20041127

animé nostalgique

Once in a while something will trigger some long forgotten memory of times passed. For me this is typically some TV series that most other people have lost any recollection of. One such example is Robostory. Ring a bell? Probably not...it was a animated series from France that was shown on CITV in what I'm guessing was the late 80s, although I can't be sure. The basic premise was that a girl and her dog ended up in a rocket which blasted off while they were in it, and ended up crash landing on another planet populated by a rather odd collection of robots. Still no memory of it? Well let me try this one on you...there was one white robot who was forever being told "You are the lowest of the low!" (see pic)



If you still don't remember it, you probably didn't see it, but for those who do have some vague recollection of it, you may, like me, want to track down more about. Alas there seems to be a paltry amount around. There are a handful of screengrabs, and some irritatingly broken links to a site that once houses a full episode in Real Player format. Alas no more. If anyone reading this does happen to possess such a video - get in touch!

For the terminally nostalgic, here are some links I found with bits of Robostory content:
http://www.planete-jeunesse.com/sources/series.php3?cle=388&sec=1
http://albator.com.fr/AlWebSite/maquette.php?Id=dessins26.php
http://www.nostalj.com/emission.php?quel=204

The return of Frank Sidebottom?

Way back in the 80s there was a character on TV with a big, round papier-maché head called Frank Sidebottom. I don't recall exactly what he did or what he was in, aside from starring in the Saturday morning childrens' programme "Number 73". I was browsing the Swedish TV website today when I saw a picture of what seems to be Frank - well a painted head looking exactly the same in any case. The video-clip only shows the character for a moment, so I've no idea if there's any link to the character who appeared on the British TV all those years ago.



20041124

Earl's Court station quiz night?

Was anyone else passing through Earl's Court station yesterday evening (Tuesday 23rd Nov) and heard what sounded like some sort of odd quiz? I only court a moment of it as I jumped off one train and on to another, but it went along the lines of:
"Sentence 8: Describe the shoes of a Dutchman"
"Sentence 23: How are books bound together?"
all recited in a well spoken and clear BBC-English accent. It resulted in a mix of confused looks and laughs from those waiting on my train. I would love to know what it was all about. Did it serve some purpose, or was it simply another fine example of the unique British randomness?

20041120

Saturday photography: Apple Store Opening

A typically innaccurate weather forecast for today and the much hyped event of the opening of the Apple store on Regents Street (that's Apple as in Apple Computers, although I'm not sure if that's their title nowadays) got me heading into central London bright and early to see what, if anything, was doing.

Apple's enticement to the opening of their shop had been well publicised: a "lucky bag" costing £249 which contains over £700 of goods. Judging by the line of people at 8:45 on Saturday morning, that seemed to do the trick. 300 lucky bags were for sale, but I estimate that several hundred more were queueing up, although as some consolation the first 3000 people in the shop receive a free t-shirt.

There was plenty of build-up as the hour approached; staff arriving were whooping and hollering in the sort of American self-congratulatory way which grates on many Brits, but fair play to the queuers who are obviously first class Apple fans to have braved the increasingly wintery weather for all those hours.



I didn't actually go in the store as I didn't fancy waiting until everyone in the queue had gone in, which would have probably taken hours. At the end of the day it's another Oxford Circus area shop whose presence and location is there primarily, in my view at least, is to give kudos and status to the brand. More interestingly though for those who live or frequent London is that it represents part of the renewal of Regent Street. The rather tacky touristy shops near Piccadilly Circus are closing imminently, their long-term leases at an end, and the land/property owners have plans for the future. What exactly, I don't know, although I expect we will probably see less tack and more wall-to-wall brands. I could be wrong, but we'll see in time.

Central London is an interesting experience pre-10am. There's a certain unreal air about it all. The shops haven't yet opened, and so there's no particular reason to be there. People are around of course, but in an odd purposeless way, that you don't feel when there the streets are lined with retail, entertainment and tourism draws. It's interesting, and certainly pleasant compared to the crowds which are present during the rest of the day.

20041109

Relationship between IQ and voting patterns

I was forwarded this website yesterday which shows that in the US Presidential election the states with higher IQs average vote for Kerry and those with lower IQs vote Bush. The bottom of the pile being an average IQ of 85 in Mississippi!

It'd be interesting to see how something similar in the UK would turn out...

20041104

The transatlantic divide

What can be said about the result of the American presidential election? I can only conclude that there is a divide between Europe and the US far greater than previously realised. I've yet to speak to a Bush supporter, not just since Tuesday's election but actually since his initial election in 2000. I simply don't know anyone in Europe who even partially receptive to the line of reasoning put across by the White House. Everyone appears to be in a state of disbelief that Americans have apparently bought this nonsense about being under threat this great unseen enemy, that Iraq had anything to do with the Al Qaeda and that the current war is fighting the terrorist threat. They also seem to have overlooked the rising unemployment under Bush's "watch", and that America has altered for many around the world from being a symbol to idolise to an object of loathing. The country is, after all, marketed and exported as a brand, of which the President is the CEO. When the brand is tarnished, so are all the products associated with it, the American Dream included.

Yet the majority of American voters must have favoured Bush for some reason. Americans' fears and beliefs, patriotism, concepts of good and evil... these and more we can only attempt to understand, but how detached it seems from the way of thinking in the increasingly secular, questioning, social democracies of "Old Europe".