Words matter. These are the best Phillip Schofield Quotes, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
If you ask anyone who is gay, they know, there is no confusion.
There’s nothing that winds me up more on Twitter than people who are stupid, and who say the most ridiculous things.
As far as I’m concerned, ‘This Morning’ has always pushed the boundaries.
I’d like to see Alaska or cross the Atlantic. My father-in-law spent some years crewing luxury yachts from port to port for their owners. He says the starlit skies over the Atlantic are extraordinary because there is no light pollution. I like the thought of seeing those stars, G&T in hand.
Mums and dads, if you’ve bought something that needs putting together, do it before Christmas. When the kids have gone to bed, do a little bit every night. Then on Christmas morning, they can actually play, rather than standing over your shoulder, saying: ‘Is it done yet?’
I thought maybe I was bisexual.
To do a year and a half on stage at the London Palladium was a buzz that’s hard to beat.
I love the fact we do break taboos.
I absolutely hate getting older and it’s not because of the way it makes you look. It’s because I have this sense of so much still left to do and to see. It’s my fear of missing out on the future that really gets to me.
We live in a world that has very sharp edges. It can be very bitter and if you come across a little bit of random kindness – someone who is nice to someone – then that is always lovely.
People forget the skates are like knives. Those blades are constantly sharpened… that’s why they sound the way they sound. They are blades.
She is one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. No one is more thoughtful than Christine Bleakley.
I meet people who are so sniffy about daytime TV.
I had great fun in the ‘BroomCupboard,’ learning the skills of live TV.
In the old days, people would pick up the phone and complain or they’d write a letter. But now they go to Ofcom and they must be sick to death of all of this. Any minor outrage that anyone’s got, they go to Ofcom. They must be inundated with minor complaints.
I am only about 26 in my head.
I don’t like ageing, I don’t like being older, time is going too fast, and life is like a train running at high speed. I have a real problem with it.
You never know what is going on in someone’s head when they you think they are leading the perfect life.
As long as those adjectives used to describe me – charming, affable, punctual – don’t mean that I’m dull, then that’s fine. And I am polite – I was brought up to be that way.
My technicolour dreamcoat is the only thing I’ve stolen. It would be a terrible shame if it went up in smoke after the trouble I went to get it. I was wearing it during the most terrifying moment of my life – the opening night of ‘Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat’ was fear beyond compare.
I’m not being arrogant or blase, but I got a bigger buzz sitting opposite Jean-Bernard Delmas over lunch at Chateau Haut-Brion than I did from interviewing Elton John, Liza Minelli or Whitney Houston.
I grew up in Newquay and lived close to the ocean for a few years in New Zealand, too. I’m instinctively happy in those surroundings.
After my family, wine is the biggest passion of my life without question.
I am very conscious of the fact I am in people’s living rooms every day, and they feel like they know me.
Our back garden is allegedly haunted by a ghost called the Grey Lady. When one of my daughters was three, she said she’d been speaking to a lady in the garden and we went running around trying to find this woman. There was no one there.
The more life you live, the more you are able to understand the experiences of other people. It’s one of the few benefits of getting older.
My wife Steph never tells me to take on less work – she’s just glad to have me out of the house!
At the age of 10 I started writing to the BBC about getting into broadcasting. It went on for years. I was 17 when they finally gave in and offered me a job as a bookings clerk in sport and outside broadcast.
I’m incredibly sentimental, although I’m not one of those people who doesn’t chuck anything out; I don’t keep used tea bags – just special mementos.
Our daughters have always been a credit to us. And I am so proud of them.
I don’t do anything by halves and wine is an expensive passion.
You can tell when you look at someone and think ‘he’s on the brink of fainting’ or that certainly something’s not right.
In general I’d say that I need to be with the right people in the right place – although one of the best holidays I ever had was alone.