Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I ate 'ot dogs last night. Blimey, that was a bit American.

Anyway Elms said that the Mott The Hoople 'four fer' was one of the greatest he'd ever hosted.

You don't even have to have heard of Mott The Hoople to love the bones of the man for making such a statement.

Sure, you don't.

He is such an accent chameleon. When someone with a working class accent rings in he acts all chummy and makes out he understands everything the person is on about and so on, but when someone from a different class comes on sure enough he ups his class-ness a couple of notches. He just doesn't seem to be genuine; there's nothing real about him, as if he doesn't have his own personality. He's also very anal retentive like a lot of right on liberals. He asked me on air once what my favourite shop was. At the time it was the Sh! Women's store in Coronet Street N1, so I said so, and you could see the beads of sweaty embarrassment come out the radio and he just couldn't cope with it. How we laughed.

SeanMacGabhann Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> He's dead right about the Beatles as well


He isn't. Not liking the Beatles, is a stance, a pose, a posture.

A meaningless cough against a cultural mountain.

'She Loves You' has greater significance, beauty and class than whatever everyone on the EDF will write on here to the end of time and what Robert Elms has ever written, particulary in The Face. And I quite liked most of that stuff.


Anyway.

HonaloochieB Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> SeanMacGabhann Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > He's dead right about the Beatles as well

>

> He isn't. Not liking the Beatles, is a stance, a

> pose, a posture.

> A meaningless cough against a cultural mountain.

> 'She Loves You' has greater significance, beauty

> and class than whatever everyone on the EDF will

> write on here to the end of time and what Robert

> Elms has ever written, particulary in The Face.

> And I quite liked most of that stuff.

>

> Anyway.



HonaB, I think it possible that I love you more daily.

????


I can see you dressed in fetching Violet Leather Jackboots/jodhpur/tunic/cape & hat combo ( cape is optional BTW )


Though R.E with his reddish freckly tinge,riding a bike might struggle to carry it off


"Nah wot I meen Guv"



W**F


( I still listen to his show, It's far better than any other station offers , unless "money box live" floats your boat, "Hello Brenda from Guildford".... )

I think Robert Elms strikes a chord with a lot of us of a certain age that benefitted from a state education and free university ( often being the first in our family). We came out being educated in life as well as academia. We might feel comfortable /uncomfortable in some social spheres ( like the sch! comment, and sometimes our parents attitudes) but we are basically ok and know who we are and where we came from. We love life and what it throws at us and we generalyy LOVE London.

I think he can be a bit pretentious and the Way we Wore I thoroughly enjoyed but it did make him seem a bit of a knob. He makes me laugh how he completley dismissed Acid House when really it was just that suddenly he was too old! However, on the few times I've listened to him on the radio he's been good and as others have pointed out he is a genuine Londoner.


PS That Spandau Ballet introduction is excrutiatingly pretentious though

???? Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I think he can be a bit pretentious and the Way we

> Wore I thoroughly enjoyed but it did make him seem

> a bit of a knob. He makes me laugh how he

> completley dismissed Acid House when really it was

> just that suddenly he was too old! However, on the

> few times I've listened to him on the radio he's

> been good and as others have pointed out he is a

> genuine Londoner.

>

> PS That Spandau Ballet introduction is

> excrutiatingly pretentious though


Of course it is Quids, but then so were he and they at the time. It was the way of things.

The Spandex Bullies (copyright NME) went on to become right royal knobjackets, who lest we forget inflicted 'True' on an innocent and trusting world.

We didn't ask for it, but the bastards just smashed us in the face with it regardless.


Robert went on to have sex with Sade (everyone's jealous, come on, just bloody own up, any man who carps at Elms has this as a base motive, you do and you know it), and inflict jazz and such on the listening public of some parts of London.

However he brought that ginger architect to our attention and that interesting sounding etymologist, so pretty damned good so far as I'm concerned.


I'm going to file him under 'alright'.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Staff get taxis in and out and get paid extra (which I think is x2). Some people like to work on Bank Holidays and others don’t. Some people actively avoid Christmas for personal reasons. Long live freedom of choice! 
    • Here is another article from the excellent Special Needs Jungle (SNJ) with tips for responses to the SEND conversation survey. Including shoe horning in EHCPs which they "forget" to ask a question about in the conversation. And living as we do in Southwark with the huge misfortune of 100% academy secondary schools, some thoughts on this and how unlikely inclusion in mainstream is within the current education landscape. Closing date 14 Jan 2026. And please consider a donation to the excellent entirely run by volunteers SNJ. In my view the government could save money by creating some smaller mainstream secondary schools for kids who can cope in primary school but not  with the scale of secondary, and need a calmer less busy setting. The funding would have to be different - it is currently on a per pupil basis which favours larger schools. But it would undoubtedly be cheaper than specialist provision, and the huge cost to individual children and families (emotional and financial) and to society. https://www.specialneedsjungle.com/tips-help-complete-governments-send-conversation-survey-law/ If anyone wants to take a radical step to help their struggling child, my tip is to move far away: these are the best two schools I have ever visited and in a beautiful part of the country. I only wish we'd moved there before it was too late for my son who had to suffer multiple failings at Charter North and then at the hands of Southwark SEND, out of education from February to October in year 10-11, having already suffered the enduring trauma of a very difficult early life, which in combination with ADHD made his time at schools which just don't care so very unbearable for all of us. https://www.cartmelprioryschool.co.uk/ https://settlebeck.org/ As an add on, I would say to anybody considering adoption, please take into account the education battles that you are very much more likely to face than the average parent. First you have schools to deal with, already terrible; then being passed from pillar to post within Southwark Education, SEND, Education Inclusion Team, round and round as they all do their best to explain why they are not responsible and you need someone different, let's hold another multi-agency meeting, never for one minute considering that if they put the child at the centre and used common sense they would achieve a lot more in much less time without loads of Southwark employees sitting in endless meetings with long suffering parents. It is hard to fully imagine this at the start of your adoption journey, full of hope as you are, but truly education is not for the faint hearted, and should be factored into your decision. You'll never hear from people who are really struggling and continue to do so, only from those who've had challenges but overcome them and it's all lovely. And education, the very people who should be there to help, are the ones who make your lives the most hellish out of everything your child and you face.
    • It’s a big problem all over London. I’ve seen it happen in Kennington and Bloomsbury in the last year. I think there has been some progress recently with some key arrests, but you do need to be very careful when walking around with your phone out, especially, as you say, if wearing noise cancelling headphones. Sorry you experienced this 
    • Luke Johnson (prominent director and co-owner), supported Brexit and backed the Vote Leave campaign. He also described the response to Covid as ‘a campaign of fear’ and 2020 funded a media consultant for the ‘Covid-recovery group’ of anti-lockdown MPs.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...