“I like boob-sweat. I have some right now.”
Radio From Hell (August 1, 2007)
Help us to complete the source, original and additional information
Bill Allred 95
Related quotes

Source: Twitter https://twitter.com/repjohnlewis/status/1207420638748725250, (30 December 2019)

Source: [Actress Nicole Richie doesn't want bigger breasts, March 2008, Entertainment.oneindia.in, http://entertainment.oneindia.in/hollywood/top-stories/scoop/2008/nicole-richie-big-busts-070308.html, 2008-03-07]

“I would like to be your sweat.”
Original: (it) Vorrei essere il tuo sudore.

“I would like to be your sweat.”
Original: Vorrei essere il tuo sudore.
Source: prevale.net
On how he would like to be remembered (1994)
Context: Oh, I don't know — that's a hell of a question — I don't tend to look at my stuff that way. I just look at it a book at a time. Something like the Amber books are in a different class. I try not to anticipate. I don't know what I'll be writing a few years from now. I have some ideas — I have lots of different things I want to try. I almost don't really care what history thinks. I like the way I'm being treated right now.

As quoted and paraphrased in "I Have Been a Babe and a Boob" by Joe Winkworth, in Collier's (October 31, 1925), p. 15
Context: "I am through—through with the pests and the good-time guys. Between them and a few crooks I have thrown away more than a quarter of a million dollars. I have been a Babe—and a Boob. I'm through." [Ruth] confesses he faces either oblivion or the hard task of complete reformation. [He] realizes that he must make good all over again. "I am going to do it," he said. "I was going to be the exception, the popular hero who could do as he pleased. But all those people were right. Babe and Boob—that was me all over. Now, though, I know that if I am to wind up sitting pretty on the world I've got to face the facts and admit I have been the sappiest of saps. All right, I admit it. I haven't any desire to kid myself."

“Which I have earned with the sweat of my brows.”
Source: Don Quixote de la Mancha (1605–1615), Part I, Book I, Ch. 4.