Wherever the crowd goes run in the other direction. They're always wrong.
Can you remember who you were, before the world told you who you should be?
Sleeping is not something I do a lot of.
I read that book How to Hug a Porcupine [by Julie Ross] - it's my parenting bible. They say you have to trust your children and give them freedom. I say, OK, but this is New York City!
Woo-hoo! I'm 40. I can say that now.
I work out with a trainer, Anna Kaiser, three days a week.
I don't have the best family history heart-wise, so I really try to keep my heart strong.
If I feel any sort of emotional upheaval, I go for a jog and I feel better.
Having been a cheerleader, I know all too well what these girls give up to join forces and compete.
I feel like my mind is a little quieter when I exercise.
When I'm at work, I'm remembering what I forgot to do for the kids, and when I'm with the kids, I'm remembering what I forgot to do at work.
I work out every day. It's part of my life. That's one of the benefits of having kids in school full-time.
If you're a waiter and you're waiting on me, you might get five percent, you might get seventy percent. It depends on how bad my math skills are that day.
I had a picture-perfect childhood.
It makes my makeup artist's life easier. [Plus] it makes my eyes look a little more open on TV, which is where I happen to work right now.
I get paid to make out with the hunks!
I think I have a disease called spontaneous disclosure. I need to tell everyone my life story instantaneously.
Women's clutches are too small. I open my purse, and with some hydraulic force, a tampon shoots 12 feet into the air.