The fact that people look at pictures so tiny on Instagram - people ask me about it popping on Instagram, but I didn't alter myself to be that. I didn't change for the screens, I've just been doing me.
But don't call me an actor. I'm just a worker. I am an entertainer. Don't say that what I am doing is art.
I'd love to be in another film, but they haven't asked me. I think it's a shame but the prospects of me doing another one now are remote. Please do campaign on my behalf.
People would ask me why I was doing what I was doing - but I always told them that I just loved to skate. There was no other explanation.
Everyone seemed to be doing well except me and my career. And my accent was no helping me any.
I came back to the hood and got in those streets and started doing whatever it took for me to provide.
It is easy for me to go play a rock show, I have been doing that all my life and I love that.
But it seemed to me that the American way of doing things was to obliterate a complete area, without really knowing exactly what was there and where they were.
The idea of doing something that you've seen a thousand times before doesn't appeal to me.
Lord of the Rings made me realize that I'm not interested in doing anyone else's work.
I love doing meta-humor, as long as it doesn't become too distracting and it's subtle.
Doing my own album provided me the opportunity to say whatever I wanted.
I'm going from doing all of the work to having to delegate the work - which is almost harder for me than doing the work myself. I'm a lousy delegator, but I'm learning.
Around me I saw women overworked and underpaid, doing men's work at half men's wages, not because their work was inferior, but because they were women.
As a journalist I'm comfortable doing library research, and I did a lot! I had a fellowship at Radcliff for a year which gave me access to the Harvard system.
I guess I had fun doing it but it has hard memories for me.
I'm grateful for doing those drugs, because they kept me from getting laid and I would have gotten AIDS.
I never thought about doing men. Never.
They held up 'The Outlaw' for five years. And Howard Hughes had me doing publicity for it every day, five days a week for five years.
I'm doing a lot of touring and things have been really busy for me.