Being singled out as 'The Ugly One' led to depression.

Younger writers and smaller writers need to live and get by. They need to be paid. It has to be fair.

Little Mix are hilarious.

Whenever I've been in the studio with Little Mix I've had the best time ever.

We have so many talented writers. Companies need to understand that smaller writers also need to be supported.

Fashion can really give you an identity if you're looking for one and I think the more people that know that, the less identity crises we'll have in the world.

I have a treadmill in the house but I never use it.

I tend to colour my hair myself with an at-home Wella dye. It allows me to control how red my hair is.

I used to use a sunbed after school. It wasn't a regular thing, but I'd go in wearing my uniform. No one ever stopped me. No one told me it was dangerous.

My nan's skin cancer was on her nose and had to have it removed a few times.

I do worry about getting skin cancer in the future - you only have to use a sunbed a handful of times.

I got to a really dark place when it came to wanting to be tanned, really disliking my natural skin tone. I was listening to the wrong people and all sorts of people were passing judgement on my appearance.

I'd make a good psychiatrist. I can work people out very easily and very quickly. I've been like that since childhood.

I've always been a keen observer of people.

I think so many women out there start with a lot of insecurities about their skin tone and whatever it is about their hair or whatever is they feel a little bit uncomfortable with.

I felt embarrassed about how my body looked being so pale.

It's brilliant to me, I absolutely love having red hair. I love being ginger and I love my specific colouring.

I always had a family that instilled in me red hair was my superpower and how it was such a lovely thing.

No matter how much control you have or how much confidence, it's always in someone else's hands, all the time. That's the scariest thing about this industry. It's so political.

I like my food and I eat a lot.

People feel they can say nasty things and have anonymity behind the net - as they did with all the nasty comments about me - without fear of recrimination.

I don't care if something's from Primark or Prada, it's about if you like it, wear it.

Most days I am very low key. Jumpers and jeans are my staples.

I don't pamper myself very often.

I paint my own nails and only get my hair cut when it really needs it.

Emma Stone and Jessica Chastain are both very classic beauties.

I'm not safe with fashion, and I haven't been for a long time.

I used to write at home a lot. I used to write a bit for Girls Aloud.

Song-writing in general, and vocally I've learnt a lot about myself. I want to get better and keep learning.

It's inevitable that if you write an album or a song, obviously it's going to come from how you feel. You're writing it for yourself, it's just the way it is.

Thatcher was the motivation for my entire political career. I hated everything she stood for.

A good education is the most important gift we can give our young people.

To every woman out there who thinks that they might like to get involved in politics or stand for parliament, I say go for it. If I can do it, so can you.

It's not opinion polls that determine the outcome of elections, it's votes in ballot boxes.

I am a social democrat - I believe in pursuing greater equality and tackling social justice - but... you can't do that unless you have got a strong economy, unless you have got a vibrant business base earning the wealth that makes that possible.

It's very much the currency of discourse on social media where political disagreements very quickly become very personalised.

People don't want to go back to the days, pre-referendum, when the Westminster establishment sidelined and ignored Scotland. They want Scotland's voice to be heard.

I think you should always aim for more.

Let us put the normal divisions of politics aside. Let us come together as one country; let us seize this historic moment to shift the balance of power from the corridors of Westminster to the streets and communities of Scotland.

Most people would agree that the E.U. is too bureaucratic, not transparent or democratic enough and that it often interferes too much in matters that are best left to national governments.

I worry about the direction of the U.K. and U.K. politics and governance in the event of a Brexit.

The U.K.'s debt belongs legally to Westminster, so Scotland, by definition, can't default on it.

The importance of education is ingrained in Scottish history.

Since I became First Minister, I have made clear my priority to alleviate poverty and tackle inequality in Scotland. Ensuring that everyone can do better in life will not only make Scotland fairer, but it will also make it a more prosperous place.

One of the attributes Glasgow is best known for all over the world is the friendliness of her people.

Equality and prosperity shouldn't be seen as enemies of each other, but as partners. One reinforces the other.

London has a centrifugal pull on talent, investment and business from the rest of Europe and the world. That brings benefits to the broader U.K. economy.

Polls can change; people's opinions can change. Voting intentions can change, and I think it would be a silly leader, a silly political party, that would assume that we have it sewn up.

One thing we've learned is that there's not anything that Nigel Farage won't blame on foreigners.

The U.K. needs a strong opposition, and Labour shows no signs of being capable of being that. The SNP is filling that void and will go on seeking to do that.