Top 16 Relatability Quotes & Sayings

Explore popular Relatability quotes.
Last updated on November 17, 2024.
I'm a human, and I'm multidimensional. If I was the perfect form of anything, I'd be boring. If I was a free spirit all the time, I would be boring; I would lack depth. If I was dark and enigmatic all the time, then I would lack relatability.
But to demand that a work be “relatable” expresses a different expectation: that the work itself be somehow accommodating to, or reflective of, the experience of the reader or viewer. The reader or viewer remains passive in the face of the book or movie or play: she expects the work to be done for her. If the concept of identification suggested that an individual experiences a work as a mirror in which he might recognize himself, the notion of relatability implies that the work in question serves like a selfie: a flattering confirmation of an individual's solipsism.
It's - you know, acting's all about relatability and finding empathy for a character, which is essentially, kind of, you're finding empathy with a part of yourself, which is a part of a character that was written by someone else, which was essentially kind of a part of them as well because it was a voice in their head they wrote down.
It is very difficult to explain poetry. You have to understand the poetry and figure out your own take and your relatability.
I think what I look for in a script, it's the relatability quotient that matters the most.
I feel like I can always do better with action and I always want to push the envelope there as long as I can because I'm a physical person and I love expressing myself physically, but I'm also, on the very flipside, an extremely emotional person. I like watching the relationships and the chemistry and the relatability.
I don't think about relatability (when writing), I think about the heart of the character.
Vulnerability, humility, relatability - those three are very close and very similar to keep you going. — © Jim Breuer
Vulnerability, humility, relatability - those three are very close and very similar to keep you going.
As long as the actor is able to maintain an emotional relatability with the audience, he or she will be loved by them.
The great appeal of film is its relatability.
Without having an emotional connection or some relatability to the characters, there's really nothing to root for, in some respect. — © David Nutter
Without having an emotional connection or some relatability to the characters, there's really nothing to root for, in some respect.
Maybe that's the way I'm private - I respect the privacy of "my" characters? Anyway, we're getting close to the whole "relatability" and "likability" thing.
With digital space, the content has become accessible for the audience. So, they feel more connected to you as you are more accessible to them. The kind of adulation actors get today is very different from the kind of adulation you had for a star which came from aspiration rather than relatability.
I was always looking for relatability, because I am not someone cut out for larger than life roles.
In television - not film, and not factual, nothing else - within television, likeability is everything, and relatability is everything.
The thing you can't let go of is gravity. The reality of gravity in writing. If someone says something really mean in a sitcom, and the next wave isn't a reaction to the reality of that, you start losing relatability. In a lot of romantic comedies, they throw out the rules of life.
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