Quotes on the topic: Wall


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When I'm up against a wall, that's when Billy Mays performs best.


I think very few people still understand the distinction between CEOs on Wall Street and the hedge-fund billionaires operating separately.


It appears to me that no one has learned a thing; that Wall Street is still operating as if 2008 never happened.


I can run up a wall and do a back flip - that's the most impressive thing that I can do.


The iPad - is that a phone or a computer? If I put it on my wall is it a TV?


If you can't go one way, there's many ways to get where you're going. So you just take a step back and see beyond the wall.


I'm an actor. It's like being a bricklayer. Sometimes I'm building a little wall, and the next time I'm building a palace.


I loved working on Wall Street. I loved the meritocracy of it and the camaraderie of the trading floor.


I'm not averse to helping Wall Street when it helps Main Street.


I've had time off, and it drove me nuts. I was crawling up the wall.


With the derivatives market larger than ever, we need way more regulation of Wall Street, not less.


I don't like to have time on my wall; it's too-in-your-face.


A collapse in U.S. stock prices certainly would cause a lot of white knuckles on Wall Street.


When I do a project, I like the idea that someone is going to experience the book, someone is going to experience the film, someone else is going to experience a framed photo on a wall, but they are all going to get to the same root thing as long as all of those mediums are exploring it from the same place.


A lot of rookies hit the wall after 50 or 60 games.


I have a scar on my left thigh, kind of almost near my knee. I essentially fell in the 2002 Olympics and when I hit the wall - because of the impact - my right leg kind of came in at like a knife-type angle and stabbed my leg with my own skate blade.


I used to spend a lot of time cutting out film posters from papers and putting them up on the wall in my room.


For decades, Wall Street has charged companies a standard fee of 7 percent to sell their shares to the public.


Mirror, mirror on the wall, who's the dumbest of you all?


I believe Wall Street needs serious ongoing regulation.