FOOD: Until last Saturday, it had been about 15 years since I'd eaten fried bread. With enough salt to preserve the biggest bloodiest bovine through the harshest of mid-winters, it was great.
Have you revisited any old foody flames? What was it? And, how was it for you?
SPORT: The airwaves, news print and online media are full of reaction to UK Sport's funding allocations, as British sports organizations gear up for the London Olympics of 2012. The discussions are made most interesting by the implicit question of, 'Does that sport matter?', which underpins the post mortems (post morta?) of why some sports have received funding, whilst others have not. Rarely do we get the opportunity to hear from leaders in Shooting, Table Tennis and Fencing, in one hit (or smash, or lunge).
Do you hold any affection, whimsy, or flaming passion for any minor sport?
TELEVISION: I listened to debate this past week which has, at times, suggested that the great tradition of British and European TV cop drama may be at risk of being lost to American multi-writer ensemble pieces. This, on the back of an impressive first - and perhaps unlikely - outing of Kenneth Branagh, as Wallander - the Swedish detective. Here, the casting of Branagh was most interesting to me.
Could you envisage any good - but unlikely - castings in the 'TV cop' role? Name names. (On the theme of odd castings, I recall once hearing the suggestion of Germaine Greer as Dr Who)
Good whelk to you.
Thursday, 4 December 2008
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
Minority sport: I used to like going orienteering but I don't think I've ever seen it broadcast as a spectator sport. Rather difficult to see who's in the lead, and on which course. I'm partial to watching a spot of volleyball (NOT the beach variety!) every time the Olympics comes round.
TV cop: I would SO like to have seen Bette Davis as Cagney, lacey or Miss Marple. It may not have been good but it would have been memorable. More seriously, although she doesn't seem to do TV, I would like to see Meryl Streep as Patricia Cornwell's forensic pathologist Kay Scarpetta. And how about Whoopi Goldberg as a sassy female detective?
Food: rice pudding never went out of fashion here, but you have reminded me that it's years since I made potato scollops. Must remedy that soon.
Post a Comment