Spoiling my ballot paper is the only way I can see of stripping the system of legitimacy, shaking it up, and reforming it so that it favours citizens.
I'm speaking for the streets, for the people down here. I can be their spokesperson.
I'm not the kind of guy that really buys clothing. I'm lucky. Most of the time, if I want something, I can get it from my sponsors.
If I can just live further from the spotlight I think that'll be better for all really.
So long as I can remember, my siblings and I would have 'Star Wars' action figures or Fisher-Price action figures, and we would build these sprawling compounds.
That people believe I can be Olympic champ, it just spurs me on.
I can squat 405. I'm proud of that - that's one of my favorites.
I love the plie squat. I love that because I can feel my glutes and inner thighs, and it makes me feel grounded.
Whenever I can squeeze it in, I'm writing and recording.
I try to squeeze in a workout whenever I can, even if it's doing squats with my 7-month-old in the kitchen or jumping on the trampoline with my 5-year-old.
I got the stamina. I can close.
I started acting in junior high. I was in 'Guys and Dolls.' I was Stanley Kowalski. In my head, before coming to Hollywood, I thought, 'I can play anything.'
I never get too high on my stardom or what I can do.
I want to show I can control my emotion and aggression and stay calm.
I've already had two stem cell transplants. Very rarely does somebody have a third, so I have to maintain my strength so I can go through this.
I've not been discriminated against, but I can see it happen. And not just race but gender and sexuality, too. It's stereotyping, lazy casting, which is an issue: that people can't see outside the box.
I can be so blown away by story lines.
After I script the movie, I have to storyboard it out, I have to budget it, and I have to understand if I can afford all those visual effects or not.
I can still run in a straight line, and I can still throw a punch.
My first job was being a page at 'The Tonight Show.' I saw Jack Paar come out one night and sit on the edge of his desk and talk about what he'd done the night before. I thought, 'I can do that!' I used to do that on a street corner in the Bronx with all my buddies.