Being a hairdresser is really fun, especially if you don't work at a stupid rich-lady place. You basically just get paid to hang out and talk with a bunch of cool, weird ladies and help them with their looks.
I went to beauty school, not art school.
It's important to be out as a performer.
Honestly, I find so many fields - fashion, art, music - totally boring and restricting if you just stick to one of them and try so hard to fit into that thing.
I don't really trust musical artists that don't also do visual art.
Just because I have a sense of humor and use bright colors, people always say it's 'camp.' I'm just doing my thing. I think of it as art.
My favorite artists are my friends.
I want to add 'record mogul' to my list of accomplishments and make a disgusting amount of money so I can buy a house between Taylor Swift and Miley Cyrus.
I love being surrounded by women.
That's what I want to put out into the world - just stuff I love, tributes to my favorite pop stars.
I don't know if this is necessarily a misconception, but I think people make way more a deal out of my sexuality than necessary.
I find it sad that people think it's a political, gender-bending thing, because, really, I'm just singing about guys. There's a million guys singing about girls, and no one makes a big deal of it.
I really want to make the gayest, gayest album ever.
I wear a lot of wigs and stuff on stage to make my hair look bigger.
I absolutely hate waxing and any kinda manscaping, although I love it when I'm cutting a man's hair, and his eyebrows are really insane, and I get to trim them.
I would get plastic surgery. It sounds fun.
I like in-person interviews, but I do a lot of interviews over the phone, and it's so boring. The same questions over and over.
I didn't know that buying expensive paint was a good thing and important. I always used whatever is cheapest, which I'm into, too.
I love the idea of not being able to afford something and just making your own version or buying a cheap knock-off instead.
Everyone knows queers and women invented punk.
I don't know why everyone tries to be like everyone else or just tries to make it to the top when they should be themselves and do their own thing.
I think fashion should be funny. Seriously!
I'm, like, forever a teenage girl in a way. No matter how hard I try not to be, that's just what I am. All I care about is boys and shopping.
Women that hate other women - that's the worst.
In my day-to-day life, I'm not that wild.
I think, aesthetically, I've always been drawn to packaging and products, combs and blowdryers, all that.
I went to beauty school when I was 19 because I thought it seemed funny, not because I thought I'd be good at it. I was terrible at first. I gave a girl a perm, and she cried.
I think performers who pretend fashion doesn't matter are huge liars.
Everyone tries to be so slick and modern and computerized. I've always done everything myself with little money, so I guess it's become 'my look,' but it's not really intentional.
Often, I feel like a cheap imitation aesthetically looks better to me than the real, out-of-reach thing. It's amazing that brands create a whole illusion of exclusivity and luxury, and then you can go get the $5 version of a $30,000 thing and feel the same way but have a cool little secret.
I've tried to stalk Danzig. I've walked by his house on Franklin that looks super haunted and scary, but I've never seen him.
If I don't have projects going on, I get depressed.
The music is super fun. I love writing the songs. I love performing, for the most part, and I love doing artwork, but I hate answering 100 emails a day and most interviews.
I live for Snooki. She's so cute. I love her so much.
Perry Farrell is so gross, and his wife looks like a monkey.
I traded all my 'Star Wars' toys for Pee-wee Herman toys. I wonder if I had a crush or him or something? The colors and the way that everything looked so cool or crazy just appealed to me as a young gay in Tucson.
There have been a lot of gay punks before me, and there will be a lot after.
I've met people who are embarrassed of the stuff they've done, and they try to hide it. And I'm not embarrassed of anything.
I'd love to work on art and music full time.
Hunx is kind of his own person that is not really me in my normal life.
I love the beach.
The idea of taking a brand that already exists and making a really poor-looking version of it, with acrylic or puffy paint, is really aesthetically pleasing to my eyes and also funny.
I'm bored of just being in a band and touring.
There's one side of me that just wants to get up on stage and be punk and go crazy and stuff like that; and there's also this other side of me that's like a grandma - really into arts and crafts.
Bouncers suck.
All I can say is that it's important to follow your dreams.
I have zero morals about television. I just want to be entertained.
I kind of got this weird feeling a couple years ago - I never went to college; did I miss out? I took one class, and I was like, no, I don't need to go to school.
I just don't want to be boring.
My aim was to dismantle this false history that men created punk, because they didn't. And they were certainly never the best at it.
I'm from Tucson, Arizona.
I think it's because all our music videos have chubby girls wearing crazy makeup and crazy gay dudes and trannies that are overly stylized and over-the-top. Being compared to John Waters and girl groups isn't a bad thing, though.
I have so many photos of myself in my room when I was a kid; I had one wall that was all TLC posters that I got free at some record store, then another wall was all Public Enemy, and the last wall was all '90210.'
If I could be on any show, I think I'd want to be on 'Bad Girls Club.'
People should be themselves.
I got a guitar when I was 14. I made really, really, really bad music as a teen. I learned to play Smashing Pumpkins and Hole songs.
I'm determined to only work with women or queer people because it's always a straight dude at the soundboard. I just don't want to do that anymore! It dilutes the fruit-ness!
I dress kind of flashy.
Never did much art till I was in my 30s, except for painting video sets, designing record covers and T-shirts, and making zines and stuff. I thought I was too punk for art and felt grossed out by white-room galleries and art people.