Life parades its conveyer belt of human bastardness before your eyes in twisted Generation Game style. The catchphrase is not, 'Didn't you do well,' but instead, 'Aren't they complete wankers?' And although society's undesirables whizz past you in huge numbers as you go about your daily business of commuting or walking round town or driving, these people are not the ones you remember. Bruce won't ask you to list them to win them. The ones you remember most, the ones you experience on a deeper level, who grind sluggishly past you - as if that conveyer belt has a sticky turbine - thereby leaving their stain indelibly on your mind, are the ones you have the misfortune to work with. We are all afflicted with work colleagues who cling tenaciously to our existences like unwelcome clagnets round a hairy bottom. You don't like them, but they're just there.
I've had the good fortune to work exclusively in secondary schools since I was 22. Teaching tends not to attract many bastards (there are a few exceptions) and the same is true of support staff in schools as well. But in the 6 years of doing part-time or temporary jobs prior to this, I endured the company of several objectionable cunts.
Topping this list was the assistant manager at the Turk's Head pub in Reading when I was at university. His name - at least as far as the bar staff was concerned - was 'Shithead'. There's nothing like granting a slither of authority to someone with a chip on his shoulder on account of being a general failure in life, to transform that person into a petty, power-wielding despot, reigning over his kingdom of irrelevance. Shithead looked down on us students serving behind the bar with all the disdain of someone who had fucked up at school and claimed to have more common sense than us sorry academic low-lifes. It's true to say that life is full of people with far more intelligence than someone who is university-educated; but Shithead was not one of them. Throw in his vain and sleazy behaviour towards women and you have someone whose tick-list of qualities remains forever tick-less.
In second place was Mr J, the manager of Palmers Green Tesco, where I spent a year working while doing my PGCE/ teacher training. The J was short for Janus - he was Polish - and really, it would have been more apt not to keep the J from his name and drop the rest, but to do it the other way around. Mr J maintained a sneer that suggested that there was a constant smell of shit under his nose - unsurprising since his mouth was in that area - and he seemed incapable of understanding why any of us part-timers failed to match his level of consideration for a poxy, 5-aisle, fucking supermarket. He paced around slimily barking out orders in a voice much like Boycie from Only Fools and Horses, suffixing every command with the word, 'yeah'.
'Face up cereals, yeah.'
'Clear away those boxes, yeah.'
'Get that mopped up, yeah.'
This streak of piss totally failed to comprehend my level of indifference when issuing me with a formal warning for some misdemeanour or other, I forget what, but I was training to be a teacher, I was actually teaching during the day for parts of that year, and he seemed to expect me to give some small crumb of a shit about his small crumb of a shit supermarket. What a cock.
In third place was the foreman at a sauce factory in Edmonton. He and the factory were like something out of the 60s. The white and black workers had segregated social areas. Not by rule, of course, but down to the fact that none of the black workers smoked and most of the white ones did, so the existence of smoking and non-smoking staff rooms created a situation much like a Mississippi diner in 1955. The foreman was just as much an anachronism, looking like Jack the conductor from On the Buses and to match that face and voice he had a similar personality. We'd been sent to the factory - where we spent the day placing jars of condiments into plastic trays - by an employment agency, we being myself and my mate, Fabio. When we arrived, the foreman's first words to us were, "Oh that's a shame, I thought they'd send me a couple of dolly birds." Dolly birds. Jeez.
But I think I got off lightly overall. Any of you reading this and anyone you know, no doubt, have endured these sort of people in your time. Perhaps you are doing so now. I had other part-time or temporary jobs in which everyone was a delight to work with... The Beefeater Restaurant in Enfield, two different branches of Coutts Bank. I suppose that 3 out about 100 ain't bad. It should almost restore your faith in human nature. But let's not over-react, eh.
Saturday, 13 October 2018
Saturday, 8 September 2018
Poo, bum bums and willies
'Your Dad, he loves a fart!'
That was the first thought that leapt into my cousin Gary's head when I last met him and mentioned my dad. Our family, when we were kids, was characterised most distinctively by its inexorable devotion to all forms of lavatory humour. We all loved a fart, we all laughed at poo, bums and willies. (Well, mine and his mums both retained enough grace not to descend to our level, but they'd still chuckle away). And we haven't grown out of it.
If you have read previous blog posts of mine, you won't be surprised by this revelation. Out of curiosity, I have scrolled back to discover that, far from being in any way eclectic or diverse in my subject matter, I have tended to draw inspiration from a very limited pool of interests. These are, in order of ubiquity:
That was the first thought that leapt into my cousin Gary's head when I last met him and mentioned my dad. Our family, when we were kids, was characterised most distinctively by its inexorable devotion to all forms of lavatory humour. We all loved a fart, we all laughed at poo, bums and willies. (Well, mine and his mums both retained enough grace not to descend to our level, but they'd still chuckle away). And we haven't grown out of it.
If you have read previous blog posts of mine, you won't be surprised by this revelation. Out of curiosity, I have scrolled back to discover that, far from being in any way eclectic or diverse in my subject matter, I have tended to draw inspiration from a very limited pool of interests. These are, in order of ubiquity:
- contempt for modern society
- the 1970s and 80s
- poo
But to be honest, poo has seeped into most posts focussed on the first two subjects as well. My blog is FULL of shit. Many will find this off-putting. It makes you wonder how they cope with their own daily ablutions if they turn their noses up at the mere mention of a Richard the Third.
Having perhaps exhausted the subject of the glorious brown stuff, I'm inclined to focus on the two anatomical features lined up alongside it in the title. Firstly, bums. In today's hyper-sensitive and over-serious society, it may escape the wit of many that much of my childhood in the home was spent indulging with my brother in pulling each other's pyjama bottoms down and shouting out, 'BUM BUM!' Such inappropriate behaviour has repercussions later in life. I'm not sure my wife enjoys me shouting 'BUM BUM!' when I happen to see hers.
The concept of the 'moony' seems to have disappeared these days. Late teenage years full of drunken nights often found me playing the moony card in an attempt to raise a smile (or at least to humour myself). Usually from the top deck of a bus, or towards the top deck of a bus from the street. I say 'late teenage years'... it might have stretched a little into my 30s. My personal favourite moony was performed in Crouch End on a staff night out. Clocking a couple sat eating at a table for two right next to the floor-to-ceiling front window of a restaurant, I dropped my trousers outside in the street and pushed my bum against the glass, inches from their plates of food.
I don't do that anymore. Not in Crouch End anyway.
My parents' decision to send me to all boys' school only served to foster such behaviour. There is a plethora of solemn, serious or important situations in which an undetected pinch of your mate's arse challenges him to supress an untimely giggle - during mass (Catholic school, remember), when being told off by a teacher, buying a ticket on the bus, while trying to chat up a girl in a pub. You have to draw the line somewhere, though. Usually only funerals.
While on the subject of all boys schools, there was one practice that I never participated in and really didn't understand; and that was drawing willies in biro on every human being pictured in a textbook. In history, Chamberlain and Hitler meet in Munich in 1938 to sign a peace treaty and each has his cock and balls out. In French, a comic strip of two people discussing how many pets they have and each has three dogs, two hairy bollocks and one willy. And in Religious Education, Jesus and his disciples preached to Jews and Gentiles with their genitals hanging there for all to see. My reluctance to draw a penis or two in a textbook wasn't for fear of being caught, it was more that I thought it was a bit poofy (excuse the parlance of the day). So instead, I tended to draw poo coming out of people's bums, landing on the floor and steaming a bit, once there.
As humorous as I find poo, bums and willies, I find the thought of any links between them somewhat unsavoury. But the thing that unites them is definitely a further object of celebration and that is PANTS! Everything about pants is funny, from the sound of the word to the idea of sitting around in them to the embarrassment of messing them.
And so, one day in the future, I daresay a member of my family will ask my son about me and then add, 'Your dad, he loved a poo.' And I'd like to think it will be said at my funeral. And if my best mates John and Dalboy are there, then I hope that one will pinch the other's bum.
Having perhaps exhausted the subject of the glorious brown stuff, I'm inclined to focus on the two anatomical features lined up alongside it in the title. Firstly, bums. In today's hyper-sensitive and over-serious society, it may escape the wit of many that much of my childhood in the home was spent indulging with my brother in pulling each other's pyjama bottoms down and shouting out, 'BUM BUM!' Such inappropriate behaviour has repercussions later in life. I'm not sure my wife enjoys me shouting 'BUM BUM!' when I happen to see hers.
The concept of the 'moony' seems to have disappeared these days. Late teenage years full of drunken nights often found me playing the moony card in an attempt to raise a smile (or at least to humour myself). Usually from the top deck of a bus, or towards the top deck of a bus from the street. I say 'late teenage years'... it might have stretched a little into my 30s. My personal favourite moony was performed in Crouch End on a staff night out. Clocking a couple sat eating at a table for two right next to the floor-to-ceiling front window of a restaurant, I dropped my trousers outside in the street and pushed my bum against the glass, inches from their plates of food.
I don't do that anymore. Not in Crouch End anyway.
My parents' decision to send me to all boys' school only served to foster such behaviour. There is a plethora of solemn, serious or important situations in which an undetected pinch of your mate's arse challenges him to supress an untimely giggle - during mass (Catholic school, remember), when being told off by a teacher, buying a ticket on the bus, while trying to chat up a girl in a pub. You have to draw the line somewhere, though. Usually only funerals.
While on the subject of all boys schools, there was one practice that I never participated in and really didn't understand; and that was drawing willies in biro on every human being pictured in a textbook. In history, Chamberlain and Hitler meet in Munich in 1938 to sign a peace treaty and each has his cock and balls out. In French, a comic strip of two people discussing how many pets they have and each has three dogs, two hairy bollocks and one willy. And in Religious Education, Jesus and his disciples preached to Jews and Gentiles with their genitals hanging there for all to see. My reluctance to draw a penis or two in a textbook wasn't for fear of being caught, it was more that I thought it was a bit poofy (excuse the parlance of the day). So instead, I tended to draw poo coming out of people's bums, landing on the floor and steaming a bit, once there.
As humorous as I find poo, bums and willies, I find the thought of any links between them somewhat unsavoury. But the thing that unites them is definitely a further object of celebration and that is PANTS! Everything about pants is funny, from the sound of the word to the idea of sitting around in them to the embarrassment of messing them.
And so, one day in the future, I daresay a member of my family will ask my son about me and then add, 'Your dad, he loved a poo.' And I'd like to think it will be said at my funeral. And if my best mates John and Dalboy are there, then I hope that one will pinch the other's bum.
Monday, 3 September 2018
Great Escapism
Coincidentally and with apt timing, my plan for this blog has just been symbolised by the last two things I looked at on telly,just as my fingers hovered over the keys and my eyes scrutinised the blank rectangle on my laptop. The first was a trailer for a forthcoming series of documentaries on 9/11. The second was Ozzy Osbourne in the passenger seat of a motorhome, eating a crate of ice-cream.
When I'm not working and when I'm not undertaking mundane domestic duties and when I'm not worrying about people I care about, I indulge myself in some form of escapism. Meaning, that when the soiled underpants of Modern Life afford me some respite, the last thing I wish to do is entertain myself by pulling those pants back over my head and sniffing. Which is what most TV entertainment amounts to.
I've given up watching the news. Disingenuously, it always starts and ends with a smile, a deliberate shit sandwich in which the filling would be better introduced as, 'Look at how shit life was today, somewhere'. The grim spawns of the news are all those documentary shows, hundreds of them, which present in more depth the many iniquities of humankind and the plethora of tragedies that inflict themselves upon us. Yes, yes, that's all very sad or despicable and yes we should be aware and try to do something to help, etcetera, etcetera… but for fuck's sake, why are we saturated with so much gloom. Both on TV and through social media. And people soak it up, like kitchen towel in a puddle of rancid sewage.
I know I'm courting the accusation of burying my head in the sand (rather than in the aforementioned metaphorical underpants) and my excuse is not just that the view is so much better down there, but that choosing to remind myself that modern life is rubbish won't prompt me to do anything about it. That sounds callous. It's not. I work in a school where 70% of students are officially 'disadvantaged' (by income, not by the cruel twist of fate that put me in charge of them) and I support a family, which very often really needs my support. And outside of that, I try to avoid harming people (though I am happy to annoy or upset them if they deserve it). If everyone did similar things in life, then there wouldn't be so much grim reality being paraded before us on telly, because reality would be considerably less shit.
Which brings me back to Ozzy Osbourne eating a crate of ice-cream as his kids drive him around the USA on a road-trip that is pure bloody escapist entertainment and a reminder that THIS is the kind of thing we should aspire to doing, rather than wallowing in the mire of misery that we can't solve by simply wallowing in it, wringing our hands, damning others left right and centre for causing it, allowing it or ignoring it and by adding to our own caravan of gloom.
Pause... now a hospital documentary has appeared on the telly. A man is groaning in pain. My wife has elected to watch this for some reason beyond the realms of my comprehension. If you were in a hospital room full of people groaning in pain, you'd want to get the fuck out, wouldn't you, not watch and listen with interest? Life's got enough of a miserable stench to it, without doing your pits with Lynx Dogshit while you contemplate Life's miseries as a form of relaxation. What I find is needed is Air Freshener, escapism, something to form a contrast, a distraction, a buffer, something that is not JUST MORE REALITY.
Hence my guiltless indulgence in frivolity, fantasy, trivia, self-amusement, nostalgia, absurdity, nonsense - anything that can act as an opium against the churning malaise of modern life.
That is all. As you were.
When I'm not working and when I'm not undertaking mundane domestic duties and when I'm not worrying about people I care about, I indulge myself in some form of escapism. Meaning, that when the soiled underpants of Modern Life afford me some respite, the last thing I wish to do is entertain myself by pulling those pants back over my head and sniffing. Which is what most TV entertainment amounts to.
I've given up watching the news. Disingenuously, it always starts and ends with a smile, a deliberate shit sandwich in which the filling would be better introduced as, 'Look at how shit life was today, somewhere'. The grim spawns of the news are all those documentary shows, hundreds of them, which present in more depth the many iniquities of humankind and the plethora of tragedies that inflict themselves upon us. Yes, yes, that's all very sad or despicable and yes we should be aware and try to do something to help, etcetera, etcetera… but for fuck's sake, why are we saturated with so much gloom. Both on TV and through social media. And people soak it up, like kitchen towel in a puddle of rancid sewage.
I know I'm courting the accusation of burying my head in the sand (rather than in the aforementioned metaphorical underpants) and my excuse is not just that the view is so much better down there, but that choosing to remind myself that modern life is rubbish won't prompt me to do anything about it. That sounds callous. It's not. I work in a school where 70% of students are officially 'disadvantaged' (by income, not by the cruel twist of fate that put me in charge of them) and I support a family, which very often really needs my support. And outside of that, I try to avoid harming people (though I am happy to annoy or upset them if they deserve it). If everyone did similar things in life, then there wouldn't be so much grim reality being paraded before us on telly, because reality would be considerably less shit.
Which brings me back to Ozzy Osbourne eating a crate of ice-cream as his kids drive him around the USA on a road-trip that is pure bloody escapist entertainment and a reminder that THIS is the kind of thing we should aspire to doing, rather than wallowing in the mire of misery that we can't solve by simply wallowing in it, wringing our hands, damning others left right and centre for causing it, allowing it or ignoring it and by adding to our own caravan of gloom.
Pause... now a hospital documentary has appeared on the telly. A man is groaning in pain. My wife has elected to watch this for some reason beyond the realms of my comprehension. If you were in a hospital room full of people groaning in pain, you'd want to get the fuck out, wouldn't you, not watch and listen with interest? Life's got enough of a miserable stench to it, without doing your pits with Lynx Dogshit while you contemplate Life's miseries as a form of relaxation. What I find is needed is Air Freshener, escapism, something to form a contrast, a distraction, a buffer, something that is not JUST MORE REALITY.
Hence my guiltless indulgence in frivolity, fantasy, trivia, self-amusement, nostalgia, absurdity, nonsense - anything that can act as an opium against the churning malaise of modern life.
That is all. As you were.
Monday, 20 August 2018
Student inter-railing and a catalogue of cock ups
This is a true story.
In 1990, four of us students - myself, Phil, Geoff and Ziggy - set out to spend a month travelling from one European city to another, back-packing with an inter-rail train ticket and an appetite for culture and adventure. The route was planned out in advance and we expected to visit about 12 cities and travel through 9 countries in 30 days. What we didn't plan for was a 5th traveller, a stealthy stowaway who ripped the arse out of our naïve optimism and orchestrated a series of mishaps that meant that by the 11th day - following ten consecutive days of maintaining a perfect 100% score on the 'Crap-scale' - we admitted defeat and headed home.
That gate-crasher was Mr Cock-Up and (summarising from a diary I kept at the time) this is what the little bastard did to us...
Sunday 2nd September - Departure
We met at Liverpool St station with a couple of hours to kill before our train departed for the port of Harwich and as you'd expect from 4 young lads about to go on holiday, we fancied a beer. Pubs didn't open in the City on Sunday afternoons, so after an aimless walkabout, the drinking was postponed until we boarded the overnight ferry to Holland.
Monday 3rd September - Amsterdam
At about 3am, after far too many lagers and a liqueur called Underberg, we slept on the floor (all seats having been nabbed by that point). I threw up before disembarking, then threw up again on the train from the port to Amsterdam. Geoff left his shoes on the train, having changed into his moccasins (or kebab shoes) for comfort, and had to run along the platform to get back on and find them. We didn't feel up to walking much after that heavy night, so we had a boat tour around the canals, which proved very long and very dull. Following this we had McDonald's for lunch and spent the afternoon in the Irish Pub (Cokes for me, due to the unsettling effects of the 'Chunderberg'), made another McDonald's trip for dinner and then boarded an overnight train to Berlin, securing a compartment to ourselves with fold down seats that created a big bed with lots of space in which to sleep...
Tuesday 4th September - Berlin
But at 2am, the train broke down and we had to get off and board another, which seemed to have no empty compartments, so we squeezed into the narrow bit of corridor by the bogs and tried to sleep here. A couple of hours later, Geoff found us 4 empty seats in a compartment, so we settled here to sleep, but were woken by the ticket inspector at the border between West and East Germany, who informed us that our Inter-Rail tickets were not valid in the East. We had to pay, but didn't have enough in Marks. The inspector spoke no English and confusion ensued. In the end, he let us stay on board having paid what we could.
Disembarking in Berlin, a beggar approached us with his hands behind his back. He must have been concealing a CS gas cylinder, because once he'd walked off we started to suffer from stinging eyes and fits of coughing.
We booked into a cheap hotel, the Pension Krone, and as I planned out what sights to see that afternoon, each of the others fell asleep, before I too followed, thanks to the disturbed nature of the previous night.
When we awoke at 5pm, we decided to postpone sight-seeing until the next day and instead found the Irish Pub, where we spent the evening.
Wednesday 5th September - Berlin (2)
At breakfast, we asked Geoff if he would order for us, as he was the only one with O-level German.
'Ask for 4 coffees, Geoff' one of us said.
'4 coffees please,' Geoff asked the woman serving us.
'IN GERMAN, GEOFF!' we reminded him.
Our walking tour of the city was done beneath a curtain of rain. The Brandenburg Gate was concealed by scaffolding and was minus its Victory statue. At least the Wall and the Reichstag were interesting.
We finished the day in McDonald's and the Irish Pub.
Thursday 6th September - Munich
The overnight train to Munich was hot and cramped, as we shared a couchette with 2 other people and I got very little sleep, almost cracking up at times. In Munich, it took ages to find the Youth Hostel we'd planned to stay in, mainly because we got off at the wrong U-bahn station and we were misdirected by any locals that we asked. When we found it, we had to queue for 2 hours 45 mins to check in.
We did some sight-seeing that afternoon and in the evening, as we sat on the pavement outside the hostel, I got some obvious eye-contact from a nice German girl, who I attempted to chat-up using Geoff as an interpreter. (All he could really ask her, though, was how many brothers, sisters and pets she had... I don't think he got a grade A in his O' Level). It seemed to be going well, until Phil let go an enormous fart, which caused her to walk off.
Friday 7th September - Munich (2) and Salzburg
Geoff lost his locker key and had to pay a fine. Then he found it.
We spent the morning at Dacau Concentration Camp and got on a train to Salzburg that afternoon. Thinking we had secured our own compartment, we celebrated our luck, but then found out that only the first 3 carriages were crossing the border into Austria. We were in the last carriage of about 20. We had to run down the platform, heavy rucksacks threatening to send us toppling over.
We made it just in time and after a short journey, disembarked in a rain-sodden Salzburg and checked into the Youth Hostel.
As Phil took a shower, a message came over the Tannoy asking him to come to reception. Someone had handed in his wallet, but not before whoever had taken it had stolen the money he had in it.
We walked around the city that evening, then had a proper night's sleep.
Saturday 8th September - Vienna
We took a train to Vienna in the morning, checked into a hotel and walked around a few sights. In the rain, again. We had McDonald's for dinner and bought some beer to drink in our room that evening.
Sunday 9th September - Budapest
Our luck seemed to be changing. We had no problems getting the train to Budapest the next morning and secured accommodation in private residences without needing to queue much at all. These were flats in tower blocks in the suburbs. The one in which Geoff and I stayed was home to a little old woman who spoke no English and merely pointed to our bedroom and gave us keys to the flat.
We took a cab back in to the city. (The driver who had taken us out to the tower blocks had hit another car and driven off and was generally skidding and wobbling everywhere in his rickety Skoda. This one was a bit kamikaze as well.) We had McDonald's for dinner (very cheap in Hungary in those days) and then wandered around looking for a bar. Everywhere we tried ripped us off, charging stupidly high prices for warm, shit-tasting lager. In the end, we just wandered around in a futile attempt to find a decent bar, before giving up and getting a cab back to the flats.
Geoff and I found that our door key wouldn't work. As we tried to force it to turn, the door was opened by the occupant, a little old woman who spoke no English; but not 'our' little old woman. We had the right number flat, but the wrong block. God knows what she thought as we apologised and made a quick, embarrassed exit, hoping she wouldn't call the police.
Monday 10th September - Budapest (2)
After a McDonald's breakfast, we had a whole day of sight-seeing, untroubled for once by any rain. Buoyed by the prospect of a more sustained change in fortune, we planned a proper boys' night out.
We discovered Budapest's Moulin Rouge. It cost a very steep £7 to get in and we weren't allowed beer and instead they demanded that we order what they called a 'Champagne cocktail' (also £6) as part of the deal. It was actually rum and coke. They sat us at the table furthest from the stage. There was only one other customer and he had a table at the front. The bouncers stood near us and glared. A woman came out on stage, took her top off and wiggled her boobs about to Rick Astley's 'Never Gonna Give You Up.'
We finished out cocktails and left, finding as an alternative, the John Bull (English) pub. Here we reflected on how much money we had spent so far (far too much) and how much we had left for the next 20 days (far too little). And we ruminated on how luck seemed to be going against us.
Tuesday 11th September - Budapest (3)
We met Ziggy and Phil in their flat in the tower block next to ours, only to discover that their key was stuck in the lock and their own little old woman had gone out. So they couldn't leave the flat. We managed to contact a warden for the flats, who came to fix the problem by removing the lock from the door and disappearing (presumably to buy a new lock). In his absence, their little old woman returned, saw the door with no lock and started shouting at us all. The warden returned and Ziggy and Phil were charged the cost of the new lock and labour. We left for town at 12.45pm.
The day was again dominated by McDonald's (2 visits) and the John Bull pub and also wasting time waiting around for Ziggy who had managed to chat up a Danish girl. (As we waited, a man tried to sell us prostitutes).
Our next intended destination was Athens, via a 31-hour train journey through Yugoslavia. We decided not to risk it, given our constant misfortunes, so instead I got to work that night looking at train times to Italy, which would have been the next stop after Athens.
Wednesday 12th September - Budapest (4)
Geoff and I were woken by a window cleaner entering our room, throwing the window wide open (letting in the cold) and proceeding to do his job despite us lying in bed.
We had no motivation for sight-seeing and following brunch in McDonald's we sat in the John Bull pub to plan travelling to Italy. Frustratingly, there was no easy route or timings that would suit us. It looked like we'd have to go back to Vienna first.
I said to the other three, 'There are two trains leaving Budapest at 4.40pm this afternoon. One goes to Vienna. The other takes us back to London.'
Thursday 13th September - A train
It was a typically uncomfortable night again. A couchette with 6 seats collapsing into one bed and the four of us sharing with two others, cramped, hot and disturbed by snoring and someone else's feet in our faces. We hadn't planned for food and from 4.40 the previous day in Budapest until we were on a ferry to Dover at 4pm the next day, we ate nothing. But at least we were nearly home.
The white cliffs looked so welcoming. We said goodbye to Geoff when we landed, as he lived in Kent. And we said good bye to Mr Cock Up. Or perhaps it was a moderately irate, 'Fuck off!'
In 1990, four of us students - myself, Phil, Geoff and Ziggy - set out to spend a month travelling from one European city to another, back-packing with an inter-rail train ticket and an appetite for culture and adventure. The route was planned out in advance and we expected to visit about 12 cities and travel through 9 countries in 30 days. What we didn't plan for was a 5th traveller, a stealthy stowaway who ripped the arse out of our naïve optimism and orchestrated a series of mishaps that meant that by the 11th day - following ten consecutive days of maintaining a perfect 100% score on the 'Crap-scale' - we admitted defeat and headed home.
That gate-crasher was Mr Cock-Up and (summarising from a diary I kept at the time) this is what the little bastard did to us...
Sunday 2nd September - Departure
We met at Liverpool St station with a couple of hours to kill before our train departed for the port of Harwich and as you'd expect from 4 young lads about to go on holiday, we fancied a beer. Pubs didn't open in the City on Sunday afternoons, so after an aimless walkabout, the drinking was postponed until we boarded the overnight ferry to Holland.
Monday 3rd September - Amsterdam
At about 3am, after far too many lagers and a liqueur called Underberg, we slept on the floor (all seats having been nabbed by that point). I threw up before disembarking, then threw up again on the train from the port to Amsterdam. Geoff left his shoes on the train, having changed into his moccasins (or kebab shoes) for comfort, and had to run along the platform to get back on and find them. We didn't feel up to walking much after that heavy night, so we had a boat tour around the canals, which proved very long and very dull. Following this we had McDonald's for lunch and spent the afternoon in the Irish Pub (Cokes for me, due to the unsettling effects of the 'Chunderberg'), made another McDonald's trip for dinner and then boarded an overnight train to Berlin, securing a compartment to ourselves with fold down seats that created a big bed with lots of space in which to sleep...
Tuesday 4th September - Berlin
But at 2am, the train broke down and we had to get off and board another, which seemed to have no empty compartments, so we squeezed into the narrow bit of corridor by the bogs and tried to sleep here. A couple of hours later, Geoff found us 4 empty seats in a compartment, so we settled here to sleep, but were woken by the ticket inspector at the border between West and East Germany, who informed us that our Inter-Rail tickets were not valid in the East. We had to pay, but didn't have enough in Marks. The inspector spoke no English and confusion ensued. In the end, he let us stay on board having paid what we could.
Disembarking in Berlin, a beggar approached us with his hands behind his back. He must have been concealing a CS gas cylinder, because once he'd walked off we started to suffer from stinging eyes and fits of coughing.
We booked into a cheap hotel, the Pension Krone, and as I planned out what sights to see that afternoon, each of the others fell asleep, before I too followed, thanks to the disturbed nature of the previous night.
When we awoke at 5pm, we decided to postpone sight-seeing until the next day and instead found the Irish Pub, where we spent the evening.
Wednesday 5th September - Berlin (2)
At breakfast, we asked Geoff if he would order for us, as he was the only one with O-level German.
'Ask for 4 coffees, Geoff' one of us said.
'4 coffees please,' Geoff asked the woman serving us.
'IN GERMAN, GEOFF!' we reminded him.
Our walking tour of the city was done beneath a curtain of rain. The Brandenburg Gate was concealed by scaffolding and was minus its Victory statue. At least the Wall and the Reichstag were interesting.
We finished the day in McDonald's and the Irish Pub.
Thursday 6th September - Munich
The overnight train to Munich was hot and cramped, as we shared a couchette with 2 other people and I got very little sleep, almost cracking up at times. In Munich, it took ages to find the Youth Hostel we'd planned to stay in, mainly because we got off at the wrong U-bahn station and we were misdirected by any locals that we asked. When we found it, we had to queue for 2 hours 45 mins to check in.
We did some sight-seeing that afternoon and in the evening, as we sat on the pavement outside the hostel, I got some obvious eye-contact from a nice German girl, who I attempted to chat-up using Geoff as an interpreter. (All he could really ask her, though, was how many brothers, sisters and pets she had... I don't think he got a grade A in his O' Level). It seemed to be going well, until Phil let go an enormous fart, which caused her to walk off.
Friday 7th September - Munich (2) and Salzburg
Geoff lost his locker key and had to pay a fine. Then he found it.
We spent the morning at Dacau Concentration Camp and got on a train to Salzburg that afternoon. Thinking we had secured our own compartment, we celebrated our luck, but then found out that only the first 3 carriages were crossing the border into Austria. We were in the last carriage of about 20. We had to run down the platform, heavy rucksacks threatening to send us toppling over.
We made it just in time and after a short journey, disembarked in a rain-sodden Salzburg and checked into the Youth Hostel.
As Phil took a shower, a message came over the Tannoy asking him to come to reception. Someone had handed in his wallet, but not before whoever had taken it had stolen the money he had in it.
We walked around the city that evening, then had a proper night's sleep.
Saturday 8th September - Vienna
We took a train to Vienna in the morning, checked into a hotel and walked around a few sights. In the rain, again. We had McDonald's for dinner and bought some beer to drink in our room that evening.
Sunday 9th September - Budapest
Our luck seemed to be changing. We had no problems getting the train to Budapest the next morning and secured accommodation in private residences without needing to queue much at all. These were flats in tower blocks in the suburbs. The one in which Geoff and I stayed was home to a little old woman who spoke no English and merely pointed to our bedroom and gave us keys to the flat.
We took a cab back in to the city. (The driver who had taken us out to the tower blocks had hit another car and driven off and was generally skidding and wobbling everywhere in his rickety Skoda. This one was a bit kamikaze as well.) We had McDonald's for dinner (very cheap in Hungary in those days) and then wandered around looking for a bar. Everywhere we tried ripped us off, charging stupidly high prices for warm, shit-tasting lager. In the end, we just wandered around in a futile attempt to find a decent bar, before giving up and getting a cab back to the flats.
Geoff and I found that our door key wouldn't work. As we tried to force it to turn, the door was opened by the occupant, a little old woman who spoke no English; but not 'our' little old woman. We had the right number flat, but the wrong block. God knows what she thought as we apologised and made a quick, embarrassed exit, hoping she wouldn't call the police.
Monday 10th September - Budapest (2)
After a McDonald's breakfast, we had a whole day of sight-seeing, untroubled for once by any rain. Buoyed by the prospect of a more sustained change in fortune, we planned a proper boys' night out.
We discovered Budapest's Moulin Rouge. It cost a very steep £7 to get in and we weren't allowed beer and instead they demanded that we order what they called a 'Champagne cocktail' (also £6) as part of the deal. It was actually rum and coke. They sat us at the table furthest from the stage. There was only one other customer and he had a table at the front. The bouncers stood near us and glared. A woman came out on stage, took her top off and wiggled her boobs about to Rick Astley's 'Never Gonna Give You Up.'
We finished out cocktails and left, finding as an alternative, the John Bull (English) pub. Here we reflected on how much money we had spent so far (far too much) and how much we had left for the next 20 days (far too little). And we ruminated on how luck seemed to be going against us.
Tuesday 11th September - Budapest (3)
We met Ziggy and Phil in their flat in the tower block next to ours, only to discover that their key was stuck in the lock and their own little old woman had gone out. So they couldn't leave the flat. We managed to contact a warden for the flats, who came to fix the problem by removing the lock from the door and disappearing (presumably to buy a new lock). In his absence, their little old woman returned, saw the door with no lock and started shouting at us all. The warden returned and Ziggy and Phil were charged the cost of the new lock and labour. We left for town at 12.45pm.
The day was again dominated by McDonald's (2 visits) and the John Bull pub and also wasting time waiting around for Ziggy who had managed to chat up a Danish girl. (As we waited, a man tried to sell us prostitutes).
Our next intended destination was Athens, via a 31-hour train journey through Yugoslavia. We decided not to risk it, given our constant misfortunes, so instead I got to work that night looking at train times to Italy, which would have been the next stop after Athens.
Wednesday 12th September - Budapest (4)
Geoff and I were woken by a window cleaner entering our room, throwing the window wide open (letting in the cold) and proceeding to do his job despite us lying in bed.
We had no motivation for sight-seeing and following brunch in McDonald's we sat in the John Bull pub to plan travelling to Italy. Frustratingly, there was no easy route or timings that would suit us. It looked like we'd have to go back to Vienna first.
I said to the other three, 'There are two trains leaving Budapest at 4.40pm this afternoon. One goes to Vienna. The other takes us back to London.'
Thursday 13th September - A train
It was a typically uncomfortable night again. A couchette with 6 seats collapsing into one bed and the four of us sharing with two others, cramped, hot and disturbed by snoring and someone else's feet in our faces. We hadn't planned for food and from 4.40 the previous day in Budapest until we were on a ferry to Dover at 4pm the next day, we ate nothing. But at least we were nearly home.
The white cliffs looked so welcoming. We said goodbye to Geoff when we landed, as he lived in Kent. And we said good bye to Mr Cock Up. Or perhaps it was a moderately irate, 'Fuck off!'
Friday, 10 August 2018
That Bloody Film Made Me Do It
Now, THAT'S a good idea....
Violet Beauregarde claims that she's been chewing the same piece of gum for months, all day long, except at meal times, when she sticks it behind her ear. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory proved influential in that it gave me an idea of how to get into the Guinness Book of World Records without much effort or talent. I saw myself being interviewed by Roy Castle and Norris McWhirter on Record Breakers. Roy would be so impressed by how many months I'd chewed the same piece of gum for, that he'd celebrate my achievement by hitting the highest note on his trumpet, causing his arse cheeks to clench so tightly that you'd be hard pressed to slide a credit card between them (Billy Connolly's joke, not mine).
I started my chewing marathon one afternoon and come dinner-time, I secreted it behind my ear. But this was about 1978 and like most 8 year olds I already had a large quantity of hair behind my ear, to which the gum stuck, requiring me to cut it out with scissors, thus rendering the gum thenceforth unchewable, my hair-cut somewhat lop-sided and my record-breaking ambitions up shit creek.
There was a lot of paper-talk in the 80s and 90s about how violent films were responsible for making children do violent things. You actually needed to be strongly disposed towards violence in the first place, of course, in which case (regardless of what films you watched) you'd still carry out violence against others. Films merely compensate for a lack of imagination, by giving you ideas of HOW to do things you were likely to do anyway. I was likely to do the sort of stupid shit that all kids do and films usually gave me ideas on how to do it.
When you've got younger siblings, then OBVIOUSLY you want to scare them senseless whenever possible. The Omen was pretty bloody scary, more so given that we were brought up Catholic and therefore believed in the feasibility of the Devil walking the Earth incarnate in human form. Consequently, all that needed to be done to make my brother shit his pants was to turn the lights off and shout, 'Damien!' If this wasn't terrifying enough, we watched Salem's Lot later on, and agreed that the scariest thing we'd ever seen was when a dead child returned as a vampire to haunt his brother by floating outside his bedroom window and tapping on it. Needless to say, the shouting of 'Face at the window!' when someone was alone in a room, prompted an even more traumatic soiling of underwear. But imagine the extent to which fear flew out the back end of my brother when I hid just outside the bedroom, perched on the coal-shed roof, and then tapped on the window after he'd been inside alone for 5 minutes.
Some film-inspired actions can fortunately be seen as innocuous and merely daft, rather than psychologically traumatising. Rocky inspired many children of the 70s and 80s to want to box, but it also caused me to drink a glass full of raw eggs. It was like swallowing snot. That in itself was bearable in small amounts, because in the 70s every kid was snotty and so had to swallow back the occasional teaspoonful of sloppy mucus, but a whole glass of it.... grim!
Films didn't just make you do daft or nasty things, they could also shape your outlook on life. Every time I see a new-born baby with a full head of hair I think of the babies in both The Omen and Rocky II, in both cases the child in question looked like it had been in utero for about 5 years and had come out with not just a bushy busby of black hair, but most probably a full set of teeth and politically conservative views that most of us don't have until middle age. I always balk at seeing babies with full heads of hair, thanks to those films. (Apologies to any readers whose own children had hairy heads, I'm sure they were much less werewolfy eventually).
Sometimes you don't realise how much one particular film shapes your daily existence for years and years afterwards. Everyone enjoys allowing iconic lines from a film to seep into their common parlance, as they subconsciously quote lines as part of their usual vernacular. Often, these phrases are well known and instantly recognisable - maybe from Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, Star Wars or Pulp Fiction. In my case, it's the film version of Please Sir! About 10% of all exchanges with my wife comprise of quotes from this 1971 TV spin-off film. Especially the less politically correct lines.
Finally, to conclude... Er… there's nothing to conclude. Films just make you do daft shit.
Violet Beauregarde claims that she's been chewing the same piece of gum for months, all day long, except at meal times, when she sticks it behind her ear. Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory proved influential in that it gave me an idea of how to get into the Guinness Book of World Records without much effort or talent. I saw myself being interviewed by Roy Castle and Norris McWhirter on Record Breakers. Roy would be so impressed by how many months I'd chewed the same piece of gum for, that he'd celebrate my achievement by hitting the highest note on his trumpet, causing his arse cheeks to clench so tightly that you'd be hard pressed to slide a credit card between them (Billy Connolly's joke, not mine).
I started my chewing marathon one afternoon and come dinner-time, I secreted it behind my ear. But this was about 1978 and like most 8 year olds I already had a large quantity of hair behind my ear, to which the gum stuck, requiring me to cut it out with scissors, thus rendering the gum thenceforth unchewable, my hair-cut somewhat lop-sided and my record-breaking ambitions up shit creek.
There was a lot of paper-talk in the 80s and 90s about how violent films were responsible for making children do violent things. You actually needed to be strongly disposed towards violence in the first place, of course, in which case (regardless of what films you watched) you'd still carry out violence against others. Films merely compensate for a lack of imagination, by giving you ideas of HOW to do things you were likely to do anyway. I was likely to do the sort of stupid shit that all kids do and films usually gave me ideas on how to do it.
When you've got younger siblings, then OBVIOUSLY you want to scare them senseless whenever possible. The Omen was pretty bloody scary, more so given that we were brought up Catholic and therefore believed in the feasibility of the Devil walking the Earth incarnate in human form. Consequently, all that needed to be done to make my brother shit his pants was to turn the lights off and shout, 'Damien!' If this wasn't terrifying enough, we watched Salem's Lot later on, and agreed that the scariest thing we'd ever seen was when a dead child returned as a vampire to haunt his brother by floating outside his bedroom window and tapping on it. Needless to say, the shouting of 'Face at the window!' when someone was alone in a room, prompted an even more traumatic soiling of underwear. But imagine the extent to which fear flew out the back end of my brother when I hid just outside the bedroom, perched on the coal-shed roof, and then tapped on the window after he'd been inside alone for 5 minutes.
Some film-inspired actions can fortunately be seen as innocuous and merely daft, rather than psychologically traumatising. Rocky inspired many children of the 70s and 80s to want to box, but it also caused me to drink a glass full of raw eggs. It was like swallowing snot. That in itself was bearable in small amounts, because in the 70s every kid was snotty and so had to swallow back the occasional teaspoonful of sloppy mucus, but a whole glass of it.... grim!
Films didn't just make you do daft or nasty things, they could also shape your outlook on life. Every time I see a new-born baby with a full head of hair I think of the babies in both The Omen and Rocky II, in both cases the child in question looked like it had been in utero for about 5 years and had come out with not just a bushy busby of black hair, but most probably a full set of teeth and politically conservative views that most of us don't have until middle age. I always balk at seeing babies with full heads of hair, thanks to those films. (Apologies to any readers whose own children had hairy heads, I'm sure they were much less werewolfy eventually).
Sometimes you don't realise how much one particular film shapes your daily existence for years and years afterwards. Everyone enjoys allowing iconic lines from a film to seep into their common parlance, as they subconsciously quote lines as part of their usual vernacular. Often, these phrases are well known and instantly recognisable - maybe from Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, Star Wars or Pulp Fiction. In my case, it's the film version of Please Sir! About 10% of all exchanges with my wife comprise of quotes from this 1971 TV spin-off film. Especially the less politically correct lines.
Finally, to conclude... Er… there's nothing to conclude. Films just make you do daft shit.
Sunday, 24 June 2018
I don't like how you listen to music
I'm assuming you're reading this blog post from start to finish? You're not plunging in somewhere in the middle, are you? Giving paragraph 4 a go before skipping back to 2, then forwarding to paragraph 10? (Ha! I said 'paragraph 10'. That'll put you off reading any more, won't it, you attention-restricted by-product of the 21st century, you! Actually, there are only 5 paragraphs, so don't worry, you'll get to the end before your mind screams demandingly for proper entertainment, like a ten second video of someone shitting in their tracksuit bottoms while using gym equipment.)
What you're NOT doing is clicking a shuffle button to make the paragraphs appear before you in a random order so as to elicit a sense of unexpected joy and surprise each and every time. But you might listen to your music on shuffle. This is WRONG. And there are lots of WRONG ways to listen to music.
To begin at the beginning. I grew up listening to records. We didn't call them vinyls or even vinyl records any more than we called cigarettes tobacco cigarettes. And unless you were a cack-handed clutz or just plain fucking careless, it was easily possible to avoid scratching or damaging records. (All the records I bought in the 80s still play without jumps or crackle, because I don't have ham fists or an illogical disregard for their preciousness.) Mind you, you did have to monitor your environment, like not letting your younger sister into your bedroom to leap from bed to floor with a thud that caused you to shout, 'YOU'LL MAKE THE RECORD JUMP!' with the sort of panicked hostility that caused her long-term psychological damage.
I did buy some albums on cassette around this time, but for the life of me I can't recall why that was. I had a need for music on tape in order to listen to my Walkman during my paper round and later on, when I could drive, the beige Austin Allegro in which I cut my road-teeth had a stereo that took cassettes. But you could just tape your records onto a TDK90 (or 60 for those annoying albums that came in at 50-something minutes rather than the sacred and infinitely preferable running time of 35-45 minutes) so there was no need to BUY albums on tape.
Then clever people on telly (Tomorrow's World, I suspect) were fooled by the BIG FUCKING LIE that said that Compact Discs were better than records, both in terms of sound quality and durability. So in about 1988, I stopped buying records and starting to get everything I wanted on CD (and then taped CDs onto cassettes for the car, until I could afford a car with a CD player, many years later.)
CDs were in fact a bit crap in sound quality until about 1993, but I didn't notice this, because the LIE was so huge. I forgot all about records. I stopped using my record player with the same callous disregard that Andy demonstrates when he stops playing with Woody somewhere between Toy Story 2 and 3. And worse still, I set about buying the CD version of all the best albums I already had on record. I even swapped my Doors LPs with my brother for his Doors CDs (again, pre-1993 versions, with a vastly diminished sound quality, like you were listening with some tights over your head) which he treasured for months before selling them to get money for booze.
Soon, CDs did start to sound better and thus began the trend for re-mastering original analogue recordings, so I'd sit and listen to Led Zeppelin re-mastered and not even think about touching the record versions, which adorned the lounge like the books in the book case that I'd read once and wouldn't read again, but kept on show for ornamental reasons. We had two children and they were able to leap from armchair to floor and make horrendous thuds, year after year, without any danger of hearing me yell at them, 'YOU'LL MAKE THE CD JUMP!'
And then computers could BURN CDs, which was the new word for making your own compilation CD, like a tape, and for a while you could illegally download songs as mp3 files, but these were worse in quality than pre-1993 CDs and sounded like someone HAD spread jam on them, like on Tomorrow's World. But soon iTunes sold us songs that sounded just as good as proper CDs and you could even use your computer to make inlay cards as long as no one caught you doing colour photo-copying at work.
Then, one day, when the kids were too old to want to make horrendous thuds, on a whim I started to listen to records again and (after realising that my old turntable was running a few rpm short of 33 1/3 and having to send it off to Manchester to one of the few turntable repair companies around) I realised that they sounded NOTICEABLY BETTER than CDs. I suddenly heard what was digital about CDs, which wasn't a problem for songs that were recorded digitally, but everything pre-mid-80s recorded in analogue sounds warmer and more real on record. Then a second-hand record shop opened where I live. Then I realised you could buy second-hand records on Ebay. Then everyone else started to like records again (bloody sheep) and bands started to release vinyl versions with pointless (to me) download codes. And thus, records now outsell CDs. And thus, I buy more records than CDs (I only buy CDs of newly released stuff by artists who aren't my favourites, simply because it's cheaper than always buying the vinyl version.) I still make CDs as well, though laptops don't have in-built CD drives anymore, because all you young bastards are streaming songs on Spotify etc... and playing them through sound bars and you have no OWNERSHIP of music. It's all INVISIBLE to you.
And that's WRONG. Invisible music, on shuffle, being beamed across the lounge to a sound-bar, passing through our heads and turning our brain cells to fudgy mush, with nothing to hold in our hands and read as we listen, because we are always holding our phones and watching videos of people shitting their tracksuit bottoms in gyms rather than actually listening or wanting to know who played bass on each track.
And that last paragraph was paragraph 10. Fooled you. Serves you right.
Saturday, 9 June 2018
I, T bloody V
I read a tweet today that concisely and accurately described how to tell you were visiting a posh house when you were growing up (assuming you grew up in the 70s or 80s) - it had more than one type of cheese and booze that wasn't bought to drink the same day. I would add one more feature: The people in the house never watched ITV.
Growing up with only 3 channels - and only two broadcasting companies - meant that your perception and judgement of BBC and ITV was in terms of their contrast to each other. It was like the sort of contrast you might have between your parents' respective families, where one was better educated, reserved, dignified and a bit tight with money (like the BBC), while the other was more popularist, loud, able to laugh at themselves and fairly wanton with the old spondoolies (ITV).
To some extent, the legacy of this dichotomy between the two channels still exists. Quiz shows are a case in point. I used to love ITV quizzes and game shows as a kid, partly because I could answer the questions and partly because the prizes were exciting (i.e. expensive). I couldn't answer anything on BBC. Even Crackerjack asked kids questions that you'd now see on University Challenge. And all they'd get for demonstrating a level of knowledge commensurate with studying for a PhD is a fucking Crackerjack pen. A poncey bloody biro. Over on ITV, if you knew the capital of England, guessed the price of a teas-maid or could throw a dart with any accuracy, you'd win a mini.
On the subject of kids' TV, for cutting edge, anarchic, brash and pure piss-your-pants lunacy, you clicked the 3 button. ITV gave us Rainbow, the forerunner of BBC's The Young Ones, ten years later. (Have you ever noticed the comparison? Zippy = Vyvyan, George = Neil, Geoffrey = Mike, Bungle = Rick; and Rod, Jane and Freddy were Motorhead, Madness, The Damned or whoever provided the music.) BBC served up Barnaby the Bear. Wetter than a Sunday afternoon in the Amazon.
Probably the most exciting time of the week was when Thames Television handed over to LWT (London Weekend Television) on a Friday evening. As the iconic London panorama folded inwards on itself to the sound of trumpets and trombones and then the letters L, W and T unfurled in red, white and blue, my ten-year-old heart would race. And then Mind Your Language came on. Proper 70s-diversity with no political agenda.
The BBC stopped broadcasting in the afternoons. Like a tired old grandfather, the channel went to sleep. Meanwhile, we'd turn over to watch Derek Batey presenting Mr and Mrs or Fred Dineage fronting Gambit, both with the most garishly coloured sets, proper council estate contestants (most of us were council tenants in those days) and most importantly, ad breaks that allowed you to go to the loo or make yourself a quick Soda Stream drink or Angel Delight.
When it boiled down to it though, and you tended to realise this slowly as you grew up, the better programmes were on BBC. Who can recall a typical Saturday night on ITV? Not me. Because nothing could compete with Jim'll Fix It (er...), Basil Brush, Doctor Who, The Generation Game, The Duchess of Duke Street, Match of the Day. I can't even tell you what I ever watched on ITV on Saturdays. Cannon and Ball in the early 80s was about the most memorable show and that was only because it was so astoundingly shit.
Nowadays, the nation is divided by Brexit, perceptions of liberalism and attitudes towards male grooming; back then, you either watched ITV or you didn't. We did and were proud of the fact. And in its favour, it wasn't all trashy and low-brow. I learnt more from How? then I did from Mr Sagoo my physics teacher in secondary school. And that's what sums up ITV. Fred Dineage was educating the kids in How? at the same time as he was encouraging gambling in Gambit. Your know that if Fred was your uncle, he'd spend more than a fiver on your Christmas present.
Because he's I, T bloody V!
Growing up with only 3 channels - and only two broadcasting companies - meant that your perception and judgement of BBC and ITV was in terms of their contrast to each other. It was like the sort of contrast you might have between your parents' respective families, where one was better educated, reserved, dignified and a bit tight with money (like the BBC), while the other was more popularist, loud, able to laugh at themselves and fairly wanton with the old spondoolies (ITV).
To some extent, the legacy of this dichotomy between the two channels still exists. Quiz shows are a case in point. I used to love ITV quizzes and game shows as a kid, partly because I could answer the questions and partly because the prizes were exciting (i.e. expensive). I couldn't answer anything on BBC. Even Crackerjack asked kids questions that you'd now see on University Challenge. And all they'd get for demonstrating a level of knowledge commensurate with studying for a PhD is a fucking Crackerjack pen. A poncey bloody biro. Over on ITV, if you knew the capital of England, guessed the price of a teas-maid or could throw a dart with any accuracy, you'd win a mini.
On the subject of kids' TV, for cutting edge, anarchic, brash and pure piss-your-pants lunacy, you clicked the 3 button. ITV gave us Rainbow, the forerunner of BBC's The Young Ones, ten years later. (Have you ever noticed the comparison? Zippy = Vyvyan, George = Neil, Geoffrey = Mike, Bungle = Rick; and Rod, Jane and Freddy were Motorhead, Madness, The Damned or whoever provided the music.) BBC served up Barnaby the Bear. Wetter than a Sunday afternoon in the Amazon.
Probably the most exciting time of the week was when Thames Television handed over to LWT (London Weekend Television) on a Friday evening. As the iconic London panorama folded inwards on itself to the sound of trumpets and trombones and then the letters L, W and T unfurled in red, white and blue, my ten-year-old heart would race. And then Mind Your Language came on. Proper 70s-diversity with no political agenda.
The BBC stopped broadcasting in the afternoons. Like a tired old grandfather, the channel went to sleep. Meanwhile, we'd turn over to watch Derek Batey presenting Mr and Mrs or Fred Dineage fronting Gambit, both with the most garishly coloured sets, proper council estate contestants (most of us were council tenants in those days) and most importantly, ad breaks that allowed you to go to the loo or make yourself a quick Soda Stream drink or Angel Delight.
When it boiled down to it though, and you tended to realise this slowly as you grew up, the better programmes were on BBC. Who can recall a typical Saturday night on ITV? Not me. Because nothing could compete with Jim'll Fix It (er...), Basil Brush, Doctor Who, The Generation Game, The Duchess of Duke Street, Match of the Day. I can't even tell you what I ever watched on ITV on Saturdays. Cannon and Ball in the early 80s was about the most memorable show and that was only because it was so astoundingly shit.
Nowadays, the nation is divided by Brexit, perceptions of liberalism and attitudes towards male grooming; back then, you either watched ITV or you didn't. We did and were proud of the fact. And in its favour, it wasn't all trashy and low-brow. I learnt more from How? then I did from Mr Sagoo my physics teacher in secondary school. And that's what sums up ITV. Fred Dineage was educating the kids in How? at the same time as he was encouraging gambling in Gambit. Your know that if Fred was your uncle, he'd spend more than a fiver on your Christmas present.
Because he's I, T bloody V!
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