On being a child of the 80s
You know you're the most 80s person in the world when:
* Somebody says 'It's cold outside' as part of a conversation about the weather, and you know the next line is 'And the paint's peeling off of my walls'
* You think 32kB is all the memory a home computer needs. In fact 'Defender' plays perfectly well on 17kB and comes on a cassette
* You only get to see your favourite bands on reunion tours, and your first thought is on the quality of the hair transplant
* You have no problem with men wearing eye-liner. In fact, you might be able to offer a few tips
* You think the Sinclair C5 is a perfectly good idea for a car, especially if it comes with a built-in Walkman
* You still harbour a grudge against Joe Dolce for keeping Ultravox off Number One
* You scour your Betamax recordings of TV cop drama 'Ashes to Ashes' pointing out the factual errors
* Pseudonymph adds: You quote The Young Ones on a regular basis. Ooh! Have we got a video?
On suddenly feeling old
* Your younger cousin becomes a grandparent. Congratulations, Andy!
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
On Christmas tat
On Christmas tat
It cannot be Christmas without the annual "What have Sandra and Mike given us this year?" competition.
I thought I had won last year's top prize with a second-hand book called "A Teenager's Guide to Surviving the Millennium Bug". It still had the charity shop price tag on the back.
I am 42-years-old, the Millennium Bug didn't happen nine years ago and I am eternally thankful that they spent a whole 15 pence on me.
However: The boy Scaryduck Jr got a pink bracelet, clearly out of the previous year's Christmas cracker at a total outlay of £0.00.
The clear winner, we made sure he sent them a thank you letter, which will, as eggs are eggs, have the stamp steamed off and re-used.
So, come Christmas 2008 and I am on tenterhooks over this year's present. And I was not disappointed.
A novelty teapot, bearing the dyslexic legend "A gift from DEVNO"
Filthy dirty, I gave it a rub to give it a bit of a clean, and the next thing I know the room is filled with a large Devonian djinn, the smoke alarm drowning out EastEnders.
"Thank you," it said, pausing from what appeared to be a cream tea, "Thank you for releasing me from my prison. I see Nick Cotton's back."
Steps back in amazement.
"I grant you," the genie continued, "three questions. Think. Ask well. Ask wisely."
I thought. I asked.
"Do these have to be yes/no questions?"
"No."
"Did that count as a question?"
"Yes."
"Can I start again?"
Worst. Present. EVER.
Go on - tell us your worst present story. You know you want to.
In other news: The world's greatest living Welshman Rikaitch is organising a Londonpiss-up meet as the Pseudonymph Family World Tour hits the capital. Details HERE.
It cannot be Christmas without the annual "What have Sandra and Mike given us this year?" competition.
I thought I had won last year's top prize with a second-hand book called "A Teenager's Guide to Surviving the Millennium Bug". It still had the charity shop price tag on the back.
I am 42-years-old, the Millennium Bug didn't happen nine years ago and I am eternally thankful that they spent a whole 15 pence on me.
However: The boy Scaryduck Jr got a pink bracelet, clearly out of the previous year's Christmas cracker at a total outlay of £0.00.
The clear winner, we made sure he sent them a thank you letter, which will, as eggs are eggs, have the stamp steamed off and re-used.
So, come Christmas 2008 and I am on tenterhooks over this year's present. And I was not disappointed.
A novelty teapot, bearing the dyslexic legend "A gift from DEVNO"
Filthy dirty, I gave it a rub to give it a bit of a clean, and the next thing I know the room is filled with a large Devonian djinn, the smoke alarm drowning out EastEnders.
"Thank you," it said, pausing from what appeared to be a cream tea, "Thank you for releasing me from my prison. I see Nick Cotton's back."
Steps back in amazement.
"I grant you," the genie continued, "three questions. Think. Ask well. Ask wisely."
I thought. I asked.
"Do these have to be yes/no questions?"
"No."
"Did that count as a question?"
"Yes."
"Can I start again?"
Worst. Present. EVER.
Go on - tell us your worst present story. You know you want to.
In other news: The world's greatest living Welshman Rikaitch is organising a London
Monday, December 29, 2008
On making short lists
On making short lists
A short list of famous people known only by one name:
- Bono
- Cher
- Madonna
- Pele
- Eminem
- Prince
- Thattwuntrichardlittlejohn
A short list of famous people whose names have become swears:
- Stefan Kuntz
- Jesus Christ
- Wayne Wanklin
- That twunt Richard Littlejohn
A short list of people who are, in my humble opinion, twunts:
- That twunt Richard Littlejohn
A short list of famous people known only by one name:
- Bono
- Cher
- Madonna
- Pele
- Eminem
- Prince
- Thattwuntrichardlittlejohn
A short list of famous people whose names have become swears:
- Stefan Kuntz
- Jesus Christ
- Wayne Wanklin
- That twunt Richard Littlejohn
A short list of people who are, in my humble opinion, twunts:
- That twunt Richard Littlejohn
Friday, December 26, 2008
Mirth and Woe: On putting players off at football matches
Mirth and Woe: On putting players off at football matches
The City Ground, Nottingham, 6th November 1988.
A Sunday, it was, the nation shrouded in a thick fog as we drove up from the Home Counties to watch an Arsenal side on their way to the League Title take on a particularly useful Nottingham Forest side.
Four of us went up in a car, each and every one of us in possession of a novelty item sold to us the night before by a chap down the pub who had clearly just burgled a seaside tat shop: a brightly-coloured headband embedded with a number of flashing LEDs, which would, we were told as we parted with our fivers, make us "look absolutely bazzin' down any nightclub, mate".
We tried them on. We did, indeed, look bazzin'.
Drink was, you will be unsurprised to learn, a major factor in this transaction.
We arrived at the ground, half-expecting a last-minute postponement as the fog rolled over the Trent, but ITV had paid top dollar for the rights, and the game was going ahead, even if you couldn't see the other end of the pitch.
Fortunately, we found ourselves with front row seats, right down by the corner flag, where we sat, watching a finely-balanced match between two decent teams. With the match on a knife-edge, the ball bounced out of play mere yards away from us for a corner kick.
Current North Bank hero Brian Marwood trotted over to plonk a near-post corner kick onto Steve Bould's finely-greased pate, whereupon the cavalry would turn up to blast the ball home. That was the plan, anyway.
Brian was having the season of his life that year, one which would culminate in a grand total of thirteen minutes in an England shirt in a crunch friendly against Saudi Arabia, and he was treated like a conquering hero wherever he went. And here he was, in front of four buffoons on a foggy Sunday in Nottingham.
"Bwian! Bwian!" we shouted in our best Pontius Pilate voices, our bazzin' headbands flashing away like a very small, unconvincing discotheque. "Welease Bwian!"
I still remember the look of horror and confusion as he clocked us. Coming out of the goldfish bowl of the football pitch, he was suddenly and horribly self-aware, and it was more than the poor chap could take.
His face was a mixture of "Mwwwwwwwwargh!", "Oh my gawd!" and "Get me away from these tugboats, fast", as he scooped up the ball, plonked it by the corner flag, and punted the ball straight into the stand behind the goal and his career was downhill from there.
He fled. Never to return.
He had one excellent season in him at Highbury, before injury and disillusionment set in, followed by a number of transfers and a low-key media career where he rarely seems to have a good word to say of the club these days. A disillusionment where we and our bazzin' headbands clearly sowed the seeds.
I've still got a battered video-tape of this match, which takes pride of place on my shelf next to the surely-due-for-DVD-release Danny Baker's Own Goals and Gaffes. Watch at just the right moment, and you can still see our flashing light tomfoolery, and Marwood's fatal, fateful double-take.
6th November 1988: I broke our best player. Sorry.
The City Ground, Nottingham, 6th November 1988.
A Sunday, it was, the nation shrouded in a thick fog as we drove up from the Home Counties to watch an Arsenal side on their way to the League Title take on a particularly useful Nottingham Forest side.
Four of us went up in a car, each and every one of us in possession of a novelty item sold to us the night before by a chap down the pub who had clearly just burgled a seaside tat shop: a brightly-coloured headband embedded with a number of flashing LEDs, which would, we were told as we parted with our fivers, make us "look absolutely bazzin' down any nightclub, mate".
We tried them on. We did, indeed, look bazzin'.
Drink was, you will be unsurprised to learn, a major factor in this transaction.
We arrived at the ground, half-expecting a last-minute postponement as the fog rolled over the Trent, but ITV had paid top dollar for the rights, and the game was going ahead, even if you couldn't see the other end of the pitch.
Fortunately, we found ourselves with front row seats, right down by the corner flag, where we sat, watching a finely-balanced match between two decent teams. With the match on a knife-edge, the ball bounced out of play mere yards away from us for a corner kick.
Current North Bank hero Brian Marwood trotted over to plonk a near-post corner kick onto Steve Bould's finely-greased pate, whereupon the cavalry would turn up to blast the ball home. That was the plan, anyway.
Brian was having the season of his life that year, one which would culminate in a grand total of thirteen minutes in an England shirt in a crunch friendly against Saudi Arabia, and he was treated like a conquering hero wherever he went. And here he was, in front of four buffoons on a foggy Sunday in Nottingham.
"Bwian! Bwian!" we shouted in our best Pontius Pilate voices, our bazzin' headbands flashing away like a very small, unconvincing discotheque. "Welease Bwian!"
I still remember the look of horror and confusion as he clocked us. Coming out of the goldfish bowl of the football pitch, he was suddenly and horribly self-aware, and it was more than the poor chap could take.
His face was a mixture of "Mwwwwwwwwargh!", "Oh my gawd!" and "Get me away from these tugboats, fast", as he scooped up the ball, plonked it by the corner flag, and punted the ball straight into the stand behind the goal and his career was downhill from there.
He fled. Never to return.
He had one excellent season in him at Highbury, before injury and disillusionment set in, followed by a number of transfers and a low-key media career where he rarely seems to have a good word to say of the club these days. A disillusionment where we and our bazzin' headbands clearly sowed the seeds.
I've still got a battered video-tape of this match, which takes pride of place on my shelf next to the surely-due-for-DVD-release Danny Baker's Own Goals and Gaffes. Watch at just the right moment, and you can still see our flashing light tomfoolery, and Marwood's fatal, fateful double-take.
6th November 1988: I broke our best player. Sorry.
Thursday, December 25, 2008
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
On not wanting to be a duck
On not wanting to be a duck
I never wanted to be a duck. It just happened.
One day I was the internet's One, True Albert O'Balsam, the next my charming daughter was insisting that I should become the world's premier scary duck.
Also: I came to blogging a little late, and all the good names had gone.
Now that the security guards at work are calling me "Duckie", I feel that I might – in hindsight – have made a poor choice.
To be honest, all I ever wanted was to be excellent. Excellent, and indeed, l33t. And people called Alistair, or named after waterfowl are neither. I blame my parents entirely
In fact, I not only want to be excellent and l33t - I want to be ace.
Ace Wango.
Not Ace Hole*. Wango.
Or: Dave Fantastico
Or: Clint Dangerous
Or: Ninja Goose
This being a standard, harsh farmyard goose, and not that second rate Canadian rubbish.
So, after several seconds worth of good, hard consideration over a copy of Goose Fancier magazine (incorporating Rubber Goose Enthusiast monthly), I'm going for Ninja Goose.
Not a ninja. Not a goose.
Or – six years too late – if you're going to be a complete grammar nazi about it:
Neither ninjitsu, nor a goose.
Help a man out – suggest-me-up a new interwebs alias. Be warned, "That Wanker" as already been considered, but found to be taken by Richard Littlejohn.
* © Red Dwarf
I never wanted to be a duck. It just happened.
One day I was the internet's One, True Albert O'Balsam, the next my charming daughter was insisting that I should become the world's premier scary duck.
Also: I came to blogging a little late, and all the good names had gone.
Now that the security guards at work are calling me "Duckie", I feel that I might – in hindsight – have made a poor choice.
To be honest, all I ever wanted was to be excellent. Excellent, and indeed, l33t. And people called Alistair, or named after waterfowl are neither. I blame my parents entirely
In fact, I not only want to be excellent and l33t - I want to be ace.
Ace Wango.
Not Ace Hole*. Wango.
Or: Dave Fantastico
Or: Clint Dangerous
Or: Ninja Goose
This being a standard, harsh farmyard goose, and not that second rate Canadian rubbish.
So, after several seconds worth of good, hard consideration over a copy of Goose Fancier magazine (incorporating Rubber Goose Enthusiast monthly), I'm going for Ninja Goose.
Not a ninja. Not a goose.
Or – six years too late – if you're going to be a complete grammar nazi about it:
Neither ninjitsu, nor a goose.
Help a man out – suggest-me-up a new interwebs alias. Be warned, "That Wanker" as already been considered, but found to be taken by Richard Littlejohn.
* © Red Dwarf
Tuesday, December 23, 2008
On making baby Jebus cry
On making baby Jebus cry
For one reason or another to do with the fact that I am EXCELLENT, I went to a meeting in a happy-clappy church in the skanky end of town the other night.
As we sat around quaffing tea and shovelling heroic quantities of cake down our gullets, proceedings were brought to a halt by the local Cro-Magnon oafs hanging round the car park, necking cheap lager and being generally offensive to the alleged "Jesus Freaks" inside the hallowed portals of God's House.
Jesus freaks who would – in the limited experience of these jobless, brain-rot-in-a-can-from-the-Off-Licence and shiny-stuff-for-chavs-TV-on-a-Saturday-night wastes of DNA – sit in silent prayer and take the abuse in shocked, Godly turn-the-other-cheek silence.
What they didn't expect, then, was my striding to the front door, flinging it open and yelling "Fuck off, you festering cunts" at them at the top of my voice.
To my surprise, they fucked off.
And I was further surprised that they didn't come back with their knife-wielding Karen Matthews-alike mums to trash our cars.
For Jesus Freaks we are not.
Then back indoors with the words "Amen to that" for my stunned colleagues.
"And... the next item on the agenda – Community Outreach."
"Fuck 'em."
"Passed."
For one reason or another to do with the fact that I am EXCELLENT, I went to a meeting in a happy-clappy church in the skanky end of town the other night.
As we sat around quaffing tea and shovelling heroic quantities of cake down our gullets, proceedings were brought to a halt by the local Cro-Magnon oafs hanging round the car park, necking cheap lager and being generally offensive to the alleged "Jesus Freaks" inside the hallowed portals of God's House.
Jesus freaks who would – in the limited experience of these jobless, brain-rot-in-a-can-from-the-Off-Licence and shiny-stuff-for-chavs-TV-on-a-Saturday-night wastes of DNA – sit in silent prayer and take the abuse in shocked, Godly turn-the-other-cheek silence.
What they didn't expect, then, was my striding to the front door, flinging it open and yelling "Fuck off, you festering cunts" at them at the top of my voice.
To my surprise, they fucked off.
And I was further surprised that they didn't come back with their knife-wielding Karen Matthews-alike mums to trash our cars.
For Jesus Freaks we are not.
Then back indoors with the words "Amen to that" for my stunned colleagues.
"And... the next item on the agenda – Community Outreach."
"Fuck 'em."
"Passed."
Monday, December 22, 2008
On the use of the word "fook" in public
On the use of the word "fook" in public
I dunno - give some people a drink, and it's just like they've swallowed a dictionary.
"Fookin' fook off, I'll fookin' wear a fookin' Christmas hat if I fookin' want to cos it's fookin' Christmas you fookin' fookers."
This kind of language, I have learned from years of experience, is likely to see you ejected from Midnight Mass.
This kind of language also results in the knowledge that the Church of England - HOT CLERGY or no - employs bouncers.
"Forgive us our trepasses", my Aunt Fanny.
I dunno - give some people a drink, and it's just like they've swallowed a dictionary.
"Fookin' fook off, I'll fookin' wear a fookin' Christmas hat if I fookin' want to cos it's fookin' Christmas you fookin' fookers."
This kind of language, I have learned from years of experience, is likely to see you ejected from Midnight Mass.
This kind of language also results in the knowledge that the Church of England - HOT CLERGY or no - employs bouncers.
"Forgive us our trepasses", my Aunt Fanny.
Friday, December 19, 2008
On N. Mandela
On N. Mandela
As a bewildered young man, my political views veered wildly between the Young Conservatives and the Socialist Workers Party, essentially depending on which circle of college friends I was most desperate to impress.
I soon found that the SWP had the best of the booze-ups, while the Tories harboured the best posh totty 1980s Bracknell had to offer, which wasn't saying much, to be brutally honest.
It was during this confused period of my life, I was one of dozens who piled onto a hired coach, where we were bussed to London to take part in a rather excitable South Africa Apartheid demo in Trafalgar Square.
Slogans were shouted.
Insults were traded with the angry, twisted faces of the opposition.
The odd traffic cone and placard was thrown.
And the police had trouble telling everybody apart and just stood around looking harassed.
In short: a good time was had by all, including the Old Bill who got Saturday overtime.
I know what you're thinking: 'Scary – you're a noble chap, and well done for experiencing this political awakening at this pivotal part of your young life. God bless ya. Really.'
Except – at this particular moment in time, I was desperate to impress a slim young thing called Esther from Wednesday swimming club. She was expensively educated, rumoured to be of the landed gentry, and always had spider's legs showing out of her swimming costume that betrayed the fact that she was a bottle blonde.
In the light of this particular challenge, the dungaree-d temptresses of the SWP could bugger right off – this week I was kicking for the blues and the demo was one to KEEP that no-good leftie terrorist Nelson Mandela in jail.
Whoops. If you're reading this Nelson: I'm very, VERY sorry.
Next week: Dear Dalai Lama, Your a HOMO. Your pal S. Duck (aged 9)
As a bewildered young man, my political views veered wildly between the Young Conservatives and the Socialist Workers Party, essentially depending on which circle of college friends I was most desperate to impress.
I soon found that the SWP had the best of the booze-ups, while the Tories harboured the best posh totty 1980s Bracknell had to offer, which wasn't saying much, to be brutally honest.
It was during this confused period of my life, I was one of dozens who piled onto a hired coach, where we were bussed to London to take part in a rather excitable South Africa Apartheid demo in Trafalgar Square.
Slogans were shouted.
Insults were traded with the angry, twisted faces of the opposition.
The odd traffic cone and placard was thrown.
And the police had trouble telling everybody apart and just stood around looking harassed.
In short: a good time was had by all, including the Old Bill who got Saturday overtime.
I know what you're thinking: 'Scary – you're a noble chap, and well done for experiencing this political awakening at this pivotal part of your young life. God bless ya. Really.'
Except – at this particular moment in time, I was desperate to impress a slim young thing called Esther from Wednesday swimming club. She was expensively educated, rumoured to be of the landed gentry, and always had spider's legs showing out of her swimming costume that betrayed the fact that she was a bottle blonde.
In the light of this particular challenge, the dungaree-d temptresses of the SWP could bugger right off – this week I was kicking for the blues and the demo was one to KEEP that no-good leftie terrorist Nelson Mandela in jail.
Whoops. If you're reading this Nelson: I'm very, VERY sorry.
Next week: Dear Dalai Lama, Your a HOMO. Your pal S. Duck (aged 9)
Thursday, December 18, 2008
On not being mad
On not being mad
A Friday evening. A Friday evening at home, where, once the Friday evening curry goat is dispatched and the children locked safely away under the sofa-bed, I like nothing better than to sit back and talk all the way through Coronation Street.
"You know what you haven't done for a long time," my charming wife asks me, in a veiled attempt to get me out of the room.
"You KNOW I promised Anthea Turner I'd stop sending the letters" I reply, genuinely upset at the insinuation.
"No, not that - you haven't spoken to your sister."
"Yeah. That as well. Pass the phone. I will DO THAT THING."
So, I did that thing, and:
"Hel-lo, Scarysister speaking."
"Oh, Hi. It's me. What are you up to tonight?"
"Oh, nothing, nothing. I've got the house to myself and I'm just wrapping myself up in cling film."
Riiight….
"Riiight…"
"Then I'm going to take pictures and post them on the internet."
I take this news in for a few seconds, giving it the kind of deep thought this sort of hammer-blow deserves. After all, I thought I was the mental one in this family.
"You do realise I'm going to blog this. Blog this HARD."
Shamelessly, she tells me to do my worst, and still smarting from the scars of youth and the destruction of a go-kart three decades ago, I present this:
Wanted: Man, or near offer
I am – and it pleases me to say this – not mad.
"Ah-ha", you are thinking at this moment in time, "I know which site I want to visit next on my endless travels around cyberspace. It is the one with the 'Roy Orbison wrapped in cling film' stories. But I have no idea where to find it, and internet search engines vex me so."
Fear not. It is HERE.
A Friday evening. A Friday evening at home, where, once the Friday evening curry goat is dispatched and the children locked safely away under the sofa-bed, I like nothing better than to sit back and talk all the way through Coronation Street.
"You know what you haven't done for a long time," my charming wife asks me, in a veiled attempt to get me out of the room.
"You KNOW I promised Anthea Turner I'd stop sending the letters" I reply, genuinely upset at the insinuation.
"No, not that - you haven't spoken to your sister."
"Yeah. That as well. Pass the phone. I will DO THAT THING."
So, I did that thing, and:
"Hel-lo, Scarysister speaking."
"Oh, Hi. It's me. What are you up to tonight?"
"Oh, nothing, nothing. I've got the house to myself and I'm just wrapping myself up in cling film."
Riiight….
"Riiight…"
"Then I'm going to take pictures and post them on the internet."
I take this news in for a few seconds, giving it the kind of deep thought this sort of hammer-blow deserves. After all, I thought I was the mental one in this family.
"You do realise I'm going to blog this. Blog this HARD."
Shamelessly, she tells me to do my worst, and still smarting from the scars of youth and the destruction of a go-kart three decades ago, I present this:
Wanted: Man, or near offer
I am – and it pleases me to say this – not mad.
"Ah-ha", you are thinking at this moment in time, "I know which site I want to visit next on my endless travels around cyberspace. It is the one with the 'Roy Orbison wrapped in cling film' stories. But I have no idea where to find it, and internet search engines vex me so."
Fear not. It is HERE.
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
On the weighty subject of weight
On the weighty subject of weight
Hello. I am Scaryduck Junior and I am excellent. My old Dad - who is a complete CHEESE - has foolishly let me come onto his blog to show how excellent I really am.
This excellent: About nine excellents out of ten.
I saw the other day that SCIENCE has come up with yet another excuse for larger people being bloaters. All I can say - from my top secret underground lab and bakery - is this: What a load of rubbish.
It's easy to see why people put on weight. You see, they aren't fat, it's:
Pie-lovers have feelings too.
No – hang on. That's 'fillings'.
Hello. I am Scaryduck Junior and I am excellent. My old Dad - who is a complete CHEESE - has foolishly let me come onto his blog to show how excellent I really am.
This excellent: About nine excellents out of ten.
I saw the other day that SCIENCE has come up with yet another excuse for larger people being bloaters. All I can say - from my top secret underground lab and bakery - is this: What a load of rubbish.
It's easy to see why people put on weight. You see, they aren't fat, it's:
a) big bonesWhen we all know that it is really:
b) water retention
c) a virus
d) me glands
e) metabolisms
f) genetic
g) all of a), b), c), d), e) and f)
h) pieActually, when you come to think about it, perhaps we're being a little harsh on the differently gravitationally-affected of our society.
Pie-lovers have feelings too.
No – hang on. That's 'fillings'.
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Condensed History: The Birth of Jesus
Condensed History: The Birth of Jesus
It's that time of year again, and what better way to celebrated with a bit of second-rate blasphemy? So here's the timeless tale of the birth of Our Lord and Saviour, translated into the language of today's easily bored youth, who are demanding a crate of White Lightning for Christmas or "I'll cut you wiv ma flicky innit?"
And who, pray, are we to argue?
TEH BIRTH OF JEBUS, with special guest star Jeremy Beadle as TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD
Mary O'Nazareth: Hello. I am Mary O'Nazareth and I am excellent. Today, I shall be mostly visiting my boyf Joe Carpenter becoz we r very much in LUB in a proper, chaste manner. Also, I like kittens and ponies
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Hello. I am TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD and I am excellent. Let's see if she recognises me...
M. O'Nazareth: Hello TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD. Sup?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Message from upstairs. U R up TEH duff. LOL
M. O'Nazareth: FTW! Will I be havng a puppy? And wait... is that a false beard?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Errr... nothing. TEH boss say u hv 2 marry J. Carpenter and call teh baby JEBUS. LOL
M. O'Nazareth: JEBUS? Is he going to be Mexican?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: JEBUS H CHRIST
J. Carpenter: Hello. I am J. Carpenter and I am excellent. With any luck that soppy bint M. O'Nazareth will leave me alone today. Me n teh lads are out on a beaver patrol tonite, FFS
M. O'Nazareth: Cooo-eeee!
J. Carpenter: Oh, COCK
M. O'Nazareth: Guess what? I met TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD an' he sez I'm gonnur hav a puppy called JEBUS an' we've gotta get married an' everything an' save TEH WORLD from EVIL an' an' an' we'll all liv happy evar after WIV A PONY!!!
J. Carpenter: Wait... WHAT?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: What she said, bud. Soz. Orders from above
J. Carpenter: Oh, COCK
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Degree of difficulty – in BETHLEHEM
J. Carpenter: What? That dump? FAIL
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: By donkey
M. O'Nazareth: Weeeeeee! A PONY!
Some time later
Receptionist: Welcome to Bethlehem Travel Inn, how can we help you?
J.Carpenter: Here's three nails, put me up for the night
Receptionist: LOL, that's an Easter joke, sir
J. Carpenter: A reservation. I HAZ ONE. Name of Carpenter
Receptionist: SOZ. Computer Says No. In fact, fck off
J. Carpenter: COCK. How about the stable then?
Receptionist: Fifty notes. Cash in hand. Each
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: I'm hvng a baby, me. An' I got to ride onna pony all teh way here. Weeeee!
J. Carpenter: I wish I was TEH DED
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Oh, look a baby, LOL
TEH Heavenly Host: All hail TEH KING OF KINGS, for He is born this day in Bethlehem!
J. Carpenter: Keep it down you mugs – people tryin to spleep here FFS
TEH Heavenly Host: Soz. LOL
Meanwhile, not terribly far away
Jones the Shepherd: Hello, I am Jones the Shepherd and I am excellent, isn't it? Despite everything you have ever heard, we shepherds are neither sexual deviants nor obsessed with rigging the result of One Man and His Dog
TEH ANGLE OF THE LORD: So, what are you doing with that sheep FFS?
Jones the Sheep: Err... nothing. Nothing. It's gone lame and I'm wheeling it to TEH Vet. Honest
TEH ANGLE OF THE LORD: LOL. Get down to Bethlehem and praise teh BABY JEBUS. There'll be a pint in it, dood
Jones the Sheep: Nice one, Angle.
TEH Heavenly Host: Praise! Praise! Praise! For He is born this Christmas Day!
Jones the Sheep: Look, you've been warned once already. Bunch of winged gits
Meanwhile, terribly far away
King Eric: Good moaning. Je suis King Eric et je suis formidable. Zut alors! Je must travel to Bethlehem to praise TEH BABY JEBUS
King Elvis: Uh huh huh. What he said, thankyouverymuch
Burger King: Belch
King Eric: Just don't tell King HEROD, whatever you do, for he is TEH KING OF FAIL
King Herod: Sup, fellow Kings. Just off to kill some peasants TO DETH for shits and giggles LOL
King Elvis: Just off to praise teh new BABY JEBUS, uh huh huh
Burger King: He's going to grow up to be KING OF TEH WURLD
King Herod: Oh yeh? Not on my watch, douchebags. Time to get smitin' LOLOLOL
King Eric: You pair of total, total GITS
TEH Heavenly Host: Praise...
King Eric: SHUT IT
Meanwhile meanwhile meanwhile
Jones the Sheep: Right, love, where's the nipper? I've brought Dai the Sheep, Morgan the Sheep and Cohen the Sheep so this had better be good. This is usually our pullin' night, isn't it?
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Ooh! Do I get a pressie?!
Jones the Sheep: Yes. Yes you do. It's a... shut your eyes... a SHEEP
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Weeeeee! A fluffy ickle pony!
King Eric: Zut alors and Good Moaning. We have also brought presents. Here's a pound. And some MUH*
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Weeeee!
Burger King: Have you thought of a name? We've got TOP sponsorship opportunities going
J. Carpenter: JEBUS. JEBUS Carpenter
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: JEBUS H. CHRIST
J. Carpenter: Look, we had this argument on the back of the donkey on the way over…
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: An' I'm telling you – UR NOT TEH DAD. I'm chasing TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD through the CSA. Think of teh free house an' the benefits an' the FREE PONY LOLOLOL. Gordon Clown's Judaea LMAO
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Wait.. what? But... but... He's his own Dad. IT IS WRITTEN and it is COMPLICATED FFS
TEH Heavenly Host: Do we get to sing now?
J. Carpenter: Oh, go on, then. A PROPER XMAS song or I kick you in teh nadgers
TEH Heavenly Host: Last Xmas I gave you my heart, the very next day you gave it away, ROFFLE
J. Carpenter: Nice one. Karaoke classic LMAO
Jones the Sheep: But.. but... strictly speaking, there was NO last Christmas. FAIL
Baby Jebus: WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!
J. Carpenter: Now look. You've made BABY JEBUS cry FFS
King Herod: It's SMITIN' time! LOLOLOLZERS. Crap, I love being KING . Best job in TEH WURLD
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Have you brought me a pony? Have you? HAVE YOU? I'd give my first born for a lovely pony
King Herod: All the ponies you can eat, shexxxxy, and then - HOLLYWOOD
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Ooo! What a dish
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: [slaps forehead]
J. Carpenter: Dood. Let her go.
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: But...
King Herod: Stick with me, babe. I’ll make you a star. A star of BETHELEHEM.
Wrath of Dawn re-wrote the ending to this because my original was TEH SUXXOR
* Look, you can't improve on perfection. HERE for "A balm? Does it bite?" gag
It's that time of year again, and what better way to celebrated with a bit of second-rate blasphemy? So here's the timeless tale of the birth of Our Lord and Saviour, translated into the language of today's easily bored youth, who are demanding a crate of White Lightning for Christmas or "I'll cut you wiv ma flicky innit?"
And who, pray, are we to argue?
TEH BIRTH OF JEBUS, with special guest star Jeremy Beadle as TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD
Mary O'Nazareth: Hello. I am Mary O'Nazareth and I am excellent. Today, I shall be mostly visiting my boyf Joe Carpenter becoz we r very much in LUB in a proper, chaste manner. Also, I like kittens and ponies
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Hello. I am TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD and I am excellent. Let's see if she recognises me...
M. O'Nazareth: Hello TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD. Sup?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Message from upstairs. U R up TEH duff. LOL
M. O'Nazareth: FTW! Will I be havng a puppy? And wait... is that a false beard?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Errr... nothing. TEH boss say u hv 2 marry J. Carpenter and call teh baby JEBUS. LOL
M. O'Nazareth: JEBUS? Is he going to be Mexican?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: JEBUS H CHRIST
J. Carpenter: Hello. I am J. Carpenter and I am excellent. With any luck that soppy bint M. O'Nazareth will leave me alone today. Me n teh lads are out on a beaver patrol tonite, FFS
M. O'Nazareth: Cooo-eeee!
J. Carpenter: Oh, COCK
M. O'Nazareth: Guess what? I met TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD an' he sez I'm gonnur hav a puppy called JEBUS an' we've gotta get married an' everything an' save TEH WORLD from EVIL an' an' an' we'll all liv happy evar after WIV A PONY!!!
J. Carpenter: Wait... WHAT?
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: What she said, bud. Soz. Orders from above
J. Carpenter: Oh, COCK
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Degree of difficulty – in BETHLEHEM
J. Carpenter: What? That dump? FAIL
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: By donkey
M. O'Nazareth: Weeeeeee! A PONY!
Some time later
Receptionist: Welcome to Bethlehem Travel Inn, how can we help you?
J.Carpenter: Here's three nails, put me up for the night
Receptionist: LOL, that's an Easter joke, sir
J. Carpenter: A reservation. I HAZ ONE. Name of Carpenter
Receptionist: SOZ. Computer Says No. In fact, fck off
J. Carpenter: COCK. How about the stable then?
Receptionist: Fifty notes. Cash in hand. Each
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: I'm hvng a baby, me. An' I got to ride onna pony all teh way here. Weeeee!
J. Carpenter: I wish I was TEH DED
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Oh, look a baby, LOL
TEH Heavenly Host: All hail TEH KING OF KINGS, for He is born this day in Bethlehem!
J. Carpenter: Keep it down you mugs – people tryin to spleep here FFS
TEH Heavenly Host: Soz. LOL
Meanwhile, not terribly far away
Jones the Shepherd: Hello, I am Jones the Shepherd and I am excellent, isn't it? Despite everything you have ever heard, we shepherds are neither sexual deviants nor obsessed with rigging the result of One Man and His Dog
TEH ANGLE OF THE LORD: So, what are you doing with that sheep FFS?
Jones the Sheep: Err... nothing. Nothing. It's gone lame and I'm wheeling it to TEH Vet. Honest
TEH ANGLE OF THE LORD: LOL. Get down to Bethlehem and praise teh BABY JEBUS. There'll be a pint in it, dood
Jones the Sheep: Nice one, Angle.
TEH Heavenly Host: Praise! Praise! Praise! For He is born this Christmas Day!
Jones the Sheep: Look, you've been warned once already. Bunch of winged gits
Meanwhile, terribly far away
King Eric: Good moaning. Je suis King Eric et je suis formidable. Zut alors! Je must travel to Bethlehem to praise TEH BABY JEBUS
King Elvis: Uh huh huh. What he said, thankyouverymuch
Burger King: Belch
King Eric: Just don't tell King HEROD, whatever you do, for he is TEH KING OF FAIL
King Herod: Sup, fellow Kings. Just off to kill some peasants TO DETH for shits and giggles LOL
King Elvis: Just off to praise teh new BABY JEBUS, uh huh huh
Burger King: He's going to grow up to be KING OF TEH WURLD
King Herod: Oh yeh? Not on my watch, douchebags. Time to get smitin' LOLOLOL
King Eric: You pair of total, total GITS
TEH Heavenly Host: Praise...
King Eric: SHUT IT
Meanwhile meanwhile meanwhile
Jones the Sheep: Right, love, where's the nipper? I've brought Dai the Sheep, Morgan the Sheep and Cohen the Sheep so this had better be good. This is usually our pullin' night, isn't it?
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Ooh! Do I get a pressie?!
Jones the Sheep: Yes. Yes you do. It's a... shut your eyes... a SHEEP
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Weeeeee! A fluffy ickle pony!
King Eric: Zut alors and Good Moaning. We have also brought presents. Here's a pound. And some MUH*
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Weeeee!
Burger King: Have you thought of a name? We've got TOP sponsorship opportunities going
J. Carpenter: JEBUS. JEBUS Carpenter
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: JEBUS H. CHRIST
J. Carpenter: Look, we had this argument on the back of the donkey on the way over…
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: An' I'm telling you – UR NOT TEH DAD. I'm chasing TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD through the CSA. Think of teh free house an' the benefits an' the FREE PONY LOLOLOL. Gordon Clown's Judaea LMAO
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: Wait.. what? But... but... He's his own Dad. IT IS WRITTEN and it is COMPLICATED FFS
TEH Heavenly Host: Do we get to sing now?
J. Carpenter: Oh, go on, then. A PROPER XMAS song or I kick you in teh nadgers
TEH Heavenly Host: Last Xmas I gave you my heart, the very next day you gave it away, ROFFLE
J. Carpenter: Nice one. Karaoke classic LMAO
Jones the Sheep: But.. but... strictly speaking, there was NO last Christmas. FAIL
Baby Jebus: WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!
J. Carpenter: Now look. You've made BABY JEBUS cry FFS
King Herod: It's SMITIN' time! LOLOLOLZERS. Crap, I love being KING . Best job in TEH WURLD
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Have you brought me a pony? Have you? HAVE YOU? I'd give my first born for a lovely pony
King Herod: All the ponies you can eat, shexxxxy, and then - HOLLYWOOD
M. O'Nazareth-Carpenter: Ooo! What a dish
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: [slaps forehead]
J. Carpenter: Dood. Let her go.
TEH ANGLE OF TEH LORD: But...
King Herod: Stick with me, babe. I’ll make you a star. A star of BETHELEHEM.
Wrath of Dawn re-wrote the ending to this because my original was TEH SUXXOR
* Look, you can't improve on perfection. HERE for "A balm? Does it bite?" gag
Monday, December 15, 2008
On Christmas music
On Christmas music
"Are we looking forward to the release of a Scaryduck Christmas single, then?" asks regular reader Audrey, fine figure of a woman that she is.
"Perhaps 'Christmas time, spicy brains and wine?'" she continues, unaware of the No-Cliff fatwa that operates on these pages.
We are not in the business of mentioning Cliff Richard here, except, perhaps in close proximity to the words "colostomy bag" and "Una Stubbs over a glass coffee table", which would draw a sharp intake of breath from our legal advisors, there being no truth in the rumours. In fact, there are no rumours. At all.
So.
No Cl*ff R*chard. And No D*niel O'D*nn*ll either, the f*ck*ng c*nt.
But yes, we will be releasing a single in time for the Festive Period™.
Fairytale of Huge Norks
Please, if you dare, suggest other filth that should be appearing on the Duck Christmas Album.
Who says Christmas is for the kiddywinks?
"Are we looking forward to the release of a Scaryduck Christmas single, then?" asks regular reader Audrey, fine figure of a woman that she is.
"Perhaps 'Christmas time, spicy brains and wine?'" she continues, unaware of the No-Cliff fatwa that operates on these pages.
We are not in the business of mentioning Cliff Richard here, except, perhaps in close proximity to the words "colostomy bag" and "Una Stubbs over a glass coffee table", which would draw a sharp intake of breath from our legal advisors, there being no truth in the rumours. In fact, there are no rumours. At all.
So.
No Cl*ff R*chard. And No D*niel O'D*nn*ll either, the f*ck*ng c*nt.
But yes, we will be releasing a single in time for the Festive Period™.
Fairytale of Huge Norks
Please, if you dare, suggest other filth that should be appearing on the Duck Christmas Album.
Who says Christmas is for the kiddywinks?
Friday, December 12, 2008
Neither Mirth nor Woe: My Dentist Shame
Neither Mirth nor Woe: My Dentist Shame
I have alluded, in the past, to an episode in my life where I have shamed myself in the offices of my charming, hardly-expensive-at-all NHS dentist.
In fact, past tellings haven't quite told the whole truth, for I have shamed myself on a number of occasions in dentists' offices, and only once have I been told to leave. This one, in fact.
It is time, I am afraid, to tell the full story of My Dentist Shame. With added bosoms.
You see, I had a complicated bit of dental work done in my teens, the result of which means I've got - to all intents and purposes - a dead tooth cemented in my mouth. It is grey, and a real turn-on for the ladies, because it makes me look AS NAILS.
After a few years it became complete agony. Despite being AS NAILS, it turns out I'm rubbish at the whole pain thing, and took myself back to the dentist to have it seen to.
It turned out that the gum behind the Tooth of Doom had become infected, and there were what appeared to be gallons of pus behind the horrible grey thing in my mouth.
"It's too complex for me," my charming dentist confessed, "you'll have to see Mrs Booth. She comes in on Fridays."
I came back on a Friday, where I was ushered in to see a very nice middle-aged dentist, who drilled through the dead tooth and slurped all the pus out. This took several appointments, which I rather looked forward to on account of her charming demeanour, witty conversation and her enormous bosom.
The eighth and ninth wonders of the world, all in a tight lab coat. Geek heaven.
According to Newtonian physics, everything has its own gravitational field. And so it proved the case with Mrs Booth's bosom. For every time she leaned over to insert something into my gob, they would stick to my head, rendering it impossible to see. Or in some cases, breathe.
Each and every Friday for a month, despite the terrifying drills and the industrial vacuum cleaner in my gob, I felt no pain. The pain disappeared almost immediately, and I lay there in an almost blissful trance, her enormous cleavage pressed against the side of my head.
"How's that feel?" she asked as I lay there, my world completely blacked out by the sudden eclipse.
Who knows how the male brain works? I was only supposed to nod my head to indicate I was fine. But no. Dr Freud took over.
"Nice," I replied. "Nice tits."
She completed her work in stony silence, ramming the final filling home with what appeared to be a large chisel.
"Rinse and spit," she ordered, pointing out the plastic cup of poison pink stuff, "Now LEAVE."
She sent me to have my enamel scraped in the most painful way imaginable.
That was my final appointment.
Still, nice tits.
I have alluded, in the past, to an episode in my life where I have shamed myself in the offices of my charming, hardly-expensive-at-all NHS dentist.
In fact, past tellings haven't quite told the whole truth, for I have shamed myself on a number of occasions in dentists' offices, and only once have I been told to leave. This one, in fact.
It is time, I am afraid, to tell the full story of My Dentist Shame. With added bosoms.
You see, I had a complicated bit of dental work done in my teens, the result of which means I've got - to all intents and purposes - a dead tooth cemented in my mouth. It is grey, and a real turn-on for the ladies, because it makes me look AS NAILS.
After a few years it became complete agony. Despite being AS NAILS, it turns out I'm rubbish at the whole pain thing, and took myself back to the dentist to have it seen to.
It turned out that the gum behind the Tooth of Doom had become infected, and there were what appeared to be gallons of pus behind the horrible grey thing in my mouth.
"It's too complex for me," my charming dentist confessed, "you'll have to see Mrs Booth. She comes in on Fridays."
I came back on a Friday, where I was ushered in to see a very nice middle-aged dentist, who drilled through the dead tooth and slurped all the pus out. This took several appointments, which I rather looked forward to on account of her charming demeanour, witty conversation and her enormous bosom.
The eighth and ninth wonders of the world, all in a tight lab coat. Geek heaven.
According to Newtonian physics, everything has its own gravitational field. And so it proved the case with Mrs Booth's bosom. For every time she leaned over to insert something into my gob, they would stick to my head, rendering it impossible to see. Or in some cases, breathe.
Each and every Friday for a month, despite the terrifying drills and the industrial vacuum cleaner in my gob, I felt no pain. The pain disappeared almost immediately, and I lay there in an almost blissful trance, her enormous cleavage pressed against the side of my head.
"How's that feel?" she asked as I lay there, my world completely blacked out by the sudden eclipse.
Who knows how the male brain works? I was only supposed to nod my head to indicate I was fine. But no. Dr Freud took over.
"Nice," I replied. "Nice tits."
She completed her work in stony silence, ramming the final filling home with what appeared to be a large chisel.
"Rinse and spit," she ordered, pointing out the plastic cup of poison pink stuff, "Now LEAVE."
She sent me to have my enamel scraped in the most painful way imaginable.
That was my final appointment.
Still, nice tits.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
On talking forren
On talking forren
"I don't speak French", sing fish-faced harpies Girls Aloud, adding "So I let the funky music do the talking, talking."
Although, as any fine, upstanding, patriotically-tattooed-for-Queen-and-Country Englishman traveling abroad will tell you, you'll have none of that speaking French OR funky music. We won the war, so I'm going to talk VERY LOUD IN ENGLISH, ENGLISH.
Sadly, I have completely wrecked my ignorant Englishman abroad credentials by a) being half-Irish and b) having a decent command of French and German. Unfortunately, I listened at school, which means that if there is any communication to be done between sunburned Brits abroad and Johhny Foreigner, it's me that has to apologise for the behaviour of, well, everybody.
However, where I fall over is my inability to understand the language of up-and-coming Euro-chavs, the Spanish. Luckily, I'm still paying attention, and have learned a few phrases from the electric television, mostly from the Bumblebee Man from The Simpsons.
This is all the Spanish I know:
So: Help me dear reader, with phrases I may find handy in any given foreign country. Don't bother with translations - I trust you all completely, and I fully expect the British Consul to pop over from his G&T to smooth over any wrinkles.
"Don't you understand, Diego? I SAID FISH AN' CHIPS!"
"I don't speak French", sing fish-faced harpies Girls Aloud, adding "So I let the funky music do the talking, talking."
Although, as any fine, upstanding, patriotically-tattooed-for-Queen-and-Country Englishman traveling abroad will tell you, you'll have none of that speaking French OR funky music. We won the war, so I'm going to talk VERY LOUD IN ENGLISH, ENGLISH.
Sadly, I have completely wrecked my ignorant Englishman abroad credentials by a) being half-Irish and b) having a decent command of French and German. Unfortunately, I listened at school, which means that if there is any communication to be done between sunburned Brits abroad and Johhny Foreigner, it's me that has to apologise for the behaviour of, well, everybody.
However, where I fall over is my inability to understand the language of up-and-coming Euro-chavs, the Spanish. Luckily, I'm still paying attention, and have learned a few phrases from the electric television, mostly from the Bumblebee Man from The Simpsons.
This is all the Spanish I know:
* Ay ay ay! No me gusta!As you can see, this is raw Spanish for every occasion and may, one day, save a life. However, my knowledge of languages is still sadly lacking.
* Ay ay ay! El mundo es loco!
* Ay ay ay! Mi mujer es contable!
So: Help me dear reader, with phrases I may find handy in any given foreign country. Don't bother with translations - I trust you all completely, and I fully expect the British Consul to pop over from his G&T to smooth over any wrinkles.
"Don't you understand, Diego? I SAID FISH AN' CHIPS!"
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
On being led into temptation
On being led into temptation
Sunday morning to our local place of worship, once again for reasons that escape me. Even filthy heathens such as myself need a little moral guidance every once in a while, and it is quite possibly the best free show in town. Particularly if you live in a very, very dull town.
I am surprised to find that Canon Harry has been fired (LOL)* and HOT CLERGY in the face of the Reverend Sue has been installed in his place, single-handedly putting the "KER-IST!" back into Christianity and the "Come on, big boy" into Communion.
Whatever your views on organised religion, you've got to admire the Anglican Church for their stance on appointing HOT CLERGY to positions of responsibility. For in the long term, it's going to encourage young, hormonal teens to shun the way of the hoodie and take singing up the church choir, just to harbour TEMPTED thoughts regarding Reverend Sue's behind, whilst developing Hairy Psalms.
But back to the chase...
Hymns were sung, tales of morality were spoke, and, at length, the believers shuffled to the front for a quaff of J.C's blood and a munch on one of His Holy Crackers.
Then, as proceedings reached a rowdy climax (the result of a fine bottle of Glenhoddle single malt finding its way to the front of the Communion Wine cupboard), Hot Reverend Sue calmed the masses with a call to prayer.
"And now," she purred, hotness dripping from her Holy mouth, "As we all kneel to say The Lord's Prayer, let us pause for a few seconds of quiet reflection..."
And we knelt on over-sized cushions, the pews forcing bodies into positions only previously experienced during games of Twister – the sport of SINNERS.
We all settled down - with much fidgeting – and set to contemplating the world we live in and life in general.
In one case, this also involved contemplating – in the cold of the church, the unexpected contortions and the sight of close-quarters HOT CLERGY - the set meal for six they experienced at the Rajpoot Tandoori the night before, which inevitably concluded thussly:
"FAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARP!"
And: "Hells bells!"
And: "Christ onna bike!"
And: "Allahu akhbar!"
Not guilty, I merely knelt at the back and took notes.
We have been told to return next week with a candle and an orange. Things, I fear, are taking a turn for the filthy. You don't get this in the Catholics.
* May have actually retired, or been eaten by leopards. Why let actual truth get in the way of a low-quality gag?
Sunday morning to our local place of worship, once again for reasons that escape me. Even filthy heathens such as myself need a little moral guidance every once in a while, and it is quite possibly the best free show in town. Particularly if you live in a very, very dull town.
I am surprised to find that Canon Harry has been fired (LOL)* and HOT CLERGY in the face of the Reverend Sue has been installed in his place, single-handedly putting the "KER-IST!" back into Christianity and the "Come on, big boy" into Communion.
Whatever your views on organised religion, you've got to admire the Anglican Church for their stance on appointing HOT CLERGY to positions of responsibility. For in the long term, it's going to encourage young, hormonal teens to shun the way of the hoodie and take singing up the church choir, just to harbour TEMPTED thoughts regarding Reverend Sue's behind, whilst developing Hairy Psalms.
But back to the chase...
Hymns were sung, tales of morality were spoke, and, at length, the believers shuffled to the front for a quaff of J.C's blood and a munch on one of His Holy Crackers.
Then, as proceedings reached a rowdy climax (the result of a fine bottle of Glenhoddle single malt finding its way to the front of the Communion Wine cupboard), Hot Reverend Sue calmed the masses with a call to prayer.
"And now," she purred, hotness dripping from her Holy mouth, "As we all kneel to say The Lord's Prayer, let us pause for a few seconds of quiet reflection..."
And we knelt on over-sized cushions, the pews forcing bodies into positions only previously experienced during games of Twister – the sport of SINNERS.
We all settled down - with much fidgeting – and set to contemplating the world we live in and life in general.
In one case, this also involved contemplating – in the cold of the church, the unexpected contortions and the sight of close-quarters HOT CLERGY - the set meal for six they experienced at the Rajpoot Tandoori the night before, which inevitably concluded thussly:
"FAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARP!"
And: "Hells bells!"
And: "Christ onna bike!"
And: "Allahu akhbar!"
Not guilty, I merely knelt at the back and took notes.
We have been told to return next week with a candle and an orange. Things, I fear, are taking a turn for the filthy. You don't get this in the Catholics.
* May have actually retired, or been eaten by leopards. Why let actual truth get in the way of a low-quality gag?
Tuesday, December 09, 2008
On appearing in a public information film
On appearing in a public information film
Lunch time, and I find myself in the second floor executive washroom, end cubicle, catching up on a bit of sleep.
The door to the outside world opens, and in comes another punter to the luxury of the management-only facilities.
Alas, he breaks the silence of the moment, and rouses me from my slumber, as he is talking on his mobile phone.
I do not recognise the voice, but it is immediately apparent that he is talking – at some volume – to his other half, discussing the all-important subject of what they will be having for dinner that night.
He does this, dear reader, as he parks himself in the cubicle next to mine and proceeds to park his breakfast.
"Yes dear," he says, "I'll swing by Budgens on the way home for a pint of milk and the ham."
Then: "Nnnnnng" followed by the tell-tale splash.
"..... ... ...?" asks the muffled voice at the other end, forcing our man into the most bare-faced, bare-cheeked of lies.
"Oh, in the office, just finishing some paperwork."
NNnnnnnng-splash.
Well, I had just finished off some paperwork of my own, and blew his lie out of the water with a well-timed flush.
As the cistern emptied, a shrill ".... ... .... ... ... ....?" could be heard from the cubicle, the poor, defeated victim not even bothering to defend himself. For his sake, I sincerely hope he was operating hands-free.
Not wanting to hang around for the all-too-predictable fall-out, I made my excuses and fled.
Think once. Think twice. Think – don't use your phone on the shitter.
Lunch time, and I find myself in the second floor executive washroom, end cubicle, catching up on a bit of sleep.
The door to the outside world opens, and in comes another punter to the luxury of the management-only facilities.
Alas, he breaks the silence of the moment, and rouses me from my slumber, as he is talking on his mobile phone.
I do not recognise the voice, but it is immediately apparent that he is talking – at some volume – to his other half, discussing the all-important subject of what they will be having for dinner that night.
He does this, dear reader, as he parks himself in the cubicle next to mine and proceeds to park his breakfast.
"Yes dear," he says, "I'll swing by Budgens on the way home for a pint of milk and the ham."
Then: "Nnnnnng" followed by the tell-tale splash.
"..... ... ...?" asks the muffled voice at the other end, forcing our man into the most bare-faced, bare-cheeked of lies.
"Oh, in the office, just finishing some paperwork."
NNnnnnnng-splash.
Well, I had just finished off some paperwork of my own, and blew his lie out of the water with a well-timed flush.
As the cistern emptied, a shrill ".... ... .... ... ... ....?" could be heard from the cubicle, the poor, defeated victim not even bothering to defend himself. For his sake, I sincerely hope he was operating hands-free.
Not wanting to hang around for the all-too-predictable fall-out, I made my excuses and fled.
Think once. Think twice. Think – don't use your phone on the shitter.
Monday, December 08, 2008
On ghosts and other worlds
It is late, late on a Saturday evening as we hurtle down what passes for a major trunk road in Dorset on the way home from a pleasant, if tiring, day visiting friends and relatives. It is a cold, clear night on the Tolpuddle Bypass, with the odd patch of fog drifting insubstantially across the road like some lost soul trapped between this world an the next. Much like a...
"Ghost! Did you just see that ghost?"
I am dragged out of auto-pilot by the alarmed shouts of my darling wife at what I had – at first – taken to be a late-night hitch-hiker.
"You mean the figure of a man at the side of the road?"
"You saw it too?"
"The figure of a man at the side of the road, wearing what appears to be a long white gown?"
"That's unreal. Just wait until I tell everybody. It... it... was almost like an angel."
More like an angel, than you think, my dear. It is, alas, from my own bitter experience that I know this is not some vapour of a life already lived. Nor is it a messenger from the heavenly host. Nor is it, I am certain any deity, wood nymph, sprite, kobold or C-List celebrity staggering home from a night on the tiles in Blandford Forum.
"Sorry to burst your bubble, but really I don't think what we both saw was one of the ranks of the recently deceased."
"How do you know? It was almost real."
"It was, my dear, - and of this I am 100 per cent certain - a tranny in a wedding dress."
"And how would you know that?"
"This is Pervert Country, my dear. Pervert Country."
"Mum?" came a small, tired voice from the back, "Can we stop for the toilet?"
"NO."
Saturday, December 06, 2008
On recycling old jokes I found lying about in my archives
On recycling old jokes I found lying about in my archives
I hear one of London's top hotels is doing a special offer in its restaurant to try to ride out the current financial crisis.
Buy two courses, get the third free.
Or:
"Pudding on the Ritz"
/I'll get me coat
Also... Help your humble, impoverished author beat the credit crisis by clicking on the Google Ads link. "Not Scary. Not too proud to beg."
I hear one of London's top hotels is doing a special offer in its restaurant to try to ride out the current financial crisis.
Buy two courses, get the third free.
Or:
"Pudding on the Ritz"
/I'll get me coat
Also... Help your humble, impoverished author beat the credit crisis by clicking on the Google Ads link. "Not Scary. Not too proud to beg."
Friday, December 05, 2008
Neither mirth nor woe: "The goggles – They do nothing!"
Neither mirth nor woe: "The goggles – They do nothing!"
You may already know that I work away from home. My Monday morning ritual, then, is one where I rise at 4.30am, dress in the dark, pausing only to clean up a pool of dog piss in the conservatory, before hitting dark Dorset roads just in time to listen to the Shipping Forecast.
I like the Shipping Forecast. It is almost hypnotic in tone, and gives me a chance for an extra ten minutes of shut-eye as I head up the A35 in the general direction of civilisation.
By the time I reach Winchester Services on the M3, it is around a quarter after six, and I am just about ready – and let us use the correct medical term here – to park my breakfast.
Winchester Services at that time in the morning is a little island away from the white van and container lorry madness of the motorway, with bunny rabbits living in the grass verges, should your budget not stretch to a cooked breakfast in the restaurant.
My usual routine on these occasions is to pull off down the slip lane in the Silver Hornet, pretending that I am The Stig and staying on the racing line. I roll to a halt in the near-empty car park, amble into the gents' toilets and go about my business.
All done within five minutes, and I'd be straight back on the Road to Hell (Basingstoke).
Not this Monday morning.
This Monday morning would be spent – in the main – sitting in the driver's seat of the Silver Hornet, knuckles white as I grasp the steering wheel, foot to the floor, trying to erase something dreadful from my mind as I try to put as many miles as possible between myself and the Seventh Circle of HELL.
But there are things that - once seen - cannot be unseen.
The goggles, as they say, do nothing.
And it was this:
I locked the car door behind me, marched into the building as the sliding doors whooshed open before me, took in the morning's news headlines from the paper stand and noted the time on my watch: 6.18am.
Then, without further thought, I strode into the gentlemen's conveniences, where what can only be described as "a sight" awaited me.
There, in front of me, was an elderly gentleman, seventy years old if he were a day, at the electric hand-dryer. Flat cheese-cutter cap, NHS specs, sensible zipped-up anorak.
And there, the respectability of this vision ended. His trousers and grundies around his ankles, he fanned his not unsubstantial meat-and-two-veg under the warm air of the blower, a huge smile across his wizened old face as he arched his back to achieve a better angle of attack.
"Muh!" I said, taking in this vision of Gehenna, the place of eternal damnation, my mind not entirely sure what was going on.
Then, realising he was being watched, the manky old spunker gave me a wink and a grin before exclaiming over the roar of the blower "Aye, that's done the trick!", coaxing the last turkey in the shop still further into the warming stream of air.
Air which I would – at some stage – have to breathe.
I fled. Fled with foot to the floor, until the A33 spat me out in the middle of Reading.
I'll be stopping at Southampton Services from now on.
You may already know that I work away from home. My Monday morning ritual, then, is one where I rise at 4.30am, dress in the dark, pausing only to clean up a pool of dog piss in the conservatory, before hitting dark Dorset roads just in time to listen to the Shipping Forecast.
I like the Shipping Forecast. It is almost hypnotic in tone, and gives me a chance for an extra ten minutes of shut-eye as I head up the A35 in the general direction of civilisation.
By the time I reach Winchester Services on the M3, it is around a quarter after six, and I am just about ready – and let us use the correct medical term here – to park my breakfast.
Winchester Services at that time in the morning is a little island away from the white van and container lorry madness of the motorway, with bunny rabbits living in the grass verges, should your budget not stretch to a cooked breakfast in the restaurant.
My usual routine on these occasions is to pull off down the slip lane in the Silver Hornet, pretending that I am The Stig and staying on the racing line. I roll to a halt in the near-empty car park, amble into the gents' toilets and go about my business.
All done within five minutes, and I'd be straight back on the Road to Hell (Basingstoke).
Not this Monday morning.
This Monday morning would be spent – in the main – sitting in the driver's seat of the Silver Hornet, knuckles white as I grasp the steering wheel, foot to the floor, trying to erase something dreadful from my mind as I try to put as many miles as possible between myself and the Seventh Circle of HELL.
But there are things that - once seen - cannot be unseen.
The goggles, as they say, do nothing.
And it was this:
I locked the car door behind me, marched into the building as the sliding doors whooshed open before me, took in the morning's news headlines from the paper stand and noted the time on my watch: 6.18am.
Then, without further thought, I strode into the gentlemen's conveniences, where what can only be described as "a sight" awaited me.
There, in front of me, was an elderly gentleman, seventy years old if he were a day, at the electric hand-dryer. Flat cheese-cutter cap, NHS specs, sensible zipped-up anorak.
And there, the respectability of this vision ended. His trousers and grundies around his ankles, he fanned his not unsubstantial meat-and-two-veg under the warm air of the blower, a huge smile across his wizened old face as he arched his back to achieve a better angle of attack.
"Muh!" I said, taking in this vision of Gehenna, the place of eternal damnation, my mind not entirely sure what was going on.
Then, realising he was being watched, the manky old spunker gave me a wink and a grin before exclaiming over the roar of the blower "Aye, that's done the trick!", coaxing the last turkey in the shop still further into the warming stream of air.
Air which I would – at some stage – have to breathe.
I fled. Fled with foot to the floor, until the A33 spat me out in the middle of Reading.
I'll be stopping at Southampton Services from now on.
Thursday, December 04, 2008
On letters to Viz Comic, again
On letters to Viz Comic, again
Bored, and finding that the world's best adult comic is now funny again, I'm started knocking out (heh) unfunny letters to Viz once more.
At this rate, I might have to start actually sending them in. As actual letters. With stamps an' everything.
Dear Viz,
I read in a recent edition of Take a Break magazine that (and I quote) "The family that laughs together, stays together".
Alternatively, you can try locking them in a basement for 24 years.
Your pal,
Josef Fritzl
Austria
Dear Viz,
My old gran always used to say "A little bit of what you fancy does you good".
What a load of rubbish. Try telling that to Fred West.
Yours
Rosemary West
HMP Holloway
Dear Viz,
What a load of old rubbish Rosemary West said in her recent letter to Viz Comic(Letters, above).
A little bit of what you fancy DOES do you good, particularly if it's killing loads of people to DEATH.
I might even try it myself some time.
Yours
Harold Shipman (Dr)
Rio de Janeiro
Dear Viz,
What a con these co-called skin conditions are. I recently had a case of Athlete's Foot. If anything, it made my trip from my armchair to the fridge even slower than usual.
No wonder we never win anything at the Olympic Games. Typical of Gordon CLOWN'S Rip-Off Britain.
Yours etc
B. Manning
Cockermouth
Bored, and finding that the world's best adult comic is now funny again, I'm started knocking out (heh) unfunny letters to Viz once more.
At this rate, I might have to start actually sending them in. As actual letters. With stamps an' everything.
Dear Viz,
I read in a recent edition of Take a Break magazine that (and I quote) "The family that laughs together, stays together".
Alternatively, you can try locking them in a basement for 24 years.
Your pal,
Josef Fritzl
Austria
Dear Viz,
My old gran always used to say "A little bit of what you fancy does you good".
What a load of rubbish. Try telling that to Fred West.
Yours
Rosemary West
HMP Holloway
Dear Viz,
What a load of old rubbish Rosemary West said in her recent letter to Viz Comic(Letters, above).
A little bit of what you fancy DOES do you good, particularly if it's killing loads of people to DEATH.
I might even try it myself some time.
Yours
Harold Shipman (Dr)
Rio de Janeiro
Dear Viz,
What a con these co-called skin conditions are. I recently had a case of Athlete's Foot. If anything, it made my trip from my armchair to the fridge even slower than usual.
No wonder we never win anything at the Olympic Games. Typical of Gordon CLOWN'S Rip-Off Britain.
Yours etc
B. Manning
Cockermouth
Wednesday, December 03, 2008
On cheap, offensive stereotypes
On cheap, offensive stereotypes
My drive into work the other morning took me down unfamiliar streets through the less-privileged streets of Whitley. Home of the legendary Whitley Whiff, my sister Ricky Gervais and very little else, circumstance took me past a row of shops where traffic lights brought my car to a halt.
Having the presence of mind to activate the central locking and to arm the pod-mounted rocket system that comes as factory standard in any Renault Scenic, I took in my surroundings.
A chemist, a very small Tesco, kebab bar, the roughest pub in the world, and a charity shop.
At least I thought it was a charity shop. It might not even have been a shop at all, apart from the fact that it had the words "AUTISTIC SHOP" above the door in large, orange capital letters straight from the 1970s.
"That's been there for donkey's years," my colleague who wants to be a lumberjack told me as I brought the subject up over a cup of scout hut quality tea, whilst running a swift CTRL+A+DELETE over my inbox.
"Yeah, but what's it like?"
"They never have to have a stock-take. They know EXACTLY what's on the shelves."
Ah yes. Warming to the politically incorrect theme – having seen Rain Man on several occasions, and having no reason to believe that Hollywood might ever lie to me – I suggested "but they've got some really GREAT art".
"No. No they haven't."
And: "You're going to HELL."
Of course, this kind of chat was brought to an instant halt, because laughing at the misfortunes of others is neither big nor clever.
"I bought a jigsaw there, you know."
"Oh, right…"
"The bastards never told me there was a piece missing."
My drive into work the other morning took me down unfamiliar streets through the less-privileged streets of Whitley. Home of the legendary Whitley Whiff, my sister Ricky Gervais and very little else, circumstance took me past a row of shops where traffic lights brought my car to a halt.
Having the presence of mind to activate the central locking and to arm the pod-mounted rocket system that comes as factory standard in any Renault Scenic, I took in my surroundings.
A chemist, a very small Tesco, kebab bar, the roughest pub in the world, and a charity shop.
At least I thought it was a charity shop. It might not even have been a shop at all, apart from the fact that it had the words "AUTISTIC SHOP" above the door in large, orange capital letters straight from the 1970s.
"That's been there for donkey's years," my colleague who wants to be a lumberjack told me as I brought the subject up over a cup of scout hut quality tea, whilst running a swift CTRL+A+DELETE over my inbox.
"Yeah, but what's it like?"
"They never have to have a stock-take. They know EXACTLY what's on the shelves."
Ah yes. Warming to the politically incorrect theme – having seen Rain Man on several occasions, and having no reason to believe that Hollywood might ever lie to me – I suggested "but they've got some really GREAT art".
"No. No they haven't."
And: "You're going to HELL."
Of course, this kind of chat was brought to an instant halt, because laughing at the misfortunes of others is neither big nor clever.
"I bought a jigsaw there, you know."
"Oh, right…"
"The bastards never told me there was a piece missing."
Tuesday, December 02, 2008
On not being mad
On not being mad
The BBC - between bouts of swearing at pensioners - aired a programme not long ago called "How mad are you?"
My reply: 5 out of 10 mad, which is hardly mad at all, compared to some people I could mention.
Aired at a dangerous time where the nation has never been so outraged, I have no doubt that the switchboard at Television Centre lit up like a Christmas tree as fuming mad people rang up to complain that they are not mad in the slightest.
"Why oh why oh why?" they are asking, "can't do you a radio programme with that nice John Barrowman instead?"
I was not one of those people, even though I am not mad.
In fact, I can tell my relative level of sanity just by examining my own output for style, control, damage, aggression and general offence and presenting my findings to you, dear reader in a handy cut-out-and-keep guide:
HINT: Do not 'cut out and keep' by use of a Stanley knife. Flat screens do not come cheap
HINT HINT: If I publish the piece about charity shops, please call the men in white coats. This particular post is right off the scale and into the rolling vistas of complete lunacy that have no name
I am not mad.
Tomorrow: The Duck visits a charity shop – with HILARIOUS consequences
The BBC - between bouts of swearing at pensioners - aired a programme not long ago called "How mad are you?"
My reply: 5 out of 10 mad, which is hardly mad at all, compared to some people I could mention.
Aired at a dangerous time where the nation has never been so outraged, I have no doubt that the switchboard at Television Centre lit up like a Christmas tree as fuming mad people rang up to complain that they are not mad in the slightest.
"Why oh why oh why?" they are asking, "can't do you a radio programme with that nice John Barrowman instead?"
I was not one of those people, even though I am not mad.
In fact, I can tell my relative level of sanity just by examining my own output for style, control, damage, aggression and general offence and presenting my findings to you, dear reader in a handy cut-out-and-keep guide:
----------- cut out and keep -----------I have already cut out and kept a copy for my wallet, for the worst words I can hear from The Fragrant Mrs Duck, usually after a "Sick inna hedge" post, are "I've been reading your blog", and this is usually a prelude to WOE.
"How Mad Is Scary?" – Handy Ready Reckoner
Condensed movies: Perfectly sane
Minor swearing: Slightly unhinged
Samuel Pepys' diaries: A lyttle crack'd
Poo: Nuts
Sick inna hedge: Woofing mad
Heaving cleavage: Off my tits
Tales of poo, vomit and heaving cleavage: Utterly certifiable
----------- cut out and keep -----------
HINT: Do not 'cut out and keep' by use of a Stanley knife. Flat screens do not come cheap
HINT HINT: If I publish the piece about charity shops, please call the men in white coats. This particular post is right off the scale and into the rolling vistas of complete lunacy that have no name
I am not mad.
Tomorrow: The Duck visits a charity shop – with HILARIOUS consequences
Monday, December 01, 2008
On various things that I like
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