Blame it on the weatherman…. August 18, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in News, TV, Web.Tags: bbc, flicking off, flipping the bird, giving the finger, TV, weather, weatherman
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Watch a BBC weatherman caught giving colleagues the finger before deftly playing it off. Me thinks he’ll be relegated to 3am regional news from now on.
Mini-snakes on a plane July 6, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in News, Thoughts, Travel, Web.Tags: Thoughts, bbc, news, Travel, maggots, maggots on a plane, plane, air travel, flight, Atlanta, US Airways, spoiled meat
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OK, I know I said no posts for a fortnight but this news nugget was too quote-stuffed and vacation-topical to resist. A US Airways flight was forced to return to Atlanta airport after maggots started dripping from an overhead luggage locker. The cause: spoiled meat. No liquid containers greater than 150ml but rotting flesh, have a nice flight. Nobody tell Ryanair or next time you fly to an airport in a different time zone from your desired destination, you’ll have to opt out of the ‘maggot charge’. Notwithstanding the ridiculousness of this cargo passing security unchallenged, the passenger quotes were priceless:
“felt like they were crawling all over me because it only takes one maggot to upset your world”.
“I see a maggot looking back at me and I’m thinking, ‘These are anaerobic, flesh-eating larvae that the flight attendants don’t have to sit with.’”
Perhaps I’ll try to smuggle my inevitable hooker-bride back from Vegas in my checked baggage.
This sh*t is bananas, b-a-n-a-n-a-s June 24, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in News, Thoughts, Web.Tags: animal attack, attack, evil chimpanzee, killer whale attack, macaque, Metro, monkey, monkey attack, Monkey Island
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Similarly ludicrous to the “killer killer whale” story of a couple months ago, last week the Metro offered another animal attack gem. Attempting to conquer her lifelong pomfretphobia (fear of primates), Dee Darwell visited Monkey Island (no, not the point-and-click PC puzzle game of the 90s) off the coast of Phuket.
Again I would like to caveat this post with the disclaimer that I don’t condone or find unprovoked monkey ambushes amusing. However the resultant quotes are hilarious. The full story is available on the Metro website but for your reading pleasure I’ve listed a few choice excerpts below.
She had a fear of primates after her father brought up a ‘positively evil’ chimpanzee. Surely some explanation is necessary as to why her father owned a chimpanzee. Child from a failed first marriage? Michael Jackson fan? Furthermore how did he successfully instil the evil? À la Chris’s evil monkey from Family Guy.
‘The next thing I noticed, this monkey walked up next to me and I thought, “Oh dear”. Imagine a knee-high macaque swaggering toward Dee like a drunken hoody and the exclamation of such an emotive epiphany as she realised the monkey’s intentions were not pure.
‘There was one man, a tourist, and when he saw the monkey bite me, he screamed and ran off’. Unless the onlooker had watched Outbreak (atrocious movie recently released in Thailand) the night before, I put it to you that that man was a coward.
Tour leader Yongyut Buasod said: ‘We can’t control the monkeys if they decide to bite someone.’ Classic denial of liability.
The curse of the Nike ad June 22, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in News, Sport, Thoughts, Web.Tags: ad, advertisment, Cannavaro, Drogba, Federer, football, Homer Simpson, Kobe Bryant, Madden curse, Nike, Nike ad, Nike curse, Ribery, Ronaldhino, Ronaldo, Rooney, TV, Wayne Rooney, world cup, world cup 2010
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Token African striker (OK, Drogba) beats numerous defenders before chipping the keeper only to be denied glory by a goal-line overhead kick from Canelloni (sorry Cannavaro). Insert Italian celebratory song and dancing girls. Rooney chests down the clearance before playing a sloppy intercepted pass. Insert failure montage culminating with a bearded Wayne exiled to a caravan. Inspired by this dystopic future, Rooney chases down Ribéry and slide tackles. Insert alternative success montage – Rooney is knighted, Britain’s crippled stock market recovers, newborns are named Wayne en masse and Federer is defeated at ping pong. Brazil’s Ronaldinho dazzles with some fancy footwork to swing in a cross. Insert worldwide dissemination of his step-over move including replication by Kobe Bryant. Finally enter golden boy Ronaldo, accompanied by an autobiographical movie, Homer Simpson and a 3-storey blinged statue.
Despite an impressive plethora of sportstars, the Nike World Cup ad is fatally flawed in several respects. Kobe Bryant is best known this side of the Atlantic for a sexual assault case that was later dropped. Similarly Ribéry, embroiled in an underage prostitution investigation, was banned from the Champions League Final. Ronaldinho, fancy footwork or not, was considered too old to be selected for this year’s Brazil squad. Football faux pas indeed but nothing in comparison to the stars’ underperformance in the World Cup to date. At the time of writing (20/6/10) Drogba, Rooney, Ribéry and Ronaldo have played woefully in the opening games and Cannavaro has just handed New Zealand a(n arguably offside) tap-in. Even Federer struggled in his opening Wimbledon game against relative unknown, Alejandro Falla.
The Nike curse is well-documented. Previous ads featured Eric Cantona, subsequently dropped, and Dennis Bergkamp, before uncharacteristically Holland failed to qualify. Only the Madden Curse, where American football players appearing on the videogame box art suffer a degradation in performance, is comparable in terms of expense and embarrassment. To quote the commercial’s only character not cursed… D’oh.
Africa loses weight June 15, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in News, TV.Tags: America, blunder, error, media, news report, south africa, south america, US, world cup, world cup 2010
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Tram sham June 11, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in Edinburgh, News, Thoughts.Tags: buses, Edinburgh, edinburgh council, Edinburgh tram referendum, edinburgh trams, public transport, Scotland, Scottish Government, tram referendum, trams
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Public Transport 101….
Q1) Assuming the role of transport department chief for a UNESCO world heritage city, how would you make public transport more efficient and accessible?
a) Break the local bus operator’s monopoly, allowing new entrants to offer wider route coverage and cheaper fares reflective of petrol prices and inflation (aside: an increase from 80p to £1.20 in 5 years is only representative for Zimbabwe).
b) Re-introduce a tram network (budget = £500m+).
c) Introduce a monorail (budget = probably less than £500m).
For the avoidance of doubt, the correct answer is a). Although inexplicably Edinburgh Council transport department opted for b). You may remember these clowns from past traffic tragedies such as the failed enforcement of a road toll or the installation of pop-up bollards on George Street removed after a few weeks. Similarly, nobody asked for or wants the trams – has anyone stood waiting for a bus thought “I wish there were buses that could only go forwards and backwards”?
Retailers lose trade as footfall and traffic are diverted from their shopfronts. Motorists, armed with increasingly confused satnavs, navigate ever-changing road layouts. Residents face embarrassment as ugly roadworks scar the once beautiful cobbled streets, and blackouts as power cables are accidentally cut.
To date more than £350m has been spent … representing two-thirds of the original budget. Putting that into perspective, South Korea spent only £275m on a failed rocket launch recently and rockets are far cooler than trams. The project is estimated at only 18% completion, much less than the planned 86% for this juncture. Applying simple maths, the cost could potentially balloon to almost £2billion! Perfect timing as the country recovers from recession and the new coalition Government proposes stringent public spending cuts. And the project now won’t complete until earliest 2013, a year later than planned. After the Scottish Parliament fiasco, you’d have thought the Council would have learnt their lesson and stopped trying to build things.
Could the situation get any worse? Blinkered bureaucracy abound, of course it can. The Council has recently initiated proceedings to remove German construction giant, main contractor and scapegoat, Bilfinger Berger, from the project potentially triggering a lengthy and costly court battle. Such a dispute could delay the scheme by a further few years and the Council would inevitably lose, having lost the majority of independent adjudications conducted to date.
Given the above farce, it’s no great surprise the critics are wading in. Deputy council leader Steve Cardownie (SNP) is set to demand a referendum on whether to scrap the tram project. Not a bad call if the cost of reversing the 18% is less than the cost to enact the 72%. A better remedy may be to tie the misguided members of the original tram think-tank to the tracks on Princes Street and re-open the stretch to embittered taxi and bus drivers.
€conomic warfar€ May 28, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in Business, News, Thoughts.Tags: bailout, CamClegg, Deutsche Mark, economic warfare, Euro, Eurozone bailout, financial aid, Germany, Gordon Brown, Greece, invasion, Ireland, Italy, Portugal, recession, rescue, Spain, two-tier Euro, UK, UK recession
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Despite the considerable Eurozone bailout (see the Gr€€k trag€dy posting earlier this month) the abattoir approaches for the PIIGS (insultingly catchy market acronym for Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain). The Club-Med countries passionately lived beyond their means, enjoying the sunshine rather than making hay as the saying advises. Having generously contributed €22billion to the initial Greek rescue, German citizens have now stumped up the majority of a secondary, more substantial €750billion effort to save the currency.
Unsurprisingly market speculation suggests Germany may leverage such generosity to establish a two-tier Euro or devolve to the Deutshe Mark. Realisation of the former would likely involve Germany accompanied by parsimonious partners Finland, the Netherlands and Luxembourg breaking out the top to establish a super-€ leaving PIIGS to wallow in their junk-€ squalor. Although the latter option appears farfetched, rumours abound that Germany has started reprinting the currency replaced by the Euro in 2002.
From a superficial, selfish stance a two-tier or devalued Euro sounds ideal. Travelling to desirable, sunny European locations would be as cheap as Africa or Asia. However such degradation or disintegration would inevitably deepen the financial crises facing Europe’s southern fringe and repress intra-union trading. Despite opting out of the accursed currency, the UK could be double-dipped back into recession, heavily reliant on Europe for 50% of trade.
Although apparently consolidating, Germany could be financially retrenching and preparing for a modern-day invasion. One fought through exchange and interest rates, protectionism and crossborder takeovers. For example, imagine how many Germans would purchase holiday homes (complete with toweled sunloungers) in the distressed zone with their new super-currency.
One last point worthy of note. As the UK basks in the post-coital glow of CamClegg’s coalition, Gordon Brown remains a logical scapegoat. But who ruled out Euro membership in 2007, thus preventing our forced involvement in the current fiasco? Exactly.
Beyond cartoon felattio May 21, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in Advertising, Art, News, Sport.Tags: Aaron Robinson, Anish Kapoor, avant-garde, logo, london, london 2012, London 2012 logo, London 2012 mascot, London 2012 Olympics, London 2012 Tower, mandeville, mascot, Olympics, wenlock
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What costs a paltry £400,000 and resembles Lisa Simpson performing a sex act? The London 2012 logo. The graffiti-inspired design received considerable criticism in 2007, further exacerbated by a promotional web animation which triggered seizures. Organisers defended the controversial graphic, citing the inherent flexibility afforded to sponsors by the various colour options. Although initially sceptical, having seen the logo applied to marketing campaigns of the official partners (Lloyds et al) I’d be inclined to agree.
Stage 2 of the marketing roll-out is no less important. The official mascot(s). London 2012 is expecting to raise ~£70m from lunchboxes, fridge magnets and other crap merchandise emblazoned with the character(s). Given the logo fiasco, a safe cuddly animal approach would be understandable. Nope. Continuing the risky, avant-garde design policy of the logo and Anish Kapoor’s £19m rollercoaster tower, the organisers have instead opted for Wenlock and Mandeville, two drops of steel from the construction of Stratford’s Olympic Stadium. An admirable gamble although I think Dodgee the Olympic Hoodie (below) would be a more fitting representative for modern-day Landan.
52, 69, hot, hot, HOT May 11, 2010
Posted by jasoncondie in Advertising, News, Sport.Tags: american football, bra, football, girls, hunky dory, hunky dory ad, hunky dory crisps, lingerie, lingerie football league, panties, sport
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American football is grossly misunderstood by the empire. Dismissed as too stop-start, chatty, time-consuming and padded in comparison to football and rugby, the UK simply doesn’t have the patience or weather. However (predominantly male) opinions will likely be changed following the announcement of the Lingerie Football League. Literally as awesome as it sounds. Seven-a-side American football played by cheerleaders, dancers and probably strippers wearing minimal body armour, bras and panties.
Renders the cheerleaders superfluous, but frankly who cares. Unless the organisers (misguidedly) gender reverse the pompom-weilders too. Nobody wants to see a spirited pyramid of Chippendales. I propose the underwear approach should be applied to other U.S. male-dominated sports. Picture ice hockey rough-housing. Check out the gratuitously voluminous photo gallery by clicking here.
Our Irish neighbours also appear to have jumped on the scantily-clad sports bandwagon – check out the controversial ad campaign for Hunky Dory crisps.












