I don't get involved in record label politics.
I don't like to label films with a genre.
When I realised I had a facility for humour, I latched on to it, and it gave me confidence and I built my personality around it. So I subconsciously made myself become the funny one so that would be my label rather than the ginger one or the red-faced one.
I have been a political activist most of my life and many groups have attempted to label me as a criminal because of my outspoken beliefs. I am not a criminal and I have never been one.
The concept, the label, is perpetually hiding from us all the nature of the real.
I'm not naive. Sometimes interpretation is more of an art than a science. There are those who would label interpretation absolutely anything a judge might do or, two, the text of a statute or the Constitution. But it seems to me there comes a point where a judge is using his own creativity and purpose and crosses the line between interpreting a text written by somebody else and in a sense creating something new.
The ideal label for me would be this passive being with lots of money, but unfortunately it doesn't really work like that.
If you label me, you negate me?
Hollywood likes to label everyone so you're easier to identify.
Giving a phenomenon a label does not explain it.
What intrigues me is that people kind of naturally want to label or pigeonhole the characters. They want to make it easy for themselves to go, "All right. There's the good guy, there's the bad guy, there's the girl. Okay, I get it now. " But life isn't one-dimensional. The world isn't simply divided into good versus evil. I think we're all capable of both. So any time the hero does something I'm not crazy about, or the bad guy does something I can relate to, I'll find it more interesting.
When we label anyone 'bad', we will have more trouble dealing with him than if we could have settled for a lesser label.
We are what we are. We don't have to define it or label it.
Promoting a record on a major label is like running a minor military campaign.
I am who I am and I don't think you can put a label on it.
I have so many plans! Sometimes it's hard to keep up because at this point it's just been me and the little bit of help my label gives me.
We got on his label, and the Bizarre organization is just going up and up. So we have faith.
I was with PolyGram; that was the big label that I was with for the longest, like 12 years.
I'm myself, not a label.
At an independent label, you have to figure out inventive ways to promote without spending the money.