Tuesday, February 05, 2013

Five (5) Things: Tuesday February 5th

I needed a magazine the other day. They were out of Horse and Hound and  Harvard Business Review*, so I bought one with Oprah Winfrey ** on the front and read an article in which a lady said that it was a good idea to write down 5 'moments' you have had that day before you go to bed.

I can't remember why this was a good idea - something to do with understanding that life is made up of good days (e.g. finding a Rolo down the back of the sofa) and bad days (you realise you are going to die one day and haven't decided on CofE service inc. Lord's Prayer, Morning Has Broken and Once In Royal David's City even if it isn't Christmas OR wicker box that you put on the BBQ then bury with the cabbages), but that normally you just keep on going and things are OK.

I don't know what a 'moment' is, exactly ('moment' gone into the same pot - labelled Words That Don't Mean The Same Thing Anymore - as 'connected' and 'meaningful'), but I thought I might try it for a while and see what happens.

OK here we go. First things that come into my head. Day 1. 
  1. Had a bit of old salmon that was a bit dried up on the edge in my scrambled eggs. Spent quite a long time thinking that the egg would rehydrate the salmon then got a bit of salmon stuck in the tooth that needs a new crown, which led me to think about the ambitious 'endodentiste' and his spats.  
  2. Had to lie on bed with legs in the air to get on boots.  Took them off and wore something else instead.
  3. Went to sales conference where "Edge of Glory" was the theme tune and people with headsets made shampoo salesmen clap.
  4. Sat in a car with a heated seat and was accused of being in love with a marketing director and going HA HA HA HA HA at all his jokes really loudly like I loved him.
  5. Ate a blueberry yoghurt with a long spoon.

*  In truth, I only subscribe to one of these publications.

** I do not know what has happened to Oprah Winfrey since her TV station broke, but she must be quite poor if she has to lend her voice to this fuck-awful piece of advertising.  It is the sort of shit that a) gives advertising a bad name; b) makes anyone with ill-informed prejudices about American sentimental nationalism think they may in fact have a point.  

Sunday, February 03, 2013

2013


Things I hope will end this year: 

  1. People 'curating' things. Curators curate. You there with your antlers and your jars, you are just collecting stuff and arranging it. Desist.
  2. All this chitchat about 3D printing. Either we are all going to be printing out new puppies by 2015, or everyone will have forgotten about it (see "QI codes").  On the other hand I do confess to finding it strange and terrifying in a way I can't quite articulate. 
  3. The end of posters or cards or whatnot in letterpress saying inspirational things, e.g. WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU DID SOMETHING FOR THE FIRST TIME?, or SNATCH AT THE TRUTH BEFORE IT KISSES YOU ON THE BUM-BUM*
  4. Wedding photographs with balloons in.
  5. Kimchee.
  6. Food as hipster hobby (see Brooklyn Flea Food Fair).
  7. That Laughing Cow TV ad (view it at your peril). The laaafing cow. The laaaaaffffing COW.
Things I hope will continue this year: 
  1. Making quilts. I do that now. All the time. If anyone is interested I will write more about it. All the time buying cutting sewing cutting sewing cutting sewing. Strange, like bolt from blue. Quilty bolt from blue. Perhaps that's what happens when you are 43, like what happens to your eyes when you are 42. (80% of people see a decline in vision at 42; 25% of women take up quilting at 43).  NB: I went to the sort of school where Home Economics was replaced by Ancient Greek (which left us woefully under-equipped for real life, but very well equipped for pub quizzes), so the fact I can even turn the sewing machine on is a miracle.
  2. Enjoying the job I have now. It is 2 minutes from home (this is not to be underestimated; it is life-changing shizzle) and all the people are super. It is not full of people in tight jeans and mysteriously ugly spectacles & grown-ups are in charge. And if my computer breaks I call someone in New York.
  3. Game of Thrones, Borgen 3, Fresh Meat.
  4. Looking at the cat licking her bum.
  5. BB cream. I use the Garnier one. It's really good and it's not expensive.
  6. Seattle. I visited it for the first time this year. I really liked it. Nice people, sprawly and interesting. Approved.
  7. Putting things in Pinterest, which I like a lot. Here are Vital Informations, here are Items of Simian Interest. So much faster than writing about it, and so much more interesting for you, adoring reader and/or fan. (If indeed you are even there anymore, for it is likely that you have stopped reading blogs so much because everyone is Curating and Tweeting and Pinning and watching BBC iPlayer instead of reading blogs these days.)


*only one of these is real


Thursday, September 20, 2012

A warm greeting to the reader from Oshawa

I have admired your enthusiastic reading of my web-blog over the last couple of days, and hope you are enjoying it.

You may have noticed that I was much funnier before I moved to Canada. (No connection.)

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Sun's out, not much going on

What ho everyone. What is new? Not much is new with me, except I can't remember how to write a web-blog anymore. That is because I am 'Instagramming' pictures of graffiti, cats and babies, and looking out of the window a lot.

"Stop being so bloody lazy and write your blog", said my friend Charly. It was her birthday on the 9th of September and I can't think of a good present to give her that doesn't involve yachts or private Zumba lessons with Bruce Forsyth, so this post will be a sort-of birthday present until I see something good that I think she would like. (NB she gave me a brass chip fork on a chain and that is hard to beat, so finding the good thing may take time.)

Anyhoo, here's what's going on.

Doing a bit of work

I am doing a part-time freelance thing that is extremely interesting, and I am a) learning a lot and b) working with people I like. It is pretty good and if I can keep this up I may do it forever.  The main benefit is not having to be in an office all day. Other benefits include:

- not having to do conference calls;
- not having to worry about anyone's 'performance review';
- not having to pretend you like people who you wish dead;
- etc, with the "etc" being all the things I have written about before.


Signing up for courses

WTF etc.  I have signed up for 2.

1. Intensive One-Day Course In Interactive Marketing And Advertising;
2. How to Sew.

I am looking forward to the second one more, but the first one will allow me to nod more sagely when people are talking about for e.g. internet pricing models.  This is the problem with being old and working in the marketing: you have to keep on top of all the channels otherwise the young people (who couldn't write a strategy, build a fee proposal, talk a hyperventilating client off a cliff, spell or make a TV ad if you paid them) will be clicking their fingers in your face and calling you 'Daddy-O' when you happen to comment that getting 12 'likes' on a Facebook page is not going to contribute much to an objective of for e.g. increasing unprompted awareness by 12% or increasing value sales by 23%.

Watching TV

I really like TV. Here are my favourites:

The Great British Bake-off.  If Mary Berry ever said "Oh you CLEVER girl" to me I would cry for 12 days.  I want to touch Paul Hollywood with my pastry brush and I'm not going to wear surgical gloves when I do it.

The Real Housewives of New York.  I will not hear a word against this programme. It is terrible and glorious all at the same time. Anyone who watches it will agree with me when I say Carole Radziwill is fantastic and LuAnn de Lesseps is a massive pikey with a man's head who is not French (as she claims); her mother was French-Canadian. It is not the same thing (not better or worse, just not the same thing).

The Real Housewives of Vancouver. Anyone who thinks all Canadians are nice just needs to watch this programme for 2 seconds. They are terrible people (apart from the one with the weird accent who likes boys).

Downton Abbey. I haven't watched the new series yet but I know it will be good. Won't it?

The Thick of It. I mean really:



Also, wasn't 2012 good.

Going to the Gym

Not doing super-well on this front yet, i.e. twice a week, but better than before, i.e. not at all for two years. I have a 'personal trainer' who I think will be better than the hapless Anuja. The reason I like her is that one year ago she weighed as much as me (i.e. far too much) but had surgery to get thinner and makes no bones about it. I am not going to have surgery but I am going to do her devil programme 3 times a week and we will see if I can lose 20lbs by Christmas.

Making jam

A lot of jam.  This is about 1/10th of what we got out of the plum and apple trees:




































Enjoying this excellent coffee pot cosy, designed by Hazel of Amsterdam: 




































Going to Toronto, which even the dogs wish they could escape from: 



































Finding Isaac "Figgy" Newton in the garden



































And using the wood burning oven we (and 15 friends) built in the garden. That's a whole other post, but here it is before the roof went on:



































And now, to the gym, where I will sweat like a killer and do unladylike situps.

Pip pip !

NWM

Monday, August 13, 2012

I am going to England (and the Netherlands)

"I will go after the Olympics is over.  It is bound to be terrible. Everyone will be depressed because we will lose everything, the busses will be broken and breakfast in even the most rubbish places will be over 50 British Pounds".

As it turns out, only the last was true, and I was wrong.  It has been brilliant from where I am looking (in Canada) and from what I can gather from all friends in London (which is where I am from and was born), it has been fantastic and not that much bother in terms of cycle lanes and Belgians clogging up the tube.

In fact I have watched the Olympics from Montreal and cried my face off for nearly two weeks. Crying episodes included:

1. All of the opening ceremony, non-stop welling OH THIS IS SO LIKE US I DO NOT CARE WHAT THE REST OF THE WORLD THINKS I AM SO HOMESICK give me the wine"

2. Anyone trying not to cry at their national anthem (all countries)

3. Anyone crying at their national anthem (all countries)

4. The first notes of the National Anthem (ours)

5. Roger Federer letting Andy Murray win

I did not cry in the closing ceremony, but I do think that Danny Boyle should have done a BOGOF.

Anyway, I am going to London tonight.  Here is why:

1. To see some headhunters and see if I am unemployable (should we decide to move back to the yewkay);

2. To see some headhunters who, although they are in London, are in charge of International and therefore may be able to tell me if I am unemployable (if we stay in Montreal);

3. To see the finest hairdresser in the universe - a man who is also a stand-up comedian and is doing fewer and fewer haircuts as his comedy writing gets more and more famous;

4. To see a man in Harrow-on-the-Hill about my ankles;

5. Most importantly, to see people and have a nice time.

I will go from London to Hastings and back, and to Amsterdam and back, and then I will go back to Montreal after two and one half weeks.  In the meantime, please continue to send in your questions and I will answer them (with enthusiasm) when I am back.

Pip "Blighty!!!" Pip

NWM

p.s. this is how I feel when I think about going to England

Tuesday, August 07, 2012

I begin to answer reader questions

Good news, loyal readers and fans! My inevitable return to some kind of money-making enterprise will be delayed a little longer, for  following yesterday's excellent post, I now have a new (albeit unpaid) occupation: answering your questions with the help of Spons' Household Manual (1897) and/or Every Woman's Enquire Within (1938). 

Here goes: 

Is there a remedy for insomnia?, writes Jane. 

There is a lot of advice in Spon, but it boils down to a point of view along the lines of:  if one weren't such a wetsy, it wouldn't be a problem. For e.g.: 

 "The difficulties about sleep and sleeplessness - apart from dreams  - are almost always fruits of a perverse refusal to comply with the laws of nature .... If only he would get up and do a full day's work, of any sort, and not dose during the day, when next the night came around his 16 or 20 hours of wakefulness would be rewarded by a sleep of 9-10 hours in length."

If that doesn't work, Spon recommends having a wash in carbolic soap, a short walk of 20 minutes, staying off tea and coffee, hop pillows, and not eating for an hour before going to bed. Last resort: "common raw onions raw, but Spanish stewed onions will do".  

Not a last resort: "Recently, the dangerous and lamentable habit of promiscuously taking sleeping draughts has unfortunately become very prevalent, entailing misery and ill health to a terrible degree". 

Let that be a warning to you all.

"Do either of these excellent manuals have chapters on travel? Having just spent two days cursing my way through three airports I think I need some remedial packing training", writes Megan

"Having prepared your luggage" (which takes WEEKS and a lot of polishing), "we come to the packing itself". Familiar advice follows, including tissue paper, folding, hats in hat boxes and rubber corks in bottles sealed with candlewax. But this, it seems, is all you need to know: 

"Pack tightly - this is the real secret of success, for when everything is wedged together, nothing will shake about and so get crushed." (Every Woman's Enquire Within, 1938). 

Spons is no good whatsoever; perhaps people didn't travel in 1897, but there is one piece of advice that I'd like to pass on, namely that you should "never take white petticoats for rough travelling; a striped coloured one is best. Take black lace neck scarf and gauze veils."

DES asks: "Is cleanliness next to godliness? I have such a suspicion that standards in these matters have been raised absurdly high in these germophobic times, and that your experts might have a more reasonable view, along the lines of having a bath once a week whether one needs it or not, except for houses, if you catch my drift."

There are entire chapters - huge ones - in each book about cleaning.  No God chat, but as far as Spon is concerned, being clean/cleaning is essentially the answer to everything. I am not a medical historian etc but I have the feeling from reading it that they had just found out about germs and quarantine and what-not; there is an entire chapter on the different types of chemicals you need to dispose of medical waste (from poo to snotty handkerchiefs).  I have however looked up "Infant bathing" and here's what he says: 

"Never put a child to bed dirty.  The whole body should be washed every day.  Young babies and infants should be bathed and well washed every morning in warm water, and thoroughly dried afterwards....young infants are best washed after their first meal, older children before breakfast."

No shirking for you, young man. Get in the shower immediately.   (Also, there is no chat about 'fallen ladies' etc., if my inference is correct.) 

What are the foremost duties of my servants?, writes Special K. 

Every Woman's Enquire Within was written in 1938, and this is a written for the post-war housewife who, likely as not, didn't have servants at all; as far as I can see, there's no mention of them.

I can't find anything in Spon about how to manage servants, but they clearly exist as there is all sorts of chat about where they should sleep, eat and sit: 

"Servants' beds should never have valances round them, as it encourages a habit of keeping boxes and rubbish under the beds." 

It is mysterious. I sometimes think Spon is writing for a Mr Pooter type of person - there is a great deal of advice on plumbing - but then he'll throw in a recipe for lark pie, which makes me wonder who he's writing for. Perhaps there is no advice on duties of servants because everyone just knows how to do it. Strangely, I can imagine Lady Redesdale might have had a copy of this book. 

That's it for now.  There are a lot of good recipes, parlour games, beauty advice and medical  bits and bobs in both, by the way. HINT HINT.

Pip "Keep 'em coming otherwise I'll have to find a job" Pip

NWM


Monday, August 06, 2012

I offer a new service to my readers

Dirty skirting boards that are over 100 years old should not be cleaned with modern substances like 'Cillit Bang' or 'Easy Off Fume Free Oven Cleaner'.They should be cleaned using proper old-fashioned methods that involve scrubbing, rubbing, tinctures and the sort of chemicals that were banned in some Eastern European countries as recently as 1983.

Luckily for me - and also maybe you, of which more later in this post - I have two books full of such methods.  This is just as well, because my own skirting boards (c. 1908, i.e. not that old for England, excitingly antique for Canada) are the sort of filthy that makes visitors ignore your pristine lavatory bowl and leave your house convinced that weevils live in your pants.

Book One: Every Woman's Enquire Within

A.C. Marshall, editor of Tit-Bits Book of Wrinkles (who, exactly, Tit-Bit was, and where his wrinkles were is another matter altogether) also edited this magnificent tome, first published in 1938. It is only for "Home-loving women", and touches on a range of topics including Home Management, Character and Fortune, General Knowledge, Home Maintenance, Etiquette and Correspondence and Practical Home Cookery.

Book Two: Spons' Household Manual

Published in 1897, this book reckons that ladies can cope with more than fortune-telling, and includes chapters on Water Supply, The Larder, Thieves and Fire, Receipts for Dishes, The Sickroom and Domestic Motors.  (FYI the Spons are E & F N Spon).

Both books are very relevant in 2012. Of this I am convinced. For e.g., the very first paragraph of the preface of Spons' Household Manual could not predict that one day people in for e.g. Portland or Stockholm would be knitting the very socks on their feet whilst nipping down the sourdough starter hotel to chat to their mates about rennet: 



The same is true of Every Woman's Enquire Within, which was extolling the virtues of a nice firm brush long before anyone thought that people in Hackney would one day be selling dustpans and brushes for 35 British pounds

All this leads me to two conclusions:

1. That I will one day have clean skirting boards; more importantly
2. That I must offer a service to you, my adoring readers and/or fans. 

Here's how it works:

You can send in a question (in the comments box) about any topic, and I will look it up and send you Advice From The Past. If you are lucky, you will get 1897 advice and 1938 advice (which would be like comparing now to 1971, which not many of us like to do).  If you are really lucky, the Sponses and A. C. Marshall (guided by me) will also be able to fix whatever it is that ails you. 

Come on then ! Let's see what you got !

Pip "Rub it with tincture of myrrh" Pip

NWM

P.S. This post is inspired in part by The Voice of Boo's v. excellent posts on Nancy Spain. I have not yet told her that I own The Holiday Inn International Cookbook (1970), which is dedicated to Ruby "Doll" Wilson and contains a recipe for "Beef A La Holiday".

Saturday, August 04, 2012

Fat Cat Roundup

I would like to be clear about my feelings re. cats.  They are OK because you don't need to take them for walks, pick up their poo or give them nosebags.  They are annoying because they miaow in the night, wee in a box and don't do tricks (unless you are Russian.)  There is no way you could describe me as a 'cat lover', for e.g. I do not have a cat-faced mug and I do not talk about the cats that I have experienced like they are my friends, have personalities or - heaven help us - are my furry babies. (But I have visited a Cat Museum.)

It may be a surprise to hear that I have, in fact, lived with cats. Here is the list:

Adopted when drunk from friend of friend with a stupid pug  ("There are two cats on your bed! You hate cats! What's happening?", said my friend Polly when she first saw them):

Monster: swinging belly, mental, apples fell on his head, now lives in Bromley but would be 19 by now so is probably dead
Squiffy: tiny, squeaky, nice, died of kidney failure despite the 500 British pound kidney dialysis


Joint custody of two cats with husband's ex-girlfriend and her boyfriend:
Corndog: Had kittens and hid them in a bush, fat, hairy, mental
Oustiti: Tiny, long whiskers, not annoying.

There is also Ziggy, who I have just looked after for a week. The reason that Ziggy is remarkable - and here is The Theme - is that Ziggy is fat. Monster was fat (fat when I got him, fat when he left), and Corndog is fat.

Fat cats are funny.  Pls do not put in comments boxes "it is terrible your cats are fat feed them less make them run round the garden people like you should not be allowed to have cats imagine what the council would say if you did that to your children" (etc).  Monster was on a diet but had hanging skin. Corndog is not my cat (she is my husband's, and he is a veterinariariariarian, as is her other owner), and Ziggy is not mine. So don't bother.

Other people have, and it hasn't made a difference. For e.g., a few weeks ago, as Corndog lay on her back sunning her gigantic belly in the garden of her part-owner,  the 6ft 3, 276lb Georges Laraque, famous ex-hockey player for the Montreal Canadiens, leant off the balcony of the flat above (blocking out the sun), and bellowed: "Ton chat est obèse.  Il devrait être végétarien."*

Corndog is not vegetarian, and is still fat.  There may be a connection, there may not. She also features quite heavily in this gallery of fat cat photographs, which you may enjoy. Or may not. As you wish.  (Apologies to anyone who has seen these pictures already via the Twitter or the Instagram etc - although I am sure you will appreciate their collective weight. No pun intended etc.)



Monster, now of Bromley. A photograph familier to regular readers and/or fans
Ziggy of Montreal


Ziggy 


Also Ziggy


Corndog

Also Corndog



Corndog left out in the rain for too long because I was laughing

Corndog on the knee of the pathologist. No idea where horrid cushion came from, or where it has gone to

That's it for now. If I find any more I will let you know. 

Pip "Low Fat Iams" Pip

NWM 

*"Your cat is obese. You should put it on a vegetarian diet."

Friday, July 20, 2012

I predict the future

In this, another in an occasionally regular new series, I attempt to 'spot the future'.  Essentially, the future is going to be like post-rationing 1950s Britain and/or an Amish farm, but with electricity.

OK here goes.

Books
  1. Everyone will start buying out-of-print books. I will say no more on the matter for the time being, but I am definitely right.
  2. People will keep on buying books on their Kindles, iPads etc and then they will go, you know I loved that book a lot and I would like to own a printed copy of it. Then they will buy it again.
  3. Everyone will be a bit, O why is my house so cold and unfeeling? Then they will realise they haven't got any books on their shelves anymore, just receipts from iTunes and Audible.com, and then they will start buying real books again. ("Books Do Furnish A Room", let us not forget.)  
  4. In a while someone in Shoreditch or Williamsburg or the Mile End in Montreal will - as these people do - start liking books because they are 'real' and 'authentic'. (Ref. (1) above).  It will be like locally sourced hand-reared organic foodstuffs all over again.  'Ateliers' will open where people hand print and bind books like no-one has ever thought of it before. They will have tools for it and they will have aprons.  I haven't even Googled this but I am 100% sure it is already happening and is being done by some fella with braces (suspenders for our US and Canadian cousins), a beard down to his knees, thick spectacles, a white shirt rolled up to reveal ironic sailorman tattoos, canvas trousers and workman boots.
  5. People will just get fed up with Borders and Amazon and Walmart, and they won't need to be told to visit their local bookshop, e.g. The Bookseller Crow On The Hill (in the meantime please buy your books online from him not Amazon). This is a fervent wish rather than a prediction but O that it were so! 
Food

  • Biscuits. 
  • Home-made cheese. 
  • Potted meat.

Drink

  • Lemon squash, ginger ale, cordial made out of hedgerows. 

Bicycles

  • Wicker baskets.

Cars
I have updated this post since the forward-looking Mrs Jones pointed out that horses are the way of the future. This is also true of donkeys and mules. If you don't have room for one of these, you will have one of the following: 

  • An electric car so quiet they have to put an ice-cream van style jingle in it so people can hear you coming
  • Bicycles (above)
  • Busses
  • Trams

Children

  • They will once again become small people who are seen but not heard, say 'please' and 'thank you', write thank you-letters, eat what they are given and do not do performances shouting "LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME". 
  • Parents will be pleased when their children jump in puddles in their gumboots, collect sticks, and ask for a hamster and an Arthur Ransome book for Christmas, not disappointed that they are not doing Grade 8 violin at the age of 2.
  • O-Levels and A-Levels will come back
  • High-heeled shoes and Bakugan pyjamas will be banned for anyone under 12. 
  • No-one will be mean to ladies who can't breast-feed, and people who do breast-feed will not make a political statement out of it and make everyone else feel like an idiot.
  • There will be no 'parenting technique' discussions because everyone will do the same thing.
  • Prams will be gigantic and blue.

That's it for now. What is your prediction?

Pip "Crystal Ball" Pip

NWM

Monday, July 16, 2012

BritainWatch

In the first of an occasional series, I try and tell you what's happening in Britain at the moment by sitting in Montreal and looking at 1) The British media, i.e. telly, radio, newspapers, etc*; 2)  Twitter, Facebook etc.

OK here goes. Tell me if I am wrong and/or have missed something.

The Weather

It is really bad and it keeps raining the whole time. The sky covers your poor heads like a translucent grey awning, and you wonder if S.A.D. is actually true.  Everyone is blaming the Met Office, which means that the Met Office is God - unless you are Richard Dawkins, in which case neither the Met Office nor the weather exist.

The Olympics

The whole "Jimmy Page and Boris Johnson and a London Bus" thing means that few people dare watch the opening ceremony, even if it does involve the man who directed Trainspotting turning the stadium into a version of the English countryside based on The Tempest by W. Shakespeare (inc. 70 sheep and a plough).

This is understandable, but I think it's a bit sad that everyone has forgotten to be a bit excited (in the proud style of our French and American cousins), rather than tutting the whole time. As far as I can see, the tuts are mainly about:

  • The Olympic lanes on the motorways: are they or aren't they in action? Yes they are, and everyone has got a 150 pound ticket.
  • The security which is a right fuck-up. It is going to be done by a) the army; b) some 18 year olds.
  • The cleaners live in sheds that leak. 
  • Some Americans got lost.
  • The Mall is closed. I do not know this for sure but it usually is.
  • This is just another sign of broken Britain. 
On the other hand, Twenty Twelve exists.  If anyone says, O what is this British humour of which you speak? I will say, you see this programme? In it, one of the most important events this year is taken the piss out of by the BBC, and the organisers of the event join in - even bloody Sebastian bloody Coe !!!  (I don't know if this is actually quite sad - i.e. that we are really good at laughing at ourselves and assume everything is going to go to shit - or just funny. Let me know what you think.)

Food
  • Hugh and Nigel have got their berries out. 
  • Yotam is doing something Swedish and something Palestinian at the same time, and putting at the forefront an ingredient that is usually an accent. 
  • Rose Prince is making a cake or two for charity.  
  • So far, we have managed to avoid Williamsburg-style 'tea ateliers', and in my lighter moments I like to think another good thing about the people of Britain is that they do not take themselves too seriously. (See above.) This kind of nonsense is therefore, I hope, unlikely.   
  • Suck and Chew is still going strong and this is good news.  
  • Kids that watch more TV get fatter. 
  • The 9 year old was allowed to keep her blog. 
The Royal Family
  • The Queen needs a rest.
  • Kate is still wearing those nude courts from LK Bennett, and everyone is a bit confused by her body in a bikini (put on a magazine by some Australians), because she doesn't have any hips. I don't mean, "she doesn't have ladycurves", I mean, "she doesn't appear to actually have the joints that join her legs to the rest of her body".
Politics

I don't listen anymore so I don't know. All I know is that that appalling little shit George Osborne still has an important job, and that the PM is apparently still committed to the coalition.  Other than that it all looks like a clusterfuck from over here and I'm probably well out of it. Even this twat (i.e., the PM of Canada - who FYI had never been anywhere but Canada until he was made PM) seems preferable.  

Other than that Canada is economically pretty stable etc and other than some young people banging on casserole dishes (for good reason, as it goes), things seems quite reasonable.  That is until the whole "English vs. French Canada" thing comes up, at which point I decide finally and conclusively to run away over the sea far far away. (It's like England vs. Wales or England vs. Scotland x 1,000,000.)

The Bachelor

I don't know why they bother. Spencer is only going to go for the posh birds (i.e. 5%), and is not going to be taken in by that tight-lipped trollop who kept talking about 'horseriding'. 

50 Shades of Grey

Everyone can go on about this as much as they like but she is earning something ridiculous like $250,000 A DAY.  This is easier than working in McDonald's etc. 

And all those clever journalists can sneer all they like. I know that at night they sit in their sheds and wish that they could write something that that many people go and buy. They're cross because people buy shit.  There's nothing you can do about it. People buy shit. And anyway, who are you to say what's shit and what's not?  

In other news, apparently the Audio Book uses Thomas Tallis' Spem In Alium as atmosphere music (or something), which makes sense because 'Spem in Alium' means 'Jizz In The Onions', which not a lot of people know. 

The Archers

2 words: Kate. Archer. 


Bruce Springsteen and Paul McCartney turned off

They were half an hour over, and they'd stopped singing.  All this "joyless London noise police" stuff is stupid.  Everyone on Facebook was very angry about this, especially people in America. If they like Paul McCartney so much THEY ARE WELCOME TO HIM.

That is all for now. Let me know if you would like my distance-analysis on any other topics.

Pip "Dimbleby" Pip

NWM

* Thank you, myexpatnet, the TuneIn app and all the British papers apart from The Times (that I don't read anyway)

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