The Anonymous Widower

Stroke-Friendly Food

I just wanted to put up a post about my supper, which was a tuna steak cooked with green beans and tomatoes.  I’ve done it many times before, but today it tasted particularly good.

Why?

The wine even tasted better, so perhaps I’m getting my taste back.  Could the hay fever be finally receding? I don’t know, but I’m taking some Vitamin C tablets to help.

I do find some food is easier to eat than others.  Tuna steaks are easier to cut up, than say beef, so perhaps that was the reason.

Whatever it is, I’m glad I’m feeling better.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Food | , , | 3 Comments

The Yahoo Search Says A Lot

I was just checking a Yahoo group and noticed their most common search terms.

  1. iPhone 4 – A complete waste of space, that doesn’t meet its specification
  2. Tiger Woods – Overhyped and over-here
  3. Dream Interpretation
  4. Cheryl Cole – Nice girl, but she hasn’t been lucky in love or on getting malaria on  her charity stunt. She deserves a lot better!
  5. Come Dine with Me – Never watched it and probably never will!
  6. Raoul Moat – He’s not worth searching for!
  7. Lottery – Only losers do this tax on the poor!
  8. Wayne Rooney – Perhaps you need to search for his talent that has disappeared.
  9. Mel Gibson – Someone I never think about, except if he’s in a film and then I avoid it.
  10. Toy Story 3 – Not a film I would see, but it has had good reviews from people I respect.

Does this list sum up what is wrong with popular culture in this country.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Computing | , | Leave a comment

Is It a Good Idea to Cut the BBC Licence Fee?

There are reports today, that the government is wanting to cut the BBC licence fee, as we must all make sacrifices in these hard times.

Obviously, it could be good for the country, but we must make sure that the quality of the BBC’s output doesn’t decline.

My viewing habits are I think fairly typical of someone, who is male and reasonably well off, as I have a subscription to Sky Sports, and digital television and  a Sky+ recorder.

  • I watch football, cricket, tennis and sometimes other sports on Sky.
  • If sport is on the BBC, I usually watch it.  Because there is nothing else to do today, I’m watching the golf, but I’d prefer to be watching football, cricket, tennis or athletics.
  • I never watch soaps or any drama series that require you to see all episodes.  Even things like Spooks, which I do like, I rarely watch.
  • I watch intelligent quizzes, like Mastermind, University Challenge and QI and sometimes inane ones like Shooting Stars.
  • I always check BBC3 and BBC4 for intelligent or interesting programs.
  • I watch old comedy and rarely any new stuff, except for things like Have I Got News For You.
  • I watch the repeat channels like Dave, for repeats of programs I like.
  • I rarely watch films on television, as you should see them in a proper cinema.
  • I never watch anything other than sport with adverts.
  • I watch a lot of documentaries and history programs.
  • I watch a lot of news programs and always start the day with BBC Breakfast.
  • I don’t watch property, gardening and makeover shows
  • I only watch ITV, if I’m really desperate.
  • I listen a lot to BBC Radio 5 Live and I often contribute to programmes with e-mails.

So cutting the licence fee would not affect my viewing much, unless shows that I liked weren’t made anymore.  I worry about BBC Radio 5  and BBC Sport going to  Manchester, as I think that could reduce the quality, as the good commentators and production staff, might not want to move north.  One northern-born Radio 5 presenter said as much very stridently in an off-air comment, that a microphone picked up.  If the north was so good, it would create more jobs without government subsidy, just like London and the greater South East does.

I hope too, that BBC cuts don’t mean that the BBC dumb downs. In fact cuts should mean that programs like East Enders, which are expensive to make should be replaced by something less inane, that would hopefully give ambition and perhaps a degree of education and enlightenment to those less fortunate than myself.

But what we really need is a better way to collect the licence, so that everybody pays and thus it could be reduced without atually reducing the total take to the BBC. Years ago, I proposed a Reverse TV Licence, where the BBC was paid for out of general taxation and if you didn’t have a TV, you got a payment from the government.But with technology now, we could go a lot better. Especially, as we’re all going to have to go digital and many of us will go to satellite or the Internet. Remember, many of us, pay a large subscription for all sorts of services on our mobile phone, but think that all television, music and film should be free.

One thing that has to be born in mind though, is that if the BBC cuts its budget and staff, many of the people affected will not just give up.  They will form their own production companies and make innovative programmes, that will probably broadcast through the Internet. The good ones will be found and promoted by the broadcasters and the amount of material generally available that is worth watching and listening to  will increase.

One point, I should make, is that the BBC sought my cooperation in a new program project.  It droned on for a couple of years and they must have spent a fortune to get no program at all. The program commissioning at the BBC is in my experience, a complete waste of space.  It would be so much better if independent companies took all the risk and then presented them to the BBC and others to broadcast. It would not be easy, but in the end, we’d get much better and more affordable television.

I think it is true to say, that some of the best programs, I have seen over the last few years, were created by independents and promoted by the likes of the BBC and Channel 4.

We live in interesting times.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | World | , , , , | Leave a comment

Why I Don’t Like Paper Blowing About!

Over the last few weeks, we have had it very hot some days and various people felt it was a good idea to open the kitchen door to the garden.  I don’t like it, as it tends to blow the odd bits of paper, such as newspapers, shopping lists and part-finished Sudoku that were lying about, all over the place! So now it’s colder, I’m glad to get the door shut again.

I was thinking about this a couple of nights ago.

As regular readers will know, my father was a letterpress printer.  Just as photocopiers do it sometimes, printing machines in those days were liable to monumental paper jams.  These were much more serious with those machines, as in bad cases they actually damaged the lead type.  Paper often went everywhere propelled by the feed mechanisms.  They were a time-consuming and dirty thing to sort out. I didn’t do that much machine minding, as he thought that a bit dangerous for a vhild, but say on Sunday mornings, when we were working in Wood Green, I would be called in, if the Thompson had had a major jam.

So perhaps all of that panic and flying paper has left a mark on my mind, and it is better to not let the paper start blowing about.

I don’t like draughts either and abhor the habit some people have of opening windows to let the air through.  If I want fresh air, I’ll go out and get it!

July 17, 2010 Posted by | World | , | 2 Comments

What a Disappointment!

The Russian football is not being shown! Sad, but in the grand scheme of things, not really! But suppose there was an elderly Muscovite, living in the UK, who was not very well and had been really looking forward to watching Spartak Moscow! ESPN have just made his day!

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , , , | Leave a comment

That’s a Fine Mess You’ve Got Us In!

I knew the NuLabor project would all end in tears with us footing the bill and the report on the front page of today’s Times, says it all.  Why don’t all these failed politicians crawl away into some hole somewhere and not bother us. But once they have tasted power, I suppose they want to keep it!

July 17, 2010 Posted by | News | , | Leave a comment

Something to Look Forward To!

The tour de France it is not, but the Tour of Britain is a spectacle in its own right and it will be coming almost past my door, as it goes from Bury St. Edmunds, through Haverhill, Clare and Cavendish on its way to Colchester on the 17th of September. Read more here.

I note two that it has teamed up with The Prostate Cancer Charity, something that has touched a few of my friends.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , , | Leave a comment

I Suppose I Could Watch the Golf

Weekends are bad for me, as I can’t drive, there is no pub within walking distance, so except for the stud staff, the paper lady and the postman, I won’t see anyone else for two days.

Not that I’m that bothered, as I will walk a bit in the fields with Lizzie.  The weather doesn’t look that good, so I’ll probably just watch the television.  Sport is mainly golf, although I do see that there is an exciting clash in the Russian Premier League, between Spartak Moscow and Rubin Kazan on ESPN, who report English football as bad as ITV. So I know that their Russian offering will be totally rubbish, with the commentators probably  in a cosy studio.

I do have other creative things to do though and I will report as the day progresses.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Sport, World | , , | Leave a comment

Another Tour Company Goes Bust

It has been announced this morning, that another tour company, Goldtrail, has gone bust. It does seem to happen at least twice a year.

What bannoys me is that a lot of people will not have travel insurance, so they will expect the CAA, i.e. all our taxes, to get them home.

Let’s have aaw which says that you can’t buy a holiday without either insurance or the means to get yourself home, if it all goes bust.  I have insurance, but it didn’t cover my problems in Hong Kong, so I had to fund that myself.

But why should I have to fund people who make no provision? The CAA should publish how much they have had to pay out, over and above any bonds.

Especially, as most this time were to Turkey, which is somewhere I am very cautious of visiting as it is not very coeliac-friendly, unless you stay in five-star hotels.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Business, Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Fraud from Russia Concerning Amazon

I have had a lot of e-mails purporting to say that I have ordered something on Amazon.  I know they are not genuine orders, as they come to an e-mail I never use for orders, but watch for e-mails.

They are baed on a fake AMazon web site, with a Russian domain name.

Be careful, as if you are a regular Amazon purchaser, your account has a valid credit card.

So login to the real Amazon, change your password and if you can, change your e-mail to something that you reserve for purchases over the web.

July 17, 2010 Posted by | Business, Computing, World | , , | 1 Comment