Carson Kressley
![Carson Kressley](/assets/img/authors/carson-kressley.jpg)
Carson Kressley
Carson Lee Kressley is a television personality, actor and designer. He was the fashion expert on the American television program Queer Eye, where he was one of the show's "Fab Five". He was also the motivational host of the TV show How to Look Good Naked and OWN's Carson Nation, as well as a contestant on season 13 of Dancing with the Stars...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionTV Show Host
Date of Birth11 November 1969
CityAllentown, PA
CountryUnited States of America
I am not much about rules, I like to break 'em and don't like to make 'em.
I was into Barbie and designer jeans.
Humour ended up being a really useful skill when it came time to be an international television celebrity.
People are much deeper than stereotypes. That's the first place our minds go. Then you get to know them and you hear their stories, and you say, 'I'd have never guessed.
Show's going well. New season starting, we're on the road.
I wasn't always this confident. Growing up as the awkward gay kid in a small town in Pennsylvania, you're constantly told, 'Don't be yourself, don't be proud of who you are.
I think ultimately I make people happy: Whether I'm doing the stage show, giving somebody a makeover, or designing clothing, the end goal is to make people smile.
Friends think your life is so glamorous, and it is. But there are times when, instead of going to a glamorous party, I would rather just come home from work, pop in a DVD and eat some microwave popcorn with a cutie on the sofa.
It's incredibly hard to program a network from scratch for 24 hours.
I love music. I love going out dancing.
Compare yourself to yourself and say, 'How can I be better? How can I be the real me?
Boxers are hot, and by boxers I mean guys who box, not the underwear. So get rid of 'em!
It's really important to share the idea that being different might feel like a problem at the time, but ultimately diversity is a strength.
Whether you're gay or straight, with a physical disability, your skin's a different color, it's absurd in this age to not be aware and be concerned of the inequity in rights.