470 quotes found
"Sixteen Americans, abandoned/marooned ... (followed by a description of the game site)"
"They must learn to adapt or they'll be voted from the tribe. In the end, only one will remain, and claim the million dollar prize."
"Everybody drop your buffs."
"We are Switching tribes."
"Previously on... Survivor..."
"36 days ago..."
"39 days, (number of castaways) people, ONE... SURVIVOR!"
"Who will have what it takes to outwit, outplay, and outlast all the rest? This is SURVIVOR! (name of season number; from Seasons 41 and onward)"
"Come on in, guys! (from Seasons 1-40)"
"Come on in! (from Seasons 41-onward)"
"(tribe's name), getting your first look at the new (tribe's name) tribe, (player's name) voted out at the first/last tribal council."
"Let's get to today's reward/immunity challenge."
"First thing's first, gotta take back immunity."
"Once again, immunity is back up for grabs."
"For today's challenge... (Jeff explains the rules)"
"On my go... (Jeff explains the rules)"
"Here is how it works./Here is how it's gonna work."
"Make sense?"
"Want to know what you're playing for?"
"You’ll be taken to the Survivor Sanctuary, where good things happen."
"Worth playing for?"
"(food reward) and all the fixins!"
"Take your spots, wait for my Go!"
"This is for reward/immunity!"
"Survivors ready... GO!"
"And this challenge... is on."
"(tribe's name) I've got nothing for you, grab your stuff and head back to camp."
"(amount of castaways left) are left. Who will be voted out tonight?"
"Behind each of you is a torch. Grab a torch and approach the flame. Dip it in and get fire. This is part of the ritual of tribal council, because in this game, fire represents life. Once your fire is gone, so are you."
"... can not be voted out tonight, everybody else is fair game."
"It is time to vote. (Contestant name), you're up."
"I'll go tally the votes."
"(starting from Season 14) If anybody has a hidden immunity idol and you want to play it, now would be the time to do so."
"OK. Once the votes are read, the decision is final. The person voted out will be asked to leave the tribal council area immediately. I'll read the votes."
"First vote... (name of contestant)"
"(from Seasons 1-6) Last vote... (name of contestant)"
"We're tied."
"That's enough. No need to read the other votes."
"(numbers of votes) votes (contestant's name), (numbers of votes) votes (other contestant's name). One vote left."
"1st/2nd/3rd/4th/5th/etc. person voted out of "Survivor" (season name)... (name of contestant)"
"You need to bring me your torch."
"(contestant's name), the tribe has spoken. Time for you to go."
"(from the seasons that have Redemption Island) You will have a chance to get back into this game. Grab your torch, head for Redemption Island."
"You can head back to camp."
"Next time on... Survivor..."
"Stay tuned for scenes from our next episode."
"(tribe's name), this is your first look at the new (other tribe's name), (contestant's name) voted out last night."
"(contestant/team's name) wins the reward/immunity! (not regularly used in Seasons 1-4)"
"Now, we'll bring the members of our jury..."
"Two will go on to face the jury... ONE will outlast all the rest... and become the Sole Survivor!"
"You WANT to see your name on the parchment."
"There are seven votes, it takes four to win."
"There are eight votes. it takes five to win,"
"There are nine votes. it takes five to win,"
"The winner of (survivor season)... (name of contestant)"
"(usually for individual immunity challenges when it's an endurance challenge): Whatever's left in your tank, you need to use it right now!"
"You have to dig!"
"Geraint Wyn Davies - Det. Nicholas 'Nick' Knight"
"Catherine Disher - Dr. Natalie Lambert"
"Nigel Bennett - Lacroix"
"John Kapelos - Det. Don Schanke"
"Deborah Duchene - Janette"
"Natsuko Ohama - Capt. Amanda Cohen"
"Lisa Ryder - Det. Tracy Vetter"
"Blu Mankuma - Capt. Joe Reese"
"Ben Bass - Javier Vachon"
"Gary Farmer - Capt. Joe Stonetree"
"Sandi Ross - Grace Balthazar"
"Greg Kramer - Screed"
"Maxwell Sheffield"
"Fran Sheffield (Maxwell's 2nd wife)"
"Maggie Sheffield-Brolin (Maxwell's daughter and Fran's stepdaughter)"
"Michael Brolin (Maggie's husband)"
"Brighton Sheffield (Maxwell's son and Fran's stepson)"
"Grace Sheffield (Maxwell's daughter and Fran's stepdaughter)"
"Jonah & Eve Sheffield (Maxwell & Fran's twin son & daughter)"
"Concerning arresting an abused starving sodbuster wife: "Blaming her would be like blaming the night for being dark.""
"When confronting a cattle rancher who'd committed battery on an Indian boy and cut his tongue out:"
"Commenting of Doc Adams's grumpy disposition: "What's the matter Doc? Someone pull you through a knot hole?""
"I'll sleep better for it when I do sleep, though, knowing I didn't miss nothin' when I wasn't sleepin', you know.""
"On building a pot of coffee: "Most people just don't know how to make good coffee. In the first place, they boil the water before they put the coffee in. Any fool knows you gotta put the coffee in the cold water and bring them both to a boil together. That way you get all of the flavor. Worst thing they do, they throw away the old grounds after using them once. What they don't know is that they are throwing away the best part. You got to keep them old grounds and you add a little fresh coffee every morning and let her boil. Shoot, you don't make a cup, you build a pot. You don't really get a good pot until you've been usin' it about a week. Then it's coffee!""
"On observing a prisoner Matt is releasing from jail, Chester addresses the prisoner, "You look like the dogs had you under the house.""
"On a long ride with Matt, Chester declares, "Why I'm so hungry, my stomach is growing teeth.""
"Safer than chitlins on a city folk's supper plate."
"Hotter than a jug full of red ants."
"If that don't put a clod in your shoe."
"You couldn't burst a bird's egg with a ball-peen hammer."
"This here [stew] will grow hair on your elbows."
"This here [stew] will put muscles in your whiskers."
"[It's] hot enough to fry a horseshoe."
"Tighter than the feathers on a prairie chicken's rump."
"The onliest thing you get from stradlin' the fence is a sore backside."
"I'll get after you like thunder after lightnin'."
"How'd you like to be gatherin' eggs and find her nest?"
"Fine as frogs hair."
"Naked as a plucked prairie chicken."
"Bleedin' like a stuck hog."
"He ain't got the gumption to pound sand down a rat hole."
"I thumped him 'till his ears rang like the liberty bell."
"Crookeder than a dog's hind leg."
"Hold `yer taters."
"[He's] got more friends than a dog's got hairs on his back."
"Sit there like a boll weevil on a corn cob."
"[He] draws trouble like a summer melon draws flies."
"[I] feel better than a barn rooster on a prime hoot."
"Quiet as a mouse tip toeing."
"Quiet as on cotton on cottontail."
"I'll get onto you like ugly on an ape."
"Hoppin' around like a flea on a hot skillet."
"You look like a sunfish who flopped."
"When you learn a thing a day you store up smart."
"That don't hurt a particle."
"If you don't call, then you don't see the hand."
"I made a bigger mess than a sow's bed."
"Ain't you startin' to itch before you git bit?"
"He can't see past the brim of his hat."
"Pooch up like an old toad."
"Rougher than a wagon full of cobs."
"No more chance than a grass hopper in a hen house."
"Flatter than a snake through a ringer."
"I loved that boy like a June morning."
"Quieter than a gagged gopher."
"Sincere as a $5 funeral."
"Show 'em how the cow eat the cabbage."
"You act like my foot’s asleep"
"Quicker than a rat can run over the roof with a piece of raw liver in his mouth."
"Does a mule have a tail"
"the slovering droops -a cattle disease"
"old scudder -old man"
"featherfoot - sneak"
"slackjaw - talk"
"tater trap - mouth"
"quack - quack - doctor"
"looksome - handsome"
"nub - central point"
"amble - walk"
"palaver - talk"
"soulsome - spiritual"
"glom - grab"
"spell - relieve from duty"
"squeemy - overly sensitive"
"a passel - a lot"
"a poke - a bag"
"grump head - ill tempered"
"bent ear - listen"
"twistee - tornado"
"howdyin' - introducing"
"pooch - puff up"
"whomp - to hit"
"slippery gee-jaw - lie"
"snigger - snicker"
"goosler - your throat"
"palotsome - delicious"
"complexicated - complex"
"wobble water - ``whisky"
"there's a pot a brewin' - trouble"
"roundy - no rough edges"
"Kate Jackson - Mrs. Amanda King"
"Bruce Boxleitner - Lee Stetson"
"Beverly Garland - Dotty"
"Mel Stewart - Billy Melrose"
"Martha Smith - Francine Desmond"
"Greg Morton - Jamie King"
"Paul Stout - Philip King"
"Sam Melville - Joe King"
"I'd had the stage show originally, so I was much more interested in doing something closer to that, something live-action. So when they suggested doing a cartoon, I said "I'm not really interested in that; let's do a real kid's show." I was a big Howdy-Doody freak growing up — I was actually on one show when I was a kid, in the audience — and was more interested in doing something like that. Howdy-Doody, Captain Kangaroo, a lot of the local kids shows that were on a long time ago — those were the influences."
"I've never agreed with people when they've said that last part, actually. When we were doing the midnight show back in the early Eighties, we'd do a kid's matinee show as well. I never felt like anything was changed, really. It was a bit slicker. It was made for Saturday-morning TV. But it wasn't like the character changed. Everything was like a toilet joke, but it wasn't like we gave the censors a lot to worry about. When you're writing a show for six-year-olds, you know, pee-pee and poo-poo…that's your bread and butter."
"But if you're a kid and you understand a joke that may have been quote-unquote risqué or an innuendo that might have made it in to a Playhouse episode, then you learned it from your parents or the schoolyard. I didn't teach them that."
"I was involved in pretty much every aspect of it. I'd hired the design team and came up with conception of stuff overall. I mean, someone designed and built Chairy, obviously, but it was my idea."
"The magic screen was originally about the size of a double-door entrance…it was gigantic! [Laughs] I think the door was a different color, too. But yeah, I was involved in every minute detail."
"I worked really closely with [series composer and Devo founder] Mark Mothersbaugh on the music for every episode, but the theme was a little different. It's essentially in two parts: there's the actual theme and the music that leads up to the theme. You know, that Martin Denny-esque lounge music as you watch the beaver gnaw on the wood, and everything sort of winds around as you eventually end up at the playhouse's door. Mark, the director of our first season Stephen R. Johnson and I talked a lot about the feeling that bit of music was supposed to evoke — the words "dream-like" and "hypnotic" were used a lot. I wanted kids to feel like they were being drawn into this world."
"You might find this hard to believe, but I got virtually no feedback the whole time we were making the show! In the ensuing years, since we stopped making it, I've met hundreds of fans, from little kids to grown-ups who watched it as kids when the show was originally on. But I was so busy with the making of it that I just didn't have much of life outside of the show. I was very rarely in situations where I'd meet fans. It was staggering when I finally did start to hear all that stuff, because I just didn't have an outside picture of it all."
"What I think a lot of people didn't realize was, this wasn't a goof on kids' shows. I felt like it was a mission and this was what I was supposed to do; I considered it important work. I always sort of thought that this would have a positive effect on kids. And they picked up on that, I think. [Pause] I've spent a lot of time rewatching these episodes during the restoration process for this set, and I'm still really proud of what we all did."
"The “60 Minutes” segment was filled with so many factual discrepancies that the transcript was made unavailable with this disclaimer: “This segment has been deleted at the request of CBS News for legal or copyright reasons.”"
"There is only one appropriate response to these allegations, to heal and restore my family. And that is what I will do. To respond to the accusations at this time, would only further publicly exploit my family, and there has already been enough of that."
"In a nutshell, Erhard's message was this: If you are in a rut, the problem isn't your parents, your boss or the system, it's you. Take responsibility, Erhard said, and you can transform your life overnight."
"Who was the role model, the living example of what the est Training could do? Who else but Werner Erhard, a man some of his employees say, thought of himself, as god."
"Werner Erhard, last sighted in Costa Rica, has dropped his megabucks libel suit against CBS' 60 Minutes, which did a number on him about a year ago. Nice guy that he is, he sent checks for $100 to each of the 20 defendants to cover the filing fee they had to pay to answer his charges of 'a conspiracy to defame and ruin me'."
"After an hour of 60 Minutes, Erhard was as dead as Audi. One might have thought that Werner Erhard, the company, was beyond saving. Not true. The name was destroyed, but not the company."
"Who was the role model, the living example of what the could do? Who else but Werner Erhard, a man some of his employees say, thought of himself, as god."
"I would never have believed that I, could be a person who would wind up in a cult...And yet, certainly mind control was involved. And if that's what cults do, and they set up a leader to be bigger than anybody else, a god-like figure, I would say yes, that was true in the organization."
"Mr. President, this is Ed Bradley in New York. There are many people who would question our system of criminal justice today in the United States--in fact, many people who have lost faith in our criminal justice system. With so many people languishing on death row today for so many years, how can you say with such assurance that justice will be certain, swift, and severe?"
"We still will have freedom of speech. We'll have freedom of association. We'll have freedom of movement. But we may have to have some discipline in doing it so we can go after people who want to destroy our very way of life."
"You know, we accepted a minor infringement on our freedom, I guess, when the airport metal detectors were put up, but they went a long way to stop airplane hijackings and the explosion of planes and the murdering of innocent people. We're going to have to be very, very tough and firm in dealing with this. We cannot allow our country to be subject to the kinds of things these poor people in Oklahoma City have been through in the last few days."
"This is a freedom-loving democracy because the rule of law has reigned for over 200 years now, not because vigilantes took the law into their own hands."
"I don't want to interfere with anybody's constitutional rights. But people do not have a right to violate the law and do not have a right to encourage people to kill law enforcement officials and do not have a right to take the position that if a law enforcement officer simply tries to see them about whether they've violated the law or not, they can blow him to kingdom come. That is wrong."
"We do have free speech in this country, and we have very broad free speech, and I support that."
"People should examine the consequences of what they say and the kind of emotions they are trying to inflame."
"Mr. President, Mike Wallace. Are we Americans going to have to give up some of our liberties in order better to combat terrorism, both from overseas and here?"
"I think what I'll miss the most is the work, the job, the contact with all kinds of people and all kinds of issues, the ability to make a difference, to solve problems, to open up opportunities for other people. There's almost no--not almost, I suppose there is no job like it in the world. It's been an unbelievable thrill and a profound honor, and I will miss it very much."
"The thing I love most is being President, doing the job every day. It just--to me, it's an almost indescribable honor. I would never grow tired of it, and I feel graced every day."
"On balance, I think the two-term tradition has served us well. I'm glad President Roosevelt served the third term, because of the war. But on balance, I think it's served us well. Now, you know, I'm young, and I'm strong, and I'm, as far I know, in good health. I love the job. And so if I could serve again, I probably would. But I think that's the reason we have this limit, so that people like me don't get to make that decision."
"I believed when I got here that there was a chance that we could have a very long period of economic growth. Now I couldn't have known, when we started and we started slashing the deficit and investing more in technology, that we would have the longest economic expansion in history that would even outstrip wartime when we had been fully mobilized."
"I would remind you that in the United States we had an increasing gap between the rich and the poor for about 20 years, as we moved into this new economic phase. The same thing happened when we changed from being an agricultural economy to an industrial economy. In the last 2 or 3 years, we started to see the gap close again. And the answer is not to run away from globalization. The answer is to make change our friend. The answer is to have broad access to information and information technology, to have broad-based systems of education and health care and family supports in every country, and to continue to try to shape the global economy."
"All over the world people are embracing democracy and market economics. But if you enjoy the level of military and economic strength we have and the level of political influence, people are going to resent you."
"I have done everything I could as President to try to organize the permanent Government, the people who will be here when I am gone, and the Congress to deal with the long-term threat of biological, chemical, and small scale nuclear war, as well as the increasing sophistication of traditional weapons."
"But yes, there will be problems. Yes, there could be terrible incidences. But I would say to the American people, they should, on balance, be hopeful."
"We've got plenty of talented people. We just need to be imagining the future, thinking about all the problems as well as all the opportunities, and then prepare. Society always has problems; there are always misfortunes. But basically, I believe the future is quite promising and far more exciting than any period in history. I wish I were going to live to be 150; I'd love to see what happens."
"I think the most important thing is for me to be a useful citizen of this country and of this world, because I've had opportunities here only my other living predecessors have had. And I think that for me to be able to continue the work I've done in racial and religious and ethnic reconciliation and trying to convince people that we can grow the global economy and still preserve the environment and trying to empower the poor and the dispossessed, in trying to spread the universal impact of education and use technology to benefit ordinary people, these kinds of things--I think I should continue to do this work and trying--I want to get young people into public service. I want them to believe this is noble and important work."
"So I think, in a word, I have to be a good citizen now. That's the most important thing I can do when I leave office is to use the maximum--to the maximum extent I can, the knowledge that I have, the experience that I've gained to be a really good citizen."
"I look around this office, and I see a desk over there that President Kennedy sat at. And I remember the story he said about the Presidency, and one of the great things about the Presidency was he could walk to work."
"Prosperity. Economic prosperity and growth has been a hallmark of this Presidency. How long can it last, and will it be a part of our future, our near future?"
"Some worry--and Seattle might be an indication that we're looking at the possibility of a great gap between a two-tier system, between the haves and the have-nots of the world, those who get it with technology and those that don't."
"Do you hear around the world now, as I'm sure you've heard from heads of state and others, this kind of unilateralist--America in the future is too strong, too dominant, and the fear of a backlash against us."
"The potential of science to do harm is alarming."
"What's interesting about a conversation about the future with you is that because of this office and your curiosity, you see and know more than almost anyone. I mean, you are aware because you talk to the scientists; you talk to people responsible."
"It's the old notion about if the tree falls in the forest and nobody hears it, did the tree fall? Can you--are there things that we don't know about that alarm you? This sense of science and where it's at and what's coming down the pike that gives you great pause?"
"One would think that making a film is an ; you're building this—it's not, it's . The best metaphor I know of is we make in [] and it takes forty gallons of sap to make one gallon of maple syrup. And that's what the process is."
"It’s been a tradition for more than half a century that the major party candidates for president sit down with 60 Minutes in October. In 1968, it was Richard Nixon and Hubert Humphrey. This year, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump accepted invitations."
"The 60 Minutes program looked like a news story, but it was effectively a drug ad"
"Words, rather than pictures, are what 60 Minutes is all about."
"The story of 60 Minutes is also any self-respecting capitalist's vision of the American Dream."
"Started in 1968 by CBS, 60 Minutes is probably television's most well-known news magazine—or even one of its most successful shows in general."
"Mr. Speaker, I rise today to share with you and our colleagues and to commend the CBS 60 Minutes program that was aired last week on Sunday, January 17 of this year. As it was narrated by CBS reporter Scott Pelley, the television program was called, American Samoa--Football Island."
"60 Minutes is a popular CBS television news and commentary show coming out of the 1960s. It was among the first to use a narrative approach to news (stories) and a confrontational style."
"There is no disputing the fact that the CBS 60 Minutes program is the finest news magazine show in the history of television broadcasting."
"Don Hewitt, the creator and executive producer of 60 Minutes, loves to tell the story about how, when the show first went on the air, Bill Paley, the founder of CBS,told him, 'Make us proud!' 'Now,' Hewitt says, 'they tell us: Make us money!'"
"Wikileaks has published the video and transcript of an investigative report into 'est' (Erhard Seminars Training) guru and Landmark Education Forum godfather Werner Erhard by CBS News, originally broadcast on the program 60 Minutes on March 3, 1991."
"60 Minutes is the most successful television series of all time, measured by almost any standard, not the least being cash flow. One year, in fact, the profit generated by 60 Minutes was said to have been all the money made in prime time by the CBS Television Network. It has been honored for dozens of awards for outstanding television journalism."
"60 Minutes is famous for their extremely tight close-up shots, particularly those which come in tight while someone else is speaking."
"In the newsmagazine field, CBS's venerable 60 Minutes is the most-watched news broadcast. For twenty consecutive seasons ... it has been in the top ten rankings."
"Whatever the formula, 60 Minutes is a relatively low-cost, spectacularly revenue-producing success. In in 1991-1992 season, the one-hour show was listed as the one that was the least expensive to produce."
"60 Minutes has been one of the premier programs produced by CBS, which counts the profits from this show to be significantly in excess of $1 billion."
"In 1991, 60 Minutes ran a damning profile of charismatic EST founder Werner Erhard (born Jack Rosenberg). A onetime student of Scientology, Erhard was accused of sexual and physical abuse by his family, though some of those claims were later recanted. That same year, Erhard sold out to Landmark Education, which continues to attract millions of followers from all over the world. Landmark is now run by Erhard's brother and sister."
"One of the best things about being at 60 Minutes is the amount of time devoted to a single story."
"All across America, thousands of est graduates, Forum participants, Erhard employees, and other faithful acolytes — not to mention countless others who may have remembered only vaguely the man with the strange-sounding name of Werner Erhard - — watched as '60 Minutes' correspondent Ed Bradley related a dark story of Erhard's past."
"By the time of the '60 Minutes' broadcast, Werner Erhard had already decided that the United States no longer provided a very hospitable place in which to live."
"When Les and I spoke, he looked me in the eye and convinced me that he was sincere in what he was saying about wanting me to stay with CBS for many years on 60 Minutes. I trusted him as a man of his word."
"60 Minutes is still the most successful news program in television history, continuing to earn high ratings, journalistic awards, and an enormous fortune for CBS."
"The media today are controlled by the big corporations. It's all about ratings and money. Believe it or not, I think the downfall of our press today was the show 60 Minutes. Up until it came along, news was expected to lose money, in order to bring the people fair reporting and the truth. But when 60 Minutes became the top-rated program on television, the light went on. The corporate honchos said, "Wait a minute, you mean if we entertain with the news, we can make money?" It was the realization that, if packaged the correct way, the news could make you big bucks. No longer was it a matter of scooping somebody else on a story, but whether 20/20's ratings this week were better than Dateline's. I'm not knocking 60 Minutes. It was tremendously well done and hugely successful, but in the long run it could end up being a detriment to society."
"I mean to work for 60 Minutes, and be able to go any place in the world, do any story, have enough time on the air, et cetera, there is simply no job in journalism like it. At the beginning, it was a dream. Even now, at the age of 84, I work with people who are half my age or less, and it is the draw of the story. If there is a good story going, why not be there?"
"Robert Duvall as Captain Augustus "Gus" McCrae"
"Tommy Lee Jones as Captain Woodrow F. Call"
"Danny Glover as Joshua Deets"
"Diane Lane as Lorena Wood"
"Robert Urich as Jake Spoon"
"Frederic Forrest as Blue Duck"
"D. B. Sweeney as Dishwater "Dish" Boggett"
"Ricky Schroder as Newt Dobbs"
"Anjelica Houston as Clara Allen"
"Chris Cooper as July Johnson"
"Timothy Scott as Pea Eye Parker (credited as Tim Scott)"
"Glenne Headly as Elmira Johnson"
"Barry Corbin as Roscoe Brown"
"William Sanderson as Lippy Jones"
"Barry Tubb as Jasper Fant"
"Gavin O'Herlihy as Dan Suggs"
"Steve Buscemi as Luke"
"Frederick Coffin as Big Zwey"
"Travis Swords as Allan O'Brien"
"Kevin O'Morrison as Doctor"
"Ron Weyand as Old Hugh"
"Lanny Flaherty as Soupy Jones"
"David Carpenter as Needle Neslon"
"James McMurtry as Jimmy Rainey"
"Charlie Haynie as Ben Rainey"
"James Terry McIlvain as Cowboy"
"Sonny Carl Davis as Bert Borum"
"Helena Humann as Peach Johnson"
"Todd Barbee — Charlie Brown/Chuck"
"Robin Kohn — Lucy van Pelt"
"Stephen Shea — Linus van Pelt"
"Hilary Momberger — Sally Brown"
"Christopher DeFaria — Patricia "Peppermint Patty" Reichardt"
"Jimmy Ahrens – Marcie"
"Bill Melendez – Snoopy and Woodstock"
"If I live to be 100, I'll never be able to forget that big snowstorm a couple of years ago. The weather closed in and.... well, you might not believe it, but the world almost missed Christmas. [tips his hat] Oh, excuse me! Call me Sam. What's the matter? Haven't you ever seen a talking snowman before? Nice around here, isn't it? I call it Christmastown, better known as the North Pole. The Christmas tree forest. Yep. Here's where we grow 'em. Nice place to live, you know. Christmas seals. Of course, the #1 citizens up here are the Clauses; Santa and the Missus. They live right over there. [scene pans to Santa's workshop] First castle on the left. Matter of fact, the only castle on the left. [chuckles]"
"Billie Mae Richards - Rudolph"
"Stan Francis - Santa Claus"
"Paul Kligman - Donner, Coach Comet, and Clarice's unnamed father"
"Burl Ives - Sam the Snowman"
"Paul Soles - Hermey"
"Janis Orenstein - Clarice"
"Larry D. Mann - Yukon Cornelius"
"Peg Dixon - Mrs. Claus"
"Carl Banas - the Head Elf"
"Stan Francis - King Moonracer"
"Alfie Scopp - Charlie-In-The-Box"
"Carl Banas - the Spotted Elephant"
"Corinne Conley - Dolly"
"Snow belongs in its proper places: mountain tops, poetry, and songs by Bing Crosby."
"Jonathan Winters as the Narrator"
"John Goodman as Frosty"
"Elisabeth Moss as Holly"
"Michael Patrick Carter as Charles"
"Brian Doyle-Murray as Mr. Twitchell"
"Andrea Martin as Ms. Carbunkle"
"Jan Hooks as Lilly"
"Peter Robbins - Charlie Brown"
"Christopher Shea - Linus van Pelt"
"Tracy Stratford - Lucille "Lucy" van Pelt"
"Cathy Steinberg - Sally Brown"
"Chris Doran - Schroeder and Shermy"
"Geoffrey Orstein - Pig-Pen"
"Sally Dryer - Violet"
"Anne Altieri - Frieda"
"Bill Melendez - Snoopy"
"Karen Mendelson - Patty"
"Todd Barbee – Charlie Brown"
"Melanie Kohn – Lucy van Pelt"
"Stephen Shea – Linus van Pelt"
"Greg Felton – Schroeder"
"Linda Ercoli – Peppermint Patty"
"Lynn Mortensen – Sally Brown"
"Bill Melendez – Snoopy/Woodstock"
"Duncan Watson - Charlie Brown"
"Melanie Kohn - Lucy van Pelt"
"Stephen Shea - Linus van Pelt"
"Lynn Mortensen - Sally Brown"
"Greg Felton - Schroeder"
"Linda Ercoli - Violet/Frieda"
"Bill Melendez - Snoopy/Woodstock"
"Brett Johnson: Charlie Brown"
"Jeremy Schoenberg: Linus van Pelt"
"Stacy Ferguson: Sally Brown and Violet Gray"
"Heather Stoneman: Lucy van Pelt"
"Gini Holtzman: Peppermint Patty"
"Keri Houlihan: Marcie"
"Danny Colby: Schroeder"
"Bill Melendez: Snoopy, Woodstock, and Spike"
"Chad Allen - Charlie Brown"
"Jeremy Miller - Linus van Pelt"
"Melissa Guzzi - Lucy van Pelt"
"Kristie Baker - Peppermint Patty"
"Elizabeth Lyn Fraser - Sally Brown"
"Aron Mandelbaum - Schroeder"
"Jason Mendelson - Marcie"
"Bill Melendez - Snoopy, Woodstock"
"Sally Dryer - Lucy van Pelt, Violet"
"Geoffrey Ornstein - Pig-Pen"
"Lisa DeFaria - Patty"
"Gail DeFaria - Shermy"
"Patricia Patts - Peppermint Patty"
"Casey Carlson - Marcie"
"Arrin Skelley - Charlie Brown, rude ice hockey player captain"
"Debbie Muller - Teacher, shopkeeper"
"Scott Beach - Announcer"
"Daniel Anderson - Linus van Pelt"
"Laura Planting - Lucy van Pelt"
"Jason Victor Serinus - Woodstock"
"Ken Wahl - Vincent Michael "Vinnie" Terranova (Season 1-3)"
"Jonathan Banks - Frank McPike"
"Jim Byrnes - Daniel Benjamin "Lifeguard" Burroughs"
"Steven Bauer - Michael Santana (Season 4)"
"Cecil Hoffman - Hillary Stein (Season 4)"
"Ray Sharkey - Sonny Steelgrave"
"William Russ - Roger Lococco"
"Kevin Spacey - Mel Profitt"
"Gerald McRaney - Rick Simon"
"Jameson Parker - A.J. Simon"
"Mary Carver - Cecilia Simon"
"Eddie Barth - Myron Fowler (seasons 1–2)"
"Jeannie Wilson - Janet Fowler"
"Tim Reid - Lieutenant Marcel Proust "Downtown" Brown (seasons 3–6)"
"Joan McMurtrey - Lieutenant Abigail Marsh (seasons 7–8)"
"Daphne Reid - reporter Temple Hill (seasons 3-6)"
"William Shatner - Sergeant Thomas Jefferson "T. J." Hooker (Seasons 1–5)"
"Adrian Zmed - Officer Vincent "Vince" Romano (Seasons 1–4)"
"April Clough - Officer Vicki Taylor (Season 1)"
"Heather Locklear - Officer Stacy Sheridan (Seasons 2–5)"
"Richard Herd - Captain Dennis Sheridan (main cast Seasons 1–2, occasional special guest star Seasons 3–4)"
"James Darren - Police Officer Jim Corrigan (Seasons 2–5)"
"Hugh Farrington - Detective Lieutenant Pete O'Brien (Seasons 3–5)"
"Tyne Daly - Detective Mary Beth Lacey"
"Sharon Gless - Detective Christine Cagney (Seasons 2-7)"
"Al Waxman - Lt. Bert Samuels"
"Martin Kove - Victor Isbecki"
"John Karlen - Harvey Lacey"
"Sydney Clute - Detective Paul La Guardia"
"Carl Lumbly - Mark Petrie"
"Harvey Atkin - Sgt. Ronald Coleman"
"Don Johnson - Inspector/Acting Lieutenant/Captain Nash Bridges"
"Cheech Marin - Inspector/Lieutenant Joe Dominguez"
"Jodi Lyn O'Keefe - Cassidy Bridges"
"Jeff Perry - Inspector Harvey Leek"
"Jaime P. Gomez - Inspector Evan Cortez (seasons 1–5)"
"Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa - Lieutenant A. J. Shimamura (seasons 1 & 2)"
"Serena Scott Thomas - Kelly Bridges (seasons 1 & 2; guest season 3)"
"Annette O'Toole - Lisa Bridges (seasons 1 & 2; guest seasons 3 & 4)"
"James Gammon - Nick Bridges (seasons 2–6; recurring season 1)"
"Mary Mara - Inspector Bryn Carson (season 2; guest seasons 1 &"
"Kelly Hu - Inspector Michelle Chan (season 3; guest season 4)"
"Yasmine Bleeth - Inspector Caitlin Cross (seasons 4 & 5)"
"Wendy Moniz - Inspector Rachel McCabe (season 6)"
"Cress Williams - Inspector Antwon Babcock (season 6)"
"This story is to be neither an accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure, for death is not an adventure to those who stand face to face with it. It will try simply to tell of a generation of men, who, even though they may have escaped its shells, were destroyed by the war."
"[after killing a French comrade] I didn't want to kill you. But you jumped in here like that. What would you have done? It's... it's just I'd never met you before... like this... face to face. I just saw your rifle... your bayonet... grenades. If we threw all those away... we could be brothers. But they never want us to know that, do they? They never want us to know. We each have mothers... fathers... the same... fear of death. The same... pain. The same... everything. Everything. Forgive me, comrade. I could write... to your family. Yes... Yes, I'll write!"
"[to Kantorek] Not the Iron Youth then. No Iron Heroes. Just boys... wanna play, laugh, just stay alive. Only boys."
"Well, Kat... I think we're gonna be separated. Three years. You remember when I first came up here? How green I was? You fixed that. "Keep your head down." That's what you said. Maybe... Maybe when this is over, when this war is really finished, maybe we can do something together. Huh? I don't know what. A glass of wine. I don't even know where you live. Three years in the same trenches, I don't even have your address. Let me give you mine. Let me give it to you."
"[meeting his new platoon] So, here you are. It's the custom to assign one old hand to every new platoon. You're the new platoon. I'm the old hand. In training camp they filled you full of fancy information on how to be a soldier. We're going to work hard to forget all that. I'll teach you practi... [to Josef Behm] Listen to me, boy. I'll teach you practical things, like how to put your diapers on in the front lines, [puts his smoking pipe in his mouth] and how to kill Frenchies. You won't have long to wait before I baptise you. But first, we're gonna give you some hot food and we're gonna let you get some sleep, and then I'm gonna take you out on your first Patrol, tonight."
"Richard Thomas - Paul Bäumer"
"Ernest Borgnine - Stanislaus "Kat" Katczinsky"
"Donald Pleasence - Kantorek"
"Ian Holm - Corporal Himmelstoss"
"Patricia Neal - Mrs. Bäumer"
"I did Lassie for six years and I never had anybody come up to me and say, 'It made me want to be a farmer.'"
"as Ellen Miller"
"as George "Gramps" Miller"
"as Jeff Miller"
"Cloris Leachman as Ruth Martin"
"as Paul Martin"
"as Uncle Petrie J. Martin"
"as Timmy Martin"
"June Lockhart as Ruth Martin"
"as Corey Stuart"
"as Hank Whitfield"
"as Bob Erickson"
"as Scott Turner"
"as Garth Holden"
"as Ron Holden"
"as Dale Mitchell"
"as Keith Holden"
"as Lucy Baker"
"Champion the Wonder Horse Like a streak o' lightening flashing cross the sky Like the swiftest arrow whizzing from a bow Like a mighty cannon ball he seems to fly You'll hear about him everywhere you go The time will come when everyone will know the name of Champion the Wonder Horse Champion the Wonder Horsea"
"Original verse (used in episode Two) Champion the Wonder Horse Like a streak o' lightening flashing cross the sky Like the swiftest arrow whizzing from a bow Like a mighty cannon ball he seems to fly You'll hear about him everywhere you go Out West there's not man who doesn't know the name of Champion the Wonder Horse Champion the Wonder Horse"
"Champion as Champion, the Wonder Horse"
"Barry Curtis as Ricky North"
"Jim Bannon as Sandy North"
"Blaze as Rebel, the dog"
"Harry Belafonte - himself"
"Carol Burnett - herself"
"Ray Charles - himself"
"John Denver - himself"
"Jim Henson - himself (archive footage)"
"Frank Oz - himself"
"Steven Spielberg - himself"
"Frank Oz - Fozzie Bear, Miss Piggy, Bert, Grover, Cookie Monster and Animal"
"Jerry Nelson - Robin the Frog, Lew Zealand, Announcer, and Floyd Pepper"
"Richard Hunt - Scooter, Beaker and Janice"
"Dave Goelz - Gonzo the Great, Beauregard, Boober and Zoot"
"Steve Whitmire - Kermit the Frog, Rizzo the Rat, Bean Bunny, and Whoopie Cushion"
"Kevin Clash - Clifford and Elmo"
"Kathryn Mullen - Joy Buzzer and Mokey Fraggle"
"Caroll Spinney - Big Bird"
"Pam Arciero - Grundgetta"