I talk to millions of people every day. I just like it when they can't talk back.
Talking doom and gloom all day no longer fit who I was as a person.
When I ran across America, for 75 days I ate 10,000 calories a day. I still lost about five pounds.
I'll still try to nail acting jobs, but with 'Eastbound,' creating it is what gives me the ultimate pleasure at the end of the day.
You possess a potent force that you either use, or misuse, hundreds of times every day.
It was so simple in the old days. You put out an album, people promoted it, it got in the charts, and you had a hit.
I think that the day you've figured out the differences between women and men is the day that you're no longer attracted to women. It's the difference that is so fantastic and frustrating and angering, and really sexy.
As a CEO of a large company, clearly we need policies in the U.S. government that are pro-business, because at the end of the day, we all work within the framework of a country's policies.
My mother wanted us to understand that the tragedies of your life one day have the potential to be comic stories the next.
I've been beat up pretty badly. Pretty badly. Yet at the end of the day, everyone says I'm doing a pretty good job.
It gets harder every day to get out of bed. I don't feel like it loads of the time. It is only my exercise routine which wakes me up.
I don't think of Kurt as 'Kurt Cobain from Nirvana'. I think of him as 'Kurt'. It's something that comes back all the time. Almost every day.
Every day I tell myself that reading newspapers is a waste of time, but then... I cannot do without them. They are like a drug.
I never, ever used my son for publicity. He'll have his say one day if he wants it. He'll have the last word. He has time to defend himself.
I write all the time. I do artwork that's part of a diary, and I write short stories to go with them pretty much every day.
I do not fault anyone else who makes choices to play characters that they wished they hadn't... Because at the end of the day, none of us are happy with our jobs all the time.
Back in the day, I used to be in the studio recording 20 hours a day. And that was all of the time. I still record a lot of hours, but I don't go as long as I used to.
At the time I was arrested I had no idea it would turn into this. It was just a day like any other day. The only thing that made it significant was that the masses of the people joined in.
In college I didn't dress up every day, for class or stuff like that, but when it came time to do certain things I'd dress up for sure.
For us as entertainers traveling, the schedule gets really crazy - flying all the time, being on a bus tour, changing hotels every day. And it's challenging.
I don't spend time wondering what might be next; I just focus on trying to savor every day.