The times change, and if you don't change with them, you get left behind.
Bradley Walsh
Everyone's path is different. It's not always about money - sometimes it's about the journey.
I was a sheet metal worker, then a metal engineer, then a Pontin's bluecoat, then a comedian. You can achieve anything you want if you put your mind to it.
'The Chase' is such a strong format and so simple to follow. The best quiz show formats are the simplest.
I'm the black sheep: I got into telly.
I said, 'If I don't play football for a living, I'm going to get into show business.'
I can't listen to rap music; it's not my thing. They say that they're the modern poets: of course they are, but it's not for me.
I like people to have a bit of a laugh. Life is too short to not enjoy what you're doing.
Don't let anyone tell you that you're not good enough. Don't let anyone tell you that you're too short, you're too fat, you're too thin, you're too ugly - that's nonsense.
I want to try to help shift perceptions people may have of me as an actor.
People don't realise I have seriously bad blepharitis.
I like something you can hum along to.
Every day I learn something new, and, you know, you go through life's experiences, and if you can bring every experience at some point somewhere in every drama or every story that you have to portray, you will come across an emotion or a feeling you have had some point in your life.
It's much harder to lose weight as you get older.
To do a train wreck and make it look real on screen is tremendously skilful.
I'm so excited to be appearing in 'Peter Pan.' It really is an extraordinary production, the like of which Wembley has never seen before. It's a big, bold arena extravaganza and festive treat with something for everyone.
It's just about being an entertainer; it's about having all those tools over the years to do all sorts: films, musicals, playing a bit of piano, running a quiz show - it just becomes part of the job.
On 'The Chase,' I don't know what questions are going to appear, so they deliberately try and catch me out.
Time travel is a wonderful thing, isn't it?
Unfortunately, my football career wasn't very long. The reason I finished playing was because I fractured both ankles in a matter of months.
I remember watching William Hartnell as the first 'Doctor.' Black and white made it very scary for a youngster like myself. I was petrified, but even though I'd watch most of it from behind the sofa through my fingers, I became a fan.
Debra Stephenson and I are nothing more than friends and have a close working relationship - we certainly have not had an affair.
I first started as an actor, but there was no money in it, which is why I drifted into comedy.
The first real gig I went to was Randy Crawford in 1980. Seeing a big star like that was just fantastic.
I grew up listening to legends such as Sinatra, Sammy Davis Jr., and Tony Bennett.
I remember watching the Twin Towers collapse. Because it was another country and looked like a film, I just sort of thought, 'Oh.' I didn't think that much. Then three days later, it hit me. I was in a terrible state, and I was tearful for three or four days.
My goodness, what a blast it is filming 'Woody.'
I can't dance to save my life, really - proper, proper dad dancing - but I was once at a wrap party for a show, and at the end of the night, they still hadn't played 'Dancing Queen'. So we extended the wrap party for 40 minutes and played 'Dancing Queen' 11 times in a row.
The 'Law & Order' audition was so last-minute. I was already in a shabby suit, the journey was a complete disaster, my train stopped early, it was raining, and I had to show the cabbie the way... I rushed in apologising, gave this terrible reading, and ended up telling my whole journey to them. I must have bored them to tears.
You never know what's coming round the corner. There's only one thing coming round the corner - more corners.
I'd love to still be able to play a bit of football, but my knees are shot to pieces.
I'm loving every second working with the brilliant Kayvan Novak; it's a hoot from dawn to dusk!
I used to watch 'Doctor Who' as a child with William Hartnell and Pat Troughton in the black-and-white days, so being cast is brilliant.
Families have a sense of kinship that no four strangers would ever have as a team.
If I'm doing a job, I'll give it 100%, and that job gets my absolute focus, and everything else goes to the side. Then, that job is finished, I'll concentrate on the next job.
On my tombstone it will say, 'At last, a day off.'
I don't think I can plate-spin, I've turned loads of things down because I just can't get the time to do it.
Everyone's got to have a bit of faith.
I thought, as a kid, that I was The Doctor's biggest fan, so my mum and dad bought me a battery-operated Dalek. I must have worn it out, I played with it so much.
A lot of comics make good actors. Actors make bad comics. They can't do it the other way round.
I like Hawaiian pizza.
Me and Stormzy. We're gonna do an album. We're gonna do an album of Nelson Riddle arrangements in grime form. It's gonna be called 'Griddle'.
We've made it to the 1000th episode of 'The Chase,' as the show is so entertaining and informative. I'm so lucky I get to be a part of such a great team and have a laugh at work; I even learn some things, too.
I don't want to do the same thing all the time, and I was thrilled to bits to do a BBC comedy. It's the home of British comedy.
I love pirates, and I'm a big fan of the Johnny Depp films.
I'm a man who doesn't even have a mobile!
'Law & Order' is a six-month shoot. Everything has to be crammed in. I had so much fun, but it wasn't a holiday. We had seriously long days, and we'd finish at 8 P.M. and start again at 7 A.M. We were doing six-day weeks, which sometimes tripped onto the seventh. But I loved it all.
Stevie Wonder is extraordinary.
I had spent so many years on 'Law & Order: UK' being a downtrodden detective standing on Hammersmith Bridge at six o'clock in the morning, being rained and snowed on, and I thought, 'I'll have a bit of a change of direction in my career and go and do 'SunTrap' in Gran Canaria.'
That's what I think a journalist from the '70s and '80s should look like - as though he has led a full journalistic life.