A woman telling her true age is like a buyer confiding his final price to an Armenian rug dealer.
First, you have stereotypes, and that will be the black drug dealer, the east Asian kung fu master, the Middle Eastern terrorist in 'True Lies.' Then you have stuff that takes place on culturally specific terrain, that engages with it, but actually subverts assumptions. 'Smashes' stereotypes. That's where I've come into the game.
'Priced to sell' - just the phrase makes me smile. When a dealer says all the items in his booth are priced to sell, he means he's tagged them as aggressively as he can to get you to buy them. Don't worry, though, I still haggle. You have to. That's the point of a flea market.
I don't think anyone's ever thought I was a drug dealer.
A leader is a dealer in hope.
I'm not a gambler, let's just say that, nor have I ever been a dealer at a casino.
In Mallrats, you pretty much don't see him sell any weed, really. I don't consider him a big dealer.
The difference between an author and a horse is that the horse doesn't understand the horse dealer's language.
Many say an art dealer running a museum is a 'conflict of interest.' But maybe the art world has lived an artificial or unintentional lie all of these years when it comes to conflicts of interest.
Since the Gulf War, since the new World Order, America is now the number one arms dealer in the world.