When I'm writing, it's because I'm trying to figure something out for myself. If I don't believe in what I've written, then how can I expect anyone else to believe in that, either?

People say Taylor Swift's not feminist enough or Beyonce's not feminist enough, but there are 12-year-old girls going to their shows and taking an awesome message.

I've always worked in cinemas or cafes to make money because it turns out freelance journalism is quite hard to get into.

Is the casual objectification of women so commonplace that we should all just suck it up, roll over, and accept defeat? I hope not.

I identify as a feminist but subscribe to the pretty basic definition of a feminist as 'someone who seeks equality between the sexes.'

Moving from a first to a second album is an incredibly transitional time for any band because you never get to make one in a vacuum like you did with your debut.

I did my dissertation on the idea of femininity and women's writing, so I spent eight months reading about how women are portrayed in the media in terms of images and tone of voice and what words are used.

Growing up in Scotland and living in Glasgow, you see the heritage that religion has had and how something that, in theory, is about kindness and community and caring for each other is used to persecute people.

Objectification, whatever its form, is not something anyone should have to 'just deal with.'

We all like to believe we are completely self-sufficient, but at the end of it all, we're all searching for a human connection, something to make it all feel a bit more worthwhile.

I don't know if anyone should do anything that's not authentic to them.

What I would tell everyone is don't lose your sense of individuality.

It's cool to be able to give each other that space to really explore ourselves individually and grow.

Societies have been conditioned to believe that entertainers are just that, but I refuse to be put into the box of a puppet.

I'm actually a huge fan of changing every single 'anti-Trump' sentiment to 'pro-human rights' because they are synonymous.

We are screaming battle cries against those whose political and personal agendas threaten our lives and sanity.

It's amazing the support we've been able to get from Latinos and just in general from everyone.

I think Ed Sheeran would be a great collaboration.

My theory is the spectrum: there's a spectrum of sexuality.

There's straight people, and there's super gay people, and then there's everybody in between, and everybody is a little bit of something because sexuality is fluid.

We're all really passionate, and we voice it in our own way, and we all come from a loving place and see from the same perspective, which is why I feel so blessed to be part of this group.

I feel like all four of us are really powerful in our messages, what we speak about, and what we are about.

We've digressed from the true meaning of life. We have replaced the Creator with money and claim Him in the name of war. We have dishonored our children.

I'm marching for women; I'm marching for the LGBT community. I'm marching for immigrants. I happen to fall into all three categories, so I'm marching for myself at the end of the day and for my family and my friends. And for whoever else deserves it.