A Quote by Tucker Carlson

I feel like I've known Hunter S. Thompson for most of my life. I first encountered him in 1981, when I was 12. — © Tucker Carlson
I feel like I've known Hunter S. Thompson for most of my life. I first encountered him in 1981, when I was 12.
Life as Hunter Thompson's mother was no weenie roast.
I knew Hunter Thompson since the '70s, and I loved him, but he would wear me out as I got older.
February was always the cruelest month for Hunter S. Thompson. An avid NFL fan, Hunter traditionally embraced the Super Bowl in January as the high-water mark of his year.
I have a personal issue with Shakespeare. When I first encountered him, he made me feel thick. Well, not him, but the productions I saw.
I'm a huge Hunter S. Thompson fan.
I started reading Hunter S. Thompson when I was in college.
We like to pile language on language. Hunter [ S. Thompson] was an influence on me, no doubt about it.
Just because you go to Burning Man doesn't make you Hunter Thompson.
I wrote my first song at 12 and remember someone asking, 'What were you going through at 12 that you could write about?' I get what you're saying, but 11, 12, 13 were the hardest years of my life. You learn everything. You learn how horrible things feel.
Black bears, though, are not fearsome. I encountered one on the road to my house in Vermont, alone at night. I picked up two stones just in case, but I wasn't afraid of him. I felt a hunter's exhilaration and a brotherly feeling.
I'd like to have a solid, classy career with a good CV of work. I want to be known for acting, not my personal life. Women like Emma Thompson and Kate Winslet - they're intelligent and sophisticated. I want to be given those opportunities.
My dream dinner party guests would be Ethel Kennedy, Truman Capote and Hunter S. Thompson.
Hunter S. Thompson and I are old friends, but what we do is so different. There are surface similarities that really have to do with us being frustrated poets.
I think it may have been Tom Wolfe (if it wasn't, my apologies, Tom, and my apologies to whoever it was) who said in print once, 'David Carradine lives the life that Hunter Thompson only writes about.'
I was about 12 when I first encountered 'The Moonstone' - or a Classics Illustrated version of it - digging through an old trunk in my grandfather's house on a rainy Bengali afternoon.
I always lamented that I wasn't a writer during the late '60s and the early '70s, with the New Journalism and Tom Wolfe and Hunter Thompson and all those people.
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