Why must you know the details of my troubles to have compassion? Is it not enough to show compassion simply because you know that everyone has troubles?
I can and will improve the world. I will smile, show kindness, and be grateful. I refuse to be unhappy.
Mehlis will go all the way and we want to go all the way. These arrests show that no matter how high the perpetrators are, they will face the consequences of what they did.
Art is, after all, only a trace – like a footprint which shows that one has walked bravely and in great happiness.
You don't have to disrespect and insult others simply to hold your own ground. If you do, that shows how shaky your own position is.
I created 'Dinner: Impossible' with a guy named Bryan O'Reilly and I shot the pilot as a 30 minute show and we sold it.
There are so few shows that are willing to take risks with their characters in the way that 'Homeland' does. And yet, the audience still comes back and loves those characters.
How often, really, do you get a Filipino story line in a show? Not very often. I can't think of any.
When I came to England at the very beginning of commercial television it was easy for me because I was only doing one or two shows a week at most. It was really a holiday.
The real intimidating stuff is the scene where you show up for the first day. You kind of square off, and that is where you look each other in the eye.
Google is the enemy. I would tell that to anyone who enjoys any TV show like 'Game of Thrones' to avoid it; it spoils so many storylines.
My aim is to show that those governments that violate the rights of people by invoking the name of Islam have been misusing Islam.
Twin Peaks was special because it was so groundbreaking. In the early '90s it really changed television a lot. A bunch of weird shows, like Northern Exposure, came on after that.
The doctor should be opaque to his patients and, like a mirror, should show them nothing but what is shown to him.
I wouldn't be interested in just doing a show that's mapped out and choreographed with a set list. That would've been boring so long ago it just wouldn't be any fun.
It's interesting because a lot of people that stop me on the street now, and they talk about 'The Wire,' and they all have the same question: 'How come they took that show off the air?'
Personally, I don't get that whole reality show thing. It was much smaller, and it's grown. It's like an epidemic. I'm still rather confused by it.
'Greek' is basically a show about sororities and fraternities. It follows Casey Cartwright, played by me, her younger brother, and all the people that are involved in their lives from the different fraternities.
I still take it seriously, but once I go out there I think I've got more relaxed and I think it shows.
I actually got an initial sense of how big 'Outlander' was going to be on Twitter. We're all on there to help promote the show and also interact with the fans.
I had rather see the portrait of a dog that I know, than all the allegorical paintings they can show me in the world.