My home town is very small and very remote and we don't have a movie house.
I have a deep affinity for New Orleans - its like a second home to me - they treat me like I'm their own.
I have the person at home, the person who has his privacy, too. Michael Jackson didn't do the moonwalk in his kitchen.
A guy wants a classy girl who is smart and has goals - someone that he wouldn't be afraid to bring home to his parents.
I'm super lucky because I come home and I don't have to run errands and clean the house and do all that.
I have so many friends and obligations, and I want to go out and support people. But we eat at home.
I feel at home in a lot of places, but I am truly an African-American.
Even the most dismal and hopeless-sounding Wilco music, to my ears, has always maintained a level of hope and consolation.
If I love a song I hope to find a way to get other people to love it too.
Happiness is fleeting - I think that's the main lesson I have learned.
I don't really care how I am remembered as long as I bring happiness and joy to people.
I just hope I can spread some of the happiness that's been coming my way.
Women respond to comfort and a sense of humor. I was always able to make them laugh, so that helps a lot.
I've always been interested in the history of the West, our country and particularly as it relates to the Native Americans - the original Americans.
I make movies for me and posterity. I'm more scared of history than I am of the studio.
Life moves fast. As much as you can learn from your history, you have to move forward.
There's a difference between knowing what's on the page in a history book and actually feeling that page have curves and valleys.
Everything was going my way. I was happily marching into the history books. Then it all just fell apart.
Never in the history of cinema has a medium entertained an audience. It's what you do with the medium.
I've been lucky. I've had this history of having an appeal to more than one type of audience.
History is malleable. A new cache of diaries can shed new light, and archeological evidence can challenge our popular assumptions.