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November, 2009:

Hornsea, Askance

NotVeryAmusingAmusements

Hi. I’m a 38 year old man, living at home with his mum.

(Until she’s recovered from her recent surgery. Probably returning to York this time next week).

Walking through town last night, I squinted until everything was blurry – until it was 1998 again, the last time I lived here. I listened to someone explaining the finer points of making up a rollie. I watched as the side of the church cracked open, spilling buttery light and rosy-cheeked young urchins onto the street (and since my eyes were half-shut I couldn’t see their cigarettes or cans of lager). I squinted at the rebranded kebab shop until its name changed back.

The streets looked too wide – explained by the fact that they’ve recently been widened – and the same shops are constantly in flux while others endure as fixed points in time and space. The latter are a marvel. For every safe, sensible attempt at yet another bakery or grocery store there’s something so wildly nichey that it couldn’t even survive in York (a city that has a shop selling Christmas decorations all year round). At an inaccessible end of the roundabout near St Nicholas’s Church there’s a Fung Shui shop. It’s a shop that sells Fung Shui. In East Yorkshire. To Yorkshire people. And yet somehow it’s survived for at least the last half-decade. I’m fascinated by this Shackleton-like feat of endurance, flying in the face of every commercial law I know. I want to know more. There’s obviously a story there.

Even if I squinted, the boarded-up Amusements along the sea-front stubbornly remained shut. I dimly remember going in Dave’s (above) – distinctly remember walking through the doors, but nothing else, as if I’ve had that memory surgically removed by someone desperately covering their tracks and/or hiding just how bad it was in there. All the amusement arcades are derelict buildings waiting to have their roles reimagined – even the mighty Pastimes. There’s a hint of Pripiat about the place, except it’s not radioactivity, it’s apathy.

Squinting goes some way to hiding all that. But squinting is dishonest, and so very 1998; it reminds me to who I used to be when I’d rather concentrate on who I am now. Also, squinting gives you frown-lines. Being English, I already have enough of them.

So while I’m back here, I’ll open my eyes and see what happens.

Image: the repairman

383 Reasons I Haven’t Been Around

Heatwave

In my line of work I get asked a lot of questions, such as “Why are you never around on your personal blog?”, “Did you actually read back what you’ve just written?”, “Where’s the money you owe me?” and “Why can’t you be funnier?”.

I can answer the first question fairly easily. (The other three are more tricky).

(more…)

But A Wisp of the Dales

In 2007, I went walking with 2 good friends in the Yorkshire Dales around Ingleborough.

Yorkshire Dales4 2007-1

The air was heavy with rain that never quite broke, shot through with sunshine that never really came out to play, and just the right temperature to keep you walking at a mile-devouring trot.

We walked up hill and down valley, up to the top of Ingleborough, glorying in the view down to Ribblehead Viaduct far, far below (look – we were up there) and marvelling how completely unsuited to the environment we were with our puny arms and puny legs, clumsy and uncoordinated. I’m saying this chiefly because I remember falling over just after the following photo was taken – one of those undignified sprawls that has even the goats rolling around, eyes streaming.

YorkshireDales3 2007

Somewhere up Ingleborough, I lost my notebook.

(Maybe you can see how).

Then, three months later, my hard-drive crashed just before a much-delayed data backup, and I lost all but four of the the 100+ photos I took.  These are two of them: the others are here and here. Four photos and a few scraps of memory, like wisps of sheep wool on barbed wire.

It’s shocking how much of life is like that.

Why Games Need Stories: A Lesson Learnt?

Videogames

I used to think the videogaming industry needed all its graphics confiscated until it deserved them.

But then along came Bioware, Valve, 2KBethesda, Quantic Dream and Double Fine.

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Picasing Around

Over here, I be.

(All CC Attrib. – ie. feel free to use any you like for anything you like, with a link back to the original. Ta!)

Waiting To Be Replaced

Suitcase

Today might be the day I get replaced.

(more…)

Could You Spare A Couple Of Squid, Mate?

kalamari rings

Sometimes, I think my life is nothing but one long pursuit of squid.

A memory from growing up in Cyprus:

All around me, and much higher than me, the hubbub of Greek chatter. It’s late in the evening and I’m tired, but they’re Greek and haven’t even had their evening meal yet, so they’re full of energy and it’s making me even more tired. I drink my Coke, enjoying the sturdy feel of the glass bottle lip against my mouth. (I make it bubble with my straw, and get told off). The restaurant lights are muffled in cigarette smoke, but the chatter is brighter by the second. Mugs clink, squeak in sweaty hands. My stomach gurgles so loud it scares me and I wonder if I’m dying.

(Mummmmmm!).

Then, a plate of kalamari rings. And I live again.

It’s the first bite. I’ve had a lot of squid in Britain, and it’s always been a mixture of evocation and frustration – because that first bite, that first faintly rubbery, lemon-tangy squishy sinking-in of the teeth, is the only one that transports me back in time and away in space to an alternate world where fried squid rings are precisely as good as I now remember them to be.

That first bite flings me up the Royal Oak restaurant, perched in the branches of a colossal tree and accessed via a bole-wending staircase. That first bite puts a snorkel mouthpiece in my mouth and flipflop thongs between my toes. It puts me on our veranda, on our reclaimed aircraft seating turned into a bench, my feet drawn up under me, reading Lord Of The Rings for the first time and thinking how cool it would be to be a Black Rider.

Then…bite 2. That shimmeringly perfect world winks out. I’ve now got a mouthful of tasteless, pappy, insubstantial gunk – like raw tofu but without the charm. I want it to be chewier, I want it to fight me, dammit – but it breaks apart, turning to sea-tasting gruel. This isn’t what I ordered! Take it away – no, take me away. Take me somewhere that does real kalamari!

(Incidentally, when in Greece or Cyprus, don’t do this).

We all have trigger-dishes: specific foods that whisk us inward to a specific time and place so powerfully that it unfolds and swallows us whole. We sit there, motionless except for chewing, fork held in front of us like we’re hammering home a point in conversation, pupils dilated, until the spell is broken and we’re spat out into the present-day once more.

Mine’s fried squid. What’s yours?

Image: cmgramse

Nearly…

…back.

Nearly finished. Not long now.

Nearly ready to blog for fun again. Don’t go far.

In the meantime, how about building yourself a Drawdio (down at no. 9)? Based on a short trial I conducted earlier in the day, this is a device that makes tea shoot from your nose.

Or how about half a driving lesson?

How I Will Save The X Factor

MoneyGrab

This was the week that Simon Cowell announced to the nation that the X Factor was all about who could sing Ghostbusters the most off-key.

Which would have been fine if he’d said that from the beginning.

“X Factor Is Dead”, shout the newspapers! “Fields of Piss” says Sting! The public marches on the X Factor studio, maiming and pillaging and setting presenters alight! Sickening and wrong, but certainly a step up from “dull”.

So here’s the thing, Si. *I care*. I believe in your tawdry, soiled, human-battery-hen franchise machine and what it can still do for the world. I think the magic can return emerge at long last. I think you can make dreams come true.

And so, in the style of Joss Whedon, I’d like to stump up an offer of

$10,000!

which converts neatly to

£6,029.50!

for the whole X Factor franchise.

I’m not just saying this. I’ve even got the 50p right here in my hand this very second.

So here are my suggestions for livening the whole thing up until it’s worth watching.

  • For every ten acts they judge, the panel has to perform a number themselves, and if the public hate them, they’re voted off the show. (Lookin’ forward to yours, Si. Ohhh yes).
  • Whose Strictly Come X Factor Is It Calling My Bluff Quite Interestingly Anyway? Talent, wit and improvisation. What’s not to love?
  • Everyone sings after sucking helium. I’m barely in control of my sphincter just thinking about this.

And your suggestions are…?

Image: Steve Wampler

There’s That Voice Again

Moleskineh

Stories, I said.

Here’s mine.

Since returning from Orkney I’ve been freelancing over at WebUrbanist and its sister-site WebEcoist, and my final post for them will be going up on November 24th.

And after that?

In the immediate short-term, I’ll be looking after my mum when she comes out of hospital after some surgery (all’s gone well, but I’ll be needed round the house) and I’ll be taking a fortnight off my very accomodating part-time dayjob to do it. Then I’m back to York before Christmas, just in time to move house.

My new gaff – as in “place of residence“, not “laughable mishap” – will be nearer the centre of York and a lot closer to the train station.

I have Plans.

  • I have a book I’m writing.
  • I have a play I’m writing for Radio 4′s Afternoon Play slot – using the same character as in my book. (Yes, I’m trying to be Clever. I don’t know if it suits me or not, but I’m having a crack at it all the same).
  • I have travel articles to write.
  • I’m going to read as much as I write.
  • And I have a lively slithery stack of personal projects that I’ve neglected while being a freelance blogger – like the website you’re looking at right now.

And while I’m still living here, I’m revisiting York. I can’t comfortably move away from it until I’ve done so.

That’s my plot. It’s got everything - Conflict (a writer’s life vs. starvation, frostbite and a debilitating Caffeine Problem), Theme (One Man’s Epic Struggle To Paper Over The Hole In His Finances, Set Against A Backdrop Of Titanic Yorkshireness), Tension (Can Mike Become A Freelancing Digital Nomad Before He Hits 40?) and Character (cast of thousands – possibly including you).

I’m looking forward to writing it up.

Image: Amir K.
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