I think the paparazzi might have chased me out of Los Angeles.
Los Angeles is more hospitable to writers [Than NY]. It's less claustrophobic. It feels more unpredictable and dangerous, and the landscape is less structured. You see coyotes lurking all over the place. It just feels wilder and more dangerous.
Los Angeles is the only place that I can honestly say I have ever called home.
I live in Los Angeles and I like to do a lot of hiking. I live a very relaxed life.
The thing about living in Los Angeles and doing a lot of movies is that you get to go to a lot of premieres, and, regardless of whether or not you're a celebrity, you still get to walk down the red carpet and then have everyone sort of screaming your name. The pictures never get printed anywhere, but they are nonetheless taking your picture.
I have very mixed feelings about the movie business, and about Los Angeles in general.
People don't seem to have a problem with a romanticized New York, in fact that's almost all they ever do, in some sense, is romanticize that place. Los Angeles deserves the same courtesy.
There's such a unique humour in Wales that I just love and miss in Los Angeles.
Given the choice of living in Los Angeles or living in Sydney, I would choose Sydney.
I don't live in Los Angeles and I don't do a lot of superfluous press.
There's no need to travel further. The Los Angeles area is big enough for us.
I am an eighth Chinese, and I come from a large Chinese-American family in Los Angeles.
I don't really know anything about the movie business, even though I've lived in Los Angeles my whole life - somehow I've never bumped into it.
Tip the world over and everything loose falls into L.A.
Los Angeles has been good to me.
Everything moves a little quicker in Los Angeles.
I enjoy going to Palm Springs when I'm living in Los Angeles.
In Los Angeles, everything is 100 percent organic, except the people.
There is no pedestrian culture [in South Central Los Angeles].
I have turned into a bit of a homebody as I've gotten older. I don't really like to leave the couch in Los Angeles, but when a job comes around that you feel you have to do, you get up and do it.
My aim was never to be an American star; otherwise, I would have moved to Los Angeles.
Los Angeles is such a town of show business, and I'm a terrible celebrity. I find it difficult - it's the beast that must be fed. There's this big wheel of pictures and articles that goes around, and you get pinned on it.
I moved from Minnesota out to Los Angeles and I thought I was going to hate it out there, but I really like it.
I both love and am terrified by Greg Van Eekhout's vision of Los Angeles. I already want to go back.
I began my career in Los Angeles and started working fairly quickly.