http://open.spotify.com/track/5kgTNMMDhTN1FJQlxjj37O
Yours truly,
Booth
Tuesday, 31 August 2010
Tuesday, 17 August 2010
is space not the final frontier?
Sorry Jim, but we’re going to have to agree to disagree on this. Moving through space is all well and good but realistically the only outcome is winding up sitting on a different lump of rock. And if you’re lucky the locals, who may or may not have blue skin, won’t try to disembowel you for planting a flag on some of their prime real estate. Sounds to me like your just holding down a job and paying a mortgage somewhere slightly different. That said, “Sorry mum, I’m 20,000 light years away.” is a half descent excuse to avoid family gatherings. But it does leave you with the hassle of explaining to her that turning the warp drive off and on again won’t get you home any faster. I’m thinking time travel, that’s the big one.
In my infinite boredom I find myself wondering when I would go. Which is a much more interesting question than where I would go. The sad fact of life is that the practicalities ruin the innate magic. Traveling around the world should be an ideal thing to fantasise about while I sit at my desk doing very little work (but still probably on facebook). But the whole idea is tarnished by the realities. It’s a feasible idea, it’s workable in the world we live in. So when i think about traveling around the world my first thought is not of the magnificent rivers and breath-taking mountains but expense! Wham! The flashbacks set in from previous Ryan Air flights. You start a check list in your head; make an appointment with the doctor, buy travel insurance, find someone to look after the dog etc etc What started off as a fantasy has turned into a rather dull string of organisational tasks. Believe me, that’s not how I like my daydreams to end!
Wouldn’t mind swinging by the 16th century for a while. (Talk about needing you travel vaccinations!) A quick round of golf with a chap named Henry wouldn’t go a miss. I foresee (Actually, would you call it foresight?) a beautiful opportunity for an ‘Enjoying 18 holes / having 6 wives’ joke emerging. I suppose making it a quick round could be a tactical error, only playing 9 holes might scupper things slightly.
Having a gander at the future would be a laugh too. Not my own future, I have no interest in knowing how my life pans out. I like to encounter each individual piece of misery as it occurs. And don’t give me any of that changing your life for the better crap. I’ve seen enough sci-fi to know that it doesn’t work. I’ll end up making things worse, condemn myself to the lime green prison of an ASDA uniform and possibly even cause the universe to collapse in on itself. Only bad can come of it. I mean the real future. Robots, flashing lights, a Costa on the moon - the whole shabang! It’ll be reassuring to see that people are still screwing things up 400 years from now. America will probably be invading the middle east for its dilithium crystals under the guise of peace-keeping.
We’re wandering dangerously close to the realms in which people think themselves cool for knowing what “TARDIS’ stands for, so I’ll draw to a timely close. In the time it has taken to write this blog, the adventurer within me has been quashed and the rather dull, financially motivated side has arisen. I’m thinking I might pop back to the 90s and invest in a little company called google...
Timelessly yours,
Guiteau
Thursday, 12 August 2010
are nuns really cool?
I saw some nuns on the train the other day. One of them was knitting some beigy wooly thing, and another was reading History Today. Most of them were seventy plus. I guess there’s not much of a market for nunning anymore, now that we have much more exciting religions, like Scientology. Er, hang out on a yacht with Tom Cruise, or wear itchy underwear? Hm. Tough one.
There was one nun who could perhaps be described as “young”, although she fell into that category of people who are just really hard to age. I’d say she was probably somewhere between 18-30, although it’s difficult to tell in those habits. Gok would not be impressed; “Get those tits out girls, show ‘em what you’ve got!”.
Anyway, she looked slightly awkward. You know when you end up in a room full of old people, and you’re all like “Shit, mustn’t talk about sex, alcohol, or drugs”, which is pretty hard when those are the sole components of your life… (who am I trying to kid? I’m writing a blog, obviously I have no life). Anyway, you’re all like “Oh yes, I LOVE crochet knitting! Please would you pass the Rich Tea biscuits?” Which is ridiculous, considering they’ve probably had more sex than you’ve ever had.
Well, not if they’re nuns I guess, but you catch my drift.
Hanging out with old people is just painful. And sometimes, when you’re trying so hard, you can’t help but slip up. It’s like the Fates are conspiring against you. Or God is sitting on a big white fluffy cloud in the sky and saying “Hey Jesus, come have a look at me fuck this bitch over! It’ll be well jokes!”
You drop the biscuit.
“Oh, fuck it!”
And all their little beady eyes turn to stare at you, like you might as well have shagged Pete Doherty on the Persian rug in front of them, at 4.30pm (which is when Countdown was always on - don’t pretend that you didn’t already know).
Obviously the young nun didn’t drop a biscuit and shout “Fuck!” really loudly. Because that would’ve been hilarious, and a brilliant punch-line, and actually made this blog somewhat interesting. She just stood there looking awkward, and was probably at that very moment wishing she hadn’t signed up to be a nun, or however you do it, and was metaphorically shagging Pete Doherty instead.
Nuns have a sort of collective aura. People give them a wide berth, although given public paranoia on transport, this may simply have been concern that it was a consignment of Al Qaeda terrorists in disguise. Because yes, every terrorist secretly desires to blow up Pontefract Boghill station… (I’d better write “jk” after this, just in case some government organization reads this, and gets the wrong idea). JK. No wait, I mean, er…
That’s one thing that I don’t get, people (namely my grandparents) are so furiously against the hijab, because, well, they’re racist (they can’t help it, they read the Daily Mail). And there are all these intellectual arguments that the hijab is degrading to women rather than empowering, yet no one really thinks this of nuns.
But yeah, you might as well be a llama in a station, for the amount of attention nuns receive. Some people just openly stand there and stare. At least I had the decency to buy myself a latte and pretend to be reading the paper… albeit with two eyeholes cut out. But hey, the Russians got away with that trick for 9 years! Cunning Russians…
And one or two people will wander over and talk to them. Generally old men with beards, who probably think the tales about nuns being pent-up sex beasts who’ll willingly service the needs of any man, even those with dodgy beards, are actually still true. Not that I’m pogonophobic or anything…
Ok, way too many of these paragraphs are ending with ellipses now. Not cool. Possibly a reflection of my wandering and erratic mind although.
It’s like being a nun offers instant celebrity status, simply for having bad dress sense, no sex, and believing in God. Ok, that’s quite a lot of sacrifices one would have to make simply to get noticed, so I’m fairly sure they don’t take their vows for the attention. It must be pretty weird actually. I mean, “Baby Nun” looked like the kind of girl who had always been on the edge of the stage all her life, hanging around where they keep the scenery and props. And suddenly, everyone is watching her wherever she goes. Not in a mean way, more in a mildly interested “Ooh, look! It’s a nun! Don’t see many of them these days!” kind of way. It’s a bit like they’re a species of rare bird; Bill Oddie will be hanging around next with his binoculars. What can I say, he does have a dodgy beard after all. (This would be the perfect place for an ellipses, but no, I refuse to fall into the punctuation trap…)
An ex-boyfriend of mine once told me he wanted to become a monk. I mean, having your BF/GF tell you that they are gay is pretty bad. Not because they’re gay, for all you moral crusaders out there who were about to lynch me, but because you’d feel like you were so repulsive in bed they couldn’t bear to sleep with another woman again. But having them tell you that they want to give up sex altogether is off the scale; “She was so hideous, I was like, I cannot sleep with another human being EVER AGAIN!”
He didn’t become a monk by the way. I think actually, in retrospect, he probably just wanted me to beg him not to. I just punched him and told him not to even fucking dare.
In conclusion, maybe I lied; nuns aren’t really that cool. I’m certainly not planning on becoming one any day soon. But I have a certain amount of respect for them; someone who believes in something so strongly that they are willing to give up so much in life maybe fairly stupid, but they are also very brave. I don’t think I’ll ever be able to make such a giant leap of faith, and in many ways I wish that I could. It must be such a wonderful feeling to believe in something so completely, and to be so free of doubt.
So, yep, think I’ve sufficiently waffled for now.
Over ‘n’ out,
Oswald.
are we completely dependent on technology?
That’s right folks, a guy sat typing at his laptop is going to moan about technology. He’s going to tell you it’s evil and ruining our lives, yet doesn’t want to be too far away from his emails all the while. He might miss a 75% off DVD sale at Amazon, not to mention that new PS3 controller he’s watching on eBay!
There is good technology. Good technology is the type that does it’s job but you don’t consciously acknowledge. You walk into a room and turn the light on without really thinking. I don’t really notice the central heating that much either, slight whirr from the boiler but nothing major. I’m also rather fond of running water. That said if they were ever to stop without warning then you’d be looking up numbers in the yellow pages so you can find someone to shout at down the phone. Of course these days, you’d be scouring Yell.com and firing off angry emails. These three are akin to Yakult’s good bacteria and so, by extension, the rest could well kill you! Or more commonly just give you a dodgy stomach.
I think it’s time that we face the fact that the internet is one big conspiracy to distract us from what’s really important in life. I don’t know what this mysterious important thing is, I’ve had a facebook account for over 3 years, I’m too far gone. But I know that it’s out there.
The internet’s always there, tempting us. You sit down to rewrite your CV at 6:30, but first you should just quickly check your emails. Nothing too interesting there, a couple of adverts, Travel lodge are offering you a room for £9 and NPower want a meter reading. Dull. You know how a CV is structured but still you decide that it’s worth looking up. It’s the modern form of an ancient art; that of feeling like you’re working whilst not actually working. Colour coding your folders and arranging them alphabetically, that kind of thing. Of course, your homepage is BBC news and it turns out that if the most interesting things to happen that day are displayed strikingly on a single page, it can be a little diverting. *An Indeterminate Amount of Time Passes* Now that you’re up to speed on the Pope’s travel plans, you look at the clock - 8:45. This leads you to the conclusion that the internet can warp time, and so you minimize Firefox as a precaution to avoid missing Top Gear. Which leaves you back staring at your word document. It states back as unspoiled as when you opened it. Reluctantly, you admit to yourself that enough’s enough, it’s time to crack on. You’re just about to start typing when suddenly you have a great idea for a Tweet (Or worse a blog) and that’s it. You’re stuck helpless on the intricately woven tinterweb.
Even the simple ones manage to aggravate us. Last week, I inadvertently stood on some blu tac and didn’t notice until the insidious little miscreant had become firmly entangled in one of my favourite socks. Many people would at this juncture be grateful that they don’t fix their wall decorations with drawing pins but I’d rather a hole in my foot than a tac in my sock. Who needs skin? At least that problem would have healed itself.
It’s okay for me, I’m a young man, probably in my prime (although that’s depressing for a whole host of other reasons) - I can handle it. But! There’s an entire generation sat at home right now wondering why they can only get one channel on the microwave and what time it’ll be showing Songs of Praise. Those are the real victims of our 21st century lifestyle. My gran can’t handle self service machines in Tesco! As far as she’s concerned touch screen computers are black magic. Realistically, at her age, being confronted by witchcraft after pushing that trolley for an hour is enough to make her cardiologist more than a little nervous. The poor woman is likely convinced that the voice reminding her to take her items is in her head.
Sometimes it makes me wonder, whose side are they one anyway? But then I think of those two beautiful words and I forgive the lot. Two words that literally send a chill down my spine. Air conditioning.
Regards,
Guiteau
Thursday, 5 August 2010
does the universe persecute everyone else too?
Ever had one of those days? You get dressed, go outside and it’s raining but you swear that a split second before you crossed the threshold it wasn’t. Seems unlikely that the universe is conspiring to make you slightly damp but you reserve the right to be suspicious. No choice but to go about your business, but you still check over your shoulder periodically for signs of further minor inconvenience. Never quite sure what it is you’re looking for, but you’ll recognise it when it comes along.
A couple of hours later the rain dries up and the sun starts to shine albeit from behind cloud. Maybe you’ve got away with it! Your good old fashioned stiff upper lip in the face of drizzle and stubborn refusal to seek shelter has shown the world that it can’t win. You might smell vaguely like wet dog but you’re 1-0 up. The whole damn macrocosm should just cut its losses, cash its chips and go home.
Turns out the universe is willing to go for broke. They’ve always run out of your favourite sandwich but none of the others. To make things worse, for reasons that you can only assume are beyond the comprehension of man, they have about 20 more tuna mayonnaise than any other. Do Boots not make more than 1 chicken and bacon?! How do we not have a law against this atrocity? Well, a chicken and stuffing isn’t too bad but it’s not the one you were already mentally eating when you walked through the door. So you start queuing with your second-rate sandwich in hand when you see the clumsily written sign “No cards today. Sorry for any inconvenience”. Your mentally envisaged self drops his sandwich, runs for the automatic doors and starts scouting the local area for a cash machine. But there isn’t one. There never is. By my count, it’s half time and its got you 3 times. Slightly more miserable than before you slump back to an afternoon of hard graft. We’ll call that 4.
It’s the end of a hard day and there’s only one reasonable solution to a man equipped with any sense; a cup of tea. Into the house and straight to the kitchen, you reach for the switch and FLASH. And then dark. The bulb’s gone and so taken a fuse with it. No time for that now, you stay on course for the kettle, praying it’s on a different power circuit. Dead. You decide to settle for a glass of milk. Lumpy. The cosmos got you 3 times in 30 seconds. Unlucky 7, and that’s it. Game over. Bed. You’ll need your rest if you’re going to beat it tomorrow.
It once occurred to me that I might be paranoid but I’ve come to realise that’s just what the psychologists say when they’re out to get you. They say that there’s always someone worse off than yourself. By my reckoning, that leaves one poor sucker at the bottom of the list deserving a bloody good sympathy card.
Don’t let the universe win!
Guiteau
Sunday, 1 August 2010
isn't it great when something turns out not like you'd expect?
They started off with this..
(Notice the blend of the Cadbury's Flake song and the gorilla drumming tune (kind of) in the background.)
But since then, Cadbury's have come a long way. The standard in their advertising has improved vastly. They've managed to create adverts which really stick in the public's mind.
This is the latest version of the advert above:
I really thought it was a perfume advert at first and was impressed they'd gone to that much effort for a chocolate advert... mmm
Potential inspiration:
I really thought it was a perfume advert at first and was impressed they'd gone to that much effort for a chocolate advert... mmm
Potential inspiration:
Yours truly,
Booth
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