You’re just using me for my body.” “You don’t have a body,” I’d remind him. “Throw that in my face.” “Technically, you don’t have a face either.
I use Simple face wipes and Nivea face cream. For my body any kind of body butter, the more moisturising the better.
I only put soap on my face once a day, in the evening, and I'll add in a face mask or exfoliating product ever so often.
Face-to-face customer feedback refines or validates every component of the startup's business model, not just the product itself.
The elder who is eliminating what time has done to the face, what life has done to the face, is making a statement for others to see: This is the way to be a good old person - it is to defeat this body that is doing things to you. Because you haven't changed. Your body's changing.
I've always believed that the best way you combat intellectual property theft is making a product available that is well priced, well timed to market, whether it's a movie product, TV product, music product, even theme-park product.
Face dance means you don't know what the hell the rest of your body was doing but your face is fierce. That's face dancing.
You could place one product in a first-run telecast, a second product what that program is rerun, and a third product when the show goes into syndication, and another product when it goes on cable.
The face... always the face. The body can [have] muscles or [be] too skinny -- I don't care.
You think of it [voicing] as something where you not only don't //need// your body, but you don't even have it to use! There's nothing you can do with your body that's going to show in the final product. Maybe that's all the more reason I used my body so much to get whatever noise or sounds out of it I could. When it was needed to keep the energy up I found myself almost running in place! It is very physical.
Stretching exercises in the morning for face & body or my body feels heavy and I can't do anything else.
If the face appears, the picture is inevitably a portrait and the expression of the face will dictate the viewer's response to the body.
I was teaching live drawing in a community college and students started zoning in on the face and spending a couple of hours on that and then putting the rest of the body on the face only in the last hour. It didn't work to just tell them, 'Well, you're really not thinking of the body as a totality.' So in desperation I would put a drape over the model's head so they couldn't see it. They had to draw the body and then at the end of the session for an hour I would take the drape off just to try to reverse their procedure.
My young face keeps me in the running for youthful roles. If my face is going to look 22 then so should my body.
Just because a product says 'As Seen on TV' and looks like my product doesn't mean it performs like my product or will sell like my product.
Process innovation is different from product innovation. It's about how do you create a new product or develop a new product or manufacture a new product, but not a new product itself?