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shaggy blog stories · shared items · twitter · village blog · you're not the only one Saturday, April 05, 2003
The Let's All Give Ourselves Tinnitus And Win A Mug & A Mousemat Project - Day 3 of 4.
(Day 1 is here and Day 2 is here.)
"But Mike, this is impossible! Our ears hurt! We know you've got a new product range to promote, but why must you torture us so?" Oh, stop snivelling like that. You'll get nothing for free in this life. So get those headphones back on, and knuckle yourselves down for round three of the quiz that Here are today's four middle bits, to be matched up with the right intros. Right-click on the track listing to download. justin timberlake - cry me a river (dirty vegas vocal mix) angie stone - wish i didn't miss you (hex hector & max quayle mixshow) layo & bushwacka! - love story (vs finally) daniel bedingfield - if you're not the one (remix) By the way - it has now been confirmed that the Troubled Diva product range will definitely be released on Monday. Update: MP3 now deleted.
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When a black sheep meets a white sheep.
i was walking through a county where the vales are high and steep a lovely english county noted for its sheep i came across a shepherd who wore an old-time smock and as the sheep were grazing he was singing to his flock: when a black sheep meets a white sheep what does the black sheep say? "baa baa baa little white sheep, come where the life is gay." "there's a lovely field of clover only a field away let's go look it over every sheep should have its day." "all among the white sheep life's too tame for me gambol with the black sheep in high society." when a white sheep meets a black sheep now what does the white sheep say? "baa baa baa mister black sheep you can't lead me astray" (billy cotton & his band, mid 1940s) (flip-side to "we're gonna hang out the washing on the siegfried line") Cute tune. One of my late grandmother's old 78s. I'll stick it in the Curiosity Box one of these days.
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Friday, April 04, 2003
Match the Intro - Day 2.
(Day 1 is here.)
Yes! It's Day 2 of the Fun Quiz that everybody is doing! Or rather, they would be doing it if only: a) they understood the instructions. b) the quiz wasn't so completely and utterly impossible. c) the supplied MP3 of 20 minimal drum tracks wasn't enough to drive them right round the twist after just one listen. But I live in hope. So here - as plucked from yesterday's comments box - is a condensed recap of the rules. 20 intros, 4 middle bits.
Today's 4 middle bits are as follows (right-click on the track listing to download):
Match each middle bit to the intro. Yesterday: first 4 middle bits. Tomorrow: 4 more middle bits. Saturday: 4 more middle bits. Monday: last 4 middle bits. Monday or thereafter: e-mail me, telling me which intro matches which middle bit. (Example: "Justin Timberlake is intro 4.") Highest correct score gets a mug & a mousemat. Next highest score gets either a mug or a mousemat (not both). 1. dj sneak featuring bear who? - fix my sink (original club mix) 2. the streets - weak become heroes (ashley beedle's lovebug vocal) 3. faithless featuring dido - one step too far (rollo & sister bliss mix) 4. sugababes - stronger (almighty mix) As before, each one of the four is ascending beats-per-minute order, i.e. slowest first, fastest last. As the 20 intros are also in ascending beats-per-minute order, this should make things slightly easier. The DJ Sneak track should be a comparative doddle. (I said comparative). Even if you only get one correct answer, then you should be able to get that one. And frankly, I have a strong suspicion that One Point might be all you need to win this competition. Happy beat-matching, everyone! Update: MP3 now deleted.
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Thank you, Saint Isidore.
You see the posting below, titled If wishes were horses? The one about genies and magic lanterns and wishes?
Well, I was having quite a lot trouble coming up with a suitable title for it. Eventually, I gave up and plumped for If wishes were horses, beggars would ride. Because it was a well known saying using the word "wishes", basically. But not a terribly good fit. Bit of a lame title, in fact. Best I could come up with, though. A few minutes later, on my way to lunch, the blessed Saint Isidore (patron saint of the Internet) decided to lob some divine providence my way, in the shape of an Interesting And Poignant Incident involving a beggar. Meaning that I could now split the previously meaningless phrase over two consecutive postings. (1) "If wishes were horses..." - a piece about wishes. (2) "...beggars would ride. - a piece about beggars. Wow. How slick and conceptual does that make me look? Huh? Praise be to Saint Isidore, then. Why, it's almost enough to make you a Believer.
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...beggars would ride.
This lunchtime, about half an hour ago. I'm waiting to use the right hand cash machine, just behind a Young Person. One of his mates is using the left hand cash machine. Behind us, three other Young People are hanging around, waiting for them to finish. Much lively banter and carefree laughter is flowing back and forth between the group.
Sitting on the pavement between the two cash machines is a fair-haired woman in her mid-twenties, with a blanket arranged over her legs. She is looking up at the group and beaming at them, like someone at a drinks party who is hovering on the edge of a conversation in the hope of being included. Something about this strategy annoys me instantly. It seems both falsely ingratiating - designed merely to elicit cash - and utterly futile. As if these people are going to include her in their banter! I turn my head away to the right, and stare into the middle distance. Come on, Mike. You're hardly being fair. What would you rather see? Would you rather she just sat there, head downcast, assuming a suitably downtrodden, meekly supplicating air for you? Would that be the "correct" way for beggars to behave, then? "Excuse me? It's free?" What? I turn my head back. The Young Person in front of me has vanished, and I realise I have been dumbly standing in front of the cash machine with my mouth hanging half open. The beggar woman is looking up at me and smiling. "You were miles away there." "I was, wasn't I? I was on another planet..." I fumble quickly for my Switch card. "What were you thinking about?" I was thinking about you. God, I can't say that. Come on, answer her. "Oh nothing much. Stupid stuff, really." God, that sounds dismissive. She was only being nice. I take my 50 quid, fumble for change, press two 20ps and a 10p into her hand without making eye contact, and hurry off to the deli.
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If wishes were horses...
Anna's list of things I wish I'd known at 6 has reminded me of something which used to exercise my brain a great deal when I was about six years old. Namely: if I ever found a magic lantern, and rubbed it so that a genie came out and offered me three wishes, what exactly would I wish for?
I used to think about this a lot. Just in case it ever happened. Because I'd need to be good and ready. Wouldn't want to waste my precious wishes on anything stupid. (I was well aware of this danger, having read rather a lot of stories in which silly, greedy children abused their wishes and ended up getting their karmic just desserts. Their desperate, panic-stricken third wish, blurted out in the heat of the moment, always seemed to be "Oh, how I wish I had never found this stupid lantern!") After much careful deliberation, I had finally managed to whittle my wishes down to just two. I can still remember them word for word. 1. I wish I knew everything. 2. I wish I could do everything. (There didn't seem to be much point in having a third wish after that. Two would suffice, thank you Mr. Genie.) Omniscience and omnipotence, then. I might not have known the actual words just yet, but I had certainly grasped the concepts. I didn't ask for much, did I? Precocious child. Nowadays, omniscience is, of course, no longer that big a deal. In fact, now that anyone with an Internet connection can have omniscience at the touch of a button, omniscience has become rather a devalued stock. About as special as having indoor plumbing, really. Omnipotence, then. The final frontier. So give me Absolute Power, and give it to me now. That's all I ask.
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Thursday, April 03, 2003
Apotheosis of blog (slight return). A tale of devilish A-list chicanery and sustained Product Placement.
(Warning: The piece which follows contains a dangerously high concencentration of bumptious self-aggrandisement, coupled with thermo-nuclear levels of self-referential Linky Love. First time readers in particular should approach with great caution.)
(now fully, fully, fully updated) Saturday afternoon: Pre-drink drinks on Old Compton Street with Stuart Hydragenic, Mrs. HG and Mrs. HG's jolly friend. Nice of them all to meet me on my home territory, I thought. First orders placed for the Troubled Diva coffee mug. An excellent start to the weekend's Saturday evening: Drinks at The Globe on Bow Street, with a secret, self-appointed cabal of UK webloggers. No names, no pack drill, mum's the word OK? Why such secrecy? Let me explain. You know how people keep banging on about "A-list bloggers", like the A-list is some sort of abstract concept - a mere figure of speech? Well, these people are wrong. The A-list is - of course! - a real list, written down on a piece of paper and kept under lock and key in a secret location. Because why on earth would the A-list be an imaginary list? That would be just stupid. So, (now gather round closely, and not a word to anyone, and if you do then I'll only deny it) get this: our intrepid little group had managed to discover the location, sneak in, pick the lock, and steal the A-list. Look, here it is! Except...it's not the A-list any more. Oh dear me, no. We have replaced it with a new list. Our list. Ahahahahaha! Obviously, the brilliance of this coup de blog needed to be toasted - and toast it we most certainly did. Having done that, we then sat around earnestly discussing Trackbacks and Movable Type plug-ins for most of the rest of the evening. But then, when you're A-list (ahahahahaha!), you do have a certain agenda-setting responsibility. This was also my best chance yet to Push The Product. Not only was I modelling the first of the Troubled Diva T-shirts (from the Classic range, as opposed to the Novelty range), but I also ensured that both coffee mugs were strategically placed on the ledge behind me, in full view of the group, thus Maintaining Product Visibility At All Times. The Buzz amongst the secret cabal (or were they my Street Team by now?) was tangible. I felt quite confident that they would all go away and write unsolicited and spontaneous Positive Copy about the Product forthwith. (And I'm sure they still intend to, as well. It's clearly just taking a little bit longer than I had anticipated.) Saturday late night: Over to Duckie, for more blog-based socialising: this time with the group that I always think of as the Very Long Blog Name Beginning With TH Set. This consisted of:
Never mind. Instead, we witnessed a wonderful modern dance performance by the two-piece h2dance ensemble, who combined classical ballet music with hardcore nosebleed breakbeats to marvellous effect. Proper art, no less! The Readers Wifes awarded their Best! Record! Evah! accolade this week to XTC's Senses Working Overtime...but best of all, they played Carly Simon's You're So Vain (outright winner of the Which Decade Is Tops For Pops Project, remember?), to a packed dancefloor. As no-one else in our little group seemed to be in the mood for dancing, I peeled myself away and shamelessly hurled myself around on my own. Well, maybe not every single person in the room had noticed my Troubled Diva Classic Range T-shirt yet (although I did make a point of leaning over the raised walkway for most of the evening, so it shouldn't have been too hard to spot). Saturday very late night / Sunday morning: Steve and I move down the road to Crash. Jabber jabber, tops off, jiggle jiggle, jabber jabber, oh just one more then, jiggle jiggle, no I must go home soon, jabber jabber, come on, OUT that door, you're out for lunch tomorrow AND the clocks are going forward, remember? Sunday morning: Having somehow managed to navigate myself back to Sasha's in the early morning light, I wake to the sound of D on my mobile, ringing to arrange meeting for lunch. Ohmigod, talk about cramming everything in. Crash was fun - but, in the cruel light of day, maybe not strictly necessary. Sasha fixes me with a hot beverage and sorts me out with a taxi, as I sit in her exceptionally gorgeous flat (all light and space and split levels and double heights and internal windows and tasteful furnishings and, ooh, really really lovely) and try to order my thoughts. I'm feeling bad about being such a fleeting guest, and sorry that we're not getting to spend more time together. Before leaving, I solemnly present Sasha with the one and only Troubled Diva Classic Range mug currently in existence. This is known as Leaving Samples Of The Product With Key Opinion Formers. My minicab driver has quite possibly never been out of Kilburn before - and I'm only going as far as Camden Town tube. He starts to pick loose sheets randomly out of his road atlas. Oh dear: he has plucked out the Stratford / Leyton / Leytonstone page, and is now studying it intently. I think I'd better say something... D and Pix (or maybe "Pix" is a tad too familiar - no, I think I shall call her annelizabeth instead) are waiting at the appointed spot, and whisk me away through the sun-drenched and beautifully appointed streets of Primrose Hill - where paparazzi from Heat magazine lurk on every street corner, waiting for Jude Law & Sadie Frost to pop out to the newsagents. D has already mentioned this, but I must re-iterate: there really was a garden hedge shaped to look like a gigantic dead pigeon. Eyes and everything. Spectacular! We were also very much taken with the "peace fence" at the lower edge of the grassy hill area itself. Various anti-war messages had been threaded through the railings by local children - but this being nice Primrose Hill, where they bring their kids up proper, all the messages had been written out in Best on neatly co-ordinating little luggage labels. No Greenham Common style tree-hugging hippy crap here, thank you very much. You could also tell where you were by the somewhat erudite nature of the messages that dear little Jasper and Molly had left for Nasty Mister Bush and Bad Mister Blair to read. "War is inappropriate." Ah, bless their little hearts. Over a cooked breakfast in a delightfully chic little café, I handed D a "thank you for designing my guest week logo" goody bag, which mostly contains chocolate. I bet you'll never guess what else was in it. Yup - a Racist Ducks Novelty Range coffee mug. Which nicely matched the Racist Ducks T-shirt which I now proudly unveiled from under my jacket and shirt. Because I wasn't going to let up for one moment. D and annelizabeth turned out to be wholly delightful company, of course. A truly charming couple, who simply radiated bliss and contentment. So much so that at one point, they stopped short, threw each other meaningful glances, and muttered "God, we sound like one of those annoyingly perfect couples from Bridget Jones' Diary." Which only endeared them to me further, as K and I have long suffered from a similar perception. Honestly, the number of times that we have been wheeled out for the benefit of friends of friends who are Coming To Terms With Their Sexuality... ("Here we go again", we will mutter seditiously. "We're f***ing role models. Can't we just stage an enormous row for once? Shall we start accusing each other of shagging loads men behind each other's backs? Can we make it really toe-curlingly embarrassing? Can we? Oh go on...") Er, yes. Where were we, anyway? Oh right, D and annelizabeth. Yes, lovely people - but once again, I don't want to start unravelling anybody's carefully constructed Enigmatic Web Presence, so I shall say no more. Except to note that D's proposed Camden/North London Bloggers' picnic, scheduled to take place on Primrose Hill next Saturday, sounds like a capital idea. Update. Sunday afternoon/evening: Oh, hello. What are you doing here? You've come back to see whether I ever got round to finishing this piece off, haven't you? Because you know how I hate leaving things unfinished. And you're quite right, of course - I do hate leaving things unfinished. So why the long delay? Well - since there's no-one left reading this except you and me, and the odd stray Googler - I might as well tell you. After leaving D and annelizabeth, I headed south for the Royal Vauxhall Tavern, where I remained for most of the rest of the day. Now, as regular readers will know, I've visited the RVT several times before over the last year or so, and have always had an outstandingly good time there. Until this time. Don't get me wrong here. It wasn't the fault of the RVT, and it certainly wasn't the fault of the people I was with (the usual suspects: David, Ian, Luca, Steve et al) - it's just that, particularly after the excesses of the night before, I really wasn't in the mood. Or rather: I no longer had sufficient reserves of the social resources which the occasion demands. Instead, I fell back into the old trap of subordinating myself, feeling like a spare part, feeling like a bore, feeling like I had nothing of value to contribute. Know what I'm talking about? Of course you do. We've all been there, haven't we? Anyway, we sat about for a couple of hours in the gorgeous sunshine on the famous Grassy Knoll (meaning I could at least hide behind my shades a while longer), drinking cans of beer from the local offy, before wandering in for The DE Experience. After the show, when the dancing started, I put my best "oh yes, I'm having a good time really" face on and jiggled about on auto-pilot for a while. David had gone home sick...Luca was outside, looking after an equally sick Dr. Bitful...the numbers were dwindling...and I found myself wondering what I was still doing there. Plus, I really, really missed him. It just wasn't the same without him. Eventually, around 20:30, and to my immense relief, Ian mentioned that he was heading up the road to Dukes. Delighted at the chance to escape the mayhem, I hitched along with him. Unfortunately, I then instantly switched over into "let's be all earnest and heartfelt and deep, and talk about the things which, you know, really matter" mode, and proceeded to chew his ear off with my overweening Sincerity. So let's leave us there this time, shall we? Me gabbling away in a dark pub over my umpteenth pint, just a couple of hours away from catching the last train back to Nottingham, and - frustratingly - just half an hour short of being able to meet Paul for the first time. Anyway, I'll be back. Of course I'll be back. We all have our off days, after all. So just treat the above as a sort of minor-key variation on the usual theme. But shush, right? I don't think anyone suspected a thing. Let it be our little secret.
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Edwin Starr, RIP.
It turns out that the late Edwin Starr was actually resident in Chilwell (a suburb of Nottingham) at the time of his death. (Motown legend? Chilwell? Does not compute.)
It also turns out that his last ever interview was given just a few days ago to our local newspaper, the Nottingham Evening Post, who have published it today. The article also reveals that a new version of Starr's classic War (recorded with the Utah Saints) is to be released as a posthumous single. Edwin Starr's Contact was actually the very first extended 12" single I ever bought, back in January 1979 (on bright pink vinyl), on the strength of a review by James Hamilton in Record Mirror - thus kicking off my lifelong obsession with dance music. RIP, Edwin. Update: Take Scaryduck's Edwin Starr Memorial Mini Poll (his archives have gone all wonky, so you'll have to scroll down to Saturday April 5th).
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The great weblog sell-out?
It's all going off, isn't it?
US webloggers are promoting milk-based beverages... ...a marketing firm is actively recruiting webloggers to promote further products... ...Peter is accepting sponsored product placements on Naked Blog... ...and I'll shortly be launching a merchandise range. Wa-hey! But so far, one site has to take the biscuit. From the top of the "Recently updated UK weblogs list", where it has started popping up with suspicious regularity - ladies and gentlemen, I give you the artfully titled aaron abbott. Where will it all end?
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Match The Intro. Yes, it's another daft quiz.
This quiz has been devised as something of a tribute to the really boring bits at the beginning of full-length extended dance mixes. You know: the ones which start with at least a minute and a half of minimal drum-beats. Or, if you're very lucky, a single repeated bass note might appear after about 30 seconds, or maybe a tiny little sample stab, in order to build up the excitement. This is done purely so that DJs can easily mix tunes together, without worrying about awkward clashing keys and the like. Which is fine if you're a DJ, but skull-crushingly dull for everyone else, as we hang around waiting for something vaguely interesting to start happening. (I wonder how many hours of my life have been cumulatively wasted in this way? It doesn't bear thinking about.)
I have therefore decided to do something useful - and who knows, maybe even entertaining? - with all this wasted acreage of percussive dreariness. To whit, another daft Troubled Diva quiz, with prizes. Actually, let's talk about the prizes first. As previously mentioned, I will shortly offering a full range of exciting and stylish Troubled Diva merchandise for sale via this site (via my old mate Rob, whose company is gearing itself up to become the UK equivalent of Cafe Press). T-shirts, coffee mugs, mousemats and record bags will all be available, in a choice of design: either the Troubled Diva title bar (the Classic Range), or the "racist ducks" picture from earlier in the year (the Novelty Range). And like the good little wannabe marketeer that I am, I naturally recognise the value of Raising Brand Awareness and Stimulating Demand. Because if I'm going to sell out to the forces of Rampant Commercialism and Naked Profiteering (and lending a helping hand to my old mate Rob of course, which is actually the Main Thing, honest), then I might as well do things properly. Therefore, I am proud to announce that the first prize in this competition will be: an exclusive Troubled Diva coffee mug & matching mousemat, from the Classic Range. There will also be a runner-up prize of either a mug or a mousemat (your choice). These are quality goods which would grace any desktop, as well as being a visible demonstration of your loyalty to your favourite weblog. OK, I sense I'm overdoing it now. Onto the competition, then. Take a listen to this MP3, which contains the opening eight bars of twenty recent(ish) dance records, in ascending beats-per-minute order. (Total duration: just under 5 minutes) Marvel at just how tedious even eight bars can be. Shake your head at the woeful lack of creativity prevalent in the dance music industry, etc. etc. To help you locate each intro more easily, here's a list showing at what time each intro occurs on the MP3. Intro 1 - 0:00 ··· Intro 2 - 0:19 ··· Intro 3 - 0:34 ··· Intro 4 - 0:50 ··· Intro 5 - 1:05
Now take a listen to this MP3, which contains the "middle bits" (i.e. eight bars where something is actually happening, like a chorus) of four of those twenty tunes. Once again, I've included the precise start time of each tune within the MP3.Intro 6 - 1:19 ··· Intro 7 - 1:34 ··· Intro 8 - 1:50 ··· Intro 9 - 2:05 ··· Intro 10 - 2:20 Intro 11 - 2:35 ··· Intro 12 - 2:50 ··· Intro 13 - 3:04 ··· Intro 14 - 3:19 ··· Intro 15 - 3:33 Intro 16 - 3:49 ··· Intro 17 - 4:05 ··· Intro 18 - 4:18 ··· Intro 19 - 4:32 ··· Intro 20 - 4:46 1. (0:00) Justin Timberlake: Like I Love You (deep dish zigzag remix)
Your task is to successfully match the four "middle bits" with the correct four "boring intro bits". Sounds simple enough, right? Well, it's actually quite difficult. In fact, it's bloody difficult. So, to make things slightly easier and to give you more of a fighting chance, I have also arranged the four "middle bits", like the intros, in ascending beats-per-minute order.
2. (0:20) Missy Elliott: 4 My People (basement jaxx remix vocal mix) 3. (0:34) Soft Cell: The Night (almighty mix) 4. (0:48) Sex Pistols: God Save The Queen (neil barnes 2002 remix) Tomorrow, there will be four more "middle bits" to match up, with a further four at the weekend and a final four on Monday. Four mystery intros will therefore remain completely unmatched. When you have matched up all sixteen tunes (and not before!), e-mail me with your guesses. The person with the most correct guesses wins first prize, and the second highest wins, er, second prize. In the event of a tie, I'll take the first answer received. Note: I'll be amazed if anybody gets all sixteen answers correct (although there are ways of cheating, of course). So do have a bash at it, even if you're not 100% confident of your answers. And just think! In a couple of weeks time, a Troubled Diva coffee mug and mousemat might be sitting on your desk! This is the final nail in the coffin of my integrity as a weblogger, isn't it? Update: There's a quick summary of the rules (which are dead easy, no, honest, they are!) in comment #9 below. Update: MP3s now deleted.
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Walking with Mark.
There's an excellent almost-daily autobiographical series currently going on at London Mark, which - to swipe someone else's phrase - rises above the quotidian. Well worth your attention, I reckon.
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Tuesday, April 01, 2003
Re-design.
Sue Bailey's site has just undergone a truly stunning re-design, which I feel could even signal a major paradigm shift for the way that the rest of us construct our sites. Exemplary stuff.
Update: It was, of course, an April Fool thing. I *heart* April Fool things.
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Blog sponsorship.
An idea whose time has come, a pragmatic way of meeting increasingly steep bandwidth charges, or a worrying new development which threatens to compromise all who participate?
Update: It was, of course, an April Fool thing. I *heart* April Fool things.
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Welcome aboard...
...to the brand new but already excellent Frail Loop, raising the bar of British blogging once again.
Update: It was, of course, an April Fool thing. I *heart* April Fool things.
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Monday, March 31, 2003
So that was Guest Week, then...
...and now it's just back to little old me, blogging on me tod, with - as from tomorrow, April 1st - increasingly less time at my disposal to do so. But as long as you're not coming here for Quantity, then I'm sure we can work something out together.
Wasn't Guest Week great, though? Wasn't it? Wasn't it? For my own part, I particularly enjoyed the novel sensation of regularly checking for updates on my own site. I also liked the way that a lot of the postings naturally followed on from each other in terms of subject matter - be it chocolate, spoons or, erm, self-mutilation. Now, that's memetic. But most of all, I must pay tribute to the sheer quality of all five of my guest contributors - and yes, I do mean that most sincerely, folks. Appreciation, gratitude, Massive Respect and Big Big Love goes out to:
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Invisible Stranger.
Well, well, well.
Well. Well. Do you remember the Which Decade Is Tops For Pops Project? Well, of course you do - it was only a month ago, after all. Do you remember the final day of the project, when I said this? ...the Troubled Diva Which Decade Is Tops For Pops? Golden Notepad award, for consistently delivering a quite superb set of comments throughout the entire lifespan of the project, on every single last record featured, has to go to...
Well, you know what? Just five days later, very very quietly so no-one (including me) would notice, this appeared.
Nigel R (the UK one). Somebody show this man how to set up his own weblog! This is a talent which deserves to come out of the Google-can't-find-me-here shadows of the comments box, and into the sunlit uplands of the, OK I'll say it And you know what else? It's every bit as good as I'd hoped it would be. Welcome to the sunlit uplands, Stranger.
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Sunday, March 30, 2003
War, it simply isn't cricket dahling
Posted by D
And so guest week ended very fittingly with a fleeting visit from Mike. We took him to enjoy the serene celebness of Café Seventy-Nine in Primrose Hill replete with teacup chandeliers and vegetarian sausages that were more like evil potato croquettes. We saw luggage tags tied to fences extolling how war in Iraq "simply isn't on", a hedgerow shaped like a pigeon out cold, and the silo on Primrose Hill where Thunderbird One is kept locked away in case London comes under terrorist attack. I have a piece of unique Troubled Diva merchandise that I will cherish and checking the keyboard now I can understand how someone can typo "racist ducks" since the d and the f are side-by-side... I have been given lots of food for thought regarding my tastes in chocolate (no literally, Mike gave me some rather posh chocolate) and gained a fearful respect for liver. In future I will hide myself under a blanket to drink milk just in case any nearby pieces of liver decide to have a go. Also... Jeremy Clarkson, he's alright really. Honest. Not as alright as Nigella Lawson though. Phoar!
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Goodnight Children, Everywhere.
(posted by noodle vague)
So that's it then. What a luvverly week it's been. I've learned why Hershey's Kisses taste so rank, and where the SS took their holidays in 1939. I've enjoyed meeting new people and reading their frabjous blogs. I'm only sorry I don't have a picture of me stood next to a big ol' eel to leave you with. I'd like to give big thanks and love to Mike for allowing us to squat his luxury pad for the week. I think I've got all the furniture back where it came from and I'm sure that unsightly stain in the spare bedroom will come off with a bit of bleach. I'd also like to thank all of Troubled Diva's regular readers for putting up with this pish and not throwing stuff. I'm sure normal service will be very much resumed tomorrow. 's been a gas. Peace out.
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about the site (2007) troubled diva: the first 5 years, summarised dramatis personae potted autobiography 4 things · 100 things · 100 other things BBC Nottingham profile & interview what makes me "good"? the zbornak mini-interview the ages of mike (in pictures) blogging questionnaire "finish this sentence" meme my mother's memoirs: 1940-1960 K's dog cancer company Amazon wish list return to sidebar menu ![]() we interviewed...
alison moyet armistead maupin athlete: tim wanstall barry adamson boy george british sea power: yan david gest dealmaker records & red dionne warwick donny osmond duke special duran duran: roger taylor elbow: mark potter erasure: andy bell erasure: vince clarke the gossip: hannah & brace the go! team: ian parton hard-fi: ross philips hercules & love affair: nomi jason donovan jennifer saunders joan baez john barrowman kano kevin ayers (full transcript) liza minnelli lorna luft marc almond maria mckee the musical box: martin levac pam ann public enemy: chuck d the rascals: miles kane rodney bewes rodrigo y gabriela seth lakeman shayne ward steve hillage (system 7) supergrass: gaz coombes trail of dead: jason reece will oldham yazoo: vince clarke return to sidebar menu we lectured...
creative collaborations: lecture notes lowdham book festival: lecture notes we serialised...
· 100 things about 100 bloggers which also apply to this blogger · danny · defining vignettes of the 1980s · format firsts · hangzhou diary · nottingham, my nottingham · of seating plans, turtle doves and symphonies in watered silk · shaggy blog stories: the full story · stations of the diva · telegraph poles on snob alley · the 90 best singles of 2004, exhaustively described · vietnam diary · walking the forest path · which decade is tops for pops? (2008) · which decade is tops for pops? (2007) · which decade is tops for pops? (2006) · which decade is tops for pops? (2005) · which decade is tops for pops? (2004) · which decade is tops for pops? (2003) · which is the best madonna album? · window into my world: the troubled diva pointlessly detailed journal theme week return to sidebar menu we wrote...
25 favourite posts 2007: the year in blog 2007: the year in mike 25 things to do: before i die 25 things to do: before you die accommodating: the f-word all time: fave singles ambushed: by unexpected emotion apotheosis of blog: 1a / 1b / 1c / 2 / 3 arbeit: macht frei archbishop: sex shop scandal are you: a proper blogger? astrology: hmm (1) (2) autographs: the collection bands which: left me cold battle: of the band aids big nights out: what changed? blending: with the english blogging tips: for newcomers best music: 07 / 06 / 05 / 04 / 03 / 02 / 01 / 00 blogmeets: popular myths dispelled bobbly fruit & pillows: for whom? bob dylan: suggested coping strategies book review: 2005 blogged boutique hotels: never again boutique shag: squint squint squint bridget riley: & wolfgang tillmanns bt vision: diary of horror carnet: parisien celebrity angst: what to do? chino latino: get shum bongo clapped out has been: yes or no? conkers: bonkers! conversation: with an 11 year old cottaging: fond memories crisp sharp edges: k's guest blog cross butts: the aga was a godsend cumberland hotel: i want my apples! daddy: what's sex? dancing the hard house: on beer do ya: think i'm sexy? dreams: of returning duckie: hula hoops & hoo-hahs easter holiday: in numbers emotional tailspin: inner retreat fashion: sexy no-no's famous people: i could be fave albums: of the 1970s flush: of shame future dream: shopping scheme gay partnership rights: blah gay up: me duck general election 2005: 1 / 2 god-man: in the airport grandad's on: the guest list happy happy happy: splurge hi i'm ken: gayest moment ever hiking: to the gate how much: do you WHAT? if wishes: were horses... ...beggars: would ride i have bought: a pedometer!!! if wishes: were horses... inland empire: oh, the agony iPods: feel the love iPods: feel the pain it's time: the tale was told john peel: and the "noble savage" jongleurs: nottingham latvian baywatch interlude: beaver patrol! lit crit: bitch sesh longnor nights: ronnie corbett ramble magisterial: coruscations membrillo: cottage style me, dear 1: local media calleth me, dear 2: good morning nottingham memories: of the cerne giant michael's big day: with "the creatives" motoring: with mike and k my desk: exhaustively annotated my mummy: the movie star my mummy: the vogue model my week: barcelona business wonkery naked diva: port in a storm (parody) new dawn fades: failed space-age nicholas hellen: the new serenata flowers one night in: amsterdam on this day: 1966/76/86/96 orange mivvis: wrong message? petite anglaise: book review philip pullman: the vignette phuket nights: before the flood political mike: what happened? poofs & lezzers: in pop popbitch: worst records racist ducks: by request recitatively yours: in beeston regarding: regards reiki: balancing me chakras, like remove power: and we have nothing resolution watch: happy endings rvt: a diva perspective sambuca drinking game: just DON'T should gay men: give blood? sky mirror: a sudden profusion social smoking: who said oxymoron? soft furnishings: a social history songs: containing lists spiked: a cautionary tale statement: of jadedness successes: and unknowns sunshine, balance: and lurrve swanky do: playing the game tacky stab: celeb status ta-dah: rough tasting notes tales from: amsterdam: 1 / 2 / 3 tatchell/humphries: today howler thatchenfreude: stuff of nightmares the secret: gay signal the thespian life: 1 / 2 / 3 / 4 / 5 the world won't end: 9/12 the year in blog: 2003 too many people: multiple mikes through bad times: and good trams: so this is hucknall? trashy pop: a justification trentbeat: the nottingham sound tufts: and chuffs unlikely: new interest up for grabs: in both senses vinyl countdown: re-learning the rituals what i did: on saturday when good cliques: go bad whither: the political blog? whore to culture: why opera bores me why i like: queenie working in paris: 5 stages you lattay: i lartay return to sidebar menu we freelanced... ADULT., battant agnostic mountain gospel choir, congregation alison moyet amp fiddler amy winehouse, mr. hudson & the library ...and you will know us by the trail of dead andy williams the automatic, mumm-ra barry adamson the beat, neville staple beyoncé black kids, team waterpolo black mountain bonnie "prince" billy boy george breeders british sea power, make model bucks fizz, brotherhood of man buena vista social club bugz in the attic cardiacs cocorosie david essex delays diana ross donny osmond drive-by truckers duffy duke special duran duran dv8 physical theatre erasure euros childs evan dando fallout trust, computerman the feeling feist fionn regan foals from the jam (may 2007) from the jam (dec 2007) the futureheads gary numan: replicas tour get cape. wear cape. fly. girls aloud glasvegas the gossip greg dulli & the twilight singers guillemots, joan as police woman hard-fi, the rumble strips here and now tour 2008 hidden cameras hope of the states i'm from barcelona imogen heap joe lean & the jing jang jong john barrowman journey south juana molina ken dodd laura veirs liza minnelli lorna luft los campesinos! low manu chao maria mckee the musical box: selling england... nouvelle vague, gabriella cilmi nuru kane & bayefall gnawa the orb the osmonds palladium pam ann piney gir pink prince public enemy puppini sisters rachel unthank & the winterset the rascals richmond fontaine rihanna rodrigo y gabriela (2006) rodrigo y gabriela (2007) ryan adams & the cardinals scissor sisters secret machines seth lakeman the sugababes system 7 twilight sad the verve, reverend & the makers victorian english gentlemens club, das wanderlust westlife white denim the x factor live yazoo young knives, ungdomskulen slate magazine: america, meet the eurovision song contest agnostic mountain gospel choir: ten thousand ali farka touré: savane athlete: beyond the neighbourhood brett anderson: brett anderson british sea power: do you like rock music? bucks fizz: the very best of datsuns: smoke & mirrors defected presents: charles webster duke special: songs from the deep forest erasure: light at the end of the world george michael: twenty five golden afrique vol.3 hard-fi: once upon a time in the west hidden cameras: awoo kevin ayers: the unfairground lady sovereign: public warning lcd soundsystem: sound of silver marc almond: stardom road mountain goats: get lonely mr. hudson & the library: a tale of two cities queer noises 1961-1978: from the closet to the charts rufus wainwright: does judy at carnegie hall rufus wainwright: does judy! judy! judy! (dvd) rufus wainwright: release the stars sean lennon: friendly fire the rascals: rascalize ultimate eurovision party stylus singles jukebox 2005: archive the eurovision song contest: the official history: john kennedy o’connor return to sidebar menu we saw... !!! (chk chk chk) air basement jaxx, audio bullys bay city rollers the bellrays, the d4 beth orton, ed harcourt bob dylan brian wilson broadcast bryan ferry butterflies of love, tompaulin calexico chicks on speed daevid allen damo suzuki's network datsuns, polyphonic spree, interpol, thrills david bowie doves, the coral duran duran, goldfrapp flaming lips franz ferdinand, von bondies, the rapture, funeral for a friend franz ferdinand, fiery furnaces hidden cameras (2004) jon spencer blues explosion kevin ayers kylie minogue lemon jelly madonna (2001) madonna (2006) the magic band, wreckless eric manitoba, four tet mariza mark gardener mudhoney the music neil diamond oasis omara portuondo patti smith pet shop boys prince: o2 arena & aftershow richard ashcroft robert newman, mark thomas rolling stones scissor sisters, atomizer, readers wifes, synthetic pleasures scissor sisters (the social) scissor sisters, syntax, david wrench scissor sisters, phoenix smokey robinson sons & daughters, vincent vincent & the villains, ralfe band sophie ellis bextor the streets, blackalicious |