I feel sorry for many politicians... we expect them to be completely consistent and moralised when we're not.
— Alexei Sayle
A lot of those comics can't hold down relationships and they've got no other life apart from performing. They sleep in their Jags and a lot of them can't even talk. All they can do is tell gags.
Everyone I used to work with is still alive and can afford expensive lawyers.
It seems easier to make a career out of comedy now than it was in the 1980s.
I don't think people were that interested in what I was doing for the most of the 1990s.
However, my problems with my memory are further complicated by the fact that while I don't have any recollection of things I have actually done, I have very vivid recollections of loads of things that I haven't done.
First off, I have to mention what is undoubtedly the greatest phenomenon of the modern era: All You Can Eat Buffets.
I'm fascinated by comedy.
I always thought communism was crap, really.
I would say I was still a Marxist - which is not to be confused with being a Communist. Despite its flaws, Marxism still seems to explain the material world better than anything else.
I suppose the common idea of me is that I'm going to be someone who's hyper and cracking jokes all the time, but people who meet me are soon disabused of that notion.
As a comic, you try something and if it works you go with it and grind it to death.
People aren't universally heroic.
Most of my friends are women - I quite fancied being a woman in a way.
People used to think I was just a shouty comic but I was doing stuff about Sartre.
If you travel to the States... they have a lot of different words than like what we use. For instance: they say 'elevator', we say 'lift'; they say 'drapes', we say 'curtains'; they say 'president', we say 'seriously deranged git.'
Dire Straits is a great band. Someone tells you they like 'Brothers in Arms' and immediately you know they're a stupid annoying git.
Despite its flaws, Marxism still seems to explain the material world better than anything else.
I've accentuated the look over the years. As a comic, you try something and if it works you go with it and grind it to death.
For me, the showbiz memoir is uninteresting - you want to tell people something they don't know about.
Yuri Gagarin, the first man in space, may have had his charms, but he really couldn't be considered hip.
I exist as an annexe of the BBC. I'm down the road a bit from the main building, in a little hut.
I'm sure a psychologist would see something highly significant in how absent-minded I am. I mean I'd forget my head if it wasn't attached to my neck by muscles, ligaments and my esophagus.
I like the south of Spain, notably for the Moorish influence and the weather.
I feel really ambiguous about the psychology of people trying to do good in the world.
But as in all cults, what's central to the Communist Party is the belief system and the elimination of nuance. From there you're very slowly led down the road to fanaticism and mass murder.
I liked 35 and in both my novels that is the age of the lead characters. I tried making them my age but they just seemed to keep moaning about stuff.
If sitcoms were easy to write, there'd be a lot of good ones, and there aren't.
I think that my ideas of the world are that it's random and cruel but kind of quite comical really, and therefore the humour, in a sense, springs from that.
It always seemed to be a constant that my parents were political.
I wanted to write about how people's beliefs shift.
Now, as a comic, if you're vaguely amusing you can go straight into TV, then you play the O2 and then everyone's sick of you.
Recently, my personal advisors have been telling me to go to America. Actually, people have been walking up to me in the street and telling me to sod off, but that's the same thing, isn't it?
Americans have different ways of saying things. They say 'elevator', we say 'lift'... they say 'President', we say 'stupid psychopathic git.
I have a lot of nice Italian winter clothes that make me look like a sophisticated Lebanese professor, so my friend Robert and I go around pretending to be experts in Arabic politics. It doesn't work in the summer though. I don't have the right clothes.
I don't think I'd ever get thin, but I don't see why I should necessarily think that I couldn't... You can't live your life for your routines.
I did six series for the BBC and that was enough. I've been writing for ten years, which is more challenging artistically.
If someone starts agreeing with me, I don't like it. Out of pique, I become something else.
The optimum frequency with which comedians should do a series is every year. I do one every three years. My audience is literally dying off.
Honestly, sometimes I get really fed up of my subconscious - it's like it's got a mind of its own.
I've been going to Granada for many years and 12 years ago bought a house a few miles outside the city.
I'm still fiercely ambitious.
Most of the Communists I knew were nice people.
If I won the lottery I'd start a charity that helped little family hardware stores, cobblers and fruit shops open in city centres.
You can't do comedy with a beard.
I'm distinct, really.
I am quite girly.
The journalists have obviously failed to capture my innate magnetism, humour and charisma, and they all need to be fired from their newspapers right away.
I'm an intellectual.
People are more violently opposed to fur than leather because it's safer to harass rich women than motorcycle gangs.