Sunday, May 18, 2025

The Fiend Of My Fiend Is My Enema

The latest From The North bloggerisationism update is very much upon us, dearest blog fiends.
And, we begin this update with the singular most important-est question of the week - what the Hell happened with regard to this blog's daily traffic on Saturday 18 May? That was the day when From The North's usual four-to-six thousand(ish) daily page hits more-or-less trebled for no obvious or discernible reason? What the actual funk?
Just for a little bit of context, here is a graph of From The North's page-hit record covering the last couple of years. So, to each of the fourteen thousand one hundred and ninety one individual page-hitters who rocked up to the gaff to (hopefully) find something of interest hereabouts, welcome you all are. And, if you are new around these parts, pull up a chair and make yourselves entirely comfy. We're all very friendly. Even this blogger. Sometimes.
Next, dearest blog fiends (new and established), this seems about right.
Oh, Keith Telly Topping, you crack us all up with your witty japery and merriment. 
Meanwhile, someone's been having fun and discombobulations with their DVD collection, it would appear (not this blogger, he very much hastens to add).
Things that yer actual Keith Telly Topping did on the morning of 2 May which he hadn't done for a while previously (if, indeed, ever); spend over half-an-hour clearing out a blocked-solid-with-gunk hose in his Shark cordless vacuum cleaner (steady). It was, quite literally dear fiends, a dirty job but someone had to do it. And, by someone, yer actual, of course, means Keith Telly Topping his very self. That's definitely forty minutes of this blogger's life that he'll never get back.
Another tasty stash of home-media-style gear arrived at The Stately Telly Topping Manor that very morning during the vacuum fiasco. Which was nice (the arrival of a package of DVDs, that is, not the blocked vacuum malarkey). Edited to add: This is a slightly improved-quality photo since the lighting on this blogger's first effort was so dark it made poor Boris Karloff look like he was from West Africa rather than South-East London. Carry on as you were.
Subsequently that day, this blogger was more than a bit hungry, so he ended up ordering a pizza for delivery to The Stately Telly Topping Manor. Because it was Friday night and, you know, whyever not?
And it was, of course, as one might expect geet lush in this blogger's sight, so it was.
On a similar grub-related theme, at the very crack-of-dawn on the following Bank Holiday Monday, this blogger doing The Stately Telly Topping Manor weekly shopping at Morrisons was preceded by brecky at McDonald's in Byker. And, this blogger will tell you all what, dear blog fiends, they were only bleeding out of barbeque sauce again. This! Will! Not! Stand! This blogger is now, officially, calling on Sir Keir to get this muddyfunker sorted. Pronto. If not sooner. This blogger cares not a smidgen about the environment, the state of education, the benefit system, better relations with Europe, worse relations with the US or the national health service (well, okay, a little bit about the latter, he'll confess, for personal reasons, twice in fact). But this. This silt, is a Major National Emergency Outrage of cosmic proportions. Hell, even the Tories managed to get BBQ sauce into outlets without much fuss (seemingly at the expense of completely knacking-up the economy right good and proper, admittedly - a bit of a drawback). The problem is, of course, should The Liberals get in they will want to replace such sauce with organic, fair-trade, made-by-somebody-other-than-Viet'namese-children-on-four-pence-an-hour-type sauce ... which will, inevitably, put the prices up. And that's not good. As for The Greens, they will want it replaced with a vegan, rocket-and-water-cress-plant-based alternative, which will make yer hash browns taste like the ground when you dip them in. Reform will claim - claim, dearest blog fiends - that they are not only tough on sauces but, also, tough on the causes of sauces. But, the only thing those hideous right-wing scumbags will get from this blogger's McDonald's breakfast menu is a strawberry milkshake all over Mister Farango's greasy heed. And, as for Comrade Corbin's Independents - they want to abolish capitalism and, with it, all of the sauces. So, it's down to you, Mister Prime Minister. This blooger wants his bloody sauce with his bloody Sausage and Egg McMuffin, cappuccino and an extra hash brown (all-in-for £5.98) and you're the only man who can make this blogger's day start in the right way. Get the muddyfunker sorted or come the next General Erection From The North will, collectively, be voting the Tories back-in. You have been warned.
Live living-type-things, meanwhile, were (and, still are) live-and-living at The Stately Telly Topping Manor. Look at the evidence.
As previously mentioned on this very blog, in early April when this blogger's current contract was about to expire, Keith Telly Topping rang up Sky to see if they could do him a new deal on The Stately Telly Topping Manor TV and/or Broadband (or, at least, if they could keep his monthly payments at around the same rate). He spoke to, this blogger joshes y'all not, a young lady called Ncuti (this blogger even checked the spelling, just to make sure). 'Just like Ncuti Gatwa?' he asked. 'Who?' she queried. 'Yeah, that's exactly right,' this blogger replied. Before adding: 'You set 'em up, sweetheart, this blogger will stick 'em away!' So, anyway, Mister Sky Q chappie (the very nice Gavin) finally arrived on that Bank Holiday Monday afternoon to do the Sky-TV cable upgrade. The Stately Telly Topping Manor, dear blog fiends, used to look like this.
But, after Gavin his done all his stuff, including drilling a smallish hole in The Stately Telly Topping Manor front-room wall to get the new cable in, it now looks very much like this.
So, the installation of The Stately Telly Topping Manor TV cable-upgrade went swimmingly (and, surprisingly) well; it was quickly done and left astonishingly little mess, plus Gavin was a nice chap and we had a lengthy chat about football and yer actual Keith Telly Topping sometimes being unable to watch Th' Toon's live games due to nerves. The installation of the Interweb fibre-cable-upgrade, on the following Wednesday however was, by contrast, a complete and total sodding nightmare. And it still wasn't completed by that evening due to ... stuff. According to the rather gruff and not-particularly-helpful engineer (who didn't turn up to do the job in the first place at shortly before 5pm), at least they would not need access to the actual gaff itself to finish the job (which happened the next day whilst this blogger out out having a nice time with a fiend). A bit of The Stately Telly Topping Manor front room (mercifully, hidden by a CD-stack most of the time) now resembles spaghetti and/or worms. It's a health-and-safety nightmare. Or, it would be if it wasn't hidden by the CD-stack. Out of sight, dear blog fiend, out of mind.
That Thursday, in fact, whilst The Stately Telly Topping Manor Interweb was being reconnected, upgraded and generally fiddled-with, yer actual Keith Telly Topping was with his excellent fiend Young Malcolm for the usual, periodic, luncheon-style malarkey, shenanigans and kerfuffle. A change of scene, a change of style (... as Joy Division) once said. This was the general locale - scarily close to The Cathedral of Dreams.
Here was the actual place of the actual incident its very self (we'd decided to move down the road from The Little Asia just for a change). A class gaff, The King Neptune, this blogger has always enjoyed the scran here on the occasions that he's dined there previously.
This was how it all began (the soup was so tasty, dear blog fiend, that it was all gone by the time yer actual Keith Telly Topping got his silt together and got the camera out).
The main event was a - very cush - chicken garlic, salt and chilli thingy. And it was, in fact, niiiice.
Followed by a furiously necessary puddin' as a palate-cleanser.
And, finally, a steamin'-hot-cup of sweet-creamy-Joe a'fore we got chucked out the gaff because they were ready to close(!), paid the bill and then adjourned to HMV for some, meandering, Blu-ray shopping.
Arriving home, post-luncheonette with Young Malcolm, this blogger had himself another steamin'-hot-cup of sweet-creamy-Joe - this time with The Divine Goddess That Is Caroline Munro giving this blogger a saucy 'come-hither stare' - courtesy of this blogger's Facebook fiend the very excellent Steve Cannell who was kind enough to, quite literally, mug-this-blogger-up (see below). And there was also the latest home media purchase (nabbed el-cheapo in an HMV sale). It was, dearest blog fiends, a tidy day all round. And the Interweb was working fine so he didn't need to ring up Sky and shout at them. Which is, always, a bonus. 
What had, in fact, prompted Young Steve to send this blogger the Dracula AD 1972-themed mug was the following popping-up in this blogger's Facebook 'Memories' page when this blogger noted: 'I can never make up my mind whether AD 1972 is the greatest "bad" movie ever made or the worst "great" movie ever made. Depending on the day, I tend to shuttle backwards-and-forwards between the two options. Today, it's the former!' And, you know what dear blog fiends? This blogger still stand by his confusion of three years previously, despite having written, extensively, on the subject and watched the damn thing, on average, once-a-week for the last thirty years. To quote the bloke that said it: 'One of the most hilariously dated movies of any era - by having a specific date as part of the film’s title, it is forever trapped within a time capsule. Yet, perhaps because of this, Dracula AD 1972 has aged so utterly terribly that it has transcended its humble origins to become little short of a comedy masterpiece. Exploitation cinema is always at its finest when polemic and dogma meet head-on and, instead of producing the expected gestalt of social-comment, ends up with a mélange of clashing and fractious statements. Dracula AD 1972's like that. It so desperately wants to be a serious, po-faced observation on important youth culture issues. Instead, by the sheer banality of its construction, the film comes over as Carry On Biting, full of unexpected laughs at, literally, every turn. However, that said, a word of genuine praise: Dick Bush's cinematography, particularly during the title sequence with zoom-lens shots of the concrete jungle that London had become, is just gorgeous. Watch this one with a few friends, a bottle of wine and a Chinese takeaway and, simply, thank God that you weren't born in the 1870s and, thus, never got a chance to see incompetent genius like this.' Oh, hang on, that was this blogger writing all that, wasn't it?
This blogger has said it before, dear blog fiends, but if life was party, this blogger still wants his party to have Stoneground playing 'Alligator Man' in the front-room of The Stately Telly Topping Manor and Caroline Munro dancing on the sideboard. Shake it till it drops, Caroline, baby. And, to the guy dancin' with her - oi, Moody Chops, get yer bloody hair cut, hippy.
That Facebook posting, incidentally, promptly prompted a right-good-and-proper thread with lots of amusing comments, incisive critique, side-alleys, cul-de-sacs and dead-ends. For instance, this blogger's fine Facebook fiend Simon (himself a terrific horror critic and author) noted that there is far more that the movie gets right than wrong and that most of the criticisms of it doesn't stand up to close examination. 'The actors were too old to play teenagers, apparently, despite their ages never given!' This blogger confirmed that AD 72 is, in fact, the prefect time-capsule of a era which never existed except in the heads of the bunch of middle-aged, middle-class white men at Hammer that made it. And, therein lies its true, epic, genius. Plus, the fact that within eighteen months Janet Key would be playing Jack Regan's ex-trouble-and-strife and the mother of a ten-year-old daughter on The Sweeney is the cherry on the cake. Even Johnny Alucard would be baffled by that.
Simon also noted that he had once written that Johnny's Cavern crowd may be a bunch of entitled kids who have joined the fag-end of the counterculture movement. Which is, perhaps, why they get the hip dialogue so very wrong. 'Fascinating,' this blogger replied. 'But, does that explain the obsession with "jazz" though?' The film is no more 'dated' or 'an old bloke's idea of what the Youth are really like' than Beyond The Valley Of The Dolls, which doesn't get half-as-much stick claimed this another of this blogger's excellent - horror film-critic and author - fiends, Yer Man Ken. 'Also, I reckon that Don Houghton - an experienced screenwriter - was typing all of that material out with a certain amount of tongue-in-cheek. Plus, Sir Lee! The Cush! Murray and his wonderful detective sergeant.' Ken added that this was the first Hammer film he had watched on his own and, therefore, although it's not a 'good' film, per se, 'it is and-ever-shall-be a hugely enjoyable one.' That's 'a fair point re-other "old blokes idea of what The Kidz are into, man"', this blogger conceded. 'It's not even the only example of this in British horror cinema of the era (Tower of Evil, The Haunted House of Horror, Psychomania - all terrible films in one way and utterly, mind-bogglingly brilliant films in another - or, if they're not, at least maddeningly entertaining),' the blogger continued. 
'Oi, Sir Christopher, cheer-the-funk-up, matey. You're in a movie with Marsha Hunt, for God's sake!'
It's interesting to think that Michael Armstrong was only twenty three when he made The Haunted House of Horror, noted Simon, 'and yet the yoof [sic] speech seems just as awkward' in that. This blogger agreed, but noted that what ended up on-screen in the latter movie was 'more Tony Tenser and Gerry Levy's idea of what The Kidz were up to, man,' than Michael's - his take was, according to his original, published, script, The Dark far more cynical; albeit, as Kim Newman and Sean Hogan's DVD commentary makes very clear, it was written when Michael was at school in the early 1960s and half-a-dozen pop-culture subgenres and been-and-gone by the time it finally got made. The Beatles, a popular beat combo of the 1960s, you might've heard of them, for example had gone from playing Chuck Berry and Little Richard covers at Litherland Town Hall and The Kaiserkeller to 'Revolution 9' for a kick-off. And yet, again, this blogger loves that particular film. The same company's The Curse of the Crimson Alter is another example of Tony Tenser desperately trying to keep up with The Kidz and another one which, nicely, falls into the so-wrong-it's-brilliant column. 'We were very good for a few years in the British horror industry at reaching for decadence and finding, instead, only (and I say only advisedly) slapstick. Which isn't, genuinely, damning with faint praise. For that, let's all be thankful.'
Another of this blogger's fiends, James, also noted that he's a fan of AD 72 adding that whilst he believes it's nowhere near the best of the series, he still enjoys the film far more than Risen From The Grave and Scars both of which felt 'formulaic and tired.' This blogger replied that he's said, in Return to the Vault of Horror, that Scars of Dracula is - horribly - the nadir of the entire series and that, compared to it, the subsequent three movies in the franchise need a major (and, by major, this blogger means Brigadier-General) re-evaluation; in comparison to Scars, Legend of the Seven Golden Vampires is a jolly decent effort and AD 72 is the twenty four-carat masterpiece. 'I do love Risen From The Grave, though,' this blogger added. '[It was the] first horror film I ever saw on TV (Friday 18 October 1974, fact-fans) and, as a consequence, it looms large in my legend!' It was, as noted in at least two books this blogger has written, a night which, in a way, changed Keith Telly Topping's life.
The Haunted House of Horror, incidentally, was the third horror movie this blogger ever saw on TV (after Dracula Has Risen from the Grave and, the following week, The Blood-Beast Terror). Is it, therefore, any wonder that Keith Telly Topping ended up so warped and sexy and just a little bit dangerous and, in all likelihood, will come to a jolly bad end? Tyne-Tess Television and their Appointment With Fear Friday-night strand have a Hell of a lot to answer for. Just ask everyone whom has ever met this blogger. Incidentally, you have to love the Evening Chronicle synopsis for The Haunted House of Horror, quoted hereafter. '... They are having a good time until one of their number is found hacked to death.' Yeah, that'd probably put a bit of a dampener on things ...
'I remember a double-bill of Twins Of Evil and Terror From The year 5000,' added Simon as one of his first memories of watching horror movies on TV. 'I still don't know what reality really is.' Ah, The Twins of Evil, noted this blogger fondly. '9 September 1977. The day where I learned about breasts (or, at least, had their importance confirmed, anyway). Happy memories.'
Don't merely take this blogger's word for it, dear blog fiends ...
Anyway, back to AD 72. 'I thought it was great' said another of this blogger's fiend Matt (rather cheekily infringing on this blogger's copyrighted phrase). 'When I did my epic-watchathon - those two contemporary Hammer Draculas were such relief after the repeated attempts to regurgitate the original in a period setting and the turgid dead end of The Karnstein Trilogy. They played like pilots for an Avengers-style TV series - original, energetic and brave.' Spot on. They both, of course, have a reputation lower than rattlesnakes piss amongst men with stroke-y beards who 'take their British horror very seriously', this blogger added. Which, is probably only but one of the many reasons why Keith Telly Topping loves both of them so very much. 'There's also something about how the stroke-y beard fans tend to be stuck in a particular time,' Matt continued. 'I felt the same about the two contemporary Dracula movies now as I do about the unfairly-derided 1998 Avengers film - in the 1990s when the fashion was all grim and sincere, they were sneered at. Now, we're in a more ironic mode after Edgar Wright, Taika Waititi, James Gunn et cetera, they feel almost ahead of their time.' That, of course, is down to the general conservatism of many fandoms, this blogger conceded. 'We're Doctor Who fans, do we need to be told about people who take their subject more seriously than it needs to be? Or, indeed, more seriously than the people that made the damn thing in the first place probably intended? Horror fans, like comics fans and SF fans, tend to fall into two categories - the sort that spend five hours in an online conversation whinging about how something has utterly reaped their Dalek-lovin' childhood; and then there's people like us who spend an - admittedly equal - amount of time online finding something "fun" and wanting to tell the world and its dog about it. Neither position is, inherently, wrong per se - but, some of us get invited to much cooler parties. See, also, every other fandom under The Sun (except Star Wars fans, they're all serious). And, for anyone taking notes (and if you are, why?), here is the first time this blogger saw AD 72. Keith Telly Topping was fourteen. The perfect age to have your mind well-and-truly blown, baby. 'If we do get to summon up the Big Daddy with the horns and the tail, he gets to bring his own liquor, his own bird and his own pot!'
'I think the biggest problem is not so much that it feels like a middle-aged man's hazy conception of the Youth Today, but that it feels like a middle-aged man's hazy conception of the Youth in circa-1966,' suggested this blogger's fiend Joel. 'Which is a bit of a problem when you proudly brag about the release year in the title itself.' An excellent point, this blogger's replied. 'But, to be honest, it's more like a middle-aged man's hazy conception of the Youth Today circa 1958 (with a few elements of post-1966 thrown in via the more hysterically salacious pages of the News of the World).' That's enough to scare even the lead singer of Stoneground. 
Incidentally, if anyone fancies a Dracula AD 1972 mug just like this blogger's (or, indeed, a slightly different one), check out Steve's excellent Midnight Mugs Facebook page. Tell him this blogger sent you, when you order something. 
A few days later, this blogger was idly flicking through channels on his new, spanky, Sky Q box when he stumbled across a repeat of an episode of The Ambassadors of Death on U&Eden (no, me neither) and was reminded of an age-old truism that all but a very-select-handful of yer actual Doctor Who four-parters are three really good episodes and then another less-really-good one (usually episode three) with lots of running up-and-down corridors and capture-escape-recapture-reescape. Then, there's The Ambassadors of Death which is three really good episodes and four funking awful ones with lots of running up-and-down corridors and capture-escape-recapture-reescape (see also, Silurians, The).
And, speaking of that from The North favourite particular television series about a-madman-in-a-box, since last this blogger bloggerised like a big bloggerisationism-thing, the Beeb has only been and gone and broadcast three further episodes of the current series; Lucky Day - which this blogger thought was great.
The Story & The Engine - which this blogger thought was really great.
And, The Intersteller Song Contest - which he also thought was great.
... Though, admittedly, this blogger could've done with significantly less Funking-Bucks-Funking-Fizz. Listen, dear blog reader, it's yer actual Keith Telly Topping's problem, he'll be the one that deals with it.
The two-part series finale, Well World and The Reality War will be shown over the next two Saturdays.
After that, the wait for confirmation of the next series begins. So, until that happens, here's a picture of a cat in a field of flowers. Ooo ... pretty. 
'Surprise Replacement Bassist Announced For The Forthcoming Slade Reunion Tour.' That bloody From The North favourite Yer Man Mark Kermode, he gets everywhere and hangs out with all the groovy funkers. Some (hopefully, well-meant) advice to Nod, Dave and Don - take absolutely no lip from the geezer if he gets the bassline to 'Gudbye T'Jane' wrong. Sorry, Mark, but it's The Law.
Speaking of 1970s rock and/or roll icons, 'she's the Queen of Northern Soul', apparently. 
And finally, dear blog fiends, there is only but one nomination for the latest From The North's Headline Of The Week award. And it goes to From The North ... whatever the opposite of favourite is, the Gruniad Morning Star. Blimey, he's hard. But, what was the Polar Bear doing with the saucepan in the first place? Answer that and remain fashionable.

Thursday, May 01, 2025

"What A May Day"

So, dear bloggerisationism fiends, welcome you all are, as ever, to the very latest From the North blog-page update and that. Coming to you, as it usually does, from the magnificent splendour and elegant palatial luxury of The Stately Telly Topping Manor blog-writing-and-creative-thinking room.
Arriving at your Interweb browser all the way from The Stately Telly Topping Manor. Which is, of course, in The North. Just for anyone that wasn't aware of this universal constant or the relevance of this blog's name for the last nineteen years. Well, you know, some people can be a bit slow on the uptake. 
We kick-off this bloggerisationism piece with a, necessary, opening weather report: To quote the extremely-late George Formby, it's turned out nice again.
The most recent From The North bloggerisationism update happened to coincide with the arrival on the actual BBC of the latest series of From The North favourite Doctor Who. The opening episode of which this blogger thought was great. Since which times, two further episodes have been also been shown; Lux - which this blogger thought was great ...
... and The Well. Which this blogger, also, thought was great.
Of course, this blogger - being 'up Russell's arse', according to one particular source - would say that. To provide a counterbalance to such a crass show of actually 'enjoying something' (Heaven forbid) as per usual, a few mouthy, punchable online naysayers, have been whinging about ... you know, stuff. It's what they do, dear blog fiends. They're very good at such kerfufflement. It is, therefore, always worth remembering when reading such glakish loose stool-water dribbling the following piece of necessary contextualisation.
As is his occasional want, dear blog fiends, this blogger recently decided that it just was about high-time for another change of appearance. In this particular case his, bi-annual, well-dodgy haircut. 'Change, my dear. And it seems not a moment too soon (before he starting looking like a hippy). 
Meanwhile, following the untimely death and (subsequent) funeral of the late Pope Frankie (it had to be subsequent, it would've been a bit harsh to bury the poor chap whilst he was still alive, would it not?), a surprise front-runner in the search for the next Pope has emerged. Keith telly Topping can, indeed, confirm that he is available ... at the right price. 
Should His Holiness Keith Telly Topping get the gig, of course, he shall not use the papal right-hook in the manner of 'Enery's 'Amma to smite-down, with great fury and righteous vengeance, those who offend against The One True Religion; on the contrary, this blogger's benign papal reign will be a time of peace and tolerance based, largely, on the teachings of Keith Telly Topping's role model, His Holiness Pope Ringo I from Lisztomania. His Holiness Keith Telly Topping will be no Pope John-Paul III, dear blog fiends. He will, rather, be His Holiness Pope George-Ringo I. And, when it comes to the tricky question of the church's attitudes of general gaiety ...
The Metro - so, not a real newspaper - ran the sad, sad story of one chap who has, seemingly, lost a useful secondary source of income. Or, at least he would have done if anyone has actually needed to hire a His Holiness Pope Frankie lookalike. Trees died to bring you this vital information, dear blog reader.
Perhaps a change of artistic direction might be in order for yon rent-a-pope chappie if he wants to make some money out of the job.
On a somewhat related-theme, let's hear it for Chris.
The following rather excellent image popped-up on this blogger's Facebook memories page last week. 'The Seven Bridges', taken by this blogger with his (then-new) Motorolo digicamera, in 2008, from out of the window of a Douglas Dakota DC-3 which was making its final flight from Newcastle Airport having been in service since the mid-1950s.
Whilst this blogger waits, patiently, to receive the page-proofs for his most recently completed book, already his thoughts are beginning to turn towards whatever it is that he intend to pitch next. Which potentially may (or may not) include a boxed-section on the role of the wise-cracking Jack-the-lad Detective Chief Inspector in the 1970s British horror movie. Most of whom are, seemingly, as thick-as-mince and funny as a dose of testicular cancer. With these two notable exceptions.
At the back end of last week, this blogger enjoyed one of his semi-irregular 'let's do the show right here' lunches with his close fiend, the legend that is Young Malcolm. There was a revised, buffet, menu on offer at the Little Asia and it was, all told, a rather civilised way to spend a leisurely lunchtime. Here was the very scene of the incident.
This was how, in the words of Elvis Costello, the whole thing started.
There then followed what can only be described as The Main Event.
And, before we paid the bill and buggered-off to HMV to do some Blu-ray shopping, there was also cake, dear blog reader. Actual cake. 
Meanwhile, back at The Stately Telly Topping Manor, 'he did, in fact, play The Invisible Man, but this is daft, isn't it ...?'
This blogger recently received his latest Covid-19 inoculation-type thingy at (one of) the local pharmacies. Keith Telly Topping's arm is, sad to report, still knacking over a week later which is the first time he's had any sort of (in this case, extremely mild) averse-reaction to one of these since the very first Covid jab he received back in early 2021. He can live with it, however, it just means he's been sleeping exclusively on his left-hand-side in plush and comfy The Stately Telly Topping Manor bed for the last week. Following those tricky hospitalisation events of February 2022 and November 2024 this blogger is, frankly, taking having a-bit-of-a-sore-arm for just over a week as something of a result compared to getting used to hospital food again. 
Nevertheless it was, in short, one of those sort of weeks.
Last Saturday was the twelfth anniversary of the death of this blogger's late-mother. The following day was the thirty fourth anniversary of the death of this blogger's late-father. Keith Telly Topping, of course, continue to miss them both every single day.
This blogger's fortune cookie on Sunday evening gave the following, no doubt sage, advice. This blogger could, he is forced to confess, hardly wait for the following day to arrive.
On Monday morning, this blogger was shocked - and stunned - to discover that the branch of Lloyds Bank on Shields Road had only been and gone and shut (without them bothering to actually tell anyone about this). Shields Road Post Office was, likewise, closed - temporarily in this particular case due to some hapless plank of a lass getting herself locked out of the counter-area and needing to call the manager to come and let her back again. One imagines her next Annual Report will be a document that's well-worth reading. McDonalds and Morrisons, bless 'em, we're happy to accept of this blogger's custom without questions. And, they shall have it again; amazing is it not, dear blog fiends, commercial premises never seem to have any of the fiascos that service industries do on a virtual daily basis?
Following that, dearest blog fiends, on Monday evening it was clearly time for a nice medicinal - and thoroughly deserved - King Prawn curry with egg-fried rice at The Stately Telly Topping Manor. Oh yes. As usual, this blogger is happy to report that it was geet lush.
Now, some people talk a good game, dearest blog fiends, but others actually do something which, quite literally, affects every single person on the planet on a daily basis. Take, for example, Joseph Wilson Swan (1828-1914), seen here in his laboratory in Mosley Street, Newcastle. An inventor, chemist, physicist and electrical engineer, Swan is most famous for inventing the incandescent lightbulb, as well as fairy lights, photographic paper, synthetic silk and a miner's flameless safety-lamp. Born 1828 in Pallion Hall, Sunderland. In 1846 Joseph joined his friend John Mawson in a chemist business. In 1867 Mawson was tragically killed in an explosion on Newcastle Town Moor whilst trying to dispose of some Nitro-glycerinein. That same year Swan's wife and his twin sons also died. The following year, Swan moved his remaining family to Underhill House in Kells Lane, Gateshead. In 1869 the company Mawson and Swan was extended to include stationary, under the management of Thomas Morgan. New premises were taken at the top of Grey Street which became Mawson, Swan & Morgan (later a branch of Waterstones and, now, Byron Burgers - this blogger's never eaten there personally, though he's told it's very nice). The original electric street-lamps can still be seen outside the building. In 1879 Swan demonstrated his incandescent lightbulb to seven hundred people at the Newcastle Lit & Phil Library on Westgate Road. In 1879 the Mawson, Swan & Morgan lab premises on Mosley Street and the street itself became the first in the world to be fully illuminated with electric light. In 1880 Swan supervised the installation of his electric light at Sir William Armstrong's mansion at Cragside utilising hydro-electric power. Thomas Edison was also working on an incandescent lamp at the same time. In 1880 he produced a lamp using a bamboo filament and received a US patent for what was, essentially, an exact copy of Swan’s design. The notoriously-litigious Edison attempted to sue Swan through the British courts for patent infringement. However, he quickly realised (or, was advised by his lawyers) that he was onto a loser and, eventually, the two men settled their differences and formed the Edison and Swan United Electric Light Company Limited. For the next fifty years pretty much every electric lightbulb sold in the world was an EdiSwan. Sir Joseph Swan was born into a world of candles and left the world a more illuminated place. He died in 1914 at the age of eighty six.
This is just what one needs if one wishes to grease up ones very own burglar, this blogger will venture. Get it in the shops for Christmas.
'Red sky at night, Gatesheed's alight ...'
Moving on, now, to the regular From The North Headline Of The Fortnight nominations. Beginning with all manner of trouble, strife and mayhem in that there Marske. Let us allow, therefore, the Northern Echo to describe the sort of scenario which Enid Blyton never thought it necessary to inform us about.
It would seem that Julian, Dick, Anne, George and Timmy have also been up to no-good in Devon. With lashings of Ginger's Beer, one trusts.
Presumably, Uncle Quentin was the dastardly mastermind behind these naughty criminal shenanigans.
From that nonsense to what is, without question, the most thigh-slappingly ironic story of the week. Or indeed any other week for that matter.
Oh, if you will dear blog fiends, the irony.
In this week's Whom, Exactly, Is The World's Biggest Numbskull? competition, the BBC exposes one, potential candidate to the full, harsh, glare of publicity.
It's a question which needs to be asked, dear blog fiends.
At least the same competition's runner-up had an excuse ready, according to the Manchester Evening News. Not a very good excuse, admittedly, but still ...
Things that are 'nothing whatsoever like [a] nuclear war ... not even a little bit', a loadish bridge siren in Glasgow. The pie-ruination business is, undeniably, a twenty-four carat tragedy though.
The BBC News website (which used to be run by adults) appears to have highlighted the only flatulent beaver in nature.
And, from the same website (which, again, used to be run by adults) in the 'this utter-horseshite constitutes "news", apparently' column, the following mountain of noxious diarrhoea.
Considerable and generous congratulations are, of course, due to the Henley Standard for managing to shoehorn a Monty Python's Life of Brian dialogue quotation into a headline. One presumes the sub-editor in this particular case 'did it for a bet'? If so, jolly well done, sir (or madam). next, see if you can get away with 'Biggus Dickus'.
Should someone inform the authorities about this possible copyright infringement, one wonders?
Here's a potential hot-topic for this time of the year.
'Nick Ross, law lecturer at ULaw [no, me neither], states: "It may be surprising to find out that topless sunbathing is perfectly legal for both men and women in the UK. Full public nudity is also not a crime but only if the person who strips off has no intention to cause alarm or distress.' If you do intend 'to cause alarm or distress' (to either yourself or others) with your naughty nakedness, dear blog reader, then this blogger is very much afraid it's straight-off-to-jail-with-you right good-and-proper. 'You ought to be bloody-well hung.' 'I am, Mister Judge, sir, what do you think got me here in the first place? Society is to blame.'
Next ... So many potential jokes about Rovers at this juncture. Obviously.
The Daily Torygraph's Madeleine Ross, meanwhile, wishes to illicit readers' collective sympathy for exceedingly rich people who whinge about what a hard time they and their hideously-entitled grubby offspring are currently having and how we should all feel sorry for them (and, vote Tory). 
And, still on the subject of 'shit that nobody in the world could, actually, give a soddin' cobbles about', there's this nugget of stinking, toxic phlegm from CNN.
The only sensible reply to these previous two pieces, of course, being ...
Thank you Richard. Next, when it comes to court appearances, honesty seems to be the best policy. At least, it is according to My London News (no, me neither).
Blimey, could this be the long-awaited 'Coming of The Lord'? They called. He, seemingly, answered. Possibly he misheard about what happens in Exodus 3 with the burning bush and though it said 'bus'. 
Jesus was, to be fair, probably more than a bit pissed-off at the point by this sort of malarkey. Every year around the same time. It's enough to make anyone cross, frankly.
'Waiter, there's a maggot in my burger.' 'Keep it to yourself, sir, or they'll all want one.'
'Waiter, there's a fly in my soup.' 'Yes, sir, it's the heat that kills them, they reckon.' 'But, what's it doing in there?' 'Looks like the breast-stroke to me.'
Not the Gruniad Morning Star's Bayeux tapestry penis tally mass-debate, surely?
Now, of course, what we all really need to know is just what, exactly, those dirty pigeons have done to Adrian Chiles downpipe. And, are there any pictures of them doing whatever it is that they do. Because, this blogger, personally, would pay good money to see that.
'Police say they have nothing to go on.' What? What?
Arthur Poo-Sheds Jackson's latest info-dump, from the Doncaster Free Press.
'The power is out and nothing is working. How am I supposed to get through the day? That was the question faced by millions of people on Monday across Spain and Portugal during the worst electricity blackout in their history.' Thus begins a piece of abject space-filling bollocks by one André Rhoden-Paul on the BBC News website (which, remember, used to be run by adults). In which the answers cash, a radio, tinned food, candles and torches and a powerbank; he fails, however, to also mention that cash won't be of much use to you if most places are closed because of the powercut; the radio will also need batteries; your tinned food will require a can-opener so you can get at it and, unless you have a gas stove, you'll also need something to cook it on; candles also need matches to light them and, finally, a powerbank isn't going to be much use unless it operates on solar power. André Rhoden-Paul, dear blog reader. Silly name, silly man. 
Why ever not? It's certain more celebrational than anything else that's ever happened in Stockport dare one suggest?
Yer actual Keith Telly Topping reckons this is more than a bit of a blow.
And, finally ...