Malcolm Reynolds Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Malcolm Reynolds. Here they are! All 15 of them:

Or maybe go sci-fi. You sorta look like that guy who roamed outer space everybody's so crazy about." "Malcolm Reynolds?" asked Rook.
Richard Castle
It's my estimation that every man ever got a statue made of him was one kind of a son of a bitch or another. --Malcolm Reynolds
Melodie Ramone
I swear by my pretty floral bonnet, I will end you.
Malcolm Reynolds
Mercy is the mark of a great man! (stabs defeated opponent) I guess I'm just a good man. (stabs opponent again) Well ... I'm alright.
Jane Espenson
May have been the losing side. Still not convinced it was the wrong one.
Malcolm Reynolds
It's my estimation that every man ever got a statue made of him was one kind of sumbitch or another. -- Malcolm Reynolds
Joss Whedon
Mercy is the mark of a great man
Malcolm Reynolds- Firefly
Malcolm, you and . . . how about Reynolds
Anonymous
If anyone tries to kill you -you try and kill them right back!
Captain Malcolm Reynolds
Much like GM and GE, Kodak had a fair employment policy in place by the 1960s and had laid out is own Plan for Progress, which included a commitment to “hold discussions with the employment interviewers in the various division to remind them: that “such things as race, creed, color, or national origin” are neither to “help nor hinder in getting a job at Kodak.” Yet for blacks trying to work and move up at the company, these assurances didn’t mesh with their own experiences. Some of this was a consequence of blacks being poorly educated, especially those who had relocated to Rochester from the rural South. In the company’s eyes, the simply weren’t qualified. “We don’t grow many peanuts in Eastman Kodak,” Monroe Dill, Kodak’s industrial relations director said in 1963, adding that the company would start to recruit more from all-black colleges so as to not keep “discriminating by omission.” But there was also plenty of discrimination by commission, as individual Kodak managers used their discretion to hire whomever they liked and cast off whomever they didn’t. “They would say it blatant, like, 'We don't have any colored jobs,"" recalled Clarence Ingram, who served as general manager of the Rochester Business Opportunities Corporation, an entity formed after the '64 riots to support minority businesses. "They would tell you that." Apparently, they told a lot of blacks that. In 1964, only about 600 African Americans worked for Kodak in Rochester. less than 2 percent of the 33,000 employees based there. Determined to remedy this was FIGHT, which was led by Franklin Delano Roosevelt Florence, the thirty-one-year-old pastor of the Reynolds Street Church of Christ, a stocky, hard-charging, charismatic man, who called Malcolm X a friend. On September 2, 1966, a delegation of sixteen from FIGHT walked into Kodak's executive suite. Florence, sporting a Black Power button in his lapel, said he wanted to see "the top man." Before he knew it, the minister and his retinue were sitting in front of three top men: Kodak chairman Albert Chapman, president William Vaughn, and executive vice president Louis Eilers. Florence told them about the harshness of life in Rochester's black ghetto and said he wanted Kodak to start a training program for people who normally wouldn't be recruited into the company. Florence braced himself, expecting Kodak to resist. But Vaughn listened carefully and then asked Florence to submit a more specific proposal. Two weeks later, he did. Calling FIGHT " the only mass based organization of poor people and near poor people in the Rochester area," Florence requested that Kodak train 500 to 600 men and women over eighteen months. FIGHT also wanted direct involvement in the process; the group would "recruit and counsel trainees and offer advice, consultation, and assistance.
Rick Wartzman (The End of Loyalty: The Rise and Fall of Good Jobs in America)
May have been the losing side....still not convinced it was the wrong one." a quote from a fictional character, but quite accurate nonetheless.
Captain Malcolm Reynolds
Someone ever tries to kill you, you try to kill ’em right back!
Malcolm Reynolds- Firefly
Reynolds does not believe quotas would work in the Liberal Party, and while Labor boasts it has worked for them, she reckons what has really worked for Labor is the steady pipeline of women coming through the trade union movement.
Niki Savva (Plots and Prayers: Malcolm Turnbull’s demise and Scott Morrison’s ascension)
As partners, Malcolm and Reynolds—also from the Burglary Unit
Richard Castle (Frozen Heat (Nikki Heat, #4))
Sure, guess I could give you a bullwhip and a fedora. We’d market you as Indiana Bones. Or maybe go sci-fi. You sorta look like that guy who roamed outer space everybody’s so crazy about.” “Malcolm Reynolds?” asked Rook.
Richard Castle (Heat Rises (Nikki Heat, #3))