For me, shopping is a way to unwind.
Stacey Dooley
You can be aware and educated and informed, but you've got to place emphasis on being compassionate, having empathy and understanding.
I've earned my stripes; I don't need to prove myself to anyone.
I'm such a homebody. It's actually quite tragic because, if I'm out for drinks, I'll constantly be thinking about when it's acceptable for me to leave.
One of the things that slaps you in the face when you arrive in Japan is their obsession with everything cute.
I can nod off anywhere. Once, when I was little, I even slept through a car crash.
Winter is 100% my favourite time of year. I'm not a summer baby.
As a journalist, I think it's OK to feel - I think there's space for it. It's how you react to those feelings that's important.
There have been scenes and sequences I've done that I watch back now and cringe and think I dealt with that in completely the wrong way. Sometimes I'm too emotional - too invested, in that sense - but you learn, and then you don't do it again.
We should celebrate make-up. It's a lucrative industry; a massive employer.
I believe, ultimately, there are more goodies than baddies in the world, and you have to remind yourself of that.
I know some people believe impartiality is key, and it's necessary in some situations, but in others - if something is so fundamentally wrong, why do we have to make out we're impartial?
My mum went above and beyond to make up for the fact I didn't have two parents. I was very lucky.
If I had tried to adopt the tone and vibe of other serious journalists, that would have come across as insincere, forced, and false.
I had no desire to go to Iraq. I never wanted to go to Mosul. I'm not a war correspondent. No part of me thrives on the adrenaline or anything like that.
I left school at 15, didn't pick up my GCSEs, didn't do A-levels, didn't go to uni.
I work hard. That's probably one of my only strengths.
It's hard being homeless at any age, but at 16 years old? I can't even imagine. When you're a homeless teen, how do you build a future or have any sort of life?
I deserve to be paid the same as men.
In Cambodia, education is really a luxury, and many kids are thrown into work as early as possible. This means they can help support their parents, as often the parents don't even earn a living wage.
I try to be more mindful and less greedy.
I like eating everything in sight.
Drugs have always scared me.
Most evenings I'll light a few candles, get snuggled on the sofa, and read a magazine.
I love being in people's houses.
I have never met anyone who has worked harder than me.
I never really had an opinion about the Al Muhajiroun; I didn't really know enough about them.
I feel like no-one likes a sob story. No-one likes to hear Moanie Margaret.
I try to be semi-healthy, but I've got into a really bad routine of never food shopping. My fridge is always bare!
The few pounds we spend for an item of clothing isn't the true cost - the real cost is the millions of gallons of clean water that was used to grow the fabric, or the millions of gallons of fresh water that was polluted with toxic chemicals to dye the clothes.
Feeling the pressure to find a job or make the wage we earn go as far as we need it to? That's totally relatable. Nearly all my pals, and definitely myself, have been in that situation. It's no fun.
I love Orla Guerin - she's my queen... when I watch her on the news, I just can't believe how brave she is.
I think BBC3 gave me my first commissions because I wasn't a middle-class, highbrow journalist. I was able to speak to the contributors on a level that perhaps some journalists don't.
I don't really care anymore: I'm fiercely proud of the fact I've been able to make a career despite the fact I wasn't born into privately educated schools.
I often think, if I hadn't have done 'Blood, Sweat and T-shirts,' where would I be? What would I be doing?
You have to be brave and ask the questions on the tip of your tongue.
I'm not toeing the line when I say BBC3 is an incredible channel - it has evolved and found itself.
Now I'm 30; I'm starting to think I'd love a family. I think it will happen one day.
Hate won't solve anything.
When I was given my first gig, and I had no real appetite for a career, I just worked to get money so I could live!
I'm such a wimp.
Life is life, and you've got to be mindful of that.
Whether you're a man or a woman - whatever your gender - if you're doing a job, and you're doing it well, you should be paid accordingly.
Sometimes, it's healthy to take a step back.
It's daunting doing something you haven't done before - you feel silly; you feel like a bit of an idiot.
2018 has been such a fantastic year for me: working on some hard-hitting documentaries, as well as 'Strictly,' has been a real treat.
I love making documentaries. But I do like other factual entertainment as well, and I like doing the lighter stuff.
I'm still hesitant to call myself a journalist. I see myself as a documentary maker who is trusted with hard-hitting current affairs issues.
The thing about my dancing is, I actually think I'm magnificent.
You have to put the extra hours in if you're not up to scratch with everyone else.