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Welcome to Blighty's Rant. As Brits we love to complain, but we also don't want to cause a fuss. So use this little corner of the website to let off steam, blow your top and let rip - but let's do it in the British way, with humour and candour.

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  • These Aren’t a few of my Favourite Things

    May 18, 2009

    As I’ve had a very long day and I’m not in the mood to form a balanced argument on various aspects of life and the world around us, here is a list of things that annoy me:

    - Whistling,
    - humming,
    - chewing,
    - irritating people at the head of long queues on hot days who faff and complain,
    - people walking behind me,
    - noisy shoes,
    - people walking behind me with noisy shoes,
    - walking smokers,
    - walking smokers walking behind me with noisy shoes,
    - Chelsea fans,
    - Arsenal fans,
    - Manchester United fans,
    - supporters of teams that aren’t those three clubs who feel obliged to support them in Europe,
    - English weather,
    - people who complain about English weather,
    - teenage girls thinking they can sing when all they are doing is warbling - without even attempting to hit the note,
    - the new song by the Black Eyed Peas,
    - the old songs by the Black Eyed Peas,
    - programmes about Peter and Jordan,
    - programmes about David and Victoria,
    - programmes about the fabulous lives of people like Peter and Jordan and David and Victoria,
    - companies that advertise what they “believe” to their customers,
    - companies that advertise their “thanks” to their customers,
    - companies that have hijacked the concept of grand artistic projects to create hideous flash mob marketing stunts,
    - having the opportunity to write blogs for websites without really having any ideas of what to write about,
    - people who tell me to watch the Wire,

    - and Piers Morgan.


    Phew.

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  • I hate loving Football

    Apr 27, 2009

    I hate football. I hate football because I watch it every week and can’t stop myself. Coverage of football is repetitive and in the main merely speculation, uber-rich Premier League footballers themselves are loathsome and the results are predictable. The Premier League is the least competitive league in the world, mainly because all of the crazy billions are stuck at one end of the table. The odd shock here and there, yes, but mostly it’s mostly the same old story.

    Sooner the world will wake up and see that the top end of English football is vile, especially if one compares it to the lower leagues.

    Even when Villa were six points clear of fifth there was an awful inevitability they would somehow slip up and the Arse would once again make the top 4 tiresome again. Because, as I frequently hear on rolling Sports News channels (sigh), “it would be a disaster for Arsenal not to be in the Champions League.” Yes, my heart would certainty bleed – poverty would have a new meaning.

    Take a look at Luton Town; the authorities gave them an impossible mountain to climb, facing Hatters to contemplate an entire season of staring relegation in the face. Yet 40,000 of their fans turn up the Johnson’s Paint Trophy and are ecstatic with the doomed team’s victory. The memory of that will live on for a long time. Magical. The type of football story that brings a lump to the throat.

    Now look at Manchester United winning the Carling Cup. To them, the winning of this particular trophy is merely a notch on their quest for complete domination of the footballing world. Soccercapitalism is what it is. In year’s to come, someone will remind a Man U fan that they won the League Cup in 2009, and the glory-hunting arseface will reply, “oh yeah, we did. When we won everything else aswell.” Congratulations; you’re rich. Any other club fan (except three others) would consider having 2009 tattooed on their arse.

    I’m going to come clean; I’m a Spurs fan. I can tell you that Spurs would have appreciated winning the Carling Cup way more than any Man Utd fan, and yes, is because Spurs are less successful. But ask a random in the pub who they support – if they say something like “Norwich” or “Bury,” your reply will be “oh, really?” This is a true, thick-and-thin football fan. But hear “Chelsea,” and the instinct is to groan and go and talk to somebody else.

    Man Utd have apparently been on a bad run recently. They beat Aston Villa 3-2, and then beat Sunderland 2-1. They must really be staring relegation in the face. I’m sure there are loyal Man U, Arsenal, Liverpool and Chelsea fans out there, and it isn’t their fault their clubs have been over-run with soulless, knuckle-dragging fartheads that support their club “coz dey looked good on duh telly.” But football has become too ugly and horrible to follow –for instance – Avram Grant finishes within a game of the Premier League title and reaches two cup finals and is sacked. That sums it up. Brian Clough is turning in his grave.

    The solution – pretend the Premier League doesn’t exist. Either Wolves or Sheffield United will win the league this year despite neither of them being in the top four last season. Now that’s competitive and exciting. (JT)

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  • Nay to Nay-Saying

    Apr 17, 2009

    Today I’m going to spend my two pence worth on the many nay-sayers having their two pence worth. That’s right. Hold tight.

    I read the Metro (because it’s free, and last week there was a story about a local police authority in Tiverton decideding to have some graffiti commissioned to “engage with youngsters…and show that graffiti is in fact an art.” I found this approach by the authority, spearheaded by Sergeant Robin Curtis, rather endearing. But without even reading the article I knew instantly how the paper would react – by collecting the sound-bites of local-something-or-others along the lines of “shouldn’t they be out catching criminals?” or “is this what we pay our taxes for?”

    Sure enough, the Metro went straight to Matthew Elliott of the Taxpayer’s Alliance (clearly looking for a balanced opinion), who said the scheme was “pointless trendy nonsense,” and “to waste taxpayer’s money on such a gimmick instead of using it to fight crime is a disgrace.”

    Imagine the scene:

    (The phone rings. An operator picks it up).

        Caller: Help! Help! I’m being held hostage!

    Operator: Just one minute, caller; let me see if the constabulary have finished spray-painting the officers’ nose and we’ll get back to you.”

    Incidentally the article was written by John Higginson, the Metro’s CHIEF Political Correspondent. That’s right, Chief. To waste commuter’s reading-time and advertiser’s money on such a small story instead of using it to report on actual news of importance is a disgrace.

    1-0 to me.

    Whether the police officer’s idea of trying to recreate the youthful art is a good one or not, I can’t say that I’m totally against the use of tax money on things to make life a little easier and happier. I don’t begrudge the government for attempting the Millennium Dome project, for instance, as it seemed like a wonderfully courageous and grand thing to do. If they hadn’t arsed up the administration, spent  way-way too much on it and filled it with absolute guff, then we would all be celebrating it. Well, actually, we sort-of are, as the re-branded O2 is a massive success. And think about St Pauls, the Houses of Parliament and even Stonehenge – we celebrate these landmarks now but I wonder if a mass of petitions and Matthew Elliotts protested about them at the time.

    Sergeant Robin Curtis is just trying to make life a little bit better. Even if it fails, he’s at least trying, which is more than I can say for you, Matty boy. Nice one Robin.

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  • Food, not-so glorious Food

    Apr 15, 2009

    Food, not-so glorious Food

    Jack Dee once commented, “What kind of a family eats out of a bucket?” And he’s right to ask this question. The kind of company that endorses eating food from receptacles usually reserved for coal or gravel needs to employ more chefs and fewer marketing and cost-cutting types.

    The introduction of fast food has been a major contributory factor to the declining standards of etiquette in society and the destruction of the human palette. Not do these fat-covered liberal-interpretations of meat clog up our arteries but they have destroyed the food cycle.

    Take the cinema – it is baffling to think the average person (in every possible way) can’t go two hours without shovelling sweaty, crunchy lumps of nothingness down their gobs. Many a time have the deep and meaningful segments of films been ruined by the sound of the salivary crunch of the world’s most inappropriate film-watching morsel.

    The way to cure the scourge of food served in cement mixers and high-decibel snacklets is to eat meals. Proper meals. Watch Saturday Kitchen and Gary Rhodes, put a cooked slab of meat next to a couple of piles of roughage and you’re set. Your body will be thankful, your senses more satisfied and I won’t be tempted to remove your head and bury it in the residuey filthiness of an empty fried-chicken scuttle. (JT)

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