7. When you were younger, whom did you lust after?
JF: Farrah Fawcett. Oh, that poster. Her and the entire Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders squad. Those were my favorites. That was like just when I was hitting puberty.
8. Do you like to watch sexually explicit material?
JF: Yeah. Watching is about all I can do now. Once you get married, everything becomes visual. But I'm also a visual person. I think everybody is voyeuristic. Society now experiences everything more visually than anything else -- especially sexually -- from the time you're little looking at magazines and movies or looking at other people. You're only intimate with a handful of people compared to who you see and what you experience. I also used to be a cartoonist and now I am a filmmaker so I am very visual.
9. What was your most memorable onscreen kiss?
JF: You know something? There's a scene cut out of Swingers where I kiss Heather Graham. And that was my first real screen kiss. And she was...well, I had a bit of a crush on her, so that one was pretty...that threw me for a loop for sure. I was like, "Wow, this job isn't so bad after all."
10. Have you ever felt awkward during a love scene?
JF: Love scenes tend to be very polite and mechanical. At least the ones I was in. Very professional. I've never gotten involved with someone I work with. For some people it works. For me, it would hurt the work. Because when you get involved with somebody intimately, it tends to preoccupy you from the important part, which is the movie-making.
There was one time I had to kiss Cameron Diaz in Very Bad Things and it was weird because Matt Dillon was on the set. On Friends, it wasn't as odd. Sitcoms are a lot more stagy. And at the time, David Arquette was hanging around; I think it was actually Valentine's Day. He was wearing a red velvet tuxedo waiting for her. Under those circumstances, it wasn't strange.
11. You starred in the bachelor-party-gone-wrong film Very Bad Things, but you're married now. What's your take on bachelor parties?
JF: I've probably been to more bachelor parties onscreen than I have been in real life. I remember at one of them, the guy who was doing the driving was the boyfriend of one of the dancers. And that seemed to really put a strain on a relationship. And that's where I got the idea for Made, which starts out with me driving Famke Janssen, who is dancing at a bachelor party, and I'm getting too involved and ultra-protective.
12. Do you have a name for your member?
JF: Hmm. I could probably come up with one. No, I don't have one, but I would be happy to think of some if you want to run some online contest. I'm always open to that kind of thing. I think he deserves the honor of a christening. He's been good to me.