Keith Allen
Keith Allen

I'm probably the biggest show-off in the world. But I also happen to be an artist. You can be both, you know.

Martin McDonagh
Martin McDonagh

I've learned not to be such a show-off and to have a bit more empathy with humanity. Or at least to fake that.

Mika
Mika

I was a show-off as a kid. I was wearing bow ties and matching coloured trousers.

Nita Strauss
Nita Strauss

I might come across like kind of a show-off onstage and stuff, but I like collaborating with people.

Peter York
Peter York

By the late Nineties, we had become a more visual nation. Big-money taste moved to global standards - new architecture, design and show-off contemporary art. The Sloane domestic aesthetic - symmetry, class symbolism and brown furniture - became as unfashionable as it had been hot in the early Eighties.

Rupert Everett
Rupert Everett

As a kid I would be put to bed when my parents had guests and because I was such a show-off I would go to my mum's room, put on her nightdress and Jackie Onassis shawl, run downstairs, go outside, ring the doorbell and pretend to be one of the guests. I'd say, 'Hello, I'm Mrs. So-and-So.'

Shazam!
Shazam!

Shazam: Dude! Dude! Dude! Dude, did you see that?
Freddy Freeman: Yeah. You electrocuted a bus and almost killed these people.
Shazam: And then I caught it! Freddy, I caught a bus with my bare hands, man! I caught a bus like people catch fly balls. Like, who does that? I do that!
Freddy Freeman: Billy, you do

nothing. You, you take selfies and make people pay you. You know, forget it. I can't really talk to you when you look like this.
Shazam: You just wish it was you!
Freddy Freeman: No shit! You think I wouldn't kill to have what you have? Because everything I do is, like, some desperate attempt to get people to notice me, to not feel sorry for me. I

mean, look at me! Look at me! Do you even see me? Cause most people don't! Cause they don't want to. And now you don't, either. I mean, you think this is who you are? I mean, Billy, you're 14. And now you're no better than the Breyers. All this power, and all you did was turn into a show-off and a bully.
[Freddy walks away]
Shazam: Whatever, kid! I do what I want!

And I'm like, mid-20s probably! Maybe even, like, 30.

Sideways
Sideways

Miles Raymond: What about you?
Maya: What about me?
Miles Raymond: I don't know. Why are you into wine?
Maya: Oh I... I think I... I originally got in to wine through my ex-husband.
Miles Raymond: Ah.
Maya: You know, he had this big, sort of show-off cellar, you

know.
Miles Raymond: Right.
Maya: But then I discovered that I had a really sharp palate.
Miles Raymond: Uh-huh.
Maya: And the more I drank, the more I liked what it made me think about.
Miles Raymond: Like what?
Maya: Like what a fraud he was.

[Miles laughs softly]
Maya: No, I- I like to think about the life of wine.
Miles Raymond: Yeah.
Maya: How it's a living thing. I like to think about what was going on the year the grapes were growing; how the sun was shining; if it rained. I like to think about all the people who tended and picked the grapes. And if it's an

old wine, how many of them must be dead by now. I like how wine continues to evolve, like if I opened a bottle of wine today it would taste different than if I'd opened it on any other day, because a bottle of wine is actually alive. And it's constantly evolving and gaining complexity. That is, until it peaks, like your '61. And then it begins its steady, inevitable decline.
Miles

Raymond: Hmm.
Maya: And it tastes so fucking good.