I've kissed just three people in my life, other than stuff that I've done for TV or movies. I know - I'm weird!
In America they like my spicy TV alter ego, probably because there were a lot of Italians and Hispanics in the country, but the real L.A. life is a hard-working one.
The first audition I went out on was because my father was on an audition for a TV show called the 'Gilmore Girls,' and that kind of snowballed a lot of stuff in my life.
I've been watching RFD-TV for a few years. As a person who lives mostly in the country, I appreciate a network that shows the many facets of rural life.
When the TV version of Annie came on, I was drawn to it. It was the struggle of this poor kid in this environment and how her life changed. It immediately resonated.
I play a bad boy on television, but in real life I have a passion for nature and nature conservancy, specifically bird rehabilitation.
The facts of life are that a child who has seen war cannot be compared with a child who doesn't know what war is except from television.
I still do television. I don't care. I just want to work. I love to work. I want to do 500 movies.
I would love to be able to play some characters on television that are similar to some of the indie film roles I've done, that have been so close to my heart.
I'm very crafty! One time I made a television set out of a cardboard box - Everybody thought it was a lark! This was the beginning of a love affair with the arts.
I have the most ridiculous TV crush on Michael McIntyre. I fell in love watching him on 'Britain's Got Talent'.
'Young Indiana Jones' was one of the happiest times I ever had, so I love television.
I love consumerism, TV culture, shopping malls. There's nothing I'd ever buy, but I like being there. It's wacky.
'Fringe' is one of my favorite television shows, from its inception. I absolutely love all of the science fiction of it, the mystery of it, and the science in it.
I love movies, I love television and I know that the kind of stuff I love to watch and that's what I want to do.
When you're making a television show, it's about the story and arc of the show rather than any particular episode or director.
It seems that whatever we do is somehow beyond reproach - murder, rape, drunk driving - as long as we go on a TV show and apologize.
I was a pretentious child. I grew up without a television. I read a lot of books and I loved Shakespeare. Still do.
It would be ridiculous for me to say anything negative regarding blacks having an equal opportunity on TV.
I started off doing live TV, so I kind of learnt that if I get myself into trouble, I get myself out of it.
Somehow, by just continually pestering the general public by appearing on television, they accepted me and wanted more.