Abspielen / Play Ärmel / Sleeve Beschädigt / Damaged Emotional Frau / Woman Herz / Heart Krebs / Cancer Leute / People Menge / Lot Sagen / Say Sehr / Very Tragen / Wear Wange / Cheek Zunge / Tongue
Fans are very emotional people, and when they have seen you with some people and they like your chemistry, they expect you to work with the same person again.
I think people really connect with the idea of someone who's gained and lost weight in this very public way, and also someone who's an emotional eater.
At my house, it's an, 'If dad says it, you can say it' kind of deal, so a lot of my slang words come off very childish at this point in my career.
I certainly wear my heart on my sleeve, and I think that comes out in the characters that I play. There's a yearning, or something, that comes out of me that people relate to.
I never dreamed that I would hear 10,000 people screaming when I stepped out onto a stage. Well, that's not entirely true. I dreamed about it but in a performing-on-the-stage-at-Staples-Center-or-Madison-Square-Garden context. But never in a I'm-in-a-movie-that-hasn't-even-come-out-yet one.
Any man and woman, and I've been on the record, any man or woman who wears the uniform and serves this country is a hero. I've said that repeatedly at all the town halls I've had.
Obviously, writing together is very intimate because it's sort of acting where you need to get to a really deep place to get the most emotional song.
For me, what I really want to come out of it is to show people that I can hold together a movie, be the number one character and play someone who is twenty or twenty-one.
The thing about the banjo is, when you first hear it, it strikes many people as 'What's that?' There's something very compelling about it to certain people; that's the way I was; that's the way a lot of banjo players and people who love the banjo are.