David Letterman is a 'better person' since leaving TV job
TV talk show host David Letterman has declared his showbiz persona was a pretence and he's finally discovered his real self after moving back to his home state of Indiana after spending decades living in New York City.
David Letterman is a "better person" since walking away from his TV job and moving back to his home state of Indiana.
The TV talk show host grew up in Indianapolis and spent decades living in cities in New York City during his lengthy TV career which included presenting the 'Late Show with David Letterman', but he moved home after stepping down from the job and he believes he's discovered his real self.
He told GQ: "In show business, I find that I have pretended to be someone I’m truly not. In my life here in Indiana and at my home with my family, I am probably the person I actually am. And I regret that they don’t kind of cross at any point."
When asked if he thought being in the entertainment industry made him a "worse person", he replied: "Yes. You're exactly right. And I don’t know, maybe it’s only because I went through show business. I got that out of my system eventually that I can concentrate on being a better person and probably couldn’t have reached this point if I had not gone through the exercise of trying to succeed at show business."
He added: "I just feel like personally, I have greater humanity than I did when I was in show business.
"It was all single-minded and great pressure, real unimagined, and I felt like it’s all on me, and it’s all on me, and that it was all nonsense.
"All I cared about was television, one hour of television that I was responsible for, for 30 years. That’s all I cared about.
"Everything fell apart, went away. I didn’t even know if it was falling apart or not. And now I have the energy and the broader focus to recognize humanity has other fulfilling pursuits."
Since walking away from late night TV, Letterman has been hosting a series called 'My Next Guest Needs No Introduction' for Netflix and he added of his career: "I’m surprised that I’m still doing it at my age. On the other hand, I still get a kick out of what we’re doing. So what does that mean? I don’t know."