Most of the pop videos I've seen that have any male/female interaction are usually centered around a romance - and that's great, I am all for romance. But let's face it, there are a lot of other sexualities and identities that are well-deserving of some shiny pop video love.

Everyone has a different definition of what they find sexy, so why do we so often get given one version of what sexy is time and time again?

Pop music has a pretty good track record of embracing queer culture.

The word queer first started being used in the late 1980s by members of the community who wanted to reclaim something negative and turn it into a positive. It's still a painful word for some, and lots of people don't identify with it. But for me it's a helpful and empowering term that unifies an ever-growing community.

I can't play guitar well at all, so I had to learn that.

Blackpool is a hilarious place. It's kind of like the Las Vegas of the U.K. It's by the sea and there's a lot of casinos and resorts.

If you look at pop stars through the ages, we've had camp, glam popstars from the 80s - your George Michaels and what have you - but then people went back to the closet a bit, and became more homogenised and generic.

When I meet gay kids and they know who we are, I remember that's amazing because literally every gay person in every gay story I knew growing up was doomed to die. There weren't any positive gay stories and it's incredible that has changed.

So many queer people come out constantly for the rest of their lives, ya know? To the people they work with, to people in taxi cabs. Whatever it is, it isn't the one day.

I would love it if less bands were hetero.

When I was a bit younger, I loved Rufus Wainwright - just the fact that he existed.

I want to feel sexy with the body I have.

Dating shows should exist for people who aren't straight. They're out there, there aren't enough of them. Whether you try and squeeze a format that already works into something else. I don't know.'

We can't police the way people express their sexuality.

I used to be scared of people thinking I was gay but now I'd be shocked if they didn't.

I get a real thrill for being 'overtly queer' in my aesthetic.

With anxiety and depression, what's been most helpful to me has been learning a toolbox - a set of skills I can use when I'm in periods of low mood or feel an anxiety attack coming on. When Years & Years took off it felt like I needed that toolbox really quickly.

I think there's strength in being honest and open about yourself and your struggles. But it can also be a challenge. This is my life, I live with my own mental health, and that is happening to me every day. I can talk about it from a position of 'Oh, I've done this' but I'm still living that existence.

I am obsessed with Matt Healy.

I want to do a song with Rihanna - we need to make that work.

I hear bands say they don't know what country they are in at times. Now I understand because we sleep at weird times and are always in different places - but I'm not moaning. It's all fun.

We used to have quirky weird bands that made dance music like the Pet Shop Boys and Depeche Mode and I think people have still got an appetite for that type of music-melody and darkness.

I think all of the best songs are about heartbreak and love.

We could perform in space or be the first band to play moon, but we want to be the first 'Star Wars' band.

Felt really low as a teenager and hearing music from artists that could express their pain in a way that is beautiful and made me feel better about the way I felt and I think that is something that anyone can relate to.

I used to travel a lot as a kid and when I first moved to England I felt lonely and my parents were splitting up at the time.

My mum listened to stuff like Alanis Morissette and Tori Amos, but she also listened to a lot of '80s stuff like Heart. I still quite like Heart.

I get to do my own thing with music. I get to write the songs and sing the songs. As an actor, you have to do what someone else tells you to do and say someone else's words. And you're limited by the way you look and music is just more rewarding creatively for me.

Now, to be a mainstream act, you have to be firing on all cylinders on so many different platforms. You've got to have a social media voice. You've got to do promo on TV. You've got to tour everywhere.

I feel like listening to sad songs are a way of narrating your life and confirming your identity.

All the best songs have an element of sadness.

I feel like you could listen to any Bon Iver song and it would make you cry. They're all so heart-wrenching.

I'd love to work with SBTRKT if he'd have me.

At 13 I taught myself piano from an old song book, and Joni Mitchell's 'Both Sides Now' was the first song I learned.

I grew up loving artists like the Spice Girls and Britney Spears - artists who seemed to live this fantasy lifestyle, and I remember always wanting to join these fantasy people in that world.

I come from a single-parent family and my Mum is super liberal.

I'm a big believer that if you want things to change you have to embody that change.

I'm the person I am because of all the support we have but inside there is still a scared, gay kid, worried he's going to get bullied and people aren't going to like what I do.

When I go on stage and perform, I'm an extreme version of myself.

I've always loved sci-fi and fantasy.

I'm fascinated by technology and how it is changing the way we live and view our humanity.

The likelihood is that you or someone you know closely will suffer from a mental health condition in your lifetime.

It's like any other part of your body - your mental health gets sick, and it needs treatment.

I've mostly worked in weird films playing weird characters, probably because I'm a weird person.

I don't know what's wrong with me - I don't know why I only get picked to play strange characters!

I just feel lucky to be able to do stuff I enjoy.

The majority of the film industry is, like, obsessed with a ridiculous gender binary and keeping with this stupid social binary. Like, who cares?

Women are so appallingly represented in movies.

Words are important. They do matter.

As young as 10 I started fancying boys. It's a common experience but I just wished I wasn't gay up until the age of 18 or 19.