I think feature film can be quite conservative, because you have to now get audiences to come out, and it's quite a hard thing to do. Of course, television can be conservative too.
For shows that are hyper-serialized, it just seems to make more sense to follow a feature film model than follow a television model, which was set up more for a procedural type of show.
I have done a lot of work in Hollywood myself. I worked in television for roughly 10 years, from the mid-'80s to mid-'90s. And I was on staff at a couple of shows. I did some feature films, including originals and adaptations.
On '90 Day Bae,' Marcy Jarreau and I recap '90 Day Fiancee' because it's just the most insane, funniest show on television.
I stopped watching television like a fiend once I got into college.
English television from the Fifties to the Nineties was the least bad in the world, and now it's just as bad as it is anywhere.
I absolutely don't deny that I was inspired by 'Fight Club,' among many other television shows and films. I completely not only acknowledge it, I own it and love to nod to them as much as possible.
Television and film acting is really fun because you are working with other people and you are not completely responsible for the outcome of the project.
I wanted to be a film and television writer and producer.
I've taken the experiences that I've had in the theatre and applied them to film and television and now games.
Cultures and races are mixing in a very organic way in the world, and that should be reflected in film and television.
Broadway was always sort of my trajectory before I found film and television - that would be really tremendous.
I plan on continuing to explore all the possibilities of technology, and then finally film and television and movies. Embrace it.
Thank God for theater and film and television and my very, very, very lucky life.
When I was 24, I went back to the academic life and did a degree in film and television at Brunel University.
I didn't dream of being in television or film. But then I got married pretty young and had children, and I wanted to feed the children, so I worked a lot of film and television.
After finishing my study in Film and Television Institute of India (FTII), I was mentally prepared for the struggle in the film industry.
Film and television is just a different technique in terms of how to approach the camera but basically the job is the same; but what you learn as a craft in theater, you can then learn to translate that into any mediums.
Film and television essentially feel the same when you're doing it, because it's the same technical approach.
Television's Mr. Filth: that's me.