1.
To have a high IQ, you tend to specialize, think deep thoughts. You avoid trivia.
Christopher Langan
2.
Correct thinkers think that 'baseball trivia' is an oxymoron: nothing about baseball is trivial.
George Will
3.
Trivia rarely affect efficiency. Are all the machinations worth it, when their primary effect is to make the code less readable?
Brian Kernighan
5.
NHPrimary Trivia: The Republican candidates have not spoken to a black person since Herman Cain dropped out.
Andy Borowitz
6.
I think I'm a trivia nerd. I love to learn about everything. I'm curious.
Adam Rodriguez
8.
People who take everything to heart trivia - the most capable of genuinely love.
Natalie Portman
9.
I don't really want to tell jokes about trivia; I'd kind of rather tell jokes about things like life and death.
David Shrigley
10.
It is exciting to write about the present once one gets beyond the trivia of the moment. As a time to live in, as a time to think about, the present is intriguing.
Vikram Seth
11.
Anything television trivia I'm good at. But when you're on your couch, you're really good at it, but when you're standing there, it's probably scary.
Sarah Silverman
12.
In a fast-paced world, today's popular brand could be tomorrow's trivia question.
D. Wayne Calloway
14.
What's new?" is an interesting and broadening eternal question, but one which, if pursued exclusively, results only in an endless parade of trivia and fashion, the silt of tomorrow.
Robert M. Pirsig
15.
There is nothing, under present conditions, that can be more easily and exactly reproduced than a technically good black-and-white photograph, and it is utter rot to burden those interested in them with irrelevant biographical trivia and pet longwinded theory.
Clarence John Laughlin
16.
Don't speak if you don't have to about trivia. The time for joking comes because of the trust, and you have to earn the trust. So, I don't alibi for anything, and I'll take the heat. That's the other thing. Don't let them take the heat. We take the heat.
Phil Ramone
17.
Telling a story of illness, one pulls a thread through a narrow opening flanked on one side by shame and the other by trivia.
Susan Griffin