Jerry Maguire Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Jerry Maguire. Here they are! All 10 of them:

Hey, everybody, Jerry Maguire's here.
Susan Elizabeth Phillips (Match Me If You Can (Chicago Stars, #6))
Sweet Jesus,” Dad snaps. “Don’t you dare go Jerry Maguire on me.
Kristen Callihan (The Friend Zone (Game On, #2))
She completed me. Jesus, now I’m quoting Jerry Maguire. Dick check. Still there. Whew.
Chelle Bliss (Hook Me (Men of Inked, #2))
You had me at 'blood allergy.
David S.E. Zapanta (Posthumous (Cadabra Rasa, #1))
I was going for flirtatious, along the lines of the scene in Jerry Maguire when Renee Zellweger told Tom Cruise, “You had me at hello.
Lauren Myracle (Let It Snow)
I wanted to be a daughter like Enid Blyton’s Molly in The Family at Red-Roofs.[176] I thought the kind of friend I should be was like the ones I saw in the Bollywood movies of the 1960s who willingly fell on a metaphorical sword for their buddy’s happiness. In professional life, the person I would have liked to be was Jerry Maguire.
Lata Subramanian (A Dance with the Corporate Ton: Reflections of a Worker Ant)
it was not yet true what Dorothy Boyd, the secretary played by Renée Zellweger in the movie Jerry Maguire, tells her son about flying first-class: “It used to be a better meal, now it’s a better life.” I grew up in a time and place where the word “public” had deep resonance and engendered the highest respect as a source of innovation—as in public schools, public parks, public deliberations, and public-private partnerships. I grew up at a time and place when I was anchored in concentric communities and where the American Dream—“my parents did better than their parents and I will do better than mine”—seemed to be as certain as spring following winter, and summer following spring. And I grew up in a time and place where Jews were the biggest “minority” but gradually integrated themselves and were integrated by the dominant white, non-Jewish society and culture, and while it wasn’t always easy or pretty, somehow it happened. So where was this place over the rainbow and when was this time? The Land of Oz that I speak of was the state of Minnesota, and, for me, its Emerald City, where I grew up, was, as I said, a small suburb/town just outside of Minneapolis called St. Louis Park. The time (I was born July 20, 1953) was the 1950s, 1960s, and early 1970s. Growing up in that community at that time was a gift—a gift of enduring values and optimism—that has kept on giving my whole life. Three decades of reporting from the Middle East tried to leach that out of me. So, today, mine is not a naïve optimism that everything will turn out well; I’ve learned better. But it is an enduring confidence that things can turn out well, if people are ready to practice a politics of compromise and pursue an ethic of pluralism.
Thomas L. Friedman (Thank You for Being Late: An Optimist's Guide to Thriving in the Age of Accelerations)
If and when I found him and he hadn’t got his danger fix, he’d be way more than just disgruntled. More like royally ticked off. Not the best time to share my recent revelation. One that shocked the heck out of me. One I wasn’t sure how to phrase. “Jake, you’re the love of my life.” Ugh. “You complete me.” Too Jerry Maguire. “I want to spend the rest of my life with you.” Gawd, no. I felt my lip curl as I pictured him fixing his intense blue eyes on mine, waiting for me to explain. As if I could. This sudden about-face didn’t even make sense to me. I just wanted him, dammit, even with his insane stunts, like hang glider tag.
Betsy Cook Speer
Pete drained his cup, then set it on the table. “In the words of that great humanitarian Jerry Maguire, ‘Show me the money.
Kathy Reichs (Break No Bones (Temperance Brennan, #9))
In the movie Jerry Maguire starring Tom Cruise, there are many great one-liners.
Robert T. Kiyosaki (Rich Dad Poor Dad: What the Rich Teach Their Kids About Money That the Poor and Middle Class Do Not!)