I've been lucky enough to be surrounded by people that were always supporting me, and I never felt pressure.

I'm from Wisconsin so I always feel a little nauseous about begging and trying to trick people into liking me.

I'll do anything for $50. People are always trying to get me to do dumb things. The possibilities are endless.

There are certain things people always bring up with me. The accident. The drugs. And how tight my pants were.

I've always had a fondness for the Gothic. That's what kind of stories attract me: Why do people do bad things?

I always felt that when people found things that they didn't like about me, it seemed to distance them from me.

People are always asking me in interviews, 'What do you think of foreign affairs?' I just say, 'I've had a few.'

People are always telling me that they've seen people reading my books on the subway, or the beach, or whenever.

People always ask us, 'Hey, is there going to be a 'Beerfest 2'?' I don't know if I have another beer joke in me.

I've always hung out with people older than me, with my parents' friends, because I appreciated the conversation.

I've played matches in Mexico, Canada and the United States. The people of North America have always welcomed me.

I always stayed for the first curtain call and people always said, 'Who's that?' But this got me started in acting.

My father always told my sisters and me that once you succeed, people will automatically be quiet. And he was right.

I want to attract as many people as I can to listen to my show, and I don't expect everyone to always agree with me.

People always say to me, 'You're really attractive - in an unusual way.' No one ever just says, 'You're attractive.'

The newspapers were always against me in the beginning because they thought I was depriving people of what they wanted.

I think people were expecting me to be that kind of glamorous sexpot. So they were always, Wow you're not what I expected.

I was always a wrestling fan, and being an Arab kid who grew up in Canada, there was no representation for people like me.

I always argue with a lot of people. They ask me for my top rappers, and he's always on my list. I mean, the GZA inspired me.

People want to be liked by other people, so they adopt other people's standards, but for me, my standard had always been true.

I knew that people disliked me, and there always will be, but that's the price you pay for being in the limelight, so to speak.

People always told me that 'Kalyug' wasn't the right choice, but it did well and now I think people have accepted me in the lead.

People ask me what my hobbies are in interviews, and I always say biking. But all I bike for is to get to rehearsal more quickly.

People always meet me and go, 'You're so much cooler than I thought you'd be,' and I'm like, 'What did you expect me to be like?'

For me, it's always about using my platform to give people an alternative narrative, because we all need to upgrade our mindsets.

People have given me classified information, but always with the disclaimer 'This can never end up in a book.' And it never does.

Sometimes I feel like I have a dozen different people inside of me. I've always been that way, and I've always written stuff down.

I was a musical theatre kid, which meant you could always find me singing or dancing in the halls with at least four other people.

Me and Kobe are always going to talk trash and get into it. But when he talks trash to everybody else, some people tend to shy away.

It always makes me laugh to think that I get to sit around and chat with people like Anne Reid and Derek Jacobi and get paid for it.

When people first meet me, they're always like, 'What are you?' as far as ethnicity. And I've been pegged as 'ethnically ambiguous.'

Successful people are always looking for opportunities to help others. Unsuccessful people are always asking, 'What's in it for me?'

Before I came out, people always asked me math questions. But once I became a woman, they stopped. There's unintended discrimination.

Whenever I tell people I'm from Miami, they always ask me about the beach. But I can count on one hand the times I went there as a kid.

Some people know me as the bad boy of professional poker and call me The Poker Brat. Sometimes I deserve that nickname, but not always.

In the playground, I always made people laugh; I used to charge them three pence for an impression of a teacher. It kept me in toffees.

People would ask me why I was doing what I was doing - but I always told them that I just loved to skate. There was no other explanation.

I think I've always been pretty shameless about seeking out people much smarter and much more experienced than me from the very beginning.

People who know me know that I'm always interested in an honest, civil exchange of views, and I'm not some Hollywood liberal know-nothing.

I examine other people's characteristics, so when I'm playing characters, I don't always have to make them me; I can transform into others.

I have always been drawn to child-related causes. I find that people listen to me more when I advocate for children now that I have my own.

To me, adventure has always been to me the connections and bounds you create with people when you're there. And you can have that anywhere.

There's gonna be stretches where I don't play as well. People are gonna be talking bad about me and not always on my side and cheering me on.

I can't think of the last Asian that I ran into that talked about internment camps. But black people always want to talk to me about slavery.

Juggling is very, very straightforward; very, very black and white; you're manipulating objects, not people. And that's always appealed to me.

As a kid, I think people would have described me more as a goofball, or being energetic. But I always loved parodies; I loved spoofing things.

I'm already a personable person. I always try to smile and get to know somebody and say hello - even when people are trying not to talk to me.

People would always try and set me up, which was awkward. You can't set me up on a blind date because she will automatically know more about me.

I've always been happy just to be working. It doesn't really matter for me how many people are familiar with my name or my picture, or whatever.

It always circled back around to Marco Polo and Kublai Khan. That always fascinated me because so few people make the connection between the two.

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