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The latest Makerfield betting – politicalbetting.com

SystemSystem Posts: 13,173
edited 10:57AM in General
The latest Makerfield betting – politicalbetting.com

Unsurprisingly the latest Makerfield poll has had an effect on the betting. The key takeaway for me is that the Reform + Restore score is less than the Labour score.

Read the full story here

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Comments

  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 32,589
    First.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 25,461
    Well outside the top two, like the party of opposition.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 25,461
    It is looking more likely that the person who believes he should have the office of Prime Minister handed to him on a plate will indeed have the office of Prime Minister handed to him on a plate. And then he can totally ignore the flooding in Makerfield.

    At least we'll have a by-election for Mayor of Greater Manchester to look forward to.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?

    That's often advanced as being the perfect pop song. For which 'short' is a key metric. The perfect pop song can't be more than 2 mins 30 secs.
    John Peel's favourite. It is a timeless classic. There is something ethereal about Shelley's delivery of Ever Fallen in Love.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 50,718
    edited 11:09AM
    Not to tempt fate but my initial gut feeling about this byelection (Burnham will walk it) might well turn out to be correct. I didn't, sadly, back it up with much £££ at the 1.7 at which he opened. Some others (Dixie?) did iirc.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 17,563
    FPT:
    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 25,461
    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 50,718

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 50,718
    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,193
    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 11,142
    edited 11:18AM
    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
    Yes, my sister was also besotted with Roland Gift. He was a major heartthrob for teens and twentysomethings at the time.

    Also Simon Le Bon.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 18,474

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    Wait till people find out what Golden Brown is about!
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 18,474
    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,193
    FWIW I have revised my opinion on Badenoch this week. It was good to see her take a distinct position. I hope it continues. The nation needs a viable centre right Reform alternative.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    kinabalu said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
    Different song but Sharkey created one of the greatest lines in Rock and Roll history. "He always beat me at Subbuteo, 'Cause he 'flicked to kick' And I didn't know".
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,193

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 17,563
    On thread: Once again, I marvel at the missed opportunity of Reform.

    There was a big unserved area in British Politics: vaguely left on economic issues, right on cultural issues. Not necessarily totally to my taste, but tailor-made for places like Makerfield.
    Reform toyed with this bit f the political map - then turned a good thirty degrees rightwards on both economics and culture. It's no wonder they're not really hitting the back of the net. It's no wonder also that they appear to be recruiting a lot of characters who have rather dubious histories.
    It should be possible to articulate a position rather firmer on illegal immigration without going full on expel-anyone-whose-great-grandparents-weren't-born-here. It should be possible to articulate a party sceptical of the excesses of identity politics without going full-on Trump. It should be possible to leave those areas of the American culture wars which we've happily managed to avoid - like abortion - well alone.

    But perhaps it's not possible to start a new party from scratch. Perhaps everyone who is a) keen on politics and b) keen on balanced and sane solutions is already in other parties so if you're trying to garner thousands of new members and potential politicians from scratch you are effectively left with the angry outsiders, which then skews your party wildly away from the bits of the electorate you thought you might serve.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 18,474
    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
    My wife had a thing for Damon Albarn, who I looked a lot more like when we started going out than I do now...
  • Northern_AlNorthern_Al Posts: 9,630

    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
    Yes, my sister was also besotted with Roland Gift. He was a major heartthrob for teens and twentysomethings at the time.

    Also Simon Le Bon.
    My female peers' (and the odd male) favourite heartthrob was Kevin Rowland of Dexy's.
    I bought some dungarees to try to replicate the image. It didn't work.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 17,563

    kinabalu said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
    Different song but Sharkey created one of the greatest lines in Rock and Roll history. "He always beat me at Subbuteo, 'Cause he 'flicked to kick' And I didn't know".
    "His mother bought him a synthesiser,
    Got the Human League into advise 'er."
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 20,960

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    Other songs on the topic include t.A.T.u.’s “Робот” (“Robot”), https://youtu.be/KP1GcK2-TK0 , which is probably why it was omitted from the English-language version of their debut album.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 89,667

    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?

    That's often advanced as being the perfect pop song. For which 'short' is a key metric. The perfect pop song can't be more than 2 mins 30 secs.
    John Peel's favourite. It is a timeless classic. There is something ethereal about Shelley's delivery...
    The fountains mingle with the river
    And the rivers with the ocean,
    The winds of heaven mix for ever
    With a sweet emotion;
    Nothing in the world is single;
    All things by a law divine
    In one spirit meet and mingle.
    Why not I with thine...

    ?

  • PeterCairnsPeterCairns Posts: 63

    kinabalu said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
    Different song but Sharkey created one of the greatest lines in Rock and Roll history. "He always beat me at Subbuteo, 'Cause he 'flicked to kick' And I didn't know".
    My Sharkey favourite is "Never Never!" by the Assembly...Vince Clarke before Erasure.

    Peter.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 17,563
    edited 11:30AM

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,547
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,193
    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
    Saw Roland Gift as Romeo at a memorable schools Shakespeare production at the Shaw theatre.

    Despite the commitment of the the cast, the kids were not into it. They had to stop the performance to tell everyone to shut up. I’m not sure R&J is necessarily the play to engage teenagers.

    Must have driven Roland crazy.

  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    Cookie said:

    kinabalu said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
    Different song but Sharkey created one of the greatest lines in Rock and Roll history. "He always beat me at Subbuteo, 'Cause he 'flicked to kick' And I didn't know".
    "His mother bought him a synthesiser,
    Got the Human League into advise 'er."
    Back in the mid eighties I once saw Sharkey being dropped off at the top of Regent Street by a blond girl driving a silver Mazda RX7. I wonder what he does now?
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,193

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    Nigelb said:

    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?

    That's often advanced as being the perfect pop song. For which 'short' is a key metric. The perfect pop song can't be more than 2 mins 30 secs.
    John Peel's favourite. It is a timeless classic. There is something ethereal about Shelley's delivery...
    The fountains mingle with the river
    And the rivers with the ocean,
    The winds of heaven mix for ever
    With a sweet emotion;
    Nothing in the world is single;
    All things by a law divine
    In one spirit meet and mingle.
    Why not I with thine...

    ?

    A different Shelley. Not the one who wrote "Love me, Love my Dog" either.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 36,352
    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    The Winker's Song (Misprint) · Ivor Biggun (northern bloke off That's Life). Sorry to lower the tone. (nsfw)
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=02QdeWnfn9s
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,547
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    It's an old problem, that has got worse.

    Think of all the people on the Left who get a rage on when they discover politicians on the Left talk to Tories, and even socialise with them. Like they are real people or something.
  • PeterCairnsPeterCairns Posts: 63
    Maybe it's me and Covers but I also prefer FYC's version of "Suspicious Minds" to Elvis! and talking of Covers, here's Max Rabb doing Queen!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3O-PLopk5g

    Peter.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,904
    The greatest punk single is of course the first one, New Rose by The Damned.

    Possibly my favourite single of all infused with bittersweet nostalgia is Another Girl. Another Planet by The Only Ones who were difficult to categorise.

  • RogerRoger Posts: 23,139
    edited 11:40AM
    Wasn't it interesting to see in close up the standard of candidate put up by Reform? We don't often get to see that sort of backstage. You look at Rees Mogg or Priti Patel and marvel at what their selection committees must have seen that is completely invisible to the rest of us.

    But last night there it was in glorious technicolour. A Reform candidate unvarnished and chosen by we know not who-presumably Farage?

    So what's Farage's process? This guy's a plumber and a plumber won last month.....Or this guy is as rough as sand paper and thinks all women are slags! We've cracked it!

  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 14,287
    edited 11:41AM
    Reform and Conservatives together got 16% of the under 35 vote in Scotland. And only 22% of those with a degree, and 23% among those aged 35-50.

    As in England, Reform’s best cohort by miles is those living in council housing. And Labour’s weakest - their best group was those with household income more than £70k.

    The Amerification of Scottish/UK politics is near complete.

    https://yougov.com/en-gb/articles/54908-how-scotland-voted-in-the-2026-holyrood-election
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 50,718

    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
    Yes, my sister was also besotted with Roland Gift. He was a major heartthrob for teens and twentysomethings at the time.

    Also Simon Le Bon.
    My female peers' (and the odd male) favourite heartthrob was Kevin Rowland of Dexy's.
    I bought some dungarees to try to replicate the image. It didn't work.
    Did not do it for my mum. She used to say he looked like he needed a good wash.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,904

    Maybe it's me and Covers but I also prefer FYC's version of "Suspicious Minds" to Elvis! and talking of Covers, here's Max Rabb doing Queen!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3O-PLopk5g

    Peter.

    Another Max Rabb fan!
    I have a definite weakness for covers in the style of the Jazz/big band age. Bryan Ferry is of course the master of this.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,159

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    As was Angel Fingers by Wizzard
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 64,491

    kinabalu said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT:

    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    Dopermean said:

    Taz said:

    Taz said:

    https://www.theguardian.com/music/2026/jun/05/i-knew-it-was-over-for-us-the-bands-who-got-left-behind-when-punk-exploded

    A fascinating article about the lost world of rock that got blown away by punk.
    I can't stand punk music personally, except for the more new wave stuff that is sometimes bundled up with it, like the Stranglers or Blondie. Call me old fashioned, but I like songs with a tune. I don't really like the gobby attitude associated with it either. I turned 1 in 1976 so I was a bit young for it all anyway.

    People also conveniently forget Punk rocks flirtation with the Far rights and Nazi symbolism.

    A very seedy underbelly to punk.

    Although, nice tunes.
    Yeah I was trying to keep this politics free but very much agree on the far right aspect, another reason why I don't care for punk much, apart from the paucity of tunes and the spitting.
    I didn’t care for the spitting either. Vile habit.

    Music wise I quite liked some of the stuff, probably more new wave. I like guitar based music.
    I could listen to the Stranglers all day.
    Gordon Brown texture like sun
    Never a frown with Gordon Brown
    Was going to take up OLB's suggestion but was then reminded about the cricket.
    Maybe after lunch when the cricket's over...
    I like punk. I like guitar music, I like fast guitar music. I value energy over finesse. I reckon if you lined up all the members of this board in order of how much they like punk, I would be in the top handful. I also quite like punk's less talented offshoot, Oi.
    And yet, I will admit that 90% of punk isn't very good. You don't need to be the best musician in the world to produce something interesting, but you do need a spark of creativity.
    If you have 1000 albums in your collection, one of them really needs to be Never Mind the Bollocks Here's the Sex Pistols. It is genuinely one of the best albums of all time. That was basically all they did though. London Calling by the Clash is a fine album, but is it punk? Probably not, by that stage. And also you need something by the Buzzcocks. Beyond that I'd say it all gets a bit optional.
    But it was a very brief movement. 1976-1978 at the longest. Almost everything after mid-1978 was either New Wave or Oi.

    (Mind you, New Wave could keep you going for a lifetime.)
    Ever Fallen in Love (With Someone You Shouldn't've) is quite possibly one of the finest "pop" songs ever written.

    I remember Peter Shelley at Malvern Winter Gardens pleading with the punks to "stop spitting".
    The Fine Young Cannibals version is excellent
    I quite liked the FYCs when they were around - when I was about 10-12 - without really knowing why. It turns out - I only recently discovered this - most of the FYCs were in The Beat. Suddenly everything falls into place.
    My first wife had a mega thing for Roland Gift. Who I didn't resemble in any way shape or form.
    My wife had a thing for Damon Albarn, who I looked a lot more like when we started going out than I do now...
    He's aged rather poorly, hasn't he?
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 72,179
    edited 11:45AM
    Roger said:

    Wasn't it interesting to see in close up the standard of candidate put up by Reform? We don't often get to see that sort of backstage. You look at Rees Mogg or Priti Patel and marvel at what their selection committees must have seen that is completely invisible to the rest of us.

    But last night there it was in glorious technicolour. A Reform candidate unvarnished and chosen by we know not who-presumably Farage?

    So what's Farage's process? This guy's a plumber and a plumber won last month.....Or this guy is as rough as sand paper and thinks all women are slags! We've cracked it!

    As bad as he was the Green candidate was simply a joke [bad one]
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,159
    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    The Wankers Song by Ivor Biggun
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    Taz said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    The Wankers Song by Ivor Biggun
    "Winkers Song"
  • JonathanJonathan Posts: 22,193

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
    Thatcher , Major, Cameron and Johnson all actively reached beyond the tribe.

    In the old world it was THE only winning strategy. Unfortunately social media and fragmentation has changed that equation slightly where you can go far with a highly motivated core, but it’s still the best approach for centre left and right IMO. At least that’s my hope.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,159
    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    That won’t happen here. The Greens have picked an utter imbecile as a candidate. Deliberately so I’d wager to give Burnham a free run
  • DougSealDougSeal Posts: 13,463
    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    edited 11:52AM
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
    Thatcher , Major, Cameron and Johnson all actively reached beyond the tribe.

    In the old world it was THE only winning strategy. Unfortunately social media and fragmentation has changed that equation slightly where you can go far with a highly motivated core, but it’s still the best approach for centre left and right IMO. At least that’s my hope.
    I believe Blair, particularly as a Labour politician, eclipsed the skill of reaching outside the base moreso than even Thatcher. I think in Johnson's case that success came off the back of a disingenuous Brexit narrative by a Remainer.

    It is a shame Blair turned into what he turned into.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 10,060

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
    Genius to Bananas is a well trodden path, including on here.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 17,563

    Maybe it's me and Covers but I also prefer FYC's version of "Suspicious Minds" to Elvis! and talking of Covers, here's Max Rabb doing Queen!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3O-PLopk5g

    Peter.

    Another Max Rabb fan!
    I have a definite weakness for covers in the style of the Jazz/big band age. Bryan Ferry is of course the master of this.
    I take it you're aware of the work of Scott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox?

    I have a weakness for pretty much any well known song in the style of another genre.
  • PeterCairnsPeterCairns Posts: 63

    Maybe it's me and Covers but I also prefer FYC's version of "Suspicious Minds" to Elvis! and talking of Covers, here's Max Rabb doing Queen!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3O-PLopk5g

    Peter.

    Another Max Rabb fan!
    I have a definite weakness for covers in the style of the Jazz/big band age. Bryan Ferry is of course the master of this.
    I think he also did a "We are the Champions!" cover...but a bit to third Reich to be posting!

    It's up there with "Springtime for Hitler!"

    Peter.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 11,142
    Barnesian said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
    Genius to Bananas is a well trodden path, including on here.
    I always think goimg bananas never sounded bettet thsn on here.

    https://youtu.be/l7gRi2dn74s?si=P8CJcUYw4vvx-0-4
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 20,960
    DougSeal said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
    Cyndi Lauper’s “She Bop”, as well as t.A.T.u.’s “Robot”, as I mentioned upthread.

    And should we mention Radiohead’s “Thinking About You”?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 63,547
    Barnesian said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
    Genius to Bananas is a well trodden path, including on here.
    "NO! Poor people are crazy, Jack. I'm eccentric."
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 89,667

    DougSeal said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
    Cyndi Lauper’s “She Bop”, as well as t.A.T.u.’s “Robot”, as I mentioned upthread.

    And should we mention Radiohead’s “Thinking About You”?
    No.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 17,563
    On Makerfield: seemingly Reform have used the stylised images of Andy Burnham of a well-known local graphic designer in their election literature without permission, and said graphic designer is most unhappy and planning legal action.
  • https://x.com/lordashcroft/status/2062867029900636380

    The Makerfield dilemma: change now with Burnham (maybe) or bigger change later (maybe) with Reform?

    As I’ve said many times, people still want Labour to deliver change. All to play for.
  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 58,896
    Duckett rather throws it away just as England were getting properly on top. Hey ho.
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 5,215
    I spent half a day doorknocking in Makerfield last Sunday, in two different locations. There were some favourable responses for Burnham who had good name recognition and was personally known to a couple of people I met, but there were quite a few Reform and hostile against responses too. We did quite a bit of driving across about 5 miles of the constituency and in that time and during doorknocking I spotted about 20 homes with Reform stakes/posters compared with about 10 for Labour and 1 Restore, although I don't think you can take too much heed of the relative numbers for Reform v Labour (based on an appreciation that if willingness to display a poster was a reliable indicator of relative support, the Conservatives wouldn't have won a general election in my lifetime.) What was striking was just how many people were not aware of the national implications if Burnham won and the Labour campaign approach was not to mention that. That approach might change a bit now that Burnham has made clear his intentions. A couple of Reform supporters appeared to genuinely equivocate once I went off script and pointed out that if Burnham wins Starmer would probably be out of the door in months.

    The overall impression was that it certainly wasn't in the bag for Burnham so I would counsel against going all in on Burnham based on the latest Survation polling. With a lot still in play I don't find odds of 2/9 on attractive although Burnham should still be favourite.
  • PeterCairnsPeterCairns Posts: 63
    Nigelb said:

    DougSeal said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
    Cyndi Lauper’s “She Bop”, as well as t.A.T.u.’s “Robot”, as I mentioned upthread.

    And should we mention Radiohead’s “Thinking About You”?
    No.
    What about London Beat then?

    Peter.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 33,520
    edited 12:14PM
    Cookie said:

    On thread: Once again, I marvel at the missed opportunity of Reform.

    There was a big unserved area in British Politics: vaguely left on economic issues, right on cultural issues. Not necessarily totally to my taste, but tailor-made for places like Makerfield.
    Reform toyed with this bit f the political map - then turned a good thirty degrees rightwards on both economics and culture. It's no wonder they're not really hitting the back of the net. It's no wonder also that they appear to be recruiting a lot of characters who have rather dubious histories.
    It should be possible to articulate a position rather firmer on illegal immigration without going full on expel-anyone-whose-great-grandparents-weren't-born-here. It should be possible to articulate a party sceptical of the excesses of identity politics without going full-on Trump. It should be possible to leave those areas of the American culture wars which we've happily managed to avoid - like abortion - well alone.

    AIUI right wing politics (on immigration / race) that is essentially Oswald Mosley early 1950s version, which is where Rupert has pitched his tent.

    I don't know the BUF positions in detail.

    But the left wing parts of Mosley's journey are worth noting, too.

    The position you describe could also be done from the left, as istm that the positions on both wings are identity politics - ethno-nationalism as much as the latest elaboration of PQRSTUVXYZ when taken too far.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    Nigelb said:

    DougSeal said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
    Cyndi Lauper’s “She Bop”, as well as t.A.T.u.’s “Robot”, as I mentioned upthread.

    And should we mention Radiohead’s “Thinking About You”?
    No.
    ⚒️
  • PeterCairnsPeterCairns Posts: 63

    Nigelb said:

    DougSeal said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
    Cyndi Lauper’s “She Bop”, as well as t.A.T.u.’s “Robot”, as I mentioned upthread.

    And should we mention Radiohead’s “Thinking About You”?
    No.
    ⚒️
    Are those Pink Floyd Hammers?

    Peter.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    US delegation at the Russian Davos includes Steven Segal and Candace Owens.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815

    Nigelb said:

    DougSeal said:

    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Orgasm Addict by the Buzzcocks is the obvious omission
    Cyndi Lauper’s “She Bop”, as well as t.A.T.u.’s “Robot”, as I mentioned upthread.

    And should we mention Radiohead’s “Thinking About You”?
    No.
    ⚒️
    Are those Pink Floyd Hammers?

    Peter.
    Ban hammers.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    edited 12:18PM
    Interesting on Jonny Dimond WATO. Without the war in Iran Putin would be in greater economic jeopardy. He has been saved by Trump's oil price spike.

    #putinslittlehelper
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,904
    Cookie said:

    Maybe it's me and Covers but I also prefer FYC's version of "Suspicious Minds" to Elvis! and talking of Covers, here's Max Rabb doing Queen!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3O-PLopk5g

    Peter.

    Another Max Rabb fan!
    I have a definite weakness for covers in the style of the Jazz/big band age. Bryan Ferry is of course the master of this.
    I take it you're aware of the work of Scott Bradlee's Postmodern Jukebox?

    I have a weakness for pretty much any well known song in the style of another genre.
    I was not, thanks for the heads up.
  • Wulfrun_PhilWulfrun_Phil Posts: 5,215

    https://x.com/lordashcroft/status/2062867029900636380

    The Makerfield dilemma: change now with Burnham (maybe) or bigger change later (maybe) with Reform?

    It is not an either or option, effectively if you want change it's a shot to nothing to vote for Burnham now, because you will still have an opportunity to stick or twist at the next GE.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 60,398

    The greatest punk single is of course the first one, New Rose by The Damned.

    Possibly my favourite single of all infused with bittersweet nostalgia is Another Girl. Another Planet by The Only Ones who were difficult to categorise.

    Saw The Damned several times. Always fun.

    They once appeared and took over a show by said The Only Ones.

    (Years later, saw Rat Scabies drumming for Donovan. Which was weird!)

    Punk band worthy of an honourable mention were Stiff Little Fingers. The mosh pit for "Alternative Ulster" was legendary.

    And I cannot leave this subject without reference to the best punk crowd of all time. Adam and the Ants. They made vertical moshpits - anthills - which eventually got too high to be stable, They inevitably collapsed - then everyone helped everyone get up and it all started again.

    There were 1,000 fans locked outside without tickets. Messy.
  • Simon_PeachSimon_Peach Posts: 429
    As a naive 16 year old in 1976 I got the job of students union vice president at Hull College of Further Education (stood as FCS candidate for those with a long memory). We booked the Stranglers to appear on May 6 1977 but they pulled out due to a TV appearance in Hamburg. Agent sent along Jonny Thunders Heartbreakers instead - New York punk band, sort of New York Dolls without the softer edges. Total riot ensued, crowd trashed the place, door money stolen and cleaners nearly went on strike on the Monday due to the number of used “prophylactics” in the bands changing room. Simpler times.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 55,434

    It is looking more likely that the person who believes he should have the office of Prime Minister handed to him on a plate will indeed have the office of Prime Minister handed to him on a plate. And then he can totally ignore the flooding in Makerfield.

    At least we'll have a by-election for Mayor of Greater Manchester to look forward to.

    To be fair, he seems to think he should get elected to Parliament, then selected by the Parliamentary Labour party as a candidate, then get elected as leader of the party.

    That sounds like fair amount of "getting elected" vs "having the job handed to him"
    Despite Streeting’s bullish talk, he’d be a fool to force a contest against Burnham assuming the latter lands a convincing by-election win. He’d kill his future prospects à la Liz Kendall, whereas he’s young enough to bide his time and hope a better chance comes along.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    The comments are interesting. "I'll just put Franco in the good guy column".
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 47,904

    The greatest punk single is of course the first one, New Rose by The Damned.

    Possibly my favourite single of all infused with bittersweet nostalgia is Another Girl. Another Planet by The Only Ones who were difficult to categorise.

    Saw The Damned several times. Always fun.

    They once appeared and took over a show by said The Only Ones.

    (Years later, saw Rat Scabies drumming for Donovan. Which was weird!)

    Punk band worthy of an honourable mention were Stiff Little Fingers. The mosh pit for "Alternative Ulster" was legendary.

    And I cannot leave this subject without reference to the best punk crowd of all time. Adam and the Ants. They made vertical moshpits - anthills - which eventually got too high to be stable, They inevitably collapsed - then everyone helped everyone get up and it all started again.

    There were 1,000 fans locked outside without tickets. Messy.
    SLF’s St Paddy’s Day gigs at Glasgow Barrowlands have become legendary, almost on a par with The Pogues. They’ve become rather portly so hopefully there’s no leaping into the mosh pit.
  • BartholomewRobertsBartholomewRoberts Posts: 28,785
    Who could have forecast at Tea yesterday that England would go into Lunch today at effectively 99/1 for the second innings?

    Remarkable.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 60,398

    Interesting on Jonny Dimond WATO. Without the war in Iran Putin would be in greater economic jeopardy. He has been saved by Trump's oil price spike.

    #putinslittlehelper

    But equally, that has been a spur to Ukraine trashing Russia's export capacity - notwithstanding pressure from Washington not to.
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 66,587
    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    Jonathan said:

    It’s worth remembering that Reform lost their last must win by election to the greens.

    They have vastly increased support, but perhaps right now still not enough despite dominating the conversation on social media.

    Reform are first and foremost a content creation outfit for social media.
    They need to be taken seriously as a result. He seeks attention and largely this week got it. Trump playbook 101. By condemning him, he was given energy.

    I wouldn’t use Badenochs words, but her diagnosis that we’re living in dangerous times is correct. One side simply cannot understand the other.
    Several of the sides in modern politics see not understanding their opponents as a virtue.
    Which is a real problem. You end up with political mistakes like “the deplorables”. The more successful politicians have always looked beyond the tribe. Unfortunately social media rewards bubbles. So we end up polarised.
    That was Blair's genius, before he went bananas.
    Thatcher , Major, Cameron and Johnson all actively reached beyond the tribe.

    In the old world it was THE only winning strategy. Unfortunately social media and fragmentation has changed that equation slightly where you can go far with a highly motivated core, but it’s still the best approach for centre left and right IMO. At least that’s my hope.
    Hear hear.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 39,815
    Jonny Dimond on BBC WATO crushing this Government for losing control of the asylum and immigration system. A report by a very nasal Conservative Committee Chair (Sir Geoffrey Clifton Brown) is being discussed.
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 11,142
    edited 12:35PM

    As a naive 16 year old in 1976 I got the job of students union vice president at Hull College of Further Education (stood as FCS candidate for those with a long memory). We booked the Stranglers to appear on May 6 1977 but they pulled out due to a TV appearance in Hamburg. Agent sent along Jonny Thunders Heartbreakers instead - New York punk band, sort of New York Dolls without the softer edges. Total riot ensued, crowd trashed the place, door money stolen and cleaners nearly went on strike on the Monday due to the number of used “prophylactics” in the bands changing room. Simpler times.

    Sounds similar to Suzanne Moore's memories of the time. Endless threats of random violence in the crowd hanging over the atmosphere of many punk gigs.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 35,231
    Cookie said:

    On thread: Once again, I marvel at the missed opportunity of Reform.

    There was a big unserved area in British Politics: vaguely left on economic issues, right on cultural issues. Not necessarily totally to my taste, but tailor-made for places like Makerfield.
    Reform toyed with this bit f the political map - then turned a good thirty degrees rightwards on both economics and culture. It's no wonder they're not really hitting the back of the net. It's no wonder also that they appear to be recruiting a lot of characters who have rather dubious histories.
    It should be possible to articulate a position rather firmer on illegal immigration without going full on expel-anyone-whose-great-grandparents-weren't-born-here. It should be possible to articulate a party sceptical of the excesses of identity politics without going full-on Trump. It should be possible to leave those areas of the American culture wars which we've happily managed to avoid - like abortion - well alone.

    But perhaps it's not possible to start a new party from scratch. Perhaps everyone who is a) keen on politics and b) keen on balanced and sane solutions is already in other parties so if you're trying to garner thousands of new members and potential politicians from scratch you are effectively left with the angry outsiders, which then skews your party wildly away from the bits of the electorate you thought you might serve.

    I think we should remember Reform's age. It's like comparing adults with a 12 year old who happens to be 6ft following a massive growth spurt.
  • StarryStarry Posts: 203

    The greatest punk single is of course the first one, New Rose by The Damned.

    Possibly my favourite single of all infused with bittersweet nostalgia is Another Girl. Another Planet by The Only Ones who were difficult to categorise.

    Saw The Damned several times. Always fun.

    They once appeared and took over a show by said The Only Ones.

    (Years later, saw Rat Scabies drumming for Donovan. Which was weird!)

    Punk band worthy of an honourable mention were Stiff Little Fingers. The mosh pit for "Alternative Ulster" was legendary.

    And I cannot leave this subject without reference to the best punk crowd of all time. Adam and the Ants. They made vertical moshpits - anthills - which eventually got too high to be stable, They inevitably collapsed - then everyone helped everyone get up and it all started again.

    There were 1,000 fans locked outside without tickets. Messy.
    Love the Only Ones, but they were just around punk rather than punk. More a mix of glam and post-punk before it was post (mind you, the ultimate post-punkers, Joy Division, thought they were absolutely punk).
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,159

    Interesting on Jonny Dimond WATO. Without the war in Iran Putin would be in greater economic jeopardy. He has been saved by Trump's oil price spike.

    #putinslittlehelper

    The war was at Bibi and Mossads behest.
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,159

    As a naive 16 year old in 1976 I got the job of students union vice president at Hull College of Further Education (stood as FCS candidate for those with a long memory). We booked the Stranglers to appear on May 6 1977 but they pulled out due to a TV appearance in Hamburg. Agent sent along Jonny Thunders Heartbreakers instead - New York punk band, sort of New York Dolls without the softer edges. Total riot ensued, crowd trashed the place, door money stolen and cleaners nearly went on strike on the Monday due to the number of used “prophylactics” in the bands changing room. Simpler times.

    Sounds similar to Suzanne Moore's memories of the time. Endless threats of random violence in the crowd hanging over the atmosphere of many punk gigs.
    Bit like soccer matches at time

    ‘Where the English go to hate’
  • Andy_JSAndy_JS Posts: 40,172
    New Zealand should have had an LBW just now but didn't review it.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/cricket/live/cwyw7kw2g02t
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 25,461

    It is looking more likely that the person who believes he should have the office of Prime Minister handed to him on a plate will indeed have the office of Prime Minister handed to him on a plate. And then he can totally ignore the flooding in Makerfield.

    At least we'll have a by-election for Mayor of Greater Manchester to look forward to.

    To be fair, he seems to think he should get elected to Parliament, then selected by the Parliamentary Labour party as a candidate, then get elected as leader of the party.

    That sounds like fair amount of "getting elected" vs "having the job handed to him"
    Having the leadership contest put on hold until he is eligible.

    Getting a mate to resign a "safe" seat right next door to the constituency he used to represent.

    Having everyone else on the soft-left of the party give him a free ride in the forthcoming leadership contest.

    Having the job handed to him.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 18,474

    Cookie said:

    On thread: Once again, I marvel at the missed opportunity of Reform.

    There was a big unserved area in British Politics: vaguely left on economic issues, right on cultural issues. Not necessarily totally to my taste, but tailor-made for places like Makerfield.
    Reform toyed with this bit f the political map - then turned a good thirty degrees rightwards on both economics and culture. It's no wonder they're not really hitting the back of the net. It's no wonder also that they appear to be recruiting a lot of characters who have rather dubious histories.
    It should be possible to articulate a position rather firmer on illegal immigration without going full on expel-anyone-whose-great-grandparents-weren't-born-here. It should be possible to articulate a party sceptical of the excesses of identity politics without going full-on Trump. It should be possible to leave those areas of the American culture wars which we've happily managed to avoid - like abortion - well alone.

    But perhaps it's not possible to start a new party from scratch. Perhaps everyone who is a) keen on politics and b) keen on balanced and sane solutions is already in other parties so if you're trying to garner thousands of new members and potential politicians from scratch you are effectively left with the angry outsiders, which then skews your party wildly away from the bits of the electorate you thought you might serve.

    I think we should remember Reform's age. It's like comparing adults with a 12 year old who happens to be 6ft following a massive growth spurt.
    We should also remember that Reform is led by unreconstructed Thatcherites and funded by various dodgy billionaires so the idea that it will ever be a credible vehicle for left of centre economic policies is frankly laughable.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 15,638
    Cookie said:

    On Makerfield: seemingly Reform have used the stylised images of Andy Burnham of a well-known local graphic designer in their election literature without permission, and said graphic designer is most unhappy and planning legal action.

    They won't give a fuck. They aren't short of a Baht/₿ or two.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 89,667
    Taz said:

    Interesting on Jonny Dimond WATO. Without the war in Iran Putin would be in greater economic jeopardy. He has been saved by Trump's oil price spike.

    #putinslittlehelper

    The war was at Bibi and Mossads behest.
    The Jerusalem Post has a story which has Mossad planning for the war to last a year in order to topple the regime...
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 89,667

    Cookie said:

    On thread: Once again, I marvel at the missed opportunity of Reform.

    There was a big unserved area in British Politics: vaguely left on economic issues, right on cultural issues. Not necessarily totally to my taste, but tailor-made for places like Makerfield.
    Reform toyed with this bit f the political map - then turned a good thirty degrees rightwards on both economics and culture. It's no wonder they're not really hitting the back of the net. It's no wonder also that they appear to be recruiting a lot of characters who have rather dubious histories.
    It should be possible to articulate a position rather firmer on illegal immigration without going full on expel-anyone-whose-great-grandparents-weren't-born-here. It should be possible to articulate a party sceptical of the excesses of identity politics without going full-on Trump. It should be possible to leave those areas of the American culture wars which we've happily managed to avoid - like abortion - well alone.

    But perhaps it's not possible to start a new party from scratch. Perhaps everyone who is a) keen on politics and b) keen on balanced and sane solutions is already in other parties so if you're trying to garner thousands of new members and potential politicians from scratch you are effectively left with the angry outsiders, which then skews your party wildly away from the bits of the electorate you thought you might serve.

    I think we should remember Reform's age. It's like comparing adults with a 12 year old who happens to be 6ft following a massive growth spurt.
    Nigel Farage is 62.
    The precedent is not promising.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 25,461
    Cookie said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    I did not know that.

    Other songs about masturbation:

    Blister in the Sun - Violent Femmes
    Turning Japanese - the Vapors
    I Touch Myself - the Divinyls
    Longview - Greenday

    Any others?
    Captain Jack by Billy Joel includes the lines:

    Your sister's gone out, she's on a date
    You just sit at home and masturbate
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 89,667
    Trump officials planned to mark 2.7 million living people as dead, whistleblower says
    https://x.com/bresreports/status/2062852436239294643
  • TazTaz Posts: 28,159
    Nigelb said:

    Taz said:

    Interesting on Jonny Dimond WATO. Without the war in Iran Putin would be in greater economic jeopardy. He has been saved by Trump's oil price spike.

    #putinslittlehelper

    The war was at Bibi and Mossads behest.
    The Jerusalem Post has a story which has Mossad planning for the war to last a year in order to topple the regime...
    They’re clueless.
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 15,638
    No. He's not stupid in any conventional sense of the term. He's just not particularly well educated or informed outside of a few narrow technical fields. He's also surrounded by lackeys meatriding him 25/8 and is more or less fucked on drugs. All of that leads to shallow and misinformed shitposting coloured by his long-standing obsession with the racial and religious demographics of some Western countries.
  • malcolmgmalcolmg Posts: 46,467

    Cookie said:

    kinabalu said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
    Different song but Sharkey created one of the greatest lines in Rock and Roll history. "He always beat me at Subbuteo, 'Cause he 'flicked to kick' And I didn't know".
    "His mother bought him a synthesiser,
    Got the Human League into advise 'er."
    Back in the mid eighties I once saw Sharkey being dropped off at the top of Regent Street by a blond girl driving a silver Mazda RX7. I wonder what he does now?
    he tests rivers for crap and campaigns against water boards
  • BattlebusBattlebus Posts: 3,257
    Another reason to avoid using AI. Apparently it's woke after being taken over by liberals and the radical left.


    https://thehill.com/opinion/technology/5909906-ai-bias-american-narrative/
  • Dura_AceDura_Ace Posts: 15,638

    Cookie said:

    kinabalu said:

    FPT: "What about Teenage Kicks by the Undertones?"

    A song originally about masturbation, until they changed the word "it" to "her".

    They should have kept that - more realistic,
    Different song but Sharkey created one of the greatest lines in Rock and Roll history. "He always beat me at Subbuteo, 'Cause he 'flicked to kick' And I didn't know".
    "His mother bought him a synthesiser,
    Got the Human League into advise 'er."
    Back in the mid eighties I once saw Sharkey being dropped off at the top of Regent Street by a blond girl driving a silver Mazda RX7. I wonder what he does now?
    This is a shit anecdote unless we know whether it was an FB or FC.
  • SandyRentoolSandyRentool Posts: 25,461
    "Man admits sending death threat to councillor"

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cgjpjd5595po

    Councillor for where I live.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 8,089
    edited 1:38PM
    Dura_Ace said:

    No. He's not stupid in any conventional sense of the term. He's just not particularly well educated or informed outside of a few narrow technical fields. He's also surrounded by lackeys meatriding him 25/8 and is more or less fucked on drugs. All of that leads to shallow and misinformed shitposting coloured by his long-standing obsession with the racial and religious demographics of some Western countries.
    I thought you were talking about Leon, not Musk.
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