I'm hearing echoes of Bill Clinton, circa 1996, in President Obama's reelection rhetoric.
Sober up, and you see and hear everything you'd been able to avoid hearing before.
You don't have to pound your head after hearing a country song and wonder if you missed something.
I always say that it's tough to judge a player when you're just hearing rumors. It's never accurate.
I had gained a greater appreciation of hearing the concerns of woman, doctors, and so many others.
The Sufis say there are three ways to know fire - by hearing it described, by seeing it, or by being burned.
WFMU is so experimental that you can go hours without hearing something that resembles an actual song.
My mother has lived abroad and I've grown up hearing her talk, so probably that's where I get this accent from.
When I started out, no one would talk to young people about HIV or AIDS. I looked around and radio looked like a powerful way to shape culture in a healthy way.
I had some really dear friends who died from AIDS-one in particular. His family wasn't around and he didn't have many friends. I spent a lot of time with him in his later days.
Nobody ever gets enough appreciation when they're behaving themselves, but there's no end to hearing about it when they're not.
I had to go to Sunday school once or twice in my life, and that's where I commented someplace on hearing.
Though we don't have a cure for cancer we at least have stopped being too ashamed to even say the name of the disease - and the trajectory of the AIDS epidemic is edifying, isn't it? Shame shuts down productive thinking, and I'd like to open the doors. It's a first step.
I'm doing a very funny show in which we talk about issues. I speak at Aids charities and things. It's great to do something fun with our days and yet we're told we're doing something important.
On the The AIDS Epidemic: This is a war. It has killed more people than has been the case in all previous wars and in all previous natural disasters ... We must not continue to be debating, to be arguing, when people are dying.
You don't have to always be the smartest person in the room, but if you listen and absorb what you are hearing, you will be ahead of the game.
Diarrhea, 90 percent of which is caused by food and water contaminated by excrement, kills a child every fifteen seconds. That's more than AIDS, malaria, or measles, combined. Human feces are an impressive weapon of mass destruction.
I've seen things change and people forget: the history of Berlin, the history of queer struggle, the history of AIDS, the history of New York changing from an artistic powerhouse to more of a financial one now.
I sometimes wish I had been educated a Catholic, in order to unite the poetry of religion with its higher principles. Are they necessarily inseparable? Is man really so much of a philosopher, that he can conceive of truth in its abstract purity, and divest life and the affections of all the aids of the imagination?
Pigeons are gentle and smart and have complex social relationships. Their hearing and vision are both excellent.
I heard about the Holocaust before hearing the 'Cinderella' story or watching 'Peter Pan.'
Hearing God is about the very specific issue of what it means to live with guidance in our life.
The hardest part is just hearing people saying that I won't amount to crap, and that I'm going to be a bust.
I love tuning into Radio 1 on a Friday night after training and hearing the new stuff.
My pet peeve is hearing a knock on the bathroom door followed by the familiar words, 'What are you doing in there?
The public, hearing pop music, is, without knowing it, also soaking up jazz.
I don't get to listen to music for fun very often; a lot of what I'm hearing is for work and isn't released yet.
I'm scared of haunted things, like hearing noises in my house and stuff. That scares me.
I am not a fool. I keep on hearing and seeing the way people misbehave with their coaches and seniors.
I'm very proud that President [George W.] Bush took on AIDS relief. It was the largest single response by any country to a major international health crisis, and there are millions of people who are alive today in Africa and other developing countries because of that program.
People in general are equally horrified at hearing the Christian religion doubted, and at seeing it practiced.
One of my principal childhood memories is hearing one of the Liszt Hungarian Rhapsodies waft throughout the house.
Everyone on this planet needs to be made aware that for several years now I have met and keep meeting people who no longer have AIDS, cancer, and almost any other disease you can think of, due to the continual and correct application of oxygen therapies.
In my experience what I'm hearing from people now is that they're just desperate to hear about something else.
Rather than hearing from the city council president, you'd hear from sources all across the country.
Christian fundamentalists seek to roll back women's right to choose in the United States, and then also insist that money against Aids must not go to organisations that help people obtain their reproductive rights. These are extremely worrying trends.
The movie that's had the most effect on me is Jaws. To this day when I'm in the ocean, I'm hearing that music.
The life of the individual has meaning only insofar as it aids in making the life of every living thing nobler and more beautiful. Life is sacred, that is to say, it is the supreme value, to which all other values are subordinate.
I love biographies. I read Patti Smith's 'Just Kids.' I'm into that time frame in New York, the '70s and '80s. In art school, I read 'Close to the Knives,' the autobiography of the artist and AIDS activist David Wojnarowicz.
Poverty must be eradicated, the resources of our planet used sustainably, human rights respected, equality between men and women strengthened, HIV/AIDS and other diseases prevented, terrorism stopped, and disarmament and non-proliferation secured.
In This Body Mystery, even though it was written in the voice of people with HIV/AIDS, it's about how people come to accept their fate and their sickness. It's about accepting the way your life is.
Turn up your hearing aid 'Grandpa', because I'm only going to say this once!
I am not happy that I am sick. I am not happy that I have AIDS. But if that is helping others, I can at least know that my own misfortune has had some positive worth.
When you approach intuitive methods with respect, you become open to hearing from your interior channels.
You can always find the sample that covers what you're hearing, but barely...it allows me to really concentrate on words.
I have lived seventy-eight years without hearing of bloody places like Cambodia.
There is no greater mistake in life than seeing things or hearing them at the wrong time.
I walk out of my apartment, and St. Vincent's is standing there like a ghost ship. That was the ground zero of AIDS in New York: a conservative institution that quickly adapted to its unconventional patients and made heroic efforts to try and save them.
It's important not to lose sight of the fact people of all sorts are still putting themselves at risk. It happens to straight and gay, single and married. I have never been comfortable thinking of AIDS as something that 'other people' get.
As soon as I see period costume, I turn off. It's like hearing drama on Radio 4.
We think about the enormous costs of homelessness, or the enormous cost of HIV/AIDS, over the long term, as people visit emergency rooms, etc. The more we are investing in that ounce of prevention the better off we're going to be.
Those who have come into Formula One without experiencing cars devoid of electronic aids will find it tough. To control 800 horse power relying just on arm muscles and foot sensitivity can turn out to be a dangerous exercise.
I was born deaf, and I gained my hearing back when I was six months old - it was a miraculous event.
Using a first-person narrator is simply a matter of hearing the voice inside yourself.
You've probably been asked to care about things like HIV/AIDS or T.B. or measles, but diarrhea kills more children than all those three things put together. It's a very potent weapon of mass destruction.
'One Night Only,' the words I'll be hearing from my agents when I tell them I'm coming back to Broadway.
Listen more than you talk. Nobody learned anything by hearing themselves speak.
Our highest ambition is to be included in the stream of American life, to be permitted to "play the game" as any other American; and is opposed to anything that aids in the exclusion; the face may be Africa, but the heart has the beat of Wall Street.
A glass of wine often makes me a better man than hearing a sermon.
I have covered wars, before the epidemic began and since. They are all ugly and painful and unjust, but for me, nothing has matched the dread I felt while walking through the Castro, the Village, or Dupont Circle at the height of the AIDS epidemic.
This site uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience.
More info...