“It's amazing being a member of perhaps the last analog generation - being born in the late '40s, growing up in the '50s and '60s, when it was still a very analog world. And in New Orleans those days, the country was just next door, as it were. You didn't have to travel miles and miles to get out in the woods. There's tons of fishing, obviously, in New Orleans, and tons of hunting. That was part of the cycle of life, to get fresh meat from the butcher or go duck hunting and get it yourself. It wasn't malicious or insensitive. It was just there, and you used it.” WorldStillsCountryLastsUsedNextBornGrowing UpGrowingGenerationsDoorsMembersLateWoodsMilesMeatFishingCyclesHuntingDucksNew OrleansButchersMaliciousInsensitiveAnalogCycle Of LifeDuck Hunting Author:John Larroquette
“I do think that the imagination you create yourself when you're reading, to create the tone and the accent of the world, is an individual accomplishment that someone is imposing upon you by listening to them read it. Because you're listening to their interpretation, and their emphasis would probably be different from the one that your brain makes while you're reading it.” ThinkingWorldDifferentReadingIndividualImaginationBrainListeningAccomplishmentToneInterpretationAccentsEmphasisImposing Author:John Larroquette
“Thinking fascinates me, and I probably spend too much time in my mind. My wife says that my perfect world is to be in the Suburban driving, with her next to me and the boys in the back seat and complete silence for two thousand miles.” ThinkingWorldMindTwoNextPerfectSilenceBoysToo MuchWifeThousandMy WifeDrivingMilesSeatsA Perfect WorldThousand Miles Author:John Larroquette