Blaming TV as an abstract entity is nonsensical. It's our hand on the remote. There's a world out there outside the tube.
The impact of television on our culture is just indescribable.
It wasn't always easy at times, having grown up on television and being in the entertainment industry.
I don't mind being interviewed on television or radio.
You're allowed to make things for women on television and there's not like... you don't have to go through the humiliation of having made something directed at women. There it's just accepted, whereas if it's a feature, it's like 'So, talk to me about chick flicks.'
I remember when I used to have actual time to write and now you don't have time and you just do it. I think it explains a lot about television.
Nowadays, to be frank, every week is a good week for freakshow television. we might start asking, Why are there so many freaks? And why do they all want to be on television?
Even though I do a more traditional type of being funny on television, I still know a lot of comedians and stand-ups and improv actors.
I know so many people who actually just watch television on their computers now and don't even really watch their TV anymore.
There is a lot to life, and a lot more than just television to life.
I'm still going to do television. I'm just not going to do morning television. I would like to do some things that satisfy interests, private interests.
I think the best-written films or television series have a measure of the opposite of what they are.
In my mind, everything is too sanitised on television - what is wrong with things going wrong?
I still do television. I don't care. I just want to work. I love to work. I want to do 500 movies.
I did 125 films, and over 100 television shows, and you've never seen the same character twice.
The genre of television that I love and watch is so vast. There's not one type of thing I love.
I know how I felt when I saw things like 'Fame' on television when I was growing up and how that was an exceptional magnet for me to want to explore the theater. I can only assume that 'Smash' is doing that for anyone who is halfway interested in theater already.
Television is certainly a writers-led medium. They're the ones who are there, they're the ones that are conferencing or whatever, with directors coming and going.
You know, I'm a television personality. It's not like I'm a famous hooker or something!
Everybody is within reach of a television set. And so they're all politicized, and they're all stimulated, and then they have these desires, pleasures, hates, resentments, and so on, and they're reacting instantaneously.
I think interactive television is doomed. It's a dead end.
Pretty much any time in my career where I worked on television it was usually because of some financial woes or something.
I'm trying to become a young CEO, to brand myself in television and movies.
I dont have a television. All I have is Netflix and Apple TV and Hulu.
Among the roles Ive played on stage, television and in films were politicos as diverse as Abe Lincoln, Juan Peron, Herman Goering, George Wallace and both Roosevelts.