Since most of our films cater to crossover audiences, I think it's time we make films for multilingual viewers.
Particularly with live TV, I have a really good time reacting in the moment to things that are going on around me. I try to think of the viewers' perspective too.
I really focus on giving the viewers compelling television, and hope that more and more people watch.
I hate being typecast and I don't want to do things that are boring for me because it would be boring for the viewers as well.
I would never say no at a red-carpet event. It's part of the job. Without the viewers we are nothing, so a simple picture is hardly too much to ask.
I want viewers to relate to me on a different level, not just a sexual level.
I try to create work that doesn't make viewers feel they're being spoken down to, so they feel open participation.
What exactly is 'viewer discretion'? If viewers had discretion, most television shows would not be on the air.
In banking, it was my responsibility to deliver investment opportunities and solutions to hedge fund clients, and at Bloomberg, it's my job to break down news that matters to our viewers and readers.
I want to remind the viewers that people like Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama endorsed the Occupy Wall Street movement which is actually full of anarchists.
Some IMDB viewers complain that 'Beloved' should have been reclassifed as Horror... well, so should American history.
The minute viewers callin or write about your looks, they were not listening to what you were saying.
Steve Irwin did wonderful conservation work but I was uncomfortable about some of his stunts. Even if animals aren't aware that you are not treating them with respect, the viewers are.
And you know, we did it as an independent film, and we weren't expecting it to be on television, and Lifetime ended up buying it. And the viewers responded intensely to that film.
I never want to feel more than the viewers. I'm not trying to be an automaton. It's like when you see people laughing on camera, and you don't find it funny as a viewer - it's an offputting experience.
Advertisers like shows that viewers like to watch live.
My intention has been to encourage viewers to face their prejudices about prostitution, sex and aging while reflecting on the complex and varied forms that love and loneliness can take.
With music videos becoming a popular form of content these days, I am thankful that Is Qadar has also found a place in the hearts of the viewers as well as on the top chartbusters.
When people see 'bisexual,' they still confuse it with promiscuity, which is so wrong. So I was so pumped to be the first bisexual on Riverdale and just normalize that for viewers.
I'm used to politicians being angry with me, you know, because I don't work for them. I work for my viewers.
You get the information, and it's not your job to judge it or not judge it. You adapt, and you do it. That's what we do as actors. We're just as surprised as the viewers, sometimes.
When you go to commercial, you want something to call the viewers back, and if you don't have a decent act out, the audience probably won't be there in the numbers you want when the show returns.
I think that you have to get out there and get with the folks and push the flesh and be connected to viewers and listeners.
The adulation from viewers is a huge stimulant for me, and it keeps me going.
My hope is to be a trusted utensil for viewers. Like, literally, 'That thing works. I can rely on that thing.'
With anything, and especially with the pallet of viewers in watching anything on TV and film, you have to entertain them.
In all my years in 'Countdown's' Dictionary Corner, the subject most guaranteed to rankle with our viewers is the presence of Americanisms in the dictionary.
I think three debates is good. I think it should be on a night where viewers are going to be able to watch.
Netflix sees people as users or subscribers or customers. Historically, networks have seen people as viewers.
The most important thing for me is appreciation from the viewers and the love which I get from them. This helps me to work passionately on my projects.
But Steven Bochco was smart; he knew that viewers were smart.
I'm so fortunate in my career to be able to share with viewers my travels and experiences with some amazing and talented people and to bring that inspiration to television, books, and the digital world.
We often come across certain directors who mention some of their own flops as their favourites. They will blame the viewers for not realising its merits. I think that is plain hypocrisy.
But I will say this: In my humble opinion, knowing nothing about it, I do believe that they have remote viewers working on where Osama Bin Laden is. I absolutely, 100%, convinced of that.
So I decided to move that scene in the doctor's office to two-thirds into the movie, after the viewers had come to know Ryan and Ali and share in their happiness.
I've avoided doing a network comedy, because I wouldn't get my own way. Even though it would get more viewers, it wouldn't be mine.
I always deliver on my promises, and I can promise that doing 'Strictly' would be as much of an entertaining laugh for the viewers at it would be for me.
Thru the auspices of the viewers who become - I think this is an import - in a democracy, become a working unit with law enforcement against the criminals.
Generally, I love being part of a project that imparts a positive message, is somehow educational or enlightening, helps to bridge differences, or inspires viewers in some way.
You have an obligation to challenge your fans and your viewers.
I feel that if my work excites me and makes me deliver my best, then it should, hopefully, entertain viewers as well.
Viewers are used to seeing us at our sternest and most serious on 'The Chase,' so it might be a bit of a shock when we let our hair down.
I am proud to be a role model for my viewers. I am finding out that helping victims is as or more rewarding the all the awards I win.
My paintings don't simply represent what I see; they present viewers with what I want them to see.
Viewers don't want you to walk the fence - they do want a point of view - and that's what we bring.
If we have no respect for our viewers, then how can we have any respect for ourselves and what we do?
I think my viewers want smart, honest programming. They don't want to be told what makes them feel good.
And what's nice about 'Sunny' is that it has this honesty with the viewers, which is, like, they're here because they're on a television show and they're locked in this purgatory where they have to keep doing the same things with each other.
Being launched into a show with two million viewers every night made me instantly famous. I found it quite difficult to deal with but it got easier.
If there was a blog with five listeners or viewers, I had to be on it. Now I have to be on fewer media, but more substantive media.
My mom was truly an iconic figure, a great journalist and a pioneering woman who died at 54 of cancer without ever having revealed to viewers that she was ill.
Viewers don't like rudeness, but they like us to be persistent.
The written tone and the spoken tone change and the reporters' disbelief in the veracity of the government spreads to the readers and the viewers.
It's an entire industry focusing on young male viewers that want action and violence. They sell us something that isn't valid. They're selling films like a product.
The original 'CSI' grew stronger once the spinoffs became entrenched. Like any good franchise, when there's a great story to be told, viewers can't get enough.
The viewers of video game content on YouTube are young and savvy. They are exactly the sort of people who tend to enthusiastically install ad blocking software.
I think viewers know CNN delivers time and time again on the most important stories.
I want to seduce my viewers and be able to hold them with the work. Much of that is done in terms of formalist ideas that I bring to the work.
RT completes the picture of the events in the U.S. and around the globe, giving viewers access to a range of stories, voices, and opinions and a real opportunity to speak their minds.
'MasterChef''s preliminary stages deliver just the right level of almost-drama for viewers feeling shagged out after a hard day's fruitless existence.
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