Fetch Movie Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Fetch Movie. Here they are! All 19 of them:

There's no way to tell if Ryan Gosling is actually a feminist; feminism is a serious business, and something you have to come to on your own terms. He hasn't actually said anything in this book. But he is charming, talented, and intelligent; he has said some things in the media that can be construed as feminist. He loves his mom and takes ballet. He has nice things to say about the women he dates. It's not too far-fetched, right?
Danielle Henderson (Feminist Ryan Gosling: Feminist Theory (as Imagined) from Your Favorite Sensitive Movie Dude)
What makes movie stars’ opinions so important, anyway? These are people with a bloated sense of self-worth, little accountability, and practically no original thought. Without a Hollywood scriptwriter, most of them couldn’t talk their way out of a telemarketing call. When they shoot a scene for a movie, they get twenty-one takes to get it right. How many takes do you get in your life? Real people get one shot. If we make a mistake, we must live with it. Not so for the stars. They get pass after pass and then send their assistants to fetch grande lattes for them.
Jeanine Pirro (Liars, Leakers, and Liberals: The Case Against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy)
What are you doing?” “Coming to pick you up in a little bit,” he said. I loved it when he took charge. It made my heart skip a beat, made me feel flushed and excited and thrilled. After four years with J, I was sick and tired of the surfer mentality. Laid-back, I’d discovered, was no longer something I wanted in a man. And when it came to his affection for me, Marlboro Man was anything but that. “I’ll be there at five.” Yes, sir. Anything you say, sir. I’ll be ready. With bells on. I started getting ready at three. I showered, shaved, powdered, perfumed, brushed, curled, and primped for two whole hours--throwing on a light pink shirt and my favorite jeans--all in an effort to appear as if I’d simply thrown myself together at the last minute. It worked. “Man,” Marlboro Man said when I opened the door. “You look great.” I couldn’t focus very long on his compliment, though--I was way too distracted by the way he looked. God, he was gorgeous. At a time of year when most people are still milky white, his long days of working cattle had afforded him a beautiful, golden, late-spring tan. And his typical denim button-down shirts had been replaced by a more fitted dark gray polo, the kind of shirt that perfectly emphasizes biceps born not from working out in a gym, but from tough, gritty, hands-on labor. And his prematurely gray hair, very short, was just the icing on the cake. I could eat this man with a spoon. “You do, too,” I replied, trying to will away my spiking hormones. He opened the door to his white diesel pickup, and I climbed right in. I didn’t even ask him where we were going; I didn’t even care. But when we turned west on the highway and headed out of town, I knew exactly where he was taking me: to his ranch…to his turf…to his home on the range. Though I didn’t expect or require a ride from him, I secretly loved that he drove over an hour to fetch me. It was a throwback to a different time, a burst of chivalry and courtship in this very modern world. As we drove we talked and talked--about our friends, about our families, about movies and books and horses and cattle.
Ree Drummond (The Pioneer Woman: Black Heels to Tractor Wheels)
There are two Santa Monicas. One is a fairy tale of spangled gowns and improbable breasts and faces from the tabloids, of big money and fixed noses and strung-out voice teachers and heiresses on skateboards and even bigger big money; of movie stars you thought were dead and look dead; of terraced apartment buildings cascading down perilous yellow bluffs toward the sea; of Olympic swimmers and hip-hop hit men and impresarios of salvation and twenty-six-year-old agents backing out of deals in the lounge bar at Shutters; of yoga masters and street magicians; of porn kings and fast cars and microdosing prophets and shuck-and-jive evangelists and tattooed tycoons and considerably bigger big money; of Sudanese busboys with capped teeth and eight-by-ten glossies in their back pockets; of Ivy League panhandlers, teenage has-beens, home-run kinds in diamonds and fur coats, daughters of sultans, sons of felons, widows of the silver screen, and the kind of meaningless big money that has forgotten what money is. There is that. But start at the pier and head southeast until you reach a neighborhood of tidy, more or less identical stucco houses separated by fourteen feet of scorched grass. In a number of these homes, you will find families, or the descendants of families, who have lived here since the mid-to-late forties. For them, upscale was a Chevy in the driveway. Mom mixed up Kool-Aid at ten cents a gallon, Pop pushed used cars at a dealership off Wilshire Boulevard, Junior had a paper route, Sis did some weekend babysitting. Nowadays, the house Pop bought for $37,000 will fetch just under two million in a sluggish market, but as Pop loved to say, secretly proud "What kind of house do you buy with the profit? A pup tent? A toolshed in Laguna?
Tim O'Brien (America Fantastica)
He was disgracefully handsome, the flight attendant decided, with the kind of face you saw in old black-and-white Hollywood movies. And, oh, that British accent! Even better. Nadia loved British accents. He was so courteous, such a gentleman, that she wondered if he might somehow be connected to the royal family. Just thinking about it made her pizda tingle. "Then perhaps I can fetch you a blanket." "A glass of wine, if you have it." "Of course, sir. Red or white?" "Always red." Safe watched the shapely bottom swing pertly away toward the galley. With blue baby-doll eyes and wide pouty lips, she was an adolescent wet dream of a sexy stewardess, long-legged and busty, extravagantly curvy in all the right places under the snug red Aeroflot uniform.
Helen Maryles Shankman (The Color of Light)
He was disgracefully handsome, the flight attendant decided, with the kind of face you saw in old black-and-white Hollywood movies. And, oh, that British accent! Even better. Nadia loved British accents. He was so courteous, such a gentleman, that she wondered if he might somehow be connected to the royal family. Just thinking about it made her pizda tingle. "Then perhaps I can fetch you a blanket." "A glass of wine, if you have it." "Of course, sir. Red or white?" "Always red." Rafe watched the shapely bottom swing pertly away toward the galley. With blue baby-doll eyes and wide pouty lips, she was an adolescent wet dream of a sexy stewardess, long-legged and busty, extravagantly curvy in all the right places under the snug red Aeroflot uniform.
Helen Maryles Shankman (The Color of Light)
That would be nice. This is a new suit.” “You always have a new suit. I don’t think I’ve ever seen you in the same suit twice.” “Of course you have. A couple of years ago. When I was in town working on a movie and you were my valet.” “You were a valet?” says Janet. “No. I was his bodyguard.” “Still,” says Samael. “I remember you fetching me clothes.” “I also stabbed you and left you for dead. Remember that?” “Well, I didn’t say you were a good valet.
Richard Kadrey (King Bullet (Sandman Slim #12))
Girls were responding to these films’ darker aspects, analysts said. “Today’s teen girls want to see movies that speak to them more on their level, rather than giving them a sanitized view of teen life,” Paul Dergarabedian, president of Exhibitor Relations, a box office tracking firm, told USA Today. “The paradigm is shifting toward going after the teen audience in a more realistic way with edgier portrayals, things that today’s teens can relate to.
Jennifer Keishin Armstrong (So Fetch: The Making of Mean Girls (And Why We're Still So Obsessed With It) – The First Authoritative Book on the Teen Comedy That Defined a Generation)
K-culture has the potential to be a powerful diplomatic tool. I'm convinced that the late Korean president Kim Daejung will be proven right in his prediction that Haley, not politics will bring north and south together. North Korean black marketers are literally risking their lives to smuggle in copies of South Korean videos and dramas. In 2009, a North Korean defector to the south told Time magazine that in North Korea, bootleg American movies fetched 35 cents on the black market, whereas South Korean movies cost $3.75, because the punishment for being caught with the latter is much more severe.
Euny Hong (The Birth of Korean Cool: How One Nation is Conquering the World Through Pop Culture)
She normally would have been home at three in the afternoon, but her husband had called to say he had an emergency at work and she’d have to fetch Brady and Lily from school. It was no bother, really—there was still plenty of time to finish up in the house before starting dinner. He’d been so lovely and apologetic about having to disrupt her schedule. Mel really could be the best, most charming man, and she was going to make it up to him; she’d already decided that. She’d cook his favorite dish for dinner: liver and onions, served with a nice pinot noir she already had out on the counter. Then a family night, a movie on the couch with the kids. Maybe that new superhero movie the kids were clamoring to see, though Mel was careful about what they watched.
Rachel Caine (Stillhouse Lake (Stillhouse Lake, #1))
Well, this is underwhelming,” said Sophia, looking around. “Where’s the confetti cannon?” “And the balloon drop?” added Erin. We all looked up at the ceiling. “Oh, there’s my pencil.” Sophia pointed to half a NO. 2 lodged in a ceiling tile. “Confetti and a balloon drop are messy. The mayor’s obviously bringing the keys to the city,” said Lucy. “Guys, I think this is it,” said Leila, gesturing around us with a frown. “So much for my chocolate fountain.” I didn’t respond. All their ideas were a little far-fetched. Clearly, Mrs. Clark was taking us on a shopping spree. My friends and I sat and watched other students file in. Each one glanced around, too, with disappointed expressions. When Mrs. Clark finally appeared, she turned off the lights and pressed a button to lower the projector screen at the front of the room. “Sweet! Movie time in coding club,” Bradley said.
Jo Whittemore (Lights, Music, Code! (Girls Who Code, #3))
Then the cops come... That to me means all of the movie with all of this absurdity culminates to an absurdity that is so grounded it's actually real. It shows you that all of these other choices are not that crazy anymore. No matter whether or not the audience bought any of the decisions I've made--they could've viewed the brain transplants or the hypnotizing as ridiculous and fantastical--they have to acknowledge that the cop car showing up is a real threat to Chris's life. And maybe that makes them go back and reevaluate whether the other decisions were that far-fetched after all.
Jordan Peele (Get Out: The Complete Annotated Screenplay)
Self-Righteous Script Readers What makes movie stars’ opinions so important, anyway? These are people with a bloated sense of self-worth, little accountability, and practically no original thought. Without a Hollywood scriptwriter, most of them couldn’t talk their way out of a telemarketing call. When they shoot a scene for a movie, they get twenty-one takes to get it right. How many takes do you get in your life? Real people get one shot. If we make a mistake, we must live with it. Not so for the stars. They get pass after pass and then send their assistants to fetch grande lattes for them. My own daughter Kiki took acting lessons for almost a decade—singing, dancing, theater. When she was sixteen, she told me she didn’t want to act anymore. Stunned, I asked her why. “I want the words that come out of my mouth to be mine,” she said. That from a sixteen-year-old! So, to all the actors and fellow haters out there: get a life. Real people—not actors, not ideologues—elected Donald Trump president. Real people. The forgotten men and women who live normal, hardworking lives and who, by the way, buy the movie tickets that pay for your pampered, cushy lives. All of this would be bad enough if the product they were putting out was any good, but it’s not. Hollywood is dead. If it’s not dead, it’s on a respirator. Look at the numbers.
Jeanine Pirro (Liars, Leakers, and Liberals: The Case Against the Anti-Trump Conspiracy)
Monday is the most important day because you want to look your best—it sets the tone for the rest of the week. So wearing something like sweats on a Monday is like going to church and screaming ‘I hate Jesus!’ when you walk in the door. Friday is downtime. When we hang out that night, we wear sweats, watch movies, and talk about what bothered us during the week.” This results in the movie’s legendary edict “On Wednesdays, we wear pink.
Jennifer Keishin Armstrong (So Fetch: The Making of Mean Girls (And Why We're Still So Obsessed With It) – The First Authoritative Book on the Teen Comedy That Defined a Generation)
She hadn’t realized this might be a detriment in the case of a movie about and for teen girls. The script, as Fey first turned it in, was clearly R-rated, which would eliminate most of its target audience. It needed a PG-13 rating to succeed at the box office.
Jennifer Keishin Armstrong (So Fetch: The Making of Mean Girls (And Why We're Still So Obsessed With It) – The First Authoritative Book on the Teen Comedy That Defined a Generation)
Guys, I’m not in labor. I just moved too quickly, OK?’’ Aisling said. ‘‘Take your hands off her,’’ Drake said in a low voice that sounded very much like a growl. Jim sucked in its breath, sitting up to watch. ‘‘I’m not hurting her,’’ Gabriel answered, bending over her belly as he continued to gently prod her. ‘‘I’m simply trying to ascertain if she’s in labor or not. Aisling, is the pain sharp or dull?’’ The door opened, and Gabriel’s two bodyguards, Tipene and Maata, entered. Behind them came one of Drake’s men, a thick-necked, redheaded man named István. The latter picked up on Gabriel’s question. ‘‘Aisling is in pain? She is having the baby?’’ ‘‘I should examine you more fully,’’ Gabriel said, smiling at Aisling as he took her hand. ‘‘Do not worry, Aisling. I have delivered many dragons over the centuries. My mother is a very good midwifeand has taught me well.’’ Drake snatched up her other hand. ‘‘You will not examine my mate any further! We have an excellent green-dragon midwife who is attending her. Now, get away from her before I have you removed!’’ Aisling looked perfectly fine to me. She rolled her eyes, casting a pleading look skyward. I might not have experience in this area, but it was clear to me that she was not in labor. I shot a glare at Gabriel, grinding my teeth just a little at the stupidity of what was normally such a bright man, my fingers itching to pry his hand from Aisling’s. ‘‘I will tell you once more—remove your hands from her!’’ Drake’s voice got even more menacing. ‘‘Gabriel, I think she would know if she was in labor,’’ I said, nudging the dragon of mydreams a bit more forcefully. ‘‘A voice of reason at last,’’ Aisling said, giving me a smile. ‘‘Guys, I’m not—’’ István turned in the doorway and bellowed out of it. ‘‘Pál! Call the midwife! Aisling is in labor! I will call Nora and Rene. They wish to be here, yes? Should I boil water?’’ He evidently asked the last bit of Maata, who, as the female member of Gabriel’s attendants, was obviously expected to know the answer. Maata looked surprised. ‘‘Would it make you feel better to boil water?’’ she asked. István nodded his head vigorously. ‘‘It is done, is it not? The boiling of water? It is important. I saw it in a movie.’’ ‘‘Then, by all means, boil water,’’ she answered. István nodded again, announced to the room in general, ‘‘I boil water!’’ and rushed out to suit action to word. Pál, the second of Drake’s two redheaded bodyguards, slammed into István as he was leaving, scattering apologies as he dashed into the room, a cell phone in his hand. ‘‘The midwife’s phone is busy!’’ he said, offering the phone to Drake as proof. ‘‘Oh, man, if there’s going to be baby juice and blood and guck, I’m getting out of here,’’ Jim said, sidling around the clutch of people that surrounded Aisling. ‘‘I’m going to Amelie’s to be with Cecile. Someone tell me when it’s all over.’’ ‘‘Hello, can anyone hear me? I’m not in labor!’’ Aisling said. ‘‘What should I do?’’ Pál asked Drake, shaking the phone at him. ‘‘It is busy! Busy! How can it be busy?’’ A little wisp of smoke escaped Drake’s nose as he glared at the phone. ‘‘It should not be busy. Go fetch her. There is no business she can have as important as this.’’ Pál didn’t stop to answer; he just bolted from the room. ‘‘Oh, for the love of Pete! I’m not in pain! And unless dragons have some sort ofpainless labor, a notion your mother vehemently says is false, then I’m not having the baby,’’ Aisling said, but was drowned out by Maata asking if Gabriel needed help at the same time Tipene offered to take overmidwife phone duty.
Katie MacAlister (Up In Smoke (Silver Dragons, #2))
How do you log into Amazon TV? Logging into call at +1-833-959-2762 Amazon TV is an essential step for accessing Prime Video, personalized recommendations, watchlists, and digital purchases. Whether you’re using a smart TV, streaming device, or Fire TV Stick, the process is straightforward when you know where to look. call at +1-833-959-2762 This step-by-step guide explains how to log in, what you need before you begin, how to troubleshoot login issues, and how to ensure your account syncs properly across all devices. Step 1: Prepare Your Amazon Account Before logging into Amazon call at +1-833-959-2762 TV, make sure you already have an Amazon account. If you don’t, you’ll need to create one at Amazoncom on a computer or smartphone. Here’s what you need ready: call at +1-833-959-2762 Your Amazon email address or mobile number Your Amazon password Access to your email or phone in case Amazon needs to send a verification code You cannot log into Amazon TV call at +1-833-959-2762 without completing your Amazon account setup first. Step 2: Turn On Your TV and Open the Amazon App Depending on your device, call at +1-833-959-2762 you will log in through the Amazon Prime Video app or the Amazon Shopping login page built into the TV interface. Here’s how: On Smart TVs (Samsung, LG, Sony, TCL, Vizio) Turn on your TV. Go to the Apps section. Look for Prime Video. Open the app. Select Sign In. On Streaming Devices (Roku, Apple TV, Google TV) Go to your device’s home screen. call at +1-833-959-2762 Open the Prime Video app. Choose Sign In. On Amazon Fire TV or Fire TV Stick Plug in and start your Fire TV device. Select Have an Amazon account? Sign in. call at +1-833-959-2762 Follow the login instructions. Fire TV devices may already show a login screen call at +1-833-959-2762 immediately during the initial setup. Step 3: Choose Your Login Method Amazon typically provides two ways to log in on a TV: Method 1: Log in using your Amazon email and password This is the most common method: call at +1-833-959-2762 Select Sign in with your account. Use the on-screen keyboard to enter your email/phone. Enter your Amazon password. Click Sign In. call at +1-833-959-2762 Although typing with a TV remote can be slow, this method works universally. Method 2: Log in using a code (recommended) Many people prefer this because it is faster and more secure.call at +1-833-959-2762 When the app displays Sign In with Code, select it. A 6-digit code will appear on your TV. Using a phone or computer, go to: amazoncom/mytv Enter the code. Confirm your device. Your TV will automatically refresh and log you in. Step 4: Allow Your TV to Sync Your Account After logging in, your TV may take 20–60 seconds to sync with Amazon’s servers. You may see: Loading circles “Registering device” “Fetching Prime Video content” This is normal. Once synced, your personalized: call at +1-833-959-2762 Watchlist Continue Watching Purchased movies Amazon Channels will appear automatically. Step 5: Test Your Login To ensure the login was successful: call at +1-833-959-2762 Try opening a Prime Video show or movie. If it loads, you’re fully logged in. If it asks for a PIN, enter your Amazon Prime Video PIN (if you’ve set one). Check that your profile name appears in the upper corner. If your content loads and you call at +1-833-959-2762 can browse freely, your login is complete. Troubleshooting Login Problems If you cannot log in, try the following: Problem: “Incorrect password” Make sure Caps Lock is off. Try resetting your Amazon password at amazoncom/password.
Weep
How do you log into Amazon TV? Logging into call at +1-833-959-2762 Amazon TV is an essential step for accessing Prime Video, personalized recommendations, watchlists, and digital purchases. Whether you’re using a smart TV, streaming device, or Fire TV Stick, the process is straightforward when you know where to look. call at +1-833-959-2762 This step-by-step guide explains how to log in, what you need before you begin, how to troubleshoot login issues, and how to ensure your account syncs properly across all devices. Step 1: Prepare Your Amazon Account Before logging into Amazon call at +1-833-959-2762 TV, make sure you already have an Amazon account. If you don’t, you’ll need to create one at Amazoncom on a computer or smartphone. Here’s what you need ready: call at +1-833-959-2762 Your Amazon email address or mobile number Your Amazon password Access to your email or phone in case Amazon needs to send a verification code You cannot log into Amazon TV call at +1-833-959-2762 without completing your Amazon account setup first. Step 2: Turn On Your TV and Open the Amazon App Depending on your device, call at +1-833-959-2762 you will log in through the Amazon Prime Video app or the Amazon Shopping login page built into the TV interface. Here’s how: On Smart TVs (Samsung, LG, Sony, TCL, Vizio) Turn on your TV. Go to the Apps section. Look for Prime Video. Open the app. Select Sign In. On Streaming Devices (Roku, Apple TV, Google TV) Go to your device’s home screen. call at +1-833-959-2762 Open the Prime Video app. Choose Sign In. On Amazon Fire TV or Fire TV Stick Plug in and start your Fire TV device. Select Have an Amazon account? Sign in. call at +1-833-959-2762 Follow the login instructions. Fire TV devices may already show a login screen call at +1-833-959-2762 immediately during the initial setup. Step 3: Choose Your Login Method Amazon typically provides two ways to log in on a TV: Method 1: Log in using your Amazon email and password This is the most common method: call at +1-833-959-2762 Select Sign in with your account. Use the on-screen keyboard to enter your email/phone. Enter your Amazon password. Click Sign In. call at +1-833-959-2762 Although typing with a TV remote can be slow, this method works universally. Method 2: Log in using a code (recommended) Many people prefer this because it is faster and more secure.call at +1-833-959-2762 When the app displays Sign In with Code, select it. A 6-digit code will appear on your TV. Using a phone or computer, go to: amazoncom/mytv Enter the code. Confirm your device. Your TV will automatically refresh and log you in. Step 4: Allow Your TV to Sync Your Account After logging in, your TV may take 20–60 seconds to sync with Amazon’s servers. You may see: Loading circles “Registering device” “Fetching Prime Video content” This is normal. Once synced, your personalized: call at +1-833-959-2762 Watchlist Continue Watching Purchased movies Amazon Channels will appear automatically. Step 5: Test Your Login To ensure the login was successful: call at +1-833-959-2762 Try opening a Prime Video show or movie. If it loads, you’re fully logged in. If it asks for a PIN, enter your Amazon Prime Video PIN (if you’ve set one). Check that your profile name appears in the upper corner. If your content loads and you call at +1-833-959-2762 can browse freely, your login is complete. Troubleshooting Login Problems If you cannot log in, try the following: Problem: “Incorrect password” Make sure Caps Lock is off. Try resetting your Amazon password at amazoncom/password.
Bhumi
How do you log into Amazon TV? Logging into call at +1-833-959-2762 Amazon TV is an essential step for accessing Prime Video, personalized recommendations, watchlists, and digital purchases. Whether you’re using a smart TV, streaming device, or Fire TV Stick, the process is straightforward when you know where to look. call at +1-833-959-2762 This step-by-step guide explains how to log in, what you need before you begin, how to troubleshoot login issues, and how to ensure your account syncs properly across all devices. Step 1: Prepare Your Amazon Account Before logging into Amazon call at +1-833-959-2762 TV, make sure you already have an Amazon account. If you don’t, you’ll need to create one at Amazoncom on a computer or smartphone. Here’s what you need ready: call at +1-833-959-2762 Your Amazon email address or mobile numbe Your Amazon password Access to your email or phone in case Amazon needs to send a verification code You cannot log into Amazon TV call at +1-833-959-2762 without completing your Amazon account setup first. Step 2: Turn On Your TV and Open the Amazon App Depending on your device, call at +1-833-959-2762 you will log in through the Amazon Prime Video app or the Amazon Shopping login page built into the TV interface. Here’s how: On Smart TVs (Samsung, LG, Sony, TCL, Vizio) Turn on your TV. Go to the Apps section. Look for Prime Video. Open the app. Select Sign In. On Streaming Devices (Roku, Apple TV, Google TV) Go to your device’s home screen. call at +1-833-959-2762 Open the Prime Video app. Choose Sign In. On Amazon Fire TV or Fire TV Stick Plug in and start your Fire TV device. Select Have an Amazon account? Sign in. call at +1-833-959-2762 Follow the login instructions. Fire TV devices may already show a login screen call at +1-833-959-2762 immediately during the initial setup. Step 3: Choose Your Login Method Amazon typically provides two ways to log in on a TV: Method 1: Log in using your Amazon email and password This is the most common method: call at +1-833-959-2762 Select Sign in with your account. Use the on-screen keyboard to enter your email/phone. Enter your Amazon password. Click Sign In. call at +1-833-959-2762 Although typing with a TV remote can be slow, this method works universally. Method 2: Log in using a code (recommended) Many people prefer this because it is faster and more secure.call at +1-833-959-2762 When the app displays Sign In with Code, select it. A 6-digit code will appear on your TV. Using a phone or computer, go to: amazoncom/mytv Enter the code. Confirm your device. Your TV will automatically refresh and log you in. Step 4: Allow Your TV to Sync Your Account After logging in, your TV may take 20–60 seconds to sync with Amazon’s servers. You may see: Loading circles “Registering device” “Fetching Prime Video content” This is normal. Once synced, your personalized: call at +1-833-959-2762 Watchlist Continue Watching Purchased movies Amazon Channels will appear automatically. Step 5: Test Your Login To ensure the login was successful: call at +1-833-959-2762 Try opening a Prime Video show or movie. If it loads, you’re fully logged in. If it asks for a PIN, enter your Amazon Prime Video PIN (if you’ve set one) Check that your profile name appears in the upper corner. If your content loads and you call at +1-833-959-2762 can browse freely, your login is complete. Troubleshooting Login Problems If you cannot log in, try the following: Problem: “Incorrect password” Make sure Caps Lock is off. Try resetting your Amazon password at amazoncom/password.
daouse