Myself, I have never seen a bumper sticker saying " Hate if you Love Jesus ", but I sometimes wonder why not. It would be a good slogan for the religious Right.
If I ever play Hamlet, it'll be in a dress!
I finally learned to love myself by dressing up as Geri Halliwell.
When I left school I was full of angst, like any teenager, and I channeled it all into comedy.
People see my impressions as a great skill and I am flattered, but there are things I can't do that everyone else can. I can do funny voices and funny faces but I can't drive.
Keep yourself busy if you want to avoid depression. For me, inactivity is the enemy.
You wouldn't know how to perform a sketch that you don't find funny. You just couldn't do it.
Research is creating new knowledge.
Men cannot abandon their religious faith without a kind of aberration of intellect and a sort of violent distortion of their true nature; they are invincibly brought back to more pious sentiments. Unbelief is an accident, and faith is the only permanent state of mankind.
It doesn't matter if you're good at anything, just try your best. Then there's the idea that individually they're flawed but together they can do amazing things. I think that's a very nice message and it's not something you hit people over the head with. It just comes with The Muppets; it's what they're about. It's that kind of innocent try, try, try quality. And it also makes them underdogs. You can't help but support the underdog.
There are three things we have to let go of. The first is the compulsion to be successful. Second, is the compulsion to be right-especially theologically right. (That's merely an ego trip, and because of this "need" churches split in half, with both parties prisoners of their own egos. ) Finally, there is the compulsion to be powerful, to have everything under control.