I'm a hockey coach and a single mother of two who commutes. I don't watch TV. I watch news, and that's it!
I've come to terms with the fact that if you're on TV, lots of people like you and lots of people hate you, and once you're OK with that, you apply it to everything.
I have been defending Israel's right to exist, and to defend itself against terrorism, for many years-on college campuses, in television appearances and in debate.
I don't go out to parties because I'd look terrible in pictures. My escape is television - it's like meditation to me.
You know, you never say never because before I did 'ER,' I always said 'I'll never do a TV series,' so that's what I said.
Many people have this memory of traditional TV documentary-making that aims to portray pure reality, and I just don't see that as the only option.
15 years later, it's all the TV stars with the film deals, whether it's the cast of Friends or That '70s Show now with Ashton and other people doing stuff.
Memorising my lines is actually something I do fairly well. I look at it a few times and it is pretty much there. When your shooting on TV, they do it in such a way that it is pretty easy.
One thing about television in Britain is that they're so scared about complaints. It curbs a lot of drama.
I was brought up in a tenement house in a working district. We didn't even have a bathroom! We had a gaslight in the hallway and a black-and-white TV.
You know, I've never been a comic book person, just because that's not my gig and I don't have a television.
It's a dialogue, not a monologue, and some people don't understand that. Social media is more like a telephone than a television.
I'm on the Internet a lot more than I watch TV and most everybody I know is, and yet if you watch most late-night talk shows, it's as if it doesn't even exist.
I am a stage actor. I do mostly improv comedy. The only national television stuff is 'Archer' and' Frisky Dingo.'
Ever since I was a kid, I just loved those comedians on TV who would just have fun with the language.
When I was a kid, there were hardly any gay story lines or characters on television that I recall. Then when I was in college, 'Will & Grace' started up.
The comforts come from my movie and television writing. It is unusual to live this well simply from books.
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.
I have to say that as an actor, I really look for the role. I'm not really looking to see if it's for television or film, because there are highly talented people in both mediums.
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.
When synchronised swimming first appeared on TV, we laughed very heartily, and I, for one, applauded the decision to introduce humour into the Olympics.