Sing a song of joy and glory -
You must be taking the piss.
During the regime of the Iron Lady
Miss Selfridge named a lipstick after her
Dark maroon, if I recall.
Unionists voting on the slope of a hillside
Makes it easier to see
Who hasn't put their hand up.
Crisp pink and white striped blouses
Put me off banking for the rest of my natural.
The Elysian Fields live in Paris
Along with the rest of the French Revolution.
School inspector orders me not to faint
At the death of Robespierre
On pain of being shot as a crypto-Jacobin
Thus surplus to requirement
During a recession.
Labour isn't working.
What do you expect
When there's no jobs
And Greenham Common to surround
With a ring of peace?
I chose this dawn to be alive
Because it sounded like a good idea at the time.
All mankind are brothers-in-arms
Gotta install microwave oven
Custom kitchen, colour TV.
Unblessed with blow-dry hair
Fascination with blue Curucao must suffice.
When does the next flight leave for Mars?
Showing posts with label French Revolution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label French Revolution. Show all posts
Tuesday, 25 October 2011
Thursday, 31 March 2011
Up the revolution
Wouldn't Charlie Brooker make a brilliant Jacobin?
Having just finished his Screen Burn collection for about the third time since buying it in the post-Christmas sale at HMV, I think I'm well qualified to say that he would have made a great addition to the Committee of Public Safety.
Having just finished his Screen Burn collection for about the third time since buying it in the post-Christmas sale at HMV, I think I'm well qualified to say that he would have made a great addition to the Committee of Public Safety.
Never hesitating to preach the most violently radical solutions to the perennial problems that beset human society, this is a man who has studied at the feet of the masters.
He’s tough, he’s uncompromising, he’s a man who stays true to the purity of his vision through thick and thin. And most importantly of all, he commands the rhetoric (if not the crowds) to prove it.
Misanthropy, he insists in Like The Doritos Friendchips Crew, But Worse (31 May 2003), is “not a personality flaw, it’s a skill.
“It’s nothing to do with sheer numbers. Move me to a remote cottage in the Hebrides and I’d learn to despise the postman, even if he only visited once a year. I can’t abide other people, with their stink and their noise and their irritating ringtones. Bill Hicks called the human race ‘a virus with shoes’, and if you ask me he was being unduly hard on viruses: I’d consider a career in serial killing if the pay wasn’t so bad.”
Whatever the time, wherever the place, Brooker insists on nothing but the highest standards in both ethics and practice.
“They say the first casualty of war is truth, but actually it’s picture quality,” he complains in his review of Gulf War II news footage The Third World War In Low-Res JPEGS (29 March 2003).
Well, if we will insist on inflicting our Weltanschauung on an unwilling nation, then surely we’ve also got the right to see for ourselves the full extent of the damage.
“I’m not being callous … it’s just that this being the twenty first century I thought we’d get a digitally perfect, Dolby Surround kind of war, with swooping Michel Gondry camera moves and on-the-fly colour correction. But no. It’s all shots of empty skylines and blurry videophone bullshit. Most of it isn’t even in widescreen, for Christ’s sake.”
He’s quite right to have us all pinned down as ghouls. Myself I remember watching all the news reports on the television in the pub, whilst feeling more than a little disappointed with the results of modern technological progress. Quite often the video-phone footage used to freeze or even break up into tiny pixilated fragments during the actual news bulletin, leaving me feeling somewhat shortchanged.
“This obsession with live coverage reached a ridiculous nadir last week on the ITV News Channel,” he continues. “ Alistair Stewart breathlessly announces incoming live footage of behind-enemy-lines conflict: cut to an indistinct green blur with the odd dark blob wobbling around, like a plate of mushy peas behind a layer of gauze. But the viewers’ bafflement was nothing compared to Alistair’s – because he’s got to explain what’s happening. ‘And there you can see … uhhh … well, it’s hard for me to make out because my monitor is situated quite far away, but I’m sure at home you can see more.’ Nice try, but all I could see was my own bemused reflection. Sod the Second World War in Colour – this is the Third World War in Low-Res JPEGS.”
Yes, I can just hear good old Sir Kenneth Branagh doing the narration for The Third World War In Low-Res JPEGS, sandwiched somewhere in his future daily schedule between playing King Lear to Frankie Boyle’s Fool at the Globe Theatre on the South Bank, attending Lord Simon Russell Beale’s memorial service at St Martin-in-the-Fields and watching the bouncing bosoms of the latest female streaker to come running on the pitch during the first over at Lords.
That’s the sort of imagination you need to kick off on behalf of an entire disgruntled generation.
But Charlie Brooker also has a soft side. And he’s not too proud to reveal it to his more dedicated readers.
“Really, it feels rubbish being a man at the moment,” he admits in Skull-Flaunting Cueballs (5 April 2003), “assuming you base your self-perception on the images pouring from your TV set, that is. I know I do, and I’m beginning to feel like scum simply for owning my own testicles.”
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