Birmingham is my second home.

I was born in Birmingham and raised in Birmingham.

We have a fabulous civil rights history here in Birmingham.

My record is good with Birmingham and Wigan. Just study the facts.

Manchester's history is cotton and wool. Birmingham's is iron and steel.

I told Birmingham I don't want nothing, I'm not interested in the money.

I grew up in Birmingham, Ala. Nobody really blow up from Birmingham, Ala.

I grew up in Birmingham, where they made useful things and made them well.

The policies enacted during segregation are still being felt in Birmingham.

If you live in Birmingham, then being awake is not necessarily a desirable state.

My paternal grandmother drove ambulances during the regional Blitz, in Birmingham.

I just didn't feel like there would be a lot of opportunities for me in Birmingham.

I had a fantastic time at Birmingham and I never regret anything that happened there.

I love Birmingham, Michigan. It's lovely - you know, it's very similar to the Hamptons.

My mother was a leading lady in a local theatre in Birmingham, Alabama, where I grew up.

Baldwin thought Europe was a bore, and Chamberlain thought it was only a greater Birmingham.

One has not great hopes from Birmingham. I always say there is something direful in the sound.

I consider Birmingham a proper football club; the tradition and support base that fits the club.

I love my home state and my hometown. I'm so grateful to Birmingham and Alabama for what it made me.

I went to university in Birmingham in the 1970s just when the curry revolution was starting in Britain.

I played with the Birmingham Black Barons. I was making 500 at 14. That was a lot of money in those days.

We come to Birmingham every January for the 'Britain's Got Talent' auditions and always have a great time.

I like Manchester, Birmingham. I really find this place very nice. Loved Australia. I thought that was awesome.

I feel unbelievably blessed that I have had the opportunity to photograph Malala in her classroom in Birmingham.

I'm a big Birmingham City supporter and seeing the fans dressed as Peaky Blinders is one of my proudest moments.

I remember I played Birmingham and I'd been awake for about a week and I was walking about like a raving lunatic.

Playing at Birmingham helped me grow as a goalkeeper: it made me better all round, being a regular part of a team.

I grew up in an environment in Birmingham that was really multicultural, with black kids, Irish kids, Indian kids.

I was born in Birmingham, and then I moved to Rotterdam when I was about five/six and then came back when I was 14.

I love living in Birmingham, it's just a lovely gentle life, and it's calm. And it's full of Brummies who I find hilarious.

The saddest face I ever saw on Martin Luther King was at the funeral of the four little girls slain in Birmingham, Alabama.

I'm the only member of my family who dared to move away from Birmingham - my brothers and sister are still here, along with my mom.

Working in Birmingham for the first time was the best thing, especially as it was round the corner from my mum's house in Harborne!

I know how much of a uniting game cricket is and as a leader of the Birmingham Phoenix that is something I definitely want to promote.

It is a bit surreal for me because I have been a lifelong Birmingham fan, so to be inducted into the Hall of Fame is a massive honour.

In my third year at medical school in Birmingham, I joined the Air Force as a medical cadet so that I was sponsored to become a doctor.

When I was at university in Birmingham, I used to spend half my grant betting on horse racing. Seven terms out of nine, I made a profit.

With the national team I had to go to Newcastle, Wales, I knew a little about England, but Wolves and Birmingham I did not know anything.

Normally during the week between Christmas and New Year I'm slumped in a chair in Birmingham, eating, farting and spouting total nonsense.

We're a tight-knit city in Birmingham. We have so much around us that brings the people together, no matter who you are or your background.

I can't thank Birmingham and Alabama enough for the love and support. I can't thank everyone enough for their time and love and commitment.

I am a Muslim, yes, but I am also very English. People don't realise how proud I am to be representing my country or being from Birmingham.

I accept House of Fraser cannot have 500,000 square feet in Birmingham. Honestly, you would need an Uber to take you round. It's ridiculous.

The problems of the world are not going to be engaged with and solved in Faversham, they're going to be sorted out in cities like Birmingham.

I think I'll always be homesick. Even though Orlando is amazing and the sun's always out, I'll always miss Birmingham. I don't know what it is.

I remember going to Birmingham City matches as a kid and there were these other kids in Small Heath who had their own odd, partly Scouse accent.

When I started my undergraduate course at Birmingham University, as a Jewish student it was a natural step to join the Union of Jewish Students (UJS).

Nobody black had learned anything from the 'Letter from the Birmingham Jail' or from the 'I Have a Dream' speech. That was a revelation of white people.

I came close to joining Villa early on in my career but nothing happened. I met with them and also with people from Birmingham but nothing materialised.

I hardly had any coaching until I joined Birmingham where I had Dave Watson for five years. He's one of the best and I knew how important that was for me.

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