Nice to see your own fans booing you.
I wasn't putting too much emphasis on it (the booing). I think that you have to put it behind you.
The thing about politicians in Britain is that they are out there, you can lobby them, get close to them, there are loads of ways you can protest against them, and booing is a pretty weak way of doing it.
I'm a bad lover. Once I caught a peeping tom booing me.
I've been cheered by thousands, booed by thousands, but nothing feels as bad as the booing inside your own head during those ten minutes before you fall asleep.
If you got up on the bandstand at Minton's and couldn't play, you were not only going to be embarrassed by the people ignoring you or booing you, you might get your ass kicked.
You've got audiences cheering at the prospect of somebody dying because they don't have health care and booing a service member in Iraq because they're gay. That's not reflective of who we are.
In life, I'd much rather have people laughing at me than booing me.
The hardest thing is to endure the applause of fools, and patiently suffer the booing, while with the bravissimo of the foolish one would rather strike them between the ears.
If you're standing in the middle of a ring and you're playing the villain, and everyone is booing and throwing things at you, that's real.
A boo is a lot louder than a cheer. If you have 10 people cheering and one person booing, all you hear is the booing.
There's always a moment in any stand-up show I do where people are booing. They kinda boo a premise. And then I bail myself out with a joke. But it's like trying to do movies where there's a dramatic undertone.
I think it's bad when people start booing between serves.
I see the booing as a nice bit of banter and at least it means the fans aren't bored. It's quality. I enjoy it to be honest and I'm getting it even more than Robbie Savage, which is really saying something.