A Quote by Jay Rock

I was on Warner Bros. for a minute. — © Jay Rock
I was on Warner Bros. for a minute.
You see a Clint Eastwood movie, and you might not know if it's from Universal or Warner Bros. or another studio. He has affiliations with so many studios now, but there was a time when you'd just look at a movie and think, 'Oh, that's a Warner Bros. film.'
And Warner Bros. seems to be pretty much into re-releasing all of their catalog. So there's the Warner Bros. stuff and the stuff that we have control over, we're gradually re-releasing it. Some stuff we don't have control over.
The parallel we like to make.... is the idea of becoming the next Warner Brothers, which is a company that creates the content, but they also produce the content. They also distribute; they also market. So we say that because Fine Bros. and Warner Brothers is fun to say.
I became merely a pawn used to produce more money for Warner Bros.
I think Warner Bros. are probably some of the best people in marketing films in the world.
Warner Bros. is just this amazing historic studio that does great movies.
Warner Bros offered me the next Batman, and the only reason that I didn't do it was because of The Saint.
We're going to help DC feel like more of an important priority in Warner Bros.
For years, Warner Bros. was trying to get me to make a movie about Howard Hughes.
I gave up on the big screen. The Witching Hour was at Warner Bros. for 10 years and it just didn't work out.
I've proven that I'm not a complete failure. Every film has done well. It's like, "So, okay, when do I get my deal at Warner Bros?
When I went to Warner Bros., there was a woman named Bonnie Lee who was an executive who helped me to get to 'Pee-wee's Big Adventure.'
I was really disappointed that Warner Bros. didn't think highly enough of my film or my filmmaking to ask me to make the new Superman.
I worked at Warner Bros. for a while. I was the head of the minority talent casting. It was like pre-Spike Lee and post-blaxploitation era.
Trying to convince Warner Bros. to make a $30 million 'Veronica Mars' movie just wasn't going to happen, for understandable reasons.
I was a Charles Schulz kind of guy. I didn't read comics books. The Warner Bros. guys were great - Chuck Jones and Friz Freleng.
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