Happy relationships are boring. We all want them in our own life. But I don't want to watch them on TV.
If you like standup and decide that it's overtaking your life and want to hate it, watch 1,000 standup comedians who are trying to get on a TV show.
I've worked in television all my life, but really I've always wanted to work in the movies.
I think you just have to accept the fact that no one lives forever, and eventually things are going to come to an end, whether it's a TV show or life.
'The HoneyLine' is my web site and TV segments that were birthed out of the stark reality that we all need a few people to help navigate this life.
Television and comic books are, and continue to be, probably the biggest influence in my life. It's the biggest influence on everybody's life.
Cinema and, most of all, films have changed my life much more than theatre or television. And that is the reason why I'm an actress.
I'm not one of those people that goes into details of my personal life on national TV to get attention. Some things are better left unsaid.
People ask me about fighting in real life and, honestly, it wouldn't look as graceful as it does in film and TV.
Radio, newspapers, they were normal parts of my life. In those days, you had to go somewhere to watch television and leave something to see it.
I haven't written my memoirs or let the television movie be made about my life.
My weight has fluctuated my whole life, and because I've been on television since I was 11 years old, everyone has seen it.
I think the struggle, whenever you make a film or television movie based on a real person's life, is finding a dramatic arc that will hold an audience's attention.
A film has a sort of life over time, whereas a TV show comes up in your living room, and it's immediate, and people write about it.
I'd like to classify my life as a romantic comedy. Unfortunately I feel it's probably more like a TV reality show.
I love the long-form format of television. I love being able to develop a character, over a long period of time.
I was always singing and dancing for my mother when I wasn't glued to the television watching I Love Lucy or the Carol Burnett Show.
I would love to do more movies, but the reality is women have many more opportunities on television to play a greater variety of characters.
I don't watch TV, so I feel like I'm left out of the American fabric or something.
I enrolled in an acting workshop and my first acting role was on the TV soap opera 'Melrose Place.'
And TV is not the easiest place to be dangerous or on the edge. Especially on a Saturday night.