I love 'A Mighty Wind.' Even though it's not a funny movie, I think that's kind of beautiful and sweet.
— Matt Walsh
I'm a young boy at heart, I guess.
I've seen a little 'Mighty Boosh.'
There's a moment in every romantic comedy when a person sees something in someone else that nobody else sees.
The thing about 'Veep' is that you never really know where the camera's going to be. So you're not really just saying your line and then just watching it: you're trying to act the whole time just in case the camera is watching you.
I make a mean Irish soda bread every Christmas and give it out to friends and family.
When I first started doing press interviews, the big question was, 'Do you think women are funny?' People would ask you that in an interview. In an interview! It's like, of course they are.
I spent a lot of time in Chicago at a place called The Annoyance Theater, where we would develop one-act plays through improv, and you would just improvise scenes and then discover something about the character and use it in the next scene.
It's such a smart decision for comedy to not try to be relevant or contemporary.
Although I do use some of my psychology training in comedy, but it's more like pop psychology, not a course of treatment or anything. To me, it's more like social intelligence.
I've never gotten hired for drama because I'm a good improviser. I don't think people who write drama scripts want you playing with them as much.
I've always wanted to make an improv movie because I have so much experience in it.
I ended up doing a lot of prank shows in my life or prank theater, but I always got fairly nervous about doing 'em.
I had a small part in a storm-chasing movie, so I did some research into storm-chaser culture.
Improv is a disposable art form, but it's kind of freeing in that way, too, because things can fail, and the audience is a little more forgiving.
I've always loved improvised movies like Christopher Guest and the 'Spinal Tap' era of comedy.
I think people who can do comedy well don't get enough credit. It can be harder than drama.
Authentic discovery, when captured on camera, I think, is tremendous acting.
Improv Olympics, Second City are some of the most tolerant, accepting people. They're like circus folk. They're freaks themselves.
You can't be controlling in improv.
L.A. can be pretty insane because there's so much show business here, but I also know a lot of kids who grew up in Manhattan who are some of the most normal, nicest people I know. Casting directors always say Chicago people are just nicer.
I guess I'm sort of spoiled because, most of the things that I get to do, people know that you're a good improviser, so they allow you at least one improv take, and for comedy, that's great.
I've seen several funnel clouds as a kid, too. They're cool if, you know, they're, like, two towns over, but they're scary as hell if you know they're coming your way.
Of current British stuff, 'Brass Eye' was one of my favorite shows.
There's something outrageously funny about the bold-faced lying that's going on, in a general way. Just the blatant denial of facts, whether it's climate change or crowd sizes. Every day, there's another blatant lie. I think there's comedy in there somewhere.
Jane Fonda is someone who impressed me.
I can speak a little German, a little Spanish, and I was a psych major, so I'm good at listening to people's problems.
When I came into improv, it was almost like an outsider art form.
Stylistically, in improv, I don't think you can have as many camera tricks; I think you're kind of shooting more like a documentary: you don't know where it's going, so you have to hang back a little more.
When I started doing improv in Chicago, for every five teams, one or two would have one woman.
Well, politics is much more severe than entertainment. You have to hit those points, in politics, word for word. You have to remember the date. You have to remember the website. You have to rehearse stories that might be asked, have anecdotes ready for questions that might come up.
I'm a huge fan of Chicago sports and Chicago food, and I love going home and my family is still there. I guess it's pretty easy to have a normal life in Chicago.