Top 1200 Fashion Show Quotes & Sayings - Page 20

Explore popular Fashion Show quotes.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
I like Pride festival because we get to show up and show out. Remind people we have resilience and rainbows.
The first time I really had an influence on a show was during 'Ragtime.' It's still the most magical show that I've ever done.
If you want a show to talk about politics or the Muslim ban or whatever - someone should make that show. That's not what I'm interested in. — © Ramy Youssef
If you want a show to talk about politics or the Muslim ban or whatever - someone should make that show. That's not what I'm interested in.
Dialogue is not always the best way to show emotion, to show your thought process, or to reveal yourself, as a character.
Nobody wanted the "Roseanne" show. I heard from agents that there was no interest in a show about a fat woman and her family.
It was actually the production group that ended up producing the show for us...Every musician, especially in the hip-hop community, you always make these show recaps or vlogs, and essentially what "Touring's Boring" was is, we tried to make our vlogs interesting and almost more like a TV show. That's how we got discovered by TV.
Nobody wanted the 'Roseanne' show. I heard from agents that there was no interest in a show about a fat woman and her family.
I go for as much feeling as I can rather than show what I can do up and down the neck. I don't play to show people ability.
Show me a gracious loser and I'll show you a failure.
The radio is not show fun, it's show business. It's money.
I've been asked for years to do a reality show. One of my criteria is that I would be given the opportunity to show a strong family unit.
I sometimes close my eyes during a show because I have drawn a picture of an audience enjoying the show more on the back of my eyelids.
It's also show business. It's not "show fun friends". — © Lauren Graham
It's also show business. It's not "show fun friends".
In fighting, if you get hit in the face, you don't show it. You can't show it.
Season 4 can be deadly for a show that's been a hit show.
The Walking Dead' is my show. I download it from iTunes so that I can watch it the second it comes out. It's a show that I've got really involved in, emotionally.
No talk show or game show for me, thanks.
Every show with my Jazzmaster is like a new show.
Any comic can get on the radio show and be funny. You can get that on any morning radio show or afternoon radio show. There are plenty of people who do that. It's not a difficult format, to sit around with two or three comics and be funny.
Coming into my second year, my main thing is to show growth - show that I can be consistent and play at a high level all the time.
Mainly, when I go see a show, unfortunately it's more industrial espionage than it is going to actually enjoy a show.
We like to keep the show small. Honestly, where we moved the show to the UCB theater, we moved it to a smaller space. Even though the show has technically gotten more popular. And that is, only because we like intimacy and the ability to experiment more. We don't want to be like, "We can get 250 people in a week. So let's do that. But we have to be careful about who we book..."
I start the show, and the armour goes on, and the showman comes out. When the show is finished, that comes off, and I become soft centred again.
The fashion I've acquired over the years is so sacred to me - from costumes to couture, high fashion to punk wear I've collected from my secret international hot spots. I keep everything in an enormous archive in Hollywood. The clothes are on mannequins, also on hangers and in boxes with a photo of each piece, and there's a Web site where I can go to look through everything. It's too big - I could never sort through it myself! But these garments tell the stories of my life.
You sit at a fashion show in another country and you watch all of these paparazzi swarm around a celebrity, only they're a local celebrity, maybe a soap opera star, so you don't have any idea who they are, you just know they're famous to a bunch of stunned Italians. It's weird, because when you can't identify who a celebrity is, they can just look like overslicked stand-ins. That might sound awful, but what I mean is, when you think about most actresses, even in Hollywood, they really aren't that fascinating or glamorous in their own right once you strip away the flashbulbs.
We are talking about mutated women, the result of cruel genetic experiments performed by fashion designers so lacking in any sense of human decency that they think nothing of putting their initials on your eyeglass lenses. The leading cause of death among fashion models is falling through street grates. If a normal woman puts on clothing designed for these unfortunate people, she is quite naturally going to look like Revenge of the Pork Person.
Strictly' is a machine, it's a beast! It's the biggest show on television, I was thrilled I was allowed to come to watch the show - let alone work on it!
'The Rachel Maddow Show' is a piece of sleight of hand presented as a cable news show. It is TV entertainment at its finest.
Show me someone who doesn't have some sort of experience that they would be uncomfortable for people to know about and I'll show you a dullard.
The truth is, people go to shows because they want a show. They want showbiz. When people talk about a show they saw it's not because they heard a song, it's because they were excited and geared up about the show.
When you're making a television show, it's about the story and arc of the show rather than any particular episode or director.
The show is called 'MacGyver,' and I've got to be there every day. There are probably a lot of girls out there watching the show that I don't have time to talk to.
Why not show off if you've got something to show?
One of the things that makes this show unique, in terms of an experience, is that when you do a show that has a large cast, scheduling is a very difficult thing.
The next step for me is not 'The Tonight Show.' That's a job for Jimmy Fallon. I'm way too divisive for a show like that.
I didn't know I wanted to be a hairdresser. I was always interested in fashion and imagery in a very naive way, but it was always an attraction, like glitter balls. This was in the late '70s, early '80s, so it wasn't like today, where you kind of know all about the industry. Fashion was a very insider industry then - it was very closed. So I didn't really know what I wanted to do.
When I was growing up my favorite show was 'The Mary Tyler Moore Show', and I loved all the stuff that Norman Lear did.
I think 'Oz' is the type of show that makes you turn away in fear and in horror, so for a television show, that's pretty intense. — © Jon Hurwitz
I think 'Oz' is the type of show that makes you turn away in fear and in horror, so for a television show, that's pretty intense.
It is a reality show... this show is never without drama.
You have to lead, in the case of a game show, a contestant through the architecture of the show. So there's a lot of rules there, literal and implied, that you have to navigate.
When I start to think about all the things, I'm doing sometimes I just have to thank the man upstairs. Because I'm doing the morning show here in Chicago 5 days a week, and I have the syndicated radio show that's been going on now for several years. In addition we are in the midst of taping 13 episodes of a television show-The Legends of Jazz: The Masters of jazz on PBS-TV.
I would love to play a show with Kanye West. That would be amazing. I want to play a show with Tom Petty or Bruce Springsteen. It would be really fun, especially to stick around, watch their show and watch how they work a crowd. It's really a wonderful thing.
I don't watch that much TV, so I can't compare one show to another. When I watch television, I watch people talking to one another usually or a science show where they show me microbes, you know. Microbes actually communicate quite a bit, and so there's a lot of talking going on.
Well, I think tone is very important with this show [Masters of Sex] because there are certain elements or certain aspects to the show that may be reminiscent of other shows. But, it really is a very new kind of show, in terms of the subject matter and the way it's being dealt with, and the fact that it's about real people and real events.
Fashion is one thing, you kind of can change your silhouette and try this and try that. But I think that with skin care, you know anything that you put into your skin goes into your body, so you want to know it's actually good for you. So I think I don't believe in fashion when it comes to skin care if that makes sense.
I think Ugg went out of being something that Kate Moss and Sienna Miller were wearing in high fashion circles and then they were embraced by everyone. Once something reaches that tipping point of mass popularity then suddenly the fashion world is a bit like, "Wah." As you say, you see them less kind of everywhere now so maybe it's time to bring them back.
I value very much the time before the show, when there is nothing else but to concentrate on the show, and it's just purely design.
Show me a friend in need and I'll show you a pest. — © Joe E. Lewis
Show me a friend in need and I'll show you a pest.
Every show is your last show. That's my philosophy.
Andy Paley got us a show opening for his band at an outdoor show at Simmon's College, on a Friday.
Show me a good loser and I'll show you an idiot.
I've always come into a show when the show was already up and running.
I wanted to come up with a hybrid show of sorts that wasn't your traditional 'dump and stir' type of cooking show.
Walking into a show when I was 16, at that time when it was the No. 1 hit show, and replacing a character comes with so many expectations. I felt a lot of pressure with that.
Show me the incentive and I will show you the outcome
Also, if I did join another show, I'd end up burning my bridges to the show I love most.
I think Oz is the type of show that makes you turn away in fear and in horror, so for a television show, thats pretty intense.
Show me a satisfied man, and I'll show you a failure.
Tucker Carlson has the new seven p.m. show on Fox and right now it may be the most interesting and engaging show.
I've always said it ain't 'Show Friends.' It's 'Show Business.'
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