When I'm by myself, I'm really cool and nice to everyone, but then the whole paparazzi thing? If you see me with my kids, I change.
Sometimes I think they should set up an asylum for people like that... a whole slew of paparazzi defending their positions.
The problem with paparazzi is that it makes you question your boundaries, like, how do I say, Thats enough guys?
I hope we don't see no paparazzi today. Because I'm still getting acquainted with these jogging pants I threw on. Like, 'That's not my statement!'
I like to sneak in under the radar. I don't have any paparazzi following me or have to deal with that stuff. I'm never in the tabloids. I prefer that.
When The Cranberries got really big in Ireland, it became difficult for me to be there with all the photographers and paparazzi.
I do sometimes feel like the paparazzi are really what ran me out of L.A. They're just giving everyone a bad name.
I'm sorry you're so unhappy as a person that you feel the need to say things that you would never understand [to a paparazzi]
Everyday, I get up in the morning and I see a picture of my grandson in newspapers. Now everyone recognizes his maid also! That's because of the paparazzi.
It`s hard when paparazzi are photographing every single thing you do. I'm sure a lot of people made mistakes - they just were not documented the way they are now.
Totally, if I wasn't trying to be an actor, I would leave L.A. because you can't really have that life here. There's a lot of baggage that comes with being here, like the paparazzi, traffic, and all of it.
I say to the paparazzi, 'Fellas, take your shot and go.' It's just they usually find me on a beach.
My mother emails me stuff about when she finds a paparazzi photo and theyre like, his hair is out of control.
I never knew my titties was bigger than Pamela So paparazzi flickin be flickin their camera
I'm not somebody who no matter where I go there are paparazzi or any of that nonsense. But I have a little window into that world and I can enter it and dance around. I want to be the audience's ticket into the party.
I've spent years when I've not been in the limelight at all and I'm perfectly happy living my life without being swooped on by paparazzi.
I'm intensely private, and I've openly shown annoyance at the paparazzi. That's served in the past to create an image of me where I'm always frowning or looking angry.
I think there is a shadow network where everybody has infiltrated in terms of hotel concierges, restaurants, will tip off journalists or paparazzi, the airlines, everywhere.
I didn't react well toward paparazzi. I just was really protective of myself and constantly hiding myself.
I feel sorry for the young people today. I think there's too much paparazzi and not enough protection.
I'm sure it's 10 times easier to handle the criticism and the paparazzi and all of that stuff with somebody by your side that you can share some of that with.
What did the paparazzi do to Diana? They chased her and they killed her.
It is possibly worth mentioning at this point that Mr. Young thought that paparazzi was a kind of Italian linoleum.
Now I feel I have an unspoken deal with the paparazzi: 'I won't do anything publicly interesting if you agree not to follow me.'
I'm afraid of buying a house or anything, 'cause if there's one paparazzi outside for one day, then they'll never leave.
I won't fool anybody by saying, 'Oh! I'm a private person.' I love people, flashbulbs and the paparazzi.
When you’re in a position to be paparazzi-ed just walking down the street, you’d look a little daft if you were smiling all the time.
Between the paparazzi and so many false stories in the media, it was causing me extreme nausea and fatigue.
It was scary. It's a public beach that we're filming on, so there was tons of paparazzi, especially when Pamela would be working. It was absolutely mayhem.
You know when you eat too many sweets and get diabetes? Paparazzi are the diabetes of materialistic culture.
When you have the paparazzi hiding in the bushes outside your home, the only thing you can control is how you respond publicly.
When I went to Seattle, it was quite a quiet town and we made it the biggest soccer following in America. We didn't have the paparazzi, though, and I needed that at the time.
When I first started playing, the only time you knew you would get photographed was if the paparazzi were outside a smart restaurant in town.
The difference now is that the paparazzi get paid fortunes. That's what motivates people; it's about the money, sadly, at anyone's expense.
The beauty about living in Atlanta is that there aren't too many paparazzi here; you can just relax. And that really works for me and my children.
I've actually stopped tinting my windows because the paparazzi look for trucks and cars with supertinted windows.
My biggest fear is that a paparazzi or someone ... is going to come in my backyard and see me when I get in my pool. That would be very unfortunate.
The paparazzi have got worse for everyone over the years. It has just become such a big deal. No-one in this business really has much privacy.
At the weekend, one of the paparazzi left their lunch box filled with half-eaten pasta salad on my doorstep: it was like a little warning, you know? 'We have been here.'
Fame is drag. The paparazzi culture is more pervasive than it used to be. On the positive side, it’s nice not to have to worry about bills.
I'm not always going to like the paparazzi photos, but I'm still going to go to lunch with my boyfriend.
For the most part, I hang out in my back yard with my dog, but there's no paparazzi trying to check that out.
That is the biggest form of bullying ever, the paparazzi. Printing lies, making accusations, it's just bullying.
I don't know how people do it these days - paparazzi and that kind of thing. That's something I can't even imagine.
I refuse to put make-up on just because the paparazzi are on my doorstep. I find it morally wrong.
I can't handle the paparazzi. They're everywhere. One of them was in a dumpster trying to take my photo the other day. It was crazy!
Paparazzi will try to get the most controversial picture of you in a compromising position because that's how they're going to sell it.
The first time I went to Taiwan, there were cameras, paparazzi, TV stations outside my hotel twenty-four hours a day nonstop.
When I'm surfing, I'm sure not thinking about the paparazzi. I guess if they start getting on floaties and coming out there in the water, then I might be a little upset.
The problem with paparazzi is that it makes you question your boundaries, like, how do I say, 'That's enough guys?'
The paparazzi and the press have given me a voice. No matter how I got the voice, it's there.
My mother emails me stuff about when she finds a paparazzi photo and they're like, his hair is out of control.
Sometimes I just want to be left alone and be a normal kid for, like, five minutes. That's tough when the paparazzi are chasing you.
When you're in a position to be paparazzi-ed just walking down the street, you'd look a little daft if you were smiling all the time.
The more attention you give to the paparazzi, the more it just, like, validates everything . . .
I tell you, the paparazzi would not be sitting outside if they realized I was the most boring person in Hollywood.
I got Moxie, I'm so damn foxy
Industry try to block me like cops and paparazzi.
The paparazzi terrify and torment people and endanger people and it's really unpleasant.
I always try to be nice to the paparazzi because finally, maybe one day, they won't ask for me, and I will regret it.
The cult of celebrity in the '60s and '70s was really more reserved for movie stars or high socialites. Paparazzi didn't care about Janis Joplin.
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