People will burn through a show in two or three days, and then you're left feeling empty for 51 weeks.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When the show's in production, we work for three weeks at a time and then take a week off.
You open the show with a bang, then don't come back on for 45 minutes.
Eight shows in six days can become very tiring - actually, a grind. It's not that I ever dreaded going to work because I always maintained a level of gratitude.
I firmly believe, only because I've been doing this for so long, every show takes three years. 90% of them don't get three years. It just does. It takes a long time to build a community, build a friendship with your characters. It's hard for people to grasp on and make them care about you.
It takes a week to do a sitcom in Hollywood. I do a show a day in my studio, three or four shows a week.
It's always difficult when you're on a show that goes for more than a year or a couple of years.
You don't get as invested in someone in 90 minutes as you do over 13 hours of television show.
I leave for the show at least an hour ahead, and I do some vocal warm-ups, and that's pretty much it.
You only have a week to do a show. I mean, there's only so deep you can dig in that week.
Combine that with the fact that we only had one week to get everything taken care of and to get to know one another, whereas most shows get two weeks. It looked like we would never have a chance.
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