(136 quotes found)
“[Frazier soaked it all up like a sponge. When they arrived in Manila it was the same story. Ali poured scorn on his opponent. Humiliated him. Joe had the heart of a lion but verbally he was out of his depth when Ali got going. One time, as fight day approached, Ali spotted Frazier on a hotel balcony, grabbed a security guard's gun and fired some rounds at him. Everybody knew it wasn't live ammo but it still startled the hell out of Joe.] Go back in your hole, Gorilla, ... You gonna scare the people! Come out again and I'm gonna kill ya before time!”
Muhammad Ali
“If you don't want your dog to have bad breath, do what I do: Pour a little Lavoris in the toilet.”
Jay Leno
“[In the losing Miami locker room there were some players trying to pour saltwater over the Jets' victory, particularly on Chad Pennington .] The guy cannot get the ball down the field, ... I don't remember any great throws. It was more things we didn't do than things [Pennington] did.”
Chad Pennington
“Marketers understand the tremendous publicity and marketing potential surrounding the Oscars, and the pour substantial amounts of money into making an impact during the awards.”
Chad Kaydo
“If a person wants to limit how much they consume, it's better if you pour into a tall, skinny glass. If as a host you want to limit what people drink, you better use tall, skinny glasses. You will be less likely to pour too much.”
Brian Wansink
“We should not pour muck on ourselves.”
Leonid Brezhnev
“It had to be pure and dust-free -- it pours like water at times in the piece -- and we brought it in over the last year, 56 bags a week, special-ordered through local hardware stores. It fills the stage!”
Crystal Brewe
“If you're not watching what you pour on or put into your food, you can easily add 500 calories per day without even realizing it.”
D. Milton Stokes
“That probably overstates the impact, just think of the army of people pouring into that region, and you see people spreading out across the country and getting jobs; it won't continue, I don't think those bottlenecks and shortages will continue. The broader concern is we have crude oil over $60 a barrel, which is the price even before Katrina was named, and that will have long-term effects on the economy, and I think that's a distinction that should be made.”
Dana Johnson
“Unless it's really pouring bad, unless field conditions are terrible, we keep going. It's just tough on men and women and equipment. I think farming is the most humbling of professions. On any given day, I can experience any given emotion known to man.”
Dale Huss