There's not a single club out there that can compete with Barcelona.

I miss everything that surrounds the club. I miss my colleagues, my friends and everyone who cares for Barcelona.

The group of players that you see in the Barca dressing room is unique. There are a lot of homegrown players and others who really care for Barcelona a lot as well.

I am very happy and satisfied with my first year in Italy.

I am flattered Serbia are interested in me and for the great effort they are making. But I am Spanish and my desire is to play for Spain.

I was looking to be in a club where you feel the love, a family where everyone is fighting for the same thing. I'm like that as a person.

When I decide to do things in my life, it's because I feel it.

I am super happy to have finally scored in the Bundesliga. That makes me proud.

I made my debut very early and a lot of things happened to me at a young age, but I was there for the best time in Barcelona's history and played with the best players in the world.

Being a home-grown player, I achieved what I set out to do by playing and scoring for Barca. I consider I was a success.

I like to get the ball on the ground, make good plays and move the ball around the pitch quickly at a good tempo.

I like to play as a striker or secondary striker.

I am a striker or at least a playmaker behind the front man, certainly not a wide man. But with Rome and Milan, I was only playing on the wings.

My mission is to be kept on by Milan. Nobody wants to stay with the Rossoneri for only for one season.

I miss scoring lots of goals, but I have always thought that a striker should not be judged just by the amount of goals he scores. The work he does for the team is also important.

Messi scores three goals every game. If you score one goal, you're not Messi.

I thank God for having played for four years in the best Barcelona team in history, but playing in the Premier League is also very important.

I started very young and it is not easy to get to grips what I achieved at the age of 17.

One thing I've been taught from young is that you have to work hard, turn up to extra training sessions, etc.

My target is enjoying and proving to myself that I am progressing.

The footballer's career is very long and staying on the top for many years is always very difficult.

I chose Milan for many reasons. It is a great club and the team is made of an historic group of players.

My parents weren't at all in entertainment, but when I look back, something along the line prepared me and opened me up to entertainment.

I'm very lucky that my husband is a true partner in child-rearing. If I get home late, he gets home early or vice-versa. I travel more, and he's able to spell me when I'm gone.

My parents did great and provided well, and gave all their kids personal, moral, ethical values, not a belief that we were entitled to something.

The biggest mistake to me is complacency.

To put it bluntly, I feel relevant and valuable, and I am struggling to understand why, when women reach age 65, they encounter an invisible barrier of perception that says it's time to walk away. Shouldn't we have a choice in the matter? Shouldn't our experience and energy be worth more?

In the American office lexicon, 'aging' - and its close cousin 'old' - are inconsistent modifiers. While older women are often labeled as 'tired' and 'out of touch,' aging men get to be 'distinguished' and 'seasoned.'

For me, turning 65 doesn't include walking away from my profession because of age; I love my job and the company I work for.

As a working woman at the height of my career, I know age has only enhanced my professional and personal abilities. It has brought a sense of calm to the drive for success.

The younger me was motivated by a need to please others, by the pressure to climb the corporate ladder and make money, and by a fear of failure - all of which became more and more intense as I navigated the competitive landscape.

I have tremendous admiration for companies with the kind of pioneering spirit and innovation eBay has demonstrated from day one.

Prejudice and discrimination based on our differences is an unfortunate fact of life.

We are not born knowing how to hate; we are taught how to hate.

Exterior shots showing blue skies add a levity and brightness to each show.

Channel brand is so key.

I've never wanted to be a woman playing a guy; I love being a woman.

When NBC bought USA and SCI FI in 2004, Jeff Zucker put me in charge of USA Networks. We did a lot of research to find out what was working and what wasn't, and we actually had to hear a lot of things we didn't like. USA was predictable; it was boring.

My career is really, really important, and I love it, but the life highs - like seeing my son graduate - need to me to be more important than the career highs, which are fleeting.

My very first real job in the industry was as a production assistant on a show called 'Infinity Factory' in 1976.

You can't change how people act, but what you can change is how you react.

Many of the top-grossing movies of all time are science fiction.

Most people assume wrongly that science fiction is a male-based genre, when, in fact, there are far more women who tune into sci-fi than anyone expects.

Getting to a 1 rating in households is a sign that we're building momentum. It gives us bragging rights.

I've been trained and lived my entire life on the smallscreen.

My dream isn't running a studio or doing anything managerial in any way, shape, or form.

My dream would be producing, maybe directing - definitely not writing - one feature film.

The TV mini-series is kind of a lost genre because the networks have given up on it.

Oftentimes, when a movie turns into a series, you never retain the creative auspices. You buy the idea, you buy the franchise, and then you bring in a whole new creative team and copy the tone or sensibility.

I wouldn't be comfy going toe to toe launching a new scripted show against broadcast.