I've been to Sundance before, but I'd never seen a lot of screenings.
Jen Lawrence is quite a fan of 'Game of Thrones.'
We, as Americans, at least - I mean, I love my country - but we're so self-righteous sometimes, in terms of, like, our nationality, our country. But we're people from somewhere else; the true 'Americans' are the original peoples. It's funny, but we're a very territorial species.
There's a thing at the Museum of Natural History in New York, where I live: they have a stairwell where you follow the beginning and the course of this planet, and it's a very long stairwell, and you follow, and you follow, and then you reach the top, and we're, like, half a step on the stairwell - the timeline for us on this planet.
I think more money can be very detrimental to movies and TV because things get solved economically rather than creatively, and that's never a good solution.
With a lot of shows, what you'll see happen is they start off really well, and they're very original, but they become sort of a version of themselves. They stand outside the show... they become a cliche of the show they once were. That's the whole 'jumping the shark' thing.
I think everybody goes through changes, and the same should be said for fictional characters, especially ones that you follow on television.
People's personalities get tweaked at weddings.
Fantasy novels, I don't really gravitate to that part of the bookstore.
Anybody who was in 'The Godfather' is a tough guy.
There are wars being fought! Who cares what I'm doing on a Saturday night? I'm not even a celebrity.