A Quote by Nick Moran

When you've been in the tabloids as a drunken 'It-boy', people automatically assume you're thick. — © Nick Moran
When you've been in the tabloids as a drunken 'It-boy', people automatically assume you're thick.
It's an interesting thing about being a 'fem.' People automatically assume that I'm straight.
One of the worst things anybody can do is assume. I think fools assume. If people have really got it together, they never assume anything. They believe, they work hard, and they prepare- but they don't assume.
It's really easy to avoid the tabloids. You just live your life and don't hang out with famous people who are in the tabloids. Don't do anything controversial and be a normal person. Have friends. And get a job and keep working.
People assume because I have a very thick skin that I don't have feelings. I don't, for the most part. But occasionally, I'm capable of great acts of charity. I tend to do it quietly.
People automatically assume that if I get anywhere it's because of my association with X, Y or Z, or because I'm pretty.
A sensitive boy's humiliations may be very good fun for ordinary thick-skinned grown-ups; but to the boy himself theyareso acute, so ignominious, that he cannot confess themcannot but deny them passionately.
I do believe that there are African Americans who have thick accents. My mom has a thick accent; my relatives have thick accents. But sometimes you have to adjust when you go into the world of film, TV, theatre, in order to make it accessible to people.
People look at me, they know I've appeared in costume dramas and they automatically assume I must be a Tory, I must be a certain type of person.
When reading fiction, we cannot automatically assume that what we read is fact.
You don't automatically assume everyone will fall for a period drama.
The biblical writers assumed many things about reality that modern, Western people do not assume because we've been conditioned by our cultures to assume otherwise.
Are we taking the drunken drivers off the road only to turn them into drunken pedestrians?
An artist could have a really big relationship, and then they break up, and any song after that, people are automatically going to assume that that song is about that person.
Drunken with what? With wine, with poetry, or with virtue, as you will. But be drunken.
Because I don't wear a suit, and have such a horrible boy band face, people assume that I'm not doing satirical material.
I would not have used the phrase "I'm selling you" because even though that's exactly what you're doing, when you tell people you're doing it - or worse yet, when you tell people "I'm not here to sell you anything," they automatically assume that that's exactly what you are here to do.
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