A Quote by Frances Arnold

I was the first female cab driver in the city of Pittsburgh. — © Frances Arnold
I was the first female cab driver in the city of Pittsburgh.
It's probably similar to being in New York City and having a cab driver behind you and you're driving too slow. It's not the most pleasant thing.
Sometimes I get frustrated in traffic. I typically start going deep with my cab driver and Twitter feed - simultaneously - to take my mind off the gridlock. I enjoy live-tweeting my cab rides.
Anyway, a spokesman for Barack Obama says the prisoners that are released from Guantanamo will either be sent back to their home countries or enter the New York City cab driver training program.
New York has made me so paranoid, too. Whenever I visit another city, I always act like I'm from there, so the cab driver doesn't rip me off. I'm always like, "Yeah, it's good to be back home. Back here where I grew up. Yeah. Here in Tokyo. ... Uh, driver, I need to go to my old stomping grounds. That would be the Holiday Inn. And the address appears to be the pound sign."
You'd never think of taking a cab if you had to walk a mile down Chicago's Michigan Avenue. But in a bad city you take a cab just to go around the corner.
You know, before I would think, my cab driver hates me. Now I think my limo driver hates me.
The one thing you shouldn't do is try to tell a cab driver how to get somewhere.
It's not a special taste. An American composer should have something to say to a cab driver.
I always think you can tell a lot about a person by how they talk to their cab driver.
I was just school class clown and that was it. Someday I'll get a job as a cab driver or whatever.
Casting is a convoluted kind of trip. No one likes to be typed - even if you're a cab driver, or whatever you do.
Pittsburgh is an underdog city because it's been in a recession for a really long time, since the steel industry collapsed, so it has this underdog mentality. Yeah, there are a lot of people who are conservative, but I also think they want to rally around their Pittsburgh people.
Where I grew up in South East London you became a cab driver or worked in a flower market.
Pittsburgh felt like the perfect size of a city to me. There's enough to do, but it's not like living in a circus. I also really loved how sports-enthusiastic Pittsburgh people are: how proud of their sports they are.
I think things will work out for the greater good for not only me but the city of Pittsburgh. I'm extremely grateful to get out in the community of Pittsburgh and not only play the game but affect other people and kids in that regard, and I'm excited about the whole process of that.
It's weird - the cab driver is playing very loud dance music and yet it doesn't really feel like a party.
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