Quotes of All Topics . Occasions . Authors
Everyone loves twins.
I studied archaeology.
I take a lot of pride in my photography.
No man is an island, especially not Jughead.
I am a sucker for that childhood romance narrative.
I prefer my friends and family not to watch anything I do.
I think Jughead's a selfish character. I think he really is.
I think the teenage sides of myself have informed my adult self.
I had a really complicated relationship with acting for a long time.
To even be a working entertainer in Hollywood is such a rare privilege.
I love to bake. Cakes are my specialty - they have to be moist and sugary.
Acting requires a great amount of empathy for real lived human experiences.
Oftentimes, the funniest comedians are people who've gone through personal torment.
Jughead, to me, was reflective of a teen experience that made a lot of sense to me.
I became obsessed with the storytelling of photography and going on little adventures.
I was sad and in a dark place, and I turned to a hobby to sort of take me out of that.
My closest friends are the ones who tell me that I'm being dumb or that I'm being wrong.
If someone feels afraid to tell you honest criticism, then you're never going to improve.
At first, when I received the script for the 'Archie' show, I was immediately turned off.
I couldn't continue to live in a bubble and hope to be an empathic actor. It doesn't work.
The way Jughead talks to Archie and vice versa is very much the way I would talk to my twin.
I think as long as acting feels fulfilling and continues to feel fulfilling, it's worth it to me.
We have to be thankful for what we have. A lot of kids would love to be in our situation, and we realize that.
My grandpa was a geologist, and I always had this fascination with not only earth sciences but ancient history.
Going to college made me realize you have to have real spaces of privacy, and you have to establish those early.
Something Dylan and I really don't care much for is leaning into the identical twin thing. It doesn't make sense.
It's no new narrative to say that when people get out of child stardom, they oftentimes rebel in very serious ways.
There's an incredible amount of loneliness that comes with child stardom because you're isolated from your society.
Maybe it was escapism, but I had become obsessed with going to remote locations and keeping myself behind the camera.
When I would read the 'Archie' comics when I was younger, I was rooting for Betty and Archie way over any alternative.
There comes a real loneliness in celebrity where you're constantly told you're part of an out group in your own society.
If we were writing what the fans wanted to see, Betty and Jughead would be the most linear, monotonous narrative of all time.
I focus on different parts of the body on different days. It's usually high-intensity circuits and a lot of body weight stuff.
I needed to see if I could have fun in a project again, and 'Riverdale' was a project that ended up looking like a tonne of fun.
We were at this point of recognisability where we couldn't even walk around anymore... I was really socially anxious and strange.
I believe every photographer is influenced by their sexual preference in a greater or lesser way, and it certainly has affected me.
My brother and I have a profound nostalgia for our youth, and I think people need to come to terms with things leaving and being gone.
Twins work really well in the industry because child labor laws dictate a baby, as an example, can only work for, like, an hour a day.
Because 'Friends' is on Netflix, there's a renewed interest from that... People can call me 'Ben' on the street, and I will turn around.
Jughead is one of those characters that takes the opinions of his father really seriously and probably seeks a bit of validation from him.
I think sexuality, especially, is one of those fluid things where oftentimes we find who we are through certain things that happen in our lives.
I come from an educational environment that really praises, as do I, the forms of representation that are otherwise lacking in our public media.
I had become obsessed with the control-freak aspect of photography and with the rising importance of the image in our social media age it ended up working.
Being on set is the thing I love the most, and a lot of the things that come alongside acting and entertainment are the things I despise, to be quite honest.
I don't come from a lot, so Disney gave me the opportunity to go to college, which is great. My brother and I are some of the first in our family to ever do that.
It's one of those things that gets written off as humorous when you watch a child entertainer try to redefine themselves, but it can be an intense identity crisis.
I took a break from acting for a little bit, came back, and didn't know how it was going to be, but I had so much fun. I really had, like, a reinvention, a renewal.
My Twitter is a joke toilet, and I filter all these old, cringe-y parts of my brother and my childhood through that in an attempt to flush it down the drain forever.
There is no question I consider myself a feminist, but I also think the term 'feminist' has become a topical thing to say without backing it up with any real action.
A lot of Disney Channel actors and actresses, when they stop working for Disney Channel, they have a real aversion for not wanting to be remembered by Disney Channel.