In sports, every day you can be the hero or the goat.
From Geoff Stults
The holiday season can be an especially trying time for our service men, women, and families. Military service and deployment create empty seats at holiday tables, religious services, and celebrations.
There are athletes and celebrities that are out there and they Twitter and they constantly try to drum up press because they're narcissists.
I feel very blessed in my career to have been able to bounce back and forth between different things, television and film, comedies and some dramas, but I am, um, as long as the script inspires me and there good people, that's it. I'm in.
I think anybody can relate to the reluctance to have to lead sometimes.
You might be the leader of the team, but without the rest of the team, you're not doing anything. I think that's the way I look at my job as the lead of a TV show.
I've never thought that what I do as an actor does anything for anybody, other than making them laugh once in a while.
I don't look at things goin', 'Oh, is this gonna make me rich? Is this gonna make me a star? Am I gonna win awards?' If all that stuff happens, great. Who cares? I still have to wake up in the morning and go to work and be happy to do it.
You don't want to jump in on your first day on a show and start improv-ing and changing the show.
I think the one thing that athletics prepared me for that's been more beneficial than anything has been the humbling times.
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1 perspectives