Sunday 12 April 2009

Oh Gord

PM DEMOLISHED BY POLITE SCHOOLCHILDREN


To see just how hopeless a politician Gordon Brown is, watch this clip of him being completed and utterly floored by an easy-peasy, soft-ball question thrown to him by a well-intentioned child.  

Skip the video to about 01:15. A group of schoolkids on some kind of BBC-sponsered news reporting work experience arrive at No 10 Downing Street to interview the Prime Minister. The excitement! The children huddle outside the famous black door, taking pictures and expressing their awe at the occasion. They're nervous - they're about to sit down with big old Gordon Brown himself, the most famous name in policitics, the most powerful man in the nation, the most scarily serious person you could ever meet...

And then they do.  Brown hurries in to the conference room. He greets them: "Nice to meet you... Hello!". It's said a bit stiffly, and he seems a bit patronising as he bends over the seated children to shake their hands. But Gordon'll recover from the awkward start, won't he? As soon as things get going, he'll be spouting policy and progress, sounding all statesman-like and before long everyone will get all dreamy and completely forget how rubbish they think the government is.  Right?  

First question: "My favourite food is Chinese noodles.  What's your favourite meal?"  'Great', you or I would be thinking in the same situation: that's bloody easy. I can just waffle on about how I like lamb biriyani, and how I learned how to make it the other week, although it's not a patch on how they make it at the Indian restuarant... etc.  I can do that on autopilot, leaving my brain free to simultaneously try and stitch together some way of defending my atrocious economic record... 

But Gordon isn't like you or I.  He grins sheepishly, knowing he's been wrong-footed by the children asking such a cleverly non-policy orientated question.  

"Traditional things, like, uhh, steak...." Good, he thinks, the right answer. Even if it's been forced out of me.  I've totally covered myself by showing that I'm patriotic and not a cosmopolitan twat like Mandleson... 

Hang on, though. What more can he possibly say about "steak"? In fact, what other food even goes with steak??! Keep on talking, Gordon!  

"... and, err, ... and all that..." His manner now is exactly like that of a schoolkid who's failing to bluff his way through answering a question about the set text he hasn't read.  His interviewers, of course, can sense this all too well (especially the boy seated to his right, who increasingly looks as if he can barely suppress a guffaw at this pathetic perfomance).  

So Gordon re-winds to try and salvage the situation.  "And I love, uhh, ... spaghetti ... bolognese, carbonara... and all these ... all these things. "

" So, ah... I like, I like all these, uhh, things."  

Gordon thinks: Good god! This is going terribly.  Start listing some stuff like a proper politician who know's his facts!

"So I like Chinese food, Indian food..." [Too foreign - back up!] "I like, uhm, English food" [I'm going to offend the Welsh here!] "uhm, British food..." [Now I sound like a mad fascist] "... I like French food... I like almost anything!" [phew!].

But the children can now sense blood.  

Another kid asks "but what would be your perfect, perfect meal?  You can have anything!" Wham! Patronised and boxed into a corner by these crowing kids, Gordon has nowhere to run. "Perfect?...Huh, huh huh! Perfert meal!" He squirms with nervous laughter.

"I think it would be.... ahhh .... steak.

At this point, the BBC editors seem to join in with the bloodsport by very cruelly cutting straight to a similar children's meeting with David Cameron.  Here, of course, the tables are turned. 

Dave's giving an efficient spiel about how politicians can't answer questions. He does a line about Jeremy Paxman. The kids all laugh. He's doing all the confident body language stuff, leaning forward and backwards at the right points, gesturing commandingly. The children sit bolt upright and smile demurely.  They listen attentively. He's definitely the alpha male here. It's the way it should be: they're all inwardly cowering at his superior social skills.

The BBC doesn't cut back to what's happening at No 10, but it's obvious that, by now, Gordon's been run out of the room, puffing and sweating, chased by hoardes of evil children asking polite questions that they know he won't be able to answer.  

So, yeah - there we have it. My thesis is that children are the canaries in the cage that'll alert you to the imminent death of a government.  OK, maybe not the best metaphor, assuming the children weren't too badly harmed by the experience of meeting the PM.  But they could certainly tell you how it really is. Gordon Brown is like the emporer who says he has the best dinners in the world. And it took a humble child to point out that he hasn't got a favourite meal.  

Saturday 28 February 2009

RIGHTWING ROCK

Pointless list #1 - Top 10 arguably right-of-centre, and good, tracks:

When musicians get political this usually means flying the flag of liberty, railing against social injustice, or promoting peace and equality.   So we have The Clash; Asian Dub Foundation; The Style Council; Rage Against the Machine.  Rock is revolution!  Rock is left-wing.  

This is so much a given, that I always get a bit of a frisson of excitement, and smile when I hear something that is blatantly taking a more reactionary line - even though I don't personally have much time for conservative politics.   

The criteria for this list?  Taking a hard stance on law and order; having a strong patriotic tone; OR a expressing a profound skepticism that government is the answer to societies' ills.  And it has to be a very good song (otherwise it's not a very interesting exercise - you could just list 100s of hate-songs by neo-nazis of the sort that Louis Theroux always interviews).   The best 10, IMO, are, in reverse order:


Righteous broadside against corruption and the violent disintegration of civil society in Jamaica. Lyrically, it's sheer 'why-oh-why' Daily Mail stuff: "All the crimes committed day by day // No one try to stop it in any way!".   Sung, like all Murvin's output, in a slightly creepy falsetto which he never comes down from.   Apocalyptical.

Surprisingly stand-offish - even rather reactionary - response to 60s student radicalism: "when you talk about destruction // don't you know that you can count me out?".   The line about "carrying pictures of Chairman Mao" sort of pre-empts Mark from Peep Show's bewilderment at trendy people's "ironic veneration of tyrants".

Witheringly contemptuous analysis of the vacuity of libertine drug-taking yoof culture.  Like most of the artists on this list, Jarvis is usually associated with liberal attitudes.  But he's a little more complex than that, I reckon.  

Raucous rockability hate-fest against serially spawning single mothers.  Escapes being pure bile (just)  by being very funny indeed: "We'd all do the same as you // if ever we had the nerve to".  

Probably not intentionally rightwing, but the opening lyric "What will happen in the morning when the world, it gets // so crowded that you can't look out the window in the morning?" sounds like something that the nutters at Migrationwatch might say.  Really lovely song, though.  

Probably the only rock song whose main message is the need for strong national security.  Bo Diddley says he wants to join up for the US army and give the Soviet leader what for.  Best bit: "J.F.K. can't do it by his self // Come on fellas, let's give a little help."  Backed by a drill sergeant with silly syncopation: "Hup 2 ...  3, 4!".  Brilliant.  

4  'God don't like it' - Blind Willie McTell
Fun little blues duet about how folk who drink moonshine whisky are wicked.  The Blind Willie McTell track dates from 1935, so I assume it's a cover of an older song, since Prohibition ended in 1933. 

Morrisey did have a fairly consistent reactionary-streak in his song-writing, so it's fair that he makes this list twice.  A hilarious song, sung at breakneck-speed, about a tearful juvenile delinquent who promises to "never, never do it again // at least, not until the next time..."

Weirdly, for the band that invented peace and love, the Beatles made quite a few somewhat left-critical tracks (I could have also probably included 'Back in the USSR' as well).  This is George Harrison being incandescent with rage that he should be asked to contribute to the public finances.  "Don't ask me what I want it for //  If you don't want to pay some more!".  Great riff - and  great, WS Gilbert-esque lyrics.

One of my favourite songs.  If you are always seeing 1960s concrete tower blocks and thinking "What the fuck??" - if you find yourself sick with homicidal hatred for the goons who designed and approved these nightmare developments - this is a soothing balm.  The lyrics are Paul Weller imagining the crazed mindset of the civil servants and government-sponsored developers : "They were going to build communities // It was going to be pie in the sky".  I know that you don't have to be rightwing to detest UK-brutalist architecture, but this song definitely deserves its place on this list because it places the blame squarely on the bureaucrats - the people with "money to squander" who thought brave new designs could revolutionise society. 

"If people were meant to live in boxes // God would have have given them string // To tie around themselves at bedtime // To stop their dreams falling through the ceiling."