Ben Feldman quotes:

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  • With 'Mad Men,' you feel like you're a member of Seal Team Six when you're shooting.

  • I would say what Mad Men has taught me has been a super elevated evaluation of text in general, and understanding subtext, and understanding where a character comes from - what he means by this or by that.

  • You've got a problem. Part of what you own isn't yours. It belongs to Uncle Sam. May I show you how much belongs to Uncle Sam?

  • My aunt is a famous L.A. chef, Susan Feniger, and she's got Street and Border Grill. So a fun night out for me is to go to my aunt's restaurants.

  • If you look at the history of advertising, most of them were Jews, so it was only a matter of time before 'Mad Men' explored that area of advertising.

  • Work hard. Think big. Listen well.

  • Life Insurance is the only tool that takes pennies and guarantees dollars.

  • Usually, if I'm yelling at the TV, I'm in a bar. If I'm by myself, and it's not a game, I often find myself scolding reality stars that can't hear me through the television set.

  • Here's the thing about Jews in Hollywood. Not to stereotype, but the Jews I know here are the funniest, most self-deprecating people I know. And it's rare to find a Jew that is actually offended by comedy about them.

  • When you audition for shows in Hollywood, you go in, you do your scene, maybe you get an adjustment. It's sort of easy, and a lot of times it just feels sort of rote and simple. Whereas when you go to New York and you audition for plays, you walk out sweaty and intimidated and nervous and doubting yourself as an actor.

  • Youll have the same problems when I walk out, as you had when I walked in... unless you let me take your problems with me.

  • Doing something costs something. Doing nothing costs something. And, quite often, doing nothing costs a lot more!

  • I don't like sci-fi/fantasy.

  • Don't sell life insurance. Sell what life insurance can do.

  • I do not sell life insurance. I sell money. I sell dollars for pennies apiece. My dollars cost 3 cents per dollar per year.

  • Your biggest asset is a positive attitude. That more than anything else determines your earnings.

  • If people understood what life insurance does, we wouldn't need salesmen to sell it. People would come knocking on the door. But they don't understand.

  • You know, a man's life is the most precious thing in the world, isn't it? So isn't it odd that a man will insure everything but his life?

  • Goals aren't enough. You need goals plus deadlines: goals big enough to get excited about and deadline to make you run. One isn't much good without the other, but together they can be tremendous.

  • Life insurance is time. The time a man might not have. If he needs time, he needs life insurance.

  • The biggest asset you have is your earning capacity, and that depends entirely on your attitude.

  • The key to a sale in an interview, and the key to an interview is a disturbing question.

  • Your value depends on what you make of yourself. Make the most of yourself for that is all there is of you.

  • Read! Study never stops because publications never stop coming in. It's read and study. And think about what you're studying. Take it apart and put it together. Ask 'why?' And know the answers.

  • My dad told me at the very beginning of my career, basically, "If you're gonna have a megaphone, you're gonna need to use it to do some kind of good." He has always been aggravated by any kind of celebrities that don't have any charities or love or passion or something they're trying to help.

  • I rarely use the telephone because he may not want to see me. I have a better chance of seeing the man I want to see if I do go. Besides, switchboard girls and secretaries have become very good. They've learned to take you apart. 'Who? Why? What for? What company?' You don't always get by. I seldom call on the phone. I'd rather go.

  • Most people buy not because they believe, but because the sales person believes.

  • When you walk out, the money walks in

  • Term insurance is temporary, but your problem is permanent.

  • I've been pretty lucky, I like my jobs.

  • I get up in the morning and I put on makeup and then I say somebody else's words in someone else's clothes, and then I go home and watch TV, have a glass of whisky and go to bed. And I'm overcompensated for that. So it's insane to not use that pedestal to try and at least help someone or something that's in need.

  • I don't like horror, which is ridiculous because I've been in three horror movies, but when I see those things, I see camera tricks and fake blood and actors screaming and I don't know understand why other actors don't see that.

  • I meet people and a lot of times, instead of saying, "Are you from the East Coast?" people just go, "you're from the East Coast, right?", having no reason to have known that. I don't know what that is. Maybe it's just that I'm Jewish.

  • If you're starting to lose your faith in the general intelligence of the American populous, there's nothing like them mistaking pop culture for Van Gogh as a sign that people still read their history books and care about art.

  • If I don't buy it, I can't sell it.

  • No one ever died with too much money.

  • You are already broke and don't even know it.

  • If you look at the history of advertising, most of them were Jews, so it was only a matter of time before 'Mad Men' explored that area of advertising,

  • I think I'm the funniest guy in a room full of unfunny people. Unfortunately, my career is increasingly leading me into rooms where everybody is funny. I'm the least funny person in a room full of funny people.

  • I never thought I was gonna live in LA. I thought I was gonna live in New York forever.

  • I think I'm the funniest guy in a room full of unfunny people.

  • I'm a lot happier in people's living rooms weekly than I think I would be if I was really, really relying on a movie career to keep me fulfilled and excited.

  • I'm just the least funny person in a room full of funny people, which is basically every single day of work for me.

  • Unfortunately, my career is increasingly leading me into rooms where everybody is funny.

  • I know plenty of actors smarter than me with better taste than me who love horror movies and love sci-fi and it just doesn't make sense to me.

  • When you realize the writers start writing to who you are, you're basically reading reviews of yourself. And then it becomes this cyclical nightmare where I feel like I need to play into it, then I find myself acting like the character in real life.

  • There was a time where I chose my jobs based on what jobs were available to me, so I would choose 100 percent of them.

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