I'm lucky that a lot of my friends are in the entertainment industry.
I grew up in a very strict Pentecostal household.
Everyone knows that if you've got a brother, you're going to fight.
I'm so greedy, I'm hungry, I'm young.
Elvis was rock'n'roll. He came from the poverty and the pain.
I had Elvis' number in my book and I never called it.
I decided to write about the myths of divorce.
I got my first handgun license when I was 22.
I knew about Elvis. Of course, everybody knew about him then.
Coming to terms with the fact that my marriage was a failure was devastating and very difficult.
Blues and jazz pulled me away from what was left of my family.
Willie Nelson, out there 200 days a year, calls his band family. And it is.
My family and my friends are most important to me. These people are my foundation.
I was born in Montreal and came from a lower-middle-class family.
I've got one young family by the first wife, with four children.
I grew up in a family of secrets; there was a lot of pathology in the family.
The business of being a popular entertainer in England is just too hard.
'None of Your Business.' It's the only Salt-N-Pepa song that I regret.
By the mid-70s, I wanted to get out of the business. I was tired anyway.
As you know, the business is cyclic with styles. It's no different from clothing styles.
I grew up in east Tennessee, and everybody knew everybody's business.