I love visual gags and gimmicks; I love them.
I consider myself more of a visual comedian than a physical one.
The Western memory museum is now mostly a visual one.
My favorite films, I would put my answering machine up to the television set and hit record. I'd tape my favorite movies and then I could go back and listen to them again. I only had the soundtrack, I didn't have the visuals. But I think it made me really pay attention to the soundtracks.
Everything for me is visual. That's just how my head works.
If I don't see a music video to it while writing it, I just scrap it immediately. It's very visual.
Music is so visual now.
I was an artistic dilettante for a while, in photography and collage and the visual arts.
Even if you close your eyes, you'll still hear Donald Trump sniffing. Linguists might call [these visuals] paralinguistics, every form of information including facial gestures and facial features. Obviously these things get scrutinized in tremendous detail, so that a cough can be of outsized importance. [But] that's all part of the package.
Some of the most remarkable and profound worship encounters I've experienced have happened in churches with no production, no lighting, no exciting visuals or amplification, sometimes with not even a single musical instrument.
For me, photography must be visual, rather than intellectual and ideological.
I'm a very visual person and I love the ability to tell stories through images.
Do not slip into writing for the mind and the mind alone. In other words, do not play merely upon our ability to reason. And do not focus only on visuals. Write for the whole person.
I'm a great believer in visual distinctions.
After I script the movie, I have to storyboard it out, I have to budget it, and I have to understand if I can afford all those visual effects or not.
The lies are in the dialogue, the truth is in the visuals.
Music has always been a part of me and art in general. I love visual art as well.
We are limited by our visual, physical senses; yet from the Scriptures we can readily conclude that heaven is indeed not distant at all. It is nearby.
Fiction becomes visual by becoming verbal
I'm very fond of the strictly visual cartoons I did when I was breaking in in the 1970's. Over time I migrated to a more verbal approach.