My first Olympics memory was watching Haile Gebrselassie in Sydney 2000. His sprint finish to defend his title really moved me.
I have really got into watching the unsigned bands. They play mad venues like the Sugarmill in Stoke and all sorts of underground, grimy places.
When I'm filming a documentary, I feel like I should be the straight man, watching with a raised eyebrow.
What someone does when viewing content on a tablet is different than the lean-back mentality of watching on the big screen.
Watching artists like Joplin perform, I felt that tingle down my spine; I experienced the wonders of a cultural and musical revolution.
Despite the absurdity and the silliness and the triviality of the entire campaign experience, there is also something, as non-cynical as this sounds, kind of uplifting and strange about watching democracy unfold.
The idea that people are watching me now is a bit unnerving, but I suppose it comes with the territory. It is, perhaps, the modern side of celebrity.
I'm scared of watching a TV show about vampires. I can't fall asleep.
I can't imagine voluntarily standing beside an F1 track in the rain, watching motorised wedges plastered in corporate decals zooming past at 500mph.
I'm one of those guys that spins through the clicker when I'm watching TV. When one of my movies comes on, I'll watch a scene or two.
I never really grew up watching TV.
I go through phases of watching a ton of dance/performance, and I am bizarrely well-informed on the subject.
I've been reading a lot of books on history, and watching a lot of educational TV. Wikipedia too, even though it is not reliable.
It all started as a dream. Just watching as a kid, just watching Hogan, just watching WWF - it was amazing.
I started watching YouTube videos and singing, and it became something that I was obsessed with.
I'm obsessed with zombies. I like watching zombie movies and I read zombie books.