My experience as a young actor on network television was that I couldn't make it work. I was drowning as an actor.
Watching Fox, that's like watching the Cartoon Network. Fox is nuts.
If networks are to be more efficient. . . this will come about only on the basis of a high level of trust and the existence of shared norms of ethical behavior between network members
In an apostolic network the person in charge of maintaining the DNA of the network is the lead apostle, who consults with those he or she chooses, and no one else.
The key to social engineering is influencing a person to do something that allows the hacker to gain access to information or your network.
National Action Network, the group I founded, has affiliates or chapters in over 40 cities around the country.
Most of the time people are aiming so low on television. They're trying to reach that common denominator, especially on network television.
And so I think that if the person has the funds, the network, and the equipment to do this, and also the experience, which is the key factor, then they can be quite deadly.
You want to put out a TV show? If you have the money to do it on your own, by yourself, and you have a TV network, you can do it by yourself. But the nature of the beast is, art needs finance. That's how this industry works. So until the Internet becomes our source of entertainment - and watch it, I believe it will - this is how things go.
'Adult Swim' on the Cartoon Network is unbelievable. And 'South Park' continues to do great stuff. And 'Family Guy' and the various other Seth MacFarlane projects are amazing.
For me, I'm happy to succeed on any network.
In a network situation, a vice president, while he's shaving, can decide your history.
CNBC is a very serious-minded financial news network, and what we've seen thus far from Fox appears to be not as investment-focused or financially focused, and that's good for us.
The important thing here to understand is that the people that are at Guantanamo are bad people. I mean, these are terrorists for the most part. These are people that were captured in the battlefield of Afghanistan or rounded up as part of the Al Qaeda network. We've already screened the detainees there and released a number, sent them back to their home countries. But what's left is hard core.
Every network wants to capture new viewers, but that's up to the networks.
Bitcoin is a currency, bitcoin is a network, bitcoin is a technology and you can't separate these things. A consensus network that bases its value on the currency does not work without the currency.
Avoid losers. If you hear someone use the words 'impossible', 'never', 'too difficult' too often, drop him or her from your social network.
Now, you always know there's going to be some compromise when you're doing something for television, and especially network television.
They started doing it in reality TV, where writers don't have union protections and are easy marks for getting this kind of material in there. You're less likely to find it on network prime-time series, but the creep is moving in that direction. It has become intrusive and overwhelming to us as a union of writers.
The network told me to get rid of Number One, the woman first lieutenant, and also get rid of 'that Martian fellow'. . . meaning, of course, Spock. I knew I couldn't keep both, so I gave the stoicism of the female officer to Spock, and married the actress who played Number One. Thank God it wasn't the other way around. I mean Leonard's cute, but. . .