A lot of the time I had a nanny. But I never felt like I didn't come first. Mum always made time to be a mother. On weekends she would sit down next to me, hold my hand or sit me on her lap and make me talk about my week. She would continuously try to get to know me.

Whenever I'm having a hard time, Mum guides me through. She understands how a situation can become overwhelming.

Mum is withdrawn and very shy. I don't see her as a friend, like I do my dad. He's active and bouncy. She's maternal, nurturing, exceptionally intelligent and empathetic. I'm a better person for having had her as a mother.

It's my parents' attitudes to situations that gives me a sense of reality about what's worth worrying about, and what's not.

I missed a connecting flight once and the girlfriend I was with started to cry. And I was like 'Look, just chill. We've got an open ticket. This really isn't a big deal.'

I would say weightlifting - this methodical act that results in physical and mental feelings of strength, capability, accomplishment - has absolutely had a massive ripple effect on my life.

I eat all day long, I have a very varied and balanced and healthy diet, but it's very structured and disciplined.

Thank God we're getting rid of the stigma that women shouldn't have muscles, that if a woman does she looks like a man. I'm so happy we're breaking down those barriers.

Fake tan isn't ideal. You have to be into that whole look to enjoy it - and I hate it.

Inside, I really do care what people think about me and it can make me nervous and very anxious.

I'm an absolute daddy's girl.

I grew up in television studios watching Mum and Dad do 'This Morning' and other stuff, and I'm just like lots of people, I'm following in their parents' footsteps.

There are a lot of myths about fat loss, and I wanted to explain how to do it properly, without obsessing over silly fads.

I definitely used to be a party girl.

People think I just dropped out of university and went, 'Mum, Dad, get me a job in television.'

I did drop out of uni, but I worked in PR for a while and then I worked as a runner on 'Loose Women,' 'The Alan Titchmarsh Show' and 'Hairy Bikers,' so I know how the industry works.

I eat healthily but one day a week I have what I want.

I'm accused of promoting eating disorders which makes me so angry.

The television presenting I have done has been quite sporadic, and it's normally only lasted a few weeks or months, so it would be really fun to get a gig that was a bit longer.

If you are going to be ice skating for three or potentially six months you are probably going to get injured a lot.

I think in every family there are pros and cons to it.

I feel so happy and warm inside that I've made my parents proud.

I don't want to offend or upset people.

Aside from the whole Richard and Judy fame thing, I am incredibly lucky they're my mum and dad.

Doing a show like 'Dancing On Ice,' if you are not a performer, it's a bizarre world to go into.

I want everyone to understand the importance of cervical screening and get one booked in if they are overdue.

Smoking-related heart disease runs in my family. My grandfather and great-grandfather died in their early 40s.

I am very proud of my parents.

I can definitely see why having my parents has helped me get to where I want to go.

What I definitely don't like is people calling me or any of my siblings spoilt because we're not. We are privileged but my parents have never given us wads of cash or designer bags or shoes.

I went through a phase where I dressed a bit provocatively when I was a teenager and I don't think my mum was too thrilled. But my dad held the line of, 'Well she will grow out of it' and I did.

My dad is the softer one and my mum is the disciplinarian, the one who calls the shots.

Because I'm my parents' daughter, and get attention from things I've done in the past, that probably goes over people's heads.

Even in the face of the greatest adversity, the key is to never lose hope, never lose sense of the dream that drives you.

The weird thing for me is I'm sitting there in the '80s writing about the Mutant Control Act and here we are in the second decade of the 21st century with the Patriot Act, listening to presidential candidates talk about building walls to keep people out: who's acceptable and who isn't. It's very creepy.

The fundamental thing that makes the 'X-Men' different from every other series out there is it's all about prejudice. It's about a group of young people trying to make a place in a society that doesn't want them.

X-Men has always been about finding your place in a society that doesn't want you.

The most basic excitement was the opportunity to work with Dave Cockrum. He was an artist I'd admired for years and our imaginations were ridiculously simpatico.

I will say there is only one caveat as far as 'Logan' goes: I got to the end and went, 'OK, what happens next?' To me, as an audience member, damn. If you can get to the end of the third act of a trilogy and your reaction is 'what the hell happens next,' someone did their job incredibly.

The one thing I have never been comfortable with in the modern presentation of character - and it may have changed, this is some years ago - is their total isolation from the rest of the world. It's all about superheroes interacting with superheroes. There's no normal life. No normal people.

I think it would be cool if Hugh Jackman showed up in 'Avengers: Infinity War,' even if just for a tryout.

My problem with both iterations of 'Dark Phoenix' onscreen, the original by Brett Ratner and the newer version by Simon Kinberg, is, I don't think you can do it effectively in 90 minutes.

Comics deal with fundamental archetypes. We've been called the myth-makers of the modern age.

I think there's a yin and a yang to everything.

My wife and I have this discussion all the time. Her primal influences are J.R.R. Tolkien, C.S. Lewis and George MacDonald. Mine are Rudyard Kipling, Edith Nesbit and T.H. White. So, we have certain structural differences in form and content right off the bat!

What excites me, what attracts me, what gets me up in the morning is telling the next story and getting it out in front of readers and hoping they'll love it too.

All things are possible, especially in the realm of superheroes.

If one were to go back to the '50s, the most popular TV genre on the air in the United States were Westerns. You could go turn on ABC or CBS on any night and you'd almost have three full hours of everything from 'Bonanza' to 'Rawhide' to 'Wanted Dead or Alive.'

I find the idea of the recap page to be something of a waste. It's the page nobody ever reads and it's even worse because it doesn't tell you who anybody really is.

The whole point of 'The New Mutants' was that the oldest of them, Sam, and maybe Dani Moonstar... they're 15. Rahne is 13. They are kids still. The whole point of being kids is half, if not two thirds of the time, they're making mistakes.