What I like about South Florida is there's a good quality of life here; the cost of living is much lower than Silicon Valley.
It's been a fascinating thing because we didn't really know how to write when we started South Park at all. It's been like, we've just sort of grown up a bit and it's amazing to just see how, if you take Butters and Cartman and put them in any scene, it works.
If somebody actually came to me and said, 'O.K., this is it: write your last 'South Park' episodes,' I'd be like, 'No, no, no.'
How many times have you been watching an episode of 'South Park' and thought, 'I'd like to be able to watch this on my television while hooked into my mobile device, which is being controlled by my tablet device which is hooked into my oven, all while sitting in the refrigerator?'
I'm kinda disapointed that Canada isn't like the South Park movie said it was.
I just like the people and the culture of Southeast Asia.
The great thing about not being American is that you don't assume you know what a Southern accent sounds like, so you have to be specific.
Every Southerner, I think, knows people like Bill Clinton, maybe not quite as smart and maybe not quite as liberal, but kind of a glad-handing, country-club yuppie Southerner. The problem is we don't have labels for middle-class Southerners.
Writing about where I was from and the people I knew was not something that would have occurred to me early on, because like so many Southerners of that period - the Sixties - I rejected those things when I went north.
Southerners are also like ethnic groups in that they have a sense of group identity.
The U.S. is a sovereign nation, and if the U.S. decides to build a wall on the southern border, it's their sovereign decision. We may like it or not.
The Afghans did not have sophisticated weapons like the Soviets did, but with their faith they defeated a superpower.
I don't like processed soy stuff.
I don't mean to say it's not fresh on the space station, but there's nothing like new, cold air coming into the capsule.
When we were kids, our parents would let us play outside all day, and there was a horse-drawn milk wagon that could become anything in my mind, like a spaceship or something.
I don't like to not call a spade a spade.
There are fun parts of running a startup and not so fun parts, and Facebook handles the not so fun parts, like infrastructure, spam, sales. The real questions are, how big can 'Instagram' get? Is it 400 million, or bigger? Can it be a viable business if it is that big? These are at the top of the list for everyone in Silicon Valley.
A misfit like me getting anywhere in Hollywood as I somehow have, seemed, certainly at the time of 'Spanking The Monkey,' kind of out of reach, or not a very realistic take.
Time is like money, the less we have of it to spare the further we make it go.
Given my absolute druthers, I would certainly like to see that every part of my body is used for spare parts for science.