Top 1200 Cable TV Quotes & Sayings - Page 7

Explore popular Cable TV quotes.
Last updated on December 19, 2024.
I don't even have cable anymore, or a television. I just watch on computers. It's clearly the future of where we're heading.
The cable makers are the ones who are willing to take risks and do something original and push the envelope some.
I enjoy watching football on TV. Many times I can visualize the whole field, even on the TV screen, because I still know enough about what the teams are doing. — © Tony Dungy
I enjoy watching football on TV. Many times I can visualize the whole field, even on the TV screen, because I still know enough about what the teams are doing.
The problem with the cable networks is the lack of money, not from personal income but as far as show budget.
I think a lot of people in television news look at the cable networks with great envy.
You might be a redneck if your coffee table used to be a telephone cable spool.
The only work I ever turned down was a cable programme called Diving for Excrement.
On away trips, I'll listen to my iPod sometimes or watch some TV, see what's on of a Friday or Saturday night - I'll usually save the TV box sets until I'm at home with the wife.
We've recognized that Twitter is the second screen for TV, and TV is more fun with Twitter. There are a bunch of ways that we can be complementary to broadcasters.
TV cameras seem to add ten pounds to me. So I make it a policy never to eat TV cameras.
When we started looking at the bigger television ecosystem, you see that there's not that many serialized TV shows being made for TV. The economics are lousy: They don't sell into syndication well; they're expensive to produce.
I always have the TV on. When there's no TV, I play music. I like having noise. I think that's why New York is so suitable for me, because it's never really fully quiet.
I always get a little uppity when I hear the phrase 'TV actor.' It's like saying you're a magazine reporter. I was in the theater for ten years before I ever had a TV audition.
The difference between movies and TV is that in TV you have to have a trauma every week, but that event may not be the biggest event in the characters' lives. — © Peter Capaldi
The difference between movies and TV is that in TV you have to have a trauma every week, but that event may not be the biggest event in the characters' lives.
The big difference in those days was that in England the Government subsidized TV, in America we work on TV so we can subsidize the Government.
I don't get sick of being naked, but the added pressure is staying in really good shape, because naked shape is a different kind of shape than just regular TV shape. Regular, having-your-clothes-on TV shape is intense, but naked TV shape is, I mean, you really have to watch what you eat.
I believe people will be watching their TV screens for a long time and that TV channels have a long-term life.
My very first job was working on a TV show that was a prestigious TV show and well done - was called 'Family.'
You have film actors doing TV, rap stars doing TV, with everyone kind of crossing the line.
In terms of making TV drama, not everything has to make sense. In cinema, you usually strive for reality and a natural environment, but in TV, it's more acceptable to do something crazy and break with naturalism.
The first 'Interdimensional Cable' episode is amazing because it's filled with such absolute drunken nonsense.
We didn't have a TV because we didn't have a whole lot of money. My parents would have their friends over - their friends who thought, 'How can you live without a TV?
I could have had my husband put me on a lot of TV shows every day, but I chose not to. I am a serious businesswoman. I don't enjoy being out there on TV; it's not what I do well.
I know I'm on a small cable reality show. I'm realistic where I stand in the scheme of things.
When answering questions over the years about film and TV adaptations of my books, I have always maintained that no movie or TV series could ever change or damage my work.
Summer is a great opportunity for all of cable. People love to find original episodes.
I just personally feel like the best writing for actors exists in cable television.
I'll never forget, Christine Woods came up to me on set and she looked at me so seriously and held my hand, and she's like, "Kether, look at me. In real life, we are beautiful, beautiful women. No one thinks we're fat. In TV, we are TV fat and we just have to get used to it. Don't ever take it personally. We're TV fat. End of story".
The way I see it is, you can be a character on a TV show for years, then the TV show gets cancelled and your favorite actress or favorite comedian, you don't see them for a little while and then you see them back doing something else. You can still be enjoying them performing on TV.
I think it's terribly important to watch TV. I think there's a sort of minimum number of hours of TV a day you ought to watch, and unless you watch three or four hours of TV a day, you're just closing your eyes to some of the most important sort of stream of consciousness that's going on!
With the recession, people are having to choose between their cable and their internet connection. And think about it.
The failure of The Cable Guy impacted my career. I had to start writing and acting again.
Doing a TV show is different because it's more of a TV version of something. A more focused take on things.
There are not going to be hundreds of cable networks doing original programming; they won't be able to sustain the model.
Television really does offer still great parts for women, cable in particular.
My focus is films, and 'Angela's Eyes' is one of those TV projects that has some good TV concepts behind it and good writing.
My biggest pet peeve, I guess, is other comedians criticizing Larry the Cable Guy.
As a woman you have to tick all these boxes to be able to be on TV. I know I look a certain way and that's partly why I'm on TV. If I were really ugly and fat, I don't think I'd have had the same chance.
I don't watch TV. When people at my house try to talk about TV, I'm like, 'Ah, I have no idea what I'm talking about.' — © Evangeline Lilly
I don't watch TV. When people at my house try to talk about TV, I'm like, 'Ah, I have no idea what I'm talking about.'
TV industry pays us as much as the leading guy or probably more. All our shows are women-oriented, and all the TV actresses are getting paid well. There is absolutely no discrimination over here.
I can't say that I have ever been fanatical about a show. To be honest, I'm not a big TV watcher. When I do watch TV, I watch the news.
Among some of the youngsters, I think reality TV has installed that culture into them and inspired a few of them into wanting to be 'TV celebrities.
I prefer film to TV because of the amount of time film affords you that TV doesn't (though theater is probably my favorite and the scariest place of all).
Without network neutrality, cable and phone companies could stifle innovation.
Habit is a cable; we weave a thread of it each day, and at last we cannot break it.
All I'm saying is that it's shortsighted to blame TV. It's simply another symptom. TV didn't invent our aesthetic childishness here any more than the Manhattan Project invented aggression.
Cable news tends to be talking points - you don't have that much time to substantively unpack an issue.
Reality TV is a lot about drama, but for the first time in a long time, you actually have role models on TV.
You see reality TV and it's not reality TV. It's contrived and everything is plotted and scripted nearly. Documentaries are the same and just as bad. — © Ricky Gervais
You see reality TV and it's not reality TV. It's contrived and everything is plotted and scripted nearly. Documentaries are the same and just as bad.
Well I grew up in Canada in a really small town. We didn't have running water for a long time and we didn't have TV. Then when we did get TV we only had one channel.
It's not easy to go from reality TV to being taken seriously as an artist, so I don't think I'll be doing reality TV again because of that.
I usually just watch YouTube videos or reruns on Netflix of older TV shows like 'Family Guy' and stuff. But I still really want to start watching more TV.
We love our business. We have never been more enthusiastic about cable and its future.
I find myself watching cable and television much more than going to the movies.
I was the CEO of Justin.tv, and my cofounders were senior engineers there. We came up with the idea at Justin.tv in the fall of 2010.
No cord or cable can draw so forcibly, or bind so fast, as love can do with a single thread.
I was never a western guy, but I happened upon 'Tombstone' one day on TV and was really sort of taken with it. It's one of those movies that, if it's on TV, I can't turn it off. I just have to watch the whole thing.
I don't want fame or to make money by appearing on TV, but I would not mind appearing on TV if it is related to what I am doing for football.
I really missed what I'd done on Rogers Cable, which was shooting and editing all my own stuff.
For me, as an actor, going from TV to film was interesting because TV and film are two very different things.
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