Scottish things and people that I like

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So what really *is* accurate, then? I have the feeling there has to be a middleground between Ring Of Bright Water and Trainspotting.

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:17 (twenty years ago)

7. (obvious but negated) poet Robert Byrnes (surname may be spelt incorrectly)

battlingspacemonkey (battlingspacemonkey), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:19 (twenty years ago)

Burns

Mädchen (Madchen), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:21 (twenty years ago)

(Or, "famous Irish poet, Robbie O'Burns" as my father would rant at the television every year the local newstation made silly errors of nationality.)

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:22 (twenty years ago)

Alisdair Gray is a total dude. Dunno about pastoral surrealism. Lanark is very much an urban novel, perhaps the greatest Glasgow novel, arguably the finest British novel of the last 25 years. Go into Oran Mor after 5pm and he'll be sitting having a end of the day pint with his assitants (he's working on the mural for this converted church/art centre).
I gave that Enlightenment book to a friend ages ago and still haven't got it back/read it. Boo!


Stew (stew s), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:23 (twenty years ago)

To be honest, my knowledge of Scottish history gets a bit patchy after about 800, so I'm not really sure myself.

All the tartan and shortbread stuff is bollocks, of course - clan tartans were invented by aristocratic Walter Scot fanboys in about 1820; and ever since "Highland Dress", of the non-military-uniform kind, has been *extremely* posh, the favoured clothes of moneyed landowners like Mohammed Al Fayed. Kilts, incidentally, were invented by a Lancashire mill-owner, slightly earlier.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:23 (twenty years ago)

yes, but poshboys in kilts = MAJOR K-ROWR, Mg-ROWR EVEN GIGA-ROWWRRRR!!!

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:25 (twenty years ago)

optimo!

lauren (laurenp), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:27 (twenty years ago)

Especially if they have long dirty hair? ;-)

(xpost)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:27 (twenty years ago)

DL

U forgot

8. Your Dad

battlingspacemonkey (battlingspacemonkey), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:27 (twenty years ago)

So what really *is* accurate, then?

try glasgow more :)

grimly fiendish (grimlord), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:29 (twenty years ago)

Is The Wicker Man Scottish, or just set in Scotland?

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:29 (twenty years ago)

http://lsc.mit.edu/schedule/archives/design1996/old_terms/Sp96/Graphics/Braveheart.3.gif
L: Kate
R: Long dirty hair, kilt

Mädchen (Madchen), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:29 (twenty years ago)

Incidentally, the Scottish [Gay] Pride march usually features lots of fit men in mini-kilts. Minikilts and bondage leathers = faintworthy rowrness.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:30 (twenty years ago)

Eeewww! Eeeewwww!!! Offend not mine eyes with that Gibson rogue!

(Where *is* that photo of bare-chested Ewan MacG in a kilt?)

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:31 (twenty years ago)

Minikilts and bondage leathers = faintworthy rowrness.

(on men or women, I should add)

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:31 (twenty years ago)

We're forgetting Highlander. Super accurate - a Scotsman playing a Spanish immortal, a Frenchman playing a Scottish immortal.
"Ma bonny 'Eatherrrr" etc

Stew (stew s), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:32 (twenty years ago)

Anyone remember Trial By Night, STV's yoof version of Question Time? I went on it a few years back and Howie Nicholsby was unveiling his new range of kilts in denim, pvc, camo etc (as infamously modelled by Jack McConnel at Tartan Week in NYC last year) Most of us thought they were a nice wheeze but there were these self-styled clansmen who looked like extras from Braveheart who were up in arms. They were still tutting about it after the show. "If it's no tartan it's no a kilt!"

Stew (stew s), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:35 (twenty years ago)

Mmm, those sort of people don't like reminding that modern tartan patterns - and the idea of 'clan tartans' - are only 200 years old at most.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:38 (twenty years ago)

My gran to thread: "Men in skirrrts? No, dearrr."

(I am Duncan MacCLOUD of clan MacCLOUD and I will have yerrrr head!)

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:40 (twenty years ago)

They also don't like reminding that kilts are actually a type of skirt.

Forest Pines (ForestPines), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:41 (twenty years ago)

Is The Wicker Man Scottish, or just set in Scotland?

I don't think it's very Scottish at all. It's "British".

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:42 (twenty years ago)

Plus I'm not sure how "Scottish" Ivor Cutler is, he seems more Jewish to me

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:44 (twenty years ago)

DL
U forgot

8. Your Dad

Oops, sorry Dad.

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:45 (twenty years ago)

http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/1680000/images/_1682371_rabflowers150.jpg

Sociah T Azzahole (blueski), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:50 (twenty years ago)

Now you're talking!

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:53 (twenty years ago)

Is that true about Alasdair Gray and Belle and Sebastian? That would've been wicked!

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 11:55 (twenty years ago)

all these posts and nobody's mentioned deep-fried mars bars yet. i'm convinced they're an urban myth.

also: nobody's mentioned chewin' the fat, mogwai, absolutely, aereogramme, single malts or haggis. this suggests my appreciation of the country in which i live is rather different to many other people's.

grimly fiendish (grimlord), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:04 (twenty years ago)

Or potato scones and Tunnock's Teacakes

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:07 (twenty years ago)

good point.

grimly fiendish (grimlord), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:08 (twenty years ago)

Whatever happened to the Stone of Scone anyway?

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:08 (twenty years ago)

They can take our freedom but they cannae take our Stones!

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:11 (twenty years ago)

mmmmm, scones.

It Is What A Man Does Which Demeans Him, Not What Is Done To Him (kate), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:13 (twenty years ago)

I think he was too expensive, Alisdair Gray, for the nambling pamblers, back in the day.

PS: I've never seen that song book.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:14 (twenty years ago)

I HOPE he was too expensive, he deserves to be a very rich man... he isn't, of course

Dadaismus (Dada), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:16 (twenty years ago)

Tunnock's Caramel Logs!

Tattie scones are great. Anyone ever had a Scooby Snack from the van outside the Botanics? Burger, cheese, bacon, sliced sausage, fried egg and a tattie scone in a burger bun. I had one to soak up the booze coming back from a Hogmanay party last year. Never again.

Every town in the North East claims to have invented the deep fried Mars bar. Go to Peterhead and one shop proudly proclaims to be the originator. Go to Stonehaven and you'll get the same.

Ivor Cutler's Life In A Scotch Sitting Room is indisputably Scottish and indisputably wonderful.

Chick Murray!
Dick Gaughan!
Monorail Music!
Orange Juice!
Edwin Morgan!

Stew (stew s), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:19 (twenty years ago)

The Stone of Scone? That's the same thing as the Stone of Destiny is it not? It was returned to Scotland in 1996 as a desperate attempt by the Tory's to claw back some support up here. At the General Election the following year they were wiped out in Scotland. Ha ha!

Stew (stew s), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:26 (twenty years ago)

the van outside the Botanics

"the maggie"? i've never been brave enough. also, if i'm outside the botanics i'm either a) visiting mrs fiendish's sister, who lives up the road, or b) trying to get the fuck away from the west end in that crappy little taxi queue. in either case, death by burger would only be a hindrance.

grimly fiendish (grimlord), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:30 (twenty years ago)

I HOPE he was too expensive, he deserves to be a very rich man... he isn't, of course

I heard he's spent most of his life in very squalid surroundings. He deserves to be rich.

dog latin (dog latin), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:31 (twenty years ago)

Squalid surroundings? He lives in Downanhill! Flats there sell for about £200,000! Mind you, he would have got in when it was cheap.
I think he's doing okay now - his paintings are getting more recognition and he's starting to sell some of them. And the 20th anniversary of Lanark boosted his profile.

Have you read any Edwin Morgan? He modernised Scottish poetry by rejecting the narrow nationalism of McDiarmid (who is, nonetheless, great) and being hip to the Beats and modernism. Like Gray he has an ability to capture Glasgow as it is and also recast it as his imagination wishes. There's a playfulness and cosmopolitan quality to his writing. He translated Miakovsky into Scots! He's suffering from cancer sadly, but he's still writing. He was a lecturer and tutor at Glasgow Uni for years. My parents were both taught by him and agree he was the most inspiring lecturer they'd ever had. That blows my mind.

Stew (stew s), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:53 (twenty years ago)

Tardises

Mädchen (Madchen), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:55 (twenty years ago)

tablet!

lauren (laurenp), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 12:56 (twenty years ago)

Oh my, how did I forget tablet?

Mädchen (Madchen), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:11 (twenty years ago)

mmmm sweet sugary butter tablet

battlingspacemonkey (battlingspacemonkey), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:31 (twenty years ago)

i quite like Ally Coook, in spite of the beard, in spite of his chagrin at my not having an iron.

Sociah T Azzahole (blueski), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:35 (twenty years ago)

buckfast!

lauren (laurenp), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:36 (twenty years ago)

I tried tablet the other weekend and I thought it was grossly over-sweet. Caramac I can handle though, perhaps McCaramac would be a happy medium? Except it sounds American.

Sociah T Azzahole (blueski), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:37 (twenty years ago)

all these posts and nobody's mentioned deep-fried mars bars yet. i'm convinced they're an urban myth.

Do you read yr own paper? Top scientists (badly short of funding, doubtless) did a study showing the DFMB wasn't an urban myth.

(What's true however, is that everyone makes em wrong. You have to seriously, seriously freeze the Mars bar first, so that when it's fried the batter and the outside is meltingly soft, but the inside is cold and rock.)

Stew OTM with Scooby Snacks, but a deep-fried pizza wins my heart every time.

stet (stet), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:44 (twenty years ago)

DFMB exist, but only post-myth.

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:49 (twenty years ago)

buckfast!

is made in devon or somewhere, innit? buckfast vomit is usually scottish, though, aye.

Do you read yr own paper?

i find it hard to see past all the mistakes :)

grimly fiendish (grimlord), Tuesday, 26 July 2005 13:50 (twenty years ago)

think that should be the new motto instead of Nemo me impune lacessit.

languid samuel l. jackson (jim), Saturday, 6 June 2009 17:33 (seventeen years ago)

Scotland Isnae Bad

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Saturday, 6 June 2009 17:51 (seventeen years ago)

I liked Leith, being asked if I wanted "salt and sauce," and the Glasgow Necropolis.

Also: Robert Louis Stevenson.

Virginia Plain, Monday, 8 June 2009 01:34 (seventeen years ago)

Alcholism?

"too worldly to compete on /b/" (King Boy Pato), Monday, 8 June 2009 02:04 (seventeen years ago)

AC/DC?

pfunkboy (Herman G. Neuname), Monday, 8 June 2009 02:08 (seventeen years ago)

two years pass...

Limmy's Show

Scary Move 4 (dog latin), Wednesday, 21 March 2012 17:28 (fourteen years ago)

seven years pass...

I like Scottish banknotes but am more than a little irked by English shopkeepers' unwillingness to accept them. What gives?

pomenitul, Saturday, 14 September 2019 09:01 (six years ago)

Imagine how much more irked you'd be if you were Scottish.

Scottish banknotes are unusual, first because they are issued by retail banks, not central banks, and second, because they are technically not legal tender anywhere in the United Kingdom – not even in Scotland.[1][2] As such, they are classified as promissory notes, and the law requires that the issuing banks hold a sum of Bank of England banknotes or gold equivalent to the total value of notes issued.[3][4]

The Inner Mounting Phlegm (Tom D.), Saturday, 14 September 2019 09:23 (six years ago)

Imagine how much more irked you'd be if you were Scottish.

I do think about that fwiw.

So why do they exist in the first place? Is it a botched, nigh contemptuous symbolic allowance?

pomenitul, Saturday, 14 September 2019 09:26 (six years ago)

and you can still execute a Scot with a crossbow if they try to pay for horseshoes with ye counterfitte currencies between maundy thursday and whit sunday.

calzino, Saturday, 14 September 2019 09:31 (six years ago)

95% of scottish notes test positive for traces of ground-up shortbread iirc

provisional ilx (darraghmac), Saturday, 14 September 2019 09:54 (six years ago)

All the more reason to prefer them to their English counterparts.

pomenitul, Saturday, 14 September 2019 09:59 (six years ago)

So why do they exist in the first place? Is it a botched, nigh contemptuous symbolic allowance?

Apparently banks in England used to be able to print their own notes too:

Until the middle of the 19th century, privately owned banks in Great Britain and Ireland were free to issue their own banknotes. Paper currency issued by a wide range of provincial and town banking companies in England,[3][4][5] Wales,[6] Scotland[7] and Ireland[8] circulated freely as a means of payment.

As gold shortages affected the supply of money, note-issuing powers of the banks were gradually restricted by various Acts of Parliament,[9] until the Bank Charter Act 1844 gave exclusive note-issuing powers to the central Bank of England. Under the Act, no new banks could start issuing notes; and note-issuing banks gradually vanished through mergers and closures. The last private English banknotes were issued in 1921 by Fox, Fowler and Company, a Somerset bank.[9]

However, some of the monopoly provisions of the Bank Charter Act only applied to England and Wales.[10] The Bank Notes (Scotland) Act was passed the following year, and to this day, three retail banks retain the right to issue their own sterling banknotes in Scotland, and four in Northern Ireland.[11][12] Notes issued in excess of the value of notes outstanding in 1844 (1845 in Scotland) must be backed up by an equivalent value of Bank of England notes.[13]

The Inner Mounting Phlegm (Tom D.), Saturday, 14 September 2019 10:03 (six years ago)

I think it's more a case of lets give the Scots their little freedoms, keep the fuckers on side.

The Inner Mounting Phlegm (Tom D.), Saturday, 14 September 2019 10:05 (six years ago)

... little being the operative word.

The Inner Mounting Phlegm (Tom D.), Saturday, 14 September 2019 10:05 (six years ago)

Interesting, thanks.

pomenitul, Saturday, 14 September 2019 10:32 (six years ago)

Cullen skink
Haggis
Vegetarian haggis
Innis & Gunn beer
Bruichladdich
Castles

El Tomboto, Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:39 (six years ago)

I will now answer the thread question in boring fashion

Cullen skink
Haggis
Vegetarian haggis
Innis & Gunn beer
Bruichladdich
Castles

El Tomboto, Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:41 (six years ago)

ludacris otm

provisional ilx (darraghmac), Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:41 (six years ago)

lol wtf how did I xpost myself with an edited version

El Tomboto, Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:42 (six years ago)

that mangoes on the run beer by innis & gunn is so good

calzino, Saturday, 14 September 2019 15:43 (six years ago)

three years pass...

Ferguzade, Scotland's version of Lucozade.

https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FBo_PvkX0AAYwRI.jpg

A Drunk Man Looks At Partick Thistle (Tom D.), Monday, 23 January 2023 12:03 (three years ago)

"DAUGHTERS keep radiant on it". This can't be real!?

Vague and fond memories of those Chewin' the Fat sketches that were ads for a beer you drank in the morning: "it's never too early for a Fusilier".

verhexen, Monday, 23 January 2023 12:08 (three years ago)

It's 100% genuine.

https://www.doyouremember.co.uk/memory/ferguzade

A Drunk Man Looks At Partick Thistle (Tom D.), Monday, 23 January 2023 12:09 (three years ago)

It was from Forfar, you couldn't make that up!

A Drunk Man Looks At Partick Thistle (Tom D.), Monday, 23 January 2023 12:10 (three years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0CYB5V9e64

Cry for a Shadowgraph (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 23 January 2023 13:03 (three years ago)

It's weird because Lucozade isn't that far from Irn Bru, anyway, in terms of taste and spiritual sustenance.

Ward Fowler, Monday, 23 January 2023 13:07 (three years ago)

This is deep Glasgow lore, but this place popped into my head the other day.

I even wondered if I might have imagined it, but I definitely visited at least once.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6-DvmtFGTdI
https://stvfootagesales.tv/content/buck-rogers-burger-station-glasgow/
https://www.glasgowlive.co.uk/news/history/glasgow-burgers-rogers-station-14717048

MaresNest, Monday, 23 January 2023 13:10 (three years ago)

five months pass...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IA3JH5tfTYg

Renaissance of the Celtic Trumpet (Tom D.), Thursday, 29 June 2023 19:49 (two years ago)

James Kelman is fantastic.

Wish Bill Forsyth would direct a new film

beamish13, Thursday, 29 June 2023 21:33 (two years ago)

Ah yes this video is a classic

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Thursday, 29 June 2023 23:02 (two years ago)

NTS: Must rewatch Gregory's Girl

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Thursday, 29 June 2023 23:04 (two years ago)

Housekeeping (1987) is just a masterpiece. I really wish his original cut of Being Human (1993) was commercially available

beamish13, Thursday, 29 June 2023 23:07 (two years ago)


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