“People will often cry gross over-intellectualisation when popular culture is critically addressed, as if it is somehow exempt from serious consideration because it is itself ‘non-serious’, just a bit of fun that doesn’t require or deserve dissection. I disagree; every expression of art is a product of its environment and as such will reflect the concerns, preoccupations and neuroses of the time. Mainstream entertainment particularly, by its very nature, has to reflect the dominant modes of thinking in order to qualify as mainstream, and in that respect, mass entertainment is even more fun to pick apart.”

—Simon Pegg, Nerd do well

“I managed to reconnect with my old English teacher Mrs. Taylor at a [book] signing in Manchester. I tracked her down after another former teacher got in touch to let me know where she was. We met in the stock room of the bookstore before the signing and it was wonderful. She was white-haired but still had the effervescence and twinkle in her eye that endeared me to her as a child. I signed a book for her which pleased her no end as her family did not believe she had taught me. The joy of that reunion meant so much to me. I actually include a quote from her in the book, a comment she left at the bottom of a project I had written for her. The comment made mention of me becoming a published author and here I was 25 years later, signing my first book for her. That was a genuinely lovely moment for me.”

—Simon Pegg

“You could argue that the comic is the most impatient and neurotic amid the ranks of the insecure. Not only do they require approval, they require it immediately, that evident and tangible assurance, asserted by an unquestionable reflex of confirmation: laughter. 'You love me! YOU LOVE ME!' internalises the mad clown, whilst looking confident and a tad smug.”

—Simon Pegg
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