I loved my role on Who's the Boss? There is always some of me in every character that I play.
Both Neil and I had done solo projects where we were the boss and I just thought that if he was willing to get into it, it would really be a good experience for him.
Second, if you're the boss, just because they don't ask doesn't mean your employees don't have needs.
It is funny because the guy who is my boss now, Howard Stern, has a similarity there. He got big being a regular guy. He wasn't the greatest looking guy in the world.
The one important thing you do as boss is you set the standard. The minute you go in and say 'we'll let it go this time,' you set a new standard, which is lower. So you cannot do that.
That's my main flaw: I always think authority figures or my boss is going to think something I do is funny. And usually they don't.
We were having a trial game against Leeds, and Jack Charlton was the boss of Middlesbrough at the time.
I've always found that the speed of the boss is the speed of the team.
The speed of the boss is the speed of the team.
Well, it really describes what it feels like to be a normal person whose boss and friend suddenly runs for the president, and then becomes the president.
More power than all the success slogans ever penned by human hand is the realization for every man that he has but one boss. That boss is the man - he - himself.
The only time some people work like a horse is when the boss rides them.
To me, success was not having to have a boss and not having a day job. I've been living my own version of success since the early '90s when I first got signed. I haven't had a job since then.
And I particularly like the whole thing of being boss. Boss and employee... It's the slave quality that I find very alluring.
If you think your boss is stupid, remember: you wouldn't have a job if he was any smarter.