Archive for the 'quote of the day' Category

Quote of the day: ACCENTS

March 8, 2016

ACCENTS

I hear you’re a new father to a baby boy. Congratulations. What’s his name?
Hudson.

I guess you can see the river from your office.
It was either Hudson or Window. It didn’t occur to me until recently actually that my son is going to have an American accent. Because I guess in my head that’s never how I’ve heard my child speak, and I think it’ll be odd that I’m going to sound different from him. And he’ll hear me have to change my voice for automated machines. You probably don’t have to do that. On the automated phone lines, all the time — “No. 4.” “I’m sorry, I didn’t understand that.” “No. 4.” “I don’t understand that,” and I have to say “No. 4” like a kind of a sedated John Wayne. And it feels like such a defeat. There’s almost a smugness in there: “Ohhh, No. 4.”

–John Oliver, interviewed in New York magazine

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Quote of the day: TIME

February 15, 2016

TIME

[With “Pee Wee’s] Playhouse,’’ [Paul] Reubens revitalized Saturday-morning programming, a wasteland of cheap animated series that served mostly as glorified toy commercials, by discovering an aesthetic wormhole connecting late-night comedy and early-morning children’s programming. The sensibility of stoned 20-somethings at midnight, he realized — marked by an unreasonable love of repetition, absurdity, narrative disjuncture and jokes that either last way too long or flit by in a short-attention-span-accommodating blink — had significant overlap with that of little kids in pajamas, laughing themselves silly over breakfast cereal. ‘‘Those are the times of the day when there aren’t rules,’’ Reubens said of morning and night, standing as they do in idiosyncratic opposition to the more conventional prerogatives of the prime-time dial. ‘‘Rules are for the other times.’’

— Jonah Weiner, “Laughing Last,” New York Times Magazine

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photo by Jeffrey Henson Scales

Quote of the day: PARANOIA

February 12, 2016

PARANOIA

Anyone can become paranoid – that is, develop an irrational fantasy of being betrayed, mocked, exploited or harmed – but we are more likely to become paranoid if we are insecure, disconnected, alone. Above all, paranoid fantasies are a response to the feeling that we are being treated with indifference. In other words, paranoid fantasies are disturbing, but they are a defense. They protect us from a more disastrous emotional state – namely, the feeling that no one is concerned about us, that no one cares. The thought “so-and-so has betrayed me” protects us from the more painful thought “no one thinks about me.” It is less painful to feel betrayed than to feel forgotten.

–Stephen Grosz, The Examined Life: How We Lose and Find Ourselves

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Quote of the day: CHARACTER

February 8, 2016

CHARACTER

Character – the willingness to accept responsibility for one’s own life – is the source from which self-respect springs.

–Joan Didion

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Quote of the day: NAKED

January 28, 2016

NAKED

To be naked is to be oneself. To be nude is to be seen naked by others and yet not recognized for oneself. A naked body has to be seen as an object in order to become a nude….Nudity is a form of dress. The nude is condemned to never being naked.

–John Berger

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