The one guiding principle over my 23-year career in TV has been as long as I'm having fun, I really don't care what the job title is.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Television is a different challenge; it is not a stage. But each opportunity that I have to learn I learn, and I take the opportunity to work.
I really moved through my career based on curiosity about something. I never looked at a title and said, 'I want that.'
I don't sit around thinking about my titles and roles; I just do what feels right.
I want to continue doing as big a variety of things as I can do, and if that means I have the honor of getting to do more feature work, I would love that. I know that if I make any other long-term TV commitments, it's not going to be on a drama.
I really have no plans for any kind of career in TV or anything, but if I wanted to become good at it, I could. But I don't really think it's in the cards.
I have the best job in the entire history of broadcasting.
I wasn't really interested in doing television. I don't have that much ambition. My agent, Eileen Feldman, has all the ambition for me.
I didn't really have any aspirations to do TV when I first decided to be an actor.
I get called all kinds of things - an investigative comedian, a comedian activist - I've lost track of what my job title is.
Television isn't my career. Business is.