To be a socialist is to submit the I to the thou; socialism is sacrificing the individual to the whole.
I look up to my father, because he's very, very experimental in his cuisine, and he puts a lot of love into things. He's the best. To me.
We try not to waste food in general. Because as a meat eater it's just responsible to eat as much of the animal as you can. It's also instilled in my family culture, where it's not even an ethical thing, it's just that all those parts are delicious, too. You eat the ears, you eat the intestines, you eat the livers, the hearts.
I always feel in a funny place when I'm really asked to inform people, so I just try to take the more absurdist route - like, "this is how you could do it, but it's actually turning into a cat now. This might happen at home I guess, but it probably won't. "
Instructional programming is really great. To me, it's very enjoyable to watch a process.
I watched a lot of cooking shows when I was younger on PBS and TLC and those channels. It's a very cool genre of television.
It's very meditative to watch Food Network shows. I mean, you might be taking notes, but you're probably not. It's meditative to watch someone cook, just like it is to watch your mother cook, or anyone cook.
He will apologize, or I'll give him a lesson in swordplay he will not like at all.
If you can get sexual attention and then (or therefore) succeed as a writer - or fill in career blank - that means you're a writer worthy of literary respect?
The thing with film and theater is that you always know the story so you can play certain cues in each scene with the knowledge that you know where the story's going to end and how it's going to go. But on television nobody knows what's going to happen, even the writers.
The man who asks of freedom anything other than itself is born to be a slave.