The Six Million Dollar Man was one thing, but I wanted to keep my own parts.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
I had more money than I could spend in million lifetimes.
I'm a huge fan of 'The Six Million Dollar Man' and I love the episodes where they would cross over with 'The Bionic Woman.'
My father earned every penny he had, and I would have loved to have bought him a Rolls-Royce because his whole life was cars. Sadly, he didn't live to see the day when I could have done that for him, which still hurts.
I built a great company, one of the - some of the most iconic assets in the world, $10 billion of net worth, more than $10 billion of net worth, and frankly, I had a great time doing it.
In the days when I was the big hero, the money wasn't much. Nobody made anything on television in those days.
I couldn't stand back and watch the strong economy that my father envisioned go to ruins.
I was at my father's office, and I'd be in the back of his office, building Lego skyscrapers, as he was negotiating million-dollar deals.
My father was the youngest of six brothers, and he was the brains. I never thought he was making what he should have. He had to split it with five brothers. So I made up my mind: I was going to go on my own and make my own money.
Something like 'A Single Man,' it was tiny; it was financed by one guy. We all lost money doing it.
I was never specifically associated with a part, I didn't have tons of money, I wasn't conventionally tall or handsome, so you know the things that were available to me were hard work and perseverance.