A Quote by Loretta Lynn

You can't be halfway in this business. If you don't meet the fans, you lose all you've got. — © Loretta Lynn
You can't be halfway in this business. If you don't meet the fans, you lose all you've got.
I got a lot of fans, like core fans, that love me. I ain't one of the dudes that sell five or 10 million brackets, but my followers are stern. They're there. My fans - Jadakiss fans, LOX fans, D-Block fans - they loyal.
Lovers are not snails; they don't have to protrude from their shells and meet each other halfway. Meet me within your own self.
People come in with business plans and, I mean I know that no one is going to meet everything they say in a business plan but you got to have something to, to guide towards.
I hate to lose the constituency that I've worked with, but I've got 170,000 people to meet in my new district.
In boxing, if you think you will lose... you're already halfway there.
When inspiration does not come to me, I go halfway to meet it.
The garden suggests there might be a place where we can meet nature halfway.
We just have to learn to meet each other halfway okay?
We've all of us got to meet the devil alone. Temptation is a lonely business.
On the third Friday of each month, I go to the Andy Griffith Museum. I get to meet hundreds of fans who stand in long lines for hours to meet me. Some months I don't feel too good and I think maybe I won't go, but then when I go and get to be there with so many wonderful people it always lifts my spirits and makes me feel better. I wouldn't stand in line for hours to meet me, but I'm so glad my fans do.
I do meet-and-greets at every show and meet a minimum of 20-35 fans at each.
The man who says he is willing to meet you halfway is usually a poor judge of distance.
The fellow who says he'll meet you halfway usually thinks he's standing on the dividing line.
Some people are so fond of ill luck that they run halfway to meet it.
The fans sing my name around the world. When I meet fans, they ask, 'How are you? All good with your family?'
If you've got the power to raise prices without losing business to a competitor, you've got a very good business. And if you have to have a prayer session before raising the price by a tenth of a cent, then you've got a terrible business. I've been in both, and I know the difference.
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