How do you get inspiration for your work?
Inspiration for my comedy comes from everything around me, to be honest with you. For example, the guys out in Iran, the 15 guys in Iran: I find that quite funny that they come into somebody else's war, and instead of Britain apologising and saying give us some back, they'd rather stick up their English nose and refuse to apologise because it was an accident. I find those kind of things funny. I find the fact that my daughter might wake up and sound like a dog, because she's coming through the corridor with snot, inspiration for comedy. You're drawing inspiration from everywhere really. When you take it to stage, you're trying to get everybody to find some way of being able to relate to the experiences that I'm going through. The inspiration is one's personal point of view and one's personal interests, and then once you've got your personal point of view and you've got your personal interest, you have to think about how interested other people will be. I go on stage and say, "I've got something to tell you, I've got something to tell you. This is what..." and then everyone's like, "What are you going to tell us? What are you going to tell us?" And that's what makes comedy interesting.