The things we did and didn't blog
The worst thing about this heat is that it forces you to talk about the weather. It's not enough for it to turn your brain into soft curdled mush, it has to make absolutely sure your conversation goes to pot. And your writing. Look at that now.
I haven't taken any pictures for ages. I could have taken a picture of a lovely TVR Tuscan at the British Motor Show at the weekend but neither of us had camera facilities. It was blue and looked very much like a proper Batmobile. Maybe Batgirl would drive it if she could cope with the treacherous rear-wheel drive and its allegedly extreme likelihood of spinning the occupant to a grisly end. We sat in it and admired the preposterous gorgeousness of its design - the hand-stitched blue leather, the opulent curvature of the dashboard echoing the voluptuousness of the body work.
'It's so beautiful because it's going to be the last thing you see, y'see.'
'Is this all the boot space?'
'You don't need to take any luggage with you, because you're going to die.'
'Oh yes. How do you unlock the doors? I can't see the locks. But it doesn't matter because once you get into the car, you never need to get out again.'
'Perfect.'
I seem to miss more stuff than I attend these days, but considering it's summer I'm not doing too badly in terms of Diet Coke Ad Terror (DCAT). That usually strikes sometime in June and continues until late September, when I figure it's actually OK to wear rubbish clothes, be untoned and untanned, and not have a big group of sexy friends who swing by every day in their Chrysler (it seats about 20) to take me to the beach for BEACHY FUN AND SEXFULNESS.
I'm too grown-up for that to really bother me these days. I accept I'm not going to be at the Reading festival this year, but I also understand that my hankering to go there has everything to do with misplaced nostalgia and little to do with the reality. Although last time I did enjoy being a snotty VIP git, loafing about in the blessedly (relatively) civilised press bit with the PVC chairs and tables. I saw about five bands and the rest of the time hid from the hordes of 16-year-old wankers whose ancestors threw their shoes at Daphne & Celeste.
What did I miss?
- Dog becoming Japanese catalogue model
- Attending naked nightclub. Er... yes.
- Being employed worryingly regularly on the basis of my ability to bullshit (but only because I bullshat them so effectively, I think)
- Seeing Graham Coxon faffing about, twice, and being a bit sad at the multiple chins of the middle-aged Buzzcocks
- Wondering why no one has managed to remake The Lost Boys, and concluding that yea, only I have what it takes to tackle such an awesome task, and plotting to rain foulness upon the idiots who are making some sub-Buffy slarge (working title 'The Lost Girls', probably) and show them the error of their boring, bollocks ways. (It was a slow day around here.)
- Bumping into two ex-nemeses who are alright really and even admitted without prompting to having been primo tosspots before
- Attending about three events in a week calling themselves 'Christmas in July' - the imagination of these people knows no bounds
- Seeing the Red Hot Chili Peppers in stinking Earls Court, realising how low my tolerance is for OTHER PEOPLE in their NEARBY THOUSANDS with their BAGS and ELBOWS and THROWING OF BEER. (They were good although Kiedis kept his top on. I paid MONEY for that gig, how dare he?)
- Spending upwards of three hours being savaged by a student of Vidal Sassoon. My hair now resembles... oh, Christ, what is that? It's sort of a routed out of bed at 4am with Tazer guns and trained badgers over hot coals by an 8-year-old ADD sufferer with pinking shears look. It looks quite nice.
Labels: beast, boring maturity, girlie fo firlie, good films, good music, gratuitous nudity and or sex, nothing to see here, pretty pictures
2 Comments:
Curiously, I had a dream that they made a sequel to The Lost Boys. It had all the flavour of the original but with a slick, 21st century touch, and Corey Haim was in it again still looking as young as he did in the first film. Which, if you know what he looks like now, is very very ironic.
I woke up just when Kiefer Sutherland was brought back for a climactic surprise return.
I just saw the words 'Kiefer Sutherland' and 'climactic' and had a bit of a funny turn.
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