Tomorrow is not a promise, but a chance.
My mom's a chemist, so she's pretty smart. I love technology and I can handle myself around a computer.
I've always done a lot of stunts in the past, and I sound like I'm tooting my own horn here, but I've always impressed the people I've worked with and they've let me do more and more.
I took Jujitsu for four years, which has no striking. My dad had me in Taekwondo when I was a kid, but I didn't retain much of that.
It takes a minute to get use to the TV thing, and I have so much more respect for TV actors now.
What's funny is we were doing some fire at work the other day and it was reminding me of all the firework I got to do as Havok, because a lot of that was as practical as you could get.
I'm also a video game addict, so I'm always looking to support my addiction.
They're not parallel at all. They're my concerns, but how they're expressed particularly on the page is completely divorced from who I am in my street life.
I never really acted at school. It was doing small parts on TV that really got me started.
Below the knee, halfway down the arm, and two finger widths below the collarbone.
Even if someone is competent, it's so damned easy to crucify him as long as he's only working on his father's account. So at the beginning I certainly wanted to prove myself to my father and the rest of society. That quickly turned into a greater challenge. My lifestyle hasn't changed as a result.