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Starmer is still struggling to win Tory converts – politicalbetting.com

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  • gettingbettergettingbetter Posts: 584
    rcs1000 said:

    No one would have taken the Bulb customers on at Bulb prices. (And it was the price they were selling to consumers that is the ultimate cause of the losses.)

    The government decides people* seeing 4-5x increases in their electricity prices would be bad for their electoral chances, and decided to splurge on keeping the contracts.

    * Bulb customers
    As a Bulb customer we were getting electricity and gas slightly cheaper than other suppliers because Bulb was not paying a premium for medium term supply contracts like other suppliers, but buying on cheaper spot or short term contracts.
    When the prices shot up we did not have not have to worry as Bulb could not raise prices above the cap. The government would have to subsidise us one way or another, and they chose to let Bulb linger on a for a good while and pay for its losses, rather than pay other suppliers to take us on. I think this was mainly to avoid administrative chaos rather than for any financial reason.
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    edited May 2023
    Northern Ireland is still counting...and counting
    But it is almost finished

    1st prefs
    Sinn Fein 30.9% (+7.7 on 2019 locals)
    DUP 23.3% (-0.8)
    Alliance 13.3% (+1.8)
    UUP 10.9 (-3.2)
    Social Democratic & Labour Party 8.7% (-3.3)
    Traditional Unionist Voice 3.9 (+1.7)
    Greens 1.7 (-0.4)
    People Before Profit 1.0 (-0.4)
    Aontú 0.9 (-0.2)

    Cllrs elected so far

    SF 137 (+34 on the seats declared so far)
    DUP 117 (=)
    Alliance 62 (+13)
    UUP 52 (-18)
    SDLP 37 (-15)
    Independents 19 (-5)
    Traditional Unionist Voice 8 (+1)
    Greens 3 (-3)
    People Before Profit 1 (-2)
    Aontú 0 (-1)
    Others 1 (-3) (* the one seat is for the PUP)

    Seats still to be filled: 25
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350

    Bulb customers should have been taken on at Ofgem Price Cap prices.
    I think we were (declaration: I was a bulb customer, now transferred to Octopus as part of the takeover). At the moment, I think pretty much everyone is paying some variation of the Ofgem price cap.

    AIUI (and I suspect rcs knows more about this), bulb's problem was more at the buying end than the selling end. The energy firms that got into trouble hadn't done much in the way of hedging or buying in advance, so they had to buy day-by-day at the prevailing price. And for a while, that was above the price cap. Which is both a rubbish business for bulb to be in and a very hard proposition to sell to another firm.

    Nimble and efficient, sure, right up to the moment it goes wrong and you're reminded all those boring rules were put in place.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,814

    As a Bulb customer we were getting electricity and gas slightly cheaper than other suppliers because Bulb was not paying a premium for medium term supply contracts like other suppliers, but buying on cheaper spot or short term contracts.
    When the prices shot up we did not have not have to worry as Bulb could not raise prices above the cap. The government would have to subsidise us one way or another, and they chose to let Bulb linger on a for a good while and pay for its losses, rather than pay other suppliers to take us on. I think this was mainly to avoid administrative chaos rather than for any financial reason.
    I don't see why the Government would have had to pay other suppliers to take you on. If Bulb went tits up, wouldn't its existing agreements be void? Other suppliers would have stepped in with a clean slate.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    DougSeal said:

    I think the Afghans were Mujahadeen, not Taliban, the latter only sprung up in the 90s IIUC
    Mujahadeen (kind of) became the Northern Alliance - the opponents of the Taliban.

    The Taliban were largely a creation of Pakistani Intelligence, when the post Soviet Afghan government was not sufficiently pro- Pakistani. They even developed a relationship with India, which really set the ISI off.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    edited May 2023

    Northern Ireland is still counting...and counting
    But it is almost finished

    1st prefs
    Sinn Fein 30.9% (+7.7 on 2019 locals)
    DUP 23.3% (-0.8)
    Alliance 13.3% (+1.8)
    UUP 10.9 (-3.2)
    Social Democratic & Labour Party 8.7% (-3.3)
    Traditional Unionist Voice 3.9 (+1.7)
    Greens 1.7 (-0.4)
    People Before Profit 1.0 (-0.4)
    Aontú 0.9 (-0.2)

    Cllrs elected so far

    SF 137 (+34 on the seats declared so far)
    DUP 117 (=)
    Alliance 62 (+13)
    UUP 52 (-18)
    SDLP 37 (-15)
    Independents 19 (-5)
    Traditional Unionist Voice 8 (+1)
    Greens 3 (-3)
    People Before Profit 1 (-2)
    Aontú 0 (-1)
    Others 1 (-3) (* the one seat is for the PUP)

    Seats still to be filled: 25

    NI seems to be on an inevitable trajectory towards a true 3-party system with the Shinners on 40%, and Alliance and the unionists on 30% each. Alliance are managing to do in NI what their sister party the Lib Dems never achieved in GB: a Macron-style redefinition of the internationalist centre.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350

    I don't see why the Government would have had to pay other suppliers to take you on. If Bulb went tits up, wouldn't its existing agreements be void? Other suppliers would have stepped in with a clean slate.
    Which agreements are you thinking of?

    Son-of-bulb wouldn't be able to sell to customers much (any?) more expensively- everyone is basically hitting the Ofgem price cap.

    I doubt that Son-of-bulb wouldn't be able to buy energy for 1 million or so customers any more cheaply; I suspect their existing contracts wouldn't cover that, so they would be in the same "get what you can at today's expensive price" pickle.

    Hence the impasse. Still, the new company's app has an animated octopus that wriggles with joy when you enter a meter reading, so there's that.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094

    Will Alba be standing candidates against the SNP? Indeed will their two MPs - originally elected as SNP - be standing for re-election?
    I would hope they stand a few
    Nigelb said:

    I didn't say there was, malc.
    Just that a QT appearance isn't any great validation, given some of the utter dross that gets on the panel from time to time.

    I can't comment on Salmond's performance as I didn't see it.
    @nigelb, no issue Nigel, he was head and shoulders above the others , I know QT is crap and usually biased to boot. He had a good performance and never once slagged off anybody.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764
    DougSeal said:

    Anyone got any tips for generalised anxiety? Mine's off the chart today. Was thinking about getting out in the sun to the driving range but I'm not sure a few bad swings would do me much good.

    Sun, fresh air and exercise.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307

    ..

    Exactly. Can't remember the drug dealer's name but he was quite a nasty piece of work at least, but Brad Whittaker the arms dealer was silly, didn’t have a lair to speak of, and only the milk man henchman was menacing in the slightest. Add to that, once Bond has fooled the baddies that he's killed the General, they're basically done.

    It is an interesting period piece though, with its glowing portrayal of Al Qaeda/The Taliban, who were seen as frightfully good chaps at that time.
    Yes, it's the backdrop of the Soviet-Afghanistan War that makes the finale of The Living Daylights so interesting, and the role played by the mujahideen. The cinematography and score is amazing.

    Whittaker is essentially an also-ran, so it doesn't really bother me.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307

    Northern Ireland is still counting...and counting
    But it is almost finished

    1st prefs
    Sinn Fein 30.9% (+7.7 on 2019 locals)
    DUP 23.3% (-0.8)
    Alliance 13.3% (+1.8)
    UUP 10.9 (-3.2)
    Social Democratic & Labour Party 8.7% (-3.3)
    Traditional Unionist Voice 3.9 (+1.7)
    Greens 1.7 (-0.4)
    People Before Profit 1.0 (-0.4)
    Aontú 0.9 (-0.2)

    Cllrs elected so far

    SF 137 (+34 on the seats declared so far)
    DUP 117 (=)
    Alliance 62 (+13)
    UUP 52 (-18)
    SDLP 37 (-15)
    Independents 19 (-5)
    Traditional Unionist Voice 8 (+1)
    Greens 3 (-3)
    People Before Profit 1 (-2)
    Aontú 0 (-1)
    Others 1 (-3) (* the one seat is for the PUP)

    Seats still to be filled: 25

    If nothing else STV is relentlessly tedious.
  • ClippPClippP Posts: 1,962
    TimS said:

    NI seems to be on an inevitable trajectory towards a true 3-party system with the Shinners on 40%, and Alliance and the unionists on 30% each. Alliance are managing to do in NI what their sister party the Lib Dems never achieved in GB: a Macron-style redefinition of the internationalist centre.
    They have the advantage of a decent voting system, STV in multi-member constituencies.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764
    viewcode said:

    A historic moment. People will ask me in years to come "What were you doing when Pip Schofield left, viewcode" and I will answer "Stuck indoors on a politics website when I should be outside in the sun"... :)

    Incidentally, did anybody ever say out loud what it was Philip and Holly were arguing about?
    She was upset he didn’t confide in her that his brother was a paedo
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933

    Sun, fresh air and exercise.
    I second that. Walking. As far as possible - hours on end of just walking in one direction. It’s almost impossible to be stressed when you’re walking (unless you’re lost on a mountain and the weather is closing in, obviously).
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,814

    Which agreements are you thinking of?

    Son-of-bulb wouldn't be able to sell to customers much (any?) more expensively- everyone is basically hitting the Ofgem price cap.

    I doubt that Son-of-bulb wouldn't be able to buy energy for 1 million or so customers any more cheaply; I suspect their existing contracts wouldn't cover that, so they would be in the same "get what you can at today's expensive price" pickle.

    Hence the impasse. Still, the new company's app has an animated octopus that wriggles with joy when you enter a meter reading, so there's that.
    Yes, I do see that.

    For me, again it drives home the utter lunacy of the Government's policy to sit on its hands and do nothing whatsoever to increase supply. Nothing to speed existing power station projects through planning, nothing to increase North sea oil and gas, fracking biting the dust again, nothing on the small nuclear reactors, no revisiting of tidal lagoons. Just more useless subsidised wind.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 44,094

    Sun, fresh air and exercise.
    Brisk walk and a nice cold beer at the end of it , or a spot of gardening.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,506

    But no other European countries have followed our model on this that I know of, and not even the Americans.

    It's simply not in anyone's interests to have so many national-strategic assets owned abroad.
    It doesn't matter whether they are foreign-owned or not as long as the very heavy regulation they face is UK-based.

    We benefit because foreign investment brings foreign expertise and management, which is often better than our own in such sectors, and foreign capital, which is often cheaper than its UK equivalent.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296

    She was upset he didn’t confide in her that his brother was a paedo
    Ffs!
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764
    rcs1000 said:

    That's a really interesting question.

    My guess is that it's a bit of both. A few months ago, we had a really excellent troll, who was able to chat on a range of subjects, and - sure - would always make sure to get Kremlin talking points in there, but was always interesting.

    One thing that "impresses" me, is that they clearly keep files on various PB users. So, they all seem to know that (a) I used to work at Goldman Sachs, (b) I live in Los Angeles, and (c) I have a startup auto insurance business.
    May be that’s because you keep telling everyone?

  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384

    May be that’s because you keep telling everyone?

    Yes... but they know these things within five minutes of arrival.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    ydoethur said:

    Drugs soaked in petrol would very much set the world alight!
    I apologise now, but the headline in one of the threads tomorrow is going to trigger you very badly.
  • SandraMcSandraMc Posts: 727
    Re Bond: My theory is the better the pre credits sequence, the worse the actual film as that is where the budget goes. Quantum of Nonsense had a great opening sequence but it was rubbish after that.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384

    I don't see why the Government would have had to pay other suppliers to take you on. If Bulb went tits up, wouldn't its existing agreements be void? Other suppliers would have stepped in with a clean slate.
    Here's the thing.

    Other suppliers (retailers) had some longer-term supply contracts from generators*. This meant their blended cost of electricity per customer was (say) 100, even though spot prices were 120. If they took on 1.5 million Bulb customers, then their blended cost of electricity would go up to 108 or 109.

    The other suppliers were profitable at the price caps (albeit barely) because they had forward bought some of their electricity.

    One couldn't** profitably supply electricity at the caps if you were buying your electricity at spot.


    * Although nowhere near enough. Most suppliers had hedged 15-25% of forward electricity supply.

    ** One can now, of course.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,319
    The "Russian" trolls are almost certainly African students employed for the purpose. Hence why they start on a Saturday when their academic week is over and why they do not write in English like a Russophone - which is very easy to spot if you know what to look for.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    We really need to talk about Arsenal's choke.

    An omen for Starmer?
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664
    Happy for the Forest fans.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764
    malcolmg said:

    Brisk walk and a nice cold beer at the end of it , or a spot of gardening.
    Yep. Walking is my exercise of choice. Preferably hill walking but I have to walk the streets more than I would like
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,764

    Ffs!
    Apparently it called their friendship into question because he didn’t trust her
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,012

    Sun, fresh air and exercise.
    Not had that kind of anxiety myself, but I have observed it closely in others. One thing that might help for immediate crises is to concentrate on breathing and breathe slowly - inhale normally then exhale very slowly.

  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771

    Happy for the Forest fans.

    Ta. Me and the daughter cheered quite loudly.
  • jamesdoylejamesdoyle Posts: 797
    CatMan said:

    QoS suffered from the Writers Strike.

    Some people say you should view it as a sort of Casino Royale Part 2, then it becomes clearer.
    Yes, on QoS, the writers strike was ongoing and.rhe rules said that only.the director and star could contribute new 'writing'. As they were committed to a release date, they had to go on
    Craig has said that he and the director discovered them that they were not writers!
    The fight at the start qas inspired by a visit Craig has made to that location. They filmed it with no idea who it would go in the story, just that it would look good.
  • SteveSSteveS Posts: 200

    Which agreements are you thinking of?

    Son-of-bulb wouldn't be able to sell to customers much (any?) more expensively- everyone is basically hitting the Ofgem price cap.

    I doubt that Son-of-bulb wouldn't be able to buy energy for 1 million or so customers any more cheaply; I suspect their existing contracts wouldn't cover that, so they would be in the same "get what you can at today's expensive price" pickle.

    Hence the impasse. Still, the new company's app has an animated octopus that wriggles with joy when you enter a meter reading, so there's that.
    Indeed, there used to be a possible business model along the following lines:

    Spot price is 100. Aggressive marketing and sell fixed price deal to the punters at 95 for three years. Set the direct debit at a level so that you’re in credit for a bit, and so you can cover the spread for a while.

    If spot drops to 90, then pay yourself a large salary and trebles all round. If spot rises to 110 then pay yourself a large salary, trebles all round, then wind up the company when it becomes insolvent and your customers are transferred to someone else.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,360
    A couple of months ago, I wrote a post on here simply saying: "Bakhmut has fallen" (or somesuch)

    I was wrong then, but it now seems it finally has. The fact it has taken Russia so long to take the town might be seen as a sign that, despite all the flag-waving from Russians and pro-Russian shills, the war is not going well for Russia.

    Instead of 'seven days to the Rhine', Russia is down to 'seven months for one town' ...
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @PaulBrandITV
    The @LibDems call for investigation.

    “Braverman should be urgently investigated by the Ethics Adviser and add her name to the nearly endless list of Ministers who’ve undergone the same. Time and again we see a conveyor belt of Tory politicians run roughshod over the rules”.

    @PaulBrandITV
    Labour call for same.

    “As Home Sec Braverman is responsible for upholding the law, yet this report suggests she has tried to abuse her position to get round normal penalties…We’ve had 13 years of Tories trying to dodge rules for themselves and their mates. Enough is enough.”

    @euanmccolm
    that suella braverman story is so damaging, sunak’ll have to get rid of her until wednesday.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,502
    TimS said:

    NI seems to be on an inevitable trajectory towards a true 3-party system with the Shinners on 40%, and Alliance and the unionists on 30% each. Alliance are managing to do in NI what their sister party the Lib Dems never achieved in GB: a Macron-style redefinition of the internationalist centre.
    It’s a big indictment of Unionist political leadership that their vote share falls so far below the share of those who tell pollsters they favour remaining in the UK. (Political polling in NI is now pretty accurate). When you endlessly pick fights you can’t win, and tell your supporters they’ve been betrayed, is it any wonder that many conclude that voting is a waste of time?
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    @YvetteCooperMP
    Shocking. Suella Braverman’s role is upholding law but this suggests she tried to abuse her position to get round it

    Why do Tories think its one rule for them & another for everyone else?

    Sunak was too weak to act last time she broke Ministerial Code. Is he still too weak now?
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771

    A couple of months ago, I wrote a post on here simply saying: "Bakhmut has fallen" (or somesuch)

    I was wrong then, but it now seems it finally has. The fact it has taken Russia so long to take the town might be seen as a sign that, despite all the flag-waving from Russians and pro-Russian shills, the war is not going well for Russia.

    Instead of 'seven days to the Rhine', Russia is down to 'seven months for one town' ...

    Let's see what "fallen" means.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,319
    Scott_xP said:


    @euanmccolm
    that suella braverman story is so damaging, sunak’ll have to get rid of her until wednesday.

    The chase is on! Jenrick and Shappsie on Sky News ASAP.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    SandraMc said:

    Re Bond: My theory is the better the pre credits sequence, the worse the actual film as that is where the budget goes. Quantum of Nonsense had a great opening sequence but it was rubbish after that.

    Goldeneye, Casino Royale, and The Living Daylights all had great pre credits sequence. By contrast, that for Licence to Kill was rather underwhelming, and the movie was actually better.

    In the modern era, I think it's the ego (or not) of the director.

    It's no coincidence that both Goldeneye and Casino Royale were made by Martin Campbell (who was focussed solely on the film) as were the likes of John Glen, Peter Hunt, and Terence Young before him.

    Others like Sam Mendes, Cary Fukunaga, Lee Tamahori, Danny Boyle etc. were more interested in stamping their own brand on it, quite frankly.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    *Edit: I know Danny Boyle didn't actually make one in the end but he left before he could for that very reason.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    Sean_F said:

    It’s a big indictment of Unionist political leadership that their vote share falls so far below the share of those who tell pollsters they favour remaining in the UK. (Political polling in NI is now pretty accurate). When you endlessly pick fights you can’t win, and tell your supporters they’ve been betrayed, is it any wonder that many conclude that voting is a waste of time?
    And, many in the Conservative Party seem to take their cue from them.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,536

    I apologise now, but the headline in one of the threads tomorrow is going to trigger you very badly.
    If you have written a post in admiration of Spielman, Cummings, Gibb or Freedman I'm coming up to Manchester to force feed you a pineapple pizza while wearing a Max Verstappen face mask.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384

    A couple of months ago, I wrote a post on here simply saying: "Bakhmut has fallen" (or somesuch)

    I was wrong then, but it now seems it finally has. The fact it has taken Russia so long to take the town might be seen as a sign that, despite all the flag-waving from Russians and pro-Russian shills, the war is not going well for Russia.

    Instead of 'seven days to the Rhine', Russia is down to 'seven months for one town' ...

    It's an interesting battle: the Ukrainians seem to have been advancing around the town, while the Russians have successfully captured the centre.

    It remains to be seen which strategy is the more successful one.
  • CorrectHorseBatCorrectHorseBat Posts: 1,761
    It is time to call a General Election.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,350

    It is time to call a General Election.

    Wine o'clock on a sunny May evening?

    Seems a little unsporting.
  • Scott_xPScott_xP Posts: 38,111
    Rishi needs to wait until Thursday so he can sack Cruella for the immigration numbers (and the speeding)
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,509
    rcs1000 said:

    It's an interesting battle: the Ukrainians seem to have been advancing around the town, while the Russians have successfully captured the centre.

    It remains to be seen which strategy is the more successful one.
    I know bugger all about this stuff, but isn't a good idea not to get yourself surrounded and cut off.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,384

    Goldeneye, Casino Royale, and The Living Daylights all had great pre credits sequence. By contrast, that for Licence to Kill was rather underwhelming, and the movie was actually better.

    In the modern era, I think it's the ego (or not) of the director.

    It's no coincidence that both Goldeneye and Casino Royale were made by Martin Campbell (who was focussed solely on the film) as were the likes of John Glen, Peter Hunt, and Terence Young before him.

    Others like Sam Mendes, Cary Fukunaga, Lee Tamahori, Danny Boyle etc. were more interested in stamping their own brand on it, quite frankly.
    The pretitle in Casino Royale was "ok". It was the black and white "considerably..." section.

    The bit immediately after the title credits, in Madagascar, was absolutely superb, and ranks amongst the finest action sequences in any movie.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,933
    Scott_xP said:

    Rishi needs to wait until Thursday so he can sack Cruella for the immigration numbers (and the speeding)

    There’s definitely a sacking coming. A big, high profile sacking of Braverman accompanied with a denunciation of her Nat-C musings would do a great deal to shore up the blue wall.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited May 2023
    TimS said:

    There’s definitely a sacking coming. A big, high profile sacking of Braverman accompanied with a denunciation of her Nat-C musings would do a great deal to shore up the blue wall.
    Plus they need to do something much more and symbolic, about the growing public concern on the Water issue.

    The Lib Dems, on their own steam, will be adding about another 5% on it alone, at this rate.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,307
    rcs1000 said:

    The pretitle in Casino Royale was "ok". It was the black and white "considerably..." section.

    The bit immediately after the title credits, in Madagascar, was absolutely superb, and ranks amongst the finest action sequences in any movie.
    The way that Campbell shot the poker scenes is also brilliant. I'd read the book more than once before I saw the film, and kept thinking how faithful it would be.

    I was delighted as scene after scene in the film, essentially, kept faithful to Fleming's original.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 14,319
    TimS said:

    There’s definitely a sacking coming. A big, high profile sacking of Braverman accompanied with a denunciation of her Nat-C musings would do a great deal to shore up the blue wall.
    The mad twat will be constantly brewing up chaos from the backbenches if Sunak puts a bullet in her.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    On Topic.

    “The detail is very similar to other pollsters” - that is the key fact which underpins your header Mike. I contest it - Other pollsters have it at 14-16, which may seem small but according to research of some PBers is mightier than Blair managed in 1997. If all the other pollsters also said 11% I would agree with you, but they don’t, and when you also add huge lead reported by some pollsters in Red wall and a lead in Blue wall, this additional data beyond the Yougov weakens the headline you are making.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,360
    rcs1000 said:

    The pretitle in Casino Royale was "ok". It was the black and white "considerably..." section.

    The bit immediately after the title credits, in Madagascar, was absolutely superb, and ranks amongst the finest action sequences in any movie.
    "ranks amongst the finest action sequences in any movie."

    Where would you put the church scene from Kingsman in that ranking? It's ultra-violent, but the way they shot it, and the switching from the violence to the reaction of the people watching it in real time, was superb.

    Also, John Wick has some brilliant (and bloody) action scenes.
  • CorrectHorseBatCorrectHorseBat Posts: 1,761
    Martin Campbell saved James Bond twice.

    And both times he was replaced and the follow up was shit.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    Dura_Ace said:

    The mad twat will be constantly brewing up chaos from the backbenches if Sunak puts a bullet in her.
    The fate of a Tory PM was ever thus: to have a mad twat or two constantly brewing up chaos from the backbenches.
  • MoonRabbitMoonRabbit Posts: 14,073
    kjh said:

    I know bugger all about this stuff, but isn't a good idea not to get yourself surrounded and cut off.
    Charles-Louis-Napoléon Bonaparte, President Emperor of the French says “hi”
  • CorrectHorseBatCorrectHorseBat Posts: 1,761
    Question of Sport was so incoherent that I don't think the people in the film actually knew what was going on.
  • TheScreamingEaglesTheScreamingEagles Posts: 121,664

    NEW THREAD

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,198
    kjh said:

    I know bugger all about this stuff, but isn't a good idea not to get yourself surrounded and cut off.
    The history of “salients” is worth looking up.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,644
    DougSeal said:

    Anyone got any tips for generalised anxiety? Mine's off the chart today. Was thinking about getting out in the sun to the driving range but I'm not sure a few bad swings would do me much good.

    I find an hour or so in a park (or any green space) with some mildly engaging (but not _too_ engaging) podcasts help a lot. Ideally I'd head to somewhere with a sea view (or lake/loch view) but that's not quite 'on demand' where I live. But basically 'chit chat and greenery'. And ducks. Ducks are ace.
  • GhedebravGhedebrav Posts: 3,860
    mwadams said:

    Ta. Me and the daughter cheered quite loudly.
    Good day chez nous: City, Forest and Stockport County all supported in our gaff.

    Off to Wembley for the playoff final next Sunday (as long as I can get tickets - County allocated 39,000 so should be ok).
  • AndreaParma_82AndreaParma_82 Posts: 4,714
    Updated on North Ireland

    SF 141 seats
    DUP 120
    Alliance 65
    UUP 53
    SDLP 39
    Independents 19
    Traditional Unionist Voice 8
    Greens 3
    People Before Profit 1
    Progressive Unionist Party 1

    Seats left: 12 (19 in Belfast and 3 in Causeway Coast)

    Couseway Coast
    1 seat between DUP and TUV
    2 seats to be filled with DUP, TUV, FS, Alliance and SDLP left in the race

    Belfast
    In Botanic...3 seats to be filled with 2 SF, 2 Alliance and 1 Green left
    In Collin...1 seat to be filled with People Before Profit, SDLP, Aontú and Alliance left
    In Odlpark....3 seats to be filled with 2 SF and 2 DUP left
    In Ormiston...2 seats left with 2 UUP and 1 Green in the race
This discussion has been closed.