Brooklyn is not the easiest place to grow up in, although I wouldn't change that experience for anything.
Brooklyn was the most wonderful city a man could have the good fortune to inhabit.
There's something really special about Brooklyn. There's a feeling in the air, a vibe that's unique to it.
Brooklyn is the largest community of African Americans in the country.
Brooklyn was a dream. All the things that happened there just couldn't happen. It was all dream stuff.
I'm from Brooklyn. In Brooklyn, if you say, 'I'm dangerous,' you'd better be dangerous.
I have a place in Brooklyn, but I don't really live there. I lived there when I was a kid, but that was a long time ago.
I'm in Brooklyn. Turn left at the corner, I'll meet you there.
The future of Brooklyn is going to be decided by people who live there, not by outsiders.
Brooklyn, of course, is the world.

Brooklyn was the capital of America in 1956, because it was just as possible as Washington, D.C., just as representative.
Brooklyn was the center of the world, as far as I was concerned.
I grew up in Brooklyn, and my parents were Holocaust survivors, so we didn't have a lot of money.
I'm proud of coming from Brooklyn. Half of my life is there.
I am from Brooklyn, NY, so it's in my blood to drive a hard bargain.
To me, Brooklyn is the future of New York City. It has diversity, it has youth, it has energy.

Brooklyn's always been very independent, but there's something about a borough that's totally self-sufficient that makes it a great place to grow up.

Brooklyn is a very different place than Manhattan, and it's important to remember that.

Brooklyn was like the Jack Nicholson of boroughs. It was the only one with any street cred.