It's not annoying to get a compliment.

I think you kind of facilitate civil conversation no matter how heated you think it could get by telling everybody and showing them that you mean what you say when you value all sides.

I do believe that this country is the greatest on this planet and that we can come together and get great answers together.

I believe in diversity in thought, in culture, and all sort of things.

I hope that people look at me and think that I'm good at my job.

To get a presidential tweet from the Commander-in-Chief about a military book that you've written is pretty awesome. And it wouldn't matter where that person's politics would be, it's the President of the United States.

Getting into network television was tougher than I thought it was gonna be.

I'm curious when I look across the dial Monday through Friday, you know, where are the other female black anchors?

My kids really still share the one thing that I think is life-changing, and that's eye contact with me. As they've gotten older, I have made it a priority to continue that.

I married an amazing guy.

Unfortunately, we've reached a point in society where we don't mind staying mad at each other for awhile. It wasn't always like that.

You have a finite amount of people who watch at a certain time every day. But when you have that kind of success that 'Outnumbered Overtime' continues to have, it's gotta be a broader audience. I'm really thrilled about that.

I know enough to know every time a cable show beats a broadcast show... you've attracted people outside the scope of what you normally reach.

The greatest skill that I have is what the viewer has: I listen. I try to listen silently.

Sometimes you will hear me say right on the air, 'You just cited a poll that is not even part of Real Clear Politics,' which is an average, an aggregate. Yours is seeming to be an outlier. Give me the name of that poll and the date that it was taken. I will say it right on the air.

Sometimes I get slammed because I work at Fox and I am black. People are like, 'How could you work there? Who are you?' People really want to know what are your politics personally. Some of them, not everybody.

Regardless of what all the research says about don't talk about politics at work, people are talking about what they see on the news.

I think it's impossible to be up close with people and to ask them to let you in if you're fake.

I have a certain perspective and intolerance for people who try to twist and bend whatever the truth might be.

As I got older, my mother taught me to remember that your connection with people is based on what you're allowing them to touch about you, which was the opposite of what you get as a military kid, because dad's in a uniform. He's official; you don't poke that. But with mom, you do: Always question authority.

When a black church is hit in South Carolina by someone with hate in their spirit, that's something that touches all of America, but as a person of color, I see that story even through a deeper prism of, 'Gosh, that takes us back to a time when black churches were targets in this country.'

I get flak from everybody, which is how I know I'm living my truth.

When the Murdoch family leadership chose Suzanne Scott to lead Fox News who had been at the channel for a number of years and knew inside and out, the system of winning, I was excited.

Local news taught me to take each moment as one of extreme importance - don't waste people's time. Give them solid information in a compelling fashion so they will remember it and use it in their lives.