I honestly, sincerely love what I do.

As journalists, we keep pushing and pushing.

Macauley Culkin was on the show a lot. Or Haley Joe Osment.

The pressure to be timely with news has increased every year.

Martial arts just normally would not draw me to the box office.

At these award shows, I love to see what people are going to wear.

We can't laugh quite as much on camera, but we sure do on the set.

The stars handle it very graciously. They let you know. They know how to play the game.

Traffic is one of the most powerful films to come out in recent years. It blew me away.

People do want to know the personal things. How far is too far to go with personal lives?

They had an opening. You know, it was one of those deals. I auditioned and got it in '93.

There have been many times when we have not run stories because we cannot get it verified.

It's nice to help remember somebody who really made a very positive difference in the world.

There are days like any normal human being where I wake up and I don't feel like going to work.

There are people who are very highly paid to cover the truth and who will protect their clients.

Julia Roberts is a favorite. Everybody loves her in the Hollywood community. The public adores her.

We will often talk to Liz Smith about couples and relationships because she always has an inside track, too.

I am actually wearing slacks on the show more than I ever have - it is now acceptable, and I like mixing it up.

People magazine had been around for a short period of time, but nobody had thought about putting entertainment news on a nightly basis on television.

Many have been with the show for years, and they have sources in the business, so we do know things, but until it is verified, we don't run with the story.

I can't think of a major story that we have broken that was incorrect. But we have had to correct some things that were false; we have had to retract things.

In a lot of cases, as in Tom and Nicole's case, the tabloids were about to break the story, so they said just let the news out. And they called organizations such as ours.

Survivor has been such a hit, and out of that have come so many interesting stories from people that we don't see on the big screen. We have helped make them incredible celebrities.

There are so many venues in which stars are exposed today, that we just know much more and the studios don't have the control over stars like they used to, in the 30s, 40s, and 50s.

I can't say I'm happy to be talking about John Ritter and his passing. In my 21 years of Entertainment Tonight, this really was one of the most shocking and sad things to have happened.

I have been asked whether it is strange when a big story and big business for you is tragedy or ill fortune for someone else; but the fact is that is how many things in life work sadly.

When you look at what we spend on entertainment, whether it's on CDs, music, DVDs, there is so much money invested in that, people want to know a little more about the stars they're paying to see or hear.

There have been many cases in which stars have come to us first to break the news because they knew the pressure was on. They wanted to have it on the air so that they could give their honest evaluation of the situation.

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