Quotes from Jim Rash


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I love discussing the ins and outs of the collaborative nature of writing.


When you're talking about people like Shonda Rhimes, Vince Gilligan or Beau Willimon, you're talking to people who are notable and celebrities in their own right. People want to know how their brains work.


I think the networks, in general, have to evaluate what's happening around them. I'm sure they're scared about a lot of things: Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, and all these places that allow people to watch shows in chunks.


I feel like my experience on 'Community' was that I saw just how important that first year is for a series. That is where you work all the pieces out, and that means honing the characters' voices, setting that tone, finding your angle.


With writing, I love doing it, but there's that love-hate relationship: You're not having a good run, you've hit a wall; it's frustrating.


Old beach houses sometimes don't have TVs, or you don't get cellphone reception.


In television, the writer-creator-showrunner is embraced as the creative mind.


I think what's cool about a body-switching movie is, 'The grass is always greener:' the idea that someone else has a better life than I do.


I think what makes a good show is obviously a rabid fan base.


I think the community that's created within a writers' room is a very interesting topic.


I loved 'Lost,' from beginning to end.


With Saturday morning cartoons, you've got to start at 6 A.M., right?


For young boys, just to know you exist in any capacity is a strong feeling.


'Dexter,' while the pilot shares moments with the novel that created the character of Dexter, they completely abandoned the book from that moment on.


I think there's a fear of disconnect sometimes; communication is a huge issue for all of us, from adults to kids, as far as our face-to-face time and our ability to interact with each other without isolating itself to a phone. I think that has to be something that's very challenging.


I am always up to steal secrets from smart people.


I think fans have an outlet. Through social media, you can hear them.


I remember lying on the floor of my room, staring at a black-and-white television for most of the '80s - watching 'Diff'rent Strokes,' 'Facts of Life,' 'Silver Spoons,' Saturday morning cartoons, and 'Murder, She Wrote' while eating an insane amount of Stouffer's French bread pizza. I was sucked into it all.


A sketch is just a mini movie.


Writing sketches, you're also learning about a journey and characters, and you translate that to bigger things.