 How's Lenny McLean? Lenny McLean was cool. I was in prison with him when he'd done the murder. He was in my first documentary. I've been on a few boxing shows with him. Yeah, it's cool. They're all really cool. What happened was the Premier Division naughty men, the Freddie Formans, the Ronnie Reggie Charlie Cray, the Ronnie Biggsies, they all knew that I was better at doing in front of camera than they were because they've had their old life going on but now they're actually expected to go, sell ourself. Dave is the best one for that. So they wrapped me up in cotton wool and sent me out to try and sell them. You know, get their book deals, get their film deal, get all that because they weren't used to it. Not that I was the biggest gangster. I was the best at that bit. Networking. Networking. If Lenny McLean's your mate, why do you want to have a fight? Get Lenny McLean to do it. He's the best at that. So, and the rest of the world didn't know that. The rest of the world thought I was out clambering for get a load of me. The gangsters were loving me for it. Who's the toughest man you've ever been surrounded with? It's all different people, I'm afraid, in different situations. The best nightclub dormant fighter I've ever seen was Lenny McLean. You know, you're born for certain things. Usain Bolt born and run, Muhammad Ali born and box. Lenny McLean was born to stand in doorways and fight groups of men. Because he made it famous when dormant got famous, individuals, because there was every Saturday you had football violence. One Saturday, two Saturdays a month, London got 20,000 Liverpool supporters for Saturday night playing Arsenal, 20,000 Man United supporters playing Tottenham, 20,000 Leeds supporters playing Chelsea, 20,000 Newcastle supporters, all down in London for the night. So the little dormant in the London West end had 100,000 Norveners to compete with one night. So there were fights. There were no radios, no trouble accident number five. You actually went, help me! And dormant had the sleeves ripped off their jeep skins and looked like dormant. And 30 blokes of standing at the bar all with a chiver having a bit of Charlie and the government went from out. You had jobs then, that it was different kind of dormant and he loved it, loved pain, loved the taste of blood, went to work with a broken collarbone, a broken nose and a tooth knocked out, his arm in a sling on a Friday and went to work on a Saturday and still no one would fight a gun.