A Quote by Lance Armstrong

A boo is a lot louder than a cheer. If you have 10 people cheering and one person booing, all you hear is the booing. — © Lance Armstrong
A boo is a lot louder than a cheer. If you have 10 people cheering and one person booing, all you hear is the booing.
A boo is a lot louder than a cheer, if you have 10 people cheering and one person booing, all you hear is the booing.
San Francisco has always been my favorite booing city. I don't mean the people boo louder or longer, but there is a very special intimacy. When they boo you, you know they mean you. Music, that's what it is to me. One time in Kezar Stadium they gave me a standing boo.
No players want to hear their own fans booing the players, booing the team, but football is a hard game, and you can't win everything.
Booing is not going to affect you. It's not the worst thing I will hear. Boo. I've seen and heard worse things.
A boo is a lot louder than a cheer.
I don't care if people are booing me. They can boo all they like.
I was really nervous about people booing, because my mother had gone for a film 20 years earlier and had a terrible time with people booing, whistling, so I knew that in Cannes people can get aggressive.
It's always good for people to like you, but as long as people react to you coming out, whether they are booing you or cheering you, it's great.
When you're in WWE and you're in front of 16,000 screaming fans booing you or cheering you, you only have one take.
I'm going to tell you right now, no one is harder on me than me. The fact that fans sit there and boo me, I'm booing myself when I'm walking in.
We should confine booing in sports arenas to sport. I love a good boo as much as the next football fan.
I don't type my sentences on an arena's pitch, surrounded by thousands of cheering or booing fans - I don't feel pressure to please a crowd.
There's always a moment in any stand-up show I do where people are booing. They kinda boo a premise. And then I bail myself out with a joke. But it's like trying to do movies where there's a dramatic undertone.
As long as the crowd make noise, I will be in my element, whether it is booing or cheering. The main thing is I get a reaction of some kind.
Whatever the crowd is - cheering, booing or whatever - it's not anything I bother to think about.
You've got audiences cheering at the prospect of somebody dying because they don't have health care and booing a service member in Iraq because they're gay. That's not reflective of who we are.
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