A good leader needs to have a compass in his head and a bar of steel in his heart.
I was no longer troubled when he pulled out a machete in a crowded bar, tried to pick up schoolgirls, or threatened to scalp us, then rip off our heads and scoop out our brains.
If you're middle aged. . . where're you going to go to meet someone? You're not going to go to a bar, you're not going to go to a night club; and there are the museums.
What will die with me the day I die? What pathetic or frail image will be lost to the world? The voice of Macedonio Fernandez, the image of a bay horse in a vacant lot on the corner of Sarrano and Charcas, a bar of sulfur in the drawer of a mahogany desk?
It doesn't really exist, this Frat Pack. We run into each other on occasions and we all like each other's films, I guess, but there isn't some big funny restaurant or bar where we all hang out. At least, if there is, they haven't invited me.
Never mind about 1066 William the Conqueror, 1087 William the Second. Such things are not going to affect one?s life. . . but 1932 the Mars Bar and 1936 Maltesers and 1937 the Kit Kat - these dates are milestones in history and should be seared into the memory of every child in the country.
I spilt paint all over the bar, they almost fired me.
I'm not going to get drunk at a bar. There are younger girls who look up to me. So I do my best not to stray too far.
I learned a lot about lead; you don't have to blow your cookies in the first bar. It is much harder to be simple that to be complicated during solos.
I bought an energy bar, and as I ate it a great weariness came over me.
There are so many little places I want to play, sometimes weird places I think would be fun to play. . . a bar that's half full.
When people in my generation started to write, we did not actually have much of a movie industry, much of a theater scene, much of a television industry or other creative outlets. But we had a lot of aspiring writers. All that has changed. We now have a movie industry, television industry and lots of theater. But we have retained a large contingent of writers and a dedicated readership. The larger number of people in society who value writing, the larger number of good writers will be produced. That's my belief. It raises the bar.
I meditate, I do yoga and I have a lot of friends who are healers. . . . . And if none of that works, I go by a chocolate bar and a bottle of cognac.
Where I play, the greens always break toward the bar.
I did all sorts of jobs after drama school - working in a bar, as a teaching assistant. I probably learned as much from them as I did at drama school.
How much of our literature, our political life, our friendships and love affairs, depend on being able to talk peacefully in a bar!
I think if you sing a song for the first time to your mom and dad, or your friends, and they go, 'That's pretty cool'-if you're playing at the local bar somewhere, or the coffee shop, singing songs, or if you have a gig somewhere and you're singing your own songs, I think that's some version of making it. . . . It's not just about having commercial success; it's about having a great life.
Hmm. . . Death by mini bar, how glamorous.
People are more likely to help other people who look exactly like them. They will hang out at the bar and on the golf course with them.
Another show I really enjoyed working on was Raising The Bar. I did four or five episodes of that show.