I just remember the early days of Tenacious D. There was no talk or thought about doing a TV show or a movie.
On most TV shows, you work on a set and do some location.
I don't need to write comics for a living. I have movies and TV for that. I write comics for one reason and one reason only: I love comics. I love the form, the structure, the storytelling process, I love everything about it.
I feel like obviously the standard for what TV looks like changes all the time.
If I stop working and publishing, and TV, and film and all that, I would be dead within a couple of weeks. I don't really have that kind of off-switch.
I'm always kind of off to the next movie, and focused on making sure that the one I'm currently working on is as good as the one that's already on TV.
You never get tired of seeing yourself on TV. It's always extra cool... always a treat.
I've never been on a TV show for more than a season and you have to continually keep it interesting and you have to keep it connected, even as you change.
No TV and no beer makes Homer something something.
Without TV, it's hard to know when one day ends and another begins.
I'm not entirely sure what my end goal is, but I'd love to get involved in city politics and broadcast TV.
TV is generally an unfriendly environment for directors because you're expected to come in and tell a story in the voice of the show that already exists, and just fill in the blanks and then submit it back.
In fact, is beginning to use a lot of the language and phraseology that we have used. In fact, I think I saw Hillary Clinton TV ad, and I thought it was me.
There was even a time when Donald Trump didn't get an Emmy for his TV program three years in a row and he started tweeting that the Emmys were rigged against him.
I'm always looking upwards and looking forwards and so when someone says, "Hey, would you consider a TV show?" I say, "Hell yeah, I'll consider that. I'll check that out."
I never thought I was right for TV or that TV was right for me.
I love working in TV. TV is fast. You shoot it and it's done quickly.
Digital advertising is now larger than TV.
Almost always, when I'm on TV, the producers who call me, who negotiate what we're going to say, is a woman.
I don't really like to arrange shows by best performances. That's why Emmy season is kind of a chore for me. Unlike movies, where it's easier to decide who was the best performance, a TV show goes up and down, including characters/portrayals.
I'm not much a TV reporter, as in someone who covers the daily machinations of the television industry, though I certainly follow it and weave it into my reviews and essays about the medium.
In fact, when it comes to TV, I'm not even sure what my real, true preferences are.
I had kind of sworn off network TV a while ago.
The wonderful thing about a TV show is if you get picked up for another season, there's no happily ever after.
I dont really enjoy watching reality TV.