Wednesday, June 15, 2005

And This One Doubles Up As A USB Flash Memory Drive!

Well, I was in my headmaster's office today for a short meeting which turned into a long meeting thanks to his ongoing habit of quickly converting all such discussions into a forum dedicated to the improvement of the school, and, of course, a small amount of revelling in how much better it's got since he showed up. Anyway, all was well for the first fifteen minutes or so, but then I completely lost the ability to concentrate on what was being discussed. My mind was occupied, you see, by a far more important matter. Specifically, that of why on Earth he has a book on his shelf entitled "Novel Diarrhoea Viruses".

Not for him the old, trodden paths of those staid, traditional diarrhoea viruses. No, he is as some bold frontiersman, casting aside any virus he deems too dull and taking note only of the particularly odd ones. No, I just don't see it.

Of course, in truth I'm not too sure what makes such a virus "novel". Possibly they're pink and spotted, or do somersaults, or play the fiddle. Now that would be a virus worth studying.

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

Crossed Lines

Well, I opened the page for that last post just before replying to an e-mail, and inadvertently typed a small chunk of my reply into Blogger, which was rather silly of me. I feel that I should mention this because if I do this again and don't notice for some reason, it will probably be rather less confusing for you all if you have enough prior knowledge of my foolishness to guess that what you're reading is meant to be an e-mail to my girlfriend and not a blog entry. Let's face it, that could lead to significant befuddlement for all concerned.

I can multitask, honestly. I just can't do anything else while I'm doing it.

Who Gives You Extra?

Not so long ago, I finally decided to get off my arse and apply for a 16-18 bank account, with debit card and so forth for convenience's sake. I then decided that, what with the Internet being so very helpful, I would instead stay on my arse and apply for a 16-18 bank account, because frankly there was no good reason to walk to Morley when I could have a glass of water and a Big Bowl of Fruit and Yoghurt and do it online.

Once I'd worked my merry way through the forms, which were all very simple except for the one on which you had to come up with a security question (a task which I'm certain is actually more difficult than fraudulently accessing someone else's account), I was informed that my application had been accepted and I would now just have to mosey on down to my local branch and provide them with some proof of identity. So, having already got all this to hand, I did.

The more observant among you, and indeed the less observant, will no doubt have noticed that at this point in the proceedings I have had to get on my arse anyway. I should therefore note that in between those last two sentences, a day or so passed. Super.

So, very shortly I had my identity confirmed, my balance transferred and my old account closed, and just had to wait for my card and PIN to arrive. Not long afterwards, I got an envelope from the bank, which I assumed was one of those things, simply because when I registered for online banking I also requested the paper-free banking service, which would get all my statements sent by e-mail. In the envelope was a statement from my old account, containing one withdrawal, my interest, and my balance transfer. So I waited.

After a couple of days, I received a further envelope from the Halifax which, lo and behold, contained my card. I was told to ensure I memorised my PIN and advised on how to change it, which was valuable advice but would have been rather more use in a mailing containing my PIN. So I waited.

A little after this, I got not one, but two envelopes from the bank. The first contained another statement, entirely identical to the last but with the addition of "Account Closed" to the end. The second contained a pleasant letter explaining that they had found me in their records thanks to my previous account and there was no longer any need for me to take my proof of identification in. I was, of course, already aware that there was no longer any need for me to do that because I had already done it. I'd also, by way of the transfer, deposited more than the £10 required to activate my account, so its reminding me of that was also rather unhepul, particularly as they had apparently made a mistake concerning what kind of account I was opening and told me to deposit £50. So I waited.

Today, my PIN arrived. Now, these things used to come in a little paper envelope-within-an-envelope, covered with a mess of numbers so you couldn't read it by holding it up to the light and could tell if it had been tampered with, which was sensible. That's changed somewhat. Now, you get the same classic scrambled mess, but it's covered by a single paper tab, beneath which is a piece of cloudy see-through plastic with your PIN printed through it. You are advised to turn the letter over and put it on a piece of white paper to get your PIN.

This is not necessary.

In fact, you can read your PIN perfectly well without paper. In fact, if you're capable of reading mirrored numbers, which is hardly the most challenging of tasks, you can read it without turning the letter over. In fact, the only thing that this change achieves is to make it so that, once you remove the tab, anyone nearby can not only read your PIN through the conveniently transparent plastic, but, thanks to the fact that it's reversed when viewed from the side with the tab on, can actually do so more easily than you can. Now that's secure.

Since signing up for paper-free banking about a week ago, I have received approximately three times as much paper from my bank as I did in the whole of last year. In fact, their only concession to actually reducing paper was in replacing that tiny scrap of the letter containing my PIN with plastic, that it might be easier for people to steal from me. I should have never strayed from my children's account. At least with that one they sent me birthday cards.

Wednesday, June 08, 2005

Join My Dairy Band

There can be few better impromptu percussion instruments in this world than the foil-topped yoghurt

Trick Photography

Up until now, I thought that my passport photo was relatively sensible. There wasn't really anything all that offensive about it. However, having just got it out so I can go and prove to the bank who I am, I've realised that I really look very short on it. Now, I know some of you might be thinking that you can't really look short on a photograph that takes in only your head and shoulders, but rest assured, you can. (And look how tiny my head seems, it is barely an inch across.)

Whenever I have hold of my passport I am struck by the sudden desire to leave the country. Is that odd? I suspect that it may be. I guess I just like to use things. That or I'm supposed to be fleeing the authorities and I just forgot.

You Could Have Someone's Eye Out With That

I have just peeled the pointiest banana in the world. Lord above. I opened this page in the hope that something to mention would come to me, as I generally do when I haven't updated in a while, because I promised not so long ago that I'd try not to let this thing stagnate too much (this, of course, explains the quality of many of my posts). It's almost as though the banana knew what was going through my head and remoulded itself just for my sake.

My. I'm looking at it, and it's not getting any less pointy (I considered "blunter" there, but I think this way's for the best.) It really does look quite lethal. You could knock it through a particularly soft vampire if you wanted rid of him. I'm half-tempted to attempt to impale other foods on it and make some kind of extremely fruity kebab. I really am quite startled.

For a little while, I considered photographing this frankly amazing banana and posting it for your delectation. Then I saw sense, so I'm eating it instead.

Sunday, June 05, 2005

It's A Sort Of Red Sort Of Colour

My never-ending research into trivia has just revealed to me that the theme tune to Mr Bean, as sung by a very serious-sounding church choir, translates into English as "Behold the man who is a bean."

As if that wasn't good enough, the closing theme translates as "Farewell, man who is a bean."

Against this wonderous background, somehow the fact that the advert breaks allowed us to hear a very serious-sounding church choir singing "End of part one" in Latin manages to be disappointing.

Monday, May 30, 2005

And The Prophet Spake: "A Ding Ding Ding"

I think this is a religion we can all get behind.

Is Your One Brain Better Than His None?

"Sport is an abomination. It's a total waste of time, effort and money." Those were the words - well, actually, they might not have been quite the exact ones, I can't quite remember, but I'm writing it as a quote anyway because it's much, much easier - of a gentleman named Chris Thingy. Well, actually, his surname isn't "Thingy", though I'm sure like anyone else he would love it to be. And I'm not positive he's called Chris. But anyway, there's this bloke who's probably called Chris, and he has a surname of some description - well, I assume he does, but let's not get picky - and he said something to the effect of "Sport is an abomination. It's a total waste of time, effort and money."

Right. Now. The point. The Chris in question - if he is indeed a Chris - is the International Mastermind Champion. Because of that, he's also one of the Eggheads on the popular - well, it might not be popular - quiz show called, er, Eggheads. For those of you not familiar with the show, this essentially means that he's on it every weekday, answering questions in an attempt to foil the contestants. This man appears on an early-evening quiz show five days a week! It takes a certain arrogant bloody-mindedness to spend that much time sitting in a box answering trivia questions and still have the nerve to say that sport - just, you know, in general - is an abomination and a waste of time, energy and money.

Although come to think of it, CJ could probably manage it too.

Wednesday, May 25, 2005

Human Nature

If people had time machines they would be used primarily to go back to their childhood and watch children's television programmes.

And Now For The Next Installation Of Our Mini-Serial, Dead Ringer

With a Krypton Factor immeasurable with our rudimentary number system, it's the BBC.

Well, that's if this actually gets off the ground. But let's hope so. Then we can get back to the golden times of rubbish observation-round acting, hilariously squiggly flight approaches, and people who break their ankles at the start of the assault course and not only finish anyway but don't even come last.

(I was enormously disappointed when that woman didn't win her heat, or semi-final, or whatever it was.)

Tuesday, May 24, 2005

Some Condemned Men Don't Fall For That One

This week, the Scouts were knotting. Knotting's a good, wholesome activity for a Scout troop. The older ones can teach the younger ones and everyone comes away having gained something from the experience. Trouble is, when you're dealing with the Scout troop who can endanger lives washing up, what they tend to come away with is rope burns, a tinge of blue in the extremities from the cutting-off of circulation, and at least one choking-based near death experience.

I reckon that as long as I still have the patience to step in and prevent them from killing themselves, I'm doing as well as can be expected.

Smoke-Filled Rooms

For a little while now, I've been on the campsite management sub-committee for Bradley Wood, a delightful little campsite in Brighouse that, if you're reading this, you probably know a little of that's chock-full of groovy things and nice people (we also have a great many bluebells.) I can't say with any degree of precision how long I've been on this committee because I never really agreed to be on it, but I wouldn't want to mislead you with such information anyway, as committee meetings have no regard for the usual laws of time. Anyway, I was rather hoping to get away from this meeting in good time so I could get to bed in preparation for an exam today, but that wasn't to be. I don't intend to bore you with the details - not even those of the particularly fascinating discussion of the various applications of JCBs that took place shortly after we'd decided unanimously that it was too late in the year to start digging things up with one - but I feel I ought to mention one particularly signinficant episode by way of a warning to anyone else who might get dragged onto one of these things over the course of their lives.

Last night, the Bradley Wood Campsite Management Sub-Committee spent fully ten minutes, if not more, discussing, analysing and generally mulling over a proposal that we continue to do things precisely as we always have. Quite what would have happened if we had rejected this particular proposal I'm not sure, but I like to imagine that it would have left us free to actually get something done down there without all this vein-bulgingly dull mucking about with committees.

Friday, May 20, 2005

Join The Debate


Thank goodness The Times hasn't dumbed down since moving to its new tabloid layout.

('Pologies for the rubbish blurry photo, I am exceptionally lazy sometimes, and besides, it gets the message across.)

Thursday, May 19, 2005

Born To Be Wild

I am planning on spending almost all of this weekend writing essays in preparation for my English exams. Mostly for the literature one, simply because I have a bigger pile of practice questions. It's looking like a long, hard slog of making many a point and explaining many a quote and doing a fair deal of thinking, over and over and over again. My question to you is this: quite how sad is it that I am actually quite looking forward to it?

Speaking Of Omelettes

Gosh.

Interactive Television

Apparently ITV's Celebrity Wrestling, which goes up against Doctor Who every Saturday night, is being pulled due to a lack of viewers (the result, of course, of it clearly being utter rubbish and yet still trying to compete with Doctor Who). I'm mentioning this here really only because it feels good to be able to. With luck, nobody will watch Celebrity Love Island either.

Come to think of it, I suspect that Celebrity Love Island may be the result of the same process as Domino's Pizza's new Cheese Steak Pizza - that is, making a big list of words and sticking three pins in it. If that is the case, I think the lists really should be combined. Then perhaps we could tuck into a nice Celebrity Spice Waffle while watching Hidden Omelette Beach. Now that's what I call civilisation.

Wednesday, May 18, 2005

A Troubling Development

The world, it seems, has stopped turning. The illusion of day and night is now maintained only by Clever Trickery. This may cause problems.

(See, now, if you were Doctor Who you wouldn't need me to let you know about this.)

Monday, May 16, 2005

Grounds For Complaint

Though I am rather more fond of tea, I thoroughly enjoy the odd cup of coffee, and to be honest it always rather frustrates me to see the stuff lauded solely for its caffiene content. Now, I know that attitude is by no means universal, and that even so it really shouldn't bother me, but I suspect that if you did a quick Family Fortunes-esque survey on "A Reason For Drinking Coffee", the answers "To wake you up in the morning" and "To keep you up at night" would come out somewhat higher than "Because it really tastes rather lovely and goes beautifully with a good chunk of parkin", and that seems a bit of a shame. Possibly I should blame largely rubbish-tasting instant coffee. Or possibly, and this is more likely, I should not concern myself with it.

I'm not really sure where I'm going with this, and frankly I'm rather shaky on the value of where I've been already, so I'm going to stop now. Though I should really plug CaféDirect's fancy Peruvian stuff, because it's really really tasty, fairly traded, and has a very nice picture of Machu Picchu on the front. Though I should mention that their instructions for making coffee require you to put your feet up, so if that's a problem you might want to look elsewhere. We wouldn't want you to strain yourself.

The Ancient Dilemma

On the one hand, my hair really, really needs cutting, on the grounds that is looks ridiculous and will only look more ridiculous as time goes on. On the other, I have just discovered how satisfying it is to comb one's hair with a fork, and I rather suspect shorter hair might ruin this effect.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

The Least Reassuring Page On The Internet

Don't you feel better for knowing?

A Very Seedy Gentleman

It has come to my attention that there is no better snack for extended periods of not-terribly-exciting work than the little bags of pumpkin and sunflower seeds (or, as it says on the bag "Delicious Pumpkin & Sunflower Seeds") they sell at Boots. I suspect they may also be ideal for films, journeys and long, boring speeches. So thank you, Boots, and thank you, More Than One Country.

Wednesday, May 11, 2005

Some Rats Don't Fall For That One

There's a lot of fine stuff in the Scout Law. A Scout is to be trusted, for example. That's a good all-round rule to live by. A Scout has courage in all difficulties - it never hurts, does it? Nonetheless, I feel that there's one crucial point that's missing, and that ought to be tagged on the end as soon as is possible. Something along the lines of "A Scout has something other than lukewarm porridge between the ears." Now, brace yourself, you may have to read the following sentence twice.

Last night, one of my Scouts tried to wash the dishes with rat poison.

Now, just put yourself in his shoes. You're stood in a building which has had a rat problem. You are washing up, a task for which you have all the relevant equipment, some of it in a clearly labelled bottle. In a drawer, in the unit through which the rats had been scrambling, you find two trays of tiny, mysterious blueish-green pellets. These trays have the word "Rentokil" set into the side. By what possible feat of reasoning do you conclude that it would be a good idea to add them to the bowl?

Last night, one of my Scouts tried to wash the dishes with rat poison.

(Told you you might have to read it twice.)

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

Pull It Back And Watch It Go (Forever)

The pressure is building. Time is running out. The heat is on. Whatever cliché I choose to use, the fact remains that if I don't get updating this thing soon, I may very shortly be on the receiving end of a menacing look. I know. I was terrified, too.

There's only one problem: after a big gap, it's hard to know where to start. I could just summarise all the stuff that's happened recently that I've failed entirely to mention, but then I have to decide what to put in and what not to and remember things and all sorts. Alternatively, I could just talk about some big stuff in a bit more detail and let the rest be, but I've never written about anything significant here before and I'm damned if I'm going to start now.

So, instead, I'm going to tell a story from a long time ago. Now, the chances are that if you're reading this you've heard this story anyway, not because I tell it to many people but because I'm reasonably confident I know my rather paltry readership, particularly my even paltrier post-gap readership. Anyway, here we go.

When I was little (I don't know how little) I had a little pull-back Postman Pat van. It was tremendous fun, pulling that little thing back and watching it speed back to deliver letters to the good people of Greendale. Or at least, the good people of the kitchen floor, which was the only surface I could easily get to that it would run on. I loved that little thing. But one day, something terrible happened: I was playing quietly with my little van and, thanks to a moment of uncontrolled driving madness, it trundled away into the dreaded darkness Underneath The Fridge. I was distraught, as I'm sure you can imagine. Over the years, the wound healed, but I never forgot that toy. It sat in the back of my mind, telling me to be patient, assuring me that it would return one day. And then, finally, the promised day came. Our fridge packed in and had to be replaced. That, of course, meant taking the old one out, and that meant that I could get my beloved Postman Pat pull-back van back! Oh, what a happy day it should have been.

But it wasn't.

You see, somehow, in that unforgiving realm twixt fridge and floor, that van had disappeared without a trace. Vapourized by aliens. Stolen by pixies. I don't know what happened to it. I just know it's gone, and it's not coming back.

Wednesday, April 27, 2005

Churchill, Laurel, Taylor

It gives me great pleasure to announce that I am now a fully qualified member of the People Who Can Tie Bow Ties Properly Club. It is a club that is not currently considered cool among the general public, but I like to think my membership will fix that.

While obtaining my bow tie, I also saw an extremely drunk idiot buying expensive shoes and explaining to the exceptionally polite and patient Middle-Eastern shop assistant precisely why he intends to vote BNP. It pleases me that it's at least possible that, in his inebriated state, he didn't realise quite how much he was paying for his shoes, and will sober up to discover that he has very classy shoes but a very empty wallet and no memory whatsoever of where his receipt might be. With a bit of luck it will even distract him so much that he'll forget to vote.

Sunday, April 10, 2005

Songs Tony Christie Should Have Performed On ITV's "Queen Mania"

- Bicycle Race (To Amarillo)
- Don't Stop Me Now (I Haven't Yet Reached Amarillo)
- (Can Anybody Find Me) Amarillo
- Now I'm In Amarillo
- Seven Seas Of Amarillo
- (All We Hear Is) KGNC FM
- Headlong (To Amarillo)
- Amarillo (With Montserrat Caballé)
- Amarillo For Everyone
- Las Palabras De Amarillo
- Princes of Amarillo
- Flash

This list certified 100% hilarity free by the Royal Commission for Funny Things.

Sunday, April 03, 2005

Wonderfully Simple Recipe of the Day

"Big Bowl of Fruit And Yoghurt"

For this recipe, you will need:
All your favourite fruit
Your favourite flavour of yoghurt
A big bowl
Chopping apparatus
A spoon


1. Chop all your favourite fruit, discarding any fiddly bits like seeds, stalks, peel and what have you.
2. Put all the bits of fruit in a big bowl and mix them up with a fingers like the chefs do on the telly with this sort of thing.
3. Cover the fruit with your favourite flavour of yoghurt (plain yoghurt can be substituted if it makes you feel clever.) This step may require the use of your spoon.
4. Mix it about until the fruit is all covered in yoghurt.
5. Serve.

It's a bit like a fruit salad, only thicker. And you can get away with less kinds of fruit.

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

The Core Issue

Should you extract the bog-roll's core,
'Twill not be firm as once before,
But lose all substance and, as such,
Give way beneath the slightest touch.
Now weakened thus, it will prevail
'Gainst reinsertion of the frail
And suddenly purposeless pipe
That generally maintains its type.

See, child, in the great plan for all
Each thing has purpose, however small,
And this is why 'tis all but law
That every bog-roll has a core.


(This post made because if people will insist on distracting me when I'm trying to write an essay to the extent that I write poetry about toilet roll, I'm damn well going to show it to the world one way or another.)

Monday, February 28, 2005

And For My Next Trick

My copy of my English Literature text (the one I was researching when I made the Magic Disappearing Notes) has apparently joined that scrap of paper in The Place.

Maybe there's some concerned religious citizen out there who doesn't think the youth of this country ought to be studying Doctor Faustus.

Just Like That

Fifteen minutes ago, I was sitting here making notes from Wikipedia on a little scrap of paper, leaning on a CD case that I rested on my knee. Just after I finished, I dropped the case and the notes. Somewhere between my knee and the ground, the notes completely disappeared. I have been on my hands and needs with a desk lamp scouring the are for those notes. I have looked under things and behind things and I have checked more pieces of paper than I would ever have thought possible without going crazy. I could have made those notes again about seven times by now if I'd wanted to. The fact is, I just need to know where that sodding bit of paper's gone. I refuse to be outwitted by a sliver of mulched tree.

I'll rip this Goddamn room apart if I have to.

Sunday, February 27, 2005

From The Pages Of Which?

"Half of us think Tesco is "too big and powerful" in a survey for Retail Week (although a similar number of people disagree)."

Thursday, February 24, 2005

Trust Your Inner Vision, Don't Let Others Change Your Mind

It hasn't stopped snowing all day.

Finally, February is doing it properly.

Monday, February 21, 2005

You've Gotta Speed It Up...

I'm going to be stereotypically English now and talk about the weather. If you don't like it, you can go philosophise about stuff that actually matters until your brain dribbles out, with my blessing. But until the day comes when I go crazy and add someone else to the members list just for the hell of it, it's banalities for supper. Where was I?

The weather. It's misbehaving. It's been snowing for most of the day, but with no respect for regularity of sense or anything. It's like there's some big slider labelled "Snow" and someone's idly fiddling with it with their free hand. Only it wouldn't be labelled "Snow", and there would probably be four or five, because nothing that's operated by a big slider is ever that easy to use.

For the sake of illustration, here is the weather now and here is the weather about two minutes ago (in AVI format). Those of you who can't be bothered downloading them can get the basics of the situation down by looking at the filenames, but you'll never understand fully (you worthless sloths).

It's trying to drive me mad, you know. And it's working. You can tell because I took a video of the snow and then took a video of the lack of snow, and then tried to present them to the world as evidence that the weather is trying to drive me mad.

Sunday, February 20, 2005

The Best Of Hubble

I'll let the universe speak for itself.

But I will also add a pointless little paragraph here, because the post looked really, really ugly before.

An Important Message

Big Barry is coming, with fifteen.

Spread the word.

Wednesday, February 16, 2005

Don't Believe Their Lies

Blogger doesn't seem to have noticed any of my posts since October. My total posts count remains steadfastly at 53, and my profile's Recent Posts section has nothing from later that the 26th of that month.

It says a lot that my first thought upon noticing this was "Well, I suppose it hasn't missed much."

It's Time To Play The Music

Outside NEXT in Leeds today was the grooviest busker ever.

He was busking with a steel drum.

And he played the theme from The Muppet Show.

I also discovered today that if you sit on a bench listening to a busker for an hour in mid-February, you get very cold.

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

Here Comes The Breakdown Of Society

I can now play Tetris on my mobile phone.

I may never achieve anything worthwhile again.

Thursday, February 10, 2005

Expanding The Scope Of My Knowledge

It pleased me immensely to discover that there was a short lived American sitcom set in an emergency room called E/R, one of the cast of which was George Clooney.

The main character was named "Sheinfeld".

Wednesday, February 09, 2005

Life's Lessons Learned

Today, I made an important discovery. Just because one end of a chili pepper is mild and delicious, with a flavour rather like a normal pepper but more nuanced and interesting, does not mean that the end nearest the stalk will not be a savage mass of pure capsaicin that will set your nose flooding and your hand reaching for every ingestible item to hand that might bring even temporary relief.

But on the other hand, I discovered that eating hot chilies gives you a rather pleasant endorphin rush. Every cloud...

Sunday, February 06, 2005

Never Trust A Man With Poor Lip-Sync

I suspect that the team behind the current TRESemmé hair-care product adverts didn't show their spot to enough focus groups. I refuse to believe that, if they had, none of them would have noticed that, just after The Hair-Care Industry Traitor has told us how much he loves to see women looking good and enjoying themselves, his little monologue and the slogan sort of run together to produce:

"Look at you: professional, affordable..."

I would have loved to put a bit more effort and research into this to give those of you who've missed out on this disturbing little campaign a better picture of it, but as it turns out, Forrest Gump is on. You never had a chance, really.

You Can Be A Big Pig Too

I am declaring the First Annual Lion King Party a success. This is based solely on the fact that my house remains intact, and that it lasted over six hours despite being essentially a joke.

There are two basic philosophies behind the concept of the Lion King Party:

1. Unless you are specifically not invited to the Lion King Party, you are invited to the Lion King Party.
2. A Lion King Party is like a swingers' party, only instead of swapping wives, we watch The Lion King.

This year's Lion King Party was a fancy dress Lion King Party - that is, those attending were expected to wear a fancy dress. Pencilled in for future Lion King Parties are the formal, sit-down dinner Lion King Party and (at Kate's insistence) the wet T-shirt Lion King Party (water provided).

Consider yourself invited.

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

How Not To Make Tea

I made two major errors when making a pot of tea just now. For me, that's a big slip. I pride myself on my teamaking finesse.

My second mistake lay in forgetting to put the tea in in between warming the pot and adding the boiling water. But I like to think that it wouldn't have happened if I hadn't been distracted by my first mistake, which was accidentally overfilling the kettle so that it spurted boiling water out of the spout.

And all over an electrical socket.

Friday, January 21, 2005

Special Introductory Offer

If you live in Beckton, Brighton, Kingston-upon-Thames, West Thurrock, Islington (London), Charing Cross (London), Oxford Street (London), Watford, Bournemouth, Bristol, Cambridge, Swansea, Swindon, Birmingham, Cheshire, Leeds, Leicester, Manchester, Newcastle or Oxford, pop into Borders and pick up a copy of the global issues magazine Bulb and I have it on good authority that at least three people you don't know will love you forever.

Oh, and I guess you may be keeping some people's hard work from having been for nothing, too. Which is always nice.

Monday, January 17, 2005

You Wear A Disguise To Look Like Chicken Guys

I try not to post links because then I would feel like I was doing some almost worthwhile service, but I feel compelled to breach this policy for Subservient Chicken because, although it didn't keep me amused for very long (mainly because unusual things tended to provoke only tenuously related acts rather than just doing nothing, though when it gets it spot on it does so wonderfully), it takes me back to my very early school days and the wonder that was "Podd Can".

At this point, I must apologise to anyone who thought this post might linger for any length of time on chicken-related subjects based on the title, or offer anything vaguely preceptive. It won't. This post is just an excuse for me to bathe in memories of Podd Can (let's face it, I can't talk to people about it), which is much more important. The title only slipped through because Chicken Boo was also brilliant.

Now, if you've followed the link and played around for a little while, you now understand the concept of the Subservient Chicken. Now, replace the living room with a loud green background and the man in the chicken suit with a big red blob (called Podd) with a stupid face that doesn't have the relevant appendages for a chicken suit, and fiddle with the action until it becomes Educational. You now understand the concept of Podd Can.

These are just some of the awesome things about Podd Can:

1. Podd Can is far more interesting than maths lessons.
2. Podd Can prefixed your commands with "Podd Can" even when Podd quite obviously Couldn't.
3. Podd Can jump.
4. Podd Can allowed you to make yourself look clever when you came up with something Podd Can't.
5. Podd Can was easier and more fun than The Crystal Rainforest.
6. Podd Can dance.
7. Podd Can is far more interesting that R.E. lessons.
9. Podd Can count.
10. The internet seems to know surprisingly little about Podd Can when you're convinced it's spelled with only one D.
11. Attempting to convince the internet that it must know something about Podd Can led me to discover that searhing Google for "Pob" will find results including "place of birth" and "post office box".
12. I thought that Podd Can was called Pob Can until just now.
13. Podd Can walk.
14. Podd Can run.
15. Podd Can is far more interesting than English lessons.
16. Podd Can die in a variety of hilarious ways and always comes back.
17. Podd Can was easier and more fun that Around The World In Eighty Days.
18. Podd Can almost certainly do loads of really filthy things that we innocent children never thought to try but amused the developer no end.
19. Podd Can pop.
20. Podd Can was awesome.

How To Make Party Ring Cakes

1. Buy some Party Rings.
2. Remove Party Rings from tray and arrange artfully on side.
3. Leave for a few days.
4. Enjoy.

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Day Of The Crow

A jackal is not a kind of raven-like bird. Jackals are, in fact, really rather thoroughly unbirdlike.

A jackal is any of several doglike mammals of the genus Canis of Africa and southern Asia that are mainly foragers feeding on plants, small animals, and occasionally carrion.

This post is not for your benefit. You see, if I can go for however bloody long it's been utterly convinced that a jackal is, in fact, black, feathered and squawky, there's no way to be sure that I won't wake up in the morning having totally forgotten that I was as wrong as I was certain. With a little luck, if that happens, I'll see this at some point.

The real beauty of the internet is its potential for correcting your startling misconceptions without you having to make a fool of yourself in polite company first.

Sunday, January 09, 2005

All The Time In The World

I got bored a little while ago.

Five Googlewhacks later, it occurred to me that I could have used the time I wasted on them to revise for my upcoming exams.

This leaves me in a state of uncertainty: on the one hand, I suspect Googlwhacking may be tremendous fun because it seems so hard but is so easy, but on the otherhand I feel it may simply be because Googlewhacking fundamentally isn't whatever important task you really should be doing.

In The Interests Of Completeness

f a r c i c a l / a n o n y m i t i e s
i d i o l e c t a l / p e r e m p t o r y
h o o p l a / t a u t o l o g i s t
g a s t r i c / c r u m h o r n s
f o r s o o t h / o c t a n t s

Monday, January 03, 2005

Happy New Year

That really isn't all. But it's certainly all you're getting.

Monday, December 27, 2004

The Family That Plays Together...

Trivial Pursuit used to feature categories like science, art and literature, and history. It used to be a fine, well-respected boardgame, with fancy little pictures on the squares with frequently unclear meanings.

The DVD edition of Trivial Pursuit features as its categories film, TV, music, sports and games, trends and gossip. It was sold to us without counters, without pieces of pie (or scoring wedges, or whatever the hell you know them as), and without a die. And apparently, the people who put together the DVD did not notice that they had put the flag of the USA in it backwards.

I really didn't know how to dress this post up to make it more ridiculous or more entertaining, so I didn't try. I really don't know what's happened to Trivial Pursuit. They don't even have brown as the colour of one of the categories anymore. Brown is no longer cool enough for Trivial Pursuit. Damn it, you do not have to make Trivial Pursuit cool. Trivial Pursuit will never, never be cool. We love it just the same.

Er, not that I take it too seriously.

Saturday, December 25, 2004

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

I Sacrifice Goats To Mr Monopoly

A quick count after our game of Scrabble found eleven words classified as "naughty" (such as burn, cruel and whore) and eleven words classified as nice (such as gift, gran and, er, nice).

I declare this a victory for natural balance. Any more boardgame incidents of such natural grace and I may have to start believing in Karma.

Sunday, December 19, 2004

The World Is Lovely

It's all change here. Inspired by Just Letters, the name has changed. This is in celebration of two things: firstly, my great triumph in finally spelling out "The World Is Lovely" in spite of the people who kept stealing my letters (see left), and secondly, the loveliness of the world.

Wednesday, December 08, 2004

Wednesday, December 01, 2004

The Coffee Irregularity

When it's five to one and you need to be somewhere at half-past, a cup of coffee can easily take a comortable half an hour to drink.

When it's quarter to five and you're waiting to meet someone at five, a cup of coffee can be sunk in about seven minutes.

Coffee, I can only assume, does this on purpose. The question is: how?

Tuesday, November 30, 2004

A Caring Umbrella Of Tolerance

Thinking about it, I do, in actual fact, like a smart arse. I can say, quite safely, that there is at least one smart arse who I like on an individual basis and also that, generally speaking, I quite like it when people behave in a smart-arsed fashion. So remember, next time you say that nobody likes a smart arse, that you are, in fact, wrong.

But don't tell the person you're talking to, because you'll just look stupid.

Sunday, November 28, 2004

NaNoWriMo: It's Only Words

Fifty thousand, two hundred and sixty of them, to be precise. I am a winner. This means I have won.

And I am knackered.

Wednesday, November 24, 2004

NaNoWriMo: Beating The Pain Barrier

I was getting worried. Not very worried, you understand, just a little. I seemed to be slowing down, my time was filling up, I was feeling crap, I just didn't have anything to suggest I could reach fifty thousand words other than my raw determination.

Today, I squeezed over three and a half thousand words out of that determination.

That leaves me with only 7616 words to go. That's only about 1270 per day. Even discounting Saturday, when I'll be at Bradley all day, that's only 1523 per day. That's over one full day ahead of schedule. And there's really no reason I can't do this again tomorrow (though I probably won't, that said). It's looking good. Better than good. My determination has something to feed off now.

Hear me roar.

Sunday, November 14, 2004

The Best Part Is Always The Certificate

I'll be honest, eager though I was to take part in the Young Leaders' training course (it's a Scouting thing, for those of you out of that particular loop), and as much faith as I had in the people who were running it (even if Trev does support Sunderland), I didn't really expect to enjoy it all that much. I was really in it for, well, the training. But thanks to the structure and content, and to the afforementioned people running it, and most certainly to the rest of the damn silly lot on the course, I had a thoroughly good time. I won't go into it because for me to do so would probably bore various items of clothing off you and that could be embarrassing, particularly if you're reading this at a public terminal somewhere, but I feel that if I will insist on having a pretty much totally self-based corner of the Internet to blabber into it the least I can do is to acknowledge the aceness of people and things that make my world a more enjoyable, and a much more envelopey place.

NaNoWriMo: Whoa-oh, Living On A Prayer

This time I really am halfway.

Woo!

Monday, November 08, 2004

NaNoWriMo: Whoa-oh, We're Halfway There

Today, I passed the halfway mark of fifteen thousand words.

Now, I appreciate that, mathematically speaking, fifteen thousand is not half of fifty thousand. That much cannot be easily denied. But I have found that there is great comfort to be taken in referring to fifteen thousand as halfway, and there is nothing that can be done to prevent me from continuing to do so.

So there.

Tuesday, November 02, 2004

NaNoWriMo: My Own Worst Enemy

Today's writing was rather hindered by a migraine that put me out of action for most of the afternoon. Still, after throwing up several times and spending a silly amount of time in bed, I was back on my feet and back on my keyboard and have kept my average daily wordcount over two thousand, well on track to finish. Mark one, migraines nil.

Well, the NaNoWriMo front page tells me that, provided everyone has bothered to update their wordcount and, more to the point, telling the truth, twenty-four million, eight-hundred and thirty-eight thousand, three-hundred and forty-two words have so far been written as part of National Novel Writing Month, solely for their own sake.

That's totally bloody crazy.

Monday, November 01, 2004

NaNoWriMo: Day One

Well, one day and two thousand one hundred and seventy-three words into Moules Frites, I have to say it's going rather better than I expected. Hacking out my quota for the day hasn't eaten up as much of my time as I expected, and I've solved my initial problem of getting stuck and bored with what I was writing by sticking two fingers up to both chronological ordering and writing sections in the order they'll appear. Now I just write the bit I want to write and put it where I think it goes best, and my wordcount is much healthier for it - I took about two and a half hours to reach one thousand and about one extra to reach where I am now.

It's been fun so far...

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

How To Lose Your Mind In Thirty Days

National Novel Writing Month, like eating raw garlic, jumping in really cold swimming pools and fitting as many people as possible in a Mini, is one of those ideas so monumentally silly that it really has to be done for its own sake, and I thank the good people at Blogger for clueing me in to its existence. The theory is simple: in November, anyone bloody crazy enough to think it's a good idea tries to write a novel of at least fifty thousand words. If they succeed, or if they are pathetic enough to cheat (which certainly isn't an achievement in itself - it's pretty much honour-based), they are declared winners and are promptly shipped a generous supply of bragging rights.

Now, "just for the sake of it" may not seem like the best reason to churn out a novel in thirty days, but when weighed against the reasons not to (a list running to approximately zero entries) the sensible course of action is pretty clear. I'm going for it. You should too. The worst that can happen is nothing.

If you want to follow my progress in this undertaking, there's a handy meter on the sidebar that, provided I actually write something and remember to update the bloody thing, will slide slowly towards 100% during November. Whether it will get there remains to be seen.

Friday, October 22, 2004

Objects In The Rear-View Mirror May Appear Better Designed Than They Are

The concept behind the Monitor Rear-View Mirror is a very simple one. It is a small, convex mirror on a hemisphere with a chunk taken out of it so the corner of your monitor can fit in, and comes with two adhesive-backed Velcro pads so that it can be attached and detached from your monitor with all the ease of doing up a three year old's trainers. Now, it's not the most singularly useful product, but when it's sitting up there, it gets the job done. You get a pleasantly wide view of whatever room you happen to be in, and all is right with the world. But there's one small design flaw, and it's one that seems so contrived as to make me think it might just be intentional. Velcro, let's face it, is often pretty poor at holding stuff together under any kind of force. But this product's velcro is of a really quite astoundingly high quality. It's certainly far stronger than it needs to be to hold the slight weight of the mirror to your screen. In fact, it's far stronger than the adhesive on the back of the pads as well, which really makes the whole velcro system seem a little pointless. I can only assume that Team Velcro and Team Glue were engaged in a fierce rivalry and lost sight of the overall goal of the product in their selfish drive to outdo the opposition's feeble attempts at attaching junk to other junk. And that's a sad thing indeed.

Tuesday, October 19, 2004

Order Now And Choose A Second Venereal Disease Absolutely FREE!

I can about see how spammers might be able to hack out a modest living with e-mails advertising "penis growth", but I really can't follow what sort of custom they hope to attract by offering "a penis growth". Answers on a postcard.

In fact, no. No answers on postcards. Or on anything else. I'll live in ignorance on this one.

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

July's Countdown Conundrum

Not so long ago, I stumbled across a mysterious little website that featured nothing but a second-by-second countdown to some mysterious future. Now, I'm pretty sure that the countdown shouldn't have reacheed zero yet, but the site has changed. It now sports the title "password", some quite nice jewellery, and plenty of French.

And there I was thinking it would become less perplexing.

Monday, October 11, 2004

You Know What They Say About Men With Big Feet

Clowns are not scary. You should not be afraid of them. They are people in silly outfits with silly painted faces who do silly things, just like characters in period dramas, or pop stars. If you're afraid of clowns, it's an irrational fear. If you're not afraid of clowns but say you are (and as stupid as that looks written down, I'm pretty confident there are people who do this) then you are, quite simply, a bit of a wanker. Now will everybody please lay off this whole "clowns are scary" business?

Sunday, October 10, 2004

He's Got His Father's Gaping, Bloody Head Wound

Yesterday, during a heated three-hour Cambridge Wow marathon, nature called. Luckily, that's a level of challenge I'm about up to coping with, and I pulled off the whole operation with militiary precision. However, when it came to actually leaving the room, I hit a small snag. You see, it seems that to go through a door you first have to open it, and while this is usually a reasonably simple task it's always best to check that the lump of wood you just pulled on actually moved before you step forwards. Otherwise, you get a door in the face.

I got a door in the face, and a small cut above my eyebrow to prove it. But the scary part came today, when I got home and mentioned the incident to my dad. It seems that he sustained a remarkably similar injury in remarkably similar circumstances, very possibly with a remarkably similar door. If there's one thing I never expected to discover about myself, it's that I have a genetic predisposition to walking into doors.

Sunday, September 26, 2004

Procrastination Never Felt So Worthwhile

Eighty minutes ago, I sat down to do a quick, half-hour English Language assignment which I may yet complete. I can't remember exactly what minor pondering it was that I decided was worth a quick browse of Wikipedia to solve, but I ended up reading about 4'33'', Finnegans Wake and Pig Latin. I'm so glad you can't have hyperlinks is ordinary reference books. I'd never get anything done.

Friday, September 24, 2004

Today's Countdown Conundrum (Really, This Time)

Lambswool?

Lambswool?

That's just ridiculous.

Friday, September 17, 2004

Why Everyone Should Buy A Question Of Scruples

"On a train, you are saving the seat next to you in the hope that the attractive person you see queueing will ask for it. An old lady asks for it first. Do you tell her the seat is taken?"

"It depends... Is she wearing kinky boots?"

Thursday, September 16, 2004

Just For The Sake Of An Update, Really

Since last updating this blog, I have:

- Been to Kent
- Learned two new card games
- Attended the funeral of an entirely fictional person
- Worn a dress
- Been thrown out of a bar for singing too many campfire songs
- Shat myself after a friend collapsed with chest pains
- Inadvertently covered a brand new necker in human faeces
- Hit my (broken) mobile phone with an inflatable mallet into a Dutchman
- Eaten three cloves of raw garlic
- Rubbed one clove of raw garlic into my feet
- Rubbed one clove of raw garlic into someone else's foot
- Concocted three brand new pasta dishes (with the help of the other member of Team Pasta)
- Learned the words to several Meatloaf songs
- Set my (broken) mobile phone in concrete under an upturned jam jar
- Burned my leg on a Defender handbrake
- Got my GCSE results
- Got a new mobile phone

And that's off the top of my head. My excuse is that I've been too busy doing things in places without internet connections to update, but now that things have settled back into the weekly grind I suppose that's not much of an excuse anymore. So here it is. The unawaited and largely trivial Comeback Of Sorts. Do try to enjoy it.

Friday, July 23, 2004

My Jet-Setting Lifestyle

Well, there won't be any updates here for a couple of weeks. There's work to be done on campsites, you see. So, upon my return, perhaps I'll throw up some more about France, but perhaps I won't. Perhaps I'll take a similar format for the events of the next fortnight, but perhaps I won't.

The tension is killing you. I can tell.

Thursday, July 22, 2004

Yesterday's France Story: Proposed Slogans For The French Tourist Board

"France: C'est France!"
"France: Pour Tous Vos Besoins De France."
"France: C'est Plus Grande Que Vous!"
"France: Tenez Dessus Sur Vos Perruques Et Clefs!"
"France: Ce N'est Pas La Fromage Et Le Vin Seulement!"
"France: C'est En France!"
"France: C'est La Plus Grande France Au Monde!"
"France: Ce N'est Pas L'Espagne."
"France: Parce Que Nous Sommes Francais!"

Wednesday, July 21, 2004

Yesterday's France Story: Guttered

The bowling alley in Cherbourg doesn't open until the afternoons. That's fine. We just went and looked round La Cité De La Mer, which was remarkably interesting and features, among other things, 33cm thick Plexiglass fishtanks, a nuclear submarine, and seahorses. Still, we managed to pull ourselves away and headed off to throw heavy things at less heavy things, a pastime as noble as any on Earth.

Once a lane freed up and we'd been handed our shoes, one of the very few downsides to sandals hit me. Bowling shoes aren't very comfortable without socks (or, indeed, with them, but I'm sure you get the point). This is Thing I Blame My Terrible Game On #1. After a brief period of confusion when my dad tried to bowl with a ball one of the people in the next lane had brought with him, we got down to it.

After I'd lost my first three balls down the same gutter, it occurred to me that I was far worse than I remembered. That said, it had been a good few years since I had last bowled, and this is Thing I Blame My Terrible Game On #2. The next ball caught a few pins, and things continued in this vein for a little while.

A few frames later, Mum went for drinks, as is the place of the person not taking part. While she was up, I went from terrible to mediocre, scoring a respectable spare. It became clear to me at this point that she is some kind of bowling jinx, and so she became Thing I Blame My Terrible Game On #3. This was confirmed when she came back and my balls rekindled their brief romance with the right gutter.

This was shaping up to be my worst bowling game ever by quite a distance, so I started glancing about the screens to find someone, anyone, who I wasn't doing worse than and who didn't appear to be half my age and height. There was only one, one faint beacon of hope, and for me, the rest of the game was about beating Anelise, whoever she was.

I failed. A spare in the last frame and I could have done it, but that just wouldn't have been in the style of the game. Overall, I lost eleven balls down the right-hand gutter. Eleven. That's a one followed by another one. That's more than half the balls I bowled. That's absolutely ridiculous.

Monday, July 19, 2004

Today's France Story: Better Than All The Rest

I got back from France last Saturday. Unless something really interesting happens to me, I plan on updating this every day I'm home with something that happened while I was there, because that way I can create the illusion of frequent updates without having to find something interesting to write about.

Now, in France, shortly before the TV packed in, we caught a sublime French game show called Interville. Now, Interville was sort of like It's A Knockout, or Jeux Sans Frontier, only crazier (insofar as that's possible). The British version, Simply The Best, started the day I came home, in fact, so if you live over here you can catch that. But it won't be as good.

Now, whenever the logo came up in Interville, there was an animated bull running around. We weren't sure why. But then the last round came, and the contestants walked into a bullring. "Ah," I said, "That's why the logo's a bull. They're in a bullring!"

Close, but no cigar.

The real reason wasn't that the contestants were in a bullring. The real reason was that the contestants were in a bullring with a live bull, playing a game as silly ever before. And that is why Simply The Best simply isn't: it doesn't have a bull. We never get bulls over here. It's simply not fair.

Thursday, July 08, 2004

Timing Is Everything

I rather suspect that I may have left school too early. You see, there are often Tango or Robinsons vans parked up in our bus bay, there to stock up the vending machines and school-dinner drinks cabinets. Today, however, when I showed my face briefly to hand in some textbooks, there was something a little different. Placed with the minimum possible subtlety in the middle of the bus bay, just next to the "Woodkirk High School" sign, was a Carlsberg lorry (along with a small crowd of people wondering whose damn stupid idea it was to park a Carlsberg lorry in front of a school).

And to think the most we ever got at the end of term was a fun-size packet of Starburst.

Wednesday, July 07, 2004

Shelf, Bracket, Word, Letter, Alphabet

I always thought that it was impossible to actually enjoy the word association game. Indeed, I'm pretty sure I've voiced this opinion to various people, and would now like to apologise to them unreservedly. I have, for the first time in my life, enjoyed playing the word association game, and it was like my own personal Lipton Ice Tea advert.

Speaking of which, why are the new ones so much worse than the old ones?

Wednesday, June 23, 2004

It's Getting Wetter All The Time

There was a part of me that actually believed I would get through my exams without it once pissing it down on the way home. With only two exams left, it was looking good. But this, when all is said and done, is England, and it wasn't to be. And all that after the exam itself was nicely lacking in frustration.

Monday, June 21, 2004

Just What He's Always Wanted, Part Two

It turns out that the Perfect Gifts for Father's Day are expensive. So instead, we went for five films, on DVD, about dangerous marine life. And I like to think that Piranha, Piranhas and the Shark Attack Trilogy will become the foundation of my dad's classic cinema collection. Particularly as Piranhas is apparently a remake of Piranha and, after thorough examination of the blurb, Shark Attack 2 doesn't appear to have any plot at all.

So far, we've only watched Piranha, and I must say I never knew that they made such a similar noise to pigeons. I thoroughly recommend it, though its startling accuracy did make it seem rather more like docuumentary than entertainment at times.

Sunday, June 20, 2004

Something Beginning With "F"

Yesterday I was kicked square in the eye. It hurt.

Sympathy, please.

Wednesday, June 16, 2004

My Graphics GCSE Paper (In Haiku Form)

1. Complete this bar chart,
Put it all in the right place,
Then make it pretty.

2. Write down the substance
That's used in vacuum forming,
And draw how it's done.

3. Draw a box design
And a corporate logo,
Then evaluate.

4. Complete your design,
Then explain about barcodes
And two ways to draw.

5. Redesign the box
So it closes correctly,
The first one was crap.

6. Englarge this image,
Use lots of British standards,
Do NOT use colour.

7. Complete the flow chart,
Say why CAD/CAM's fantastic,
Then say why it's not.

8. Explain these four tools,
Plus forehead thermometers
And materials.

9. Consider the world
And how to keep it going
With good packaging.

Tuesday, June 15, 2004

Biscuit Bigotry

If I told you that Peter Kay has a lot to answer for, you might be forgiven for thinking I was referring to the hordes of people who think that having a good enough memory to quote him makes them witty and amusing, but I just see that as a little variety amongst the people who think the same about Monty Python, or the Simpsons, or any one of a thousand others. No, I am talking about his rampant anti-Rich Tea propaganda. I put it to you that Rich Tea biscuits can be successfully dipped with consummate ease by all but the truly incompetent. So before you randomly take the word of comedians as Gospel, just have a go, and remember: if you can't dunk a Rich Tea, you're doing it wrong.

Saturday, June 12, 2004

Just What He's Always Wanted

So far, the Perfect Gifts For Fathers' Day are the compilation CDs Power Ballads II and Cruise Control. I'm really not confident that there are that many fathers who would consider anything featuring Will Young to be the perfect gift.

I suppose we'll find out on the twentieth.

Friday, June 11, 2004

Today's Shopping List

Cold Meats (Not People)
Oats (To Sustain The People)
A Potato
General Recce For Food
Mince (Not People)
Beer
Veg (Preferably Amusingly Shaped)
Apples (Braeburn) (Plenty)
Biscuits (Digestive, Rich Tea)
Mussels (Alive, Alive-O)
Bacon (From A Pig)
Tamotoes
Ingredients
White, White Wine
Stewing Meat (Not People)
People

And to think Mum thought we'd lose all organisation without a female influence in the house.

Thursday, June 10, 2004

When The Boat Comes In

In my freezer, in front of the out-of-date ASDA own-brand curries and the breaded prawns (which are probably also out of date, but nobody ever considers eating them so they never get checked), there lies four mealsworth of fish and chips.

Just down my road there is a fish and chip shop. In fact, it's an entire fish and chip restaurant.

I rather suspect that there will be some more out-of-date food in that freezer come May 2005.

Mark Allocations Are Shown In Brackets

There are few things that make you feel stupider that spending twenty minutes writing a fantastic answer to an eight-mark question only to discover that it's actually a four-mark question that you somehow misread the allocation for, but one of them is doing it on the English paper's reading section.

I like to think I kicked proverbial anyway.

Wednesday, June 09, 2004

Have You Done Your Special K Ten Thousand Steps?

Earlier today, I went on a long and pointless walk, because it was a nice day and I was bored. I passed many a Public Footpath sign, and mostly they led off down those familiar beaten tracks. But one of them appeared to point at a wall, which puzzled me somewhat. As I got nearer, I found that there was a gap in the stone just wide enough to slip through — but it was disguised by the fact that, on the other side of the wall, there was a second, much higher one, made entirely out of bracken and nettles. I like to imagine it was cultivated intentionally by someone who wanted to keep people off his land despite the public right of way.

So this is a call to arms. Footpath oppression must be stopped, and our tracks must be kept clear and beaten, just for the look of the thing. Band together to form elite mercenary rambling groups and wander about the place making footpaths look like they've been used at least once this millenium. Packed lunches and machetes are a must. We can't have the great British public looking idle.

The Future Is In Their Hands

My father, having filled in his postal ballot forms amid much grumbling, has just turned to me and said "I can't remember who I just voted for."

Which he then followed up with "Actually, I'm not sure I voted in the European one."

And to think people are worried about poor turnout.

From The TV Times Reader Offers Page

Ballerina Slippers: Buy One, Get One FREE!

Tuesday, June 08, 2004

Electronics Repair For Dummies

About five weeks ago, my mobile phone handset stopped working entirely. The good people at Siemens, hearing of my plight (through the Siemens Sales and Repairs Information Line) sent me a pre-paid Jiffy bag so I could send it off to be repaired, and I did so, noting that the information on the outside of the envelope described the job as "Skill Level 0".

Today, my phone came back. Or rather, it didn't. Because apparently, a skill level 0 job involves doing nothing for a month and then sending the customer a new phone. I'm not complaining, you understand — this way I don't have all the little scratches, or the O2 logo — it just seems to be that a fault which the Internet assures me can be solved by having your phone "unlocked" for a couple of quid on the market shouldn't be beyond the grasp on people who fix the things for a living.

Thursday, May 27, 2004

That Won't Get The Pigs In

This was nearly a dull and rambling post, but then I noticed the whole Gmail beta-account thing and got a little caught up. It's a pleasure to use, that thing.

Anyway, as I would have been saying, I just caught the last half-hour of Jimmy's Farm, a TV programme about a bloke (Jimmy) who borrowed something like fifty-five thousand pounds of Jamie Oliver's money in order to set up and run a pig farm. Pigs in woods. It's how the Europeans do it.

Now, I didn't think this programme would be up to much. I expected another standard person-setting-up-own-business deal with the odd cash flow problem and neglect of family. Alas, it seems that I will never know for sure, because I suspect that the BBC pulled Jimmy's Farm at the last minute in order to show footage of a car crash.

They found themselves in need of £15 000 to get running water. They paid three times as much as they budgetted for caravans which then got stuck in the road. They set fire to two fields and closed the motorway. They broke a big fence-post whacker on wheels. And then, like the shock death at the end of an episode of 24, came Blaze, the Least Horny Pig In The World.

The pigs Jimmy bought are a very rare breed, so it was rather important for them to reproduce successfully. Quite a burden, you would think, on the boar's shoulders. But Blaze didn't seem to mind. He was really rather content in his little sty, even when the errant Jimmy was prodding him with increasinly larger implements in the hope that he would at least twitch.

This, I understand, was not an entertaining post. But that's not the point. The point was to whet your appetite. I can only hope that I have succeeded in that, and that next Wednesday those of you who can will tune in to the further adventures of Jimmy and Blaze, the Least Horny Pig in the World.

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

Those Who Can't

How is it possible for a professional repair centre to spend a fortnight on a job they themselves designated as "Skill Level 0"? How is it possible for an established company to manufacture a video recorder that, nine times out of ten, cannot record and, when told to rewind, actually fast-forwards for a few monents and then turn itself off? What gross degree of uselessness could cause Sky to install a sattelite dish in such a way that it allows rainwater to run down the cable and into the back of the decoder box, and then replace it later with a second dish that cuts out when the first cloud appears? How can a group of thirteen-year-old Scouts take an hour to take down a tent and twice as long to cook a simple fried breakfast? How can an experienced physics teacher manage to lose a piece of coursework and not notice until the day before it has to be sent for moderation? And how, in God's name, can I somehow contrive to soak myself thoroughly every single time I attempt to rinse out my toothbrush?

More Content Than Here

The Humpday Times is a "brand new, free, independent e-newspaper" published every week as a round-up of the most important, interesting and/or amusing (are there any words for funny beginning with I?) stories of the previous seven days, not to mention a healthy collection of links ranging from the useful to the diverting to the thoroughly, sublimely bizarre. So, get a subscription or just check back every week or so and you'll never have to appear distressingly ignorant in front of your friends again. And remember, you very probably heard it here first (unless you quite obviously didn't).

Thursday, April 22, 2004

Happy Birthday To Me

Only one day after the Queen's. And Nicholas Lyndhurst's.

All the best birthdays are in April.

Sunday, March 14, 2004

Let's Get Vaguely Serious

Why is it that, every single time there's a major, publicised tragedy, people seem to decide that it is their moral duty to start a "commemorative" chain e-mail/instant message, or put an X in front of a screen-name? The latter is, I suppose, not so bad, but doesn't it seem more than a little pointless? Does it not suggest that the "wearer" of the X is trying mainly to demonstrate that they're a caring, wonderful person without ever having to do anything for another human being? Perhaps I'm just missing something screamingly obvious, but I can't think what on Earth it would be.

The chain messages, however, really do grate. Sending a pre-written sentence to everyone you know does not, in my mind, constitute a good way to mark s tragic event. Particularly as they often contain a statement to the effect of "If you don't pass this on, you obviously don't care." How anyone can receive a message like that and not immediately want to punch the sender in the face I really cannot understand. It's like someone shaking you vigourously without warning and demanding that you do the same to everyone you know, and then branding you a heartless, hate-filled fiend when you refuse.

Now, I realise that this sort of thing's significance pales in comparison to the tragedies that they respond to, but this is something that the average person can do something about. Beyond not planting bombs and not murdering people, there's not a lot you, personally, can do in your everyday life to sort the world out, and you don't need to compensate for that with little crosses or irritating messages or by vigourously shaking people in the street. So please, spare people a lot of pointless annoyance and stop. And just in case I should ever die in some pointless and tragic way, and become the focus of media attention for it, I implore each and every one of you to do all you can to ensure that nobody starts anything like this for me. However I leave this world, I don't want to be remembered as a bloody chain letter, and I very much doubt that anyone else does.

Friday, March 12, 2004

You Want To Go Where People Know That Sitcoms Are All The Same

I'd become pleasantly used to watching an old episode of Frasier on the Paramount Comedy channel at six on an afternoon. It was a nice routine. But then, suddenly, they changed the schedule, and now I'm pretty sure they show one of their worthless, dire programmes instead. So, for a little while, my routine was totally thrown out. But then I discovered that Paramount Comedy 2 (which is deserving of praise solely for the promotional trailers they ran for it) shows Cheers in the same slot, not to mention the slot directly before it. I welcomed this change with open arms, because I haven't seen nearly as many episodes of Cheers, and also because it seemed like a natural progression, or at least a natural regression.

Anyway, a couple of episodes ago was the one with Sam's "surprise" bachelor party, and as I watched it occurred to me that I have never, ever seen a surprise party on a television programme that the recipient didn't find out about in advance or inadvertantly trigger by assuming someone's secretive behaviour was because they were organizing one. This seemed a little odd to me, but then I realised that that may well be how it works in real life. I have only ever been to one thing that remotely resembled a surprise party, and I wasn't paying nearly enough attention to know if the surpise was real or not. So if anyone can remember a surprise party that came as a surprise, please let me know. It would set my mind at rest.

And if you can think of one from a TV programme, that's even better.