If I'm working, I'm not D.J.'ing. And if I'm not working, I'm D.J.'ing all the time.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I started D.J.-ing my first year of college just for fun and to pay bills.
I can't please everyone. That's not in my J.D., you know, not in my job description.
The truth is, I was D.J.-ing on my college radio station in 1987, and I was called 'Mad Marj.'
At the end of the day, I'm an actor. I'm not here to sell other stuff or use off-screen things to generate whether or not I work. If I'm any good, I'll work; if I'm not, I won't.
Remembering who I am is a really active task for me. And I often have to tell myself, 'You're a graduate student,' 'You're a daughter,' et cetera, in situations where I'm supposed to behave like one.
Regardless of any title I'll ever hold, the most important job I'll ever have is spelled D-A-D.
I'm not Bill Gates. And I'm not Ted Turner.
I'd like to think I'm an actor who leaves things at work.
Every single substitute teacher growing up could not pronounce my name, so whenever someone pauses, I'm like, 'Oh, that's me.'
I'm naturally quite lazy, and I actually think I'm lax about my career. None of my work defines who I am.