One of the things I've learned by working on the 'Walking Dead' and other TV shows is to be more tolerant of other people's process.
When I was bald, I went through a period where I seemed to do nothing except TV programmes about being bald.
If you know me, you know that nothing embarrasses me. Anything could happen to me on live television, and I sincerely don't care.
Cricket cannot afford to throw up meaningless games before its benefactors, which is what spectators and television audiences are.
Almost always, when I'm on TV, the producers who call me, who negotiate what we're going to say, is a woman.
I like basketball, and I've been to three games, which is so much more fun than seeing it on TV, I think.
TV tends to look for the living equivalents of squeaky-clean Kens and Barbies, but with my dial I'm more like Ken's dirty old uncle.
Watching TV is the most popular leisure activity in Britain. I find that very depressing.
To have a job you can count on as an actor is so rare, whether that means belonging to a regional theater company or being on TV.
I feel like sometimes people on television shows can start taking things for granted, or they don't want to be here or something like that.
I have been very fortunate, working a lot in TV, and have been able to dip into the film world a little bit here and there.
The idea of stardom was difficult to grasp. It was like being schizophrenic; there was her, the woman on television, and the real me.
Not watching TV gets me in a lot of trouble in my household because my wife and daughter have a lot of shows they like to watch.
Kids are much more intuitive these days. Not that I'm crazy about what's on TV, but they know so much these days.
The one function that TV news performs very well is that when there is no news we give it to you with the same emphasis as if it were.
I did a lot of ridiculous television. Between 1980 and '85 I had no confidence, so I did everything I was told to do.
I had no television when I was little, just a stack of old, beat-up comics from the 1950s and 1960s.
I have a TV Soap Boomerang award, and I always start my year with the Australian Open tennis! Tennis, soccer, you name it.
If I see a movie on TV that I'm in, I usually will watch it for that reason: It's like I'm watching another person.
I read that prior to the advent of color TV, most people dreamed in black and white.
Doing a TV show, you're on an assembly line and it's as cut and dry as that. There are some shows that are exceptions. There are producers that want really special things.