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Meddle

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Viewing 15 posts - 46 through 60 (of 1,933 total)
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  • in reply to: General Discussion #234852
    Meddle
    Participant

    Lutheran

    Church of instrument makers?

    in reply to: General Discussion #233952
    Meddle
    Participant

    I’ve just returned from a brief holiday where I saw more significantly and seriously obese people than I have ever seen gathered in one place.

    Who goes on holiday to Glasgow anyway?

    in reply to: General Discussion #233796
    Meddle
    Participant

    His impact on rock music is unquestionable, but he himself sounds like an abhorrent person.

    in reply to: General Discussion #233373
    Meddle
    Participant

    “Like” was the wrong word, perhaps “respect” is better.

    in reply to: General Discussion #233388
    Meddle
    Participant

    US rock and roll legend Chuck Berry and American composer Peter Sellars are named as 2014 Polar Music Prize laureates. Full Article Here.

    I don’t think Peter Sellars ever smuggled a minor across state lines for sexual purposes or filmed himself urinating on women in a hotel room. He probably also didn’t hide cameras in womens toilets either. Perhaps I’m wrong here, but I would rather that Sellars gets the award.

    I feel duty bound to like Chuck Berry’s music because I like rock music, but I tend to find most of Chuck Berry’s music sounds exactly the same. He used the same intro on a good handful of songs. He also never developed as a musician beyond what he created in the ’50s, and became an oldies act by the ’60s.

    in reply to: General Discussion #233251
    Meddle
    Participant

    i’m surprised this thread is still running, how long did the last religion/god/darwin etc thread carry on till it turned to insults then got canned.

    Reads like a bunch of second rate scientists and third rate theologians stroking their collective egos. Neither side can argue their corner well, though I think the science crew are making a slightly better fist of it.

    in reply to: General Discussion #233256
    Meddle
    Participant

    So what? He only states what people with common sense thinks, the same ones that are affraid to speak out because of “Political Correctness” bollox.

    “Well its just common sense, innit mate? You’ll never guess who I had in the back of my cab last week…”.

    Do continue!

    It seems that, to a certain minority of the population, common sense equals ‘I lack the intellectual and emotional depth to be able to grasp concepts in anything other than a simple binary manner’.

    Jeremy Clarkson may appeal to the petrolhead unreconstructed lad movement that grew out of the ’90s, but he is part of the set that invites Rebekah Brooks round for dinner. You don’t think he might be, in any way, putting on an act do you?

    Just common sense, innit.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232955
    Meddle
    Participant

    Isn’t it nice to see one go out without recriminations over his sex life etc….

    All in good time.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232868
    Meddle
    Participant

    Thinking about it, do we really need to repeat those here?

    Anarchist chants? Don’t tell me what to chant!

    in reply to: General Discussion #232395
    Meddle
    Participant

    He was never even funny..!!

    He was never anything. He has no substantial body of work to justify his media presence. He might be patterned in the hellraising mold of Oliver Reed or Keith Moon, but at least those two had artistic merit. Russell Brand’s comedy is not good. Again, he uses a big word once in a while and goes heavy on the amateur dramatics and people think he is brilliant.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232402
    Meddle
    Participant

    I steered well clear of that, having heard his incoherent spoutings elsewhere but as an apologist for crumbling Labour the Tories absolutely adore him!!:D But the media are in thrall so you can expect much more of his “brand” of political bilge in the weeks to come.:D

    It is the tidal wave of thickos I’m not looking forward to. They will be suitably ripped on his suitably simplistic rhetoric and be ready to brand anybody ‘establishment’ if you do anything other than agree with their rubbish.

    I had a smart idea. I should log on to Facebook and post “Russell Brand is telling it like it is. He is a hero.” Anybody that ‘likes’ the post will then be deleted and blocked.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232414
    Meddle
    Participant

    I made the mistake of watching Russell Brand being interviewed by Evan Davis. Much like John Lydon, brand employs that irritating tactic of shouting and generally acting out to cover up the obvious lack of intellect. Yes, Russell’s heart is probably in the right place (though years of heavy coke abuse probably hasn’t helped it much), but his whole model seems to consist of vastly simplifying a complex issue into ‘it is just common sense mate’ rhetoric, throw in some woo woo spirituality or mysticism for no clear reason, include one or two big words to impress the thickos, misunderstand complex economic models and systems, misquote a famous person, use a big word incorrectly then jump up and down, shout and speak too fast to be able to hold a civilised conversation. The guy is like David Icke reimagined as a cokehead. The sad truth is that said thickos will honestly think he, or they, will achieve some sort of real change, whereas they are only stoking his massive ego.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232144
    Meddle
    Participant

    Saw him talking Boll.. ,er Politics on telly a while ago, and it was like he was on some strange mission to insert the word “paradigm” into every sentence. I s’pose it will impress the Yoof though innit.

    In half those cases he was probably using the word in the wrong context or completely incorrectly. The man has a penchant for the malapropism.

    Or as he would say, “yeah, well the fing about big corporations is that they are well malapropostic as Keats would have put it”.

    The “We are the 45” crowd up here are making me a bit angry as of late, as is the presence of Jim Murphy in news outlets.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232153
    Meddle
    Participant

    I didn’t think he had ANY answers!! And funnily enough that’s the difficult bit. It’s easy to criticise but very much more difficult to offer sensible, rational, viable solutions. Until he does he’s not worth a second’s glance.

    The problem here is that sensible, rational, viable solutions tend to take a long time to happen, tend to be a bit wishy washy and the devil is usually in the detail. Real economic and political commentators tend to look a bit weak compared to Brand’s dayglo assault, and the agitprop crowd naturally gravitate towards the frankly strange amateur dramatic Charles-Dickens-meets-the-Yellow-Submarine foamings of the latter. Yelling stuff into a megaphone at a rally is certainly a better release than the ‘stuffy’ options.

    I think that is where Brand is most damaging. As you say, he has no answers. However he is also blocking the way for those that do have answers. Plus, he plays right into the ‘class authenticity’ trip that the Guardian crowd love to play into, because he has slummy origins. The faux-wordly ‘yeah, well I built schools in Mozambique last summer, so I think I know about X’ mentality. Somehow allowing yourself to become dependant on opiates for a time makes you a more authentic authority on health issues than a health advisor. Being poorer, druggier, sex-crazed-ier etc, sounds a lot more like the collectivist and exclusionist rhetoric I thought he and his followers would be against, yet any critic of Brand is apparently hung up on those issues, not the guy himself. Besides, I think it has been rather a long time since he last felt true financial hardship… he wouldn’t be a champagne socialista would he?

    If people fall for this junk then god help us all, the emperor is naked as far as I’m concerned.

    in reply to: General Discussion #232156
    Meddle
    Participant

    These twats;

    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/oct/23/russell-brand-revolution-book-panel-verdict.

    “The truth is, he’s doing us a favour here. When was the last time a celebrity used their position of influence to do anything other than point us at their latest Eau de Whatever?

    Brand is no day-tripper to povertyville, either. While he may have made his way into the 1%, he’s not merely speculating on life’s jagged edges; he’s lived them, so he has considerably more authority to address the polity honestly.”

    ****.

    “Brand puts forward a logical and witty argument, asking the reader to question the systems we have inherited, and it’s only once or twice a chapter that he drops a vocabu-bomb – even my mate with an English degree couldn’t work them out without dusting off a dictionary.

    The thin veil of what we were sold as democracy has been lifted and it is increasingly evident that we have inherited a system that is broken. Brand is not afraid to delve into all of the questions this raises, nor is he afraid of not having all the answers.”

    ****.

    You would think that prior to Russell Brand coming along nobody had been aware of any criticism of our political and economic systems.

Viewing 15 posts - 46 through 60 (of 1,933 total)