In 2003, I almost died of an intestinal blockage when I was on a mountain in Chile, filming a segment for 'Scientific American Frontiers.'
I'm used to American actors who have a movie career thinking television acting is beneath them.
In my book I don't just demonstrate that free enterprise is the most efficient way of organizing an economy - which it is. I also show that it's an expression of American values, and, thus, that a fight for free enterprise is very much a fight for ou...
I'm the only American alive or dead who presided unhappily over the removal of a vice president and a president.
Nationality is a very curious thing. The blood is Scots and the temperament is Scots, but I am, in fact, 100% American.
I don't want all of American cinema to be big cartoons that are just made to be digested by the entire world.
I've done shows that aired on American TV, but none of them proved to be successful, so yes, no one here knows who I am.
I kind of resent the idea that the whole world has to be interested in the American elections.
Americans have different ways of saying things. They say 'elevator', we say 'lift'... they say 'President', we say 'stupid psychopathic git.
Seems like Americans just want it to be Halloween all year. The holiday just keeps getting more popular.
Rap actually took root in the Negro community, and then in the Hispanic community, long before it impacted on the larger American community as a whole.
American businesses are struggling to pay outrageous, exploitive insurance bills for their employees, hampering our ability to compete globally.
The notion that a human being should be constantly happy is a uniquely modern, uniquely American, uniquely destructive idea.
In choosing Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney made a fantastic choice and a bold statement to the American people.
American writers, at least those of us who are fortunate enough to support ourselves in the field, are by and large a lucky lot.
Consul - in American politics, a person who having failed to secure an office from the people is given one by the Administration on condition that he leave the country.
I've often thought that the gauntlet of American politics is more individualistic, more expensive, more unpredictable than in many other democracies.
Press critics worry that the rise of media polarization threatens the foundation of credible, common information that American politics needs to thrive.
The larger meaning here is that mainstream journalists simply cannot talk about things that the two parties agree on; this is the black hole of American politics.
I happen to think that American politics is one of the noblest arts of mankind; and I cannot do anything else but write about it.
The mobilisation which Bush has been able to perform since 11 September 2001 has to be fought - at least by Americans - in the name of a wise, honourable and democratic patriotism.