Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Paparazzi. 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 Paparazzi Quotes And Sayings by 94 Authors including Heath Ledger,Elizabeth Olsen,Heather Mills,Katherine Jenkins,Henry Rollins for you to enjoy and share.
But the paparazzi are quite malicious and vocal and really rude, ... And they camped outside of my house, so I started throwing eggs at them, lobbing them at rocks next to them.
No, I wouldn't want the paparazzi ever following me in my life.
What did the paparazzi do to Diana? They chased her and they killed her.
At the weekend, one of the paparazzi left their lunch box filled with half-eaten pasta salad on my doorstep: it was like a little warning, you know? 'We have been here.'
I'm not like paparazzi. I never force myself on anyone. I always ask, and some places offer money. And so I try and get these photos to give you, the viewer, a real look at what I was seeing.
If an ordinary person parks outside another ordinary person's house for a week, it's considered stalking. If, however, that person is considered newsworthy, it's perfectly legal for paparazzi to do the same thing.
I always try to be nice to the paparazzi because finally, maybe one day, they won't ask for me, and I will regret it.
I remember that even my first impression of Italian cinema was pictures by paparazzi because my mom was reading all of these trash magazines with paparazzo pictures.
You can't control the paparazzi. But if you go to Coachella you're going to get photographed. Whereas if you're at home, walking down the street you probably won't. It's something I've learnt to navigate my way around but I try to keep my private life private.
I have a hotline to the tabloids. When I get up in the morning, I call the Star, and the last thing at night, I call them. I want them to have the inside track.
We don't have paparazzi following you in Sweden.
I tell you, the paparazzi would not be sitting outside if they realized I was the most boring person in Hollywood.
I feel sorry for the young people today. I think there's too much paparazzi and not enough protection.
I don't really want to find myself face-to-face with 10,000 paparazzi. I just want to be comfortable.
These days, with 'American Idol' and all the other reality shows, young people become famous overnight, and that can be very difficult to handle, the way photographers follow you around and study your every move.
I'm intensely private, and I've openly shown annoyance at the paparazzi.
Some girls love to go to the airport and have 50 paparazzi on them. I go to the airport and have a mental breakdown.
But I don't want to be out there anymore; I don't want people asking me about my health issues, about my kids. I choose not to be a public paparazzi girl on purpose.
Now it was as if everybody had become their own fan. Everybody was their own paparazzi.
One has to be suspicious of anyone who seeks the limelight.
You have to assume that everything you do is public knowledge. Everything. Because now everyone is a reporter. Everyone is a photographer.
The incentive for digging up gossip has become so great that people will break the law for the opportunity to take that picture. Then it crosses the line into invasion of privacy. The thing that's really bad about it, though, is that the tabloids don't tell the truth.
When you have the paparazzi hiding in the bushes outside your home, the only thing you can control is how you respond publicly.
I suppose if the offending paparazzi was wearing a hoodie and I shot him, it would all blow over.
Since I was 18, I've been under orders from magazines and newspapers - chiefly The New York Times and Rolling Stone - to step into the lives of musicians, actors, and artists, and somehow find out who they really are underneath the mask they present to the public. But I didn't always succeed.
I get photographers hiding in my bushes. We're way past autographs. We're into being stalked and followed.
When I'm surfing, I'm sure not thinking about the paparazzi. I guess if they start getting on floaties and coming out there in the water, then I might be a little upset.
I don't have paparazzi following me. Because I'm a human character, it's different. The vampires get a lot of attention, and then the werewolves, and then the humans. It hasn't really changed that much for me.
What self-respecting male wanted a job being photographed?
People, photographers, people in the press can sometimes be inappropriate.
Magnum photographers were meant to go out as a crusade ... to places like famine and war and ... I went out and went round the corner to the local supermarket because this to me is the front line.
Press agent - a man who hitches his braggin' to a star.
Back in the 1980s, the 'News of the World' had specialised in digging into the privacy of criminals. In the 1990s, enriched by the excavation of Princess Diana's volatile life, they had widened their work to mine the activities of any celebrity, any public figure.
I've been ... chased by paparazzi, and they run lights, and they chase you and harass you the whole time. It happens all over the world, and it has certainly gotten worse. You don't know what it's like being chased by them.
Camera-Phones are at the root of the Citizen-Journalism revolution.
I never knew my titties was bigger than Pamela So paparazzi flickin be flickin their camera
Fame is drag. The paparazzi culture is more pervasive than it used to be. On the positive side, it's nice not to have to worry about bills.
'TMZ' took the illusion of privacy away. Now the paranoid star just assumes someone is always there. Decoy cars and false itineraries are floated to throw 'TMZ' off the scent.
I'm not Elvis. I don't get chased by paparazzi.
The first time I went to Taiwan, there were cameras, paparazzi, TV stations outside my hotel twenty-four hours a day nonstop.
I'm not the Queen. I'm not a huge superstar; I don't get paparazzi around me.
Im a B-list celebrity trying to give it an honest look. They see me do actual work ... I try to be the viewer with a microphone.
I'm not bothered by the paparazzi and I don't feel hemmed in, I've never felt that. My youth, mind you, there wasn't quite the same attention to celebrities as there is now, but I've never felt that.
The paparazzi stuff is a little weird. I used to leave the house in my pajamas. I can't do that anymore, but I'm not complaining!
I think that the camera loves peopke who ... loathe the camera (Bono)
One should not google oneself. My mother lets me know when I'm being followed by paparazzi.
I hate complaining about paparazzi, I hate complaining about being recognised, because if I ultimately didn't want to be an actor or in the public eye, I would quit doing what I do. That's not the reason I do it, but I love the work so much that it's worth it.
I like photographing the people I love, the people I admire, the famous, and especially the infamous. My last infamous subject was the extreme right wing French politician Jean-Marie Le Pen.
I don't want a gang of shouting, arguing, law-breaking photographers to camp out everywhere we are, all day every day, to continue traumatizing my kids,
Well no, I think we won't have that problem but as far as paparazzi I'm speaking, I will deal with that.
It's been a strange [summer] ... I was sent by a magazine to photograph famous photographers ... Of course, I included myself.
I hope we don't see no paparazzi today. Because I'm still getting acquainted with these jogging pants I threw on. Like, 'That's not my statement!'
I've been left alone, even by the paparazzi, because what sells is sex and scandal. Absent that, they really don't have much interest in you. I'm still married, still working, still happy.
In every photographer there is something of a stroller.
Being hunted, paparazzi-style , doesn't appeal to me.
...the ravenous monsters men called reporters; sub-human vermin who feed off misery and created it wherever they went.
I guess people recognize me, but I'm not a household name. Two out of every five people who come up to me know my name. The one thing I don't want is to be followed by paparazzi.
People tracking your life and photographing you anywhere you go, that can make you crazy.
The beauty about living in Atlanta is that there aren't too many paparazzi here; you can just relax. And that really works for me and my children.
What woman wants a camera following around her naked butt?
Photographers deal in things which are continually vanishing and when they have vanished there is no contrivance on earth which can make them come back again.
I'm at that great level where fans will stop and say 'hi,' which I love, but the paparazzi don't care, which is incredible.
A lot of journalists like to suck up to celebrities, and then as soon as they're a safe distance away at their computers, they take shots. But that's the way society has become, especially in pop culture.
I think I've ignored it so much so that when the paparazzi are following me I really don't see them. You don't see them anymore.
I think there is a shadow network where everybody has infiltrated in terms of hotel concierges, restaurants, will tip off journalists or paparazzi, the airlines, everywhere.
Over the past 10 years of being famous, my relationship with the camera has not been a pleasant one.
In 15 years or something
I like the idea of just one paparazzo coming out and trying to get a picture and I just beat the s- out of him. I mean
out of nowhere
when my picture's not even worth ... and I've spent all my money, so you can't sue me!
Life ain't no rehearsal, the cameras always rolling.
When you have a magazine like 'Vogue,' you know a lot of kids are going to follow your pictures.
I got followed by the paparazzi because they thought I was Shannyn Sossamon.
Reporters. Honestly. What an exhausting profession, to be professionally trained to be relentless.
Reporters ... most were carrion who fed on human tragedy.
But you know, I have a pretty good relationship with the press and the paparazzi. It's just when they step over the line that, you know, enough's enough.
Photographers are always imposing
I'm sorry you're so unhappy as a person that you feel the need to say things that you would never understand [to a paparazzi]
You can't win. The annoying thing is that you can't attack them, but you can't defend yourself. The best thing you could possibly do is punch a paparazzi and give them their big payday.
I am simply the most conspicuous part of a large, thoroughly dedicated and professional staff that extends from just behind these cameras, across this country and around the world, in too many instances, in places of grave danger and personal hardship. They're family to me.
It's quite true that what I am aiming at, even when I take portraits, is to get a scandalous picture. I would love to be a paparazzo.
I'm kind of a twisted social documentary photographer.
There's such big pressure on people who are incredibly famous, on those who have people sitting outside their front door and taking photos every time they move.
Today there are paparazzi out, I'm doing a day of press, I'm in a hotel, I've just been on Radio 1. But when I'm in my day-to-day life people don't know who I am and I'm left to my own devices.
There are times when you see how ridiculous is this life, how ludicrous it is, you know, leaving your house every morning and being followed by paparazzi.
Of course I don't like the fact that my wife goes to the supermarket and there are photographers. But I realise that the press attention is the same wherever you go.
I never care about myself out in public when I get the paparazzi swarming me.
I refuse to put make-up on just because the paparazzi are on my doorstep. I find it morally wrong.
My mother emails me stuff about when she finds a paparazzi photo and they're like, his hair is out of control.
It's the tabloids, with their intense commercial need to get scoops to bring in readers, that run a regime of fear, where reporters are bullied, shouted at. That's where things go wrong.
I don't trust valets, waiters - nobody. I don't waste my time anymore trying to figure out who leaks things to the press.
I don't look at paparazzi photos. And most of my friends don't want to be photographed, so they walk four feet to the side. If you see a photo of me laughing, that's why - because my friends don't want to walk with me.
I've never had paparazzi follow me and I rarely get recognised. I dress like a tramp when I'm not working. My hairdresser calls me the Romanian window cleaner. That's just the way I am.
I'm always having to get rid of reporters.
Hollywood wants press, any kind of press.
In France we have a law which doesn't allow the press to publish a photo that you didn't approve. It lets the paparazzi take the picture, but if they publish this picture, you have the choice to sue the newspaper. So me, I always sued them.
Some people call me a publicity hound.
I hate that tabloid idea of anybody who is famous having to forfeit their privacy.
People get a little sidelined thinking that fame and fortune is going to bring them happiness, peace and contentment in their lives. Everyone thinks they want to be famous until the paparazzi are in their face, and then they're asking, 'Just give me some privacy.'
Everybody has a smartphone; everyone is a reporter.
I get into all sorts of trouble with my publicists and with newspapers because I won't do photographs.
I hate publicists and publicity. But I love the people.
was letting the cameras