But I'm blessed to work with great people. I collaborate with brilliant stylists both here and in Paris. I work with a great design team. I really allow everyone to bring their ideas. I almost rely on them to inspire me.
I have to remind my dad 'Journalists - no matter how many cigars they smoke with you - are not your friends so don't talk to them.'
Internet mailing lists are like Fox television shows. They have really cool previews and they get you all excited about them but they just don't live up to their promises.
A lot of journalists like to suck up to celebrities and then as soon as they're a safe distance away at their computers they take shots. But that's the way society has become especially in pop culture.
Musicians and journalists are the canaries in the coalmine but eventually as computers get more and more powerful it will kill off all middle-class professions.
Set lists are tough because you come up with this structure of how the songs are going to go from one to the next but at the same time you have to be spontaneous and take requests and change the set list at the drop of a hat.
Environmentalists have a very conflicted relationship with their cars.
The best discussion of trouble in boardroom and business office is found in newspapers' own financial pages and speeches by journalists in management jobs.
Some of my best friends are Venture Capitalists but let's face it a hamster with Alzheimer's could make those kind of numbers. It's great work if you can get it.
Warmth isn't what minimalists are thought to have.
Making checklists of things you're looking for in a person is the numero uno thing you can do to guarantee you'll be alone forever.
Journalists do not live by words alone although sometimes they have to eat them.
Rereading A.J. Liebling carries me happily back to an age when all good journalists knew they had plenty to be modest about and were.