Living in New Zealand, it's like a different world - it is a different world. It's very, very cool.

New Zealand is a country of thirty thousand million sheep, three million of whom think they are human.

New Zealand is a pretty no-nonsense place to work, like Australia. I mean it doesn't falter to anyone.

My father is an expatriate American; he fell in love with New Zealand in his youth and never went home.

My motivation is being unified heavyweight champion of the world, making New Zealand and my family proud.

I've got some real diehards down in New Zealand; I look after them and make sure they always get tickets.

I think that generally New Zealand is respected for the positions it takes because it thinks them through.

Pete Bethune is a hero in New Zealand. He's a hero worldwide to people who want to see the end of whaling.

Every time we go to New Zealand, it gets harder to leave. Everyone's always treated us like we're at home.

New Zealand is the only country I know well enough to write about. It can sometimes lead to complications.

If Northern Ireland had better weather, it would be like New Zealand. It's an immensely beautiful country.

Lake Taupo is on the north island of New Zealand and in the countryside. I absolutely fell in love with it.

New Zealand, by the way, where I was ambassador, has had two women prime ministers - one from either party.

I'm a Kiwi. I'm from a beach suburb called Takapuna, which is on the north shore of Auckland in New Zealand.

New Zealand is weird. I mean, it does not seem of this earth, not to me. It really is like something made up.

If you're making films in New Zealand, you can't avoid the landscape. It's certainly more handsome than I am.

I've never been to New Zealand before. But one of my role models, Xena, the warrior princess, comes from there.

When I'm not acting, I'm usually sailing or camping or exploring or travelling or spending time in New Zealand.

I'm always going to be a New Zealand fighter. I'm a Kiwi, of course, and I've still got my New Zealand passport.

In the winter, I'm always in Europe. July and September are New Zealand and Chile camps. I'm always on the road.

Bumble is the perfect fit for New Zealand, a country that has always been a world leader when putting women first.

Everybody recommends New Zealand. I really want to learn this haka, the traditional dance - I love it; it's so cool.

After a good training camp, pushing myself, learning new things, I always feel confident coming back to New Zealand.

We have got amazing filmmakers in New Zealand with amazing stories to tell, and I want to keep being a part of that.

New Zealand was one of the most beautiful countries to drive through for the scenery and the vast scale of the place.

I really wanted to write an adventure story, a murder-mystery that was set during the gold-rush years in New Zealand.

I had a good time shooting in New Zealand. I almost bought a home there while I was there, because I loved it so much.

I'll never forget travelling to New Zealand for three months to make the 'Underworld' films - that was pretty special.

I won Formula Four. I went to New Zealand and won the Toyota Racing Series. I won the F3 European championship in 2016.

I am disappointed that the President made the decision to have Ambassador Froman sign the TPP agreement in New Zealand.

I got to dress up in funny clothes and run around New Zealand with a bow and arrow for 18 months, how bad could that be?

I want to get down to the nuts and bolts of what is actually going to change to lift New Zealand's economic performance.

I walked two hours to an audition once and was so sweaty that someone said, 'Oh, you guys from New Zealand don't shower.'

I think it would be impossible not to be an Internet kid, coming from New Zealand, because culturally it's a little barren.

I feel unfinished business with the WBO title because that was my first loss when I went to New Zealand with Joseph Parker.

If the people of New Zealand want to be part of our world, I believe they should hop off their islands, and push 'em closer.

New Zealand's economy may be more immune... from the waves of disruption elsewhere, but I guarantee you, it's not that immune.

I grew up in the New Zealand countryside. We didn't have television until I was 14, so sing-alongs were our only entertainment.

I've been lucky in life, that's for sure, but it all started with being born in the greatest country in the world - New Zealand.

Every rugby player in Australia and New Zealand or wherever they are from wants to play in the World Cup, and I am no different.

The New Zealand sense of humor is tough and realistic. Jokes are not surreal; they are about life and death and tough decisions.

In terms of having views and being prepared to express them, yes, I think New Zealand's had a leadership role in a lot of things.

We aspire to be a government for all New Zealanders and one that will seize the opportunity to build a fairer, better New Zealand.

An interesting thing about New Zealand, you know, literature is that it really didn't begin in any real sense until the 20th century.

I grew up in Newquay and lived close to the ocean for a few years in New Zealand, too. I'm instinctively happy in those surroundings.

When I lived in New Zealand I took my then girlfriend to Tahiti - which is a lot easier to get to from there than it is from England.

The way New Zealand played at the 2015 World Cup changed cricket. The way they went about it epitomised the way they are as a nation.

I grew up watching the 'Muppets.' In New Zealand, the 'Muppets' were as big as anywhere else I think. It was a pretty global phenomenon.

While living in New Zealand, I usually made or found Korean food nearby, so when coming back to Korea it was just like coming back home.

I think it's nice to have New Zealand as a base for me... it's this little island on the bottom of the Earth. It's this nice, quiet place.

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