A Quote by Tan France

I live in Salt Lake City, and I don't have a lot of gay friends. — © Tan France
I live in Salt Lake City, and I don't have a lot of gay friends.
Most of my family is still active in the Mormon Church. They live in Utah and Provo and Orem and Salt Lake City.
Salt Lake City gave me a lot of surprises. How progressive the city actually is, for instance, compared to the rest of Utah - it's like this purple dot in a sea of red. And the government there is kind of a mix of conservative values and progressive ideas.
I live in New York and I love hanging out in gay clubs, and a lot of my friends are gay. But, for better or for worse, I'm not gay.
It's always good to be back in Salt Lake City.
I love Salt Lake City. It's beautiful with all the great outdoors around you.
I live just outside of Salt Lake City in a place called Emigration Canyon. It's on the Mormon trail. So I feel deeply connected, not only because of my Mormon roots, which are five or six generations, but because of where we live. There isn't a day that goes by that I'm not mindful of the spiritual sovereignty that was sought by my people in coming to Utah.
I had an agent in Salt Lake City, but acting was more like a hobby.
Growing up in a Jewish matriarchal world inside the patriarchal paradise of Salt Lake City, Utah, gave me increased perspective on gender issues, as it also did my gay brother and my lesbian sister. Our younger sister is the perfect Jewish-American wife and mother, and is fiercely proud of that fact.
It was necessary to organize my career to remain at the top level until Salt Lake City.
I began skating when I was 3. It was during 2002, the year the Olympics were held in Salt Lake City.
I left Montana in Spring of 1866, for Utah, arriving at Salt Lake city during the summer.
It's tough because a lot of my friends in normal life, a lot of my friends in the entertainment business, and a lot of my friends in the wrestling business are gay. Just to say something spiteful and hurtful, I don't get it... if it was true and I was gay, I'd embrace it, and I'd tell you guys about it and I'd celebrate it.
When I got to Salt Lake City, in the summer of 2010 - I know it's a cliche, but man, it's the truth: I was just a kid.
We have fewer troops in Afghanistan than we had law enforcement [officers] at the Olympics in Salt Lake City.
I'm in a little bit of a different situation, because working in the business that I do and living in the city that I live in, I haven't had a problem with people who are gay. Since I was 10 I've been working alongside them, and some of my best friends are gay.
Yesterday the flame of the Olympic torch was carried through our great state on its way to Salt Lake City.
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