If you take 'Cheers' and 'Seinfeld' and watch the early shows, they're kind of awkward. It took a while for the writers and everything to gel.
I really don't have a problem showing the ugly side of people. If that means my wearing no makeup, that's fine. To me, that's beautiful.
But, I don't know, the violence, I can't even talk about. We don't do a lot of violent shows. When I started in television, breaking a pencil was a violent act.
Most of the stuff I do on the show comes out of me just trying to make my friends laugh.
I like a certain style of show, I like a certain pace, I like a rhythm, I like a lot of comedy in with my drama.
You start to think bigger when you see how quickly a TV show can catch on in a whole country. That confidence, and thinking big, opened a lot of doors.
I want to show that the dividing lines between sanity and mental illness have been drawn in the wrong place.
You get a show where people are jumping up and dancing, but it's not a critical event in the sense of profound catharsis. Essentially it's celebratory.
The difference between a poet and a philosopher is that the poet sees logically and describes basically the beauty whereas the philosopher defines the basics and shows the beauty of logics.
Show a single way in which something can be said really good and it does not affect the self-vested interest of someone anyway.
I think modern television shows, with their intricate plots, are stimulating our minds. This is one reason IQs have been going up.
So the bodhisattva saves all beings, not by preaching sermons to them, but by showing them that they are delivered, they are liberated, by the act of not being able to stop changing.
In the first years after the systemic transition, our screens showed American entertainment that had not been available before, or had been available only sporadically.
At any moment we can demonstrate our faith by taking action that shows our belief in God's promises!
When I'm on stage the savage in me is released. It's like going back to being a cave man. It takes me six hours to come down after a show.
I used the stormy gray and heather brown shadows from the Lilac Rose Eye Palette to create a soft smokey eye for Veronica Beard's Spring 2013 show. The look was dramatic but delicate.
I look forward to putting out the new CD and doing the television performances to show everyone that B. Brown is back. In fact, I never left.
I tried to make myself as pretty as possible and even then I thought I was ugly. I found it madly difficult to go out, to show myself.
On Saturday afternoons, there was a film, of course, and then we did about four shows between the films. And I would do a tap dance, a little military tap.
An investigation by msnbc.com shows that the CDC routinely takes as long as a month - and sometimes as long as nine months - to visit the scene of firefighter deaths.
Politics is pop. Our job as comedians - especially me, as a late-night talk show, which is a broader audience - is to amplify what we think America is thinking.