A Quote by Kathie Lee Gifford

The payoffs in showbiz seemed as random as a slot machine. — © Kathie Lee Gifford
The payoffs in showbiz seemed as random as a slot machine.
There is, however, one feature that I would like to suggest should be incorporated in the machines, and that is a 'random element.' Each machine should be supplied with a tape bearing a random series of figures, e.g., 0 and 1 in equal quantities, and this series of figures should be used in the choices made by the machine. This would result in the behaviour of the machine not being by any means completely determined by the experiences to which it was subjected, and would have some valuable uses when one was experimenting with it.
Keke Rosberg is as calculating as a slot machine.
Our old - fashioned system is better than any new - fangled voting machine. Not only is it guaranteed to work, but there is something I find appealing in putting a mark on a piece of paper for the candidate of your choice, as opposed to pulling a lever as if you were gambling on a slot machine in Las Vegas.
I was on a cruise with my grandma when I was a kid. I remember winning $10 on the slot machine.
They are the new breed of slot machine-colorful, fancy, exciting, wonderful...and deadly.
If you're an app, how do you keep people hooked? Turn yourself into a slot machine.
I might put a couple of quarters in a slot machine, but I don't know how to play roulette.
When the money is not spent on cars and refrigerators and is instead dropped into a slot machine, it leaves the economy
The real loss by gambling is $180,000 to the consumer economy for each slot machine
For every slot machine you add, you lose one job per year from the consumer economy
I love to gamble, always have! In Georgia there is not a casino, so the closest thing to a slot machine is a scratch ticket!
Every video [slot] gambling machine takes $60,000 out of the consumer economy
The only way I'll ever get hurt in the casino is if there's an earthquake and a slot machine falls on my foot.
I don't think people should abuse the fact that they are in showbiz. You still have to be human. I think that's the point. Showbiz is about showing human things - just amplified, that's all. And when it gets too much into, "Hey, we're part of the showbiz club and we can do what we want," it turns me off and I hate it.
We're talking about an extremely prolific poet and songwriter and lyricist. That stuff comes off the top of her head. She [Joni Mitchell] will write exactly what she lives. If she puts some money in the soda machine, she'll write about putting money in the soda machine. "Dry Cleaner from Des Moines," on the Shadows & Light album, was about sitting next to a dry cleaner from Des Moines, playing a slot machine.
You do not hate the time you waste; it evokes a much more passive emotion than that. You only wish you had it back, like a quarter in an unlucky slot machine.
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