I think that in the future, clocks won't say three o'clock anymore. They'll just get right to the point and rename three o'clock 'Pepsi.'
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When it's three o'clock in New York, it's still 1938 in London.
When I started my program... there was a big clock in the corner and I looked and it said nine o'clock exactly. And it was funny, because when I was standing on the podium, it said exactly 10 p.m., and this whole hour had changed my life.
We must use time creatively.
I'll just tell you the way it is. You ask me what time it is and I'm gonna tell you how to build a clock.
The clock never stops, never stops, never waits. We're growing old. It's getting late.
There are more clocks than ever - clocks on computers, on cell phones, on televisions, on any screen available, telling time to the digital second - but they all seem to matter less.
I like that time is marked by each sunrise and sunset whether or not you actually see it.
In a real dark night of the soul, it is always three o'clock in the morning, day after day.
They took away time, and they gave us the clock.
I open with a clock striking, to beget an awful attention in the audience - it also marks the time, which is four o clock in the morning, and saves a description of the rising sun, and a great deal about gilding the eastern hemisphere.