Playing girls is cool, but its a lot more fun playing boys.
I'm not interested in being one of those comedians who wants to look good and be this 'cool' funny person. I don't care how weird or ugly I look.
Religious humor is not really my area, so I probably wouldn't do anything about that, or politics or something.
I find teenage girls endlessly funny.
I just do what I think is funny and what's exciting to me.
Fans feel they know me, so they want me to be on-the-spot funny, and it's hard to fulfil their expectations.
I'm interested in youth culture - when your parents are running your life, but you think you're the big man - but I'm not trying to make a statement.
I would love to play a British character one day. My accent wavers between Scottish and Irish very easily, though.
I'm not a big comedy show-watcher, but I love Ricky Gervais' stuff and Sacha Baron Cohen's things. But I'm not an expert on them. I've seen them once.
Australia has a thing where apparently it's fine for me to dress up as an Asian woman. No one has questioned that.
British comedy fans go crazy.
I'm so independent in writing stuff and controlling what I do. Sometimes I get calls from people asking to be in their movie, but I'm always writing or editing, and I can never get around to doing it. I'm so much more interested in my own stuff. I th...
I feel really qualified to write about Australia.
I don't just want to upset people and shock people by saying something really outrageous.
It's barely OK for me to be dressed up as a black guy. But part of me kind of enjoys provoking people.
Films do seem prestigious and glamorous, but when you create something, you want people to see it. TV still reaches so many more people; it still really appeals to me.
When I wrote 'We Can Be Heroes,' I was just so excited about the concept of playing loads of characters, and a television series allows you to do that.
You can't get any better than TV on HBO, ABC and BBC3.
I met Kim Kardashian in a nightclub once, and she was really nice. Kanye was with her, but he didn't speak. He just looked at me.
I've done signings where elderly people will line up to get photos with me and ask me to sign things. They don't even pretend it's for their grandkids. They're like, 'No, it's for me.'