Some days my husband Derek and I barely have time for a conversation about anything apart from the business of life - who's picking up who and who's cooking dinner.
— Kate Garraway
I genuinely don't think there is anything wrong with wanting to look the best you can.
They say breast milk helps just about everything - I'm surprised you can't run a car on it.
Women should do what makes them feel good.
Whatever your age, parents generally embarrass their children. I think that's a role we have to play.
I don't take myself seriously, because I'm obviously ludicrous.
Wallace and Gromit's Children's Charity does a fantastic job, raising funds to improve the lives of sick children in hospitals and hospices throughout the U.K.
I was deeply in love with David Soul from 'Starsky & Hutch' when I was 11 or 12. I used to borrow my mum's peach nighty and put some lipstick on and say I was going on a date with him. I made this little purse and would carry a picture of him in it and say he was my boyfriend.
I did Robert Pattinson's first live interview for 'Twilight' and he was so nervous.
I can cope with politicians now I've had about 40,000 cockroaches tipped over my head. Westminster's going to be no problem.
The National Lottery is brilliant because when I'm on my way people tweet me and say: 'Fingers crossed,' 'make my numbers come up!' Which I obviously can't do but, what a great life!
We always have a traditional Easter egg hunt on Easter Sunday. My Aunt Lynne organises that for the family, so we go to her house in Hampshire and it gets ever more elaborate every year.
I think we have a problem with how we treat people and alcohol.
I've got a lot cellulite and my thinking was brown cellulite is better than white cellulite.
The gang on 'GMB' is what really makes it. I love Ben Shephard, Richard Arnold, Susanna Reid and even Piers Morgan.
Bartering is not my strong point.
I think holidays come in all sizes - sometimes you just need to relax.
It can be easy to let all sorts of things in your life slide, including your relationship.
I've always been a bit ridiculous.
Being pregnant changes your body image. You watch your stomach expand. If that happened without being pregnant you'd be in deep distress! But because you're excited about what's going to happen, you view yourself differently.
I'm not sure I'm very confident at all. There was a lot of my life when I thought I was fundamentally unlovable.
I loved having children and started relatively late.
I used to be the sort of person that would go out for lunch with girlfriends and get home at 3 A.M.
You've got to get your head right about ageing. Taking care of diet and exercise and facing your fears about growing older will lead you into a happier place emotionally and mentally. You feel like you have a choice.
I've never felt like thumping Piers Morgan. Others may do, but not me. He's exhilarating to be around.
Of course, no one wants to get older.
I think I learned I'm braver than I think I am.
Well we have a tiny garden, it's like a postage stamp, so generally we try to get out to the parks in London as much as possible.
If you said, 'I'm giving up smoking,' people would put on a parade. If you said, 'I'm going to eat more healthily,' people would say, 'Good for you.' If it's drinking, the first reaction is, 'That's so boring. You're going to be so boring.'
I'm very nervous of snakes. I think it's something about the movement. I'm not a huge fan of spiders either.
I've not got a celebrity body.
The negative thing about working on a breakfast show is that the alarm goes off at 2:15 A.M., and I get picked up at 2:30 A.M. That's just insanely early.
I have been lucky enough to go to all sorts of places - diving in Malaysia, snorkelling with wild turtles in Cuba and dolphin-spotting in Kenya.
The more I go to Australia, the more I realise how enormous the country is and how much there is to see. There's really nowhere like it.
I don't think having a fear of death is unreasonable.
Every time I say I'm going on a diet I end up eating chocolate.
There's something magical about breakfast TV. I can't think of anything else I'd rather do.
Midlife is a time of explosive change, particularly for women. It's just like experiencing another puberty. The changes that take place in your body are enormous and, like puberty, you have to throw off the past.
Nobody loves a baby more than me and I would happily have had about 10 of them.
I think if a youngster leaves school unable to read you're kind of condemning them to a life of poverty and a life of lack of potential.
My worst habit is my untidiness. It bewilders my family, the degree to which I can create absolute chaos around me.
I've been very lucky to work in a newsroom where there are lots of strong, funny, clever women in senior positions.
There is something special about breakfast TV in that people feel like they really know you.
I'm stronger than I think I am.
I think the thing about Easter holidays in particular is you don't know what the weather's going to be like.
I thought, 'I don't really drink that much.' But when you stop completely it is a shocker. You realise that a glass here, going to a function there, they all tot up.
I am a news junkie and I can't remember a time when I haven't read a paper or even when I am abroad, watched the news on a TV or your phone.
I love being a mum.
I don't want to look old in my advanced years so I go on a power walk for half an hour every day, and it helps to keep the pounds off.
You can't beat a British holiday for rock pooling and sandcastles with fish and chips on the seafront - perfect.