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I met Robert Crumb in 1962; he lived in Cleveland for a while. I took a look at his stuff. Crumb was doing stuff beyond what other writers and artists were doing. It was a step beyond Mad.
I always believed that I’d return to Cleveland and finish my career there.
There were a lot of times in the Cleveland and Chicago organizations when I did something, they wanted to make sure the camera was there. I really didn't want that. This isn't something my parents told me to do. Or something my family told me to do. Or do things for publicity. I do this on my own. I do this from my heart.
I came from Canada when I was about 10 years old, and our family settled in Cleveland, Ohio.
And then 45 years later, as I finished my career in the great city of Cleveland, that was another great way to end my career, going to the World Series.
I want an explosion the size of Cleveland.
You lose in the Finals, they're all disappointing. Doesn't matter if I'm playing in Miami, Cleveland or on Mars. You lose the Finals, it's disappointing.
In the Cleveland area, I have been instrumental in helping to save or create thousands of jobs. People know me there as a person who gets involved.
The only good thing about playing in Cleveland is you don't have to make road trips there.
[I]n 1938, Superman appeared. He had been mailed to the offices of National Periodical Publications from Cleveland, by a couple of Jewish boys who had imbued him with the powers of a hundred men, of a distant world, and of the full measure of their bespectacled adolescent hopefulness and desperation.
In Cleveland there is legislation moving forward to ban people from wearing pants that fit too low. However, there is lots of opposition from the plumber' union.
I used to go to the Cleveland Comedy Club all the time. If there was a comic I liked, I'd go see him two or three times that week. Bob Saget was one of those guys.
I've been out on the book tour going through Pittsburgh, St Louis and Cleveland, Dayton and Orlando, Raleigh-Durham. I sign many books for people.
I got a goal, and it's a huge goal, and that's to bring an NBA championship here to Cleveland, and I won't stop until I get it.
The difference with Cleveland is that the racial tension was not a casual taste of it. It was outlandish.
He was a great president in his first term; in his second term, he wasn't the same Grover Cleveland he was to begin with. . . . Cleveland reestablished the presidency by being not only a chief executive but a leader.
There's huge satisfaction in that, but I've got to credit all the doctors and trainers in Cleveland.
Yeah, I think there are a lot of things about Cleveland that I miss. Los Angeles is a funny place to live.
I started in theatre. I was at Cleveland and I went to London for the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's birth.