You never know, the way technology is going, we might all use the games for scouting by the time I retire.
I think Depeche Mode music somehow appeals to the oddball, to the person who is looking for something a little bit different.
I go to a very visual place when I'm singing. It's very cinematic and I get this feeling of space. I love when music does that.
Music is still the one thing that ties people together. People can come together from all different religions, walks of life, colours, creeds and enjoy the same song. That's still the most incredible thing to me about performing live.
I still hold on to the idea that a record can really change the way I feel.
I have the urge to still be part of the world, the universe, of life. Through music I have the feeling that I come a little closer to that.
I'm not that type of musician where I can sit down at the piano and work out a song; I actually really enjoy that process of sitting with somebody and having nothing and then suddenly something starts appearing. You struggle with it, and then suddenly a song starts to appear. Then, you've got to try and muscle it - there's that word again - into something and you do. You tussle with it and play with it and roll around with it and suddenly, magically, something appears.
Beware not to get caught up in the thick of thin things.
I don't like this young crudeness now which is supposed to be comedy on Friday nights.
There would be a cost for dumping carbon into our atmosphere and a cap on total emissions. The government must make a clear and firm decision - terminating the idea in our society it is free to pump infinite amounts of carbon into the air. Once that happens, private capital will flow even more aggressively into developing and deploying the alternative, less-polluting technologies.
In my 20s, I mostly ate burritos and nachos, with the occasional burger.