Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Presenter. 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 Presenter Quotes And Sayings by 96 Authors including Olivia,Montel Williams,Tony Campolo,Franklyn Ajaye,Darren Lacroix for you to enjoy and share.
An actor is an expert at being someone else. A speaker is an expert at being themselves.
I'm a talk-show host, I'm going to be a talk-show host.
A career public speaker is not what I'm called to be. I'm called to be a critic.
Ideally, you want to be in a fifty-fifty power-sharing arrangement with the audience - both of you are there for a mutually enjoyable experience.
The audience wants you present, not perfect.
I look at myself more as a storyteller than a screenwriter, as pretentious as that may sound, but that's what really attracts me to TED Talks. For me, the really effective ones are being presented by expert storytellers.
Was a master of the PowerPoint presentation nearly a century before it existed.
When I go into schools to speak, I am not giving a speech - it's really a one-man show. I call it 'didactic standup.'
I do some broadcasting and speaking as well.
I was hired by the 'Tom Joyner Morning Show' to do commentary that makes people think. I want my audience to feel like they are learning and not being pandered to.
Ben Crenshaws, Ive got a good feeling speech.
The best teacher is an entertainer.
During the first few minutes of your presentation, your job is to assure the audience members that you are not going to waste their time and attention.
I like trying to create a spark through a collaboration between me and the audience.
The best public speakers are those who seem to genuinely enjoy giving a speech. Because they're relaxed, we're relaxed.
A leader these days needs to be a host - one who convenes diversity; who convenes all viewpoints in creative processes where our mutual intelligence can come forth.
I'm not a performer. If they're looking for entertainer-in-chief, I'm probably not the guy.
LECTURER, n. One with his hand in your pocket, his tongue in your ear and his faith in your patience.
Being an entertainer includes knowing how to connect with an audience.
We should just stop calling these things presentations altogether. Everyone gets hung up on that word. Wouldn't it be easier to just call them conversations? That's really what they are.
No orator can top the one who can give good nicknames.
The more strikingly visual your presentation is, the more people will remember it. And more importantly, they will remember you.
I do a lot of talking, playing with the audience, but I don't really know what that's going to be. Somebody kind of feeds me cold. He gives me these kind of cold games that I play with the audience or quizzes that I do with them.
I'm a communicator.
I'm a singer and performer in a hybrid show that's standup, music and audience participation.
I think when you're a TV presenter, you have to have a reason for doing it, and a lot of them have been around a long time and grafted for that. The reason why it works with me on 'The Xtra Factor' is because I was a contestant on it, and I have a relationship with the viewers at home.
I talk to the audience, look into their eyes. I need them and they need me.
I'm the star of stage, screen, and television now, but I'm also available for children's parties and bar mitzvahs.
Presentation literacy isn't an optional extra for the few. It's a core skill for the twenty-first century.
I've actually done events at radio stations where I feel like I've had to give a little talk in behalf of television as a medium.
Hosting a show, even a talk show or a game show, there's so much business you have to conduct. There's so much guiding you have to do.
Patrick thought we should try to put an audience in front of one of the workshops, basically in front of the class and see how the performers rose to having an audience there, because he said, "You know, it's a really interesting test, because sometimes it gets even funnier."
Lecturing is an art. A good lecturer is an artist who understands the art.
the big things that make a good speaker: knowledge of what he's going to talk about and an intense desire to tell it to other people.
It is delivery that makes the orators success.
I'm doing the kind of show that I would want to see.
I really think a good host is just a connector. I'm more traffic cop than star. My job is to get people on and off the program, and hopefully keep the audience entertained.
A good host is someone who really takes care of everyone, from the food to their daily programme. I can't.
Delivering a speech or presentation is like cooking a meal; as long as the chef is good the cuisine doesn't matter.
I came, he said.
Good Lord! If there were an orator-of-the-year award, he would be in dire danger of winning it.
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.
A good orator is pointed and impassioned.
So much interviewing these days is about the presenter - I?m a clever boy, I?m going to be smart with people; or it?s a trivial - how do you like your eggs boiled?
I've never presented. The logistics of that is a challenge.
I don't do much public speaking. I did a lot of stuff for Bones, and then ended up having said yes to a lot of things that kept me on the road for a while for that, but then I pretty much stopped. I'm touring for this book, but when the tour is done, that'll be the end of it.
I like to present something that the people haven't seen or haven't heard before. Otherwise they might as well just stay home and play the record.
The important thing is having genuine regard for your audience.
Andy Andrews is the best speaker I have ever seen.
Oral delivery aims at persuasion and making the listener believe they are converted. Few persons are capable of being convinced the majority allow themselves to be persuaded.
A successful presentation needs to be both buttoned up (orderly) and free-flowing (a conversation). The tension between the two, the fact that both things are happening at once, defines the process.
Don't give a speech. Put on a show.
It's a tremendous honor to be asked to carry a show.
"The Entertainer" He did it all.
Look your audience straight in the eyes, and begin to talk as if every one of them owed you money.
There is interest in a crime-based reality show. With my novels, we are now editing the second book in a series about a defense lawyer whose name is Samantha Brinkman. And I am reviewing speaking engagement opportunities.
I think Ross Noble is the only person that I've seen really storm a stand-up slot at a festival, and that was when he led 3,000 people on a conga out of the tent and across the entire site to a vegetarian food truck.
I've always seen myself as one of those 'show people.' My earliest memories are wanting and needing to entertain people, like a gypsy traveler who goes from place to place, city to city, performing for audiences and reaching people.
I wanted to be a performer, not someone who introduced other performers.
My contributions were many: First clown director, with witty sayings and flashily dressed, now called master of ceremonies.
I'm an orator, a raconteur.
I've been accused of being unambitious, but what I do takes up every minute. I'm executive producer, I'm a writer and the host.
A producer is a saboteur who tries to infiltrate the passivity of viewers and to create impressions that are lasting.
My programme, The Art of Creative Expression, empowers young people with tools to express themselves. We teach photography, art and drama, but it's not just the medium that's important, it's about what you are trying to say.
I want to speak directly to the audience, to say, 'I'm like you - I'm frustrated, I'm not an expert, I don't have a manual on parenting, I make mistakes, I'm selfish too.'
Present to inform, not to impress. If you inform, you will impress.
Know yourself
and know your audience.
I don't know how to do a show not in front of a live audience.
The thing about a good podcast is you have to have a good host. If you don't have a compelling host then you have nothing.
People often ask if I pay my speakers to speak. No I don't. If you are able to explain the benefits of the virtual summit to the speaker (which we address in chapter 5) then it will be easy for you to get the caliber of speakers you want.
One famous movie executive who shall remain nameless, exposed himself to me in his office. 'Mr X,' I said, 'I thought you were a producer not an exhibitor'.
comedic playwright.
A master of improvised speech and improvised policies.
I was a university professor, I could talk on and on and on. Give me a podium and you have to drag me off with a hook.
I'm not going to name some of my colleagues who are very well-known for their television presentation, but they wouldn't know new information or how to report a story if it came up and bit them.
A good talker, even more than a good orator, implies a good audience.
When you stand on the stage you must have a sense that you are addressing the whole world, and that what you say is so important the whole world must listen.
Treat your audience like poets and geniuses and they'll have the chance to become them.
When you're standing in front of an audience like this that is so enthusiastic and so much behind you, it is very hard to give a bad speech. Even a bad speech sounds good in a convention hall like this.
No matter what you do, if you're on a stage constantly speaking to people, you need to make sure that you have something to say. You need to make sure you're fed in whatever profession you're doing.
I'm always interested in audience interaction. Not so much aggressive audience interaction - I'm genuinely interested in how people see things.
On stage, I'm me. I'm a husband, I'm a dad, I'm a guy, I'm a mess - but I am a cohesive thing that you recognize as one human entity saying these things that he generally believes.
When you are doing stand-up comedy, you are the writer, producer, director, sometimes bouncer.
I do not know why anyone would host an awards show. No matter how unbelievably well you do at it, the only thing that can happen is you get asked again to host an awards show.
Forget the audience, make what you want to see
Presenting differs from training. Typically, presenting involves one-way communication; training is multi-directional and participatory.
Every communication has as its goal to take the audience from where they are at the start of your presentation, which is Point A, and move them to your objective, which is Point B. Recognizing
I never work with an audience - I can't do this. The process depends on the highest degree of nervous concentration.
On my show 'One on One', I interview leaders from around the world - in politics, business, art. My other show, 'Her Village', is more like 'The View'.
Inspiring communicators always expect a lot from their listeners.
We have an excellent list of speakers, but the spark will be provided by the crowd to turn talk into action. The Iraq occupation and the government's bumbling effort in New Orleans, has people wanting to act.
Presenting the Oscars was the most nerve-racking job I have ever done in show business. It's very much a live show: they have comedy writers waiting in the wings, and as you come off between presentations, they hand you an appropriate gag to tell.
The producer is at the center of entertainment. The producer is being forgotten, and producers must seize the center of activity.
Chin held high, Miss Ohio beamed at an imagined crowd. "I want to be a motivational speaker."
"What are you going to motivate people to do?"
Smile still in place, she cut her eyes at Adina. "You know. Motivational ... stuff.
I do a public access show with puppets. Puppets called actors, TV and movie stars.
Swami Vivekananda: The genuine orator exercises a sort of hypnotism over his audience. I have listened to many orators, Indian, English and American; but Keshub Chunder Sen is easily the greatest of all.
When I present or speak, I write the slides myself. And regarding time, I would like to be able to publish more than I do.
My show is an anti-show and the audience have to want to listen. I'm sitting down, there's only one of me, I don't talk much to the audience and it is very quiet. I wouldn't be able to do that kind of show if people didn't know me and my material.
We do seminars, sometimes, for 7,000 people. These are people, predominantly women, who are seeking, who want to know more, who want to improve the quality of their lives, who want to find themselves.
Creator: A comedian whose audience is afraid to laugh.
I'm a storyteller, I'm an actor, an entertainer.