Thursday, July 05, 2007
NO! NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO!
Floods are judgement on society say bishops
What next? “David Beckham’s latest bad haircut is punishment for the Spice Girls reunion says curate”?
On a lighter note, the story of how the only entrant in a village fete’s cake competition came second…
Wednesday, June 27, 2007
Logo Nogo... So what?
Particularly the people who think that we’re moving too slowly. We’re on track to be ready well in time. Athens wasn’t anywhere near this stage this far ahead, and that came off. So why on earth do they think that the UK can’t do it? We all seem to be of the opinion that Greece is a disorganised and inefficient country when it comes to major events (something seemingly borne out by the Champions League Final debacle last month), and that we’re highly capable. So what’s the issue?!
I’m particularly sick of the people who assume that things like the cost of the Olympic logo were only so high because it factors in things like corporate jollies and focus groups and that everyone in the government had a whizzo jolly time and then designed it in 10 minutes using clip art.
I don’t like the logo either, and I work for the Dept now defending it, the one responsible for the Olympic Games going ahead. And none of us had a wonderful time at anyone’s expense. In fact, I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but we all have to pay tax too…
Its not the objection to the logo that I can’t stand – I totally understand that bit. It’s the assumption that every civil servant working on anything remotely linked to the games is spending the budget on fine wine and caviar and getting pissed at their desks.
Or the people who phone or write to us to complain and when they get an answer to their letter, no matter how true or complete our response, constantly accuse us of lying, or covering up, or being ignorant of what the country as a whole thinks. I forget when we selected them to talk on the country’s behalf, but there we go. We don’t express our own opinions when answering letters, just the policy. So why do they assume we are? Is everyone really as thick as that? Surely not…
We work bloody hard for very little public respect, often, and then get criticised for anything and everything – including trying to ensure our job security when thousands of civil service jobs are being cut - by newspapers who make a lot of their information up and morons who read and believe every word they say.
And as for the people who think that we shouldn’t have an Olympics because they can’t see what benefit it will have on their area, they should stop being so damn selfish. Londoners are paying more council tax to help fund the games when everyone else isn’t. The benefits will be best for Londoners, yes, but you can’t put a price on a few weeks of sport inspiring a whole new generation. Luke will be 6 when the Olympics come to town, and if he’s interested and wants to go, I’ll take him if I can. Its one of the best and high-profile events in the world, and I don’t see the point in being all po-faced about it.
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Friday, May 25, 2007
Dance Tonight - Paul McCartney
The new Paul McCartney video - directed by Michel Gondry, guest starring Natalie Portman and Mackenzie Crook... It's great, and the song is great too... To me, anyway...
Huh?
Newsround used to be one of my favourite programmes when I was younger. And even when I was at university, I’d still watch it, because it was just a bit nicer to watch than the news.
These days, however, it annoys me.
This morning’s edition is a good example of why.
Take a few seconds to think about all the news in the world at the moment. Wars in Afganistan, Iraq, the Middle east. Terror suspects absconding. Human rights abuses all over the world, change of Prime Minister in a month’s time, North Korea test-firing missiles, the underwater dinosaur tracks showing that they could swim and the first results of this year’s Spingwatch survey. If you’re pushed, there’s the Big Brother controversies both here and in Australia, Blue Peter losing a show a week, the results of the Ivor Novello Awards, and even a story about an escaped Orangutan running riot at a zoo.
This was the 3-story order for the stories on this morning’s Newsround:
1, Michael Owen will captain the England B team against Albania tomorrow.
2, A boy who lives in a tent is interviewed
3, a bird poos on George W Bush during a press conference.
Now, granted, the third is a very funny story and would always make my personal running order, but is this really the best we can do?
I know that not all kids would be interested in a lot of the heavy news that’s been cropping up, and the editors need to do what will interest their target audience, but surely we don’t have to dumb things down so much that we get to this stage?!
Sigh.
Thursday, May 24, 2007
Judge not lest you be judged...?
Why is it that the Conservative side of Christianity has a far bigger mouth?
Sunday, May 13, 2007
The Eurovision Political Contest
We're not in a Balkan country. Or an ex-Russian territory. Or a Baltic country. In short, we're unlikely to win the Eurovision Song contest until everyone else has forgotten about Iraq - or been forced to vote according to the quality of the song entry, not whether or not they're mates with another country.
It's sad - there were some intruiging songs in there, not great, but interesting. And ours wasn't bad, you know. I am aware that the papers have criticised Scooch for their performance (especially the Daily Mirror), but they did well - the performance was funny, they weren't out of tune, and the song was a good one in Eurovision terms - it was silly, fluffy pop, subtly filthy, and accompanied by daft costumes and at least one permatan. In fact, all we needed was for the two guys to be sporting healthy beards and we'd be able to claim we'd followed the Abba formula...
And we, the humble voting public of the UK did vote this through as our representative. We can hardly blame Scooch for not winning - we sent them there, and they don't decide to mount illegal invasions of other countries. We should be proud of them, I think - they certainly deserved to do a lot better in the voting than they did.
The voting is ridiculous. It always was, but its worse now. There were always the predictable love-ins: Greece and Cyprus; Norway, Denmark, Finland, Iceland and Sweden; Portugal and Spain. But now we have countless countries voting, and surely we can't be sure that there's not some rigging going on somewhere...
The song that won, quite simply, was awful. It was dirgy, had perhaps the least exciting performance of the show, and a performer who had the on-stage charisma of a squashed ant. It's neatly summed up by her views on music:
'I listen to music - I don't want to watch it, I want to listen to it.'
Which misses the entire point of Eurovision, surely.
Scooch had a catchy song, and maybe it was a little out of date in that sense (as Tim Moore argues here). But hang on, a lot of the other songs were rocky power ballads - a staple from the 1980s... And the only differences that spring to mind are Ireland (awful as it was, it was a truely Irish pop song - folky and twee. And in need of stronger vocals), Estonia (hmm. It was just an old drag queen - the song was not at all memorable), and Sweden (an interesting 60s throwback with a man who looked a bit ridiculous).
Oh, and the French. That was worse than awful with a small bald man resembling Richard O'Brien running round and round the band shouting into the mic, completely distracting from the act.
The German entry was very good as I remember though, nice to see something as different as swing making it onto the Eurovision stage. but that disappeared too.
I'm a quiet Eurovision fan, but I'm no less disappointed with this year's show. Something needs to change. If the people running the show were there on Saturday and heard the boos coming from the audience, maybe they'll get the message somewhere along the line.
I love music, and I love the art of songwriting, and that is what this is meant to showcase. Instead, its a daft circus which is followed by a biased and allegedly corrupt method of determining a winner.
Time for a regime change, George and Tony?
Monday, May 07, 2007
Down and Out With A Whimper
OK, so there’s the scandal of West Ham fielding allegedly inelligible players and being given the luckiest break of all football history by not being docked points when they would have done in any other situation and having a set of fans who inexplicably seem to think they have some divine right to be in the Premiership.
But have Charlton complained? Despite Wigan setting a pathetic precedent by whingeing their endangered little heads off about everybody else, all Charlton have complained about is their own performance.
I have a few worries about the season… I think Iain Dowie should have been given a better chance with this group of players – after all, he brought them in with a vision in mind. I’m concerned that for the first time, Charlton seem to have made a knee-jerk reaction with his firing, instead of showing faith. However, I think Alan Pardew is a very good man to have in his place, and maybe a season (or two) in the Championship is what he and the club need to truly begin working together. We saw what he’s capable of through the post-christmas revival, when we traditionally fall away disgustingly.
However, I’m still proud to be a Charlton supporter. I’m still proud at the honesty and dignity with which Pards has accepted the fate. We asked for it, gave survival our best short, nearly made it but lacked the quality to manage. Again, as with Saints being relegated in Rugby Union, maybe the ticket prices will go down a bit and I’ll be able to get along to see a game…
The Definition of a Bad Loser?
Let me fill you in.
The last game of the “Millennium Magic” event at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff was between two of the stronger teams in Super League – Bradford Bulls and Leeds Rhinos. Its usually a good match between them and this time was no exception. Bradford led 38-36 with a minute left to go. Leeds were awarded a penalty, and Kevin Sinfield kicked for goal to tie the game.
The kick rebounded off a post, a Leeds player collected the ball and got over the line to score a try, which turned out to be the winning points. The referee, Steve Ganson, wasn’t aware of any problems with the play and awarded the try without referring to the video referee.
It now seems that after viewing video evidence, the try-scorer, Jordan Tansey, was clearly offside when chasing the kick down, and therefore the try should have been disallowed. But the move was not referred, the video evidence not analysed by officials at the time, and nothing done. Since the game, Steve Ganson has seen the video, and backed by the Rugby Football League, publicly apologised for the mistake and said that he wished that he had referred the decision. Fair enough, you might think – its sport, played and regulated by human beings, and sometimes these things happen.
But, this is clearly not the way Bradford Bulls think about sport. The below is quoted on the BBC Sport website:
“The Leeds Rhinos club is justifiably a proud club, with a great tradition, andFor goodness sake, do us all a favour and grow up. These things happen - it’s what sport does to you. You don’t always win and you are not always happy with everything. Just grow up, swallow it and get on with the next game.
a club which above all values its reputation for right and fair dealing in everything it does.
"For these reasons I shall be inviting the Leeds Rhinos to do the right thing again now, for the benefit of their own reputation certainly, but also for the good of the great game of rugby league, to voluntarily hand over to Bradford Bulls what is, as the whole game now acknowledges, rightfully ours - the two points so cruelly taken from us by Mr Ganson's failure to act.”
For the record, the Leeds Rhinos’ response is perfect (in my opinion) – again quoted on the BBC Sport website:
“It's an unusual request to be asked to consider.In other words, just stop complaining and get on with it.
"The Bulls will have another chance for two points on 29 June when the two teams meet at Carnegie Headingley.”
In the cricket world, Sri Lanka have complained to the ICC about Adam Gilchrist’s use of a squash ball in his batting glove while playing. For those of you who don’t know, AG used a softened squash ball in one of his gloves to prevent the bat from turning in his hands when playing a shot throughout the World Cup. It didn’t come up as an issue at the time presumably because his performances in the first 10 matches they played were modest by his standards. But since his record-breaking 149 from 104 balls in final helped the aussies beat Sri Lanka by 51 runs, it is apparently something the losing finalists have decided should be reported to the ICC. They claim that they aren’t saying its illegal, just that its not in the “spirit and tradition of the game.”
The Australian response is typically Aussie and thoroughly fair comment:
“It's a storm in a teacup, or a batting glove. It's been suggested that if
shoving a squash ball into your bottom glove makes you bat like Adam Gilchrist,
then perhaps the ICC should make it compulsory.”
Peter Young, Cricket Australia.
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Taking a break...
1, Luke and Nikki come first, and I'm running out of spare time!
2, I am completely unconvinced that anyone reads this.
3,I have started working on something I hope I can tell people about in a few months time - it's a writing project and I'm excited to have begun giving it attention. But I won't say anything else about it yet.
I'm still contactable via crackingcheese@hotmail.com, and the two other blogs attached to this one, Duplo Philosophy and Sir Leonard Beastly's Social Whirl will both be updated as normal...
http://duplo-philosophy.blogspot.com
http://sir-leonard-beastlys-social-whirl.blogspot.com
If you ever read this, please take a minute to let me know. It might influence when I start posting again. Otherwise, come and find me on www.facebook.com and let me know.
Chris.


