For every two minutes of glamour, there are eight hours of hard work.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Every hour of useful work is precious.
By working faithfully eight hours a day you may eventually get to be boss and work twelve hours a day.
It's really not that hard. If I do a Tonight Show, it's six or seven minutes. If I do a concert, it's 90 minutes. If I do an interview, that's 15 minutes. So by the end of the day I've done three hours worth of work.
It's hard work just being on set 14 hours a day.
On a movie, you often work fourteen-, sixteen-hour days, six days a week, for six months. It is so easy to let up because of fatigue.
I usually have a 13-hour workday. But at times, we get lucky when we wind up in 8 or 10 hours.
If you're doing an hour-long show, you're working movie hours, doing a 12-15-hour day. We work three or four hours a day, and get every third or fourth week off to give the writers time to write. It's the cushiest job in Hollywood.
Working hard is way more fun. If you had to goof off 40 hours a week, you couldn't do it. It would drive you crazy.
I advocate glamour. Every day. Every minute.
It is not the hours we put in on the job, it is what we put into the hours that counts.