With 'Sharknado,' they've got a great mix of TV and film. This is a film that has film impact in the TV medium.

As a father and a provider, no stone goes unturned.

I don't want to make any mistakes. My parents have been married for 40 years. I want to stay married.

I can't walk down the street anywhere in the world without being stopped. It can be an interruption, but on the whole, it's flattering.

Dancing isn't easy, and to just jump into three to four hours of rehearsals a day is a lot.

I have two children of my own; I can't imagine anything more horrific than to have a child suffering with EB.

Being a dad is the best role I've ever played, with all due respect to Steve Sanders. It really is the best thing ever.

As an actor, I get my insurance from the Screen Actor's Guild by union, and you have to make so much every year to get that type 1 insurance.

I never envisioned that I would be able to bring something to the entertainment table that would fit Las Vegas. Vegas is so presentational; it's live theater and, for me, it's always been film or television, which isn't why people come to Las Vegas. So it's exciting to be apart of all of this, the thrust of the entertainment of Vegas.

It's intimidating when you have to stand onstage amongst a bunch of men who are dedicated to maintaining peak musculature and athleticism, and they're six-five, 240 pounds of twisted steel and sex appeal. It's a lot to stand up to... My goal is to not look like Chris Farley.

I'm a real lucky guy. I've got a fantastic woman; she's a fantastic mom and an ideal partner. She understands what I do, and she's OK with it, and I couldn't be more in love.

I'm always looking for additional revenue streams.

When I got the call from Chippendales, my jaw dropped, as it came on the heels of TMZ calling me fat on national TV. I am passionate about health and fitness, so I've kept in shape, and dancing is something I've always enjoyed, so I figured, why not?

I have a lot of irons in the fire.

I feel blessed: having a family is something that I've always wanted. Having a second child is the realization of a dream come true.

In the entertainment industry, there remains one constant: change.

Being married, I don't know how to describe it. It's very comfortable when you find the right person. It all comes together beautifully.

Everyone wanted to be eaten. It seems like it's a badge of honor to have that on your IMDb account when it says, 'Man No. 2 eaten in 'Sharknado.'

We barely had cell phones on '90210.' It started in the '90s. That's pretty much when fax machines came into play. When I first got the script for '90210' I had to come into New York to get it. It was not emailed to me; there was no email.

I look at myself more as really an entertainer. Yes, I act, but there are other things that I can do.

For me, to get to play an action hero in a science fiction film is a marriage of two genres that I'm a huge fan of.

Bo Derek was wonderful to work with.

At my pregnant wife's behest, I took the job for the paycheck and the health insurance, and it turned into 'Sharknado.' I couldn't have played this better if I'd wanted to. It's really captured the imagination of sci-fi fans.

The opening scene from 'Sharknado' I think was better than the original 'Jaws' movie. It was scarier, it was bloodier, and it had more high-anxiety moments than the original 'Jaws' movie. And that movie kept me out of the ocean for a summer.