She admitted she will miss the role "so much".
"I said 'why not?' and she said 'because nothing good ever happens to us'.""It's the kind of ecstasy and joy that you can't believe exists," he said.
Reynolds added "we live in a digital hate tank" and he believed in the power of sports, music and films to bring people together."We really experience togetherness, where the same thing, the same moment at the same time brings us together even tighter - and I love that about this," he said.Reynolds also said he has struggled to learn the Welsh language.
"I find it very hard. Like French-Canadian was hard enough," he said, in contrast to co-owner Rob McElhenney who is "really studious" when it comes to learning languages.Reynolds added after buying the club when they were in the National League – the fifth tier of English football – people had laughed when he and McElhenney said their goal was to reach the Premier League.
"Now we're standing on the precipice of that very dream in this little town," he said.
Reynolds also said he had not known there was a town in Wales called Welshpool when he created a character with that name for the Deadpool film franchise.will track to the south of the UK later this week, bringing heavy rains and strong winds to northern France.
Why does the weather so often ruin Bank Holiday weekends? A question for another day maybe.Not that the rain and wind stopped life carrying on in Bristol, with plenty to enjoy indoors such as the Tina Turner musical at the Hippodrome and tasty treats at bakeries in the city.
City kept up their play-off push and the Park Run competitors kept on going too.Simply the Best: The Tina Turner Musical is on at the Hippodrome until 26 April, telling the story of the multiple Grammy-winning star from her humble Tennessee beginnings to global fame.