I would argue that it's almost better to do heroin than to watch TV. At least when you're doing heroin you're responsible for your own reveries and thought processes. When you're mainlining TV what is it but endless messages to fetishize products?
The Shield made me realize there were great opportunities for writers in TV.
I did my own music videos, my own TV commercials.
You see reality TV and it's not reality TV. It's contrived and everything is plotted and scripted nearly. Documentaries are the same and just as bad.
I'm offended every time I see George Bush on TV!
Anything seen on TV is, in a subtle and sinister sense, thereby endorsed.
I've never been on a TV show for more than a season and you have to continually keep it interesting and you have to keep it connected, even as you change.
You never really see me acting a fool on TV.
Im a career actor. And I question this constant reliance on TV fame and celebrity.
If people want to see you, they'll find you. If they don't see you on TV, they'll find you on the Internet.
I never skimp on TV. I watch an embarrassing amount of TV shows. I don't even know how I do it.
Without TV, it's hard to know when one day ends and another begins.
Much of eating is about customs and habits, and we've developed some unfortunate ones. Not enough families eat together. We eat in front of the TV while we're absorbed in a program. You know, the average person will eat up to 50 percent more food when distracted.
You know, as I do, actors who, having become worldwide celebrities thanks to a TV series, complain of their lot and declare themselves ready to drop it all.
I was a TV junkie as a kid. I am the Sesame Street generation.
I like to be on TV when interviewers are good. I like it especially when it's live. When they can cut things, I don't like it as much. Sometimes they cut something and say, "Well, you would get in trouble, you would get a lawsuit. " I tell them, "Well, I don't want my lawyers to be unemployed. "
Every time Kellyanne Conway goes on TV, there's another fight with whoever's interviewing her that particular day.
The experience we all share and the outcomes, which have been remarkable in a way I never could have predicted. Taking unmotivated people - maybe marginally motivated to get on TV and make money - and ending up with a group that values and is changed by the treatment process and wants to share it with other people.
I'm not a TV guy. I'm a restaurant chef and a businessman.
Oh, IMDB, yeah; there's a few things on there that are TV, they're not film, some things they think we did that we didn't. There's a few inaccuracies in there. It's terrifying though, isn't it?