My mother emails me stuff about when she finds a paparazzi photo and they're like, his hair is out of control.

That is the biggest form of bullying ever, the paparazzi. Printing lies, making accusations, it's just bullying.

I've actually stopped tinting my windows because the paparazzi look for trucks and cars with supertinted windows.

In Spain you can't do anything. If you drive, everyone recognises you; at a restaurant you have paparazzi outside.

I tell you, the paparazzi would not be sitting outside if they realized I was the most boring person in Hollywood.

The problem with paparazzi is that it makes you question your boundaries, like, how do I say, 'That's enough guys?'

I don't know how people do it these days - paparazzi and that kind of thing. That's something I can't even imagine.

Some girls love to go to the airport and have 50 paparazzi on them. I go to the airport and have a mental breakdown.

I always try to be nice to the paparazzi because finally, maybe one day, they won't ask for me, and I will regret it.

I'm afraid of buying a house or anything, 'cause if there's one paparazzi outside for one day, then they'll never leave.

I don't ever like to see paparazzi much, but I have seen them, and I guess anyone who's seen them knows how scary they are.

I'm at that great level where fans will stop and say 'hi,' which I love, but the paparazzi don't care, which is incredible.

Sometimes I think they should set up an asylum for people like that... a whole slew of paparazzi defending their positions.

The paparazzi is kind of crazy here in L.A., but it's nothing like it is in London. They are animals over there, it's insane.

The first time I went to Taiwan, there were cameras, paparazzi, TV stations outside my hotel twenty-four hours a day nonstop.

The dark side is when you are with family and friends, and you have paparazzi screaming at you - that's been hard to deal with.

When you have the paparazzi hiding in the bushes outside your home, the only thing you can control is how you respond publicly.

When The Cranberries got really big in Ireland, it became difficult for me to be there with all the photographers and paparazzi.

I think I've ignored it so much so that when the paparazzi are following me I really don't see them. You don't see them anymore.

Now I feel I have an unspoken deal with the paparazzi: 'I won't do anything publicly interesting if you agree not to follow me.'

A lot of paparazzi wanted to be real photographers but they failed, and they did that instead, and it's not right; it's stalking.

When I'm by myself, I'm really cool and nice to everyone, but then the whole paparazzi thing? If you see me with my kids, I change.

I don't live in the spotlight, and I don't live my life in front of the paparazzi. I live very comfortably and quietly as possible.

You can't complain about the pressures, the paparazzi, the madness. Because that is the job. I've always understood that's the deal.

I can't handle the paparazzi. They're everywhere. One of them was in a dumpster trying to take my photo the other day. It was crazy!

Sometimes I just want to be left alone and be a normal kid for, like, five minutes. That's tough when the paparazzi are chasing you.

When you’re in a position to be paparazzi-ed just walking down the street, you’d look a little daft if you were smiling all the time.

Anaheim is not like Los Angeles, where there are more people and more paparazzi. You don't have that in Anaheim. It's more laid-back.

It's harder to live the way I live. There are certain places I like to shop and eat where I simply don't go. The paparazzi follow you.

Paparazzi will try to get the most controversial picture of you in a compromising position because that's how they're going to sell it.

What I've learned is that you really don't need to be a celebrity or have money or have the paparazzi following you around to be famous.

It's funny - nowadays people that are famous get chased by paparazzi. They have this fame, but they don't have the money to hide from it.

I've spent years when I've not been in the limelight at all and I'm perfectly happy living my life without being swooped on by paparazzi.

The difference now is that the paparazzi get paid fortunes. That's what motivates people; it's about the money, sadly, at anyone's expense.

You can seek out a lot of publicity if you want, depending on your choices. A lot of major celebrities don't have paparazzi following them.

When I first started playing, the only time you knew you would get photographed was if the paparazzi were outside a smart restaurant in town.

I wasn't being followed around by paparazzi all the time. I was able to be a kid and spend that time with my family and not grow up too quickly.

The cult of celebrity in the '60s and '70s was really more reserved for movie stars or high socialites. Paparazzi didn't care about Janis Joplin.

The beauty about living in Atlanta is that there aren't too many paparazzi here; you can just relax. And that really works for me and my children.

I think when people think about California, they think about straight Hollywood, that Hollywood glamour, whole bunch of flashes, so much paparazzi.

I get recognized now and again, but the paparazzi aren't following me around. I get to go to the shop and buy bread and milk, and no one worries me.

We try never to have pictures of our children in the magazines, because there are strange people out there. But the paparazzi try to steal pictures.

I like to sneak in under the radar. I don't have any paparazzi following me or have to deal with that stuff. I'm never in the tabloids. I prefer that.

I've never had that much trouble with the paparazzi, but I don't run the same circles that a lot of these people that do get hounded by the paparazzi.

I don't want to be the actor who's followed by paparazzi, you know? I would like to just do good work and have that work be respected and acknowledged.

My grandmother, whom we call Biel, thinks it's very unbecoming of me not to smile for the paparazzi. So every time I see them, I think, 'Smile for Biel!'

But you know, I have a pretty good relationship with the press and the paparazzi. It's just when they step over the line that, you know, enough's enough.

There are times when you see how ridiculous is this life, how ludicrous it is, you know, leaving your house every morning and being followed by paparazzi.

It was scary. It's a public beach that we're filming on, so there was tons of paparazzi, especially when Pamela would be working. It was absolutely mayhem.

I'm sure it's 10 times easier to handle the criticism and the paparazzi and all of that stuff with somebody by your side that you can share some of that with.

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