It's always great to get to do what you love and to do something that hopefully people will see and love.
Casey Wilson
Molly Shannon, for example, is someone I've always really looked up to, because her comedy is so physical and wild and unembarrassed and brave.
The down-side of these huge-budget movies is that so many people have a hand in them, sometimes they come out a little more vanilla.
Kenya Moore is everything to me. She's everything.
Jake Johnson is one of my oldest friends.
At my wedding, I was dancing so furiously that I fell hard on my kneecaps. The next morning, my knees were so swollen that I had to get a wheelchair at the airport to go on my honeymoon.
Once I made a boyfriend dress up as Woody Allen from 'Annie Hall.'
I know this is a weird niche, but a lot of my female friends have these strange stories where there their dads have seen the small successes of their daughters and have decided that they are creative as well.
I took a clown class at NYU - that's where I met June Diane Raphael, my writing partner and best friend.
My dad's cool. He is socially liberal.
My mom's brother was gay, and he actually passed away from AIDS when I was 13. He was quite a character, but he also worked at the electrical plant, so he was this complicated guy with a big laugh who would wear a trucker hat and do impressions. He was gay, but to me, Uncle Alan was just the funniest person in the world.
Something that's good in the mini-culture of 'Happy Endings' is that the goal is to try and make each other laugh. There is a pretty high bar, and you want to make the writers laugh, and you want to elevate what's already great material - and also, we're like, 'Who is even watching this? Let's just go for it.'
Amy Poehler, Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph - when they speak, everyone listens. Because they're freaking hilarious.
When you're on a road trip, anything goes.
My dad always said that 90 percent of marital problems could be solved by getting your blood sugar up, and he's right! So I would say pick a partner who's forgiving when you have low blood sugar and threaten to drive your car through your shared home.
The more money you spend, the more you need to make back, and the more pressure there is to appeal to everyone - which to the studio means that the specificity and uniqueness must be watered down. But I think mass audiences like things that are more specific and tend to have a voice, like 'Napoleon Dynamite' or 'Superbad.'
With agents, I've learned to bring them into the process when I feel confident. You're the only one that can really know what's right for your career. You're on a wing and a prayer through most of it.
Debra Winger blows me away, always.
When I was 13, I was in my tent at Girl Scout camp, trying to change out of my bathing suit and talking at the same time. I fell out of the tent in front of everyone with my bathing suit around my ankles. I was humiliated - but no amount of humiliation has ever seemed to stop me.
My mom worked tirelessly on getting equal rights for women.
If you're going to be part of a nationally televised show that airs live and do sketches that haven't even been brainstormed a week earlier, you really can't be afraid to fail.
You can't always tell if someone's gay over Twitter, but when he's talking to you about 'Real Housewives,' it's probably OK to assume.
If you can have a laugh with someone, you're then in each other's world.
On 'Saturday Night Live,' you wear so many hats there. You're the prop person, the actor, you're everything.
There's a creative freedom with being under the radar. But I guess if you're too under the radar, you get canceled?
I went on the road with Hillary Rodham Clinton when she was out campaigning.
If Damon Wayans is not breaking, it's a miracle. He is so funny that he makes everyone die laughing.
Frankly, 'Bride Wars' got made because movies with women need to be about weddings and love.
I'm the girl that writes feverishly in my tiny trailer on set.
I'll take discrimination if it's in my favor!
I went to drama school at NYU for serious acting. So I was doing Chekov and Sam Shepard plays.
I'm a voyeuristic American.
Instead of going into politics, I decided to go into comedy, which is the second most daunting career path for a woman.
All of my favorite actresses are comedians at heart: Shirley MacLaine and Madeline Kahn, Diane Keaton and Debra Winger. And they are all amazing dramatic actresses, but everything they do is funny.
I love Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris and Adele.
It's certainly strange to do sketch comedy with cue cards at midnight in a skyscraper as opposed to in a basement with your friends.
Everything related to 'SNL,' that was very sudden - from the time I found out I was joining the cast to the time I could read on a blog that someone watching the show thinks I'm fat, that was about 30 days. That blog part, that could've moved a little more slowly. But hey - it's all material, right?
My mom always worked, and I certainly don't want to look back and think, 'Well, I don't have kids, but I'm glad I did that sitcom.'
My dad would write these sketches for me while I was at 'SNL.'
My goal is to generate more material for myself.
Somewhere along the way, I think I realised that taking yourself seriously is the worst thing that you can do in life, so once I let that go, I've just let it all go. I have no standard of personal dignity.
I use a method approach to all my sitcom work.
So many shows don't have laugh tracks now that, when you hear it, it can be slightly jarring.
I love the area I grew up in, which is right outside D.C., in Alexandria, Virginia.
I've met architects before, and they're not living the life we see on TV.
I have never turned to my girlfriend and said, 'Oh, okay, babe,' and I see it in scripts all the time.
When you move to New York, especially, you feel like you need to be something.
Posturing is funny to me.
I still am not a size two - I don't think I could get there if I wanted to.
New York is hard living. It's fun living, but it's hard.