Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Ama. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Ama Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Freddie Mercury,Steve Maraboli,Jim Butcher,Muriel Barbery,Joyce Carol Oates for you to enjoy and share.
Interview? Oh don't be ridiculous.
Many like to ask the questions; few like to hear the answers.
I ask people impertinent questions. Hopefully turning up pertinent answers.
What do you drink
What do you read
At breakfast
And I know who
You are
A diverse and lively collection, the highest art of the interview.
As critical acclaim and response has built up, every interview I give is a chance to puncture the myth I've created about my work and refine it.
What are you doing at the moment? How does that compare to your competitors? What do you want to achieve? How can you create something people want?
Tonight I'll be interviewing Ken Watanabe, Keisha Castle Hughes, Benecio Del Toro and Djimon Honsou - and yes, those are actors, not caterers.
I was asked a series of questions.
What did you see? Why are there no files in the video archives? How did the assassin escape?
I lied every time.
I will interview bigwigs if I get the chance, but you are seldom surprised by people in power - you've got to get awfully damn close to get anything new.
I've interviewed presidents and royalty, rock stars and movie stars, famous generals and captains of industry; I've had front row seats at Super Bowls, World Series, and Olympic Games; my books have been on best-seller lists, and my marriage is a long-running success.
(W)rite the things you have the most to say about and the things you're afraid of messing up.
And what," he inquired
So Brandon, would you like to take... A POP QUIZ??!!
I go around the room and ask people, 'What do you think?'
People ask me so many questions.
An old Zen rule of thumb is not to answer until one has been asked three times.
I engage my subjects in conversation, patterned after psychiatric questioning, with the aim of discovering something about the reasoning underlying their right but especially their wrong answers.
The only thing I have ever been asked [by a pollster] was the age at which I first indulged in oral sex (which, since it was a Yale Daily News poll, meant kissing).
The only question that really counts, must be thins one: are things getting better or are they getting worse?
I love researching, I love interviewing.
When I sit down to interview people, I don't hold questions and I don't know the answers. They're more like conversations that become lessons.
How are you in the profession of protecting people without knowing who I am? I've been told I have one of the most recognizable faces in the world. (Aiden)
Wow ... just out of curiosity, when you go to bed at night, do you find yourself ousted off the mattress by that ego? (Leta)
Who are you really, behind the avatars you've created for yourself? What are you covering up? What are you afraid of? What are you hoping for? Where are you going?
You know what, I'd done an interview show when I was like 16 or 17. One of my first jobs. I did interviews for this television show in Toronto.
Wake a question. Eat an instant, answer
I used to do a lot of interviews in the early '80s, when my career started, but it came to a point when I decided I didn't want to talk anymore, and people kind of understood that and left me alone.
Sometimes at night I conduct interviews with myself.
What do you want?
I don't know.
What do you want?
I don't know.
What seems to be the problem?
Just leave me alone.
Well," I say, far beyond curious at this point, "I can't wait to hear what you've got to say about this." I
One of the first things I did was interview the President of the United States. Some people work their whole lives and can't interview someone of that stature.
The most important questions - "What are you? Where did you come from?" - had a whole range of answers, starting with "I'm the Disreputable Dog" and "from elsewhere" and occasionally becoming as eloquent as "I'm your Dog" and "You tell me - it was your spell.
I never know what people want to hear when they say that stuff. And it's not like anything about me is interesting or nothing. "Have you always lived in Cambridge?" I nodded. "Do you live alone?" I nodded again. So then he gave up on twenty questions and started telling me about himself.
Asking questions opens up new doors, new opportunities, and new ideas. It helps you think, create, and discover.
Can you answer who you are, without thinking of what someone else might think of this answer?
I will ask questions that are so wide and open they will feel the need to speak for a week. Then from the information that they give to me, I will mould solutions designed specifically for them.
What am I to do?' if I can answer the prior question 'Of what story or stories do I find myself a part?
I tried to use the questions and answers as an armature on which to build a sculpture of genuine conversation.
If you are truly confident about something, you welcome honest questions about it.
I don't mind doing interviews. I don't mind answering thoughtful questions. But I'm not thrilled about answering questions like, 'If you were being mugged, and you had a lightsaber in one pocket and a whip in the other, which would you use?'
I did a radio interview for a station in Connecticut or something, and it was the worst interview ever. It was all yes and no answers.
If someone looks genuinely interested and asks me a deeply personal question, I'll give the answer. I'm too open.
Heterosexual Questionnaire:
- What do you think caused your heterosexuality?
- Is it possible your heterosexuality is just a phase you may grow out of?
- To whom have you disclosed your heterosexuality?
- How did they react?
As a journalist and observer of mankind, I have more questions than answers. Sort of like an inquisitive child, still eager to learn...
Of course I wanted to know. I was a writer. I wanted to know everything.
OK - answer me this: why would anyone want to wear an overcoat in San Francisco in the middle of summer?" Sophie Newman pressed her fingers against the Bluetooth earpiece as she spoke. On
The foundation of data gathering is built on asking questions. Never limit the number of hows, whats, wheres, whens, whys and whos, as you are conducting an investigation. A good researcher knows that there will always be more questions than answers.
I am a victim of introspection.
I like to write books where I get a question on the radio, and I don't have an answer for it.
Questions inspire Curiosity
Please tell me the truth about yourself.
I have questions too, but I'm not very interested in the answers.
Don't Ask Me Nothing About Nothing,
I Just Might Tell You the Truth
I'll be back. And when i am,i promise i'll have answers.
a minute,' said Roger. 'You must ask
Interviewing people is pretty natural for me.
People are generally amazed that I would take an interest in any forum that would require me to stop talking for three hours.
You want me to tell me the truth or do you want me to stroke you?
question authority
I'm a reporter - if I don't interview someone, I don't have much to say, and I definitely can't just sit down and knock out 800 words on any subject you give me.
If I had it to do again, I'd ask more questions and interrupt fewer answers.
So how many women have you visited in their dreams? (Geary)
Is this one of those questions that if I don't answer it correctly, you get angry at me? (Arik)
Tell me with whom you associate, and I will tell you who you are.
I love to ask people questions. I want to know everything about them, even things that may be seemingly socially inappropriate.
In terms of asking questions, I plead guilty. I ask a hell of a lot of questions. That's my job.
I must have interviewed 600 or 700 scientists all around the world.
Ask me a question. Don't say talk about it, ask me a question. I'm not going to talk about it if it isn't a question.
Answer all the questions. Question all the answers.
When I was there, something clicked in my head; I found myself interviewing people, searching out facts and figures. Later on I became much more self-conscious of what I was doing.
I became very interested in the Islamic question, and thought I would try to understand it from the roots, ask very simple questions and somehow make a narrative of that discovery.
I love anything quiz related.
The mortician interviewing the corpses
Do you want to tell the truth, or do you want to tell a story?
I'm myself - knowing I'm doing a documentary and speaking with the people, telling them I have a bed, that I can eat every day, but I would like to speak to you. And they really gave me wonderful answers. We got along very well without trying to make me look like I'm what I'm not.
My biggest thing has always been privacy. With an interview such as this where the questions are about me, I struggle to express myself. I have an immediate answer in my head of what I'd say, but sometimes I feel that it would be too honest. So these wheels of censorship start going around my head.
What question?" I ask, breathless.
"Whether you're as beautiful in the morning as you are during the rest of the day.
I have a reputation for speaking my mind. I like to think my candor and bluntness will give you the answers.
I'm a gangster, and gangsters don't ask questions.
Basically, I'm a really bad interviewer. I love meeting celebrities, but then I get a bit bored. Once you meet them you thing, 'really, what an ordinary person'.
-Write 12 statements describing what you do. -Write 12 statements describing what you sell. -Write 12 statements describing your service. -Write 12 statements why you can do it better or why you are unique.
A question is a pursuit, an invitation to envision and explore a series of possibilities, to struggle and empathize and doubt and believe. The question moves, whereas our sense of what an answer is can often be static, a stopping point.
Well, my head's full of questions My temp'rature's risin' fast Well, I'm lookin' for some answers But I don't know who to ask
Do you answer a question directly?"
"Hard to say. Ah, there, I've done it again
The answers you get depend upon the questions you ask.
People are people, and they want to know about their own experiences.
Advice is sought to confirm a position already taken.
Ah, I don't do interviews, really.
I like chatting with people. If people ask me a direct question, I give them a direct answer and I feel I've always done that with the press.
Insert the biggest, most awkward silence in the history of big awkward silences.
You're not going to answer me? Or do I need to repeat myself for a third time? It's okay. I like to hear myself talk.
The effect of untrue statements on casual conversations is one of my great loves, my great ongoing investigations.
My favorite question is 'What do you do?' I'm like, 'I'm a walking cliche: I'm a model and an actress.'
I said
'i don't know'
because that
had become
my answer
to everything.
I don't make a list of questions. Ever. I think a lot of my interviews are driven by my need to feel connection.
When the press began asking me for interviews, I freaked out. My instinct is to hide.
Truth always leaves a pleasure asking questions.
Inquiry is more important than answers, for it is the questions we ask and the way in which we ask them that defines us.
You want to tell me, and I have no objection to hearing it.
Short questions with long answers, my boy.
I'm really not up for answering any questions that start with how, when, where, why or what.
I don't have to answer. Until you know the question.