I'm going to work on food culture and help food become fun and part of peoples' lives again. The traditional restaurant is more commercial-oriented. But I want community through food.

It's pretty rough in South Africa. It's a rough culture. Imagine rough - well, it's rougher than that.

Anyone who thinks restaurants are hard should try working at a tech company.

We're social beings, and food is one of the things we can use three times a day to connect with family or with friends.

I really believe that people don't have to eat healthy; they just have to know what they are eating, and then they'll eat better. That is really the movement we are behind.

Advertisers really want to create ads that are relevant to the realtime experience.

Using realtime ads, even mortgage companies can create ads that matter to you right now.

Square Roots creates campuses of climate-controlled, indoor, hydroponic vertical farms, right in the hearts of our biggest cities.

The hard part about following your purpose is the distraction everyone pulls you toward.

It is an interesting thing. Every time I try and stray from the path of food, I get whacked.

We're moving to be more of a plant-based society.

The reality is that we connect through food, and we have the opportunity to do it three times a day.

After I broke my neck, I began thinking more about The Kitchen: How can we come up with some way to make real food more affordable? Food that's locally-grown, if possible, fundamentally nourishing to the body, nourishing to the planet.

We want to replace all the T.G.I. Friday's, Applebee's - at a price point that is arguably even lower than those guys.

There's no doubt about it: people want local, real food.

I want to make the school-garden movement work.

People always ask what kind of restaurant we have, and it's like a five-minute conversation. The short answer is, 'We're creating community through food.' That's the big idea we had, the product we're exporting. And it has paid off.

Young people contact me all the time to articulate issues with the industrial food system, but they are frustrated by their perceived inability to do anything about it.

We already solved the problem of feeding the world in the 1960s, when we started serving cheeseburgers.

We want kids to value real food and understanding that it isn't just about feeding people but about nourishing the body, the community and the planet.

If you put your mind to it, anything is possible.

Work hard. Through determination and self-focus and discipline, you can accomplish anything.

The key lesson for me: Don't make this life about you. It's about other people.

I'm a very fertile Puerto Rican.

I would be flattered and honored to be considered for any position where I could serve my country.

When my mom, Mercedes, and her younger sister, Juanita, first came from Puerto Rico, they were the youngest in the family. They had to jump into a new community and really learn English, assimilate, and adapt - and I saw that. I grew up in that community.

I've always had an interest in broadcast journalism and the law. So it's nice that I can combine the two.

I hold a mini-New Year's Eve party each year with my son Ronan, and we make pigs in a blanket. They are delicious!

You really have to prove yourself and prove your worth. I didn't come from family that had been here for generations and had all these connections.

You've got to be inclusive.

I believe in people. Human beings, deep down, are essentially good. Any jury can filter through whatever bull might be thrown their way and use common sense to get to the truth of a case. Juries make the right decisions, almost unfailingly, because people know right from wrong.

My second husband, Eric Villency, is the father of my beautiful boy Ronan Anthony. Even though we're divorced, I'm still very close with his family.

I enjoyed giving back to the city I was born and raised in.

If I see, hear, or experience anything that I feel is inappropriate, you bet I'm going to speak up.

Continual, intentional, or snarky putdowns have no place in a healthy relationship.

There's nothing like the feeling of being in Times Square for New Year's Eve. It's such a great rush. You feel like the whole world is there. People from all over the world coming to celebrate together.

Nobody is going to believe what you're saying if you don't believe it yourself.

During the 10 years I worked as a prosecutor, I always struggled with what to do with someone who was clearly mentally ill and committed a horrific crime.

Roger Ailes champions women, whether it's Paula Zahn, who worked for Fox, Greta Van Susteren - we've always had a woman in primetime - Megyn Kelly, myself; I had a primetime show.

Advocating for yourself in the context of friendship starts with choosing the right people to be part of your inner circle.

God helps those who help themselves. You have blessings. You have gifts. You have passion. You have drive. Get after it; go in there and do something. Try and make every day count.

Nobody wants to take a hard look of the entitlement system to see what it is.

I believe it is my job to do everything I can so that everyone in our society feels safe, feels that justice is not an abstract concept but a fact of life for all Americans.

I've known Roger Ailes for 15 years, and I have been treated with the utmost professionalism and respect.

Making smart decisions on who to vote for is difficult.

It doesn't matter if you're a man or a woman - stay alert and focused on your surroundings. Travel with friends. Know where you are at all times, and never let your guard down.

I grew up in the Mission District in San Francisco, which was largely Hispanic at the time. I was raised in a household that was really welcoming to diversity and encouraging about different people's viewpoints and ideas and backgrounds.

No matter what stage of life you are graduating from or entering, learning how to build and state your case is something every person in the world should know how to do.

Bella is my little dog. She's an imperial Shih Tzu. She's a little cotton ball with flecks of gold. She's super, super cute, and she eats like she's a Rottweiler.

The friends I have from childhood are definitely like family to me - extended sisters and brothers, aunts and uncles.