A biggest mistake I made when I started doing a talk show was I thought you had to read the books.
“A biggest mistake I made when I started doing a talk show was I thought you had to read the books.”
The World Motivation
A biggest mistake I made when I started doing a talk show was I thought you had to read the books.
“A biggest mistake I made when I started doing a talk show was I thought you had to read the books.”
A biggest mistake I made when I started doing a talk show was I thought you had to read the books.
The very phrase 'Oscar night' used to accelerate my pulse. For one thing - dating myself - it meant Bob Hope. He always had good, strong jokes, that faultless delivery, and always a new joke about his own films' failure - once again - to be honored.
Radio, which was a much better medium than television will ever be, was easy and pleasant to listen to. Your mind filled automatically with images.
In relative youth, we assume we'll remember everything. Someone should urge the young to think otherwise.
I think my biggest mistake was deciding not to go to law school directly after I graduated from college.
The biggest mistake people make about me is that they see me as some sort of god-like figure with a big ego. If I see a button, a T-shirt, that says, 'Yngwie is God,' I just look at it as a complimentary way of people telling me they like me. Although it's very flattering, it doesn't change the way I look at myself.
My biggest mistake was when I started up easyEverything, a chain of Internet cafes. The idea that people would go to a shop to use a computer was revolutionary in 1999. It worked for a while, but cheap technology almost killed it. One silver lining of the problems I faced was that it gave me experience of turnarounds.
I'm human, and we make mistakes. My biggest mistake was that I was running away from something here in New York and I ran into the wrong hands.
All three of my parents - I also had a stepmother - were teachers, and my dad taught high school, and as he always reminded me when I was going to spend some money on something, 'Your mother and I, in the Depression, had to decide whether to spend a dime on a loaf of bread or if we could go to a movie with it.'