Cinco de Mayo has come to represent a celebration of the contributions that Mexican Americans and all Hispanics have made to America.
Being on Twitter, live tweeting some of the episodes, I get direct feedback from people.
I think we're all a lot more like our parents than we want to admit.
Life can be very funny and very tragic. Everyone has stuff that they've been through that makes up whatever fire it is that they have in their gut, but nobody goes around wearing that as their outmost exterior, all the time.
Being yourself is one of the hardest thing because it's scary you always wonder whether you'll be accepted for who you really are.
When I read the scripts, I'm always so excited to see what's going to happen because it's unpredictable.
In terms of the characters, I definitely do look for somebody that I think people can learn from and I can learn from too. In one way or another, by the fact that they are a role or by that fact that they aren't a role model. I feel like I was attracted to the past few characters that I've played, because they have an element that really touched my heart.
We're shooting 100 percent - 60 percent from the field and 40 percent from the free-throw line.
I think skateboarding is better now in terms of the amount of facilities and the amount of support young skaters have - including encouragement from their parents. There was definitely an element to it when I was younger that was exclusive and kind of rebellious because most parents didn't want their kids skating. They thought it was a bad influence.
They laughed. Things were funny. They weren't afraid to care. There was no sense to life, to the structure of things.
How many roads must a man walk down, Before you call him a man? How many seas must a white dove sail, Before she sleeps in the sand? Yes, and how many times must the cannon balls fly, Before they're forever banned?