Resting Pedant ([info]restingpedant) wrote,
@ 2008-05-03 10:35:00
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Current music:incredulous Boris talk

I think it’s short for argument-bargument

Funny week. I had the radio on constantly, and Scenes From An Italian Restaurant was played three times on different stations. Halfway through the third listen I heard a beautiful, melodious voice at my shoulder saying actually, this is a pretty amazing song. Yet I was the only person in the car at the time. That was on Wednesday, when I had to drive to a remote spot in Suffolk for business reasons. I found a B&B that looked just fine through the lens of the internet. What’s wrong with the internet in this respect? Ask for a picture of a navvy bumming an antelope and it immediately returns many precisely matched results, but for B&Bs it’s a bag of snakes.

The only things in the room were a single bed, a wardrobe filled with children’s clothes, and a combined TV/video on a pine chest with a few films inside. Freaky Friday the remake, Slap Her She’s French, Road Trip. On top of the pile was an unboxed tape labelled INTERESTED IN MAKING MONEY? DISCUSS THIS PROGRAMME OVER BREAKFAST WITH PAUL. It began with a man addressing the camera while he walked around what I’m pretty sure was High Wycombe town centre. Something about selling electricity to your friends. I started fuming about it but then I fell asleep. I am unable to talk about what happened in the morning.

Yesterday I visited one of my oldest friends, who has moved from London to one of these places on the Kent coast where just five years ago there was nowhere to buy an Orla Kiely cushion or an old wardrobe painted white; I mean, an armoire. We had lunch at his house, looking out at his lawn from the kitchen. It was just me and him and his little boy, eating Covent Garden tomato soup and expensive white bread, talking about books and films. Come at about one and I’ll make you a light lunch from the 80s, he might as well have said. From twelve to fourteen I went to his meticulous house every Saturday, and it was a tin of Heinz tomato soup at noon with rubbery slices of Sunblest, Penguin biscuits later. I usually left at about six in the evening, while his mum was laying the kitchen table for the next morning’s breakfast. He had a Sharp record player with a vertical turntable and a stylus on both sides, so you could play a record all the way through without turning it over. I still feel close to him, in a pointless sort of way. It would feel phoney to confide in him. We just talk about books and films and music, approximately twice a year.

Anyway, I was sitting in his kitchen, in this place I had never been to before, thinking what is it that this reminds me of, and it was only when I was leaving that I realised everything smelt just as it did in his childhood home. Nothing pungent or unpleasant - just that domestic cocktail sort of thing that you only pin down by contrasting it with the slightly different versions in other houses. How did he hold on to that? I think I was just smelling an old picture in my brain.

On the way back I went to a branch of John Lewis, where I was mistaken for a member of staff in the electronic gadgets dept. “So do you have any DSes then?” I can’t even express how much this fucked me off.



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[info]jermynsavile
2008-05-03 01:12 pm UTC (link)
Talk about what happened in the morning. Go on, you'll feel better (actually, you probably won't, but I'll feel better, which certainly works for me).

Last small, privately run, hotel I stayed in had curtains round everything: dressing table; sink; bath. Made one think about apocryphal tales of Victorian prudery, piano legs and suchlike. They also had a stuffed owl above the reception desk and a number of "best Mercedes saloon in class" awards dating back to the early 1980s in the dining room. That was a private trip; for work I always end up staying in bland chain hotels that leave one with absolutely nothing to say, for or against. A friend is getting married in July (I'm best man) and the only hotel nearby is run by a family who also run a takeaway Indian restaurant from the dining room. I have great hopes for the anecdotes I might get out of that one.

I won't nag about how you never post - otherwise I end up sounding like Maureen Lipman in a BT advert - but pleased to see you are still around and about. More please.

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[info]restingpedant
2008-05-06 12:02 am UTC (link)
I'm saving the events of that morning for an appearance on In The Psychiatrist's Chair or something.

I always remember this sequence in the television version of The Modern Antiquarian where the cameraman asks Julian Cope why he prefers Travelodges to nice characterful small hotels and B&Bs as he travels the country, and Cope explains that he got sick to death of being welcomed and doted on and chatted to by little old landladies when all he wanted to do was scream GIVE ME THE KEYS BITCH, find his room and go to sleep.

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[info]gfrancie
2008-05-03 02:28 pm UTC (link)
I haven't worked in a book shop in about three years but there have been a couple of times that I was in a particular branch and people would come up to me and ask where things were.
I must still have that look of a book shop employee: disappointed with life but still competent enough to care.

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[info]mockduck
2008-05-03 09:48 pm UTC (link)
Yes, I am going to be wondering about what happened in the morning for a very long time.

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[info]nurse_marbles
2008-05-04 01:25 am UTC (link)
No matter what type of store I'm shopping at, I always get people coming up to me and asking me for help. I either have "Retail Slave" tattooed across my forehead or I just have one of those faces, like "Look at her, that miserable expression, she must work here!".

But speaking of DSes, it has sucked me into the world of video games again. Damn Nintendo!

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[info]restingpedant
2008-05-06 12:20 am UTC (link)
I think it's more like your second option with me. I go to shops with a purpose and then usually end up drifting around in a trance, and people think, "He looks completely gormless - he must work here."

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