Tuesday, May 07, 2013

Party!

Saturday 25th May, 12-4pm

Summer With The Impossimals

Castle Galleries, Meadowhall, Sheffield

You are all invited to Summer With The Impossimals, two brand new editions released at a launch party being held at Castle Galleries, Meadowhall later this May. It promises to be a great event with stories, dedications, drink, new editions, drink and lots and lots of Impossimals on display, did I mention drink?

Both myself and Jayne will be there for this free event and no invite is required, just turn up on the day. You will also get a free Impossimal badge and hear first hand about the secret that is Bloodline, an Impossimally over the top collection making its startling appearance later this year.

This is a one off event, don't miss it!

 

Monday, May 06, 2013

BUSSRQ

The line moved steadily forward as the queue of people shuffled along like some gigantic centipede dragging all of its heels simultaniously. Children dressed in rags milled about lawlessly through crowds of cackling mothers whilst fathers stood stoically looking somewhere into the distance, painful memories of toil would occasionally wash over their faces and they would briefly lower their head with tears in their eyes.

The queue was designed to sap life, degrade, torment and control the population, there was no getting away from it, all the other exits were closed this was the only way through. It was policed by one guard who snapped and pointed at one of four possible destinations, bags were searched at random, items were split from packaging on the lookout for stolen goods being concealed within. One elderly woman could take no more, she threw down her bag and pushed her way past the guard uttering gutteral oaths only to be caught by a second waiting behind the heavily guarded security desk. We saw her no more, she was ushered off shouting and screaming and then there was silence as if a savage blow had silenced her plea's.

Soviet Russia has nothing on the Orwellian self service checkout yesterday at my local DIY store. Queues, shouts, screams, they were all real, the level of control these superstores now place on the consumer is beyond belief. Self service checkouts are a blight, they remove us from contact with fellow humans, they help us lose compassion for our fellow man. Yesterday the old lady I mentioned above was having serious trouble understanding the concept of the self checkout whilst trying to buy a few plants, she was from a different age that much was apparent by I also saw something else, a deep panic that I see time and time again in people, a panic that is unable to cope with modern life and the speed at which it changes. Think about how different things are now compared to say ten years ago. Did you do most of your shopping online then? Did you control your bank account, pay bills, switch electricity and gas suppliers, have fifty passwords for fifty sites, use Twitter, Facebook or Instagram, have TV on demand, watch streaming movies, read novels, share photos, music and video using a cloud all online?

No, most of the boom has also been our decline. That old lady realised that yesterday, she didn't fit anymore. Our fast paced way of life had pulled away from her and she couldn't cope. The assistant was too busy sorting out the other shoppers problems like the lack of barcodes or items that needed to remain in the basket to really show any kind of concern that maybe, just maybe there are people in this world that have never used a self service checkout before and are quite frankly overwhelmed.

Before I get all spouty about it lets lighten the mood and change the subject to the only time I had visited the DIY store and actually went to a manned till. It was only a few weeks ago but I remember it well as the checkout lady was drunk. No, really, she was off her trolley, so much so we had to wrestle the scanning device from her hands and scan our own stuff through whilst she looked on through rheumy eyes, slowly swaying with our arm movements. We had to be patient whilst she tried to use the credit card machine and we picked up various objects she had dropped along the way, it took a while and we had to listen intently to understand what was said. We left her swaying, looking like anytime now she was going to hurl on a customer or at the very least pass out. That's the thing about self service checkouts, where on earth are you going to get service like that?

Top tip for today, don't go to a DIY superstore on a Bank Holiday, it's hells waiting room.

 

Friday, May 03, 2013

Dirty Gerty

£7 for a pair of new pyjamas hidden under a pile of other nightwear in my supermarkets men's department, quite a bargain. Ok, they may be gaudy shade of blue but my current ones are so full of mystery holes as I explained last week that really they were too good an offer to miss. I paid my money and skipped out of the store convinced a bargain was snatched from under their noses.

That was two weeks ago, this morning I stood looking in the mirror through that bleary eyed look you get first thing in the morning and wondered why I had grown a pair of breasts overnight. Sticking out from underneath my new pyjamas were two enormous knockers, I stood swaying not knowing if I should be in raptures as I'll have something to play with or crying that I'll have to start wearing a 38DD. Maybe I was still dreaming and this was some weird cross dressing hermaphrodite nightmare.

Puzzled I washed my face to brighten myself up a little and looked back in the mirror. They were gone, vanished, I was boobless. Whoa! What the hell? No matter how much I pressed my chest together I couldn't get them to appear again, I even twisted a nipple radio dial like trying to bring them back thinking maybe its like a secret inflation button that women don't tell men about but all to no avail. Bemused I walked back into the bedroom.

'What's with the breasts?' said Jayne.

Looking down my whoppers were back, my hands instinctively went to cup them and was met by thin air, it was then it dawned on me. I was wearing women's pyjamas. The top had been cut in such a way as to cup the breasts, not apparent when you slip them on but spend a night wriggling about in bed and the next morning they have pulled in such a way that they bellow up exactly where they are needed giving me at least the impression of a couple of fun puppies.

As you can see, it puckers nicely to cup delicately across the chest.

I checked the label, FM which I assume stands for female and the closer I looked at them the more I noticed it all looked a bit feminine, even down to, now don't laugh, the delicate bow around the waist. I can see you stifling a laugh, silly old Peter, how could you not know? How indeed, for the last two weeks I have been cavorting around Bunnyopolis at night and even answered the door dressed fruitily in my girly sleepover nightware to sign for a parcel, god knows what everybody thought but then again if I can talk about twenty uses for Shredded Wheat or write a sketch about armchair cowboy doctors then I suppose cross dressing no matter how accidental is probably par for the course. Only yesterday I found myself carefully glueing back together the shell of an egg and making a cream pie (don't laugh again! You lot really do have a one track mind) from plasticine, cotton wool and real jelly, life doesn't get any more exciting than this.

Do I carry on wearing them and put up with the lady lumps or buy a pair of fluffy slippers to go with them?

I don't know, I'll have a think about it after I have removed my makeup and took off my black patent six inch heels which are killing me. Now where are my keys, they must be in my handbag somewhere...

 

Thursday, May 02, 2013

Well I Never!

It's the return of 'Well I Never!' And this weeks question comes from Ms Twiddly Ramsbottom in Oxfordshire who wrote in asking what she can do with a box of Shredded Wheat found at the back of the kitchen cupboard as she has no idea where it came from or indeed what to do with them.

Well Ms Twiddly, fear not, for today we have twenty things to do with surplus Shredded Wheat. You ask, we answer!

1. Replace all the tiles on the roof of your house with shredded wheat for an instant thatched cottage look.

2. Due to their rough texture they make ideal pan scrubbers for baked on food.

3. Two tied around your shins provide protection when playing sport. Pop one down he front of your trousers for extra protection.

4. Or put one in your swimming gear when taking a dip to impress.

5. Nearly forgot, make sure it's in the front of your swimming gear and NOT the back.

6. Don't follow number 4 if you wear a bikini.

7. Strap one to each of a cats paws for a makeshift buoyant set of shoes that allows cats to walk on water.

8. Mini Shreddies attached to wire make attractive earrings and you will always have a snack to hand if you feel peckish.

9. Paint your shereddies green, yellow, blue and red to give yourself an instant set of Sticklebricks. If they fail to stickle dip them in milk first.

10. Place a Shreddie in a bowl cover with orange juice and leave for twenty four hours. Return to your Shreddie now that it has soaked up all the juice and stick a fork in the narrow end making sure it penetrates the Shreddie at least half way. Place your Shreddie fork combo in a freezer and wait for a warm day. Simply remove from the freezer, hold the fork and munch away on a refreshing cooling orange lolly with plenty of roughage. If you drop your Shreddie use the handy included fork to eat it off the floor with no mess.

11. A Shreddie placed in the back of your pants will avoid embarassing flatulance problems by absorbing any smells and muffling any noises. Remember to replace every twenty four hours due to shedding.

12. Crumble six shereddies into a tray to create instant pet litter. Once soiled pour in milk and leave five minutes until it turns into a solid lump that can easily be lifted out and disposed of.

13. Using glue stick one to each heel of your shoes to turn them into Cuban heels and look fashionable.

14. Ladies are your eyebrows too thin? Using two mini shreddies covered in black mascara attach them using nail glue to where your eyebrows should be. Now you will be able to flutter your eyebrows along with your lashes when you do a duck face.

15. Paint a Shreddie white or black and stick a piece of foil to one side. Hold it in one hand and tap it with your other, occasionally swipe your Shreddie to give the impression you have a smart phone or iShred. Hollow out your Shreddie and pop your old phone inside to give a more realistic effect especially when you receive a call.

16. Having trouble shredding your Shreddie? Turn any bike upside down and spin the wheels. Thrust your Shreddie into the spokes as it rotates and voila! You will be amazed, bike wheels make fantastic Shreddie shredding shredders.

17. Own a kindle but want to impress friends with your extensive library? Take a box of shreddies and paint them booky colours like dark reds and greens. Using a gold felt tip write amusing and serious titles on the side and arrange in an empty shoebox.

18. Make a joke 'floater' by covering one in chocolate and leaving it in an unflushed toilet.

19. Use shreddies instead of expensive briquettes for your barbecues.

20. Write a blog about using shreddies in unusual circumstances to avoid painting for as long as you can until you get to number twenty and realise its time to start work.

21. Carry on typing hoping it may go away.

22. Realise that you are delaying the inevitable.

23. Cry.

24. Look out of the window.

25. Make a coffee.

26. Look at painting and panic.

27. Realise you need to finish the blog entry otherwise you will never paint and become destitute finally selling your body for shillings on the town hall steps.

28. Like last Friday when I made fifty pence.

29. Maybe I should have charged a little more.

30. Especially when it included feathers and a donkey.

31. Ahh, just thought of another one.

32. No I haven't, Shreddie based staircases are not funny.

You are sure to find something in there Ms Twiddly, good luck with your Shreddies and don't forget to send us all your Shreddie related pictures.

Goodbye from 'Well I Never!', don't forget to read our companion blog 'Bugger Me!' A week on Tuesday where we will be telling you how to make a fairground ride from surgical trusses.

 

Wednesday, May 01, 2013

Armchair Cowboy

Meet Clint Stetson, the coolest armchair cowboy around these parts as we join him on a typical day.

'Yee-haw! ride em' cowboy!' Clint shouted as he mounted the back of his loyal armchair steed Dusty Cushion. Made from the sturdiest of foam and floral material Dusty had been Clint's faithful steed for many years and seen him through many life threatening situations including Clint's brush with Chief Wig Wam Thank You Mam and his tribe of broom carrying sofa squaws.

'Today Dusty we ride into Dodgem City and round up the on the dodge cattle rustler Bad Benny and get us some of that reward money'

Clint tilted his fifty gallon hat, whipped out his gun and shot out the table lamp then kicked in his spurs and bounced up and down on the stiff cushion until he had built up quite a sweat.

'Nearly there Dusty, look you can see the saloon from here, I can't wait for four fingers of red eye'. If Dusty could look he would have seen through the window the saloon and realised that Clint had rather poor eyesight. 'Curl Up And Dye' was a new beauty salon that had opened up opposite.

'Dang, this is hard work, how about we break camp here for a while Dusty and have some chuck, we need to be alert, this area is full of road agents.' Clint gets down from his stuffed mount and lays out a small striped blanket from his saddlebag. Opening up a tin of beans Clint looks around for a source of firewood, finding little in the arid desert of the room he smashes up his last wooden chair and lights it using some papers on his desk. Smoke billows around the room as the small campfire burns a hole in the floorboards. Clint's beans are soon bubbling away but visibility is getting poor.

'Dang Dusty, that's some damp wood, all this smoke will attract injuns, what we need a good whippety snippet of a wind. I'm going to climb that dang dare hill and see if we've been spotted.' Clambering onto a small occasional table Clint steps boldly onto his desk, with one hand shielding his eyes from the glaring light of the 100 watt bulb he scans the horizon just as the desk collapses under the weight of Clint in full western gear plunging him head first into the waste paper basket.

'Dusty! Dusty! Help! I've fell into a disused gold mine and its that dark I can't see!' Stumbling around the room Clint stubs his toe on the desk. 'Oh no! Dusty! Dusty! I'm a goner, I've been bitten by a rattler!'. Hopping around temporarily blinded and holding his foot Clint stumbles uncontrollably into the wall knocking himself backwards and landing heavily in front of Dusty Cushion. The waste paper basket, now dislodged, rolls away harmlessly.

After several unconscious minutes Clint awakes. 'You did it Dusty! You old faithful steed, I knew I could count on you. Did you find me from my calls and drag me out using your teeth? Good old Dusty.'

Just then a buzzing noise causes Clint to spin around and draw his gun, on instinct he fires a few shots only to find there's nothing there. 'I'm a bit jumpy Dusty, it must be the snake bite'

Bzzzzzzt.

'Doctor, are you ready for your next patient?'

Clint walks over to the desk and presses a button.

'Yes, nurse, just give me a few minutes please then send them in.'

'Ok, Doctor.'

'Dang Dusty, at this rate we will never get to Dogem but I'm not going out without a fight!'

Doctor Stetson tips over his desk to face the door, telling Dusty Cushion to take cover he lines up his ammunition and a few sticks of dynamite to wait for his first patient of the day.

Suddenly an explosion took out most of the door frame, Dr Benny rode in on Black Bessy, his trusty swivel chair on wheels, firing wildly at Dr Stetson. Dusty took a bullet and feathers sprayed into the air. Before Dr Stetson could return fire both their attentions were drawn to the charred door frame from where a 'awawawawawawa' noise was coming from.

Nurse Nightingale stepped out in full Indian gear, took aim with her bow and disarmed both doctors with two quickly fired arrows.

'Right you two, that's enough, no more cowboys and Indians. For god sake you are doctors and should be setting an example. After all it's Wednesday and as you well know it's astronaut day, here's your helmets and suits, this time don't walk so quickly Dr Stetson its unrealistic.'

THE END

Or is it?

I have just read that back to myself and at first glance I fear for my sanity.

 

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

The Wonders Of Electricity

Electricity has been with us for a long time, from the first static sparks created rubbing two sticks together in 60,000BC to today's clean green electricity made from fans spinning to the gusts of flatulent cows. Today we explore electricity of the ancients and uncover the secrets of internal wiring before trumpeting cows were even invented.

Rome and the colosseum, home to the Roman spectacle of donkey shaving, an orgy of creativity as competitors try to out shave their opponents donkey, truly one of the seven wonders of the world. To shave donkeys safely they needed good lighting and that was provided using a triple spur mounted cable shuffler.

These shufflers enable the electricity being created by Nubian slaves on large treadmills to be transported from neighbouring Spain using cable made from reeds and the spit of the humble dung beetle. These cables ran for many miles finally meeting at the colosseum to provide not only lighting but the first ever two point shaving socket. So the next time you plug your shaver in spare a thought for the Romans and the humble donkey, without them you wouldn't know how to shave.

Slightly smaller than our magnificent Blackpool tower the 162ft Eyeful tower was erected in 1635, six years after the one in the northern resort. Originally intended to be the worlds biggest helter skelter a freak accident involving one of the spirals plunged a workman to his death as he sped around the tower at speeds reaching 264mph (that's 8726kmph in old money) until his coconut mat caught fire and his shoes combusted blasting him twenty two miles only to land in a smouldering heap through the window of a bakery in Calais. He declared the ride 'grand' before expiring on a pile of cream horns.

Anyway, this is the massive junction box that powered the tower in 1704. Rumour has it that when the switch was thrown the static burst was so big that Parisians hair stood on end for three months. The junction box was used to power a small electric light at the top of the Eyeful Tower that was visible to aeroplanes, great foresight as aeroplanes were still 200 years into the future.

Possibly the most complex wiring job ever taken on was Stonehenge, or as it used to be known No.6 Salisbury Way, Camelot, England. The first ever domestic two up, two down house that today looks a shambles. Archeologists differ on their opinions of why Stonehenge exists but really the answer is quite simple after scientists deciphered strange markings on the side of one of the stones.

This is the markings, the first ever wiring diagram for a domestic setting, proof indeed that ancient man was way ahead of its time. Electricians have studied this diagram and came to the conclusion that the ancient sparky go his sums wrong and sent a full 20v to the hallway and 240v to the kitchen where a new gas pipe was being laid. The resulting explosion destroyed everything around it for miles leaving only what we see today. A stone slab found in Wales from the explosion had the words 'Shi' etched on it, possibly the last words our ancient electrician ever scratched.

By the miracle of modern science our very own Battersea power station opened in 1902. Powered by a thousand dogs on treadmills trying to catch a dancing bone it remained in full use until 1944 when it was bombed heavily during the war. After WWII it was replaced with a more sustainable cat and ball of wool system although that tended to randomly do what it wanted and occasionally plunged everyone into darkness if anybody left a cardboard box around.

Inside was a simple system to feed our need for electricity, three cables, one for earth that is placed in the ground, on called neutral that was left loose for cats to bat and one live that carried the cat bats energy generated directly to kitchens up and down the country.

Finally the secrets of the Pharaohs, a four point pin socket that reveals that it was not all about Sirius, Nubius, Dubious and Mummies. During excavations of Tutankhamen's chamber they found a curious item resembling scissors. It turned out to be curling tongs and when out together with an unusual shaped gap in the centre of the pyramid it was revealed for the first time that the great pyramid was in fact an ancient beauty salon specialising in the curling of hair.

You can see here that the socket found fits perfectly with all four corners of the pyramid and also helped design the look for Toblerone.

A set of hieroglyphic markings on one of the internal chamber turned out to be a price list with bikini lines costing a jar of asses milk whilst a short back and sides was a whopping bushel of corn. Amazing stuff I'm sure you will agree.

I hope you have enjoyed your travel through time, tomorrow we will discuss Facebook through the centuries and the founding of Twitter in 0BC with the very first tweet 'no @mary I'm not following a bloody star to Bethlehem it's Christmas #leaveittothethreekings'

 

Monday, April 29, 2013

Eats

Cajun Chicken, lettuce, tomato, cucumber and olives drizzled with a little balsamic vinegar sat in a little bowl on my lap. A small toasted naan bread sat to my left wrapped up in kitchen roll awaiting my attention. It was to be a simple meal shared only by myself sat in the car yesterday at Jaynes Foreverbunny event in Bakewell, Derbyshire, the sun was shining and the birds singing. Nice.

I chose to sit in the car not wanting to display my less than skilful eating habits when using a small plastic bowl. You see I tend to get things down me or drop items of food mysteriously into odd places only to find them many days later, indeed only that morning I had found a small hardened pea in my left trouser pocket and couldn't for the life of me think where the pea had come from and how it had managed to secretively wriggle into its location so as you can imagine the last thing I wanted was an errant olive rolling away causing some kindly person to skid uncontrollably into the fudge stall. The worst, worst food you can give me is mini tomatoes that are whole, they really are the devils food to eat. One simple prang from my fork and you can guarantee they will send a festival of syrupy seed filled pulp in my direction and up my nose, I'm not even very good with ones cut in half and in quarters I find them too fiddly, there really is no winning with them at all.

Anyway, I sat in the car idly toying with an unexploded tomato, both passenger and driver windows down allowing a nice cool zephir to waft over me when on my left I noticed a blue car reversing haphazardly, it stopped level with my car, obviously ready to swing in to the disabled bay behind mine.

'Move over there!' Said the driver, half hanging out of his window. The driver, a gentleman of advancing years was yelling to his wife or partner who was sat in a motability scooter completely blocking the disabled bay he was trying to get in to.

'Move yer silly cow!' He said affectionately I like to think but the look on his face led me to believe otherwise.

The old lady looked around in bewilderment then as the penny dropped decided to move.

Now, let me clarify something here, I was in a normal parking bay, behind me was two disabled bays, slightly larger, both unoccupied and at 90 degrees to my car so really the unobstructed bay should have presented no problems whatsoever.

I certainly didn't expect her to do a one hundred and thirty two point turn and glide effortlessly into the back of my car. It was only a slight thud from the padded chair but how on earth she managed to do it in a good eighteen feet square area devoid of other obstacles is beyond me. A point that was noted by her partner.

'You silly cow, watch what your doing!' He offered as encouragement.

By now she had found the forward button and trundled away in a wide arc that bought her parallel with my car so effectively we were side by side only she was a little further back.

Mr Potty Mouth started to reverse, only he too wasn't very good at it and required a bay the size of a football pitch, something I realised as he hurtled back at an alarming rate only to stop short of smearing his partner, mobility scooter and a small dog up the side of my car. At the time I was eating a bit of chicken, I stopped, half of it hanging out of my mouth waiting for the bump. Fortunately it never came but I did notice several passersby look away in disgust at me as the bit of chicken dropped from my still open mouth, I must have looked a right hick. I read their thoughts 'OMG that's disgusting, quick look away children he's so common.'

By now he had moved forward a little and was shouting more instructions telling his partner on exactly where to move to as it was putting him off reversing, or as he put it 'Shift it, get right out of the way for goodness sake'

I chose to ignore the drama but I had started the engine, you know, just I case I had to shift quite rapidly. Gradually he lined up for his final move. Picking up the naan bread I watched with interest as he edged his way in barely a foot from my car still wondering why he was hugging this side of the wide space whe I noticed a head slowly moving towards my open passenger window. Not any head but his partners head, she had gracefully moved only to softly stop parallel with my passenger window so effectively she looked like she was sitting next to me.

'Looks nice' she said, pointing to my salad.

There are times that you just get put off things isn't there, this was one of them, I didn't want to carry on with an audience but here I was talking to the disembodied head of a random stranger that had just pranged my car with a mobility seat. What do you say?

'Yes it is' I politely replied whilst I curled up inside.

With car parked Mr Potty Mouth exited the car which seemed to excite my disembodied head.

'Don't call me a cow again!' She shouted, really,really loud, not at him but rather through my two open windows and across me so he heard it, because of course she couldn't shout over the car could she. The waft of garlic and Youth Dew perfume did nothing to help my appetite and filled the car with a sickly smell that clung to the very fabric of the car itself. Before I could slam the windows up she had trundled away weaving side to side and generally clipping anything and everything that moved.

See, even a quiet warm afternoon can suddenly become quite weird, for many years I considered a theory that I have some kind of built in magnet that attracts this type of thing but now I just take it for granted that as soon as I step out of the door I'm going to have an adventure wether I like it or not.

It didn't end there. Later that day when we were packing up I returned to the car with a bevy of boxes and loaded them in. The car park was empty, only our car remained. Great! Just one more trip and we are done, three minutes later, struggling with a trolley full and balancing a chair on one arm I was amazed to see that a large people carrier had parked next to us and left precisely six inches in which for me to get in. Great, just bloody great, a hundred and six spaces with a hundred and five empty and you decide to park next to me, not only that you give me a gap the size of a gnats chuff in which to squeeze through to get in.

I ended up clambering through the passenger side so I could move the car, which looked incredibly silly in an empty car park, you really couldnt write it could you. I was half tempted to leave a note along the lines of 'Thank you for being so thoughtful and protecting the right side of my car from damage with your skilful parking. I would have loved to have offered you the same service but after trying unsuccessfully to squeeze so close and better your six inches gap I only managed to scrape a little of your paint off. I'm sure that it will buff out along with the few dents I left. Have a nice day and stay lucky! A.Sole'

Anybody fancy some half eaten Cajun chicken? It smells a little of garlic but its good eats!

 

Friday, April 26, 2013

Nosmo King

Being a gorilla you wouldn't have thought I would have to put up with this rubbish. Only today I opened Bananas Weekly, the magazine for discerning banana collectors only to have six leaflets drop out on to my hairy lap. It drives me bananas, I already get enough crap through the bars of my cage, last week I had three takeaway menus, one offering cleaning services, two charity bags and an Avon brochure, although that did come in handy and the lipstick I have bought looks stunning.

As the leaflets dropped I reflected on my life, here I am in my mid forties and already advertising is tormenting me to consider a future chipping in for my funeral arrangements at 14p a day, fashion essentials up to sizes 34 that don't take into account how gorillas walk and 2p electronic tickets so I can play Bingo with my laptop sat in a tree. Really, is that all there is to look forward to? No, hang on, there's two more leaflets, 'Shower and bathe in comfort and safety again', I didn't even realise it had got dangerous and no, I do not want to buy a charm bracelet strictly limited to 4,995 worldwide that comes in 27 parts at £24.99 a month for four months no matter how luxurious or radiant it is.

I noticed the new classifieds section at the back of Bananas Weekly has been hijacked too. 'Remove facial hair instantly', bitch, please! 'Win this luxury riser recliner', I'm sure it works perfectly well and gives aid to those that need it but the damn thing looks a little too lethal to me and I'd imagine I'd get my coconuts trapped in the gaps as it started to tip. Half price cotton sandals that are apparently 'rugged' its a wonder they didn't add all terrain but they are described as 'a treat'.

See if you can guess what uses these descriptions, 'you can upgrade', 'converts in seconds', '40% more powerful' and finally 'fast and manoeuvrable', I nearly fell out of my tree, it sounded awesome, as I wrote out my cheque using my Parker pen and squinting through my reading glasses I realised with some degree of disappointment it was in fact a 2 in 1 vacuum cleaner and not a sports car.

Putting down my magazine I notice the hyenas are laughing for some reason. I swung over to see what was so funny only to find this unamusing sign.

Really, life just gets worse doesn't it. Not content with bombarding me with rubbish now they want to tell me what to do. Well, bitch, please! I do what I want.

Stick that in your pipe and smoke it.

 

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Aisle D Seat 34

Kia-Ora. One word and I bet many of you are not thinking ah, a maori greeting but thinking more Pearl and Dean. I'm talking cinema going, a treat that has become awesomely boring and corporate but roll back the years to the sixties, seventies and eighties and you were in for a treat. Massive cinemas, one screen, a heightened sense of doing something special way before the convenience of video recording.

I remember going to see Star Wars for the first time, it was around Easter and the queues for the one screen cinema, yes, one screen, stretched around the corner and away for several miles. We had to wait for a comlplete showing before we shuffled forward only to be stopped at the door again because they were full. Awesome, four and a half hours later we managed to get in and ended up in a full to capacity auditorium with and extremely large screen that you had to look left then right to take it all in. You litarally fell in the death star trench at the end, it was thrilling! Cinema experiences were all about that, the big, big screen.

I returned to the cinema many years after it had fell on hard times and had been split into three or four screens. Yes you had more choice but gone was the sweeping staircases, the strangely lit corridors and the open ticket office, in was small pokey rooms for around a hundred people watching screens that would only appear large if you sat two foot away. The magic had disappeared and remains missing until this very day.

Anyway, what really made it all the more interesting was everything.

For a start you had the usherettes, not some new funky band of wannabes but a collection of rather stern faced individuals who would make ideal henchmen for a James Bond villain given the task of showing you to your seats using a small feeble torch. Worse though were the usher given the task of walking down to the front during intermission carrying a less than appetising tray of tubs of ice cream with little wooden spatulas, the said Kia-Ora, which always came in a filmsy plastic oblong carton in which you were given the task of puncturing the lid in the dark using a sharp plastic straw. Invariably as soon as it pierced the lid the carton collapsed in on itself and you turned into an orange fountain squirting juice right up to the upper circle.

Did I say upper circle? Yes, I did. In those days they allowed you to sit upstairs overlooking other cinema goers and giving you a distinct sense of unease not to mention an ideal opportunity to casually knock something off the edge. There was no real barrier between you and a fall of fifty feet so many could be found popping to the toilet only to fall and land somewhere in rows C and E causing the attending usherettes to check your ticket and escort you out for being in the wrong seat. You were lucky sometimes as occasionally one wrong move from upstairs could cause what we called edible rain as upturned popcorn cones discarded their contents over the edge, yum!

The upper circle was sealed off every Saturday morning as a precaution. Saturday mornings was kids club, a notoriously riotous collection of children crammed in little seats armed with squirty Kia-Ora and assorted bags of Revels to act as weapons as soon as the lights went down. We were supposed to watch the films from The Children's Film Foundation but invariably children without the supervision of adults were never really going to sit still and the ushers usually gave up taking children back to their seats and preferred to lock us in and clean up afterwards. I did manage to see some fantastic stuff though through the mayhem. It introduced me not only to places around the world but also the genius of Buster Keaton, Harold Lloyd, Laurel and Hardy and many, many more.

We also had a straightforward classification system of U, A, AA and the notorious X. U was suitable for all, A was suggested it was not for under fourteens but you could bring a child aged five and above in with you, AA was fourteen and above only and X was eighteen. Getting in to see an X film required ingenuity and a duffel coat with a large hood, either that or a friend who opened the fire door for you. Classification today has pandered to the film industry with seven standards and two non standards. Mighty confusing to choose between U, PG, 12, 12A, 15, 18, R18 and PG12 and E, bring back the X, it sounds more daring and sexy. I mean who wants to brag about seeing a R18, that's a bus number not a passage to adulthood.

In the end the humble video recorder helped to signal the demise of the cinema, no longer would you have to share in a social experience and worry if the seat in front of you will be filled by a three foot afro wearing popcorn eater, no longer would you have to endure that horrid man and his wife that insisted on bringing crisps and egg sandwiches along with them, no, now you could sit in your underpants and socks and watch in the comfort of your own home. The choice was simple.

Our cinema tried to fight back with marathon film sessions. All three Star Wars or Superman I, II and III back to back. It made for grim viewing. Most of the time people only popped in for one film, if you did stay for all three the cinema gradually began to smell a little ripe after seven hours in a sweaty dark room, endless popcorn fails to sustain life for long and always, always was there some unsavoury noises coming from the dark and dank back row.

It closed and became a snooker hall a fate most cinemas shared.

My last trip to a cinema was about two years ago, it was small, cold, empty, played endless adverts and had the choice of upgrading to a comfy chair rather than the stone seat they normally provide. It was a soulless and expensive experience to watch an average film in 3D. Gone was the social aspect, in was the cattle in, cattle out. At any one time you could choose between eight films at multiple times so queues were very thin on the ground just like the excitement. The thrill was now condensed into the advertising budget rather than the experience, slick well edited trailers help to get bums on seats and very rarely do films today command audiences like Star Wars, ET and the like.

You may laugh but queuing, the most basic part of cinema going all those years ago, enhanced your experience, the thrill of getting through those doors to see something exciting like Raiders Of The Lost Ark or thrillers like Jaws made you so excited you felt sick. You went to experience not just watch. The instant gratification of using services like Netflix combined with woeful cinemas have taken the anticipation out of it all so never again will children today experience the same kind of thrill we shared when visiting the cinema.

I was going to carry on writing about this but the radio is on in the background and I have just heard the DJ spout stupid. He has asked listeners to pander to his ego and phone up and tell him what they are doing.

'I'm sat in the conservatory revising' said Donna from Hull he chirped.

'That's awesome!' He replied

What's so bloody awesome about that? You have serious awesome issues if you think sitting alone in a glass room around 8:30pm mooching through a book listening to the radio is awesome.

Next caller gets through 'I'm washing my hair and going out wi mi mates' to which he replies 'I hope you are going to smash it tonight with some random fella, are you gonna smash a man?'

What? So let me get this right, by using the line 'to smash' you have just asked live on air if they are going to have sex tonight with a random stranger.

Which brings me rather quickly around to slang. Everyday I hear the lyrics of songs, things that radio presenters say and snippets of editorials and news reports that fail to spot the nature of certain words. In the charts at the moment are three songs that talk about having a threesome, five that instructs listeners to forget their partners and just go for it and forget the consequences for one night, one that deals with oral sex and one that advocates prostitution all disguised using street slang and are played uncensored yet one song which has the words 'Britney Bitch' in it has been edited to just say Britney Britney just in case the word bitch offends. The BBC went one better when it compiled a report outlining the accessibility of hard core porn sites for children through search engines then went on to list a few of their names, you know, just in case children didn't know what to type in to google to find them.

Sigh.

I'm off to play with my rainbows and ponies whilst I smash something, you will find me in the cupboard beneath the stairs with a feeble torch, a battered cinema seat and a 8mm projector trying to get the innocent magic back for everyone but deep down I know it will never be found no matter how hard I look.

 

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Roast Bees


Holes, lots and lots of holes appearing in my clothes, where do they come from I do not know but my pyjama bottoms have over the course of the last four weeks acquired eighteen of them. Moths you would expect to be the culprit but after using cedar wood repellant and even hiding the pyjama bottoms when I'm not wearing them the holes keep on coming.

It's not unusual either, before this pair it was the turn of my pyjama tops, especially the left side to be holed but I finally think I have a link.

Bees, bluebottles, wasps and anything mosquito like, oh, and ants. That is a rough list of insects that like my flesh. I must be some kind of weird insect magnet because if I'm in the garden on a warm day and a bee decides to idly fly by it suddenly veers at me and crashes in to my head, wasps do the same, even butterfly's have been known to give me aggro on warm days. Then there's the bites, if I go out with an inch of flesh exposed in early mornings or god forbid at sunset when the midges and flying miniature biting creatures are around I get bit and when I get bit I really do get bit as the bites swell up to marble sized lumps.

So I can only assume that my body has some kind of insect attractant built into it much like some people have a mosquito repellent, either that or I'm very tasty indeed and the human equivelent of a wafer thin mint.

Only last year during a walk I brushed passed a tree on a woodland path wearing only a t-shirt. I looked down and shrieked, attached to my arm was a bloodsucking leech like creature drunk on my blood. I only found that out when in my panic I hit it and instead of removing itself gracefully it decided to explode and cover me in gore. Walking along in hiking boots with a rucksack and half a pint of blood sprayed up the side of my head and on my clothes caused passersby to faint and dogs to run away yelping. Insects and me don't really get on you see so the onset of warm weather is the start of my battles.

Back to the pyjamas. I suppose my insect attracting scent rubs off on clothing and thus causes bitey things to munch away when I'm not looking but here's the unusual thing, it only occurs on the left side of all the garments and always on the back, weird isn't it? so in the interest of science I'm going to try a little experiment, I'm going to cut my pyjamas in half and leave them outside the studio on a warm day and monitor how many bees, wasps and other inerrant insects dive bomb them and really see if left really is lush for the little darlings.

I'll keep you posted, but if my pyjamas really do attract them you can be assured they will be available on my online store as Pyjamaroma, a simple aromatic device containing a two inch square of fabric, simply place anywhere to attract a plethora of insects to your garden or pop it in people's pockets and watch them get mercilessly dive bombed by bluebottles the list is endless. Only £1.99 from all major outlets.

 

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Big Benned

I have just spent two days absolutely brain dead, no ideas, no creative thoughts whatsoever that it started to get more than a little worrying. Eventually I came to the conclusion that the last six months workload had contributed to the moment along with my last Lost Impossimal painting, Big Ben.

It was a tall order, make Big Ben from cardboard, place it in a scene with an Impossimal and paint it in the traditional style of the turn of the century 1900. Boy, did it take some doing.

First the construction of Big Ben. I had no detailed scale to work to so employed my old architect skills and used measurements from photographs to come up with a rough proportion shape which I fashioned out of an old cardboard box for rigidity. You can see the construction lines above. This was then placed in my scene and I started work on the plasticine Impossimal that was going to feature in it. The whole process took three days to model, adjust, strengthen when it collapsed, model again and finally photograph ready for the next process, transferring all that work onto a prepared board for painting.

I'd like to say it was painless but actually it was far from it. The angle I wished to work at used multiple vanishing points, all of which had to be adjusted to account for the inaccuracy of my model, further more my Impossimal had real hands so using photographs of my own these had to be worked in to grip on to Big Ben in the right places.

Getting the brickwork looking Big Ben'ish was cruicial, this was the first stage of a nine day painting process on the clock that took into account all the detail before I painted over the top of it in places with my Lost Impossimal. Every aspect was checked and the painting turned upside down occasionally to look for errors.

Eventually I made it to the clock face and decoration, another days work using a mapping system I learned many years ago when surveying a road network.

It paid dividends, here's the first face halfway through the detailing, already it's looking rather accurate.

Four weeks from start to finish, joining nine others raring to go. Only they will have to wait a while longer. Two more to paint over the next two months then I start on tying up all the links between the items in the paintings and rewriting the stories accordingly. Then and only then will I start to build the final document that will form Bloodline, a story of household items, a surprising chain of historical events, nostalgia, horror and ultimately murder. I can't wait!

 

Monday, April 22, 2013

Roll Up, Roll Up

In times of need there are changes indeed, roll up, roll up and witness the first ever farm and fairground hybrid in the country. Destined to be a 'must see' money saving attraction. Why go to the fair, why go to the farm when you can do both at the travelling Funfarmfair.

Love pigs? Then try our coconut sty and send your nuts flying. Simply load your pigs tail with a wooden ball, guide it into position using a wooden board and walking stick then fire! Kapow! In no time at all you will be a pigapult specialist and also have a lovely new pink friend to play with. Prizes include a years free manure, all the pork scratchings you can eat or our special prize of a chance to muck out Matilda, our twenty six ton Gloucestershire Old Spot using only a dining fork.

Prepared to be scared to death with our spooky Goats Train! Witness goat-ly surprises around every corner as your muck cart trundles around our makeshift barn. Cower I fear as Count Dracugoat swoops from above, cover your ears as you approach the bleating of the Goatshees, be physically sick as Frankengoat sprays you with fresh milk, devours everything in sight and poops small marbles that smell of pure evil. Survive all that and you get to see a real poltergoat in action, you never know where the next bleat will come from. Left or right? Or just maybe YOU will be the one that's bleating to get out alive.

On the Goat Train nobody can hear you bleat.

N.B. The Goat Train is manned by real goats, keep all your hands and limbs inside the muck cart at all times unless you want to lose them. Also hold on to any bags containing food, hats, scarves, gloves, watches, small children etc as our spooky goats get very, very hungry indeed.

Say flook to hook a duck and hi to Hook a Hen its 21st Century replacement. A hundred hens are bobbing around in small boats in a water filled feeding trough. All you have to do is hook their boat using our magnetic hooks and reel them safely in. If you find that the hen has an egg then you get to keep it! How cool is that, real hens, real eggs, real fun. It doesn't get more 'hens on' than this, play more than once to win more and you could go home with an omelette!

Forget mirrors, the Hall of Moos is far superior. Inside we have a selection of cows waiting, simply walk down the line until a cow moos. Stop at that cow and read its name for hilarious results. Are you a Fat Cow? Or maybe a Skinny Cow?, did the Ugly Cow moo at YOU? Such fun. Take along the wife, the mother in-law or any of a multitude of people you wish to be appraised. New for 2013 the Irritating Cow and Loud Cow.

N.B. We do offer a mother in-law special service where for an additional £5 you tell us which cow should moo and we'll do the rest.

Lambs love to run around haphazardly, leaping about like little springs. Now you can enjoy in their gambolling too by using our foam rings and gently trying to hoop a lamb. A simple game that will leave you entranced and delighted all at the same time and put you in the right frame of mind for our next attraction.

Real unwashed wool, dyed pink and dipped in sugar. It's the food that keeps on giving, one stick of candy wool will last forever, well, it seems like forever as you suck away all the sweetness inside. Once done you are left with a pile of fresh wool that you can use to knit yourself a nice jumper. Our gift to you.

We do hope you visit soon, for you information here's where we will be over the next few weeks :

28 April - Old McDonalds Farm, Eieio, Andonthatfarm, Hehadapig. EIE IO. tel. 5318008

 

Friday, April 19, 2013

A Spoonful of Invention

Take the humble spoon, a simple item masking a whole world of coolness that you never realised existed. Forget chucking away those plastic spoons, horde them and in turn you will have a treasure chest of useful and entertaining objects. Come with me and enter the world of Spoonventions, parts of the Forkatry skill set we discussed yesterday.

Problems with ninjas? Fear no more with this spuriken, a lethal throwing weapon known only to Dojen Hiyah Kung Po masters. Simply strap together four spoons as shown and carefully sharpen the edges using a potato peeler. Throw at any hiding ninjas for ninja free zone. in fact they are so good since I made mine I have been completely ninja free.

If you prefer a more hands on approach then become Wolverine instantly. No catch, you really can pretend to be Wolverine with this.

Place small blobs of glue onto your fingers and place in the bowls of five spoons like above. When you lift you will have instant extendable claws, try slashing toilet paper to see the impressive shredding action then blame the results on a passing cat. To retract your claws simply make a fist and the will miraculously vanish, open you hand quickly to extend.

N.B. remove before using the toilet to avoid nasty accidents.

Want to play a game? No problem, simply get a pack of cards and copy the symbols and numbers onto fifty two spoons for your own easy grip playing card spoons. As they fit comfortably together they will travel in your back pocket effortlessly rendering traditional card packs useless. Impress friends and strangers alike as you play snap, poker, Klondike and many more games using your stylish pack. Decorate on the reverse for extra wow factor.

If you have kids then feeding time can be a nightmare. Trying to hit the cake hole whilst they move their head like they are possessed has always been a problem but if you fasten three spoons together then you have increased your chances of filling their pie chute instantly. Also useful for eating yoghurt really fast.

Still having trouble feeding the little dears? Then you need an Aerospoon, the latest in airborne food delivery. To save having to make engine noises and swooping with your hand to deliver your payload simply stand the other side of the room, load it up and throw it towards a child. Their surprise will cause their mouth to open wide and the plane will land safely after gliding gracefully into their open mouth. Tie a piece of thread to the tail fin and you don't even have to go and retrieve it, just a small tug and it returns effortlessly.

Still having trouble feeding? Then amuse them into submission with this animated toy rabbit. Skilful use of the ear spoons will enable the bunny to look and listen.

Here bunny has heard a noise. What is it you ask?

It's the cast of Top Gear made entirely from spoons, how cool is that! Play with Jeremy, Stig and Hammond as they miraculously appear in 3D. Review cars, go on road trips, meet celebs, crash cars all whilst filming your own special Top Gear show.

N.B. Voices, cars, celebs not supplied but can be easily made following our advanced origami with toilet paper course.

Want to make some extra money this weekend? Get a stall at a craft show and sell Spoollery, jewellery made from spoons! You will be quids in and a millionaire by this time next week.

Finally the ultimate spoon hack. Need to eat your Chinese meal in a hurry? Simply snap off the spoon bowls and discard to be left with...chopsticks! Who'd have thought it possible, I'm never going to eat the same again.

Spoonventions part of the Culinariology Forketry Society of Great Britain, founded in 1482 sometime around tea time.