I'm not a huge movie buff and I don't watch that much television, but I've spent most of my life playing video games of one kind or another.

It seems like every time I agree to work with a video game company they go out of business. I stopped because I was starting to feel guilty.

I like 'Glee' because I love all the singing. It's like an hour-long music video. Those kids are so talented, and I love 'The Glee Project'.

It is more difficult to manipulate with film than, for instance, video. The problem with video is that it gives you a thousand possibilities.

Today a celebrity sex video isn't a stigma that requires penance and smarm removal; it's a branding device, a platform enhancer, a show reel.

I can get a script and go, "Well, I'd rather do stand-up." I don't hold movies in higher regard. I love making videos and posting. I love TV.

Films are fantastic - they are one of the peaks of human narrative. But I'm sorry to break the news to the movie industry: So is a video game.

Our kids are in a little band, and they like to play video games, and my wife and I do our best to live a low-key, non-Hollywood kind of life.

I have friends who come to the Australia Zoo, and it's just, instead of playing video games, we get to hug and kiss a giraffe or walk a tiger.

Now everybody's got a video camera, so go make videos with your friends or see if you can get a part in a film school thing that's being done.

That's the difference between even the best video game and what's going on in books. Video games can inspire a reaction, but not the emotions.

I wouldn't mind someone lobbing hand grenades at me, but having to reset the timer on the video recorder puts me into a blood-spitting frenzy.

I'm a mama's boy because everything I do is with respect to my mother. I won't do a movie or a video that would bring disrespect to my mother.

I'd do entire music videos in my bedroom, where I used to stand in front of my television memorizing the moves to Michael Jackson's 'Beat It.'

When we get to what happens when we die, we don't have any video footage. So let's at least be honest that we are speculating, because we are.

Perhaps at some time in the future, when you ask a friend to come up and look at your etchings, you will plug in your collection of video art.

He found it both sad and fascinating that only through an artificial universe of video images could she establish contact with the real world.

I think I was a pretty ordinary teenager, boring, just played video games with my mates and went to the pub, stuff like that. Just very normal.

The biggest thing is having a son. I got attached to him. Seeing him periodically is hard. Watching him grow up on pictures and videos is hard.

I play video games a lot... I love to read... I enjoy spending time with my husband and daughter, who are my most favorite people in the world.

It is just completely disgraceful that someone can go to the extent of morphing my face onto someone else's body to create a sensational video.

If I hear a song like "Time After Time." I'm sittin' there lookin' at video and Cindy Lauper comes on singin' this song. I said, "God damnnnnn!"

The commercial music video industry is very hard to break into, and until you break in, that first job is the hardest thing in the world to get.

I learned sweep picking from a variety of sources. One was a Frank Gambale instructional video, but he executes his sweeps a little differently.

But when I found out that Jamey Rodemeyer had made an It Gets Better video only months before taking his own life, I felt indescribable despair.

I started studying filmmakers, and I would say early on the ones that really inspired me the most were like the field magicians of music videos.

There is such a flood of TV shows, movies, video games, comics, and books, but somehow 'Avatar' is still being discovered by each new generation.

Video looks like reality, it's more immediate, it has a verite surface to it. Film has this liquid kind of surface, feels like something made up.

From wearable sensors to video game treatments, everyone seems to be looking to technology as the next wave of innovation for mental health care.

I'm a believer that players are good self-directors, and I think one thing that's good about video games is they can direct their own experience.

While films are a very visual and emotional artistic medium, video games take it one step further into the realm of a unique personal experience.

It's not so much a question of whether we've shot it through 35mm or digital video; what is important is whether the audience accepts it as real.

To me, getting to do music and videos, you work on a character. Being onstage is acting; you get to be larger than life and larger than yourself.

I don't covet images or belongings. My television set and video are rented, any paintings aren't worth a fortune, and money is of little interest.

There has got to be a lot of unreleased video out there, live footage and whatnot. There's always going to be something extra for the Pantera fan.

Video artists being at the low end of the totem pole economically, one of the ways we survive is to go around showing work and giving these talks.

Playing a character in a video game is different to other performances because your character can't lead the audience of players in one direction.

I don't have many expenses as a college student (mostly food) so I'm able to put advertising revenue right back into the production of new videos.

When you see yourself on video, you and your friends spending time on vacation, and they take a video, and then you see it, it's really disturbing.

'Papo & Yo' is an incredibly emotional experience. It shows that video games can talk about anything, even the most personal and sensitive matters.

Video games are like a religion; you want to get people tattooing your little logo on their body so they’ll get somebody else interested in it too.

When Jack White called and wanted me to do a video and play mandolin with The Raconteurs, I didn't know anything about The Raconteurs at that time.

Since Bobby Brown, I was the first one to be in my video taking my shirt off and showing the 6-pack and 8-pack. Other people weren't cut like that.

At 13 you're not even thinking about that, you know? I was just playing for fun and uploading videos on YouTube because I wanted to show my family.

There are so many people I would love to meet and say thank you for posting their videos, because hearing their stories and everything comforted me.

My first official music video for "Who Am I." It's getting crazy traffic and a lot of hype. I got sponsored by a company called MATIX because of it.

There are 23 bootlegs now. Robert Plant came home with a bootleg video and said 'Tori, you've made it. You're nothing until you've been bootlegged.'

When I started editing on my home computer, I said to myself, 'Well, I could be at home studying for a class or I could be at home editing a video.'

There's no real organised body, ... so through the internet people have spread their videos, spread photos, and spread word of a new urban movement.

We spent zero dollars on advertising. We just had a YouTube video and that was it. We did a quarter million dollars in revenue, just in three weeks.

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