“I don't know why he [Darren Star] is so good at writing for women. Maybe he just likes women. I'm not quite sure what the magic recipe is, other than he just knows how to entertain an audience, and he knows when to be gooey and sweet, and when to be provocative and naughty.” KnowsWritingStarsAudienceKnow HowMagicSweetLikesRecipesNaughtyProvocativeDarren Author:Sutton Foster
“I only do numbers/acts that excite me, or I connect to personally. I never phone it in. It's about finding the balance between what my audience wants and what I want to give them. That sweet spot in the vendiagram.” WantGivingNumbersAudienceSweetBalanceFindingsPhonesSpots Author:Jinkx Monsoon
“Gays are the best, though - we just did Gay Pride in Long Beach and in Tampa. And they're the best audience. They're so enthusiastic. They come dressed up - it's really fun. They're crazy and I love them. They're sweet as can be. Even my macho husband, he has a great time, too. He's so cool, he doesn't care. He loves them.” LongCareFunAudienceCrazySweetPrideGayHusbandBeachEnthusiasticGreat TimesDressed UpMachoGay PrideHe Doesn't CareLong BeachTampa Author:Pat Benatar
“I love watching audiences scream. I imagine it's the same joy that a director feels who has made a comedy when he or she is sitting at the back of a theater listening to the audience laugh. That sound of laughter is so sweet to a comedy director and that's exactly how a horror film feels when you hear the audience scream.” FeelsMadeFilmJoySoundAudienceLaughingComedyImagineSweetListeningHorrorDirectorsLaughterSittingTheaterScreamHorror Film Author:Leigh Whannell
“You can't have an actor where the audience says, aw, that poor, sweet guy. You got to get somebody who's, like, nondescript in a way or just somebody that looks a little like they should get it. So this is all I learned actually learn from Lucy [Ball].” WayShouldLooksLittlesGuyActorsPoorAudienceSweetBallsLucySweet Guy Author:Garry Marshall
“When I'm asked to define "Southern food," I usually turn that question back to my audience and ask them what they think. I hear responses like fried chicken, catfish, barbecue, collard greens, and sweet potatoes. These are excellent examples, because they are historically grounded. You can trace each dish back to the people who brought these food traditions to the South. Today, these foods are central to the core culinary grammar of the American South.” PeopleThinkingTodayAudienceSweetTraditionResponseExcellentCulinarySouthernCatfish Author:Marcie Cohen Ferris
“Knowledge that is acquired is not like this. Those who have it worry if audiences like it or not. It's a bait for popularity. Disputational knowing wants customers. It has no soul... The only real customer is God. Chew quietly your sweet sugarcane God-Love, and stay playfully childish.” IfsWantRealSoulWorryAudienceKnowingSweetCustomersGod LovePopularityBait Book:Selected poems Source: Selected poems
“Faites de beaux rêves, monsieur," she called as she put out the light. Switters had always loved that expression, "Make fine dreams." In contrast to the English, "Have sweet dreams," the French implied that the sleeper was not a passive spectator, a captive audience, but had some control over and must accept some responsiblity for his or her dreaming. Moreover, a "fine" dream had much wider connotations than a "sweet" one.” DreamLightAcceptingAudienceSweetExpressionFineContrastPassiveSpectatorsCaptivesImpliedConnotationSleepersSweet Dreams Author:Tom Robbins