You can only do so many serious dramas in a row before you want to break. You want a change.

My mom always said fighting with me as a kid was like going to court. I'm trying to realize that being right is not the most important thing.

When I was younger, I was very vocal to the point of being strident in my views.

Apparently, I have good feet for ballet.

I'm a Bravoholic, and I love 'RuPaul's Drag Race.'

I never thought I would be in a comedic role; my past is in drama.

Acting by yourself is pretty darn hard, especially having to do physical comedy.

I'd never really done comedy before 'Community,' so getting to work day in and day out with all these great people, directors, writers, and actors, I feel like I've learned a lot.

I like the 'Moth' podcast a lot. I listen to that.

Actors are all narcissists.

College is expensive; I always knew that, and I wanted to make money, partially to spend a little of it here and there, but primarily for a college savings fund.

NBC gives comedies a chance to find their legs.

I used to babysit. And the kids I babysat were huge Hilary Duff fans, and so we used to have dance parties every day to her music. So I am very familiar with the albums of Miss Hilary Duff.

Nobody knows what the future is except for wizards.

As you become an adult and start to make your way in life, you realize how much your friends are your family - though you get to make fun of your friends, too.

I like passionate fandom.

A lot of people watch 'Community,' but DVR viewings only count if you watch within a certain time.

We're all slight hypocrites who fall short of our ideals.

I always had an easier time with adults. Somehow, I was always old! I still feel old.

I've always thought - and I don't even know if I'd be right for the part - that Jean Seberg would make a great biopic. She was in Jean-Luc Godard's 'Breathless,' she played Joan of Arc. She had this eventful and traumatic adulthood, she thought the FBI was after her, and she became a darling of the French New Wave.

I never pursued anything but acting. But as a kid, I was really interested in the Supreme Court. I wanted to to be a Supreme Court justice, but didn't want to be a lawyer. I just wanted to go straight to being a justice.

In my sort of young, idealistic mind, I was just like, 'Well, it's either theater or film for me, and that will be that!'

I went to college and got my degree in acting, but because it was all theater, I really consider my first couple years on 'Mad Men' as amazing training for working in television and for acting on-camera.

No actor wants to choose - they just want all of the options available to them all the time; we tend to be pretty greedy.

While I love film and want to continue to pursue it 100 percent, my home is TV.

My mom wouldn't let me buy clothes she didn't like, so I dressed like a middle-aged woman in high school.

Craig Robinson is basically the mayor of wherever he goes.

We all wish there were more 'Bridesmaids' out there.

I love discovering new young brands and watching these fashion lines take off, like Peter Pilotto, Christopher Kane, and Clover Canyon.

I know other actors who are relieved when their shows get cancelled, and I've never felt that way about 'Community.'

Thinking back about throwing myself at certain gentlemen that had no interest in me, that'll bring a blush to my face if I think about it too often.

No one in my school liked me.

I had my life Monday through Friday in school, and then I had my 'real life,' which was my acting class on Saturday.

I used to like to make myself sad, so I would listen to Bill Callahan as Smog.

'Dancing on My Own' is actually a really sad song! It has totally made me cry.

I feel like so often I'm just, like, running around and eating in the car, which is, like, not good, or eating as I'm walking down the street.

I really like the concept of, like, slowing down and savoring your food, enjoying it.

I've been getting into drinking smoothies in the morning - I like those a lot.

I did live in New York. Yeah, I moved to L.A. for 'Community.' And I gave up my apartment in New York.

Dan Harmon has this idea that characters on TV are allowed to talk about their favorite movies and TV shows and songs.

My grandfather can barely even hear, and Chevy Chase makes a face, and he laughs.

My mom wouldn't know Tom Cruise if he punched her in the face.

I am very up front about about my inability to pronounce things correctly.

I love Opening Ceremony, Kenzo - anything Humberto Leon and Carol Lim touch. I drool over Christopher Kane, Mary Katrantzou, Delpozo, and Wes Gordon.

I am wrestling with the overalls trend. I wore so many pairs in junior high, and no one thought they were cute. Perhaps I'll try them cuffed with a tasteful crop top?

I think maybe my mom thought that Katharine Hepburn would be a good role model of, like, a strong, smart, independent woman. Maybe she steered me in that direction. You know, because she was really so ahead of her time.

I have a hard time watching people getting punched on screen; I have to close my eyes a lot.

I very rarely listen to music in my car - a lot of people make fun of me for it. But sometimes I listen to music on YouTube. I'm like a teenager.

In Los Angeles, sometimes it's hard to find a magazine stand, let alone one that has the magazine that you want. So I find that the longer I live in L.A., the more digitally I consume.

I'm spending way too much time test running my Vine videos. I'll go into a room and close the door and be in there for an hour workshopping a Vine video that I never even post. So that's probably a huge time suck.