How did this or that change my music? The only time I have to think about it is when an interviewer asks me that.
I think interviews can be fine. It's just there's this terrible fear of coming off wrongly or saying something that gets taken out of context.
We were delighted to have Nigel as a producer. The only problem is that Nigel is so famous that he seems to dominate most interviews without being there.
I remember interviewing someone I actually felt bad for, and therefore didn't want to take an ironic stance against him. It actually turned out to be a really funny piece.
My biggest problem in my life is I'm cheap and I didn't hire a publicist. In every awkward interview, normally actors get these things scripted.
I would love to have a long and serious conversation with the Pope. And Woody Allen, whom I have never interviewed. Then, after those two? Steve Jobs.
Most rock journalism is people who can't write, interviewing people who can't talk, for people who can't read.
In terms of publicity and interviews, well, it's really hard in this modern world to keep a sense of mystery.
After I get comfortable, I kind of forget that we're even doing an interview and I say whatever comes to the mind.
After this interview, I'm going to immigration to try to sort out my Green Card, just like any other normal person.
One reason I quit doing interviews after years and years and years was because I was making things up.
I've spent days in cinemas answering questions from the audience, in interviews, travelling abroad, and all they do is thank me nicely.
If an interview just serves the idea of celebrity, then I think that sucks. I don't want to do that.
I don't do gossipy interviews because I don't think that helps; I think that's a distraction.
You've gotta understand - when you interview someone, it's not an interrogation. It's not the Nuremberg Trials.
In any interview, you do say more or less than you mean.
I'm so reluctant to do newspaper interviews because it's so misleading how they interpret what you say.
I don't have to run the Peace Corps. I could live without seeing my picture in the newspapers and without being interviewed.
I've been interviewed for hundreds of magazine articles, and they come out incredibly goofy about 90 percent of the time.
I'm a bad interview because I want to always feel like I'm being totally honest, but at the same time, I'm absolutely paranoid. That combination results in a lot of spaces.
Hopefully, I can follow in Leonardo DiCaprio's shoes. I probably say this in every interview, but he is one of my favorite actors of all time.