There
are some pretty strange ideas floating about as to how we’ll be doing our
shopping in the future most of which appear to involve using as few staff as
possible. In fact it seems the ultimate aim is for us never to leave our
screens (says he typing a blog!). However a sort of compromise may be round the
corner to enable those who don’t want to shop online to still do so in a retail
environment albeit without any contact with employees. The concept is not
totally new; there are gyms that allow access without any staff present but
until last year it had not been tried in conventional retail.
A blog about new and old fantastical culture + photo posts + more. Also visit my alt blog : thiswayupzinealt.blogspot.com / Website: www.johnconnorswriter.com / Instagram: johnconnors100 / X (aka Twitter) @JohnConnors100
31/03/2017
26/03/2017
Where exactly is Electric Avenue?
By the time his single `Electric Avenue` was
released in 1983, Eddy Grant had already had a long career which began in the
Sixties when he was a member of The Equals who had several UK hits including
`Baby Come Back`. He was also a songwriter for artists such as Prince Buster.
After leaving The Equals in 1971 he began a solo career during which time he
also worked as a producer. `Electric Avenue` arrived after a string of hits
including `Walking on Sunshine`, `Do You Feel My Love` and `I Don’t Wanna
Dance`. The sound on these is unusually sparse for a successful artist of the
Eighties when bigger and bigger production was the order of the day. `Electric
Avenue` is especially tightly produced- in fact there’s a sound that could
easily be a piece of elastic stretching that re-appears several times! The
controlled, minimalist feel of the song enhances its lyrics which reference life
in the London area of Brixton. However when he declares “we’re gonna rock down
to Electric Avenue” where are they going?
22/03/2017
Kong Skull Island
With a King
Kong movie nowadays the issue of whether the giant ape itself can be
convincingly rendered is no longer relevant because of course it can. The
question is – what do you do with a brilliantly realised enormous animal? Peter
Jackson had a fair go at it a while back but his film was overlong and took
half an hour to even set off to sea. Kong
Skull Island is brasher, less arty, certainly more tongue in cheek but
definitely more to the point. Our first sight of Kong is within five minutes of
the start and after half an hour we’ve made landfall on the lost island after getting
through the perpetual storm that surrounds it. This intensity is maintained
throughout with thoughtful reverie kept to bite sized exchanges and no
character safe. Ones you think will obviously make it to the end don’t and vice
versa.
Raaarrghhhhh
Spoilers will bite your head off after this point!
20/03/2017
Does Twitter now do more harm than good?
The
recent case in which journalist Katie Hopkins was successfully sued by food
blogger Jack Munroe after a Tweet making false allegations has again raised the
issue of the impact social media in general- and Twitter in particular-has on
our society. Of course anyone is entitled to their opinion – as advocates of
social media keep reminding us – but the problem with Twitter is that followers
of someone automatically seem to believe whatever the celebrity they are
following says. The problem may be as much with the format as anything else.
Being limited to so few characters means that any sense of nuance is impossible
resulting in a form of communication that more often than not eschews any
diplomacy or tact. . However many emojis you may deploy is still difficult
sometimes to tell if someone is being humorous, sarcastic or just plain nasty. And
often followers simply believe it- or else misinterpret it -meaning it is very
easy to defame someone without any recourse to those little things like `fact`
or `context`.
19/03/2017
Mrs Tyrrell and the huge block of cheese
Mrs
Tyrell grew increasingly grumpy at the prospect of having to carry a large
heavy wedge of cheese to work each day. Her husband did not even offer her a
lift as he travelled to work early by gyrocopter leaving his wife to struggle
with the cheese on public transport. This was in the 1950s when cheese was of
course much heavier than it is now. She did try to use a taxi but in those days
cheese was banned from taxis so unwilling to jostle for position on the tram
and risk the cheese falling on the floor, Mrs Tyrell started to walk to work.
Accompanying her were two friends Mavis and Alma who would each take it in
turns to lug the block for a while.
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