Comedy is all about having a point of view, and it's also about power.
— Judy Gold
People always think you have a lot of money when they see you on TV.
Many comics stay in one city and develop their acts for that particular audience.
Over the years, things got so bad between my mother and I, we stopped talking to each other and started communicating by putting Ann Landers articles on the refrigerator.
Women are taught that if you want to be a lady, keep your opinions to yourself and be polite.
I'm going to be a 'Chopped' champion.
I didn't want to be known as a gay comic, but as a comic who happens to be gay.
'The Judy Show' would be the name of my TV show if I had one, but I don't.
I've done stand-up since I was 18 years old, and I absolutely love it, but I used to go onstage, and the audience was my peers. Now I go onstage, and I could be their mother.
When I got a part in 'All American Girl,' in 1994, I remember thinking, 'Now I have a series, I'm not going to need to do standup,' but every night I'd go out afterward and get onstage somewhere.
I love being a Givenik Ambassador. Not only does it give me a platform to discuss my favorite charities, but I get to talk about my other favorite topic - 'The Judy Show!'
My desire for my own sitcom began as a little girl - I spent hours lying on my belly on the shag carpeting getting lost in the world of the '70s sitcom. All I wanted to do was run away to the Brady house, The Partridge Family bus; even the project on 'Good Times' seemed better than Clark, NJ.