I never show anything to anybody until I've finished it.
I like showing the gritty truthful dark side of humanity.
There are not the same factual shows anymore - children's TV has become much more trivial.
The basic rule of storytelling is 'show, don't tell.'
I did the 'Tonight Show' once, and I choked up. I get intimidated.
All my books were easy to write - doesn't it show?
Most of the shows I want to do I'm not smart enough to figure out how to watch.
Our shows today are better and funnier than they've ever been.
You must show the world that you abhor fighting.
If I see one more forensics show, I'm gonna throw up.
On a show like 'Oz,' I was wearing Dickies and a cut-off shirt and a gold cross.
Show me the story. I just want to tell a story that pulls me forward.
For The Truman Show, I worked for a few weeks, do my gig, then I was done.
No one - apart from my agent, perhaps - should leave one of my shows in tears.
Those who insist on the dignity of their office show they have not deserved it.
I do meet-and-greets at every show and meet a minimum of 20-35 fans at each.
Creating a role is an interesting thing - each show or each situation is different.
I'd have loved to have appeared in 'Absolutely Fabulous' - that's one of my favourite shows.
I don't know how to do a show not in front of a live audience.
It is a different breed of person who wants to be on a reality-TV show.
'Freaks and Geeks' was a show where our individuality was really celebrated.