The town I grew up in was at least fifty percent Jewish, so every weekend in the 7th grade, we went to Bar and Bat Mitzvahs.
My dad is a really funny guy, and we would make jokes about my leukemia. When my friends would come over, we would joke about it, too.
It's so funny at 'SNL,' Bill Hader always kind of treated me like his little sister and would kind of, like, lovingly bully me.
It's totally my dream job. I grew up watching 'Saturday Night Live.' We'd watch it at sleepover parties and quote it.
The longer you're on a show like 'SNL,' the less frequent the Google alerts become.
There are just so many funny kids and teenagers. They're just not aware of how funny they are.
I sleep a lot on Sunday. It's really great.
I've been watching a lot of A&E's 'Intervention.' I know that's sort of depressing, but I love watching it.
I do think that the audience thinks it's funny when you break, but if you do it all the time, it loses something.
With 'Trainwreck,' because it wasn't live and we could do more takes, I feel like we broke a lot.
There always have been funny women.
Being sick is the reason I went into comedy.
Every sketch goes through a rewrite stage where a group of writers sits around a table and pitches more jokes and ideas for the piece.
As a child or young adult going through an illness, it can be stressful at times and boring and extremely alienating.
Cleveland gets crapped on a lot.