The only thing I worry about over-sharing is boring people.

Sometimes there were certain things in 'Limmy's Show' where I'd be having to come up with six episodes and as a result there was stuff in there that wasn't my favourite and I'd think, 'ach I'll shove that in this episode.'

I'm alright with being disliked rather than trying to be perfect, because you get to relax then.

When streaming came out years ago I loved it. I loved having an audience, I loved chatting away and looking at a live chat and now on Twitch you can actually get a career at it.

My son likes Doctor Seuss books, but they're right tongue twisters. You get to certain bits and you stumble your words and it makes you feel like an idiot.

People are so quick to get offended.

I was reading some Raymond Carver. I really liked how he did that 'slice of life' thing. Because I'm not much of a reader I end up finding out about these things a long time after other people.

Being in somebody else's thing and saying their words and not having any right to change it - I don't know how I'd deal with that. I'd like to think I could do it, but I just know I've got a dead particular taste.

People say what they think online because it's not to your face. That's a good thing. You don't really want people just being nice to you with their opinions.

The day I say I'm famous is the day I sound like a fanny.

I write in quite a simple way because that's just the way I write. The vocab I use is quite wee. That's just the way I talk.

If you run about trying to make people like you all the time you'd never get anything done.

People who give off about fat-shaming and body-shaming are often the same people who talk about Trump's hair or how fat he is, or how old he is. The size of his hands and his fingers - that's the big one: let's all have a big laugh at his hands.

I think on my passport form I described myself as 'entertainer,' filling it in, in a Post Office or something. I felt like I should be doing jazz hands when I wrote that, but I don't do anything else really.

Daft Wee Stories' is, as the title says, daft wee stories. I just sort of rattled them out, tried to make them quite funny, with punchlines - they're kind of like sketches.

I don't really get angry any more.

Going to a pub when you're not drinking is pretty boring.

Aye aye, I'm not one of these people that hate Christmas. Some people think it's all fake, but I like that kind of thing. It's like Las Vegas. I know this isnae really the Eiffel Tower and that isnae really the Statue of Liberty, but it's just a bit of fun.

I do like crossing moral boundaries.

I never made my website to try and get anywhere, it was just a laugh.

With the Internet I just love how anything goes, especially in the light of this whole Sachsgate.

I think I was an alcoholic. There are all these grey areas about what makes you an alcoholic - you can't cope without it, you stop caring about jobs and relationships, or you just binge.

It's in me to get steaming and to think too much, worry too much about the future, the past.

I think I was maybe a ned. I don't know. I had a trakkie, a cap and got into trouble when I was younger and I don't remember other neds round about me, so I suppose I must have been one. But a thinking ned, an intelligent ned.

I tell people on Facebook what my Playstation user name is. It's quite a social thing. I put the headset on and I'm just yappin' away. It's kind of like a sad way of socialising. It's like meeting up with people but when you get bored with them you can just switch them off and walk away.

I don't really read a lot. I got a few Booker Prize books and some others and thought I'd try this but quite quickly I just stick them down. I do like some Stephen King books but with some of them I just put them down as well. But I'm like that with telly stuff as well and films or music.

I don't drink anymore, I don't go up the town and I'm not interested in events and parties.

If the Internet went down or there was no telly I would be 'oh no, oh no.'

I actually don't have a lot of faith in comedy.

I felt I was a bit switched off for years, not really caring about things. I don't know if that's depression or whatever, but I was thinking 'I might. Aye I will. No, I willnae' as far as getting a second series goes.

I like wee arguments, I've never been into jokes. I'm more into strange things and madness and things escalating and things not really making sense.

I think no matter where you're from, you're going to be laughing about stuff going on around you.

You hear people talking about a Scottish sense of humour, or a Glaswegian sense of humour, all sorts of countries and cities think that they've got this thing that they're funny. I read about the Liverpudlian sense of humour and I was like, 'Aye? What's that then?' You get that and you especially hear about a dark Glaswegian sense of humour.

I've never cooked a great meal.

I don't mind people liking or not liking me. If you make something and then in the back of your mind you think it could have been a bit better, that can hurt a bit.

It's fine if folk don't like my sense of humour. But if somebody misunderstands, then that hurts a bit.

If I call myself an actor, it sounds like I'm trying to pass myself off as someone who went to drama school.

I think I called myself an entertainer on my son's birth certificate. That sounds a bit Sammy Davis Jr. or Brian Conley, the sort of guy you just drop into a room and let them 'entertain.'

I don't feel comfortable calling myself a writer or a director or an actor.

I don't need a lot: I've got a telly, a computer - what else can you get me?

I'm always checking other people's opinions.

I've never been an embarrassed, 'never talk about their feelings' sort of person.

I've always been a very open person, all my life, even at school.

Going to the doctors - for me that was quite brave, taking that first step. That was a bit scary, saying that I wanted to go on anti-depressants.

I've just got a really sick sense of humour that's separate from reality.

I sometimes wonder if I'm a psychopath.

I really like violence in writing and films.

It's almost like schizophrenia the way I get ideas about things that are not really happening and just end up focusing on them.

I always wanted to get on the telly. Then see when I did, and there was talk about doing more online, Comedy Labs or iPlayer, I was: 'Naw, naw, naw, I want to be On The Telly that sits in the living room and folk watch it together.

I'd never dance at school discos, I couldn't believe people could show themselves like that.