Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I did theatrical caricatures.
Old age makes caricatures of us all.
Fascism is a caricature of Jacobinism.
Every uneducated person is a caricature of himself.
I'm not like a persona. I'm not a caricature of myself.
If we live long enough, we become caricatures of ourselves.
I feel like R&B as a genre has become a caricature of itself.
Parodies and caricatures are the most penetrating of criticisms.
I'm not one of those people who are like always joking in person.
I don't like caricature. I don't like extreme, I don't like that.
Every man's follies are the caricature resemblances of his wisdom.
I am a caricature of what British science is about in the way I work.
I think a lot of times on TV we see caricatures - that's what's funny.
Caricatures created by politics never fit comfortably into the Oval Office.
In other words, the people who populate my books are more than caricatures.
What is called good society is usually nothing but a mosaic of polished caricatures.
Art must discover and reveal the beauty which prejudice and caricature have overlaid.
My kids are good artists, and they do a pretty good version of Dad in their caricatures.
For me, animation is the caricature of life. It's something that we create, from the ground up.
The caricatures that the mainstream media and the Democrats have about Republicans have taken hold.
Many militants of the secular cause look astonishingly like clergy. Worse: like caricatures of clergy.
No shortcomings of other people cause us to be more intolerant than those which are caricatures of our own.
Sometimes we tend to focus more on the personalities and the conflicts, and it really caricatures the issues.
Every man sees in his relatives, and especially in his cousins, a series of grotesque caricatures of himself.
All cartoon characters and fables must be exaggeration, caricatures. It is the very nature of fantasy and fable.
Romeo and Juliet were stunning and beautiful, but a lot of the other characters surrounding them were caricatures.
I am an extremely private person. I always feel that I come across as a caricature of myself whenever I do interviews.
Reality TV is really just based for sensationalism. So, it's extreme versions and extreme caricatures of personalities.
We must defend freedom of expression and if I had to chose, I prefer the excess of caricature over the excess of censure.
I am not one of those people who will ever be comfortable mocking or making caricatures of the stereotypes attached to any community.
My favorite caricaturist is Al Hirschfeld. I'm always trying to give my caricatures that streamlined quality - and I often fall short.
I'm the world's expert on sterotypes held by academics about athletes and held by athletes about academics. To me, both of them are caricatures.
I believe it's worth observing terrible things people have done as clearly and rationally as we can to show that our monsters are not caricatures.
Unfortunately, we have a tendency to see figures from the past as caricatures - either all good or all bad - when the truth is always much more complex.
He always describes his characters' voices and their physique so brilliantly. As people have said, they are cartoons, caricatures. They're grotesques really.
Of course, politicians always say they're just describing their opponents' positions, even if they are in fact offering absurd caricatures, if not outright lies.
When you build characters from the outside in, they become, oftentimes they become like 'Saturday Night Live' characters or they become like caricatures of the character.
A lot of times in movies, especially in sequels, the characters become caricatures and just sort of improv machines and joke machines, rather than people you can actually connect to.
Zoos are becoming facsimiles - or perhaps caricatures - of how animals once were in their natural habitat. If the right policies toward nature were pursued, we would need no zoos at all.
Comedy, surprisingly for a form that intends to bring joy and joviality, is always upsetting people. Jokes rely on broad strokes, stereotypes, caricatures, exaggerations and simplifications.
The comic novels I did when I was in my 20s had a harder edge - less sympathy for people. Or a sympathy that was harder to detect: Characters' foibles and obsessive bents were unrelenting, like caricatures.
What happened when 'Sweetback' made all that money, the studios were in a very difficult position. They wanted the money, but they didn't the message. This marked the advent of the caricatures which became known as blaxploitation.
I'm not satirical in a traditional way. What I do is more about creating caricatures and cartoons. I am commentating on the nature of how we live through photography, and how you can twist an angle to create a different perception of a person.
When I was in high school at Northeast Catholic in Philadelphia in the late '30s, I found that drawing caricatures of the teachers and satirizing the events in the school, then having them published in our school magazine, got me some notoriety.
It would be wonderful if the public sector were always great, or always terrible; or if the private sector were always great, or always terrible. Alas, reality is more complicated than comforting caricatures. Governments fail, and corporations fail.
They're all based on factual characters. Well, a good amount of them. That's why I was attracted to this genre anyways, because these characters are so large and cartoonish, they're like caricatures, I just felt that there had to be a film made about them.
I behave differently in different situations, and I'm slightly unstable and insecure, which I think are natural conditions of what I do. And I have a weird ear. Whatever I hear, I emulate. When I was a kid I did impressions: Forrest Gump, Rain Man, really big caricatures.
Our public portrayal of fathers has shifted during my life. TV fathers have 'evolved' from real people like Sheriff Andy Taylor, Beaver's dad Ward Cleaver and Heathcliff 'Cliff' Huxtable, to cartoon dads like Homer Simpson and Seth MacFarlane's caricatures in 'American Dad!' and 'Family Guy.'
'MAD Magazine' put out a book that was a collection of Trump cartoons, and they asked me to do the forward because they knew that I was a fan because I'd done stories and tweeted about 'MAD.' So I did the forward and asked them if I could do a cartoon. They let me, and I did caricatures of myself and Wolf Blitzer.
I did freelance cartooning off and on from college graduation in 1991 through ABC News hiring me in 2003. I did a weekly comic strip for 'Roll Call' for about nine years. I sold cartoons and caricatures to 'The Los Angeles Times' and 'The Washington Post.' I drew as much as I could. It's really tough to make a living doing it.