A Quote by Johnny Vegas

The idea of being on TV 24 hours a day and people seeing the real me... No. — © Johnny Vegas
The idea of being on TV 24 hours a day and people seeing the real me... No.
When I was a kid, I just devoured TV 24 hours a day. Now that it's actually available 24 hours a day, I'm usually busy doing other stuff. But I do watch TV when I can.
Discipline is the whole key to being successful. We all get 24 hours each day. That's the only fair thing; it's the only thing that's equal. What we do with those 24 hours is up to us.
People will work eight hours a day for pay, 10 hours a day for a good boss, and 24 hours a day for a good cause!
I began thinking about the idea of a 24 hour concert. What if you tied songs to certain hours of the day - creating a 24 hour world of lyric and melody. So that was the inspiration for this project.
We all get 24 hours a day... It's up to us as to what we do with those 24 hours.
Sometimes people ask me how difficult the astronaut program was, but being in Sierra Leone, being responsible for the health of more than 200 people, seven days a week, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, at age 26 - that prepared me to take on a lot of different challenges.
Not to be pompous about it - my thing in life is to write history and not to chat on TV 24 hours a day.
I enjoy just being me. I don't need to be Queen Latifah, the brand, 24 hours a day.
I always tell people that being the mayor of an urban city for eight years was like getting run over by a truck every day. There's inner satisfaction, but 24 hours a day, every day, I'm on duty.
My biggest regret is that there are only 24 hours in a day. I wish there was at least a few more hours. Each hour of me being awake means I can help a few more migrants who are stranded and are desperate to reach home.
I teach that people should watch less TV. I don't care what else they're doing! The average American's watching anywhere from three to six hours a day. If you watch six hours of TV a day, that's 15 years of your life!
I won't do reality. That is done. And I don't want people following me around with a camera 24 hours a day.
What fits your busy schedule better, exercising one hour a day or being dead 24 hours a day?
People like seeing people being human and real, and I think that's been lacking on TV.
Twitter was like a poem. It was rich, real and spontaneous. It really fit my style. In a year and a half, I tweeted 60,000 tweets, over 100,000 words. I spent a minimum eight hours a day on it, sometimes 24 hours.
I don't stress at all. When other people say, 'I'm having a bad day,' I ask, 'How can you have a bad day for the entire 24 hours, or even 12 or eight hours?' Something bad might happen, but that can't make the entire day bad.
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