Wednesday, 9 April 2014
Saturday, 5 April 2014
Sunday, 30 March 2014
Ian Fleming
16 Victoria Square is where Ian Fleming lived from March 1953. It’s here, just a few hundred yards from Buckingham Palace, that the great man wrote the Bond series, between drinking Martinis and smoking cigarettes.
Dukes Hotel in Mayfair is where Fleming first heard the line “shaken
not stirred”. Legend has it that both Sean Connery and Pierce
Brosnan celebrated landing the Bond role at the bar of the Dukes Hotel.
Sunday, 16 March 2014
Tony Benn. Maximum respect
After this was filmed Tony Benn wrote in the Gaurdian
"That should be the end of a simple story of an old man being completely fooled by a comedian in a hoax interview – but there was a sequel which showed it all in a very different light.
Lots of young people came up to me in the street, or wrote in to say how much they had enjoyed the programme and how glad they were that I had stood up to him
... In fact, the programmes were exactly what Channel 4 had said they would be - a chance to present politics to young people. Ali G is a very clever man, and I am beginning to wonder if that was what he actually intended to do. If so, perhaps he can help explain New Labour by interviewing the prime minister about the Third Way."
Sunday, 9 March 2014
London Heathrow Approach Time-Lapse
Time lapse film of planes coming into land at London Heathrow Airport. Interesting to see how many seem to be blown slightly off course as they approach the runway.
Thursday, 6 March 2014
Wayfarer
Word of the Day for Thursday, March 6, 2014
wayfarer \WEY-fair-er\, noun:
a traveler, especially on foot.
But as you passed along these horrible records, in an
hour's time destined to be obliterated by the feet of thousands and thousands
of wayfarers, you were not left unassailed by the clamorous petitions of the
more urgent applicants for charity.
-- Herman Melville, Redburn: His First Voyage, 1849
...it is not inconceivable that, for all his sorrowful
thoughts, our botanist, with his trained observation, his habit of looking at
little things upon the ground, would be the one to see and pick up the coin
that has fallen from some wayfarer's pocket.
-- H. G. Wells, A Modern Utopia, 1905
Wayfarer is the modern form of the Middle English
weyfarere. It's been used in English since the 1400s.
Sunday, 2 March 2014
The Serpentine
The Serpentine is a 28 acre lake in Hyde Park. It was added
to the park in 1720 by Queen Caroline, wife of George II to add recreational
activities to the park. It had been used as a hunting forest by Henry VIII in 16th
century and among other things a location for settling differences. It’s where the Duke of
Hamilton and Lord Mohun killed each other in a dual in 1712. The Duke was the
ambassador to Paris while Lord Mohun was regarded as being of ‘the basest sort’
(whatever that is). If only such distinguished public figures could resolve
their disputes like that nowadays.
From some angles the Serpentine seems to have wiped the London skyline from view. You could almost be in the countryside.
There are two Serpentine Galleries in the park with one
having the newly constructed Magazine Restaurant grafted onto the side of it. The
design is by controversial architect Zaha Hadid and created a lot of fuss
during its design and construction. I think it looks good and more to the point
it works well as a restaurant, making good use of the space and natural
daylight.
The other Serpentine Gallery is famous for the annual
Serpentine Pavilion construction it hosts each year. Close by is ‘Rock On Top of Another Rock’ an installation by
Fischi & Weiss.
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