The Emmy that I lost, and I can't remember his name, I lost to the man who did the Olympics. So, it was great to lose to him. It's the Olympics.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
My biggest loss was the Olympics. I just can't forget losing. I never will.
I consider 'Dr. Horrible' a tremendous success. The fact that it won an Emmy I just think lends validity to what we were doing and the point we were trying to make: taking the power into someone else's hands and changing the world.
So many people have won Emmys, so many people have won multiple Emmys that I think it's a degraded award.
It was very cool to be honored and be acknowledged in that way for the first time ever, being nominated for an Emmy.
I've been nominated for 12 Emmys, and we won - for 'Top Chef' - the only time I didn't go.
But the character was so successful, that first one, that they wrote him again and he came in right at the end of the first year in a show called THE BOX. I was up for the Emmy for that one too.
Probably one of the happiest moments, outside the birth of all of my kids, was the first time we won an Emmy, that the show won an Emmy. That was a big night.
Emmys are wonderful and I'm thrilled to death that I have mine. But they're representative of a specific achievement, where this sort of thing is representative of how you've grown in your own industry.
You never really think about what happens after the Olympics - you're just like, 'I want to compete. I want to do well' and thinking about that. After it all happened, it was such a whirlwind. I've gotten to do so many amazing things. My favorite thing was getting into acting.
It's a great way to start the day, hearing you've been nominated for an Emmy. It's just thrilling.
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