I'm the luckiest guy alive.

You just can't fake chemistry.

Guys like scars! They're like war wounds.

I try to have a true line in every character I play.

My friends all tell me I was born with a horseshoe up my butt.

A lot of shows have couples with issues inside the relationship.

I really believe that we have the power to manifest our own fates.

I want to be embraced by the audience, but it's fun to stir up the pot.

If I hadn't become an actor, I would've pursued a race-car driving career.

The single most important thing in learning my craft was being on the stage.

I'm not accustomed to taking a swing at a woman's head. That's not in my DNA.

I don't really retain much from the first couple semesters of my criminal justice studies.

I would love to shoot in San Francisco permanently. It would be such a joy to come back home full circle.

Before I pursued acting full-time, I had every intention of going into some form of law enforcement work.

For me, a career highlight was being on 'Battlestar Galactica.' Roles like that don't come along very often.

I didn't want 'BSG' to have to rewrite Anders as a sniveling, whining ball of despair who's hiding out in the corner.

I jumped out of an airplane on my 34th birthday because I promised myself I would. I have an interest in confronting my fears.

Police work was fascinating, and I didn't imagine that acting was something a kid from San Mateo, California, could really pursue.

Once I discovered the theater at Santa Clara and once I got into the theater program, I never got into specific criminal justice studies.

I don't want to get pigeon-holed into a certain kind of character. I love action roles and the hero, but I want to keep trying something new.

I am part of a circuit called 24 Hours of LeMons, where it's a sort of riff on 24 Hours of Le Mans. It's a poor man's weekend warrior racer event.

It's an interesting plot device to enter in a third wheel - it always helps raise the stakes for all parties involved. But often, those characters can be one-dimensional.

It's not unknown that Vancouver is a huge destination for television and film. It has been for many years. It just seems to be that I'm drawn to the show that shoots in Vancouver.

Oftentimes, actors don't have the luxury of picking their part. You go from one project to the next, and you hope that you find one that fits you and that you're suited for, and then they see that you're fit for it.

The most important thing is to illicit some reaction, good or bad. If some people are repellent to me, so be it. If some people are attracted to me, great. At the end, that's the object of entertainment - you want to provoke a reaction.

I come back home almost every weekend, or my wife comes up every other weekend to Vancouver. So, in that sense, we make it work. It's just a great city. It's a great country. They've been good to me, and I have no problems being up there.

I have a coffee mug that my dad gave me years ago that has the San Mateo police logo and my dad's name on it, so I brought it to set and used it in a scene. I mean, you don't see it, it's not prominently featured, but I just wanted that connectivity.

I was talking on the phone in my trailer, and I looked in the mirror and I saw the badge clipped to my belt, a gun with a holster, and the suit and the tie with the jacket off, and it was just deja vu. I remember that image so clearly from growing up. My dad would come home for lunch, take off his jacket, have the gun and the badge.

That's probably fair to say that there is a certain amount of pressure to deliver your next role when you do have a fan base as potent as the 'Battlestar Galactica' family. There was certainly a lot of curiosity to all of us on that show - what are you going to do next? Where can we see you next? That was a question we got more often than not.

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