I mean, what would I be doing if I couldn't write? But that fortunately hasn't proved to be the case and I can read any day. I still read a lot, and I can write any day, but much more slowly and fewer words.
When you've been doing comedy for forty years, you really do know most of the jokes. And even if you don't know a specific joke, you can pretty much guess what it's going to be.
Like Frank Sinatra, I'm doing it my way.
We just thought of 'Boosh' as an extension of our childhoods in a way, the stuff we had grown up on and loved: 'Monty Python,' The Goodies, Frank Zappa. It spoke to a certain type of person, and we just carried on doing it.
Sometimes you read pilots and, understandably, they're doing such a frantic tap dance for approval. I get why - it's such an incredibly competitive market.
My wife got all freaked out when we started doing the reality show because she said she saw all these reality shows, and everyone was getting divorced.
Imagine a world in which every single person on the planet is given free access to the sum of all human knowledge. That's what we're doing.
In 1975, I quit my tenure, and we moved from Ann Arbor to New Hampshire. It was daunting to pay for groceries and the mortgage by freelance writing - but it worked, and I loved doing it.
Our right to practice our faith freely is respected up to the point where doing so involves harming others.
Doing acting opened up other creative outlets; it made me feel freer as an artist.
'Captain America' I love, and that would be great, but c'mon, a Frenchman doing 'Captain America?' They would burn my passport.
I worked myself into a frenzy. By 1996, I had a nervous breakdown just from working. I couldn't eat, couldn't sleep, just getting anxiety attacks and all of that stuff because I was doing too much, too young, all the time.
We cannot have another experience like we've had in my freshman class, of people saying one thing and doing another.
I played with a band in Austin when I was doing 'Friday Night Lights.' It was a blast.
'Friday Night Lights' was never a break-out hit; I'll never regret doing that show.
Why would I want a place of my own? Then I would have to things worry about, like doing laundry and having food in the fridge.
I started out doing my mother's nightclub act, and I had stage fright.
I want people on the front line to be proud of what they're doing and give themselves permission to finish things in ways that they can be proud of.
The big thing in favor of doing an editorial on the front page is that it would be a powerful signal of how concerned we are about guns.
Seventy percent of the planet is covered with water, and there's so much we can be doing with oceans, and it was one of the frontiers that people have more or less abandoned.