If I ever feel like I'm messing up, making the worst decisions, or I'm just lesser than - if I'm being self-deprecating - I just think, 'Cheer up, dude, you're a lot worse than you think.' It makes me laugh. It takes me out of it.

I love 'What Happens in Vegas,' 'You've Got Mail.'

We're so used to getting everything we want now, my generation.

I'm working a lot. Keeping my head down and focusing and trying to take advantage of the opportunities that have come my way.

I love love.

'To All The Boys' is one film amongst a couple other romantic comedies through the decades that promotes... I don't know what they're calling it. A modern man? A man that's more emotionally accessible and available and willing to communicate and actually care and nurture.

I would say I kind of just realized one day that it wasn't worth hiding from my emotions, and that I was unhappy, and that I needed to make a change in my life so that I could be happier.

I'm super stressed; I'm super overwhelmed.

I'm pretty vain.

I auditioned for the leading role in 'The Kissing Booth' that came out on Netflix, funny enough.

I like 'Bright.' Some people didn't like 'Bright' - I loved it. I love that film for how blatantly obvious the analogies are.

I was, like, this tiny little kid that was goofy and would always crack jokes or sit in the back of class and not listen to anything that the teacher was saying.

I didn't do well in school, and I didn't really care to cater to certain social structures that were in place to be cool.

It's exciting now to be able to look at projects and say, 'Well this is right for me; this isn't right for me.'

If you have your own money, you feel entitled to spending your own money how you'd like to, and that's a slippery slope.

High school was cool, man. I went to a public school for my first two years, and then I went and did independent study. I was, like, taken out of it. So I didn't have a normal one.

High school is cool, especially that first-love mentality. That's what 'Sierra Burgess' captures is, like, his first moment of love. That's what I love. I like that innocence.

I think when two people are present and engaged and listening to each other, that's what creates the chemistry. And then the ability to react off of what the other person is saying.

I like rom-coms. I think they're adorable and endearing.

I think, for a lot of people, the point is to get high engagement and likes on their photos, so I think it's just good marketing. But at the same time, if you're posting pictures and you look nothing like your pictures, then it's false advertising.

I think I use writing as a catharsis. I feel sometimes that I'd like to share that with people, so Instagram becomes a vehicle.

We've been given the full spectrum of emotions for good reason, and it helps us be happy, in my opinion. I think it's totally normal to be sad or angry or frustrated, hopeless at moments. I don't think we would've been given these things if they were bad.

I think there's really healthy ways to segue into different roles and different genres. I'm not completely opposed to shaving my head and doing something crazy.

There are so many great messages in 'Good Trouble.' I'm just excited to be a part of it.

Somehow I made it onto a show and then another show, and now I'm doing my thing. So, how did I start? Because my sister wanted to be a model, and I was dragged along to support her!

I have the privilege of having two parents who were capable and willing to support me - emotionally and monetarily.

What I found was, when I took care of my body, my mind and my emotions and my heart were way happier.

When you're someone who is in the attention of the masses, you can't help but become a sort of reality personality.

It's always interesting when you throw two people in a room and have them try to biologically, immediately connect, but that's biology's job.

You know when you meet someone if you guys are going to get along, usually.

I think when you're young, being in love for the first time is like this fantasy.

That's the cool thing about relationships. You're relating to someone else. It's another thing to balance who you are off of.

I used to have a big issue - one - identifying how I feel and being like, 'I feel this way.' Over the years, I've tried to work on that.

To me, words convey feelings, and feelings are just vibrations that we feel, so words are never as authentic as what feelings are and what intentions are.

I think social media has a lot of negative impact and negative effects. These are fairly extreme and horrifying and really gruesome.

I've experienced cyberbullying my entire life due to just having a last name that people knew.

We wrap ourselves up in social media and fame and forget what matters.

Lunchtime is hard when you don't have a lot of friends.

I want people to see me as my own person.

As a twelve-year-old girl, I thought that I was only pretty if the people on social media told me that I was pretty - and they weren't telling me I was pretty. So I didn't think I was pretty, and I was really down on myself, and I really was sad with myself. But social media doesn't give you validation or make you pretty. You make you pretty.

I love animals so much.

I was so excited to do 'Slow' with Matoma. The song is lyrically so beautiful, and the production brings it all to life.

I just want people to know it's OK to really feel their feelings.

I almost got my babysitter arrested when I was 7.

My family has never put pressure on me. They've always been supportive no matter what.

A lot of people like to judge you and make fun of you on the Internet, and people make you feel crazy whenever you're in a depression or having anxiety or having a panic attack.

I definitely like making my friends in the music industry.

My grandma is very musical and can play piano by ear, and my grandpa was in a quartet in Kentucky.

To think that any animal would be trapped makes me so sad. It's like living in your bedroom for your entire life and never being able to go outside.

It's nice to be in the family I'm in with all their support.