Beige Van Man

Beige Van Man

[photo by Vic]

Yeah, hop in; course I’m going to the reception: I’m the photographer. You with the Japanese bride or the Swiss groom?

Oh, you must be one of the Swiss then. Phew. You looked a bit British at first glance. No offence, right, but you Caucasians are a bit difficult to tell apart—‘cept the gingas.

What have I got against Brits? Well, it’s nothing personal, like, but you’ve got to admit: they’re lazy bastards, innit? Protestant work ethic? Nation of shopkeepers? My arse. You don’t see many of them getting up at five o’clock in the morning of a weekend to unbundle three hundred copies of the Sunday Times, do you?

They all think the country owes them a bleedin’ living. Chavs, anorexics, football hooligans, social workers… Send the lot of ’em back to bleedin’ Vikingland, that’s what I say. Can’t speak the Queen’s English. Can’t cook. Can’t sing. Can’t dance. Every Saturday night you see their pasty faces out on the street, drunk as you like, throwing up in the gutter, shouting at each other. Then they stagger into our takeaways, expecting us to serve them when they can’t string three words together.

So you a Swiss banker then?

Fashion designer, eh? I had that Linda Grant in the back of my Minolta once. Nice Jewish girl. Bet she knows a bit about banking as well though. Stands to reason, dunnit?: they all do.

You one of them gayers? They’re all gay round my way. I like your cravat. I was saying to Duane, at the photo lab: thing about gayers is they know how to accessorize … [Leans out of window to shout at another driver:] ARE YOU FACKING BLIND?! … Bleedin’ breeders. Can’t dress. Can’t disco. Can’t drive…

Columnist Sneers At Drunken Fool And Demonstrates His Own Ignorance

It’s been global find-and-replace time again at the nationals over the past couple of days as the columnists check the “Fallen_Hero.dot” Word template out of the their publications’ databases in response to the detention of former football star Paul Gascoigne under the Mental Health Act. They haven’t had to do that since “Bestie” died.

The Times Website is flaky today, but, when it’s working, one of the things it’s been displaying over its banner has been a quote from Rod Liddle’s views on the descent of Gascoigne:

“Gazza has not uttered a sentient thought in his entire life”

I suppose Liddle thinks “sentient” means “wise” or “insightful”. It doesn’t. It means:

“conscious; capable of sensation; aware; responsive to stimulus.”

[Chambers Dictionary]

Sentience is pretty damned low on the scale of central nervous system activity. A sea cucumber is sentient. Whatever else you think about the woman-beating buffoon, Paul Gascoigne is at least smarter than an invertebrate. Simply by being able to “utter” anything at all he lives at altitude in Nature’s range of sentience.

“Sentient” is one of Liddle’s favourite words—at least five of his articles are returned in the top ten hits when you search the Times site—so you’d think he might spare a few seconds to look it up online at least, where the first definition cited by Google sets an even lower threshold:

“endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness”

Plenty of people would say that, far from being beyond him, being “endowed with feeling and unstructured consciousness” was a pretty accurate description of most of the thoughts Gascoigne has uttered to date. Liddle might want to look up “consummate” and “insouciance” as well. Using big words doesn’t make you clever.

And if you’re not sick of opinionists generalizing about entire sexes already then Melanie Reid is in full Polly Filler/Glenda Slagg/Sally Jockstrap mode, wibbling on in the same newspaper about how “women”, unlike “men”, see nothing attractive at all about Gascoigne’s alcoholism. As if it isn’t enough that doomed love for alcoholics is so common that there are support groups and a specific psychobabble label for it, Reid foolishly uses the example of George Best, a man who, right up until his sorry end, had no difficulty attracting the devoted attentions of glamorous women many years his junior, women who, presumably, could bag themselves men less “sad” and “ruined”.

Newspaper opinion pieces about fallen sport stars: on one side you have illiterates being paid silly money for rubbish performances; and on the other side you have fallen sports stars.

Apartheid For Nice Middle-Class People

I spoiled my ballot papers—one for men on one colour of paper, one for women on another colour—for Labour MEP nominations today. I scrawled through the voting boxes and wrote “THIS BALLOT IS SEXIST” (as if it needed explaining), then I put them both into the prepaid envelope.

If Harriet Harman has her way and we start legislating so that UK political parties can run racist lists of prospective parliamentary candidates then I’ll be looking for a seat to stand in as an independent against one of the token blacks.

If The Infection Don’t Get Ya, The Conflagration Will

It’s not a good idea to take a whole slice of brie out of the fridge, allow it to reach room temperature, eat some, and then re-chill it. If you do this enough times, then, by the time you reach the end, you may well have cultured yourself a nice little dose of food poisoning. Instead, I slice off what I need and zap it briefly in the microwave to soften it.

I did this today with my last chunk, thinking that I’d leave it in its original wrapping to save using another plate. What I didn’t think about was that this wrapping consisted of a layer of microwave-absorbing metallic foil, partially covered in a flammable matt paper coating. Luckily, I was next to the oven, dancing to the latest single from Mika, when my lunch blossomed into a soft-cheese disco ball of fire.

Generation Gap

You probably didn’t know that the miniature-mace-shaped implement used by a priest in the Roman Catholic church to sprinkle holy water is called an “aspergill” or “aspergillum”. Despite our respective Catholic upbringings and useless fact collecting, neither did I or my dad.

But my dad (Jesuit schooling, degree in classics) could quote me the relevant introductory part of the mass

Asperges me hyssopo, et mundabor: lavabis me, et super nivem dealbabor.
“Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow1.”

[Psalm 51]
and I (training in biological sciences) knew that Aspergillus is the name given to a genus of moulds that grow on decaying organic materials. Why are they so called? Because an 18th century Catholic priest and biologist, Pietro Antonio Micheli, saw a likeness under the microscope and, er, christened them so.

Yes, this a boring post, but I hope, once Google has indexed this page, that others will find it easier to find the answer I was scrabbling around for earlier today.

a pug recoils from a blessing
a pug recoils from a blessing
[click image to enlarge it]

I’d love to credit the photo, but I can’t remember where I downloaded it from.

  1. I once had to stand around for half-an-hour while the other members of a Gospel choir I was in (mainly black American graduate students) argued over whether or not it was racist for us to sing the phrase “white as snow”. []

Guests? But I Haven’t Hoovered For Days!

A couple of my friends txted me this morning to let me know that PooterGeek is in The Guardian‘s Guide today. Unfortunately, as has been the case for most of the past week, I’m too busy to write anything new and the best-of section is over a year out of date. Come back next week, Guardian readers.

Not English

Just back from lunch watching the first half of Villa versus Newcastle at my local. (Joey Barton is a dirty…) I live dahn Sarf now so there were about five people apart from me interested in the Midlands against the North-East dotted around the fairly large TV room.

In walks a big black Senegalese bloke I’ve never seen before, sits down next to me with his sandwich, and, without so much as a mention of the (glorious) weather, launches into a conversation about skin colour.

My Celebrity Stalkers

On Saturday, I was one of two customers in a tiny local deli until Nick Cave walked in, dressed head-to-toe in black and accompanied by his children in white judo outfits. I toyed with the idea of getting His Caveness to sign my olives, but that would have taken the weirdness one step too far.

Today, Des Lynam was following me around PC World. Admittedly, despite standing next to him in the furniture section for a good five minutes, I wasn’t aware of his presence until I registered the fuss going on around him. (If you want to get served in PC World then take a former BBC sports anchor with you.)

As I reached the checkout, two of the thirteen-year-old boy shop assistants upon whom the chain depends discussed Lynam’s walkabout:

FIRST 13-YEAR-OLD BOY: [bagging my purchases] Have I just missed a celebrity?

POOTERGEEK: Yeah: Des Lynam.

SECOND 13-YEAR-OLD: [handing me my Maestro card] We don’t get many celebrities here. The last one was Jordan. She wears enough make-up. Des Lynam just looks like an ordinary bloke.

FIRST 13-YEAR-OLD BOY: [nudge-nudge voice] I didn’t notice him ’cause I was too busy looking at his wife.

POOTERGEEK: [silently to himself] I didn’t notice him ’cause I was too busy looking at digital photo frames.

Shot Down

Thanks in part to you lot, I have for some time been the top hit on Google for “film photographer“, which doesn’t do my business any harm. Anyone familiar with my style of photography will understand why I am disturbed by the news story on the BBC Website that’s currently in the number three position:

An amateur photographer has told how police seized his film as he was out taking snaps in a Hull shopping centre.

Steve Carroll, of Kent, was visiting relatives in Hull in December when he decided to do some “street photography” in the city’s Prospect Centre.

Shoppers reported him to the police, who took his film because he seemed to be operating in “a covert manner”.

Mr Carroll lodged a complaint against Humberside Police but an investigation concluded its officers acted correctly.

Officers have common law powers of seizure, a force spokeswoman said.

Having developed Mr Carroll’s pictures, the force conceded that none of the material was out of the ordinary.

British Corruption

The latest political scandal uncovered on BBC Radio 2 news this morning was a Conservative MP being “late to declare hospitality from McDonald’s”. Imagine an Italian person hearing that report and trying to make any kind of sense of it at all.

Dopey

A couple of weeks ago, I wrote a post in which I pointed out that statistics disprove the media myth of an excess of unmarried thirtysomething females, complained about the parallel emotional indoctrination of women by commercial interests, warned of the uselessness of online dating services, and described a good evening out I’d had instead of going to a singles do organized by such a service. Yesterday, The Times published another one of those articles from an unmarried thirtysomething woman moaning that men are shit. I’m sure there’ll be more of them as that great sap-suckering festival of Valentine’s Day approaches. The sub-headline states, somewhat innaccurately, that its author, Laura Nolan believes that thirtysomething men won’t marry (her) because they are “selfish, mixed-up, man-boys chasing no-strings sex”.

My romantic ambitions extend to asking a woman out for a drink and having her turn up. When I do and a woman doesn’t, I don’t infer that she is a lesbian, frigid, or mentally disturbed; I simply conclude from her not spending time with me that she does not want to spend time with me. That’s us men for you: literal to the point of autism. Just as no one owes me a living, no one owes me a date (though a prompt and polite “no” is usually preferable to being messed around at the last minute).

The best bit of the article is the part where Ms Nolan recounts her bad experiences with past boyfriends who wouldn’t “commit”—and remember: this is a piece that rants against male navel-gazing. She writes of them:

All were thirtysomething, bright, successful bachelors. They had all had therapy. They all talked ad infinitum about their “ishoos”.

Here, I wanted to point at Ms Nolan’s bellybutton and tell her to give it a good hard stare. She is after all a female who thinks that a male who willingly subjects himself to psychoanalysis and unironically refers to his “ishoos” is in any sense marrying material. Does she want a man for a husband or a gold-plated jessie?

When female friends come to me looking for insights into the behaviour of males—which usually means the males they are about to, are currently, or have just been going out with—I point out that most of the ones I know are simpler than Duplo™ and that no imaginative and sensitive interpretation of their actions is necessary.

“He hit me last week . Do you think that it might be because he’s still be upset about his sister dying when he was twelve?”

“No. It’s because he’s a coward and a bully. Dump him. (And please let me be the one to give him the bad news.)”

The typical man is as complex and multilayered as any one of Snow White‘s dwarves. Generally, we are so inept at disguising our natures that we might as well have mobile hoardings floating above us saying things like “kind-hearted”, “unreliable”, “generous”, “bastard”, “affectionate”, “bashful”, or “Sneezy”.

If you get involved with crap bloke then don’t be surprised when he continues to be crap. He won’t be Transformed By Your Love. Though if he is immature enough to fall for decades-discredited middle-class pseudoscience or if you are deluded enough to believe that the sort of man who has to pay someone to listen while he talks about his emotions at excruciating length will be any cop as a father of your children then you deserve one another. What is most amazing about the banners floating over the majority of men in Britain is that some women remain (wilfully?) blind to the 600-point Helvetica, even as their best mates are reading it out loud. Will Laura Nolan’s gf please drag her down to the optician’s?

Aesthetics On Wheels

BEACHES SHUT OVER SPLINTER FEARS

A couple of days ago, I was driving along the front at Worthing and saw for the first time the amazing spectacle of the drifts of wooden planks washed up in the recent shipwreck. This was days into the operation to clear the spill and long after sunset, yet the timber loomed unignorably two storeys into the air for minutes of my driving at thirty miles an hour alongside the beach. The mad scale of it doesn’t come across in the pictures in the papers or online. It’s like the Gods are playing pick-up sticks. If you live in the area and haven’t seen the wood mountains yet (and if they haven’t been cleared up) then I recommend you check them out. They’re awe inspiring in a way that crappy contemporary artists wish their Tate Modern turbine room gimmicks were.

I’ve linked to “The Truck Driver’s Gear Change Hall Of Shame” before, but this morning I choked on a bagel when I heard the tail end of Rod Stewart’s cover of I Don’t Want To Talk About It, so ugly was the key shift at the end, which gave me an excuse to bounce over there and read the relevant page, where there’s also a rant about Ben Elton and dodgy compilation musicals in general. Also worth reading—despite being rather too forgiving of Oasis—is Dominic Pedler’s muso’s intro to the TDGC, which I’d not seen before.

Gum Shoe

Mick Hartley links to a Times report of a “serious” novelist suing the proprietors of a neighbouring factory because the fumes it produced so affected her concentration that she was reduced to writing genre fiction. It’s not just a funny hook for a news story; it’s a delicious illustration of how class and status in Britain both is and isn’t about money.

It also made me smile because, for most of my adult life (and to the complete non-surprise of anyone who reads this blog regularly), I’ve believed that the one novel I have in me is a gonzo comedy thriller that hangs on a soon-to-be-invented piece of technology1. But every time I sit down to write this, what comes out is exactly the kind of portentous, fancypants campus novel calculated to win awards and certain to make me groan the moment I turn over the cover in Borders and read its jacket blurb. Who do I sue?2

  1. Unfortunately, the emergence of this particular technology would have unavoidable philosophical and moral implications. []
  2. Perhaps my dad, the retired teacher of English language and literature, who is wishing as he reads this that I’d written “whom”. []

Index on Censorship

One of the reasons I’ve been quiet these past few days is that I’ve been working on a new Website for the journal Index on Censorship which went live over the weekend. The purpose of this post is to send some of my Google karma to their new URL: “indexoncensorship.org“. If you believe in free speech I recommend that you link to it from your own blog or Website too, using either the journal’s title or the phrase “for free expression”. Knowing my luck, this post will end up being the first hit for “Index on Censorship”, rather than their shiny new blog. [UPDATE: As of 21:00 this post is the fifth highest hit on Google UK.]

This also gives me an opportunity to defend Guardian and Index on Censorship online editor Padraig Reidy from those who have chosen to mock his new Damian Counsell-taken byline photo. Even up-and-coming movie superstar James McAvoy aspired to the Reidy look at this year’s Golden Globes™.

Padraig Reidy

James McAvoy off Atonement

James McAvoy

Padraig Reidy off Index on Censorship

If only McAvoy could do the concerned frown properly.

Amateur Video

While I’m recommending films, I notice that The Amateurs [aka The Moguls] is being advertised on the Apple trailer site as on theatrical release in the States. This is odd because I’ve already seen it cheaply in the UK via Amazon’s DVDs-by-post service. Perhaps it went straight to video here because it had stinking reviews. It didn’t deserve them. It’s a sweet, gentle movie that made me laugh out loud a lot. The cast is amazing: not so much big names as familiar US character actors known for their talent. How they were persuaded to work for peanuts and allow themselves to be uglified and humiliated I don’t know.

In many ways it’s un-American, being about a bunch of losers and doing some dreadful things to them, and saying things about race (amongst other subjects) that you’re not allowed to say in a mainstream production; but its coyness about sex—it’s a film about small town people trying to make a porn movie that takes euphemism just a bit too far—is, I suppose, what many people would call typical. If it had been made in France with Gérard Depardieu as the washed-up middle-aged lead instead of Jeff Bridges then psuedy film critics would probably have hailed it as a comedy classic—but I’d have worried that a French director would be tempted by a script like this to resort to snail-paced, gnat-brained slapstick so I probably wouldn’t have rented it anyway.

Whaddya know? Also further to my guy movie / chick flick comparison yesterday, here’s a zombie love story. Even (un)dead people can find somebody to (not) be with.

The Last Single Man On Earth

One of the things that came up over Christmas was, as usual, my continuing unmarried status as the big four-oh looms. Three different members of the family interrogated me about my non-existent love life. Yesterday, I was offered an opportunity to do something about this as I was invited to a singles event: a Website I used to be a member of was desperate for more men to attend a drinks do. Apparently lots of women had registered, but not as many men, so they were offering us free entry. The last time I went to one of these things it was the same, and, when it came to the crunch, almost none of the women who said they were going to turn up turned up. These days, women often don’t.

One explanation for this is that, if you’re an attractive female, it’s a seller’s market. Bridget Jones is a media-invented myth. There are far more men between the ages of 30 and 40 who are single than women. The difference is, faced with members of the “Because I’m Worth It” Generation to chose from, a lot of us are grateful enough not to whine about being alone. It sums up the modern male’s lack of a corresponding sense of entitlement that the most famous cosmetics slogan for him is: “The Best A Man Can Get”. And the best a man can get is a plastic razor with five blades.

Having a girlfriend can be wonderful, but having a girlfriend is not what online dating delivers. It’s a scam. What with the impossibly attractive fake/long-dormant user profiles used by site owners to draw punters in, the poorly disguised porn-line/prostitution services, the married journalists pretending to be single to get a feature piece, the fiftysomething divorcees with three children and a psycho ex, the spammers, and the timewasters looking for “validation”, I’ve got better things to do with my money.

So, instead of attending the singles evening, I went round to a straight male friend’s place. We had a(n excellent) Waitrose meal, went to the flicks to watch a zombie movie, set the World to rights over a couple of drinks, and returned to our respective bachelor pads.

Funnily enough, I Am Legend was a perfect example of the gap between the messages broadcast at men and women these days. It was a classic guy movie: accomplished, disciplined man-of-science / man-of-war alone against the forces of darkness and irrationalism. A chick flick will allow its protagonist to be disciplined and accomplished, but only so that later on we can see how her intellectual and financial achievements interfere with her “self-actualisation”. To be truly happy, she must give in to girlish emotion and allow a man to “complete her”. After years of watching that kind of shit it’s little wonder that so many successful women wind up obsessing about finding a partner. My not having a wife is more interesting to my family than it is to me, but if any single thirtysomething women reading this are looking for a loaded lawyer I can pass on my friend’s number.

Beyond this cod social psychology, it’s difficult to write anything interesting about I Am Legend without giving away the plot, but it’s worth seeing just for the extraordinary, audacious shots of a plague ravaged New York, and, this morning, it might be worth putting a bet on Will Smith being the first black President of the USA.

Christmas Cuteness On Film

On Christmas Day, I posted a quick snap of my niece and nephew taken with my new freebie digital camera. I’ve just got some scans of developed film back from the lab so I can share a few steam-powered Christmas photos with you.

Here’s Sam playing with one of his new remote-controlled dinosaurs:

Sam and his dinosaur
Sam and his T. Rex
[click image to enlarge it]

Here’s Maisie and some Christmas lights:

Maisie in front of the Christmas lights
“Yes, dahlings, I already have cheekbones”
[click image to enlarge it]

Just to remind her that life isn’t all blessings and the smiles of dazzled passers-by, my brother-in-law is raising her a Derby County supporter. In any other part of the UK this kind of treatment would be enough to draw the attention of the social services and have her put in care.

Here’s Maisie’s first attempt at taking a real photograph, under my guidance:

Damian by Maisie

I’m a bit washed out because there’s too much flash; that’s good: it fills in the wrinkles.

Metamorphoses

Apparently there exists an entity known as “Kate Lawler”, who won Big Brother and has since become a club DJ. For an organism in the contemporary UK celebrity ecosystem, the next three stages of development are as follows:

[Big Brother winner → club DJ →]

chick lit writer → Conservative MP → Alien Queen

Alien Queen

Things Can Only Get Better

For safety’s sake I usually stay in on New Year’s Eve. It makes no difference. There was the year when a drunk phoned me up in my bedsit in Oxford to accuse me of being in bed with his wife; I was on the bed alone with my guitar. There was New Year’s Eve 1999 in Battersea when I fell asleep, sober as an actuary, at about ten in the evening and woke up at quarter past midnight to vomit everything I had eaten since lunchtime into the kitchen sink because it had been accompanied by some dodgy mayonnaise.

This year I was looking forward, for the first time in years, to attending a nice party with some nice people. Unfortunately I have had some kind of gastroenteritis/headcold combo for the past few days and am still not over it. Yesterday I pulled a muscle during a particularly violent sneeze so I am also finding it difficult to move. One day I’ll look back and laugh.

The microwave is bleeping. My easycook rice is ready. I am raising a glass of Lucozade™ to you all.

Happy new year!

[UPDATE: On the radio Steve Wright has just started playing Chris De Burgh’s Lady In Red]

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