A Quote by Henry Winkler

You see, I don't know how to ride a motorcycle, actually. — © Henry Winkler
You see, I don't know how to ride a motorcycle, actually.
I actually have no aspirations to ride a motorcycle ever again. It's exhausting. You get cold.
I actually have no aspirations to ride a motorcycle ever again. Its exhausting. You get cold.
You look at me: you see the tattoos, and I ride a motorcycle.
On 'Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,' I spent two or three months learning how to ride a motorcycle. I wasn't really riding the motorcycle in 98 percent of the movie, but the shots of me getting on and off had to look like I had been doing it for years and years.
When I finished high school, I wanted to take all my graduation money and buy myself a motorcycle. But my mom said no. See, she had a brother who died in a horrible motorcycle accident when he was 18. And I could just have his motorcycle.
I did some great work with my Calvin Klein ads on the motorcycle. It was really groundbreaking because people hadn't seen a woman actually riding a motorcycle before.
I go to Australia probably once every two years. It's wide-open spaces there, so I just rent a motorcycle and ride out to the middle of the continent. For hours, you don't see anybody.
I don't belong to a motorcycle club, but I know a lot of guys who do. I ride with some guys who do.
The motorcycle was the thing I really didn't want to do... 'You're going to be raped, be naked...' but as soon as he was like, 'You're going to have to ride a motorcycle,' I was like, 'Oh, really?'
I think it's particularly a distinctively American concept that resonates with American culture through biker culture. A motorcycle is an independent thing. You're like, 'I don't want to ride in a car with this person. I want to be independent and ride by myself. But, let's ride in a group. Let's be independent, together.'
The first thing I ever rode when I was a kid was a motorcycle, so I knew how to drive a motorcycle before a car.
I ride my motorcycle with my dad, I hang out with my sisters.
When you, as a fan, go to see a wrestling show, you don't know what the predetermined outcome is. You take a seat and enjoy the ride - and it's a hell of a ride.
Note to self: Never ride a motorcycle in stilettos and a miniskirt.
Just by going fast enough, you can ride on water with a motorcycle.
If I want to work, I can. If I want to play golf, or ride my motorcycle, I can. But the rest of it is family. Sometimes you're not really needed by your family, but you're there. And my kids like to know I'm there.
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