It's amazing when you see something on T.V. for years and then you go and see it in person. It's perspective is all different.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Virtual reality is the 'ultimate empathy machine.' These experiences are more than documentaries. They're opportunities to walk a mile in someone else's shoes.
I think that T.V. shows are more like working at a home. You know you're going to the same place every day, working with the same people, the same cast and crew. You're in a dressing room instead of a trailer, so I think that that's more of a normal sort of lifestyle.
Television has proved that people will look at anything rather than each other.
I curate my T.V.-watching quite carefully.
I don't watch a lot of T.V. I only watch things via Netflix, so I only watch the things that I'm choosing to watch.
It's really hard to watch yourself on TV. It's definitely different in that the world has to watch, too.
There's so much that goes into a film that I feel like it's a bit arrogant to say, 'Oh, I never watch my own movies.' Well, it's not just you. There's a whole host of other people. So much skill goes into it. But I would say it does take a couple times seeing it to get a level of perspective.
If I see a movie on TV that I'm in, I usually will watch it for that reason: It's like I'm watching another person.
One of my biggest fears when I see really bad people on T.V. is that I don't know how they got there.
What Must-See T.V. was all about was one network, one night, for one decade. And a third of the country would come and watch Must-See T.V. And you didn't dare go to work the next day, because if you hadn't watched, you would be left out of the conversation, that water-cooler conversation.
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