Moral passion without entertainment is propaganda, and entertainment without moral passion is television.
I think I really see myself doing TV more than ever.
I didn't want to do it... I'd been trying to get out of TV for years!
Theatre's a much less faddish, more sensible world than TV or film.
Normally I'm not like a big TV person. I never use my DVR.
TV never takes any chances; they never do anything different.
I used to enjoy bad television, like really bad quiz programmes or sitcoms.
Television's very dependent on images. That's not what news is.
I've done TV and I've done film, and I'm not snobby about it. It's about the project.
Honestly, most of the stuff I made for 'TV on the Radio,' I write in the studio.
The Revolution won't be televised. It's already available on Amazon in ebook format.
Aaron Spelling went further than anyone has ever gone for television.
It's impossible to explain to people who you are in a five-minute interview on TV.
I just enjoy acting, whatever area - theatre, film, television.
Name anything - high-definition TV, computer obsolescence - and I'm pretty much annoyed by it.
Television has dried up for my generation, so it's plays and films.
I want people to laugh and cry, not just sit and stare at the TV.
I'm a little different from the average dude because I'm on high-def TV now.
I use every opportunity, whether on my radio show or on television, to break stereotypes.
While at college, I did my first lead on a network TV show, Medic.
In network TV, you have to present the box before you can step outside it.