Tuesday, September 30, 2008

I love Powys in the fall

What a week. Most of the known world is undergoing catastrophic economic collapse; you know its bad when the Daily Mail is advising people to shop in Aldi, or to forage for autumn nuts and seeds and seasonal fungi. Well, I've had better things to do than worry about this global financial meltdown, frankly. For a start, last weekend I had a wedding to celebrate, in distant North Wales.

The long drive was enlivened by a handful of classic daft rural place names – Feltup Butler was one, Beeples Barton another – and, once Offa's Dyke had been successfully traversed, Welsh road signs helped the miles roll by. For example, I now know that 'Araf!' means 'slow', 'Gwasanaethau' is a motorway service station, and – pleasingly – 'Alan' is Welsh for 'Car Park'. The wedding itself starred two old friends of mine from university days. It was sumptuous and very jolly. Almost all of my friends from that era now have young children; in many ways I feel they now view me as just another errant child to be looked after, which is quite nice. The actual children generally remain too young to appreciate the importance of a solid forward-defensive, which is where I am hoping Uncle Spim will one day come into his own. Instead, I made it my mission to teach advanced combat techniques to as many of them as possible. This backfired, though, when one of the little blighters administered first an accurate volley of pine cones, then a bone-jarring rugby tackle, and finally a perfectly executed People's Elbow to the sternum.

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Things got nasty while waiting for the canapés

The next day I returned to the wedding venue – an impressive Georgian mansion – to do a spot of birding in the extensive grounds. Please don't judge me. Without going into too much detail it was a success, with the pick of the avifauna being a Lesser Spotted Woodpecker. These are tricky little fuckers to see at the best of times, and I've tried and failed on a number of previous occasions. The most recent attempt took place a few months ago, when I went for a romantic Sunday afternoon stroll with a friend to a little patch of woodland near my house which, when I was a lad, was reputed to hold a pair. As we wandered further into the sun-dappled copse, it soon became apparent that I'd accidentally taken this poor girl into a surprisingly well-populated gay dogging area.

We saw no woodpeckers.

Undaunted, a few weeks later I thought I'd bring out the big guns and take her batting. No, not a trip to the local cricket nets, but a stroll around a nearby park at sunset with my trusty bat detector – a treat indeed. The first sign that events were drifting out of my control was the appearance of a police helicopter, which hovered into view just before dusk; rather than zooming away, it, err, followed us. Next, a police car pulled up. The copper inside told me that we had to leave, immediately. Why? Because an escaped convict was on the loose and he was hiding out in the park somewhere. You couldn't make it up.

No wonder I'm single.



This week's celebrity spots
Just the two, and both are utterly feeble - first, Grange Hill and The Bill's René Zagger yet again, this time getting on the tube at Leytonstone. Zagger has remarkably hairy hands. Too much wanking, I'd say. And secondly, Martin Fowler's stalker from Eastenders in HMV Oxford Street, looking crumpled. To actually recognise this obscure woman is both a blessing and a curse.

Not up to scratch, I know. Even regular correspondent Julie from Leighton Buzzard has struggled a bit this week, with a sighting in Soho Square of 'that bloke who used to be in This Life' failing to cut the celebrity mustard. However, Julie rallied strongly with another sighting of Lenny Henry on friday, successfully fighting off the attentions of one of the charity muggers that carpet the streets of Soho. To be fair, Henry really has done his bit for charity over the years. Certainly enough to quite legitimately tell one of these irritating twats to fuck off. And there's more; Cornish Julie has chipped in to report Mrs Henry herself, Dawn French, stroking her dog (which had apparently just rolled in something nasty) in a field in rural east Cornwall a little while back. However, the garlands of victory this week go to Kieren from Bristol. Kieren was visiting the lighthouse at Start Point, Devon, when he and his wife were surprised to find 'Red' Ken Livingstone admiring the sea views beside them. Livingstone was wearing what appeared to be some sort of dog collar underneath a tweed jacket.

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Livingstone: shafted by New Labour again.


Recommendations
Its too early to really recognise anything more than underlying trends for the season to come, but isn't the Premiership table joyful at the moment? Hull City are soaring and pulled off the result of the decade in beating Arsenal at The Emirates, Stoke and West Brom are holding their own, while Tottenham are lucky to be as high as 20th, so weak have they been thus far. You had to laugh when they sold three of the best strikers in the league – Keane, Defoe and Berbatov – but hung onto the hopelessly average yet breathtakingly overpriced Darren Bent. And now they're wondering why they don't score any goals, and why they keep losing. Joining them in the basement are Newcastle, now a genuine laughing stock, who really are deep in the shit. Join me in making merry at the geordies' discomfort and pile onto the extremely generous 4/1 offered by Totesport for the Magpies to be doomed to life in the second tier come May.

The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry to win the Man Booker prize (3/1, Paddy Power). Turgid, clunking and difficult to read – judging panels love this sort of trash. Disgracefully, The Birds of Essex didn't make this year's longlist.

Try A Place to Bury Strangers. A bit like The Cure, a bit like AC/DC, if you can imagine that.

Monday, September 08, 2008

Spimdiana Jones and the Bookcase of Gloom

Will it ever stop fucking raining? For the second consecutive 'summer' much of lowland Britain is underwater and undergoing monsoon-like weather. For example, today it was reported that Worcestershire CC's New Road ground is once again under several feet of floodwater.


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Simon Jones opened the bowling from the Shallow End.


Its not just the cricket-watching public of Worcester that are suffering – all this rain means no cricket for me either. This is probably just as well; this season has seen a sudden, alarming and near-total collapse in form. If I'm honest I've been desperate for the season to end so I can retire gracefully since about early May. Anyway, another rain-sodden abandonment this weekend meant I had a free saturday to do stuff; for some reason, I thought it would be a good idea to take a trip to the poor-man's MFI, Ikea. In his Divine Comedy, Dante famously detailed his journey through the nine circles of Hell. Well, I have now seen the tenth; its Ikea (Lakeside) on a saturday afternoon in early September.

To cut a long story short, I had to take something back that I'd picked up on a previous visit – that favourite of the urban middle classes, a Billy bookcase. It was clear there was trouble brewing when I couldn't actually get into Ikea's vast car park, with traffic backing up for some distance. I ended up parking in B&Q's car park, miles away. I'm rather ashamed to admit that I was then forced to liberate a B&Q trolley and use that to wheel Billy back to Ikea, dodging around both the stationary vehicles of people fighting to get in and the deep puddles produced by the ceasless rain. It was mayhem.

I somehow made it in one piece to "Ikea: Customer Returns", and now the fun really began. I'd harboured hopes that I'd be greeted by a smiling sales assistant and invited to part with Billy before being offered a complementary cup of tea and some meatballs, but no. There were, frankly, dozens of other lost souls taking broken, defective and otherwise knackered tat back. You have to collect a number from a machine before you can join the amorphous 'queue', then when its your turn you get called up to explain yourself. After an hour my number came in - 'House' I cried merrily. Thirty-six or so angry, agitated shoppers scowled in response. A tough crowd. Things were already fraught, and they got worse when the spotty, monosyllabic teenager behind the desk refused to give me a refund without my address, which I declined to give on the grounds of it being an outrageous violation of my civil liberties. There was a stand-off; my new-found enemies in the queue began to tut loudly, but much to my surprise young snotty eventually gave way. Maybe he could see the desperation in my eyes, who knows. One-nil to Spim vs The Man, anyway.

I now had to dodge back into the main 'store' bit, find myself a new Billy, queue for half an hour to pay, then pinch an Ikea trolley and wend my way back to the relative calm of B&Q, my own personal Mount Purgatory. As a result, B&Q now have a nice Ikea trolley to add vibrancy and colour to their fleet, and vice versa. Karma was restored; the yin and yang of the Lakeside trolley fleet was back in balance.

But this was a rare positive from an afternoon of unparallelled gloom. The people who run Ikea really are a bunch of jokers; from their Swedish-themed cafe to enhance the 'experience' to the stupid, often vaguely sexual names they give their products (Jerker the desk, anyone? Or perhaps Lessebo the sofa's more your cup of tea). However, they're nothing if not shrewd; by making shopping in their soulless store such a breathtakingly unpleasant process, they've ensured that nobody will ever take anything back unless they have literally nothing else to do. This allows Ikea to maintain rock-bottom prices, with these low prices tempting in customers looking for cheap, tatty furniture, novelty ice cube trays, or packs of 24 tea lights.

And with this the circle is complete.




This week's celebrity spots
Last Friday I was walking to the tube when who should cross my path outside Hare Krishna HQ but Lenny Henry. Our eyes met; a glimmer of recognition from me, a shiver of irritation from him. I briefly considered hailing him with a hearty 'Katanga, my friend' before common sense prevailed. So like ships in the night we passed. Henry looks really rather spry considering he must be pushing 50; it must be all that energetic sex with Dawn French. Talking of porky funsters, my personal celebrity highlight of the week was Gavin and Stacy star James Corden, arguing loudly with his agent on his mobile outside my office. Corden was wearing ill-fitting green shorts.


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Corden: chunky.

Admittedly these are only so-so sightings, and when it comes to celebrity action I know when I'm beaten. 'Matt' from Canary Wharf supplied a detailed dossier listing numerous sightings of Kenny Everett's sidekick Cleo Rocos at various points around Docklands - presumably Rocos has a pad there. Either that or she's got a job at HSBC. However, this week's plaudits go to seasoned celebrity-watcher Julie from Leighton Buzzard, who watched aghast as weedy lothario Russell Brand pawed his latest squeeze in Mildred's Cafe on Lexington Street, Soho.


Paul Ince insult of the week
West Ham vs Blackburn last saturday, and a new twist on an old favourite:

"Fat Eddie Murphy - you're just a fat Eddie Murphy"

Ince had the last laugh though, saying "'It's always like a circus when I come back here. Today I thought it was pretty tepid". A robust response.


Recommendations
So there we go, another transfer window slams shut. Rarely have I felt so unsettled, with Manchester City throwing money around like confetti, Chelsea-style, buying Brazilians and - hilariously - publicly announcing a £142 million bid for Ronaldo in January. Another English club falls into the hands of super-rich foreign owners, pledging instant accession to the 'Big Four'. The problem is, there's now about 10 clubs on a two-year plan for forcing their way into the 'Big Four' and the promised land of the Champions League. Soon there isn't going to be room in the 'Big Four' for the big four.

I greatly enjoyed the Robinhio deal, in particular - a gentleman of untrammelled dignity and probity. As the midnight transfer deadline approached, this malignant mercenary said that he was refusing to play for Real Madrid again, since "all I think about is Chelsea. Chelsea, Chelsea". Imagine my surprise when I woke up the next morning to find out that actually, when he said Chelsea, he meant Manchester City, who presumably offered more money. Meanwhile, crappy old West Ham has stuck with what it knows best, picking up 32-year old journeyman striker David di Mechele on the cheap, plus a couple of unknowns on loan to plug the groaning chasms in our leaky defence. No Tevez/Mascherano this year.

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Robinhio: King of the Kippax.

I'm seriously falling out of love with the once-beautiful game. English football is consuming itself with greed. A personal nadir was reached the other day when I received an email from West Ham, telling me that match tickets for the forthcoming Blackburn game "started at just £35". Yes, £35, for the shittiest seats in the ground. My first ever game at Upton Park cost £1.80 to get in, and for that I got entry to the North Bank, a free orange box to stand on and a firm pre-match handshake with Alan Devonshire.

Anyway, I am tipping Manchester City to fall flat on their arses and finish in the bottom half (3/1, BlueSquare), though I will admit there's an air of wishful thinking here. To show there's more to me than just football, I'm also pleased to recommend a punt on our old friend Serena Williams in the US Open (2/1, Betfair), while in the Ryder Cup a European win looks a formality, so I'm nominating Jim Furyk to be top US points scorer (11/2, various) as my pick of the week's action.

I'm slightly embarrassed to admit that I first stumbled on beatbox maestra Butterscotch in the final of America's got Talent. Despite this, she's truly incredible. Have a look.