If you added up all the really significant episodes in your life they'd probably come to less than sixty minutes.

For me, personally, I watch pretty much everything on Netflix, and I watch all the episodes in a row, when I can.

My first experience on public radio still ranks among the most embarrassing episodes of my relatively short life.

Plan for each episode to be a satisfying experience, but still leave the audience thinking, 'Oh, my God! Now what?

Chimps are very quick to have a sudden fight or aggressive episode, but they're equally as good at reconciliation.

I don't much care to watch myself. There are still probably 50 or 60 episodes of 'Frasier' that I have never seen.

By all standards, except for 'Star Trek' standards, 98 episodes of any television show is a wildly successful run.

'Studio 60' was a magical experience, as I directed six episodes, was a series regular and a producer... Dream job.

George Liquor is really the richest character I have. I'm amazed there aren't 365 episodes about him on TV already.

Its tricky to do a serialized show and not lose viewers along the way because you really have to watch every episode.

Ten episodes goes by really quickly, especially when you've got a really tough shooting schedule of seven-day episodes.

I really love the karate thing I did on CHIPs. I studied with a trainer because I knew we'd do episodes that had karate.

There is no point in appearing in just a few episodes. If I do a show on television, it won't be for a few episodes only.

If you watched 'Lost,' sometimes the episodes were crazy good, and sometimes you're like, 'That one was just sorta there.'

I'm a huge fan of 'The Six Million Dollar Man' and I love the episodes where they would cross over with 'The Bionic Woman.'

Boy, you know, it's amazing how your brain can turn into a sieve, and you can literally forget episodes that you have shot.

'Waldo' was one episode I always felt I didn't quite crack. And weirdly, now that feels like one of the more prescient ones.

I don't watch 'Glee,' not that I have anything against it. Whenever I miss the first few episodes, I won't watch the series.

'A Storm of Swords' is a massive volume, and it seemed like it would be shortchanging it to try to cram it into ten episodes.

It's impossible to make 22 or 16 great episodes every year. It doesn't matter who you are or how talented of a group you have.

I think it's the small things, the smaller episodes and details that I linger on and try to draw meaning from, just personally.

In TV, you don't know everything. The writers only give you scripts before you shoot the episodes. They keep you on your nerve.

If somebody actually came to me and said, 'O.K., this is it: write your last 'South Park' episodes,' I'd be like, 'No, no, no.'

Time moves on. You can't go back in time. Everything has a consequence, and the last episode of the last season is no exception.

By the time 'Dumbo's Circus' wrapped production of its 120 episodes, I had an agent, and I had scored my first feature film gig.

I used to host a show 'Ghuggi Express' on Zee Punjabi and it aired more than 130 episodes and I single handedly managed the show.

I had an unbelievable experience on '24'. We shot 198 episodes, and I was as excited about shooting the 198th as I was the first.

I've seen [Lalla Ward] episodes of "Doctor Who." They're good, at least partly because the scripts were written by Douglas Adams.

I often hear that those are people's favorite episodes, the ones with people that they don't know. That's the magic of 'Hot Ones.'

The treatment of patients with contaminated blood has been described as one of the most tragic episodes in the history of the NHS.

I was on a sitcom called 'Gary Unmarried' for 37 episodes, and then I was in 'Bad Teacher' with Cameron Diaz and Justin Timberlake.

As a teenager, I struggled a lot, had several major depressive episodes, and ended up dropping out of high school and getting a GED.

I did around 100 episodes as Ted without the band, but the 20 I did with The Blanks are the only ones anyone ever seems to remember.

I think that's the great thing about all 'Black Mirror' episodes - it really leaves you with this feeling of not knowing how to feel.

Gone are the days when everyone had to tune in at the same time and channel each week to watch the newest episodes of a favorite show.

I got the first thing I auditioned for - a guest role on two episodes on 'All Saints,' and I don't think I had ever been that excited.

When I have trouble sleeping, I'll read, watch old episodes of 'Sex and the City,' or dance around my house. Music helps me wind down.

I haven't watched a lot of episodes of 'The Good Wife.' I never even saw the show until I signed on, and then I watched seven episodes.

I went to Target once and picked up three seasons of '24' - what I call the Jack Bauer power hour - and watched 72 episodes in ten days.

There wasn't an episode of 'Will & Grace' that didn't begin with my voice saying, 'Will & Grace' is taped before a live studio audience.

As I kept having episodes of depression, I realized that it was not a one-off: that I had, well, not a disease, really - more an illness.

Someone can do three episodes of 'The Bold and the Beautiful,' then turn around and book a primetime show. That's happening all the time.

I worked with Roger Moore on three episodes of 'The Saint.' He is a lovely man, a good director, and was my favourite actor to work with.

I had heard about Cheers, of course, but I never watched it. So I watched two episodes, and I was like, "Oh my God. This is really good."

Obviously, it's not cable, it's streaming, but it's the same format. It's the same 10 episodes. It feels like cable as opposed to network.

When I went back and watched a couple of the older 'Doctor Who' episodes, I could see why some people felt the show had been quite sexist.

Retracing the various episodes of one's life, one is disconcerted to discover that one was not as noble as one thought oneself at the time.

I kind of joke that creating franchises is a lot like directing pilot episodes of TV series. You set a look and feel and kind of pass it on.

I kind of love that British style: two seasons of tight, compact, good television. The more episodes you have, the thinner the episodes get.

I did The Commish and an episode of Neon Rider, and then I got the series called Street Justice, which I ended up doing about 18 episodes of.

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