Caecilius would happily greet an RAF pilot on his way to the baths. Then later they would both play cricket against a team of slave girls.
― Local Garda, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 09:44 (seventeen years ago)
a population that is largely white and increasingly elderly
images of white fatties aging before one's very eyes.
― turnover is validating, profit is salivating (ledge), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 09:44 (seventeen years ago)
Using a cabbage as a ball
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 09:45 (seventeen years ago)
This after fighting their way through high street pavements which were, it felt in those days, rammed with holiday camps and tearooms.
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 09:45 (seventeen years ago)
Sometimes you would wake in the middle of the night and have a cup of tea. Other times on your way home from digging cabbages, a small child would give you a cup. Other times still, a local priest would molest the child while the entire village was asleep.
― Local Garda, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 09:46 (seventeen years ago)
But there is a sense of resilience here too, there in the gaiety of the pansies in the flower tubs
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 10:23 (seventeen years ago)
I know someone from Skegness, must ask her how accurate this portrayal is
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 10:25 (seventeen years ago)
http://www.bobpitch.com/anon/badbrains_skegness.jpg
― a tiny, faltering megaphone (grimly fiendish), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 10:27 (seventeen years ago)
Though the flowers remain, they are old flowers, struggling mightily against the dingy plastic sides of their tubs. It is tempting to see a metaphor here. In Skegness, the mainly white flowerkeepers have not quite succumbed to an irreversible slide into I know not what, but will modern Britain ever again allow them to climb out and breathe the pure air of cricket clubs and mown grass? I wonder.
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 10:45 (seventeen years ago)
Already there are some early visitors, zig-zagging like drowsy bees through the streets in search of fun, the air filled with the smell of chip fat, onion rings and marshmallow penises.
― Dom Cry For Me, Passantino (NickB), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:07 (seventeen years ago)
But there is a sense of resilience here too, there in the gaiety of the penises in the flower tubs
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:08 (seventeen years ago)
"Do we still measure ourselves in tearooms and theatres?"
― bgd, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:13 (seventeen years ago)
"Do we still measure our penises in tearooms and theatres?"
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:14 (seventeen years ago)
Tracer Hand, don't you live in like FRANCE or something?
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:27 (seventeen years ago)
No. But if I did, it would certainly say something wistful about today's Britain.
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:48 (seventeen years ago)
LB's column on the back page of the Film & Music supplement always stuck in my craw too. Especially with this kind of thing:
It was the middle of a heatwave, and so, even at night, you could sit bare-legged on the porch-stoop eating peaches and honey and sipping wine. And we sat there a long while, talking and drinking and listening to the music of the street - to the shouts in the night and the chatter of the bugs and the bursts of distant car radios and, from somewhere up above, the sound of Django Reinhardt playing I'll See You in My Dreams. That evening in July seemed to me a time of perfect, ripened happiness.
― Bill A, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:54 (seventeen years ago)
Is she American?
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 11:59 (seventeen years ago)
okay i'm lost as to what's so craw-sticking about the heatwave quote?
― horses that are on fire (c sharp major), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:05 (seventeen years ago)
The fact that it got published in a so-called "quality" national daily newspaper?
― zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:06 (seventeen years ago)
It's pretentious and devoid of insight. "Yeah, it was really hot so we sat outside and got pissed. Good times."
― chap, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:07 (seventeen years ago)
she's English but loves America, I think
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:08 (seventeen years ago)
it should be "porch" or "stoop", there is no such thing as a "porch stoop", much less a "porch-stoop"
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:09 (seventeen years ago)
but it seems mad to fix on LB when this is generic sentimental journalistic style?
― horses that are on fire (c sharp major), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:09 (seventeen years ago)
"the chatter of the bugs"
LOL Amerophiles
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:11 (seventeen years ago)
IN FAIRNESS I think I was the first one really to make the effort to get so publicly riled at LB - I think I called her 6th-form Freaky Trigger, in 2007 or so? - since then it's become kind of standard (and I am happy to concur with the renewed barrage of annoyance: really looking forward to the rest of her UK series, as read by ilx).
This is one of my few ilx innovations along with 'A-level cliché' and, oddly, 'On The Money'.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:12 (seventeen years ago)
hey TRACER HAND just cos they don't have PORCH-STOOPS in like "Bordeaux" or wherever!!
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:13 (seventeen years ago)
"The sweets have got a lot ruder," he adds, with a glance to the array of marshmallow penises. "Which isn't necessarily a good thing, but unfortunately they sell."
if he had grimaced at the array of marshmallow penises i might have enjoyed this part of the story.
― estela, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:25 (seventeen years ago)
He grimaced when Laura asked him for some salt water taffy and cotton candy
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:29 (seventeen years ago)
with a corndog and a can of root beer
― zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:36 (seventeen years ago)
she wants someone to take her out to the ball game!
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:38 (seventeen years ago)
and a large side of Five Guys fries.
x-post
― Bill A, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:39 (seventeen years ago)
if political correctness hadn't gone mad skegness would still have been a seaside wonderland today.
― ken "save-a-finn" c (ken c), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:45 (seventeen years ago)
I hear PC brigade want to ban growing of pansies in municipal flower tubs
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:47 (seventeen years ago)
And install penises in their place!
― Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:49 (seventeen years ago)
You couldn't make it up
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 12:50 (seventeen years ago)
Remember the music of the Lancaster bombers leaving Lincolnshire airfields to drop perfect, ripened bombs on the tearooms of Germany to the sound of Django Reinhardt playing I'll See You in My Dreams, as we sat bare-legged on the old broken-down pier eating marshmellow penises and watching the long, long skies over Skegness and sense all that raw land that rolls in one unbelievable huge bulge over to the West Coast, and all that road going, all the people dreaming in the immensity of it, and in Dresden I know by now the children must be crying in the land where they let the children cry, and tonight the stars'll be out, and don't you know that God is Pooh Bear? the evening star must be drooping and shedding her sparkler dims on the prairie, which is just before the coming of complete night that blesses the earth, darkens all rivers, cups the peaks and folds the final shore in, and nobody, nobody knows what's going to happen to anybody besides the forlorn rags of growing old, I think of Dean Moriarty, I even think of Old Dean Moriarty the father we never found, I think of Dean Moriarty, I think of Dean Moriarty.
― Dom Cry For Me, Passantino (NickB), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:01 (seventeen years ago)
The stars bent over the little roof; smoke poked from the stovepipe chimney. Somewhere Michael Hann was playing the new Hold Steady record. Pianos tinkled like mashed beans and chili. The old man growled... Alexis Petridis woke up and cried at the English night, at his very Englishness, for Coloraro felt so very far away. That's what friends are for, I think - for dancing with. My friend Melissa is a much better dancer than me and when we dance together she points her fingers in time with the keyboard sounds. I remember teenage years of making tapes and marvelling, wide-eyed, at the sticky labels on them, then crying all the way home to a whispered Spandau Ballet song. A California home; I hid in the grapevines, digging it all. I drove a car with the new Neil Young record and thought of how Neil's voice summed up the Canadian emptiness where only the Canada geese fly. I felt like a million dollars; I was adventuring in the crazy American night.
― the pinefox, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:08 (seventeen years ago)
She speaks in your voice, Amerophile, and there's a stoop in her street that's halfway porch.
― "Hey, We're Clubbing!" (Police Squad) (jim), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:11 (seventeen years ago)
haven't you answered your own question there?
I just find LB ultra trite, for all the excessive alliteration she never actually says anything profound, despite shooting for profundity with every word.
― Local Garda, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:27 (seventeen years ago)
I honestly don't know why you all bother reading her week in week out.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:30 (seventeen years ago)
It doesn't help that it seems like so much unnecessary effort to me because her prose is like wading through treacle.
― Matt DC, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:31 (seventeen years ago)
wading through treacle is so historically british though
― ken "save-a-finn" c (ken c), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:53 (seventeen years ago)
nowadays people wade through semen
― Local Garda, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:54 (seventeen years ago)
Churchill, maiden aunts riding bicycles, cricket on the village green, wading through lakes of treacle.
― zero learnt from nero (Neil S), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:55 (seventeen years ago)
― Local Garda, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 13:54 (21 seconds ago) Bookmark
Or so the gay mafia would have us do.
It would be really thrilling to read something like NickB's or pinefox's LB parodies, in a newspaper? I mean, as writing, not parody?
― Gravel Puzzleworth, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 14:02 (seventeen years ago)
http://upperjames.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/dog.jpg
― Sacco, Vanzetti, Passantino... (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 14:07 (seventeen years ago)
A+ since revive, folks
― However, the year 2005 Curicó Unido had his revenge (country matters), Tuesday, 7 April 2009 14:14 (seventeen years ago)
Most of the big shore places in Skegness are closed now and there are hardly any lights except the shadowy, moving glow of a fishing boat across the bay. And as the moon rose higher the inessential houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old town here that flowered once for sailors' eyes - a fresh, green breast of the old world.
Its vanished teashops and cricket clubs had once pandered in whispers to the last and greatest of all human dreams; for a transitory enchanted moment man must have held his breath in the presence of Skegness, compelled into an aesthetic contemplation he neither understood nor desired, face to face for the last time in history with something commensurate to his capacity for wonder.
And as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown world, I thought "is this 600 words yet?".
― Stevie T, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 14:19 (seventeen years ago)
^too well written!
― Local Garda, Tuesday, 7 April 2009 14:32 (seventeen years ago)