You're hosting the ABC's Paralympic Games coverage. You covered the opening and closing ceremonies in Beijing. How did you find that?

It was really addictive. I loved it. I missed it when it finished. I actually had a little depression.

"The Edinburgh Fringe Festival is still embracing innovation" ... Adam Hills.

What's your disability?

I was born without my right foot. Nobody has any clue [why]. I've got enough of the foot that I can walk without a prosthetic. I think that's why I quite like doing the Paralympics, because I feel like I've got a foot in both camps. I can translate for the able-bodied people at home but at the same time I have a disability. I did some stand-up about it but I had a manager who said, ''Just don't talk about it for a while because you will be known as the one-legged comedian.'' So it was actually 13 years of doing stand-up before I mentioned it. I had to think about why I mentioned it, because it's not funny to say, ''Oh, I'm missing my right foot.'' It was after September 11 that I noticed airport security was getting a little bit worried about me because I always set off metal detectors, and after September 11 everyone was on high alert. I thought, ''I want to talk about that.''