If you take a tube TV to a donation center, they won't accept it.
My day job is making TV shows.
I'm a TV junkie. I'm always flipping through channels.
I watch a lot of TV, and I'd like to think what I watch is good TV.
It's so hard to figure out how to end a TV show.
I always viewed [the podcast and the TV show] as two separate things.
You become a victim of your own success. It's what happens in TV when Fox has a big hit with the X-Files. And they start chasing and the rest of their shows suffer. Because the experimentation that made the X-Files a show is all of the sudden lost.
I love doing TV as much as I love doing movies.
I can get a script and go, "Well, I'd rather do stand-up." I don't hold movies in higher regard. I love making videos and posting. I love TV.
I would say the biggest difference is that a movie is a shorter, more encapsulated experience, and a TV job is like having a regular day job where you get to do what you love.
Normally I'm not like a big TV person. I never use my DVR.
I think I really see myself doing TV more than ever.
I come from the theater, and I've done a lot of character work in the theater, but Hollywood stuff in film and TV, they've been more leading lady/ingenue type roles.
TV feels quite constipated, and the thing I find particularly difficult is the branding of the channels where it's not 'Is it a good script?' but 'Is it a BBC2 script?'
A persons portrayal on TV isnt always how someone is.
There's a TV element to everything in my eyes.
Tone is everything in TV.
Many ordinary Americans make themselves feel better by saying what the famous daytime TV idiot says. But it leads to absolute calamity and disaster, as we are seeing.
Donald Trump is great television, just has it. Trump looks good on TV.
My guilty pleasure is elastic-waisted pants. And reruns of shows Ive already seen 400 times on TV.
Anybody that you put on TV five hours a week is at some point is going to say something stupid.
My real life is funnier than anything on TV.
I love TV as a viewer.
The writing is so great on TV now; it's such a pleasure to watch.
I'm much more used to the TV shows, which are demanding to write and perform but very fulfilling.