I don't make the best movies in the world, but at times, I do feel like I'm adding something to the cinematic community.
I remember, when I was an up-and-coming comic, how annoyed I would be when the famous guys would show up and just take everyone's spots.
I feel like if I won an award and I was giving my speech and the music started, that's all I'd remember, the humiliation I felt when the music started. It would mar the entire experience for me.
After every single take, I laugh. It's my own awkwardness and discomfort about being an actor.
The current Babe Ruth of improv? Sacha Baron Cohen. He's pretty amazing.
I feel much more comfortable as a writer than an actor. I feel like I am a much better writer than I am an actor.
I guess it's a kind of a goal for any actor to be the lead of a movie. Not for ego reasons, but because it is creatively the biggest challenge.
If you ask most high schoolers who Bruce Lee is, they will say that it someone they sit next to in English class.
People recognise me and come up to me sometimes, but I'm not like George Clooney.
I love cold weather.
I mean, I love Comic-Con.
I'm a complete coward in real life.
I'm not entirely comfortable saying I'm an actor, because it seems like a very weird, almost dorky thing to say you are.
You don't have to put dresses in a movie to make girls like it.
It is always exciting when you find someone who is really enthusiastic about being half of a comedy team.
I'm not one of those actors where filmmakers that I admire ask me to be in their movies. I meet them at parties and they're nice to me, but they never ask me to work with them.
I was in high school when Will Ferrell was first on 'Saturday Night Live', and I remember thinking, 'Man, that guy is the funniest guy ever.'
To me, what separates a funny movie from a good movie is something personal.
My characters come from a good place.
My mom drives me crazy sometimes, but I have a good relationship with her.