Booze, news and views from a drunken opinionated fool who can't spell very well, may well repeat himself, and can't blame it on dislexia
Sunday 9 January 2022
the beatles 'get back' dvd and imax rooftop concert releases
So, the news now is The Beatles 'Get Back' documentary film by Peter Jackson is getting a DVD release after all, and there's an IMAX film of the rooftop concert being shown in selected cinemas as well. Excellent news, and there's some more great artwork to go along with them.
I'm living the dream at the moment
Toodle pip
Friday 7 January 2022
george orwell was correct and levelling up
Wednesday 5 January 2022
a reminder of covid levels
Thursday 30 December 2021
Monday 27 December 2021
Saturday 25 December 2021
Friday 24 December 2021
the hypocritical tories
A reminder that this is one of the many Tories who voted against feeding the poor kids in summer, and that's without stating the bleeding obvious that a rich country like ours should be disgraced by having food banks in the first place.
Merry Christmas!
Toodle pip
Tuesday 21 December 2021
time to relax
the new backpack
Monday 20 December 2021
Toyah & Robert's Sunday Lunch - I WANNA BE YOUR DOG
Sunday 19 December 2021
mop top belgian canaries
After watching (and loving) the recent Peter Jackson 'Get Back' Beatles documentary, l now have a yearning to get myself some Belgian canaries
Toodle pipSaturday 18 December 2021
protect yourself from the kkk
Toodle pip
Friday 17 December 2021
mr parrot's brothers seem to have turned up
I've always wondered what happened to Mr Parrot's brothers.
Now l've got a pretty good idea.
Toodle pipMonday 29 November 2021
Friday 26 November 2021
peter jackson's beatles get back documentary and the guardian review
I've seen the first two parts so far (plus the Peter Jackson appearance on the 'Things We Said Today' podcast, so that's been about 9 hours of Beatles watching in the last couple of days, with more to follow tomorrow, and l could happily sit through many more hours if they were made available.
Some great scenes already shown include more from the Paul / George falling out, Paul welling up ('and then there were three'), the moving end to part one, and seeing 'Get Back' slowly arriving from the musical gods Paul was in touch with at that time.
Obviously critics can have their own opinions, and either think it's manna from heaven, or boring hippie crap that should have been condensed into a shorter film, and l have no issue with that (although l am always right).
However, what does bug me (amongst many other things) is when they don't know what they are talking about. Such as the piece below from Jonathan Freedman in The Guardian, a paper l usually have a lot of time for, who states in his article it's a shame The Beatles didn't continue for at least a little longer and produce more.
I guess he has never heard of the Abbey Road album they recorded after these sessions and rooftop performance.
Full article is here
Bloody youngsters!!!
Toodle pip
the new health costs and mr parrot's got another job
It's the Tories behaving like Tories - What else could you expect?
And as for the MP's making extra money from second jobs, l think my parrot has been sneaking off while l' at work and doing the same
Toodle pipMonday 22 November 2021
PISTON - LET US RISE - (Official Music Video 2020)
Bad Touch ft. Mollie Marriott - Baby Get It On (Official Video)
Monday 15 November 2021
causes of death in 1632 london
Some of the causes of death here are just baffling. Teeth??? Planet???
And don't get me started on the unlucky 46 people that were killed by 'Several Accidents'.
Toodle pippeter jackson's get back beatles documentary is nearly here!
To say l am looking forward to the Peter Jackson Beatles Get Back Documentary at the end of the month would be something of a massive understatement. Here's the poster.
Toodle pip
jurgen klopp speaks sense
Jurgen Klopp might be the manager of Liverpool, a team l always want to see beaten, but he talks a lot of sense, especially here, although he could also have included Trump.
Toodle pip
Ames Window illusion with pen
Tuesday 26 October 2021
Sunday 24 October 2021
Monday 18 October 2021
sir david amess, hate, lies, yellowhammer, brexit, covid and the national minimum wage
As the debate rages about whether politicians require more protection following the killing of Sir David Amess, it might be worthwhile considering how all the hate and disenchantment is stoked. It will come as no surprise, bur possibly with the likes of the following. It would be impossible to shield and protect ministers when they are out and about, so maybe we should try cutting down on the hate speech and preaching for a better and just society instead, with a lot less naked corruption thrown in for good measure.
And as we slip further towards a fascist state, no one should be startled by the news that Dominic Raab is planning legislation to overrule court judgements verdicts that the government don't like, while he has also made known the fact that he does not agree with the Human Rights act (what a shock that statement was).
Friday 8 October 2021
the spirit of britain and uplifting foodbanks
I'd like to unleash something on Boris. Fucking twat.
Does he and his supporters actually realise the Conservatives have been in power for the last 11 years?
More empty rhetoric that means nothing, while the country goes to the dogs and the rich get richer.
Monday 4 October 2021
bird photographer of the year 2021
Some impressive photographs from the Bird Photographer of the Year 2021 competition. More winning photos and details of the pics can be found here
Toodle pip
samuel earle nails it in the new york times
An excellent piece by Samuel Earle in The New York Times that pretty much nails the current situation
LONDON — Long lines outside gas stations. Panicked drivers fighting one another as the pumps run dry. Soldiers deployed to distribute fuel across the country. And in the background, the pandemic stretching on, food rotting in fields and families sinking into poverty. This is Britain in 2021.
Not long ago, as Prime Minister Boris Johnson lifted all pandemic restrictions in July, the mood across the country was cautiously optimistic. A successful vaccine rollout had finally restored cherished freedoms to daily life: visiting friends and family in their homes, socializing with strangers, eating in restaurants. Cases of the virus continued to multiply, but the number of hospitalizations and deaths fell markedly. The nightmare, it seemed, was over.
But any sense of normality has been banished in the past few weeks. A dramatic fuel crisis, which has been caused in large part by a lack of truck drivers and at its peak forced around a third of all gas stations to close, is only the most glaring concern.
A convergence of problems — a global gas shortage, rising energy and food prices, supply-chain issues and the Conservatives’ decision to slash welfare — has cast the country’s future in darkness. Even Mr. Johnson, known for his boosterish optimism and bonhomie, has struggled to make light of the situation.
The panic of the past week, which recalled old memories (and myths) about the tumultuous late 1970s, was a long time coming. For many months, industry leaders across the economy have warned about chronic labor shortages — of truck drivers, yes, but also fruit pickers, meat processors, waiters and health care workers — disrupting supply chains and impeding businesses.
The signs of breakdown are everywhere: empty shelves in supermarkets, food going to waste in fields, more and more vacancy posters tacked to the windows of shops and restaurants. Meat producers have even called on the government to let them hire prisoners to plug the gap.
One of the main causes of this predicament is Brexit, or at least the government’s handling of Brexit. Britain’s protracted departure from the bloc, undertaken without any real effort by Mr. Johnson to ensure a smooth transition, led to an exodus of European workers — a process then compounded by the pandemic. As many as 1.3 million overseas nationals left Britain between July 2019 and September 2020.
Yet as it became clear that Britain faced substantial shortages in labor, the Conservatives refused to respond. They bloviated, calling it a “manufactured situation.” They prevaricated, assuring the public there was nothing to worry about. And, seeing the chance to recast their negligence as benevolence, they claimed their failure to act was because they wanted companies to pay British workers more instead of rely on cheap foreign labour.
This alibi for inaction is unconvincing. In the Netherlands, for example, new legislation has improved the pay and working conditions for truck drivers. In Britain, conditions remain among the worst in Europe. The government’s belated response — offering 5,000 temporary visas for drivers from E.U. nations — is too little, too late.
Instead of higher wages, the British public has so far encountered only higher prices. Inflation has risen faster than at any point since 1997, and the climbing price of gas globally is placing further strain on people’s lives, making energy more expensive than anywhere else in Europe.
Whereas other governments, in Spain and Italy, have ensured that struggling families are protected from rising costs, the Conservatives have offered no such clemency. Three million households in Britain already live in fuel poverty, made to choose between heating and eating in the winter. After the Conservatives raise a cap on energy prices in October, that number is expected to increase by half a million.
Mr. Johnson nonetheless claims to have given British Conservatism a kinder face. He speaks rousingly of “leveling up” and “turbocharging” left-behind communities. But the behavior of his government suggests otherwise.
On Sept. 30, it ended a program that compensated people for up to 80 percent of lost income during the pandemic. And on Oct. 6, the Conservatives will cut Universal Credit, Britain’s all-encompassing welfare program, by 20 pounds, or $27, a week — just when more people than ever rely on it. The largest single reduction to the welfare state in British history, it’s forecast to push half a million more people below the poverty line, including 200,000 children. (A newly announced winter hardship fund worth £500 million, or $678 million, will do little to soften a cut 12 times its size.)
This grim confluence, from fuel shortages to spiraling poverty, has been described by many as a perfect storm. Yet the metaphor erases the active role the Conservatives — and in particular, the prime minister — have played in orchestrating these foreboding conditions. The bleak winter ahead is of their making.
But Mr. Johnson is unlikely to bear the consequences of his actions. His government, resting on a large majority, remains secure. And for him, crises are always opportunities. A master shape-shifter, unburdened by any sense of accountability or honesty, he thrives in conditions of adversity. The rest of the country won’t be so lucky.