Thursday, 20 November 2008
A Strategy
A strategy for not working. Empty the fluff not only from the sieve on the dryer door, but from the grills on the machine itself. A quarter of an hour can be made to pass this way.
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
Broken Families
The bonding of families, if it even exists any more, no longer takes place in the front parlour around the pianoforte - radio, and of course television have coalboxed that. Books still exist, and we are assured (mostly by publishers) that they always will, but they seem to be increasingly pushed out to the penumbra by online, talking books and, the most recent horror, the illuminated tablet, all designed to put a generation of opticians out of business.
No, the family is dead and the church, often cast in the role of surrogate, is dead and buried.
No, the family is dead and the church, often cast in the role of surrogate, is dead and buried.
Petrol, or a Lilo?
Listen up here. Have you tried buying a gallon of petrol recently? I'd advise a stiff drink before ever thinking about it. If petrol was all you'd be wanting, you'd probably get away without breaking sweat. But try to get your hands on a petrol filler-cap or a P12 spark plug; try to get some of the air around you into the tyres; or even try a desultory conversation with the blight behind the bullet-proof glass panel. You have to mouth your request, be it for a deck-chair, lilo or pot-plant, through the slit below the glass, quickly replacing your mouth with your ear before the wretch responds. And of course a deck-chair will not fit through the slit, any more than the tin of 20:30 that he has just run out of.
Tuesday, 18 November 2008
Au Contraire
A contraflow am I? Au contraire. What's more, I'm not alone.
Remember Harvey Goldsmith trying to build that set for Pavaotti (another forward thinking Italian) in Hyde Park? Couldn't get the steel here, nobody was interested. Had to go to Switzerland. Switzerland! So much for Orson and the cuckoo clock.
Never mind steel - have you ever tried to buy a piece of elastic? No, not 500 metres on a roll, but just a piece to support your knickers? Yes, of course you could in Ballydehob or Bridgwater because they would have a corsetiere or a draper's shop. Try it in the West End of Londonium and you will grow a beard looking, to say nothing of the whites-of-eye behind the counter.
Tried to buy a packet of Persil the other day in Sainsburys - there's a new one opened close to us, looks like a giant Terminal 4 sized Happy Eater, complete with 'runway'. They don't make packets of Persil any more. The smallest I could find was (to stay on the carousel a moment longer) the size of a small suitcase, the bunny-dip being required to lift it without putting myself into traction. Lucky the car has a tail-lift and the house dates from 1902, or I'd have had to decant the powder into the kitchen.
Remember Harvey Goldsmith trying to build that set for Pavaotti (another forward thinking Italian) in Hyde Park? Couldn't get the steel here, nobody was interested. Had to go to Switzerland. Switzerland! So much for Orson and the cuckoo clock.
Never mind steel - have you ever tried to buy a piece of elastic? No, not 500 metres on a roll, but just a piece to support your knickers? Yes, of course you could in Ballydehob or Bridgwater because they would have a corsetiere or a draper's shop. Try it in the West End of Londonium and you will grow a beard looking, to say nothing of the whites-of-eye behind the counter.
Tried to buy a packet of Persil the other day in Sainsburys - there's a new one opened close to us, looks like a giant Terminal 4 sized Happy Eater, complete with 'runway'. They don't make packets of Persil any more. The smallest I could find was (to stay on the carousel a moment longer) the size of a small suitcase, the bunny-dip being required to lift it without putting myself into traction. Lucky the car has a tail-lift and the house dates from 1902, or I'd have had to decant the powder into the kitchen.
Monday, 17 November 2008
Italians, don't you just love them?
Begob, it is the land of Michaelangelo and Leonardo but, frankly, that's not the half of it. You see, they still make things there. No, not just furniture and lighting, not just cars and clothing; they make lots of things you would never think about. Machine tools, aluminium extrusions, glass - and it is usually less expensive and better. Do you know it is cheaper for me to buy an 18mm thick plate glass table top in Milan and cart it across the Alps, than to buy it from Pilkingtons? So where do I buy it?
Listen, this didn't happen by accident, and it didn't happen overnight. This has happened since the war - 60 years. They are not really more 'artistic' than we are. Did anybody ever apply paint better than Turner? Did Wren have to tip his hat to anybody? Is there a more prolific architect than Foster drawing breath today? Faith, no there isn't.
It's industry. Industry got behind the designer, paid his milk bill while he was scratchin' away with the HB; then they paid for the mock-up; then they paid for the tools to make the piece. Later they built a factory to produce it, and paid the people for miles around to come and work there. And they had still sold nothing, not one unit.
So don't talk to me about the 'mystique' of Italian design. Talk to me about what this government is going to do to foster a climate where the artisan is king, not the merchant banker or the computer operator.
Listen, this didn't happen by accident, and it didn't happen overnight. This has happened since the war - 60 years. They are not really more 'artistic' than we are. Did anybody ever apply paint better than Turner? Did Wren have to tip his hat to anybody? Is there a more prolific architect than Foster drawing breath today? Faith, no there isn't.
It's industry. Industry got behind the designer, paid his milk bill while he was scratchin' away with the HB; then they paid for the mock-up; then they paid for the tools to make the piece. Later they built a factory to produce it, and paid the people for miles around to come and work there. And they had still sold nothing, not one unit.
So don't talk to me about the 'mystique' of Italian design. Talk to me about what this government is going to do to foster a climate where the artisan is king, not the merchant banker or the computer operator.
Wednesday, 9 July 2008
The Greatest? Do me a favour!
Instead of following my natural instincts of sloth and selfishness, and settling down to watch on telly what was obviously going to be a great tennis confrontation, I followed the advice of Sunday Times guru Simon Jenkins, and 'did live' with my youngest son, in a damp field in Kent, watching the great Neil Young.
But live or 'dead' the Beeb commentators had no business declaiming it 'the best tennis ever played', any more than Fed or Rafa can be described as 'the greatest'. Why is it that pundits have to label everything in extremis ?
The technique of the game has advanced, and we can probably guess that Connors never employed a 'nutritionist'; racquet and ball technology has taken a quantum leap in 20 years, and the scoring system, one of the most perfect creations of man, has only taken a small, and helpful augmentation, in the shape of the time shrinking, set ending tie break.
The question has been posited; is tennis an art or a science?
It seems to me to be neither, but a sport; but that is not to say that there are not practitioners who are artists (Santoro), or those who, primarily, use technology to advance their cause, and seek to batter their opponents into submission with power and little finesse (Roddick).
Laver, at the age of Rafa (22), equipped with a modern bat, and a left arm such as he possessed, could well (in the dream-world I inhabit) have been too strong for Rafa, with too much guile.
But live or 'dead' the Beeb commentators had no business declaiming it 'the best tennis ever played', any more than Fed or Rafa can be described as 'the greatest'. Why is it that pundits have to label everything in extremis ?
The technique of the game has advanced, and we can probably guess that Connors never employed a 'nutritionist'; racquet and ball technology has taken a quantum leap in 20 years, and the scoring system, one of the most perfect creations of man, has only taken a small, and helpful augmentation, in the shape of the time shrinking, set ending tie break.
The question has been posited; is tennis an art or a science?
It seems to me to be neither, but a sport; but that is not to say that there are not practitioners who are artists (Santoro), or those who, primarily, use technology to advance their cause, and seek to batter their opponents into submission with power and little finesse (Roddick).
Laver, at the age of Rafa (22), equipped with a modern bat, and a left arm such as he possessed, could well (in the dream-world I inhabit) have been too strong for Rafa, with too much guile.
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