Search This Blog

Thursday, December 21, 2006

Old dictators don't die..

..the gold on their statues just tarnishes



I'm heartbroken. Turkmenistan's president, Saparmurat Niyazov, who I blogged about here, has died.



Music and beard lovers are said to be "rejoicing". No, not really. Or at least not in public.





powered by performancing firefox

Wednesday, December 20, 2006

Ah, the good old Lib Dems know how to keep the public amused...

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Stereotypes-a-go-go

You'll never guess what - according to someone who vaguely knew him, as just shown on Channel 4 News, the guy arrested today for the Suffolk murders "kept himself to himself".

And the chap already arrested, as reported in The Guardian, was a quiet fellow too:

"He was an ordinary tenant," said Stuart Kantor, the estate manager. "He never held parties, he was never noisy. We are all amazed that anyone like that could be arrested."


Meanwhile, on the victims of crime/early deaths side of things, West Yorkshire's acting chief constable said of PC Sharon Beshenivsky, "People talked about her lively, bubbly personality".

Why, the caretaker/fairground owner/etc would have gotten away with it if it wasn't for you pesky kids...

Monday, December 18, 2006

Not Waving But Drowning
Stevie Smith

Nobody heard him, the dead man,
But still he lay moaning:
I was much further out than you thought
And not waving but drowning.

Poor chap, he always loved larking
And now he's dead
It must have been too cold for him his heart gave way,
They said.

Oh, no no no, it was too cold always
(Still the dead one lay moaning)
I was much too far out all my life
And not waving but drowning.

message to self

Tuesday, December 05, 2006

No Christmas Cheer This Year

As the more observant and long-standing reader may have worked out, unlike last year, I'm not doing a Christmas links countdown this time.
There are several reasons for this -
  • I can't be arsed
  • I probably exhausted the topic last time
  • I'm decidedly less than full of the festive spirit
  • I really, really can't be arsed
Last year, Little Miss Grumpy here managed to ruin the big day for the family, so I'm keeping more detached from it this time round. I might make some food if I'm feeling ambitious, but that's about it (I just acquired my Mum's old cooker and bid a thankful farewell to The Oven From Hell - a hideous beast with a dodgy thermostat which burnt everything that entered it - so I'm enjoying the novelty of having a contraption which actually works properly)

It's going to be a cash-strapped Christmas too (sounds like a C&W song...). I shall be indulging in some gift recycling I reckon, and if I'm very clever, I'll even manage to avoid giving someone back some of the useless crap they gave me the previous year...

On a poor at Christmas theme, the thing which has amazed me the most about the whole Farepak to-do is the amount of money people throw at one day of the year. Maybe I'm just a Scrooge (okay, no maybe about it), but it's all a bit of a waste. And just as I was wondering what sort of idiot trusts a private company with no financial protection scheme in place with all their dosh, it turns out my thick-as-pigshit sister got stung. Well whaddaya know...

Sunday, November 26, 2006

and another thing...

...the words "Pringles" and "Gourmet" do not belong together

Oh for fuck's sake...

The X Factor.

The MacDonald Brothers.

Committing a massacre so horrendous that The Proclaimers were temporarily transported to a parallel world in which they are dead just so they could turn in their graves.

Jesus fucking wept.

STOP IT!

STOP IT NOW!!

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

A Warning

To anyone who has been prescribed Effexor (venlafaxine) by their doctor - if you haven't yet started on this drug, please talk to your doctor and see if there is an alternative you can take instead. I've been completely off it for a whole three days now, with a week-long withdrawal period beforehand, and trust me, the process of quitting it makes you question any good it may have done in the first place.

Worst.Withdrawal.Ever.

I'd say more, but frankly my brain is too damned addled to manage at the minute - as is often the case, Google is your friend.

This had better get better soon, or I'm going on a killing spree. Well, I would if I could leave the house...

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

That's what happens when you interrupt the washed-up comedian...

Cue slap bass...

Monday, November 13, 2006



Anthem for Doomed Youth
Wilfred Owen

What passing-bells for these who die as cattle?
Only the monstrous anger of the guns.
Only the stuttering rifles' rapid rattle
Can patter out their hasty orisons.
No mockeries for them; no prayers nor bells,
Nor any voice of mourning save the choirs, --
The shrill, demented choirs of wailing shells;
And bugles calling for them from sad shires.

What candles may be held to speed them all?
Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyes
Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes.
The pallor of girls' brows shall be their pall;
Their flowers the tenderness of patient minds,
And each slow dusk a drawing-down of blinds.


Genealogy is a funny thing: it likes to mess with your preconceptions and cast new light on things you thought you knew. Who do you think you are indeed.
My great-grandmother was a lady called Rebecca Hunter Little. She married a fellow named Charles McDade in 1901. They had a family, and on the outbreak of what was to become the Great War, Charles enlisted. He died in the aftermath of the Battle of Loos, on 10th November 1915. In January 1919, Rebecca remarried, to a miner named Henry McKenna (though he was dead by the end of 1920) and they had a son named Samuel - my grandfather.

So if it hadn't been for the utterly pointless waste of millions of young men's lives and the near-ruination of a continent, I would never have been born. Not much of a silver lining really...



Notes:
The image above is from the film All Quiet On The Wetsern Front, adapted from the book by Erich Maria Remarque.

A radio adaptation of the play Not About Heroes, which documents the relationship between Wilfred Owen and Siegfried Sassoon can be heard for the remainder of this week at the BBC 7 listen again page (not sure whether or not this service works outside the UK)

Friday, November 03, 2006

Adrienne Shelly 1966-2006



Sad, sad news...


*Update*
She was murdered...
A teenage Ecuadorean construction worker has admitted killing Adrienne Shelly, an actor who made her mark in films by Hal Hartley, in an angry exchange over noisy building renovations. Shelly, 40, who made her last appearance alongside Matt Dillon in last year's Factotum, was found dead last week in the Manhattan apartment that she used as an office.

Diego Pillco, 19, confessed under questioning that he fought with Shelly, tied a sheet around her neck, dragged her to the bathroom and hung her from the shower rod.


Tuesday, October 31, 2006

Beautifully Put

A review of the smug annoying presence that is Ray from the X Factor, courtesy of Talent in a Previous Life:
"This week is my week", he proclaimed smugly, as he slurred and mumbled his way through Ain't That a Kick in the Head with all the charm and grace of a tramp whose head kick has arrived thanks mainly to downing half a crate of babycham. Perhaps the problem was that he couldn't connect well enough with the song, maybe not understanding fully what a kick in the head would actually feel like. We urge anyone who passes him in the street to help him out by demonstrating to him exactly what it feels like. Feel free to do it as many times as you like if you don't feel he's quite got it yet.


There's no arguing with that really, is there?

Wednesday, October 25, 2006

Those wacky Russians..

Feeling down? Planning to end it all? Well stop right there, for the marvellous scientists of Siberia have the answer to your problems - all you need is a good whipping

"The absence of the will to live is caused with decreasing production of endorphins - the substance, which is known as the hormone of happiness. If a depressed individual receives a physical punishment, whipping that is, it will stir up endorphin receptors, activate the “production of happiness” and eventually remove depressive feelings."


Or, you know, you could go for a walk, that should get the endorphins going too...
More US Politics for ya
Wacky Adventures in Depression Part One

Saturday, October 21, 2006

Sunday, October 15, 2006

I WILL become my mother...

OKCupid! The Would You Be A Great Avon Rep Test


Wahoo!!

You scored 79% greatness!

You rock, would be a great rep, and would probably have a blast doing it. There's no sense in selling something if you don't have fun, but I think you'd have great fun! Congrats on your greatness! :)





My test tracked 1 variable How you compared to other people your age and gender:
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 33% on greatness




Link: The Would You Be A Great Avon Rep Test written by kittybaby on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the The Dating Persona Test



Well, that's handy, I apparently have the ability to follow in my mother's footsteps and flog toiletries to unsuspecting suburban housewives...
My maternal unit was an Avon Lady (I suspect they're less gender-specific these days) in the early 1980s, and my youthful make-up experiments were carried out utilising tiny lipstick samples and horrendous cream blusher sticks*.
Come to think of it, mother dearest still had some of her old samples kicking about in her bathroom last time I looked, together with her "hotel room toiletries of the world" collection, and stuff I left behind 6 years ago - the saying "it might come in handy" has a positively religious status with her.
There was also an Avon song at that time, which was issued on a red flexi-disk. Unfortunately I can't remember the words or tune, and it went mysteriously missing some years ago. Boo hiss.



*I also had some of the delightful Toyah make-up range, which retailed through the What Everyone Wants chain, and mainly seemed to feature the colour purple. No, not the book. I often wondered if Ms Wilcox actually had anything to do with it, or whether it was all a dreadful con. It's A Mystery indeed...

Thursday, October 12, 2006

A snippet from the radio

The Scottish National Party are in the middle of their national conference at Perth Concert Hall. It sounds like a exciting event - according to a news report on Radio Scotland, one of the delegates accompanied a speech with a "thrilling Powerpoint presentation". Well I never...

Wednesday, October 11, 2006

Super Soaraway Pun


They may be evil (The Sun, that is - Kim Jong-Il is, of course, just Ronery), but they do have a way with a headline...

Thursday, October 05, 2006

once more with feeling

How I suffer for you, dear readers. There I was last night, happily typing away, putting together words, links and pretty pictures to make up a new post when, several hours into the procedure, the blimmin' computer throws a tantrum, and my browser crashed. And I can't even blame Bill Gates, what with it being Firefox and all. I'm semi-convinced the PC can tell when I'm writing something that I've neglected to save, and does it all just to spite me. But never mind, what follows is a cobbled together version of what that post would have been....

The scenario is thus: despite being financially embarrassed I spent a whole ten pounds on some DVDs from a local Bargain Books store. The fabulous three for a tenner offer still left a lot of decision-making to do, as the selection included the following titles.

The Giant Gila Monster

A horrific tale of a giant lizard-like creature terrorising a small town. Cutting edge special effects really bring home the terror of the tale, as this review shows:

This is accomplished by showing the person, then the normal sized lizard on a scale model table, then the person screaming, and finally a clawed foot descending on the camera.

Also available was the same director's The Killer Shrews
, the titular monsters played by dogs dressed up in carpet cut-offs, and the Roger Corman produced Attack of the Giant Leeches.

Mr Wong in Chinatown

Leaving the monsters behind, a fine selection of detective movies also put in an appearance. There were a few of Boris Karloff's Mr Wong films (yes of course a British actor can play a Chinese-American character, it's 1939! Some make-up here, some tape there - what do you mean it's racist... If it's any consolation, by the end of the series our hero was being played by Keye Luke, perhaps best known to you as Charlie Chan's number one son. Or perhaps not, your mileage may vary)

Naturally, Sherlock Holmes, in the form of the marvellous Basil Rathbone, was available, both in single DVDs and in a box-set, and a Warren-Beatty-and-Madonna-less Dick Tracy was quite tempting...


Gorilla Nabonga

But who needs a detective when you've got a gorilla? And not just any gorilla, but one played by Ray "Crash" Corrigan, fondly remembered, by me at least, for the serial Undersea Kingdom? It gets even better - the star is Larry "Buster" Crabbe, famous for playing Tarzan, Flash Gordon, AND Buck Rogers! Exciting, no? But having said that, the film itself appears to be the standard jungle romp, and once you've seen one action hero wrestle with a toy lion, you've seen them all really...





The Ape Man


No, if a gorilla movie is to pass muster, it needs another important feature too - the mad scientist. If possible the deranged anti-hero should be played by a down-on-his-luck legend of Hollywood horror like, say, Bela Lugosi. By 1943, the silver screen's first Dracula (if you don't count Max Schreck in Nosferatu, that is) was reduced to parodying his earlier successes in low-budget features for the likes of Monogram Studios. Worse was still to come for Lugosi, but as this review at 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting puts it:
The Ape Man is too forthright about its "ah, who cares - it's only a horror movie" attitude to elicit the same species of awed wonder from an audience as Bride of the Monster or Glen or Glenda, but in its mercenary way, it is no less crappy than either of those films, and no fan of Bela Lugosi at his most debased should miss it.


The Ape


Unlikely as it sounds, The Ape Man wasn't the best gorilla film on offer. It wasn't even the best mad scientist with a gorilla movie. And even more specific, it was trumped on the "mad scientist starts killing people to get access to human spinal fluid, utilising a gorilla to do so" stakes. Now what were the chances? The Ape appeared three years before The Ape Man, and stars Boris Karloff. Even in his lowliest features, Karloff always somehow brought a quiet dignity to his parts, so that alone would have elevated this film over the competition in my eyes. And as an extra bonus, the gorilla is once again portrayed by Ray Corrigan


The Secret Agent



This one was pretty much a no-brainer. 1. It's Hitchcock 2. I didn't already have it, and, indeed, haven't even seen it. 3.It's Hitch does spies! See also The 39 Steps for why this is a Good Thing 4. Peter Lorre is in it. Possibly my very favourite screen villain (undoubtedly my favourite portrayer of a German child-killer), Lorre is never anything less than mesmerising on screen.





Keystone Comedies



A selection of short films from Mack Sennett's studio, starring two of the premier comedic talents of the teens, Roscoe Arbuckle and Mabel Normand. I still haven't seen any of Mabel's films, so this should help get me on track a little more. As is often the way these days, we know more about the lives of the silent stars than we (in most cases) have the opportunity to view their work. Arbuckle is perhaps served the worst of all by this - nowadays his name is mainly remembered in relation to a trumped up charge of which he was wholly innocent, but thanks to the likes of a certain Mr Anger, gossip and rumour has more life than do the facts.


Woo! Extras!



Stop the presses, I bought some more. My sources told me to check out a secret chamber deep within a local DVD rental store, whereupon untold treasure would thrill and delight me... or something like that, anyway. So, for the bargain sum of £1.99, I am now the proud owner of a 3-film disc with Roger Corman's A Bucket of Blood (described here as "a crazy comedic beatnik slasher flick" - sold to the lady in the hat!), Vincent Price and his moustache hamming it up in House on Haunted Hill, and Mr Karloff once more in the long-thought-lost The Ghoul.

Ooh, spooky....

Monday, October 02, 2006

Can you tell what it is yet?

On TV at the minute:

Back and to the left...

Back and to the left...

Back and to the left...

Friday, September 29, 2006

Fear The Groke


Jarvis Cocker wants to know your nominations for top scary music. My suggestion? Why, The Moomins, of course. And now one can buy the DVD at long last, how delightful...

Thursday, September 21, 2006

I'm going, honest...

But first, I simply must share this masterpiece



I know it's by schoolkids, and it's a bit cruel to mock and all...

But!

Look! The evil turrists made the eagle cry!!!!!!!!11111

Bad girl, naughty girl...

I'm sure I can't be the only one who, upon seeing a headline Top Gear presenter seriously hurt in crash crossed their fingers and thought "let it be Clarkson"?

Anyway, off to bed I go, having spent a large portion of the day in the Kingdom of Loathing. Eight new zones! And Porktober 8th! All on one day! It's all just too too exciting...

Monday, September 18, 2006

Smother me in Vicks and pour me a Benylin

As you may or may not have worked out from the post title, I'm nae weel. I have a cold. Or the flu. Or a raging fever which is almost certainly leading to my imminent death, depending on the level of hypochondria present at any given moment.

The one good thing about my tragic affliction is that I've now gotten around to finishing a couple of books I've been "reading" (i.e. started, got distracted, in danger of forgetting what had gone before - a short attention span is a terrible thing) for a while: Peter Ackroyd's Hawksmoor and Jon Ronson's The Men Who Stare At Goats. Possibly my favourite bit in the latter goes as follows:

I'm not sure at what stage during the day we spent together Guy decided that I wasn't an Islamic terrorist. Perhaps it was when I discovered that his daughter danced with Richard Gere in the movie Chicago and I screeched, 'Catherine Zeta-Jones was brilliant in it!'
Even a deep-cover al-Qaeda terrorist wouldn't think to go that fey.


A less-than good side-effect of the sniffles is that my sleep patterns are now totally awry. I was already heading for a direct day-for-night swap in any case, so I'm not sure what I'll end up with now. But never mind, as long as I actually get some sleep, the hour at which it chooses to bless me is not that important.

I usually drift off to sleep with the radio on - which reminds me, I've got a rant overdue regarding a certain hokey American fellow who befouls Saturdays on BBC7 - and I hope that Sunday evening on Radio 4 had some feature or other relating to Eastern Europe, itchy wool, beds, and/or tin baths. Though come to think of it, I've had the tin bath section of that dream before.

It's a real thriller: I'm shopping with my parents, and I spot some cheap tin baths. The cheapest of the lot is shaped like a shell, higher at one side than the other, but when I try it out for size, it has so many awkward contours that it's pretty much impossible to use. The other bath to catch my attention is a lovely blue colour, and has a semi-hooded top, kind of like an old fashioned pram shape. Unfortunately, this design is peculiarly short, meaning that you have to sit with knees bent, all the while risking bumping your head on the hood. Fascinating, no?

And just in case anyone is wondering (well, you never know), the shopping trip then extended to a series of beds made by assorted Eastern European firms, all of which were extremely uncomfortable. Espscially the ones made with rough Bulgarian wool. One of these days I'll have a dream where something exciting actually happens...

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

The Thick Of It

Here at heavens to betsie, we're not afraid to tackle the big issues, risking controversy and opprobrium in search of the major stories. And today is no different, for this is one of the most contentious subjects in the world today -




Yes, that's right, it's the thorny matter of sliced bread thickness.

I may as well begin by stating that I personally favour a substantial slice, a preference which has only been intensified by, on recent shopping trips, facing near-empty shelves with only the dreaded so-called "medium" sliced loaves remaining.

The main problems with this dubious product seem to me to be as follows:

1. When preparing a sandwich, anything more than the lightest of touches with the spread and/or filling of your choice results in the bread ripping apart. As the whole point of the average sandwich is to contain other ingredients within the outer bread layer, this is clearly a fatal flaw. Medium sliced bread just isn't sturdy enough to cope.

2. Toast, that perennial breakfast favourite and student/cheapskate staple food, is at it's best when the crunchy outer layer contrasts with the soft fluffy texture of the bread's interior. With medium slices, this effect is minimised, leaving a tougher, less satisfying snack. Not only that, but the damn stuff takes less time to toast, what with there being less of it and all, so unless you're a cleverclogs genius who remembers to turn down the setting, you'll end up with too-brown toast. Hard, burnt bread. Yum.

3. Toastie making can become a health hazard, as, when making any variety involving cheese (and as all right-thinking people know, you can never have enough cheese), the flimsy medium slice has the bizarre habit of leaking cheese not just at the edges, but right through the bread itself. Third degree burns are definitely Not a Good Thing.

And yet, people buy the darned stuff - according to this site, three of the top five selling brands in the UK are medium sliced. So have I got it all wrong? Is bread meant to fall apart when you try to use it for anything? Am I just a nutcase with bizarre taste? Even more than normal, that is?

Answers on a (suitably sturdy) postcard please...

Monday, August 28, 2006

How to...

Mmm, salmony, beetrooty goodness...



Monkeying Around

I'd be recommending this Spiegel article on title alone - The Two Apes within Us: Hippy Sex Fiends and Brutal Machiavellians - but it turns out it's actually interesting too. In fact, I'd go so far as to say it's chimptastic (yeah, yeah, I'll just go shoot myself now...)

Friday, August 11, 2006

Don't be so mean to poor Aisleyne



So, Big Brother. If you want to know what I think about the whole former housemates coming back twist, just go and read this post from Grace Dent's Big Brother blog. In fact, read the whole thing from Day One onwards, she's amazingly spot-on about most things BB-related. Her only bad point is that she shares a first name with the water-throwing hypocritical bully in the House Next Door.

The Big Brother producers like every series to have a cast of stereotypical characters for us to variously love and loathe: there's the Funny Camp Man (Brian, Marco, Richard); the Person On A "Journey" (Nadia, to acceptance, Glyn, to adulthood); the Thick But Lovable Blonde (Helen, Jade, Nikki); and of course, the Villain (Nick, Stuart, Victor and Jason, Makosi). It is this latter role that has been assigned to Aisleyne. Highlights show edits, the prejudices of the various spin-off show hosts, and the barbed, self-serving comments of former housemates have all demonstrated this. The Digital Spy forum has descended into its usual name-calling state of war on the subject, and I'm not braving the txtspk of the Channel 4 forums to check, but I'm guess there's a whole heap of bile to be found therein.

Unfortunately for them all, the target just isn't evil enough for the label given to her. As far as I can tell, Aisleyne's main crimes seem to be that she looks a bit rough first thing in the morning, that she has had different moods throughout her time in the house, and she expresses her opinions, which she is capable of changing. These last two apparently make her "fake" and "two-faced". Or, as most rational people would call it, having a multi-faceted personality, doubting your own decisions, and showing some vague degree of depth. How awful of her, she must be publicly humiliated a la Makosi last year! Oh, and I almost forgot, some people dislike her choice of underwear. Clearly a case for a lynch mob then...

As for the show presenters, I've been of the opinion that Davina McCall is a liablility since at least BB4 (the Federico interview springs to mind). Gurning for the camera and asking such cutting-edge questions of the evictees as "where did you buy your boots", bizarrely feting some dull-as-ditchwater housemates while displaying open hostility towards others - these are Davina's trademarks, and by golly, do they make for an irritating show. Give the main show to a clearly bored and disillusioned Dermot O'Leary, and send McCall off to do more marvellous hair dye adverts (watermelon red, that's her favourite). And as for Russell Brand, Big Brother's Big Mouth isn't so much about the Endemol encampment as an excuse for his increasingly tired routines. For thsoe who haven't seen the show, here's a condensed version -
such-as-such's opinions are so whatever - pulled down my trousers and pants - cut off guest mid sentence - quick spin - ballbags - sit on someone's knee - little Paul Scholes - bwye luvoo luvoo - nice to condescend the audience, 'citing - the swines!
But never mind, there's not long to go now, and hopefully the Fickle British Public will realise that Aisleyne is a nice person and a damn good BB contestant, Davina will have an extended career break after her latest pregnancy, and Mr Brand will work out some new schtick for next year.

Friday, August 04, 2006

The End Is Nigh?

Is it National Take The Grandkids To The Park Day, or are there just a large number of pensioner IVF couples and/or kidnapping geriatric paedophiles round my way?

On the subject of old folks, I had a birthday on Sunday, and my age is starting to catch up with me. Not so very long ago, I was being accused of looking 19 (and I was only 18 at the time as well, boom tish), but I think it's safe to say those days are past. Nasty little lines are starting to appear around my eyes, and years of retail fake-smiling have resulted in creases around the mouth (not on a Billie Piper scale, but then I don't have hamster cheeks and a gob the size of a small country either...). I think I'd better hunt out the moisturiser again.

So I'm doomed, but what about humanity? That's what Stephen Hawking wanted to know, and he's given his own solution now too: in summary, "er, I don't know, let's all go to space!". Yep, that's a good idea, if you make one planet uninhabitable, just bugger off to another one. Naughty humans, if you don't stop polluting, there'll be no pudding for you! Personally I rather liked the solution a listener to BBC Five Live's Drive show yesterday came up with - the way to save humankind is via a Blue Peter Appeal (and perhaps sticky-backed plastic could be utilised to patch the ozone layer together).

Saturday, July 29, 2006

to dope or not to dope

Back in a previous life, when watching it on British TV didn't involve rabid insomnia and a satellite dish, I used to follow the Tour de France. Which means that the mixed fortunes of Floyd Landis are no huge surprise (well, would you go through that most gruelling of physical challenges without some kind of chemical support?)
Maybe the organisers could take a hint from the 1988 race when the winner faced a similar problem.
Or perhaps they should just bite the bullet and let the cyclists use whatever they want - after all there have been enough fatalities, health scares and unusually young deaths over the years for the current crop of riders to know the possible risks they face. The debate goes on...

Friday, July 28, 2006

Making "Oi'd do everyting to you" look like a work of genius...








Oh dear oh dear oh dear...

And what exactly are these "12-10s" that Aisleyne has anyway?

*STOP THE PRESSES*
Apparently Spoiral was merely admiring Aisleyne's fancy slide rule thingummy. So now we know...

Thursday, July 27, 2006

A rhetorical question

Would conducting a Rorschach inkblot test using menstrual blood tell you more than the results ever possibly could?

According to Tickle, this is me:

Your subconscious mind is driven most by Reserve


You approach the world with reserve because unconsciously, and perhaps consciously, you like to be in control. You keep your emotions to yourself and you may seem mysterious or enigmatic to others.

You're often very cautious about truly expressing yourself. Even people who have known you for some time may find it hard to get close to you.

Your psyche is very deep and rich; the more you learn about it, the more you will understand who you really are.

I'd tell you if it was accurate or not, but that wouldn't be very enigmatic, would it?

Monday, July 17, 2006

Baha'i
You scored 25 Angst, 30 Weirdness, and 37 Freedom!

As religious sects go, the Baha'i are very benign. They believe that all of the main prophets of the major world religions were sent by the same God, and that their prophet, Baha'u'llah, was only the most recent. Members of this faith promote racial harmony, ecumenicalism, and world peace. Their desire for harmony means that they abhore debate, however, and questioning doctrine is generally frowned upon.


http://www.bahai.org/




My test tracked 3 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 26% on Angst
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 33% on Weirdness
free online datingfree online dating
You scored higher than 8% on Freedom
Link: The Which Cult Should You Join? Test written by MyPoMoLife on OkCupid Free Online Dating, home of the 32-Type Dating Test

Thursday, July 13, 2006

Grrrrrrr

Perhaps I'm mistaken, but I consider the following behaviour to be Bad Form:

When at the supermarket checkout, leaning on the belt thingy behind your own shopping, thus preventing the next person from unloading their stuff;

Once your goods have been rung up, standing examining the receipt then realising that you were too damn stupid to pick up the right buy one get one free offer, requiring an assistant to run around and do your shopping for you properly and holding up the queue;

Waiting until all this time has passed to fumble around counting out all your loose change.

Some of us were in a hurry, you feckin eejit....

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

You know what?

I should get up early more often, it seems to agree with me.

Although, technically speaking, I didn't get up, I'm still up. Near as...

Monday, July 03, 2006

Desperately Seeking...

Are you an England footlball fan?
Were you at the game against Portugal?
Are you the owner of the flag positioned near the corner, proudly emblazoned with the words MINGE and TWAT?
If so, any chance of a photo of said item?
It certainly livened up the game, that's for sure...

Tuesday, June 27, 2006

Not waving but...

I appear to have fallen off the planet somewhat of late - 2/10, must try harder...

Normal service will be resumed shortly, but in the meantime, here's a picture of the world's most ugly shoes. Just because.


Thursday, June 15, 2006

Scotland's World Cup Hero

So there's some football tournament going on in Germany, Ing-ger-land are there, and they're obsessed with someone called Rue Knee (or something like that). But we don't care about that up here in Scotland, because we're there too!



This young gent is Jason Scotland, St Johnstone striker and Trinidad and Tobago squad member, and he's the latest cult hero north of the border. Because, right, his surname is Scotland, so it's as if the country is at the World Cup, geddit?!?!?!?!?!? Yes, I know, but when your national team is as dismal as ours, straw-clutching is as good as it gets.

It's all rather amusing though. He's currently starring in an advertising campaign for Scotland's other national drink, Irn Bru, and has even been immortalised in song by the Trinidad and Tobago Tartan Army (you can hear it via the Scottish Quest "How Scottish Are You" Quiz). The fact that T&T are lining up against England today doesn't hurt of course, what with the traditional teams supported by many being Scotland, and whoever England are playing (it's all the meeja's fault, honestly, the overkill can be downright unbearable).

Right, back to the football, after all there's important England team talk and English-based player discussion to listen to while watching Costa Rica play Ecuador...

Tuesday, May 30, 2006

Big Brother's Big Dreams, part 1 - Mikey

Waaaaay back in the distant past (or Big Brother 5 as it's also known), I had a little site - currently lurking here - with the imagined dreams of the reality TV contestants.
Because I'm easily amused that way.
Turns out I really couldn't be arsed last year (well, it was a bit dull really), but this lot are starting to give me ideas. No, not that kind, behave yourself.
Although, having said that, I'm going to start with the least interesting of them. Just to get him out of the way....

Mikey's Dream

















I look like Vernon Kay











The End


(well come on, if there's nothing registering when he's awake....)

Monday, May 29, 2006

Holi-holi-holocaust

I left the blue and white stripy jacket at home, and only on the way out did it occur to me to construct a star from the tour group stickers. I even resisted the temptation to do an "amusing" frying-on-the-electrified-fence photo op. I'm dead respectful, me. Sort of.

What better way to spend a sunny day in Poland than on a day trip to Auschwitz and Birkenau? That seems to be the prevailing theme amongst visitors. Bar the groups of bored schoolchildren, the obviously more emotional veterans, and the busloads of elderly Germans (checking out the Fuhrer's handiwork? Belatedly atoning for their sins? Who knows...), many tourists give the impression of Auschwitz being just another sight to tick off the list - been there, done that. And thus, in the group we visited with, the "lad's holiday" bunch posing beside a Halt sign, and the distracted women discussing kitchen makeovers while walking along the Birkenau railway unloading platform. Thankfully the clearly uncomfortable guide cut short the round of applause (for her) beside the remains of one of the crematoria...

But then, these buildings alone don't tell the full story of the industrial slaughter which took place here. Even standing inside the gas chamber in Auschwitz, passing by the furnaces used to burn the corpses, the experience can seem unreal. The structures at Auschwitz and the partially-destroyed ruins at Birkenau left by the retreating Nazis before the camp's liberation in January 1945 give us an insight into the technicalities of the Holocaust - evidence for the existence of gas chambers, the presence of the deadly gas Cyclon B, the railway infrastructure used for the transportation of the victims, the cramped and unsanitary living conditions of those forced into labour, the tiny punishment cells political prisoners and Soviet P.O.W.s were subjected to.

It is the exhibition rooms which really hit home: displays packed with the hair shorn from women prisoners; piles of twisted glasses taken from those who longer needed their sight; prosthetic limbs, shoes and brushes; baby clothes, serving bowls and Jewish prayer shawls; cases marked with the names and addresses of those who were made victims of genocide. If it was possible to plunder something from the victims to return to the Fatherland, then it was done - the Jews were not people, just commodities to be stripped and destroyed.

In many ways, this part of the visit reminded me to an earlier trip to Oradour-sur-Glane, a French village outside Orleans which was destroyed by the Nazis in 1944, and which still stands today as it did then as a memorial to those who lost their lives. It's the small details which remind us of the humanity of those who perished: these were not just numbers tattooed on skin, but individuals with possessions, with homes, with personalities, hopes and dreams which were snuffed out.

And that we should Never Forget.











Pigtail
Tadeusz Rózewicz (trans. Adam Czerniawski)



When all the women in the transport
had their heads shaved
four workmen with brooms made of birch twigs
swept up
and gathered up the hair

Behind clean glass
the stiff hair lies
of those suffocated in gas chambers
there are pins and side combs
in this hair

The hair is not shot through with light
is not parted by the breeze
is not touched by any hand
or rain or lips

In huge chests
clouds of dry hair
of those suffocated
and a faded plait
a pigtail with a ribbon
pulled at school
by naughty boys.

The Museum, Auschwitz 1948



Big Brother Is Watching You...



There's no escape from Big Brother. Not even in a Polish salt mine.

On the left here we have Princess Kinga, the Hungarian wife of King Boleslaw V the Bashful. According to legend, before their marriage, she threw her ring into a salt mine in her native land. When, upon her instructions, prospective mining began in Wieliczka, the first salt rock extracted miraculously contained said ring.

Her proclivities as regards wine bottles are, unfortunately, not recorded...

Monday, May 22, 2006

The Art of the Polish Poster

Wieslaw Walkuski


We may not have made it as far as an actual gallery on the Krakow trip, but there was a slight cultural diversion - a visit to the poster shop Galeria Plakatu. Previous to visiting, I was unaware of the wonderful world of Polish poster art, but thankfully that has now changed. They take their posters seriously in Poland - no dull, run of the mill film or theatre advertising will suffice when there are a group of highly talented, highly individualistic artists around to give a personal reflection and twist on the enterprise. And in keeping with Polish history of the past century, much of the art is somewhat unsettling - faces rip open to reveal a hidden identity within, objects and people morph and change, and things are never quite what they seem. And then there are the clowns. The creepy, freaky clowns (like there's any other type). Clowns which aren't happy to restrict themselves to circus posters, but sneak into other designs just to catch you out.

Andrzej Pagowski


Wiktor Sadowski


Jerzy Flisak


Stasys Eidrigevicius


Wiktor Gorka


This is just a representative sample of the talented bunch at work, for more examples, there are a range of online stores to investigate:
Polish Posters Shop
Polish-Poster.com
Polish Poster Gallery
The Art of Poster
Contemporary Posters