00:00Hai mai stato scoperto di essere trappato nel ruolo di Jackson Avery?
00:07E cosa rappresenta per te la possibilità di riempire la tua identità artistica?
00:15Ho sicuramente pensato di questo, ma non ho scoperto di questo.
00:19Credo che ci sia un'ottima piattaforma, molti nuovi persone lo guardano, è un dono che continua a dare.
00:26but I've always done so many things that I don't feel like it's a threat to me,
00:33it's only helpful and I'm appreciative of it.
00:37And playing Daniel DeLuca and helping to develop a new successful show that's different and original
00:45is absolutely a way to introduce myself to the world in a different way
00:52and challenge myself and do something new.
00:55I think that's part of why we do this for a living, is to have new challenges and to have things that begin but also end.
01:02It's important to let that, to then be able to move on or else you're just carrying everything with you all the time.
01:08So, yeah.
01:10Jesse, did making a European series give you more creative freedom than the way storytelling works in America today?
01:22That's interesting.
01:22In America, we're pretty insular.
01:24It's a big country that only speaks one language, so we're pretty, we don't have to, people aren't conditioned to look outside to experience any other culture than their own.
01:35So, it's a nice challenge.
01:37I like that there is an increased appetite in the U.S. for watching content made for and about people that exist in the whole rest of the planet.
01:46It's a step forward.
01:48So, I think that being an American but telling an Italian story is a great draw, to draw Americans out, to be okay with looking at some subtitles and considering what it's like to be a man or a woman or this or that somewhere else.
02:04And a more expanded look at the world and your options.
02:09So, do you have an American but rating on that and I'll see you in a thousand minutes.
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