When I was kid, my uncle had a grocery store. I remember the smell of the sawdust on the floor.
“When I was kid, my uncle had a grocery store. I remember the smell of the sawdust on the floor.”
The World Motivation
When I was kid, my uncle had a grocery store. I remember the smell of the sawdust on the floor.
“When I was kid, my uncle had a grocery store. I remember the smell of the sawdust on the floor.”
When I was kid, my uncle had a grocery store. I remember the smell of the sawdust on the floor.
It captures a lot of the spirit of the '50s.
I eat pasta every day. It gives me energy. I love the taste.
I recognize them for what they were. 'DeDe Dinah,' 'Ginger Bread,' come on. They're fun things. They're middle of the road. It wasn't really rock and roll. I don't know what it was, but it was something accepted and bought, and people still like them. When I reminiscence on stage, people respond. They really like those songs.
It's a wonderful thing to be stopped by people, to be recognized, to have somebody come up and say, 'Thank you for all the wonderful memories, for everything... ' Those are compliments you can't imagine.
I get homesick driving to the grocery store.
I'm no sexual siren. I see prettier girls than me in the grocery store every day.
My parents were Zionists born in Poland. My father was a rabbi who didn't know much about science and ran a grocery store in the neighborhood with my mother's help.
I go the grocery store every day, or at most every two days.
Ninety percent of the day is working out. Sometimes I get my nails done and go to the grocery store.