You should never say 'D'Brickashaw' and 'bust' in the same sentence. You should never even think that. It should be D'Brickashaw, Pro Bowl, D'Brickashaw, Jets, Super Bowl.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Fame hit me like a ton of bricks.
As a player, it says everything about you if you made the Hall of Fame. But, then again, boy... there's something about winning a Super Bowl.
Some people insist that hallowed professional teams should never change their nicknames.
Everyone thinks with 'Smash,' because it looks glossy and big, they think they're spending a fortune, and they think it's taking weeks to shoot.
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame is marketing. You've got a bunch of faceless people in a back room who trademark a name that sounds very official. Well, if you had thought of it first, you would have been the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
I'd rather have 10 Super Bowl trophies and no MVPs.
You write a hit the same way you write a flop.
The woeful tales of 'Super Mario Bros.' and 'Street Fighter' have taught studios that merely slapping a name to a movie is not enough to bring in the fans of the franchise. Also, the way games now unfold their stories more parallels that of a movie, with characters and plot points actually meaning as much as a high score.
You never imagine that the Green Bay Packers were going to be in something you wrote or singing 'Bootylicious.'
Every time when they would call my name I kept hearing 'New York Knicks' instead of 'Seattle SuperSonics.'