When you get married, your loyalty, first and foremost, is to your spouse, and to the family that you create together.
I started imagining this whole different world. It was a society of musicians, a family I hoped I could belong to one day.
Rarely do members of the same family grow up under the same roof.
You might think that after thousands of years of coming up too soon and getting frozen, the crocus family would have had a little sense knocked into it.
Nobody wanted the 'Roseanne' show. I heard from agents that there was no interest in a show about a fat woman and her family.
My family are too grounded, and I will go home to visit. I always need my dose of Liverpool to keep me grounded.
We all learn submission because we all have 'bosses', whether we're presidents of companies or not. The easiest place to learn it is in family.
I found it an interesting portrait of a marriage in exploring notions of how one partner supports the other, whilst not jeopardizing the greater good - which is the family.
I grew up in a family of strong women, and I owe any capacity I have to understand women to my mother and big sister.
I think the sense of community that exists with all the characters - that's the answer. The fact that they have found a family in their friends. It does give some depth and meaning to their lives.
I came to a happy Jewish family in dark days in Europe.
My family wasn't rich, so when it comes to money, I tend to think, 'Err on the side of caution.'
Ambivalence about family responsibilities has a long history in the corporate world.
I'm considered homophobic and crazy about these things and old fashioned. But I think that the family - father, mother, children - is fundamental to our civilisation.
I have no interest in becoming a tax exile and living somewhere I don't want to - I just want to be at home with my family.
I come from a family where soccer has always been very present. My uncles, my father and my brother were all players.
I've said my piece. My time now is entirely focused on family.
I'm a working-class kid from a blue-collar New England family.
'American Horror' is the debasement of the suburban family, the way a lonely kid would have imagined it in the Seventies.
You go through life wondering what is it all about but at the end of the day it's all about family.
The greenest home is the one you don't build. If you really want to save the Earth, move in with another family and share a house that's already built. Better yet, live in the forest and eat whatever the squirrels don't want.