Willard Scott quotes:

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
  • Positive feelings come from being honest about yourself and accepting your personality, and physical characteristics, warts and all; and, from belonging to a family that accepts you without question.

  • I loved Harry Truman with all my heart and soul.

  • My grandmother was a typical farm-family mother. She would regularly prepare dinner for thirty people, and that meant something was always cooking in the kitchen. All of my grandmother's recipes went back to her grandmother.

  • When I was just starting out in the business, I used to love to watch Lorne Greene doing the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. I said right then, 'That's what I want to do someday,' and it's been one dream that has come true.

  • In high school, I weighed 175 to 180. I looked like Abraham Lincoln. I was 6-foot-3, biggest thing in the class, but tall, not fat.

  • I'm Southern Baptist, not a meteorologist.

  • When you hit the big time, big money, big egos, people don't talk. You have no friends.

  • Now that I'm a grandfather myself, I realize that the best thing about having grandkids is that you get the kid for the best part of the ride - kind of like owning a car for only the first 10,000 miles. You can have your grandchildren for a couple of days and then turn them back over to the parents.

  • My grandmother's house - she ran it just like her grandmother and her great-grandmother. They didn't have electricity. They had wood stoves that never got cold.

  • I've produced more pilots than United Airlines, and they've all been disasters. Every audition I ever took in my life I lost.

  • Never slap a man who chews tobacco.

  • People over 100 are the fastest-growing group in America. People soon will be working 'til 100 - some because they have to - and living 'til 125 or even 135. What do I know, I'm just a weatherman, but I've made a hobby of studying this, and it's phenomenal.

  • I'm a country boy.

  • Just do the math. In the next 50 to 75 years, people will be living to be 130 and 140. They'll be working until they're 100. It's incredible.

  • The TV weatherman has always been one of the best, most secure jobs. They change anchors, they change the set, producers come and go. But the weather person hangs on forever!

  • My dad was an agent for Met Life. In the '50s, I remember the mortality rate was something like - you had - 58 was the average age. Then it was moved up to 62, and then 65, 68.

  • The best cookies of all in the world are the ones my daughter Sally makes. They come out all uniform with nice little air holes.

  • I talk too much. I eat too much.

  • I get all fired up about aging in America.

  • I go to McDonald's at least once a week. I always get a No. 2.

  • Why do we love our grandparents so much? Part of the reason I think has to do with the tremendous natural affection and affinity that kids have for older people, whether they are their actual grandparents or not.

  • Will Rogers was an American hero - someone you could get your teeth into and love.

  • I still start to get panicky each morning before I go on television. I'll say, 'I'm in awful shape, something is wrong,' and if I start to look like I'm going off the deep end, Jimmy Straka, the stage manager, will say, 'You're all right. Calm down.' Then Bryant Gumbel will grab me by the leg or something.

  • The only way to predict if there's a cloud on your horizon due to glaucoma is to get tested. No matter what the diagnosis, the forecast is for clear vision in the years ahead.

  • There are plenty of good-looking women out there. Go get them.

  • When I can, I do 25 minutes of calisthenics every day.

  • Everything I've ever done in my life has been a fluke.

  • If I go down in for anything in history, I would like to be known as the person who convinced the American people that catfish is one of the finest eating fishes in the world.

  • I had the privilege of having two sets of loving grandparents.

  • Nobody actually talks to anybody anymore. People in cubicles next to each other, they e-mail each other.

  • Remember Judy Garland? She retired 40 times.

  • It's simply a tragedy that anyone today goes blind from glaucoma, when it's so unnecessary.

  • Librarians have always been among the most thoughtful and helpful people. They are teachers without a classroom.

  • Thanksgiving just gets me all warm and tingly and all kinds of wonderful inside.

  • I'd like to do 'Saturday Night Live.'

  • August depresses me a little. I don't even feel like eating. And when I don't eat, that's a sure sign of stagnation.

  • Having a phobia has changed me.

  • There is something endearing about the weatherman.

  • It was a big story and yesterday's soup. Who cares?

  • Take a microphone out of my hands, and I'm just plain folks.

  • Everyone complains about the weather, but nobody ever seems to do anything about it.

  • I run me like a conglomerate, because that's what I am.

  • I'm not the dumbest guy that ever lived.

  • I have always said that the best training to be a TV newsman or anybody on television is to do a children's show because you are oblivious to the fact that there is a camera there.

  • I want to get my own show because 'Today' will eventually get tired of me, or the audience will get tired of me.

  • As an only child, I never felt insecure and always had total love.

  • A good marriage is like an incredible retirement fund. You put everything you have into it during your productive life, and over the years it turns from silver to gold to platinum.

  • Bryant Gumbel's ego has applied for statehood. And if it's accepted, it will be the fifth-largest.

  • I got more mail than anybody on the history of The Today Show, but half of it was to get me off the air.

  • I have the best job in the entire history of broadcasting.

  • I think women can cope a lot better than men.

  • I wore dresses all the time. I like to wear dresses.

  • I've always had a reputation as a buffoon.

  • Nature's a tranquilizer as you get older.

  • No libraries, no progress.

  • The critics - how come you never see any of them on TV?

  • These days, you have to have a gimmick to do the weather. You have to have an act.

  • Tom Browkaw said it best. He said NBC could survive without him or the rest of the news division, but not Nancy Fields.

  • Viewers figure, 'Uncle Willard doesn't know any more about the weather than I do.' They're right.

  • When something's over with me, it's over.

+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share