A lot of stars don't have a sense of humor.Collection: Humor
The great thing about celebrity culture is that they can't seem to stop themselves from displaying their ridiculous behaviour. I feel it's my job as a serious investigative journalist to witness all kinds of behaviour and then report back to the audience through the prism of my own anger and bitterness.Collection: Anger
The thing that bums me out about 'The Real World' is I don't want to believe that teenagers are that stupid.
The thing that cracks me up is how these reality characters start out thrilled and excited just to be on television, and how they move to thinking they are as big as the Friends.
I have friends who are going through chemotherapy, and they make the darkest, most hideous cancer jokes you've ever heard.
No, I love Montreal... I think I love Montreal more than Montreal loves me... I love the food there.
I hate it, it is tedious... when I write for my act, it is very improvisational, I write bullet points, I cannot sit in front of a computer; that is not my style.
I'm also doing a special for Comedy Central called Autobiography. It's going to be a spoof of Biography.
I'm always listening and watching; my ear is like a boom mike. And judging, frankly. Constantly judging.
A lot of celebrities, especially when you're talking about the really big ones, live in what I call the fame bubble. Nobody ever says no to them or challenges them or even teases them.
I also don't have a desire to be on the A-list. I feel more people can relate to the D-list than the A-list.
It is a challenge, with the global fame, to try to act like I put my pants on one leg at a time, when in fact I have Pippa Middleton help me put my pants on every morning. She's my lady-in-waiting as well.
I'm not somebody who no matter where I go there are paparazzi or any of that nonsense. But I have a little window into that world and I can enter it and dance around. I want to be the audience's ticket into the party.
Oh, I constantly say things that I regret. I mortify myself constantly. But that's just part of the deal. I'm not really sure what's going to come out of my mouth.
Well, I think that when I perform on the road I always thank the audience for buying a ticket because it's a big deal to buy a ticket for a live entertainment, get a baby-sitter and pay for the meal, the parking, whatever.
Pretty much everywhere I go, I'm pretty much thinking I'm going to be bounced. I am still the outsider who snuck into the party. I identify with the regular person, because that is who I am.
My friend Anderson Cooper is the scion of one of America's great shipping and railroad families, the Vanderbilts.
When I'm going to see a comedian, I don't want to see them hold back, and when I'm reading a book, I don't want to hear an abridged version.