You can take my factories, burn up my buildings, but give me my people and I'll build the business right back again.
I think Hollywood has seen what fandom can do for a project. You can definitely see that when you go to Comic-con.
I do get offered a lot more roles than I choose to do. I'm very busy as a producer and a writer, especially with my Internet stuff, and I tend to only accept the roles that I know will have an impact and has a fanbase.
I'm much more interested in shows that maybe not everybody loves, but a lot of people REALLY love. That's how I am as a person. I'm as extreme as the roles in the shows that I like to be on.
I was a huge fan of video games; I wanted to write something, and I saw the tools at my fingertips to upload a video to my audience, and thats why Im here today. I think that freedom and the lack of gatekeepers, combined with peoples passion, is what really the true spirit of Internet geekdom is about.
Surprisingly, I think if you're known on the Internet, you're probably an introvert.
What I love about what I get to do is that I'm allowed to create the stories that I want to tell with minimal interference by some very big corporations like Microsoft and Sprint and EA and BioWare. The advantage that these tech companies have is that they understand the space organically, versus traditional media companies.
I've always been shy, I was a quiet child. I didn't start speaking until uh, last year.
Ethically, what one generation tolerates the next may treat as normal.
Pop culture is more and more about skulls and skeletons and zombies and vampires, and that's not just on Halloween.
Thank God even crazy dreams come true