I have this ongoing obsession with Meryl Streep.
We have to remain vigilant and loud and stay consistently engaged with our representatives and the political process every single day, on both a macro and micro level.
All that social media hyperbole is just so fake.
'Billy On The Street' has no doubt always been about the people we talk to. That being said, it thrills me that the show really has a dedicated following in the comedy world.
I don't think my voice has changed very much when it comes to things that I create. It's just my perspective, my point of view, and I guess that really hasn't changed very much. Luckily, it hasn't had to change in order for me to work.
It's not enough for Hollywood to make a bunch of gay movies. That's obviously a big part of the equation, but then gay people have to show up for those movies.
Our pop cultural likes and dislikes are still very segregated, and that is not true of 'Billy on the Street.'
'Billy on the Street' is a very exhausting show to do, as you can imagine, but it's worth it.
I did see one Tyler Perry movie in the theater. My friends and I went to see, I believe it was, 'Why Did I Get Married?'
Jim Carrey and Steve Carell did dramatic roles. I look up to them. You want a career like that.
For some reasons, I have WWE wrestlers tweeting me all the time. Like, my biggest fans. Why they can connect with my love for Meryl Streep, I don't know.
I did a live late-night talk show called 'Creation Nation' with friends of mine. I had a sidekick and a band, and I wrote the whole thing. And it had the form of a late-night talk show, but we did it on stage because no one was giving me a TV show at the time.
You can't be a great comedian without having self-awareness about others or your own faults. You need a strong sense of self and view on the world. That's what great actors have, too.
Society would be better off if Billy Eichner started getting more dramatic work.
We have a whole art department on 'Billy on the Street.' We give away dioramas that we've made.
I think 'Billy on the Street' is a big show, but why do a show if you won't make it original and unique and powerful?
No one was asking me to be on TV. So I made my own late-night TV talk show.