A Quote by Kenny Wallace

It's important for me to live up to my reputation. — © Kenny Wallace
It's important for me to live up to my reputation.
I've got this reputation for shooting one take which is a wonderful reputation to have but it's hard to live up to.
I couldn't live my reputation down - all right then, I'd live up to it.
It's a very lovely reputation to have - being a kind person. I try to live up to the fact that people think that about me.
Live music is so important. Growing up, it was so important for me to go out and see it, and it inspired me.
When a management with reputation for brilliance gets hooked up with a business with a reputation for bad economics, it's the reputation of the business that remains intact.
Reputation is seeming; character is being. Reputation is manufactured; character is grown. Reputation is your photograph; There is a vast difference between character and reputation. Reputation is what men think we are; character is what God knows us to be. Reputation is seeming; character is being. Reputation is the breath of men; character is the inbreathing of the eternal God. One may for a time have a good reputation and a bad character, or the reverse ; but not for long.
Being the Rated-R Superstar, I have to live up to the reputation.
Give the other person a fine reputation to live up to.
I don't think I have a reputation to live up to and that I need to do things to satisfy that.
Mistakes quickly pile up and coalesce into a reputation, and a reputation is hard to shake.
Definitely, I got a reputation growing up playing on the guys' hockey teams. The guys knew how tough I was because I played with them. I got quite a good reputation for beating up boys going up through school.
My father taught me that reputation, not money, was the most important thing in the world.
If one's reputation is a possession, then of all my possessions, my reputation means most to me.
I didn't have to win, and winning wasn't important to me. Being world champion wasn't important to me. What was important to me was entertaining the audience, and whether that meant winning, losing, singing, or whatever it was on the live show we were doing every week, which was awesome, I was game for it.
President Obama's FCC Chairman, Julius Genachowski, has a reputation in D.C. of being a 'tepid' regulator. From reports of his net neutrality proposal, he's living up to that reputation.
Besides having an audience, the most important currency for any leader is his or her reputation. And having a reputation for over-delivering on what's expected of you should give your visitors, subscribers and customers more reason to spend their money with you and refer their friends.
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