The Devil wears Prada



Meryl Streep stole the show in the Devil wears Prada. A crappy film about nice girl (Anne Hathaway) becomes not-so-nice-girl, in a New York fashion magazine, then becomes nice girl again. A young Sandra Bullock would have made a better job of the young secretary, but no one could have beaten Streep, who shines with evil as the boss from hell. She is wonderfull. Look out for Adrian Grenier. very cute as Hathaways boyfriend... A nice afternoon movie to lift my spirits.

Aberfan after forty years, lots of work, & All Bar one

At 9.15 am on Friday, October 21, 1966 a waste tip slid down
a mountainside into the mining village of Abervan, Near Mertyyr Tydfil in outh Wales. It First destroyed a farm cottage in its path, killing all the occupants. At Pantglass Junior School, just below, the children had just returned to their classes after singing "All things bright and beautiful at their assembly. It was sunny on the mountain but foggy in the village, with visibility about 50 yards. The tipping gang up the mountain had seen the slide start, but could not raise the alarm because their telephone cable had been repeatedly stolen. The slide engulfed the school and about 20 houses in the village becore comming to rest. 144 people died in the Aberfan disaster: 116 of them children

As a child Aberfan frightened me ( I was four when the disaster happened),
actually on reflection I think the sadness and fear it instilled in the
adults around me, frightened me more. Last night I watched a programme about
the disaster, and was appalled by one small scene of the original newscast.
The young tv presenter in rather clipped English was "interviewing" local men
who were frantically digging at rubble at the disaster site. He was actually
standing next to a weary middle aged welshman, who was streaked with coal
dust.

"How long have you been digging here?" he asked,

"For a while", the man answered absently.

"Are you digging for anyone you know?", the reporter asked, obviously out of
his depth.

The middle aged man, just looked tired and vague but with an tiny edge to his
voice, said politely

"My mother is under here!"

The reporter had the good grace to looked shocked and ashamed, the difference
between today's more sensitive interviewing style was all too apparent. That scene shocked me more than any of the black and white imagery we have
seen so often of the
school.

Comming home from Uni, I had a ALL BAR ONE moment, saw a small wine bar filled with academics chatting with large glasses of wine and nibbles. After such a busy week I would have killed for a chat with friends, aimless , fun and relaxing! Chris is late home today, I may compensate by a trip to the cinema.

The games people play..........

Yes another thought on the train to Bangor! and this time is about game playing! no, not those relationship power struggles we sometimes all have, I was thinking about those little mind games we play in our own heads when we are alone and bored.

When I was a child I used to walk to and from school ( well there is a rarity nowadays) and I remember looking at each house as I passed, I gave it a mark out of ten ( yes you rememeber my list making from earlier blogs) and then wondered what it would be like to live there. Yes was that Gay or was that gay?

This was my favourite house, back in the 1970's it seemed rather more "lived in" and more like a farm house with chinze arm chairs and dark wood furniture.

Anyhow I digress!, what other games do I play to pass the time? well I tend to hum "camptown races!" when I am brushing my teeth !!!( where the hell did that come from?) and when I am turning right into Cwm Road from the direction of Dyserth, I like to let the indicator click foureen sets of two!!.........humm now I am seriously worried as any ambling reader of this blog may well think I am borderline compulsive neurotic!!

Oh I do like to count horses when I am on a long train journey, (why?) and when driving to Sheffield I have a habit of counting all the mobile phone masts.

hummmmmmmm off to bed.....perhaps to count sheep?

A Nephew's e -mail

Got the following e mail from My nephew(Pictured) today which tickled me! Haven't seen him for quite a time as he lives in some Lancashire town, Ramsbottom or Broadbottom or something bottom! A talented artist and laid back (practically horizontal) individual it was great to hear from him



Hi John just a quick line to say i've had a very entertaining evening reading poseidon's thoughts... i bellied laughed more than once...and had some old memories stired seeing the picture of granny and grandad fry.....it reminded me of seeing them every thursday at there little house by the tip when i was little. keep up the good work, i look forward to reading more.

chris your nephew

Loved the comment "their little house by the tip"..........made them sound like the Clampits!

Neighbours and the art of being neighbourly




The village spokesman, and his brother, have now fixed the Church boundary wall next to the field we hope to rent soon, and a grand job was done indeed. I went out to survey the work and was joined by other neighbours Carol and John from Next door, as well as one of the Parish committee members from the high street. The informal chatter made me think of how neighbourly village life can be compared to city life. In Wynyard road, I was friends with neighbours John and Bev, but I certainly was not neighbourly to other people living on the street. I just never really saw any people , let alone spent the odd half hour chatting in the road about village life, dogs, gossip and the state of the weather. I am not usually one to chat to people, especially acquaintances,

I prefer the company of friends, but the "art" of small talk in village life is one I am getting better at.


Well Meg may be pregnant! Even though she seemed to finish her season, out of the blue we caught Finlay indulging in his first graphic sex act! Admittedly I think the experience shocked and frightened him (not to go into too much details they were "joined" for half an hour or so), so he has spent most of the time acting post coitially , "like a monk !!!

Worked last night, and today after a short sleep,am now looking forward in a full roast dinner. Judy (aunt) is comming for tea, which will be nice as we all have a glass of wine and watch Antiques roadshow.

Control and claustrophobia

Slinked off a lecture today and came home, because I had a need to be in control and a bigger need to get rid of the claustrophobia of being either in University or work (or traveling to and from each). So the ideal place was the beach. So for an hour we had a great walk on the promenade, and all the stimuli of the last three weeks was blown away. It was lovely. I used to do the same after a particulary hard shift in Sheffield, but there I went up to Redmires, for an amble around the dams. The beach clears your mind much easier.
Instead of looking at my notes from the week, I cleaned the house, cut the grass, cleaned the chickens out properly, bought all the animal feed from the farm and pet shop ( we all, that is , me and the dogs) shared a MacDonald, and washed the windows!......the control felt very good, and has given me a boost to tackle next week!

The Crowded Sky and perhaps a new field


When you sit on a train for any length of time, you get to thinking. Now, thinking about dependent variables would have been usefull today, as I have a test on them tomorrow, but true to form, I didn't and thought instead of the huge numbers of planes that seem to fill our skys. In the deep blue sky above Liverpool Bay and the start of the Irish Sea, I counted no less than 10 vapour trails. 10 vapour trails in a matter of two minutes!!!......that is scary, especially given recent reports on pollution
and carbon dioxide emissions and calls for a "plane" tax by an ernest Tory leader. My imagination wandered into cinema ( what's new?) and the 1960 film The Crowded Sky. Indeed this evening's news that a small plane crashed into an upper East Side apartment building only compounded my disaster film mentality, especially as the apartment building in question could be seen quite clearly from our usual hotel on 42nd street.

Anyhow as a student I doubt I will be flying anywhere for a considerable length of time.

Today found out from the village spokesman, that we are in the running to actually get the field opposite the cottage. Now I WILL believe it when it actually does happen but I am quietly optimistic that we can have a few more chckens and free range ones at that! hummm next stop a small holding? watch this space.....

Rosebud


Snowglobes, I always think, are typically American in their appearance; true you see plastic cheap versions in British seaside tat shops, but for quality, nostalgia and "that certain something", you just cannot beat the Americans. One of my favourite possessions is my 5th Avenue snow globe , complete with Patrick's Cathedral,The Empire State Building and can you see right at the front? yes a little yellow taxi cab!
The History of the snowglobe ( From Wikipedia) is interesting


It isn't certain exactly when the first snow globe was made but they appear to date from France during the early 1800s, possibly as a natural successor to the glass paperweight, which had become popular a few years earlier. However, by 1879 at least five companies were producing snow globes and selling them throughout Europe.
In 1889 a snow globe containing a model of the newly built
Eiffel Tower was produced to commemorate the International Exposition in Paris, which marked the centenary of the French Revolution. This quickly became a favourite souvenir for those attending.
Snow globes became popular in
England during Victorian times and, in the early 1920s, crossed the Atlantic to the United States of America where they became a popular collectors item. Many of these were produced by the Atlas Crystal Works which had factories in both Germany and America.
The first US patent related to a snowglobe was granted in 1927 to Pennsylvania’s Joseph Garaja. Garaja then got Novelty Pool Ornaments to start manufacturing a fish version, underwater, in 1929
During the 1940s, snow globes were often used for advertising purposes in America whilst religious snow globes were common gifts for
Catholic children in Europe during the 1940s and '50s. Even Hollywood was bitten by the snow globe bug, with globes featuring in a number of films over the years, the most famous of which was in the opening moments of the 1941 classic Citizen Kane
.