Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I come to Comic-Con in San Diego because this is where those fans are - those to whom I owe the longevity of my career.
One of the reasons I moved to San Francisco was the weather. And then I realized that I really don't like being outside.
When I was a prosecutor in San Francisco I would get advice on trying cases from public defenders and defense attorneys.
San Francisco is really fun and liberal, and it's my kind of politics. It's like being Jewish in front of Jewish people.
I wish the city of San Francisco, bastion of liberalism, were more innovative when it comes to how to spread the wealth.
San Francisco is a great startup community that you shouldn't even try to model yourself after because it's just special.
I surfed Dana Point, San Clemente, and of course Huntington Beach. Every morning, you could find me at the hot water pipe.
I'm from Oakland and San Francisco, so I feel like the Pacific Northwest starts there and goes north - so, it's home to me.
In college, I stopped doing pre-med and went into theater, and then I moved to San Francisco and lived there for five years.
After I finished 'Center Stage,' I went back to San Francisco, and I danced for seven seasons with the San Francisco Ballet.
In Positano, I like the San Pietro Hotel, which is run by a friend whose family has owned the hotel for more than 100 years.
San Francisco is a mad city - inhabited for the most part by perfectly insane people whose women are of a remarkable beauty.
My world was small growing up. I never really left the three-mile radius of my tiny neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley.
I grew up in San Diego with immigrant parents, before the food blogs, before this kind of celebrity chef culture we know now.
I was homeless and I was in San Diego and I started singing in a local coffee shop and people started coming to hear me sing.
I don't think the Lakers could control Tony Parker's ability to get into the paint, so his health is the key for San Antonio.
If you turn on ABC 7 in the morning San Francisco, you'll see them using an iPad with Waze on it, and actually talking about.
I grew up in West Philly, and I took an acting class at Temple University there. Then, after school, I moved to San Francisco.
I kind of enjoy just hanging back and relaxing, sort of the San Diego, Southern California vibe, whatever you want to call it.
I want to give every victim of every crime in San Francisco the right to participate in restorative justice if they choose to.
I walked away from pro football and a $2.9 million contract with the San Francisco 49ers because I didn't want to develop CTE.
I lived in San Pedro, California, which is, you know, on the west side of California, and it's where many, many Japanese lived.
Setting San Francisco on a course to sustainability will require all of us to work in concert on a number of ambitious efforts.
This stadium is the history of football, the most important arena in Italy. Stepping into San Siro always has an effect on you.
I took a leave of absence for a year to coach at San Francisco State under Vic Rowen, fully intending to go back to high school.
I've been interested in China ever since I was a kid. When I was a kid, I grew up in San Francisco about a mile from China Beach.
I think we need to show people that they have a place in the Democratic Party, whether they come from San Francisco or St. Louis.
I worked at the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco, lived there for three years, and lived in Baltimore for 12 years.
As a child, we visited the San Juan Islands during the summer. Kayaking, big family meals, playing on the beach - great memories!
The bridge to Coronado Island off San Diego was built because the mob had a hotel there and needed a way to get people out there.
I was born in San Antonio, TX, but moved to Lakewood, CO in elementary school. Then, I moved to Valley Center, CA in high school.
My father is Jaime Rodriguez from San Antonio, Texas, and I've got one whole half of my family that's Mexican through and through.
The thing you gotta understand about L.A. is that everything is suburbia. Los Angeles isn't set up like San Francisco or New York.
We did a year of Uber in San Francisco before we went to a second city. You get those processes down, then you really get started.
My mom was a waitress, and my dad was a plumber who worked for the City of San Clemente fixing mains breaks, so not too glamorous.
San Anita is a beautiful track. It's not too far from my house in L.A., and it's a beautiful place to go and watch the horses run.
I grew up in Vancouver, which is a pretty liberal, gay Mecca of the West coast. There's San Francisco, and then there's Vancouver.
Police work was fascinating, and I didn't imagine that acting was something a kid from San Mateo, California, could really pursue.
Cities like New York have already followed San Francisco and have started similar organizations like sfCiti; New York has TECH NYC.
The best tattooists are in San Francisco, and they're kind of like my family now. I'm always excited to come back to San Francisco.
I've been lucky to conduct the very best orchestras in the world: New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Berlin, the London Philharmonic.
The nature of the South is changing faster than the stereotypes are. Much of the South now looks like San Jose. Is it still southern?
I need to surf - surf and yoga. Whenever I'm in L.A., I go down to San Diego to surf for the weekend, and I always come back perfect.
My grandmother lives with my mother in a gorgeous house in the San Fernando Valley. I am afforded these luxuries, and I'm very young.
I lived in San Francisco and did the Stegner fellowship for two years, and it was amazing. From fall 2008 to spring 2010, I was there.
If we do high-speed rail, the governor has to be intelligent and invest the dollars at the 'bookends' - San Francisco and Los Angeles.
I'm working class, my family was working class, and we have struggled the same way our neighbors here in San Francisco have struggled.
I'm a huge fan of San Francisco. And I was out here for a couple years in the mid-'90s when I was a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford.
Walking the streets of San Francisco can be a frightening, demoralizing, even an unhealthy experience for residents and tourists alike.
We need a coordinated, citywide approach to make sure that everyone in San Francisco is sheltered and has access to the care they need.