I just love America. I love living here.

I urge people to make your workout fun.

I crank up the music, and I dance around the house.

Whenever I wore a bathing suit, I kept a sarong around my hips that went halfway down my thighs. The tops of my thighs are like baby skin. Where the sarong ended, I can see sun damage: I've got dark spots and places where there is no melanin. The spots are not pretty, so I encourage everyone to protect their skin from the sun.

I like coffee in the morning and decaf green tea throughout the day... When I was younger and modeling, to kick-start a diet I would do a juice cleanse.

Most of the time, I've got my kids with me, so I'm not as prone to meeting people. And then, you never really know if someone is talking to you because you're a celebrity.

My work makes me a better mom. It gives me a little door to step out of my parenting and bring the excitement from my day back home.

We need to protect our wilderness areas and national parks. Everywhere you travel, you see blight, denuded mountains, logging. If people know what's going on, they'll become activists to safeguard those places.

I have sun damage that I want to repair, but I also want to keep myself from further damage.

When doing sports... on the water, it's crucial to stop aging by protecting your skin.

I start by moisturizing my face neck and chest with my own anti-aging SPF And IR Defense Sunblock called Recapture 360... Allow to sink in... Then I like Neutrogena's range of spray on sunblocks for body... then I use a foundation with SPF 30 or higher on my face to add yet another layer of protection to my face.

Look for rash guards that come treated, for further sun protection, and never forget your hat!

I don't think about financial success as the measurement of my success.

We don't fight about money... I hate to see people fight about money.

Try not to be either intimidated by or a captive of jargon. Even though it's language, and language is about communication, it often exists actually to obfuscate and to control power and not to communicate.

No, I never thought about my father's money as my money.

Any brand that attempts to live off a retro appeal is only going through a short second life cycle.

I've always believed that a goal in life is not to own a boat but have a friend with a boat.

I'm basically a gift-giver.

From the time that I can remember, I worked to make money - either baby-sitting, or one year wrapping gifts at a department store at Christmas, so I could have my own money.

I had an allowance, but I had to do things around the house to earn it. I think I always wanted my own money.

Actually, my parents were separated by the time I was about 2 years old.

In college, my big money memory was saving up to buy a car with my boyfriend, whom I lived with.

I never have to this day, because my money is the money I earn.

Most people sell stock to pay taxes, but I didn't want to sell any stock.

I had higher math SATs than in English - yet I became an English major in college.

I expected to go into journalism or law.

I came to Playboy not expecting to stay. But after five years, I found myself really enjoying the business world, and I realized I had some skill.

Not only did I enjoy the creative side of Playboy and enjoy being surrounded by people who are curious about life, but I also love the analytical and hard business side of it.

I've lectured at the Harvard Business School several times.

Some, but much of my money is tied up in Playboy stock.

I have invested in the stock market since I was very young.

The very first stock I bought right out of college was Berkshire Hathaway.

Well, I grew up around the magazine and was part of a generation that was embracing our sexuality.

I don't know what a world would be like if you do away with sexy images.

Half of my employees are women.

I'm surrounded by very powerful women and very progressive men.

I'd guess that 80 percent of the people who work for Playboy are feminists.

I know what the attitudes of the readers are: These are guys who love women and respect women.

I defend the right of almost everything to be published... because I think that you're better off in trusting the marketplace than allowing other people to make that decision.

It's important not to limit the amount of their own money that candidates can spend, but to give other people access to enough money to run competitive races.

Billy not only had a distinguished career in the Legislature, but he also has great business instincts and has done exceedingly well making investment decisions in both stocks and private ventures such as real estate.

Even though money seems such an objective topic, it can also be the most intimate, and possibly harmful, part of a relationship.

Being a CEO still means sitting across the table from big institutional investors and showing your leadership and having them believe in you.

But maybe because the dot-com world gives people positions at a younger age, and many women are prominent in this business, it will help change the view about who can run big companies.

I think in terms of what I am able to accomplish and build.

My mother thinks I could have even run a larger company.

I developed a great sense of self-confidence when I was very young.

We're fortunate in my family because we really have three families: my brother, David, and me; the two boys, Cooper and Marston, from my dad's second marriage; and my dad's wife, Crystal.

I've had this conversation with friends who have had challenging relationships with one or another parent. The only thing I can say is what I feel: The other person isn't going to change. That is who they are.