This was one of the places people told me to go, it was one the big trips that you should see: Alaska.

When I was on stage with the Spice Girls, I thought people were there to see the other four and not me.

People can expect to see a lot of me - I'm not too proud to stand on corners and hold my campaign signs.

It is wonderful but kind of surreal when people turn to me and say they see some kind of an inspiration.

People see me on the street, and they point to me, and they're like, 'Hey! All right, all right, all right!'

Like most reasonable people, it saddens me when I see Americans celebrating a heritage they don't understand.

I get embarrassed by people. It's really awkward for me to have a chat with people who have been to see a gig.

I really wanted to do things that weren't comic. It felt like finding people who can see this other side to me.

I know people expect a lot from me and want to see certain things when I play, but it's not really any pressure for me.

I'm not one of those people who can cry on cue. If I have to cry in an audition, I'm like, 'Okay, let me see what I can do.'

People are affected by what they see, hear. This is what matters to me the most because then our job as actors is justified.

Usually when people see me, they see me as more of the soft-spoken one rather than being the witty, smart-tongued character.

I personally don't like to go see romantic comedies. But people do want to see them, and they seem to want to see me in them.

Some people see me as a rabble-rouser. Some people see me as someone who does not care about what other people think about me.

For sure, I'm an acquired taste. People who've had that acquisition, who've acquired it, are quite surprised when they see me.

It was a shock for me to see that there are obviously more people in Germany with fascist opinions than I thought there would be.

People keep pushing me to be the center of attention... I would prefer to be on the sidelines, because that's where you see more.

Certain people want to see me solely as a pop act, but there are many different sides to Christina Aguilera besides the pop girl.

People who have witnessed all the years of me playing, they bring their kids and say, 'I used to see this guy when I was fourteen!'

I wanted to encourage people around me to evaluate their lives and see where they are holding themselves back. I wanted them to dream again.

I don't want a lot of people nosing round my studio and bothering me. I don't want to see them at all. Let the dealers have all that bother.

I think some people see me as being some kind of lovable, bumbling buffoon, and I'm actually quite mouthy and sharp, and that doesn't compute.

People don't come to see a Billie Eilish show to come to see me. They come to see her. So I just try not to screw up too much on my instruments.

People are constantly asking me if I'm pregnant, but I don't like to talk about it too much. I just think about it as the next phase. We'll see.

The coolest thing for me is that I've been blessed with a nice following. The people that come to see me are fans, and that happens in Vegas, too.

People stayed with me and worked extra hard for me because I could see the potential in them - I'm not so sure they could see the potential in me.

What really ticks me off is how the public figures you automatically become the roles you play. What most people never see is the silly side of me.

There's plenty of people I don't like that we put fights on with. It's not up to me whether I like them or dislike them, it's what the fans want to see.

When me and my brother would go to see our daddy playing, there'd be 30 people in the audience. I was only 14 or 15, but I realised something was wrong.

So many people can see my content and see that I dance and maybe it'll draw them to my Instagram where I have longer clips of me and dance classes or improv.

In fact it's quite gratifying for me to see some of the people who really objected to this method of working now being quite so profligate in their use of it.

What's important to me is offering perspectives into worlds that people don't often get to see. Do you know what I mean? From angles they don't often get to see.

A lot of people I've played with see me as a scorer and a shooter. I'm still fast and everything like that, but then, when they see me dunk, it's like 'Oh, damn.'

Golf is fundamentally about being honest. I see people hit eight shots and tell me they shot five. I never say a word. It is a reminder to me of what is at stake.

Us investigators who went out into the field were faced on occasion with a lot of anger, by people saying why has it taken you five or six year to come and see me?

I took so many different things away from my maternity leave. It taught me to have more compassion for other people and to see every individual as someone's child.

I first heard about 'Stranger Things' from people dressed as the characters coming up to me at conventions saying, 'Hey, you have to see this show. It's 'Goonies.'

A lot of people would like to see me in England. This is not necessarily the league that attracts me the most, though. It would allow me to develop further, though.

If the Rolling Stones are playing a concert across town, that's not my audience anyways. But I do find that there's a lot of people coming back around to see me again.

Films do seem prestigious and glamorous, but when you create something, you want people to see it. TV still reaches so many more people; it still really appeals to me.

Some might see me on Instagram or Twitter and think otherwise, but when you really get to know me, I'm a likable guy. So that's why I think that people are drawn to me.

I think everybody would like to see me against AJ Styles at 'WrestleMania'. That's one that people have talked about, but I also really like Kevin Owens and Seth Rollins.

My job at the CFPB, as President Obama told me when he interviewed me, was to stand on the side of people in the financial marketplace and see that they were treated fairly.

I know how people see me. People see me as a rebel. People see me as maybe even ignorant. People see me as a threat or rude or whatever. It's a lot of people who just don't know me.

Because of how I looked, there was definitely a prejudice against me. People didn't think I could play. I could see why: I weighed about eight stone and was six foot bleeding seven.

It trips me out when I hear people say, 'Well, I don't see color.' You see color. Now, how you respond and how you handle the situation once you've seen and noticed color is different.

In terms of the way people see me, it breaks down into two very clear and distinct groups: those who think they know me from reading the papers and those who really know me by reading my books.

I had a director who told me a story about a fan who had commented on how nice it was to see her sister laughing and how happy the show made her. I like to make people happy and make them laugh.

I would rather write something that's authentic to me than something that'll be likely to get played on the radio but doesn't have any substance to it. People can see through that really quickly.

Everywhere I go, I see all kinds of people at my shows - conservatives, liberals, new-agers, teen-agers, old pensioners. And for those people to have something in common is real interesting to me.

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