In TV, you just have to decide the night before exactly how you're going to say it and stick with that. You can't kick it around; you haven't got time.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
On a film you can really get away with learning the scene the night before and that's often just not possible with TV, so you have to be a little bit more prepared a little bit more in advance.
In the clubs, it's all out and you can say whatever as the character. TV has standards.
There's a fraudulent root element of comedy in that we say things night after night as though they are rolling effortlessly from the brain and off the tongue, when in fact they are crafted over weeks and months and years.
Television is so dictated by time constraints that you have to make quick decisions and go with them.
With TV, you're in people's houses every night. And you have so much time to tell stories. I don't know why I didn't do it before.
I can't sleep without the TV on, so we leave it on during the night, and that's what wakes me up - Joe Scarborough and 'Morning Joe' at 7:30 or 8.
You're lucky enough in television to always be at it, to always be doing it. It's like you're constantly that person, always, all the time. It gets to be like clockwork.
Late night television is ready for someone like me... standards have gone to an all-time low.
The whole thing about doing TV is that you never know what's going to happen. You just have to go with it and go with the flow.
Television knows no night. It is perpetual day. TV embodies our fear of the dark, of night, of the other side of things.