I like TV on demand and Cheetos.
TV and film has defined my entire life.
Every area had their own superstar. The TV was not national, it was localized. So you could develop in one place, or the next place and be a better star, go to the next place and be a superstar.
I just remember the early days of Tenacious D. There was no talk or thought about doing a TV show or a movie.
It's what I always dreamed of: that you can make TV and everyone would get out of your way and you follow your vision without watering it down.
In TV, film, and music there's a lot of snobbery, and I don't like it. I've never been a cultural snob.
I made a few movies in Holland for a lot of TV series. I came to Los Angeles and for the last 10 years, I made a lot of feature films - all kinds of low budget action movies for the studios.
Only in movies or books or TV do we have a chance to actually like aspects of a killer.
It's not prowess if you watch 5 hours of TV a day. It's just how you choose to spend your time.
Bridget who is crazy said that sometimes she thought about suicide when commercials come on during TV. She was sincere and this puzzled the guidance counselors.
Take responsibility about what you have on your TV, and about what you are out there supporting.
You'd be naive if you think you are going to retain any control once you option a character to TV.
Twin Peaks' is my favorite American TV show.
I actually don't have a TV and I've been traveling so I've missing out on a lot of stuff.
Commercials are not the only exposure that obesity gets on TV. It is by no means a rarity on the wonderful Judge Judy's show when both plaintiff and accused all but literally fill the screen.
The key to eating healthy is not eating any food that has a TV commercial.
I guess the story that best defines us [with Bud Yorkin] and our relationship goes back to the [Dean] Martin and [Jerry] Lewis show. The four stage managers on that show became major TV creators and directors - John Rich, Jack Smight, Arthur Penn and Bud Yorkin.
I feel like obviously the standard for what TV looks like changes all the time.
We look at it as the multiverse. We have our TV universe and our film universe, but they all co-exist.
It's so hard to figure out how to end a TV show.