In the age of television, image becomes more important than substance.
“In the age of television, image becomes more important than substance.”
— S. I. Hayakawa · Age
The World Motivation
In the age of television, image becomes more important than substance.
“In the age of television, image becomes more important than substance.”
— S. I. Hayakawa · Age
In the age of television, image becomes more important than substance.
So I will say it with relish. Give me a hamburger but hold the lawsuit.
You guys are both saying the same thing. The only reason you're arguing is because you're using different words.
If you see in any given situation only what everybody else can see, you can be said to be so much a representative of your culture that you are a victim of it.
In a very real sense, people who have read good literature have lived more than people who cannot or will not read.
At 19, everything is possible and tomorrow looks friendly.
I played street football from the age of seven and later went into the varzea. Sometimes I'd play as many as three or four matches a day: I couldn't get enough of it. It'd get to the point when my muscles would cramp up.
Old age is no place for sissies.
When I was a kid, there was unhappiness in my family - was dealt with partly by escaping to television. And from a very early age, for whatever reason, I became scornful and resistant to and angry about that. And some other time in my life, I realized that there's a lot I loved in television.
There are now grandmothers and grandfathers coming to see us because they are of that age, they grew up in the '50s and '60s and they bring their sons and their daughters to hear the songs they heard when they were young.