alexsarll: (gunship)
Because he has nothing better to do - it's not as if we're in an economic crisis and the pound is at an historic low against the Euro or anything, after all - our Beloved Leader has joined in the chorus of moralising hysteria directed at Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand. Because politicians love to knock the BBC for being so terribly mean to them, and all the rest of the media loves to knock the BBC because it's better than them, and worst of all the BBC loves to knock the BBC because like everything else that is good and noble in our culture, it is currently beset with a crippling overdose of self-doubt and consequent belief in the virtue of self-flagellation. And so one of the few institutions of which Britain can still be rightly proud takes another hit as the jackals circle. I mean, have any of these shrill nonentities actually read the damn transcript? (NB: many purported transcripts available are woefully incomplete. The Times, for instance, with all the fidelity to truth one expects from a Murdoch rag, omits the 'Satanic Slvts' (NSFW, obviously) line - either because they were too stupid to understand it, or because it would militate against the impression of slurred innocence they're trying to summon re: Sachs' granddaughter. Not that I have the slightest thing against burlesque performers, you understand - but treating a suggestion that one such might have done the sex with a man in a manner befitting similar suggestions levelled regarding a small child or Victorian princess does seem rather bizarre).

Consider:

- Andrew Sachs cancelled on them. He was not a random victim. It is acceptable to leave voicemail for someone who belatedly cancelled on you in a tone which might be considered poor form on other voicemails.

- Andrew Sachs is only famous because he was happy to play the whipping boy in Fawlty Towers; he can hardly start standing on dignity now. Cf Stephen Fry on fame, specifically the differences between his own and Nicholas Lyndhurst's.

- And this one is the clincher: IT WAS FUNNY. Even without the voices of Ross and Brand, reading a bad transcript that's supplied for purposes of damning them rather than making me laugh, even overwhelmed with anger at the absurd storm around it all, I was cracking up. They made a comedy show; they engaged in nothing more dangerous than the use of harsh language (and even that was not as harsh as the coverage would have you think); they made people laugh. They offended some other people, for sure, but as we should all know by now, offended people are the very worst people on the planet.

As far as I'm concerned, Ross and Brand are both due a pat on the back if not a raise, and everyone who has objected can piss off to somewhere with a suitably deferential press for their tender sensibilities - Saudi, say, North Korea, or Iran.
alexsarll: (bernard)
Honestly, I wasn't expecting much from the Beddoes material but I thought the Japan/murder/David Peace combo might get some interest...tough crowd these days. Tough crowd.

Wandsworth Road feels like it should run between Baltimore and Highgate, but I suppose Vauxhall and Clapham are plausible substitutes. It also boasts one of the most creatively misplaced apostrophes I've seen in some time (Tapa's Bar), and two rather splendid venues. Only saw the Artesian Well from outside, but any venue with a triton sticking out the front is fine by me - and Lost Society is just lovely. Or at least the 'Crystal Ball Room' is - with a sort of Mediterranean-meets-Tennessee Williams feel to it, and a very tasty line in cocktails. Which, given they have fruit in, are of course very healthy. The burlesque was...well, burlesque, I don't see it very often so haven't really established any standards, but can be sure that the headliner was absolutely adorable.
Although I was a little alarmed when, nearly home, I passed a man on the Stroud Green Road wearing only a motorbike helmet and butcher's apron, and wondered if maybe burlesque nights are one of those experiences one can never leave behind.

Quick reminder, for the benefit of the slower members of the class: anyone who calls for any book to be banned, ever, should themselves be removed from the shelves of the human library. Even the really poisonous tomes - Mein Kampf, say, the Bible or Koran - should only be kept from falling, unmediated, into the unsupervised hands of children. Borders are now doing this by stocking Tintin in the Congo with the adult comics, and the publishers did likewise when they "included a foreword noting the colonial attitudes prevalent when it was written".

Reminder for anyone not a) in a field or b) gothing - Cherry Bomb at the Betsey tomorrow night. Girl pop is good.

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