Twitter is like Ozymandias' wall of tv's in Watchmen. You don't read every tweet, but from the whole you can absorb the zeitgeist.
In my early thirties I was working in television as a researcher. I was really stuck for a period of five years. I got to TV when I was thirty. I hated being a music writer, and kept wondering why I couldn't be doing the exciting things that my friends were doing in television.
There was definitely a lack of any sort of villain in the Clinton era, which is why when Columbine happened, it was easy to pick on me. My face was around and it made good TV.
I watch a lot of TV. That's how I spend most of my time outside of work. If I had more time, I would fill it 100 percent with watching TV.
I have a hard time watching myself! Usually I do the work, and then I leave it. So I pretend like I'm not on TV every week.
In TV, there's so much compromise, it does start to grate a bit. But if you're a writer or an actor, it really is the place to be.
I tried to write a TV series, and then I discovered first of all that I love writing more than anything on this earth, and that you could write exactly as well as you want to.
George Liquor is really the richest character I have. I'm amazed there aren't 365 episodes about him on TV already.
All I need in a relationship is somebody to watch TV with me.
Even going to college, getting my degree in Radio TV and Film, as I was approaching the time when you have to decide on a major, I kept trying to figure out what would be the best major to enhance what I am doing as a performer.
I don't watch much TV at all.
The whole thing about doing TV is that you never know what's going to happen. You just have to go with it and go with the flow.
I do not know of a single TV meteorologist who buys into the man-made global warming hype. I know there must be a few out there, but I can't find them.
Closure is a preposterous concept worthy of the worst aspects of American daytime TV.
I'm a latecomer to popular TV. This is rather new to me, being in a sitcom. It's been an ambition of mine.
You can't depend on the exposure of a TV screen to keep your feet on the ground and your food tasting delicious. You've got to push yourself.
I wasn't looking to get into TV. My family was in the movie business, so I was never interested in that world.
Very rarely does anyone say that the TV is better than the book.
Paddy Chayefksy was writing and it was a time where everybody was happy to be there [on TV].
TV show's really quick. You're in, you're out. A film usually takes a lot longer. However, a voiceover is very much like TV in the sense that it's really quick. For example, I did the movie Planes in one day.
Pulling heads off Barbies, sticking them on the TV antenna and ruining the reception. But thats how witch babies are.
TV and comics and movies are what you think about when you think about geek, but people can be a geek about anything.
But also movies seem to like me more than television, so I don't get hired a lot for TV for whatever reason.
The calibre of TV's changing. It's becoming much more epic. To rival film, definitely.
A short film is just another storytelling medium like TV, Features, and Webisodes. I am just thrilled that Silent Cargo is getting out there for people to see.