05:46When I first lived with him, we used to go out late at night, go for a little walk, or go for a run, and now, two years later, he's lost.
05:54But you had to put up with a bit of his hangriness, didn't you, when he was...
05:58Yeah, yeah, he missed me on, and now he misses a run, and he wants to run, but he did incredibly well.
06:04I think it was a real privilege for me to be there and watch him become the man he is now.
06:10You know, he went from this lad to... and then he's... I couldn't keep... I started running with you, and we were running together, and now I can't keep up with him.
06:17Amazing was that, though, to just become a runner if you've never really...
06:22For me, I think I was quite lucky with the timing, like the timing of lockdown.
06:26Lockdown, yeah.
06:27Yeah, it was the first time in my life, really, where I didn't have a job or any responsibilities.
06:32So I kind of sat down, and I was like, alright, what's important to me?
06:35And I realised that Coulson is important to me, so I kind of took a little bit of ownership, and one of the things I found,
06:41because there was nothing else to do, was running, and I just kind of literally ran with it, and now I love it.
06:47Yeah, literally, now it's all I want to do, anyway.
06:51Jack, you've been in Corrie for over 20 years, I hear that you might try and beat William Roaches.