The thing is it's our own fault, right? I mean our deference to the hegemon is essentially complete. We fill our news bulletins with American stories, consume American politics as if it were our own. We should take a week off or something.
The thing is it's our own fault, right? I mean our deference to the hegemon is essentially complete. We fill our news bulletins with American stories, consume American politics as if it were our own. We should take a week off or something.
It had such a huge effect on listeners that the whole thing was put out again, in a single two-hour broadcast, on the Light Programme, the BBC's biggest outlet, a few weeks later. Looks like the original 1946 tapes have been lost but an abridged 1948 version has gone out occasionally since then.
The impact of Hersey's article in Britain was delayed, but not by much. Hardly anyone had seen it and the magazine was unobtainable. Producer Joel O'Brien had the idea of broadcasting the whole piece in a reading, using multiple voices, across four nights in October, on the new BBC Third Programme.
Great first try from Nathan McBeth there, although I'd prefer it if the commentators called him 'the Scottish prop' as superstition dictates. #SixNations2026
LOVE ISLAND IDEA. We fly a drone over the compound and drop a couple of bags of Banagrams in there.
Such a treat, on my cycle to work, to see the crocuses and daffodils in the verges. Lifts the heart!
Yes, I'm sure it's to do with the fact that none of the main roads in that quadrant of North London has any cycling provision at all! (although tbh I quite like it that way - I find the cycle superhighways terrifying!).
On my commute into central London I donβt encounter another ordinary pedal-cycle until approximately Maida Vale. Itβs fascinating. Before that itβs all delivery kids on lethal-looking e-bikes. The outer boroughs are the domain of precarity and electricity.
Our stupid toy poodle Topper, who also made it to 16, did exactly the same thing, once too wobbly to actually come down the stairs on his own. We're were summoned like Uber drivers to bring him down.
Yeh but I wouldn't want to live there
No clocks in Evri HQ
In Britain I think the Winter of 1962/63 caused a big shift. My parents told me they urgently installed central heating (taking out a loan to pay for it) after that. Always wondered if there's any research into the effect of that terrible, long Winter on heating becoming a more widespread thing.
What is she, three feet off the ground?
The regal gold emblem of Donald Trump's Board of Peace with the words 'Board of Peace' replaced with 'Bored of Peas?' in a similar style
One thing that I think is important, for those of who are not American, is to at least act like what happens there isn't important to us and that it is, in fact, laughable. I mean we live in a sovereign nation a long way away and we really shouldn't defer so pathetically to American pathologies.
Except, hold on a minute: Amanda's cop skills were ridiculed. It was one of the show's best comic elements and it resulted in her early eviction. And the FBI thing was made up, just gameplay, the opposite of copaganda. I mean am I missing something?
Telephone exchange? Always extra tall to accommodate all that clicking-clacking mechanical switching gear!
Au Pairs
Raincoats
The Gossip
Big Joanie
Patti Smith
@dmandl.bsky.social Hey Dave, I was just leafing through my copy of Radio Text(e) and noticed for the first time that you were an editor of the book! One of my faves!
BORED OF PEAS?
Only learnt about her myself the other day. Another hidden genius.
Crimewave still running out of control in London
We probably have Jaws editor Verna Fields - chief storytelling problem-solver to the New Hollywood elite - to thank for the way the verité footage showing holidaymakers arriving for that fateful 4th July weekend - is so cleverly interleaved with scripted elements⦠More: bit.ly/4qeluJh
Right, let's get into it. Steven Spielberg is a superlative storyteller and a shallow, moral coward (also, Jaws is a suburban Moby Dick). New on GROSS: bit.ly/4qeluJh
A million interviews with Ken Burns. Nobody ever asks him about his effect.
White, spiral-bound notebook with the phrase 'Nationalise Taylor Wimpey' printed on the front cover.
You work at a housebuilder and you're concerned about the housing crisis in Britain. You'll want to ostentatiously whip out one of these 'Nationalise Taylor Wimpey' notebooks in your next meeting. It uses the actual Taylor Wimpey typeface, natch (and also on about 50 other products bit.ly/3Y8il1m)
Smiling young woman models a t-shirt with a design using a still from 1956 film Moby Dick and a quote from 1975 film Jaws: "we're gonna need a bigger boat, right?"
Design combining a still from 1956 film Moby Dick in which the whale picks up a whaling boat in its jaws with a quotation from 1975 film Jaws: "we're gonna need a bigger boat, right?"
Allow me to sell you a very good value t-shirt (or a mug or a badge or all the usual stuff) with this design that uses a still from Moby Dick with that phrase from Jaws.
bit.ly/3XScz3Y
I live in Britain and the railway companies here have always dealt with the risk of burns from hot beverages by serving them at about 15 degrees below boiling. Very few burns, very unsatisfactory coffee.
At GROSS Iβve got as far as 1975's Jaws. Thereβs essentially nothing left to say about this movie, so to find an angle Iβve gone back 20 years to John Hustonβs 1956 Moby Dick, an oddball masterpiece in its own right and, in many ways, the origin of Jaws: gross.ly.
The Towering Inferno is a charmless brute, totally without wit, but its finale is a tableau from Dante - the venal and stupid plutocrats trapped in the tower are offered redemption by flood but many will die. It's a winnowing of the San Francisco elite⦠bit.ly/4oGIgI9
Snow White changed everything, collapsed the wild, barely rational space of early movie animation into something that resembled our own, where the laws of physics applied and where the market, the individual and the logic of capital prevailed: bit.ly/49Vgv7S