. . . . honest men are few when it comes to themselves.
I loved performing every week, but all of the activities and amazing people we met when we were not filming stick out to me the most.
If I can help encourage or inspire someone out there who is struggling with some of the same or similar issues as myself, then I think it's worth talking about.
In regards to my artistry, I've learned the importance of being vulnerable.
My advice to anyone wanting to get into the music business, is always be ready to learn and remain humble.
As long as children are still getting kicked out of their homes by parents, getting bullied, commuting suicide, et cetera. it's definitely still worth talking about.
I think my entire songwriting catalog reflects where I was in my life at the time. I capture whatever moment I am experiencing in life.
No state sorrier than that of the man who keeps up a continual round, and pries into "the secrets of the nether world," as saith the poet, and is curious in conjecture of what is in his neighbour's heart.
I think that bias is not a fixed thing. It's not as though some people are biased and others are not. It ebbs and flows. It can be manipulated. It changes according to a person's circumstances.
I'm just trying to write a good story, strictly from imagination. People just think it's random, they don't see the rewriting, phrasing of characters, choosing the words, bringing the world to light in which the characters live in. That creates an illusion that this is real.
The business of being a popular entertainer in England is just too hard.