‘Off Yoghurt’ archive

Stuff I’ve written elsewhere


Merchandising

Blog Digest keyringsWell, I hasn’t taken me long to descend to the level of a shameless, dignity-free shill.

After Rachel’s suggestion and kind offer, an unholy alliance of eBay, Photoshop and too much spare time has produced these babies: limited edition Blog Digest 2007 keyrings. There are currently only ten in existence.

To get one, email me a photo of you with your copy of The Blog Digest along with the proof of purchase. I’ll publish the photo and a link to your blog if you have one. You can then put the keyring on eBay.

Simon and the Blog DigestUpdate: Simon gets the first keyring. He bought his copy from Amazon so ignore their ‘Usually dispatched within 4 to 6 weeks’ warning - it’s cobblers.

Posted on December 5th, 2006 at 7:22 pm

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The Blog Digest 2007
Quick note on the book
Competition time
   
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Blog Digest out in the wild

The book, spotted in Borders in Brighton:

The Blog Digest and I

Sorry if you’re bored of of my going on about the book but I warn you I may still be hammering on about it for some time yet. When your first book comes out I guarantee you’ll also be this giddy/sad.

Posted on December 3rd, 2006 at 5:45 pm

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LOCAL ELECTION 2007 - BREAKING NEWS: Portslade falls - UPDATED
Commence au festival!
Retooling Iraq
   
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• Filed under Off Yoghurt, Pooterism, The Blog Digest 2007
 
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Quick note on the book

Anybody tempted to buy the book from Amazon but put off by the message ‘Availability: Usually dispatched within 4 to 6 weeks’ should ignore it. Davide received his copy from them in 24 hours.

Posted on December 3rd, 2006 at 9:41 am

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The Blog Digest 2007
Merchandising
Tell Alastair Campbell to go f**k himself update
   
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One of Britain’s biggest bloggers

I did a little rooting around in the 18 Doughty Street archives and found the Vox Politics show that I appeared on this week.

Watch me here (windows media) in all my fat glory. The lager and sausage roll diet is clearly not working.

Posted on December 2nd, 2006 at 11:35 am

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The Red Menace
Great face for blogging
A proper gander
   
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• Filed under Blog, bloggers and blogging, Elsewhere, Off Yoghurt, Pooterism, The Blog Digest 2007
 
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Slavery is never having to say your sorry

Are you sick of jokes about OJ Simpson and his musings of ‘If I Did It’ yet? Hell, a legion of newspaper columns and topical comedy routines in the last couple of weeks have been hung on nothing else. Imagine ‘If I Lied About WMD in Iraq’ by George Bush, they joshed. ‘If I Had Actually Had All My Enemies Killed’ by Vladimir Putin, they japed. ‘If I Could Dance’ by the one with a face like a robber’s dog but thinks she’s a sex kitten who got kicked off ‘Strictly Come Dancing’ (we thought last week while heavily drinking to drown out the cacophonous ejaculate that passes for Saturday night television these days).

And now we can add ‘If I Apologised For Slavery’ by Tony Blair. The Prime Minister came so close this week to saying sorry for the forced transportation of 12 million people and the deaths of three million of them. Without actually saying the ’s’ word you have to wonder what possible purpose his stating the obvious - ‘we condemn its existence utterly’ - actually served. He is, after all, a person who *loves* saying sorry for stuff he didn’t do. The Irish Potato Famine killing a million people? Sorry. The Guildford Four wrongfully spending 15 years in prison? Sorry. Until his slippery wriggling this week we’d have bet an apology for the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs was due any day.

(more…)

Posted on December 1st, 2006 at 3:40 pm

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Tim Ireland: I refuse to surrender
Paxman vs Blair: Bore Draw
Opportunity knocks says Liam Fox
   
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• Filed under Blair, Culture, media and sport, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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The Blog Digest 2007: First Reactions

‘…covers everything from abortion to Zinedine Zidane, taking in bears, corpse robbers, Danish cartoons, elderly care, foot fetishists, golf, Hegel, irreducible complexity, Elton John, the Khmer Rouge, the Legislative and Regulatory Reform Bill, memes, Newsnight, Mark Oaten, Jon Pertwee, a brace of Rooneys, speed-dating, toilets (inevitably), the United Nations, vaginas (Noreen’s, inevitably) and wasps…’ - Philip Challinor

‘The perfect Christmas present, then, although as I have noticed that both D[evil's] K[itchen] and Mr Eugenides have articles in there, not one that I’d leave lying around the lounge when granny comes to visit on Boxing Day’ - Ministry of Truth

‘The book’s an excellent read, and a great synopsis of the year that’s gone by. The blogosphere has definitely churned out very decent comment, and I’d be interested to see if anyone could codify opinion from the MSM in the same period which would be as good as this.’ - Osama Saeed

‘…eloquent knowledge of a type that you won’t find in the MSM…’ - Devil’s Kitchen

‘The Blog Digest has lots of variety; all of the writing is good; and seeing it in print, with links as footnotes and all, makes it fresh.’ - Charlie Whitaker

‘All human life is there. Wit, wisdom, righteous anger, sleuthing, revelations, compassion and yep, love. The love of writing, and the joy of sharing it with others - blogging is unpaid, unadulterated, and unequalled as a communication opportunity. Dive in.’ - Rachel North

‘McKeating does an excellent job of why the blogosphere has been doing so well in terms of media coverage. It’s not because it’s new and shiny, it’s because it has the quality necessary to be worth reading.’ - Ken Owen

‘He’s done the hard work of tracking down many intelligent, poignant and witty bloggers, which should save you the trouble.’ - Flying Rodent

‘If the blogger in your life already has an anorak, this would make the perfect present.’ - Mr Eugenides

‘…I can categorically say that it compares very favourably indeed to standing up to your arsehole in mud…’ - Larry Teabag

Posted on December 1st, 2006 at 1:19 pm

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The Blog Digest 2007
New Blood Blog Roundup
The Sharpener - UK blogging: cliques and changes
   
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The Blog Digest 2007

The Blog Digest 2007So anyway. A few months ago the good people at Friday Books asked me to curate an anthology of some of the best of this year’s British blogging - much like Tim Worstall’s excellent 2005:Blogged.

Well, it’s nearly here - The Blog Digest 2007. It goes on sale on this Friday, December 1. You can get it online at Amazon, Politico’s, Waterstones, and in all good books shops. It features a hundred(ish) posts from some of the UK’s best bloggers (and me) and a cover and cartoons by the estimable Matt Buck (The cartoon that heralds the chapter on sex is truly something to behold.) I’ve had my copies back from the printers and it’s looking really rather ace, if I do say so myself.

The book is in themed chapters this year (unlike Tim’s which was ordered chronologically) - Culture & Media, Sex, War, Politics, Activism, Work & Play, Death and Sport. I’ve tried to create a broad collection so, as well as some of my favourite blogs, there are quite a few excellent ones in there that I hadn’t read before researching the book. I can’t remember just how many blogs I looked through but it was loads and loads.

Hopefully, it’s a rounded collection if not a particularly balanced (politically, at least) one. Strange as it sounds for a collection of other people’s work but I hope it reflects my own personality to some extent. There’s outrage and anger and my sense of humour - many of the pieces are in they because they made me laugh out loud - in there.

I tried also to make the book as accessible as possible for people with little or no knowledge of blogs (maybe someone will buy Matthew Taylor a copy). Hopefully it showcases some of the fantastic writing that you can find out there.

Any plugging of the book would be gratefully accepted. Obviously I stand (hopefully) to make some money out its sales but it’s also a shop window for some real talent that deserves wider exposure. (Advertising the book on your blog via an Amazon Associates account might be worthwhile - an ad for Tim’s 2005:Blogged bought me a couple of DVDs this year.)

Thanks to everybody who made this possible - the Friday Books gang and, of course, all the contributors who gave permission for their work to be included.

Needless to say I’m very excited. I shall of course be hanging round all the bookshops in Brighton saying ‘Oh, this looks excellent, I think I’ll buy ten copies’ in a loud voice. If anybody spots the book in the wild or sees any reviews please let me know.

Update: As of ten days ago, David Blunkett had only shifted 1,000 copies of his memoirs. For Christ’s sake, at the very least, please help me do better than that. If/when the Blog Digest reaches 1,000 sales, I’ll let everybody know and we can have a good old laugh. So, buy the Blog Digest and help rub David Blunkett’s nose in it.

Update update: Anybody tempted to buy the book from Amazon but put off by the message ‘Availability: Usually dispatched within 4 to 6 weeks’ should ignore it - Davide received his copy from them in 24 hours.

Posted on November 30th, 2006 at 10:47 am

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Merchandising
The Blog Digest digested
New Blood Blog Roundup
   
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• Filed under Blog, bloggers and blogging, Off Yoghurt, Pooterism, The Blog Digest 2007
 
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Web of Deceit: Bloggers worse than Al Qaeda, say Labour

In the future, said British politics’ very own Lawnmower Man, David ‘Dave’ Cameron this week, political battles will be fought in cyberspace. As he strapped on his virtual reality goggles to launch the Conservative’s new down-with-the-kids ‘Sort-It’ website, he declared the ‘internet revolution’ is ushering in ‘a whole new age of political communication and engagement’ where ‘the old answers will not work’.

Now, to run the terrible, if unlikely, risk of sounding less cool than Cameron, we’d like to ask if the ‘old’ ways of political communication and engagement have really had their day. You know, the quaint, unfashionable stuff like going out and talking to people. Obviously, neither Cameron nor Blair like meeting the public face to face in uncontrolled situations because there are too many variables and too many chances they’ll be made to look like idiots. But it’s a problem of their own making.

(more…)

Posted on November 24th, 2006 at 7:16 pm

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Code breaking
As desperation takes hold
Mental arithmetic
   
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• Filed under Off Yoghurt, Science and progress, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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The War Against Terror: Licence to chill

In the new James Bond film, there’s a scene where ‘M’, Bond’s boss, goes on national television and declares that she knows who the villain is, where he is, what he’s up to and, furthermore, that her agents are following his every move.

Now, you’re probably thinking ‘what a preposterous load of old bollocks, that’s far-fetched even by the standards of Bond movies’. Ordinarily, we’d agree (we did make it up after all) but that was before we read the speech given last week by head of MI5, Dame Eliza Manningham-Buller.

(more…)

Posted on November 17th, 2006 at 3:45 pm

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British intelligence
Daily Mail: Airport security checks to extend across EU
The War Against Terror: Unholy mess, unholy alliances
   
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*Drop* the fag. Move *away* from the fag (updated)

Blimey, what a week, eh? It’s dark when you go to work and it’s dark when you come home. You’re going to bow to the inevitable social pressures and spend money you haven’t got on Christmas. The news is full of how the terrorist hordes are poised to kill every one of us in the most terrible ways imaginable. Why not have a nice calming cigarette to soothe your nerves? Or on the other hand, don’t. Just don’t, alright?

Before he died, the much lamented comedian and smoker Bill Hicks used to berate the non-smoking members of his audiences. ‘You
know what doctors say,’ he would tell them, ‘”Shit, if only you smoked we’d have the technology to help you”. I got all sort of neat gadgets waiting for me, man. Oxygen tent. Iron lung.’

But Bill, as much as it pains us to say it, was wrong. In Britain at least, lung cancer is a one-way ticket. On the express. According to Cancer Research UK, only 25% of lung cancer sufferers are still alive one year after diagnosis. It’s 7% after five years.

Christ, when we read that we were so scared we had to have a cigarette to calm us down.

This cheery little statistic comes via Dr Crippen, the NHS Blog Doctor, who is a vital caution against having anything seriously wrong with you if you want the NHS to fix it. (Read his full diagnosis of NHS lung cancer treatment).

As the good doctor says, lung cancer sufferers in the US and Europe are twice as likely to still be alive after five years. That’s because treatment is better funded and regarded by the governments in those places. In the UK lung cancer is *bad* cancer.

If you do insist on getting cancer, breast is best apparently. It’s sexy cancer. Treatment is better funded by the Government and receives more attention from specialists. Doctors are, as Dr Crippen puts is, ‘nihilistic’ about treating lung cancer - the patient is stuffed so why bother with expensive treatments to prolong his or her life?

Home Secretary John Reid never misses an opportunity to remind us that he’s the only thing that stands between us and the aforementioned terrorist hordes. How many people has al Qaeda killed in the UK this year so far? Zero.

Back in 2004, he said that for some people, notably the Great Unwashed on their sink estates, ‘the only enjoyment sometimes is a cigarette’. He was against a smoking ban. He was also Health Secretary at the time. Really. Now, how many people does smoking kill in the UK *every year*? Around 114,000 (that includes passive smokers for any of you non-smokers enjoying a quiet moment of non-coughing satisfaction).

John Reid: far more dangerous than Osama Bin Laden. QED.

Now, pass that crack pipe, would you?

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing.)

Update: Jesus Christ. I smoked my last ever cigarette yesterday. (via, again, Dr C.)

Posted on November 17th, 2006 at 3:36 pm

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Smokescreen
Thirsty work
Subspace - updated
   
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The US Mid Term Elections: Burying the bodies

The stench of death and defeat that’s now hanging around George Bush’s presidency is reminiscent of downtown Baghdad on a hot day. There are bodies all over the place. And just as Saddam, the architect of Iraq’s pre-war abattoir got notice of his come-uppance this week (a long drop and a short stop), the architect of its post-war slaughter was also pushed from his perch (with an admittedly softer landing, cushioned, no doubt, with lucrative job offers from the defence industry).

(more…)

Posted on November 10th, 2006 at 3:42 pm

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You can’t handle the truth
A proper gander
Napalm: Making it stick
   
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Our Brave Boys: A bit sensitive, apparently

Who knew that the morale of our troops in Iraq was in such a parlous state? Despite our boys being, as Tony Blair said last month, ‘the finest, the best, the bravest, any nation could hope for’, the Government, it seems, is extremely concerned that the lads are close to breaking point.

The reason the Government has dug its heels in and refused this week to hold a public inquiry into the Iraq war is because it would ‘undermine’ our troops, the poor, fragile things.

Here we have ranks of men, trained to fight, to kill and, sometimes, be killed. Hard men, in other words. And yet we’re expected to believe that an inquiry into the events that sent them there will destroy their morale. Clearly the British army is collectively on the point of mental collapse, needing only one more setback to reduce it to a parade of blubbing nancy boys.

(more…)

Posted on November 3rd, 2006 at 3:24 pm

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Bullets, ballots and bollocks
Our brave boys: beating a retreat
Supply and demand in Afghanistan
   
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• Filed under Iraq, Off Yoghurt, T.W.A.T., The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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Human rights: Beatles, beer and bollocks

Human rights are British. Human rights are as British as the Beatles. As British as the BBC. As British as bitter.


That was the Lord Chancellor
, Charles Falconer this week, the man responsible for our legal system, finding an unlooked-for lyrical alliterative outlook in his unelected and illiberal largesse. You have to wonder how much it cost the tax payer to come up with such patronising and transparently contrived nonsense.

Ah, the evergreen Fab Four, our world-renowned broadcaster and the upstanding British pint. Of course, our championing of human rights around the world fully deserves to stand in that glittering pantheon. The thing is, the Government doesn’t perceive human rights in the same way the rest of us do. For them, our core of humane and decent values isn’t so much one of cast iron as one of warm plasticine to be shaped and moulded as they see fit. And like plasticine when you mix all the colours, human rights in this country right now are starting to resemble a shitty brown mess.

(more…)

Posted on November 3rd, 2006 at 3:14 pm

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The Guardian: UK accused of complicity in torture
New Labour and human rights: words and deeds
Tony Blair vs The Law: Crossbows for all
   
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Torchwood: Who’s the daddy

Torchwood, BBC4’s ‘adult’ ‘Doctor Who’ spin-off was launched to a record UK digital television audience on Sunday. If you weren’t able to tune in and watch the television event of the year then - please - pity those of us who did.

Oh God, where to start. We say ‘adult’ although, apart from the odd splash of blood and some gratuitous sex scenes, it would have insulted the intelligence of a six year-old.

(more…)

Posted on October 27th, 2006 at 1:46 pm

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Chicken nuggets
Hail and helmet
Appropriate movie tie-ins
   
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Saving the planet one cheap flight at a time

‘Climate change: *Our* green paper’ sneered The Independent’s front-page headline yesterday in its familiar supercilious greener-than-thou style. It offered ‘a more radical’ alternative to what’s expected to be Tony Blair’s ‘toothless’ upcoming climate change legislation.

‘Set annual targets for emission reductions’, ‘Curb road pollution’, ‘Step up the drive for renewable energy’, and ‘Reduce industrial emissions’ were just some of the laudable targets set by the newspaper. But what’s this? ‘Rethink aviation policy’?

‘Unless action is taken to curb the rise in the number of flights,’ it fretted not unreasonably, ‘all other national efforts to reduce emissions will be cancelled out by 2050′.

The thing is, just two clicks of the mouse away from the front page of The Independent’s website, are offers for cheap holidays (flights included) to Naples, Seville, Prague, Barcelona, Budapest, Nice, Monte Carlo, Venice or Rome.

Not as crass, we’ll admit, as the time the Independent’s front page screamed of a possible three degree rise in global temperatures putting ‘100 million at risk’ while offering the chance to win air tickets to New York (have a look) but showing, nonetheless, the same kind of joined up thinking that says you can liberate countries with cluster bombs and depleted uranium.

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing.)

Posted on October 27th, 2006 at 1:38 pm

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More joined up thinking from the independent
But then a thought hits me
Square peg, round hole; papers must be sold
   
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• Filed under Culture, media and sport, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, The coming apocalypse
 
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The War Against Terror: Unholy mess, unholy alliances

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing.)

May we be forgiven for what we are about to admit. We abjectly throw ourselves on your mercy in advance. Oh God. Here we go.

(more…)

Posted on October 20th, 2006 at 3:05 pm

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Share the love
The War Against Terror: Licence to chill
Dramatis personae
   
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Depression, dossiers and death: Campbell confesses

When you consider what he got up to the last time he was at a low ebb, you do have to wonder whether Alastair Campbell, Tony Blair’s former press secretary, was the right person to be the public face of the Mental Health Media Awards this week.

(more…)

Posted on October 13th, 2006 at 5:46 pm

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Hope for us all
Have I got news for you
Observer: Kelly accused of hiding key evidence on school reform
   
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• Filed under Miscellaneous misanthropy, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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David ‘Dave’ Cameron: Elegant Slumming

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing.)

Erm, right. Welcome to ‘David “Dave” Cameron: Elegant Slumming’. Look out, Private Eye, we’re coming after you. Ha ha! Just let us finish putting our smalls through this mangle and eating our spam butty. Oh, look. A small child. Hang on, young person, just let us finish typing this. If only we’d known you were going to be reading this, dear reader, we’d have finished the chores and put the children to bed.

There. Hopefully you feel a little warmer towards us. Now you know that we’re regular guys who do regular kinds of things, just like you. Isn’t that great? We’re just like you!

(more…)

Posted on October 7th, 2006 at 9:36 am

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Mental arithmetic
V for Vacuity
cartoon lizard surprisingly profound shock
   
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Speech Therapy: Telling it like it isn’t

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing.)

Last year, after Tony Blair’s Labour Party conference speech, we said one or two nasty things about it. To be honest, it was tempting to cut and paste them here again this year. Tony did pretty much the same thing with his conference speech this week and he seems to have got away with it.

So, let’s get the perennially obvious out of the way first. Here’s the checklist of vital ingredients for a Blair conference speech as we’ve wearily come to expect them.

The. Halting. Delivery. Like a. Camp. William. Shatner. So that. Journalists. Can record. His. Every. Word. For. Posterity.

Check.

The strange, verbless sentences. Elevated to tedious cliché. Used again. This year. Oh, God. Again.

Check.

The weird make-up that makes him look like Data the android from ‘Star Trek: The Next Generation’, only not as lifelike.

Check.

Admit it, when it comes to the battle of presentation against content, Tony’s always been more Lionel Blair than Eric Arthur Blair.

(more…)

Posted on September 29th, 2006 at 2:38 pm

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Bang! And the dirt is gone
Speech impediment
That special relationship again
   
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• Filed under Blair, New Labour, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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What Banksy did next

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing. See also Charlie Brooker: Supposing … Subversive genius Banksy is actually rubbish)

Prankster and guerrilla graffiti artist, Banksy, got himself into trouble this week when his painted live elephant - the star of his ‘elephant in the living room’ art installation in Los Angeles - was ordered to be hosed down by the Los Angeles department of animal services.

The thing is, right, the ‘elephant in the living room’ is a metaphor, yeah? It’s a figure of speech for a subject that nobody wants to talk about. The deconstruction of that metaphor says what exactly? Other than that you’ve got the balls and resources to paint an elephant red?

In a TFT exclusive, we can reveal what Banksy has planned for his next exhibition…

- Demonstrating the cavalier attitude to human life displayed in the liberation of Iraq, Banksy paints the faces of Iraqi civilians on a load of eggs and then makes an omelette with them.

- To highlight the scandal of terrorist suspects being held without trial, Banksy holds a robin while two others, dressed in tiny orange jumpsuits, call out from inside an effigy of the US president.

- Banksy forces the Leader of the House of Commons and his family to climb, one by one, aboard a dromedary with ‘DEMOCRACY’ painted on its side. The last one to manage it before the unfortunate animal’s spine gives out is declared the winner.

- Banksy gets Jamie Oliver, Gordon Ramsay, Rick Stein, Anthony Worrall Thompson, Gary Rhodes, Ainsley Harriot, Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Ken Hom, Nigel Slater and Delia Smith to make soup in a pan with ‘THE WAR AGAINST TERROR’ painted on it. Banksy tastes it and declares it to be crap.

- Banksy researches his family tree to see if his mother’s brother really is called Robert.

Posted on September 22nd, 2006 at 3:54 pm

See also
GE05 LIVE: Good evening from me
Wham bam, thank you, Kamm
Iraqi Employees meeting tomorrow: CHANGE OF VENUE
   
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Tears of a Brown: Only there trying to fool the public

(First published in this week’s The Friday Thing.)

We were pretty sure that the last vestiges of this country’s dignity and standing in the world departed, like the friends and courtiers deserting Glenn Close at the end of ‘Dangerous Liaisons’, after the Blairs gave this mind-scorching interview to The Sun on the eve of the last General Election:

Cherie: Oh come on Tony, strip off. Let’s see that fit body we’ve been talking about.

Tony: You can keep your hands to yourself, Cherie!

The Sun: So how fit are you Tony?

Cherie: Very!

The Sun: What, at least five times a night?

Tony: At least, I can do it more depending on how I feel.

The Sun: Are you always up to it?

Cherie: He always is!

Tony: Right that’s enough - interview over…Come on woman, time to cook my dinner!

(We didn’t make this up. Honest.)

You wonder, fleetingly, if their drinks had been spiked. Just why the public didn’t go on a rampage of disgust like they have in Hungary this week, we never quite fathomed. Perhaps there was something good on the telly that night.

(more…)

Posted on September 22nd, 2006 at 2:38 pm

See also
links for 2008-04-30
The all new PMQs
Brown vs Cameron: It’s a toss up
   
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• Filed under Blair, Brown, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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Tony’s memo to Gordon: Don’t rain on my parade

Come on, be honest. You’d have loved to see Tony Blair’s farewell tour, wouldn’t you? You’d have laughed yourself sick, bought the souvenir t-shirt, and had a big dumb grin on your face every time you had a cup of tea out of your ‘Never Apologise, Never Explain Tour 2007′ commemorative mug. Admit it, part of you is sad that the plans were leaked to the Daily Mirror this week because it’s now unlikely the event of the century will take place.

We’d urge you to read the Daily Mirror’s report on the leaking of Tony’s ‘Farewell Memo’ - you’ll smile for days. ‘He needs to go with the crowds wanting more. He should be the star who won’t even play that last encore,’ was a particularly nice sentiment. If only they’d made that rhyme work properly, it could have been put to a squealing rock soundtrack (we’re thinking the theme from Thundercats) to be played as he strides on stage at each of the carefully picked venues.

(more…)

Posted on September 8th, 2006 at 1:46 pm

See also
The Long Goodbye: Phase 1 UPDATED
Believe it or not: David Miliband is an atheist
The Blair legacy continues to congeal
   
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• Filed under Blair, Brown, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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Together Alone: Protesting in Parliament Square

Let’s face it, if we got a nice, fair, humanitarian government tomorrow, huge swathes of people would have a lot less fun. Maybe not Muslims trying to go on holiday, Iraqi civilians or Britain’s underclass but it’s a good bet that many a blogger, newspaper columnist, protester and weekly email comment sheet would be bereft. Railing against the current incumbent scumbags is such a joy.

(more…)

Posted on September 2nd, 2006 at 8:14 am

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Guardian: Comedian calls for ‘mass lone demonstration’
He was a quiet loner who had a family and kids
SOCPA: rattling cages
   
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• Filed under Activism, Affronts to democracy, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, UK politics
 
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Eat, drink and be merry. Just don’t come crying to us.

We’re not saying some members of the Government are fat, but road protesters are once again taking to the trees and digging tunnels to prevent a bypass being built around the Cabinet’s meeting room. John Prescott is now so large that spacetime curves around him and small objects cannot escape his gravitational pull. He’s orbited by a set of rings - like Saturn - made up of pork pie crumbs, brown ale bottle tops and stray peanuts that missed his slack, stupid gob. Between him and the Lord Chancellor Charlie ‘Accidentally Locked In A Tuck Shop As A Boy’ Falconer, Gordon ‘chocolate fudge’ Brown and John ‘that’s what you get for packing in the fags’ Reid, cabinet meetings are now cheek by jowl by jowl by jowl with Tessa Jowell.

Needless to say, a slender government minister - the newly-designated ‘Minister for Fitness’, Caroline Flint - was wheeled out this week to tell Britain to get off its collective arse and get some exercise. Although the mental image of Prescott, Falconer, Brown and Reid shame-facedly attempting to launch a fitness campaign on national television is an immensely pleasing one, unfortunately there are limits to hypocrisy that even New Labour can’t break.

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Posted on August 25th, 2006 at 7:47 am

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Yom and Jerry
Like coal for Christmas
To the death, I suppose
   
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• Filed under Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, The coming apocalypse, UK politics
 
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Truth decay

It took long enough but finally, after 200 years, the last drop of wit and intelligence was squeezed from political debate this week. From John Wilkes’ ‘That will depend, my Lord, on whether I embrace your principles or your mistress’ (in response to the Earl of Sandwich’s assertion, ‘egad sir, I do not know whether you will die on the gallows or of the pox’) to John Prescott referring to George Bush as ‘crap’.

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Posted on August 18th, 2006 at 4:34 pm

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Dead meat
Black and white world
Crewe and Nantwich: it all comes out in the wash
   
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• Filed under New Labour, Off Yoghurt, The Friday Thing, Tories, UK politics
 
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