Actually, the fun part was not knowing what the heck I was going to be doing.
Americans are somehow obsessed with her, and something about me hit a spot with people in Japan.
I just want people to see that I do my own stuff, that I'm not stupid, and I can make fun of myself.
And also, I think Japan places great value on the lyrics.
I figure no matter how old you are, it's always going to be your first marriage and no life experience is going to make you a better judge of who you should marry.
I don't like going to the gym because I don't like being with people I don't know in that intense environment.
I do feel really determined, and that I have to pull myself together, but I don't really think like, my market has changed and my company has changed, and I'm going to make it BIG in America!
I can never really enjoy being famous.
I bought an espresso maker and coffee maker and make them myself every day.
For me, it's an experiment to see what people are gonna think of it.
But in Japanese, there's actually not much of a relationship between the music and the words.
For the version of this CD released in Japan, a translation of the English lyrics is included, but there are lots of places where meanings are lost in the process of translation.
The same parts of my brain get as excited as when I study bio or read a novel and write a paper on it.
It's a fairly recent thing but I've become very fond of making drinks myself.
When people ask me exactly how much time I spend in each country, I always tell them I have no idea.