I love the mall, and I love Howard Stern and Oprah.
I think I was always a class clown growing up and a funny kid. I never really knew how to channel that until I got into high school.
The secret to podcast success is sticking with it and making it fun for yourself.
The connective tissue between storytelling, advice, and comedy is passion.
I had always done broader characters, but going to UCB and speaking to my own voice was important for auditioning for TV and film.
When I was growing up, I watched every sitcom imaginable.
Getting to be the 'weird roommate' on a sitcom was a dream come true.
I'm really thankful for my improv background.
For me, what really excites me about my characters and what pushes their core is the kind of dark, sad side of life.
I love improvising on the spot. I like that pressure.
Most people have kind of done something that could put them in jail at least for one night.
Comedy is my first love; that's my main goal in life - to keep doing comedy.
Doing improv really got me started in my whole career.
I believe that each person can make a difference, but it's so slight that there's basically no point.
I love L.A. And feel attached to this city, but I don't identify myself as being a part of it.
I feel like that would be pretty strange to meet a voice actor as a kid.
I would really like to create my own show. And I really wanna meet Oprah.
I'm a huge 'Bachelor' fan!
It's really fun to play a character that fights back and say what she means.
Society is really coming to a point where they're not asking if women can be funny anymore. We all know they obviously are.
I love watching people tell stories, because it's very vulnerable.
You can't really get as much done when you're worried about looking gross.
I definitely get inspired by people who are disgusting on some level.
I kind of see it as my personal therapy to get on stage and do characters.