Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
I had grown up working in a video store, and I'd grown up more with film than I had with theater, so I kind of felt a natural call.
When a regular guy like me starts getting attention, it's natural to want more. I wanted the next video to be bigger than the last.
Films are pushing envelopes in terms of what is horrific, but also on other areas: in video games, in comic books and outside life.
If someone remembers me as a coach, they still call me 'Coach,' but if they know me for the video game, they just call me 'Madden.'
Today's evangelism is just as likely to take place via chat rooms and viral videos as it is in a personal conversation or a sermon.
I could do a video doing my makeup or vlogging my day with friends, and I know half of my comments section will be about my weight.
The best movies now are called 'thrillers.' Because if you use the word 'horror,' people's associations are straight-to-video crap.
My mum used to work in New York in Spike Lee's shop; she did the outfits for the video for P.M. Dawn's 'Set Adrift on Memory Bliss.'
I remember loving 'Braveheart,' and I still do! It was one of those films my family had on video and we watched over and over again.
The downside of videos is that it will put my vision in front of other people, so they might not get the chance to create their own.
I had always wanted to lend my voice to a character. I did a voice for this video game, called 'Fallout 3,' and that was really fun.
I started writing music when I was around twelve. My current record company saw a video of me performing at my school's talent show.
I'm an outdoorsy guy, but I also enjoy the average teenager stuff - video games, movies, hanging with friends. I'm just a normal guy!
My record company had to beg me to stop filmin' music videos in the projects. No matter what the song was about, I had 'em out there.
No. You know what really bugs me about my videos? When they can't figure out what to do, they just have me change clothes five times.
I don't just post a video and then get offline. After uploading, I love to respond to comments, tweets, and messages about the video.
Looking back, [R.E.M.]videos, by in large, have always been art films. I'm thinking of "Losing My Religion." That's a landmark piece.
You used to have to beg and be the busboy to do standup. I got on Community because people saw my videos on YouTube, which were free.
Among other things, I use a Samsung mobile phone, a very bad quality video camera, and an old Olympus with extremely bad Sigma lenses.
A video taped stage performance is just - you know, it's never gonna be the same as it is if you're sitting there live in the theatre.
I am a kid from the '70s, when video games first started coming out, so I definitely have to say I am a video game junkie to this day.
I love vampire stories. That's why I did the movie. Women especially were taken with that movie-even more so when it came out on video.
We want to get to a point where anything you can think of finding that is video related is searchable or recommended to you on YouTube.
Video game fans are like nothing else. You can do so many movies or so many TV things, but video games is where there is just everyone.
I think what television and video games do is reminiscent of drug addiction. There's a measure of reinforcement and a behavioural loop.
I love playing video games. I love listening to music. Just surfing the web. Facebook, Twitter, keeping in touch with people from home.
I like playing video games, so I spend a lot of relaxation doing that, and I live in a big house with a pool, so that is also good fun.
My goal with every show we put on Geek & Sundry is to make it that big of a success, not just within the video but within fandom itself.
I love directing my music videos and writing video treatments, and I think it's all just because I love the visual aspect of it as well.
I would say I know nothing about the music business, in a nice sort of way. I totally forgot I was in that music video. That's so funny.
I thought, 'If I'm going to die, I'm going to videotape it.' So I got out my little video recorder and was taping goodbyes to my family.
I am honored to be a Bond girl and be a part of the Bond legacy, To star in a video game with Connery, the original Bond, is incredible.
There's a common misconception that if I uploaded a 20-minute video that I just pressed 'record' and put it online. It's not that at all.
You can assume all photo and video is constructed as a fiction controlled by the person holding the camera and the person who is editing.
The MTV Video Awards were never about the video, but about the song. Most of the time it was just to glorify people for the wrong reason.
There is a bit of acting involved when you get in front of a camera for a video. Even when you perform onstage, you're putting on a show.
'Star Wars' is something that I've been a fan of since I was a kid - I played all the video games and I grew up reading 'Star Wars' books.
I live my life very Amish-like. Other than video games, I don't think I have a reason for electronics. It's a life that I've always loved.
In video games and animation, you find that the toughest things to make different are the things that aren't words: grunts, groans, gasps.
I was lucky enough to be in the studio with Drake and Kanye before I put 'Freaky Friday' out. I showed them the video before I put it out.
My goal in creating Geek & Sundry was to create a community based around web video, and we've accomplished that, especially on our budget.
I think I can pinpoint the moment that I realized that I enjoyed hip-hop music and it was the video game called Need For Speed Underground.
Depending on the time I get, I do my share of social networking, listen to music, or play a video game. I love watching movies in theatres.
I like making little videos and little records. I've always loved video cameras and four-track cassette recorders, still cameras, anything.
I can now video chat with my grandkids from any corner of the world, listen to music, or order food and have it delivered to my front door.
The video aside, 'P.D.A' is a song about when you really love somebody, you just can't resist wanting to show that out in public sometimes.
I'm rather old-fashioned about this video business. It's all relatively new. We really don't do videos, Fleetwood Mac. We've only done two.
It's amazing what video games have obviously done for not only the industry and for entertainment but for the world and social interactions.
I also make movies that can be seen on a small screen, as I shoot on digital video. Hopefully they can be seen small and can live like that.
I think video is the best market. When the cassette market comes out, if you just do movies that nobody else can do, that'll be the new way.