I try to hit all the places Guy Fieri visits in every city I go to. It's, like, something a 60-year-old would do.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
In my hood, I was always with the older guys.
When I find a golf course or a restaurant or a market that I like, that's pretty much exclusively where I go.
There's something fabulously decadent about staying in a hotel across the street from where you live.
I was 22 and had worked on Wall Street for a year, and quit my job. I bought a motorcycle and sort of had this fantasy that I'd go cross-country like 'Easy Rider.' I went from New York to L.A., and on the way back, I stopped in Chicago and saw a friend of mine who was into improv. And I figured it might be fun to give it a shot.
When I was growing up, I would go hang out with older guys at night in blues clubs.
For me to go back and to play for audiences some of whom have been following me for thirty years and some who have found me in the last five or six years, that's really an interesting thing. I have an audience that goes from kids to seventy year olds.
I'm 61 now, and I'm comfortable in my lifestyle... I don't yearn for the limelight on a regular basis. I get a kick out of it every so often. I go to Philly and go to a game, and they make a big deal about me. That's fun for a couple of days, and I can go back to my own private life.
I pretty much move around wherever I like.
I really get pursued by men in their 20s, like, a lot. They probably know there's food in the fridge and that somebody's going to talk to them and ask them how their day was.
I worked nightclubs all through my 20s, and I was a teetotaler.