Getting on a popular, long-running show like 'Happy Days' is the actor's equivalent of winning the lottery.
Nothing's changed from when I'm seven years old to now. Nothing's changed at all. I like the same stuff that I did - Kiss, Van Halen, 'Happy Days,' 'Laverne & Shirley,' 'The Brady Bunch,' monsters and all that stuff.
I loved TV, and I watched anything with music - 'Hee Haw,' 'Happy Days,' anything like that. So I loved the Monkees.
We play happy music, and we make people happy. That's why they like us.
If I could play drums like Patrick Carney or Taylor Hawkins, I'd be a really happy person.
I am a happy-go-lucky guy in real life. I like to chat a lot.
Maybe once in a while, you know, after a hard day of shooting or something like that, I'd kick back.
All that stuff about heavy metal and hard rock, I don't subscribe to any of that. It's all just music. I mean, the heavy metal from the '70s sounds nothing like the stuff from the '80s, and that sounds nothing like the stuff from the '90s. Who's to say what is and isn't a certain type of music?
A band like Avenged Sevenfold I've praised quite a bit publicly, because it's a band that has moved into that arena-size thing for a hard rock band.
I like to use the hard times in the past to motivate me today.
I just want people to know that they can make it through hard times like I did.
I feel like my story could hopefully inspire others who've faced hard times.
Women are like dogs really. They love like dogs, a little insistently. And they like to fetch and carry and come back wistfully after hard words, and learn rather easily to carry a basket.
I like Velvet Underground, but I was never really hardcore into them. I like them, and I like Nico, but I won't front like I'm super knowledgeable. I just never got around to it.
I tend to vote Republican, but I don't like the hardcore views on either side, and I'm not in bed with anybody.
The hardest part was convincing people that I was serious. The people were like 'you want to do this again'?
The voice I use is a very old hardware speech synthesizer made in 1986. I keep it because I have not heard a voice I like better and because I have identified with it.
I'm a mechanical engineer, and I grew up on a farm, so I like practical hardware - somebody's elegant solution that proves itself over the long term.
Things that I had created or morphed into, I almost became. I felt like a broken man having to go back to plain old Matt Hardy in many ways.
I got a few speeding tickets when I was young, but I'm a little more like the turtle than the hare.