Eric Kripke quotes:

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  • It's hard asking someone with a broken heart to fall in love again.

  • Religion and gods and beliefs - for me, it all comes down to your brother. And your brother might be the brother in your family, or it might be the guy next to you in the foxhole - it's about human connections.

  • Your half-caf, double vanilla latte is getting cold over here, Francis.

  • People pitch me the crazy mystery mind-blowing thing all the time. My response is, 'Great, but how do the characters feel about it, and how do we reveal new facets and new dimensions of who they are?'

  • I like to tell stories that have beginnings, middles and ends.

  • I'm not a fan of endless mystery in storytelling - I like to know where the mythology's going; I like to get there in an exciting, fast-paced way - enough that there's a really clear, aggressive direction to where it's going, to pay off mystery and reward the audiences loyalty.

  • I've had a lifelong obsession with urban legends and American folklore.

  • Kids aint supposed to be grateful! They're supposed to eat your food, break your heart.

  • Television showrunners are a foolishly optimistic bunch.

  • I'm kind of a comic book geek, but I'm not really a super hero comic book geek.

  • It's always better to go personal and painful than to go big.

  • We are definitely living in the butterfly effect theory, where any change that is made in the past is going to have a very logical cause-and-effect ramification of the present.

  • Beyond all our Blackberries and iPhones, we're dangerously separated from our food and water supplies.

  • Let's be honest, any show will live or die based on how good the characters are, how good the actors are, how complicated the relationships are, how grounded they are and how much heart they have.

  • People pitch me the crazy mystery mind-blowing thing all the time. My response is, 'Great, but how do the characters feel about it, and how do we reveal new facets and new dimensions of who they are?

  • If I had a worldview, and I don't know if I do, but if I did, it's one that's intensely humanistic.

  • When you start a show, the plans are not set in stone. They're really mutable, cocktail napkin sketches.

  • People simply don't make eye contact anymore.

  • If I had a worldview, and I don't know if I do,but if I did, it's one that's intensely humanistic."

  • When you do 22 episodes of a network show, it's incredibly useful to have a format that gives you a jumping-off point for a story.

  • Mythologies become exhausting burdens, from a writer's perspective.

  • People love a good mystery; I understand that.

  • Every so often, you want to map out your plot mythology but never so specifically that you can't let a story surprise you. You want to allow the type of action of the writer's room so that you have the ability to take a left turn.

  • What I think networks do so well are big, fun, accessible, invite everybody into the tent kinds of storytelling, akin to an early Spielberg movie or a Michael Crichton novel. That's not to say that there aren't scary parts 'cause there are, and that there aren't sexy parts and edgy parts, just like early Spielberg would have, but there's a lot of heart, a lot of emotion and complicated characters.

  • Driver picks the music, shotgun shuts his cakehole.

  • There are so many shows out there, so you really need to work hard to separate yourself and cut through the static.

  • You think you're funny? I think I'm adorable.

  • A show is going to be good and fun to work on, if the research is interesting.

  • I really am a very research-oriented writer.

  • I like to find ideas where the research is going to be fun.

  • It's hard to make a lot of pop culture references where there's no pop culture.

  • I'm going to put out something that I believe in, or I'm not going to do it." I'm really scared of putting out a product that people will say, "Oh, that's not as good as the other thing."

  • When I am kicking around show ideas, or really any idea, usually an image comes to me. I don't really start with a character or a logline like, "What if the electricity turned off?"

  • I've always said at the beginning of every single season of the show when I was running the show in the writers' room, "This is the last season, so let's smoke 'em if we've got 'em."

  • When you're writing TV or movies your vernacular is time, it's all based on rhythms, a character takes a beat or two characters have a moment, like everything is about time. And when you're writing a comic, everything is about space. It's how many panels to put on a page, when should you do a full page splash, what is the detail that you see in any particular image.

  • The ability to get inside your character's head in a graphic novel is really fun and useful because one, you can really define the character's voice and two, it's a way easier way to convey what the character's thinking by actually laying out what he's thinking.

  • In TV and movies, you kill yourself spending all this time to think up the symbolism or what if that deer that runs across your hero's path somehow conveys what's going on inside your hero's head? When a lot of times, you just want to hear what he's thinking.

  • I'm mostly coming at the superhero legends as an outsider, I know them and I studied them but I didn't really grow up with them, but I think it allows me to sort of analyze them in a way that's kind of interesting.

  • I have a bad habit, in the shows that I run, of killing off the people that I love.

  • At the end of day, people are starving and, if people are starving and thirsty and they need to keep their families alive, people become desperate quickly. There are real world examples of this.

  • I've never counted my chickens before they've hatched.

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