I'm obsessed with the Fenty beauty line. It's like, finally, women of color get good makeup.

I don't really read Stephen King - I just can't read scary things because it stays with me too long - but I truly liked his memoir of the craft of writing.

Adam Sandler and Drew Barrymore are two of the most charming A-listers in Hollywood.

Seriously, show me a person who's not into Tom Hanks, and I'll show you a person who is anti-happiness.

I'm going to keep doing the comedy and the art that I do. I'm going to keep uplifting marginalized voices, and I think that's my place to do that.

I'm a nail biter and have been my whole life.

I'm really into short-story collections and essays; they're my jam.

Making tough decisions that may make someone unhappy is something to get good at doing.

People like to pretend that all women have the same experience or that all gay people have the same experience. But everyone's life is different, and everyone's point of view is valid.

I think people just don't respect women's bodies in general, the bodies of women of color in general.

'2 Dope Queens,' it was just a way for us to showcase female comedians, showcase comedians of color, showcase LGBT comedians, and shake up the landscape and be like, 'Hey, there is more than just what is out there.'

I never really watched much stand-up growing up. I just was not really that into it. But I can say I honestly fell in love with it the second I touched the microphone. It was like this weird thing where it's like, 'Oh, yeah, this is what I'm supposed to do.'

Anyone who does stand-up comedy can agree that doing a late-night spot is a dream of theirs.

One cannot control the life they are born into.

It is utterly asinine that people continually go to comedy shows without bothering to see if their sensibilities line up with the comedians.

Any joke can be funny, but not any joke is funny. Any joke has the potential to be hilarious to you, but more importantly, the joke has the potential to not be funny to you but to someone else.

Comedy is subjective, and any joke can be funny.

At its best, alt comedy can be challenging, surprising, and innovative. And at its worst, alt comics think that being awkward.com/FAQS is a substitution for punchlines.

There are just so many brilliant voices out there. I'm not the funniest person out there, I'm not the best interviewer. I'm not the best at anything, but I really just am a big fan of everyone. I'm really driven by trying to make sure that representation is out there.

A lot of times in comedy, and also in podcasting and television, there are different kinds of voices that can be celebrated. So you can have 'Insecure' exist, you can have a '2 Dope Queens' exist, you can have 'The Mindy Project' exist - very distinct, funny voices from women and from people of color.

I don't have a stylist.

As a kid I used to always write these stories... some of them were really cute; some of them were kind of crazy.

I never really thought of comedy as a career. My goal was, when I moved to New York, I was going to write serious films.

I think, at the end of the day, you have to decide what you want. Do you want to be famous? Do you want to be rich? Do you want to have a career? Those are three very different things.