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"It's the place where my prediction from the sixties finally came true In the future everyone will be famous for Fifteen minutes. I'm bored with that line. I never use it anymore. My new line is, In Fifteen minutes everybody will be famous." »Andy Warhol
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"Old age is always Fifteen years older than I am." »Bernard M. Baruch
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"Old age is Fifteen years older than I am." »Oliver Wendell Holmes
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"To me, old age is always Fifteen years older than I am." »Thomas Bailey Aldrich
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"In the future everyone will be famous for Fifteen minutes." »Andy Warhol
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"In the future everyone will be world-famous for Fifteen minutes." »Andy Warhol
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"You get Fifteen democrats in a room, and you get twenty opinions." »Senator Patrick Leahy
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"It took me Fifteen years to discover that I had no talent for writing, but I couldn't give it up because by that time I was too famous." »Robert Benchley
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"A reporter is always concerned with tomorrow. There's nothing tangible of yesterday. All I can say I've done is agitate the air ten or Fifteen minutes and then boom -- it's gone." »Edward R. Murrow
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"We are shut up in schools and college recitation rooms for ten or Fifteen years, and come out at last with a bellyful of words and do not know a thing." »Ralph Waldo Emerson
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"Resolve to edge in a little reading every day, if it is but a single sentence. If you gain Fifteen minutes a day, it will make itself felt at the end of the year." »Horace Mann
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"I'm 65 and I guess that puts me in with the geriatrics. But if there were Fifteen months in every year, I'd only be 48. That's the trouble with us. We number everything. Take women, for example. I think they deserve to have more than twelve years between the ages of 28 and 40." »James Grover Thurber
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"We are always more anxious to be distinguished for a talent which we do not possess, than to be praised for the Fifteen which we do possess." »Mark Twain
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"We are students of words; we are shut up in schools, and colleges, and recitation rooms, for ten or Fifteen years, and come out at last with a bag of wind, a memory of words, and do not know a thing" »Ralph Waldo Emerson
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"We are students of words: we are shut up in schools, and colleges, and recitation-rooms, for ten or Fifteen years, and come out at last with a bag of wind, a memory of words, and do not know a thing." »Ralph Waldo Emerson
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"Dr. Evil The details of my life are quite inconsequential... very well, where do I begin My father was a relentlessly self-improving boulangerie owner from Belgium with low grade narcolepsy and a penchant for buggery. My mother was a Fifteen year old French prostitute named Chloe with webbed feet. My father would womanize, he would drink. He would make outrageous claims like he invented the question mark. Sometimes he would accuse chestnuts of being lazy. The sort of general malaise that only the genius possess and the insane lament. My childhood was typical. Summers in Rangoon, luge lessons. In the spring we'd make meat helmets. When I was insolent I was placed in a burlap bag and beaten with reeds- pretty standard really. At the age of twelve I received my first scribe. At the age of fourteen a Zoroastrian named Vilma ritualistically shaved my testicles. There really is nothing like a shorn scrotum... it's breathtaking- I highly suggest you try it." »Austin Powers International Man of Mystery
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