LOS ANGELES
Some tourists come to Hollywood to collect autographs. Me? I'm a sucker for juicy quotes. A few scribbles on a napkin may impress your friends and neighbors for a month, but a one-liner or irreverent anecdote lasts a lifetime. Here are a few favorites that I tucked away during my January journey to la-la land:
Portia De Rossi, wife of Ellen DeGeneres, on her new role in ABC's "Better Off Ted": "Veronica is my favorite character I've ever played, bar none. I'm really attracted to strong women -- let me rephrase that."
Kaley Cuoco, on playing a waitress in CBS' "Big Bang Theory": "I went into the Cheesecake Factory a couple of times, and I always forget that my character works there. And I'm always, like, 'Why is everyone looking at me?' They always give me funny looks, but it's very cute."
Scott Foley, star of NBC's "The Last Templar," on working with Omar Sharif: "He was on the set standing up and signing autographs with the local crew. When it looked like he was done, I went over and introduced myself. He said, 'Damn it,' and took my hand and put it on his crotch. He said, 'I got a hernia. They keep making me stand up.' My wife was visiting at the time, and she said, 'Did you ... was that ... what happened?' And I said, 'I think I just touched Omar Sharif in a place that a lot of people wish they could touch Omar Sharif.'"
MSNBC's Rachel Maddow on how she'll operate now that she doesn't have George W. Bush to kick around anymore: "I don't think we are at risk of idiocy going out of fashion in Washington. So wherever there are bad ideas, I will find ways to make fun of them."
Amy Poehler, star of a new untitled NBC sitcom, on the fact her husband, Will Arnett, has dual citizenship in Canada and the United States: "Sometimes he likes to take his passports and throw them on the bed and pretend he's Jason Bourne and he doesn't know which passport to use. He pretends to pack a bag really furiously and rifles through his two passports. Worst 'Bourne' movie ever."
CBS late-night host Craig Ferguson on the relationship between depression and comedy: "I think if you're happy, it would probably be impossible to do comedy at all. I got married recently and I thought, 'Well, that's the end of it. Now I'm happy so I won't be funny.' And that made me so unhappy that we actually did a couple of good shows that week. My psychiatrist -- yes, I have a psychiatrist -- says that I have reserves of unhappiness equal to Saudi Arabia's reserves of oil."