I think, the people around home are very supportive to us.
Joey, my older brother, had his own TV show in the '50s, along with Cathy Callahan.
I try to watch only real things, which basically amounts to C-Span for me. I like real people in real situations. I learn from that.
I'm an Irish-American, and I grew up in an Irish-American neighborhood.
I live out in the desert, in farm country. I'm around a lot of farmers, guys with packing houses, that sort of thing. Half the time, these guys are in their pajamas or in their slippers. It's their place.
I don't play polo anymore because I am too old. But we still have a half a dozen horses - a couple of young horses we are teaching how to play polo and older horses that are real trustworthy when you get them up in the mountains.
If you watch Cheers, in 12 years they didn't age a day.
I grew up in church and it's always been important to me. I've always had a sense of calling to do life and faith-affirming media.
People of relatively low intelligence can be morally wonderful if they desire the right and the good (not necessarily under the description "right" or "good"). Their low intelligence sometimes results in their accidentally doing something wrong, but doing something wrong out of low intelligence alone is like stepping on a person's foot because you are (literally) blind or missing a cry for help because you are (literally) deaf. We do not judge the blind or deaf person as morally bad.
Depending upon shock tactics is easy, whereas writing a good play is difficult. Pubic hair is no substitute for wit.
I am not going to apologize for speaking the name of Jesus. . . If I have to sacrifice everything. . . I will.