There's nothing that beats proving you're funny by making a funny thing, and right now there are huge outlets for that, with You Tube and all the other stuff online.
The real threat to reading isn’t the time we spend hanging out, it’s the time we spend online.
You know, when I first started making online videos, there were a lot of filmmakers I befriended who were doing it too.
There's a ton of good art and music and writing out there offline among a ton of trash, and the same goes with what's online.
I wouldn't say anyone is 100% honest online. I don't see how it's even possible.
Don't live online, live in real time. I'm just astonished how many people live online.
I think the online space can be a free space, in that we are not reliant online on the publishing industry or readers who just don't get it.
The actual process of travel I really like, because that time on planes and in airports makes me feel like I'm moving around like a ghost. There's a certain aspect of justifiable downtime. I really feel like being online is so pervasive now.
I like to build places online where readers can have productive conversations about books.
As each generation comes up that doesn't have the habits for paper it's just easier and cheaper to get your stuff online. You know, people go to what they're used to. Certainly our generation, you know, we'll always want to have a magazine in our hands. We like that, but millennials didn't see the value in that necessarily.
You're not going to change anyone's mind. Especially online.
Don't take this the wrong way but I care more and I'm a better online friend than you. I also spend way to much time online.
One of the things I really like about doing work online, and the thing I like about the work I'm doing now, is that I get to meet feminists all the time and I get to read new feminists every day on the blogosphere.
In 1998, Artnet was the site that convinced me that if my writing didn't exist online, it didn't exist at all. It showed me criticism's future.
We're in a society, I think, where everyone thinks it's so cool to work, it's so cool to be online, so cool to be super busy. I think it's super cool not to be busy.
One of the things it was obvious you could do with an online store is have a much more complete selection.
I hate shopping at stores, online, anywhere.
People's arrest tapes, mug shots, everything is online.
In this age of Twitter and Snark every misstep gets posted online in twelve seconds.
I want to close the online loophole and the gun show loophole.
You should never read online comments if you want to keep thoughts above the belt.
I think there was a petition online to get me involved in Doctor Who. Im not a Doctor Who fanatic, but I am a Steven Moffat fanatic.
Once I learned, I went online and ordered every romance novel I could find. They're fairy tales for grown-ups.
No one sells records anymore. It's all about touring. It's all greatest hits records and box sets. And even those don't sell. People just go online.
'm very conscious about how the viewing situation [of the Biennale] creates a situation for the viewer who feels pressured. I don't really have any concept of who looks at my work online. I don't think it's viewed that much online.