Wednesday, October 31

NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD



Hallowe'en, or All Souls' Eve, the first example of Irish marketing before replica pubs, Riverdance, St Patrick's Day and planet-saving rock stars. There is something ironic about one of the most Catholic nations in the world snatching the rights to a religious festival out of the Church's hands and turning it into a worldwide moneyspinner. I bet every 31st October the Pope slaps his thigh and says "Verdammt! I vish ve'd zought of zis!".

The real significance of Hallowe'en is to mark the beginning of winter, the symbolic death of the earth before it's resurrection around Eastertime. Did you see what they did there? The bible was just a very complicated calendar, with pictures. The earth's temporary retreat is symbolized by celebrating death, decay and everything associated with it, notably ghosts, since All Hallows' Eve was, according to the church, the night when all the departed come back for one night only. Which is where the pumpkins come in. With the flesh of this seasonal and cheap vegetable used as a warming soup to keep out the cold, their empty shells were used as lanterns to welcome the souls back home. In Polish cemeteries hundreds of votive candles flicker on the graves, making the place look a bit like a nightclub. A late late show, you could say.


If it were true that the dead return to earth on Hallowe'en, you could have the dinner party of your dreams. You'd have to book well in advance, as I imagine lots of people would try to bag P.G. Wodehouse, Douglas Adams, or Sherlock Holmes. The Beatles could finally do that reunion concert with John and George present – for one night only – and Las Vegas would charge astronomical fees for the annual Elvis extravaganza. And when they said at the end « Elvis has left the building », they really mean it, folks.


I do hope it's not true. I would hardly want Harold back. And who knows in what guise he might return – he was such a fantasist when he was alive, he could come back as one of his favourite personae, such as Che Guevara, and you wouldn't know if the shade was the real Che or Harold messing about. Although there were always a few telltale signs. I don't think the real Che ever wore a beige cardigan, for example, or whistled the theme from Match of the Day. Or he might come back as Darth Vader. Or Sven, the nordic ski champion. Honestly, sometimes it was like living with the Village People.


Harold always enjoyed Hallowe'en immensely, as there was something of the night about him at the best of times. His Hallowe'en dinner always kicked off with a Bloody Mary, followed by a saignant steak (no garlic) and a bottle of Graves. And a Dame Blanche for dessert. And for some reason I always woke up the next day with a sore neck.


Please don't come back tonight Harold dear. I'm having Oscar Wilde, Spike Milligan and Jimi Hendrix round for dinner.


Thursday, October 25

THEY SHOOT HORSES DON'T THEY?


I whizzed up to Antwerp on the train Friday evening to meet the esteemed Mr and Mrs Cream who were over for a wedding. What a delightful evening we had. Cream said he was hungry enough to eat a horse, so I took them to a restaurant called De Perdestaal where horse is the speciality of the house. Funnily enough, when it came to ordering, everybody suddenly decided they wanted fish, pork or something else. The food was delicious, but I must refrain from describing it in detail or else I will breach the terms of my exclusivity contract with UpFront magazine.


I hadn't been to Antwerp at all this year and was reminded, when I got there, of what a wonderful city it is and why it is Belgium's New York to Brussels' D.C., Sydney versus Canberra, Rio to Brussels' Brasilia, Lagos as opposed to Abuja. Brussels has civil servants, Eurocrats, grey suits, sandwich bars, whereas Antwerp has designer shops, nightclubs, enough restaurants to eat out every night of the year and never come back to the same place twice, broad boulevards, imposing architecture, lovely parks, a sense of grandeur, and ... a river! The Schelde is broad and majestic as befits one of Europe's biggest ports, and there is a maritime theme throughout the city, right down to the legend of Ant, the chap who saved the local citizens by cutting of the hand of the ogre Twerp and throwing it into the Schelde. Oh and there are the diamonds too.


One of the major sticking points in the current political impasse is, in the event of a separation of Flanders and Wallonia, who gets Brussels. Who in heaven's name would want it if you've got Antwerp? Perhaps they're arguing about who doesn't get Brussels.


Antwerp railway station, possibly the most beautiful example of grandiose 19th-century Leopoldian architecture, is being "modernized". The original marble concourse is undergoing renovation work, and I pray that when it is finished it looks nothing like what has been thrown up behind it in the working part of the station, which is appalling. Ultra modern, escalators, computer screens, shopping mall, ugly modern concrete blocks ... I thought I'd arrived at a different station. I came in on a platform about 100 feet below sea level, three escalators towering up in front of me and almost completely blocking the rear view of the main station. It now looks like London's Waterloo station. Well done Antwerp town council.


Despite the last fast train back to Brussels being slightly less comfortable than a cattle truck, I managed to nod off several times, notably between the Gare du Nord and the Gare du Midi, sailing unconsciously through the Gare Centrale where I had planned to get off. In fact if I'd woken up 30 seconds later I'd have ended up in Charleroi. And that's not where you want to be at one o'clock in the morning.


This morning the STIB (Brussels metro system) decided it would be a good idea to send the cleaners to wash down the steps to the platform with soapy water at 8.30, right in the middle of the rush hour. They also think it's a good idea to renovate all the platforms on all the stations at the same time, so all the passengers receive maximum inconvenience equally. I am in favour of the new big metro trains (sorry tree-huggers, but they make my journey to work much more comfortable) but why, oh why, do they only send them out in off-peak hours, and come the rush hour, we get the rattly old ones? Perhaps they don't want to get the new ones dirty.

Come back London Transport, all is forgiven.


Monday, October 22

EVERY CLOUD HAS A SILVER LINING

Can't wait for the South African edition of Les Dieux du Stade calendar.


Of course his grandfather is English:


Friday, October 19

BLOGGING: THE NEW PORTNOY'S COMPLAINT?



Blogging is a funny old game, as Margaret Thatcher might have said. As a form of social interaction, it is becoming more popular than going to the pub. This suggests that the most enthusiastic bloggers are at best a bit shy, at worst raving antisocial psychopaths. Blogging is to socializing what texting is to talking on the phone. It's driving to work with no passengers, as opposed to being crushed and asphyxiated on public transport. It's paying to use the M6 toll road as opposed to sitting bumper to bumper at spaghetti junction. It's lying on your sofa listening to your iPod versus standing up for hours at a rock concert. It's staying in with a box of Belgian chocolates and a George Clooney DVD versus standing half an hour in the rain outside the cinema only to find the only seats left are in the front row. It's only a matter of time before you will risk an ASBO for writing a blog. However, it's an understandably compelling activity, and here are just ten reasons why it can be preferable to going out:

1. You can do it in your PJs. Not that I ever do, of course. I always blog in ball gown and tiara.

2. Nobody can interrupt you. They might stop reading halfway through (or before), but they have to form an orderly queue to leave comments. The equivalent of holding forth to a roomful of gagged people, then ungagging them one by one to hear their reactions. And then gagging them again. If only ... equally, you don't have to pretend to sound interested in someone else blathering on for hours. You can listen to the sweet sound of your own voice and never read another blog if you so wish. Blogging etiquette say, if you don't like another blog you don't comment and just don't go there again, whereas in a pub you'd shove your pint in someone's face.


3. Weather makes no difference. Unless it's a weather blog.


4. You can picture other bloggers as you wish to, or portray yourself as who/whatever you want, with no fear of being exposed. Gorilla Bananas has a huge female fan club. Some of his fans think he's human! Fancy ....

5. You won't get beer spilled ov
er you – well not by anyone else anyway. But eating a bowl of cornflakes over the keyboard is nox xo be advised, as I have jusx found oux.

6. You don't have to worry about missing the last train, or finding a taxi home. But if you drink and blog, you might have trouble distinguishing your pillow from your keyboard.

7. You won't get kicked out at midnight. (Unless you're in a cybercafe).

8. You
can smoke. (Unless you're in a cybercafe). In fact, it's not a good idea to blog from a cybercafe, blogging is a solitary pleasure that is not enhanced by screaming kids playing video games or dirty old men in raincoats panting.

9. It's nearly free. If you stay off YouTube. (Pat!)

10. There is no such thing as a blogging hangover.

Brussels « blogmeets » have not really taken off, as they turned out to be raucous drunken affairs rather below the dignity of laydees such as Aunty Marianne and moiself, although I gather Scouse Doris enjoyed herself immensely. I think some of us were disappointed to find that Quarsan wasn't really a twat.


Tags and memes are for the faint-hearted. Blogging isn't about finding out about others, it's about telling the world about you. It is essentially an activity for self-obsessed, narcissistic people who would prefer a night in with a porn movie and a box of tissues to waking up in the morning minus their beer goggles and finding Shane McGowan/Shirley from Eastenders* in their bed. As somebody once said: « It's like having your own magazine. » Somebody I know has their own magazine AND a blog (you know who you are).


It seems to have gone rather quiet. Hello ... ? Is there anybody out there ... ?


Oh sod this, I'm off to the pub.



* delete whichever turns you off least

Monday, October 15

MANHUNT

On Saturday night, watching the semi-final of the Rugby World Cup, a number of ladies in the company were heard to inquire about the French no.16. I have scoured the internet, but numbers on shirts seem to be perfectly random in rugby, and I cannot find any confirmation of his name. Perhaps somebody can identify him from the line-up below. And get his phone number.





And just for Aunty Marianne, Chabbers showing his tender side: