It's disheartening to see the hate speech and the divisive behavior. But at the same time, I have to believe that smart people and good people of this country don't give in to that.

While awaiting deportation proceedings, my parents remained in detention near Boston, so I could visit them. They would have liked to fight deportation, but without a lawyer and an immigration system that rarely gives judges the discretion to allow families to stay together, they never had a chance.

Sometimes I want to bury myself in bed, and I don't want anyone to know anything about me, and I don't want anyone to judge me.

It is a huge myth that our voices don't matter, that our vote doesn't count.

I can be very moody.

This is the kind of stuff me and my friends talk about. We sit around and drink coffee, and we're really angry: We're like, 'Where's the Latino Museum?' Where can we go with our families, where can we go with our friends to learn about our history?

It's sometimes a little embarrassing to take selfies, but sometimes I want to take a selfie because I'm like, 'Oh I look cute. I like my hat. I like what I'm wearing, and I want to show it off.'

I definitely had to pave my own path, which wasn't always the easiest thing to do.

It's important that we vote, because this is how we can bring about change and bring about reform, and, honestly, I don't see Donald Trump, anything that he's saying to be effective or comprehensive. Instead of really uniting our country - we are the United States of America - he is dividing us.

I've experienced colorism in that way: where if you're lighter, then you'll potentially be accepted into society better than if you were darker-skinned.

Crazy Jane is a complex individual who always has a lot brewing. She tries to hold things together on the surface, which is something that we all try to do. She uses these different personalities to try to cope with life.

I'm not one for lying to children.

It has never been illegal to be a refugee.

Immigrants are working hard to give our families a better life. Isn't that what the American Dream is?

When you're the child of undocumented immigrants, you learn to keep your mouth shut.

I learned at a very young age that my parents were undocumented.

My parents have always been very honest with me.

I worked while in high school and college so that I could pay for school. I also had loans.

It's interesting when people access their inner little girl or little boy. I remember doing tons of those exercises when I was in school, where you're trying to dig into your vulnerability. There's no mask for a child, so all those feelings are real.

'Doom Patrol' is doing the most - and the wackiest - things, but when you've been alive in this time, you know it's actually not so wacky. Awful, strange, and inexplicable things do happen.

I love entertaining people! It's who I am.

I think one of my best qualities is my ability to empathize with people. Perhaps it's because my journey has been so bumpy.

Whatever the reason is, I am happiest when connecting with the human experience. It lets me know that I'm not alone in this world.

I grew up in Boston.

I always thought, 'Wow, I know I have an important story to tell,' but I never really thought it would happen.

We were like any other family with the same troubles and some of the same happy moments.

My parents were desperately trying to become documented citizens of this country and tried very hard to get there, but to no avail.

'Forrest Gump' has been one of my favorite movies of all time.

When I go to places, I love going to all those kind of amusement parks and kind of cheesy things to do.

I was lucky enough to be with my parents until I was 14. Having my parents tell me that I could do anything. I was special. I matter.

Once my family was taken, I became fully aware that my community matters less to some people. That we are treated differently because of the color of our skin or where our parents were born.

I feel like there's this misconception that immigrants come here and just don't care about the system and paying taxes, and that's not true.

My father was desperately trying to be a legal contributor to this society.

My father, who worked as a dishwasher, was especially anxious. He did not like being here undocumented.

We need someone who's going to govern on behalf of everyone in this country, including immigrants.

I definitely binge-watched 'House of Cards' when it first came out.

I think despite what we've seen on TV, people like seeing women and knowing about women's stories and their struggles and their truth. I think we've seen it in a lot of these shows - when there's a cast of all women, it does very well.

Throughout my childhood, I watched my parents try to become legal but to no avail. They lost their money to people they believed to be attorneys but who ultimately never helped. That meant my childhood was haunted by the fear that they would be deported.

For me, picking a college was really difficult. I wish I had had my parents there kind of supervising me. But I chose well. I did OK.

Neighbors broke the news that my parents had been taken away by immigration officers, and just like that, my stable family life was over.

My real story is this: I am the citizen daughter of immigrant parents who were deported when I was 14. My older brother was also deported.

Every day, children who are U.S. citizens are separated from their families as a result of immigration policies that need fixing.

I went through depression, which is something that we don't often talk about when we look at undocumented communities and deported families.

I want immigration reform to come into fruition, and I want it to be comprehensive, and I want it to have a path to citizenship, and I want to be involved politically every day.

I so desperately wanted to be honest, and I so desperately wanted to love myself and accept myself for who I was.

I don't think you're ever ready to read your life back to yourself and try to make it entertaining for others.

Even kids who haven't had firsthand experience with the immigration system, I want them to know how families are affected and what kind of system is in place.

I want to present the immigrant community in more of a real light.

My job as an actor is to be visible and to tell stories.

I am representing my community, in a sense, especially given the fact that there are not as many Latino actors out there.