What I've noticed about celebrities is, if they are really successful, they're more down-to-earth.
I don't like talking to celebrities.
I'm not bothered by the paparazzi and I don't feel hemmed in, I've never felt that. My youth, mind you, there wasn't quite the same attention to celebrities as there is now, but I've never felt that.
Now it seems like people want to do damage to young celebrities. They want to find them doing bad things. They encourage them.
My dad told me at the very beginning of my career, basically, "If you're gonna have a megaphone, you're gonna need to use it to do some kind of good. " He has always been aggravated by any kind of celebrities that don't have any charities or love or passion or something they're trying to help.
I don't make films about celebrities, are not interested in celebrities. I don't make biographies at all.
I had this question asked to me recently when I was buying food for my wife and brother in law and I would like to ask it to other people: Why is it that most celebrities pay with cash as opposed to credit card? Is it so that they are not recognized right away and want to be more unassuming?
There are athletes and celebrities that are out there and they Twitter and they constantly try to drum up press because they're narcissists.
The only things that interested me were sports, girls, adventures, celebrities - in short, life.
Being brought up very religious, I have a fear of people that look to idol gods. But we are idols and we're all gods, so to speak, and I think that celebrities should acknowledge their responsibility, because we are in a position to help.
What gets me is when celebrities aren't allowed to have an opinion on anything political. There's the whole 'Shut up and sing' thing.
Bigfoot loves celebrities. You just have to bring celebrities that Bigfoot loves. It would probably be just gorgeous women.
Celebrities have to get their cars washed just like everybody else.
[Trudeau and Trump] have certain things in common: they both are celebrities. Both use social media in a very big way. Both scored a big upset.
When you start becoming a pop star, you think, Hold on a second, maybe my life is different now - maybe all these people that I thought of as celebrities are going to be normal, and when I walk into a room I'm going to be really cool and so is everyone else. But that's not what happens at all - I was awkward, and then I just retreated from any social engagement for about a year.
People generally like to subscribe to celebrities.
I think celebrities suck.
I developed a deep sadness for celebrities, a pity that they often are caught in a plastic world that runs too hard and too fast, and that many times that world means destroyed relationships with everyone they know and love.
There is no fact-checking on tertiary celebrities. You can say whatever you'd like, and it will just rise up again.
You walk a fine line when you have a performance at a show just as you do with having celebrities attend a show - you never want the attention to be drawn too far away from the clothing.