Certainly, every movie has to be looked at differently. But I think what happens is, every couple of years, a movie comes along that everybody then tries to copy.
— Tom Green
I don't really consider myself an actor, and I don't know if I'm a comedian.
Drew is a wonderful woman. I love her very much. I wish our marriage could have worked out. I wish her much happiness.
I've always had fun looking forward, seeing where technology is going, and finding interesting ways of applying that to comedy.
I'm always making micro-adjustments onstage, listening to the audience, and what a crowd is like can be infectious.
Comedy is delivered to people in the same form that music is being delivered: by YouTube. People are sharing music and comedy in the same way now.
Performing on stage is addictive. The adrenaline rush is exhilarating. When I stop touring for a couple weeks, I get antsy.
It's nice to go skating in a parking lot and hang out with people who aren't talking about their next movie role.
Vegas is exciting, and it's nice to be somewhere on a regular basis rather than just criss-crossing the country. It allows me to have a semblance of a life.
I always have gotten nervous before every show. But the second I step onstage, it's all gone. It's sort of like an adrenaline rush for me.
I first met the 'Trailer Park Boys' when they did my web television show, and since then, I've hung out with them a few times.
It takes a long time to put a movie together. It can take years.
I've always tried to do things a little bit before they were being done by the mainstream. I challenge myself to do that in stand-up also, to talk about things that I'm not hearing anybody talk about onstage and in the media.
I've always liked outrageous comedy and pushing the envelope.
I'm a different guy on stage.
When you work in television, working for a big corporation, no matter who you are, you can always get cancelled. That sucks. Do you really want to work with an axe over your head for the rest of your life? Not me, not really, and not if you don't have to.
I've always found success in sort of separating myself from the pack mentality things.
I think that young people - teenagers, college-age people, anyone under the age of 30 - know when they're being pandered to.
I definitely think L.A. would be a very difficult city to move to and try to make it in. There's a lot of people down there, and it's tough to stand out in the crowd.
I try to make a point in my life to leave the cell phone in the car sometimes, to try to unplug as much as possible.
When I started my show, it was a public access show in Canada, and I was a broadcasting student in the early '90s, years before I was on MTV. We were kids sort of experimenting and trying to take on the system - you know, the media machine.
There is something romantic about the world being a diverse place, where every place has a Starbucks and Denny's.
I grew up practically getting into this business because of David Letterman. I wanted to do comedy-based interviews.
I assumed I'd never be divorced.
When you get older, you look at who has power differently. When you're 21 years old, and you do something ridiculous at the National Art Gallery and get kicked out by the security guard, in your mind, you're speaking truth to power.
I could sit here and say, 'What would have happened if I hadn't made that crazy television show, if I hadn't made those crazy movies?' Well, I'd be back in Canada working at Dairy Queen.
I used to love 'The Late Late Show.' It was nice to be able to be up late at night and see an extended conversation.
All of my old videos and the things I did on MTV, my old public access show - it was sort of all made for the Web, even though they were made before the Internet was broadcasting video.
I have so much more fun doing stand-up. I can't even begin to explain.
I clearly remember what it was like before Facebook and before cellphones. They didn't have any of that when I was in high school.
I knew at an early age that I wanted to pursue comedy.
You can't let regret stifle your creativity.
I used to do stand-up when I was in high school. But I was also making beats for this rap group, and when we got a record deal, I sort of stopped doing the comedy and focused on the music instead. When that ended, I decided to go back to school, take broadcasting, and start my show on public-access TV.
I'd love to interview Mark Cuban!
I essentially have always directed everything on my TV show without using that title; I edited and wrote all my stuff.
I was happy to be turning 40. It was a good one.
Technology can't eliminate the need for people going to want to go out and see theater and standup comedy.
If an audience is loud and in a party mode, that's an audience that can absorb comedy.
I think all comedy has victims, really. Even if it's not a victim that appears on camera, usually there's a victim. If it's political comedy, if you're talking about the president or whoever, there's a victim there.
If I ever interview somebody, I make sure I listen to them. As a comedian, I've gone on so many shows, I've wanted to take things to a crazy place. Sometimes the hosts don't like that.
I recommend people don't get in high-profile marriages. There are a lot of people in the world. You don't have to marry someone with their own team of publicists, managers, agents, and lawyers.
I'm talking about some real subjects and issues in my standup. I'm attempting to make a point about technology and how it's changing our society and our lives, and our addiction to social media, and how it affects marriages and relationships.
My show on MTV, as outrageous as it was, it was also making a point, which was, 'Look at what we're doing here. This is something that you don't see on television every day, because you're not allowed to do this on television.'
I don't watch a whole lot of television, to be honest, but I do miss music videos.
When I started doing stand-up again, a lot of it was coming from an angrier place, and I quickly learned that doesn't spell a good time in a comedy club.
I've always really enjoyed sounds and alliteration and funny words and funny melodies.
I basically went into broadcasting when I was in college because I knew that there was nothing like what I had in my mind on TV at the time.
I'm a little bit of a techie.
The truth of the matter is, I worry about nearly every bit I've ever done. I'm very critical of myself.
I'm incredibly proud to bring back 'Tom Green Live' for a third season on AXS TV. AXS TV's commitment to unique, out-of-the-box humor, in a completely open and uncensored format, is unparalleled.