Zitat des Tages über Paparazzi:
I wasn't being followed around by paparazzi all the time. I was able to be a kid and spend that time with my family and not grow up too quickly.
I'm not always going to like the paparazzi photos, but I'm still going to go to lunch with my boyfriend.
People get a little sidelined thinking that fame and fortune is going to bring them happiness, peace and contentment in their lives. Everyone thinks they want to be famous until the paparazzi are in their face, and then they're asking, 'Just give me some privacy.'
Sometimes I think they should set up an asylum for people like that... a whole slew of paparazzi defending their positions.
I can't go to war with paparazzi.
I don't know how people do it these days - paparazzi and that kind of thing. That's something I can't even imagine.
But you know, I have a pretty good relationship with the press and the paparazzi. It's just when they step over the line that, you know, enough's enough.
We were living in California, and it just wasn't conducive for the lifestyle that we wanted with kids. Los Angeles is tricky to get around, there's paparazzi to deal with, and I had this feeling that I just wanted to move back to Australia.
I'm not bothered by the paparazzi and I don't feel hemmed in, I've never felt that. My youth, mind you, there wasn't quite the same attention to celebrities as there is now, but I've never felt that.
I've been... chased by paparazzi, and they run lights, and they chase you and harass you the whole time. It happens all over the world, and it has certainly gotten worse. You don't know what it's like being chased by them.
My grandmother, whom we call Biel, thinks it's very unbecoming of me not to smile for the paparazzi. So every time I see them, I think, 'Smile for Biel!'
The problem with paparazzi is that it makes you question your boundaries, like, how do I say, 'That's enough guys?'
I tell you, the paparazzi would not be sitting outside if they realized I was the most boring person in Hollywood.
I got followed by the paparazzi because they thought I was Shannyn Sossamon.
There's a continuity between what I care about in any form: I care about it in my music, in article-writing, in how I dress, in how I live, in my relationships, in how I navigate paparazzi, how I decorate my home. There's such a continuity between everything that I don't really care what form it shows up in.
Ask me a question about paparazzi, and I get so heated. And I feel so bad for young kids of celebrities. My nieces and nephews get yelled at, and I'm like, 'You are yelling at a 2-year-old.'
It's funny - nowadays people that are famous get chased by paparazzi. They have this fame, but they don't have the money to hide from it.
I'm definitely a ham for the paparazzi.
Any partying I did, I did at home. I didn't want to be in the spotlight... There's an easy way to get away from the paparazzi; they're not that difficult to hide from and you don't need to go out for coffee every five minutes.
I don't get celebrities not understanding that the paparazzi are doing their job.
You can't complain about the pressures, the paparazzi, the madness. Because that is the job. I've always understood that's the deal.
The airport paparazzi kind of wigs me out a little bit.
Now I feel I have an unspoken deal with the paparazzi: 'I won't do anything publicly interesting if you agree not to follow me.'
I refuse to put make-up on just because the paparazzi are on my doorstep. I find it morally wrong.
We don't have paparazzi following you in Sweden.
I never care about myself out in public when I get the paparazzi swarming me.
The great thing about Dallas is there's no paparazzi.
Because when you go out, and you have fun, basically you're performing for these tabloid outlets and the paparazzi. And when you perform and create this story, they're chuffed - they get excited, they capture it, and they put it out.
I'm very friendly or whatever, but I would hardly say that I'm that cookie-cutter. I don't live in L.A. or New York. I live in Texas, and I go to hole-in-the-wall bars, so there's no paparazzi there.
The only thing I think I can be accused of about paparazzi is being really naive. I didn't think about it coming along with the job and I never, during my three years at drama school, fantasized about one bit of it.
Paparazzi need more flattering lenses.
My first trip to Japan, in 1998, began with an enormous crowd of Japanese paparazzi and television crews, all waiting for me to clear customs in Tokyo (a first-time experience for this wine critic). Over the next five days, the attention never waned.
Well no, I think we won't have that problem but as far as paparazzi I'm speaking, I will deal with that.
When you have the paparazzi hiding in the bushes outside your home, the only thing you can control is how you respond publicly.
Anaheim is not like Los Angeles, where there are more people and more paparazzi. You don't have that in Anaheim. It's more laid-back.
I don't court paparazzi. I definitely don't like that part of it.