I don't mind UFO's and ghost stories, it's just that I tend to give value to the storyteller rather than to the story itself.
If you don't love it, you can't suffer thru all the despair that comes with it. Keep doing it because you love it.
I'm working 2 days a week right now, narration usually on Wed., and host on camera on Friday.
I'm very proud this show has been accepted for this length of time.
I think voiceover is an adjunct that actors have picked up that have given us some security.
I play bad golf for good charities like the LA Police.
I am very pro law enforcement.
Also the pictures themselves give a visual to the audience tuning in, that makes them a very important part of law enforcement, or pulling families together.
A great chef is an artist that I truly respect.
I learned early on, having known the most handsome, successful, Gary Cooper, Clark Gable, Robert Taylor, don't ever spend too much time looking in the mirror.
I grew up years ago doing something that unfortunately doesn't hardly exist any more, a medium called Radio.
I grew up in France, my first language was French, and I tend to gravitate towards French cooking.
In the Belgian air force a general supposedly saw a UFO, tracked it with his plane, photographed it with his wing cameras. And I believe it because I said to myself why would this person, not getting paid for this, do it unless it actually happened or he thought it happened.
You have to love the doing of what you're doing and not wait for the phone to ring.
We did a show called The Orphan Train, during the depression, when families didn't have enough money to support their children, they'd put them on the train and hope someone would pick them up who had enough money to support their children.