A Quote by Peter Watts

Radar is too long in the tooth for fine detail. — © Peter Watts
Radar is too long in the tooth for fine detail.
There's a creative freedom with being under the radar. But I guess if you're too under the radar, you get canceled?
People think coming in under the radar is like being a fighter pilot and actually coming in under the radar. It's a completely ridiculous idea to come in under the radar. It's the Olympics; everyone is on the radar here.
A lot of times I'll be playing roles for which I'm too long in the tooth, but people who go see musicals don't seem to worry too much about that.
You drink a little too much and try a little too hard. And you go home to a cold bed and think, that was fine. And your life is a long line of fine.
When I was young, I thought I wouldn't be a good mother. Now I think I would be, but I'm too long in the tooth.
For too long the world has failed to recognise that the Olympic Games and the Olympic Movement are about fine athletics and fine art.
The devil's in the detail and sometimes if you're thinking too big, you can miss the detail.
I look for ambiguous messages to illustrate...I like some detail but not too much detail.
I couldn't care less what anyone's 'perception' of me is. I'm too long in the tooth to care.
I don't know, I don't pay attention to critics anyway. They either like me or they don't, you know what I mean? I am too long in the tooth to worry about that.
There was a rivalry - and some pie-throwing. But that was probably because Gawker and Radar had more in common than they wanted to admit. Each was the other's future. Radar served up the exclusives I always envied. Gawker was actually comfortable on the web, in the medium Radar should have made its own.
For the theatre one needs long arms; it is better to have them too long than too short. An artiste with short arms can never, never make a fine gesture.
I knew I wanted to get into acting and my parents were fine with that. My brother, thankfully, became a barrister so I went under the radar.
I think often people fall into the breadth trap of wanting to do too long a period of time, and obviously there's this sort of algorithm of how much depth you can put into something times how much of their life you're trying to show. My attitude has always been, I'd rather show a briefer period of time in more detail than a longer period of time in less detail.
We have been so impressed with the Pocket Radar that it has become the only radar gun we use for coaching and scouting.
I think I'm long past the days where I would go to the store and drop a couple hundred bucks on CDs, so my playlist is gonna be pretty long in the tooth.
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