KING CHARLIE AND PRINCESS BARBIE: THE 2023 REVIEW
A chance to be both in the pink and orange...
After what happened in 2022; one change of monarch and two changes of Prime Minister, one wonders whether it could have been bettered? Even I changed over to an academic year diary so that I could record both of them in one volume. There was a coronation to look forward to, and that suited me fine. The start of a year without HM Queen Elizabeth II seemed strange, even though the Christmas Day message a week earlier reminded us who our "new" monarch was; it almost like an epoch into the unknown similar to the start of the year 2000 and the Millennium Bug.
I just couldn't wait to see HM King Charles III crowned; in fact, I had waited years just like anyone else, but the moment finally came on former Prime Minister Sir Tony Blair's 70th birthday of Saturday 6th May. The familiar heavy objects of silver was placed on both His Majesty and his wife's head and one was proud to be British. I toasted the Royal couple on some horrible "grass-cuttings" taste of alcohol-free wine from Tesco as they stood on the balcony, and I sent off for the special Coronation plate that the Daily Mail was offering, paying £15 online and supplying the code number from two copies of the paper; the second one happened to be the 14th May edition of the Mail on Sunday. The irony is that May 6th will be a Bank Holiday in 2024 as well, courtesy of May Day. The King reached his full year of his reign in September and I was probably one of very few people who had taken a two minute silence at around 3.10 pm on Friday 8th September, exactly a year after his late Mother had passed away. I made a similar tribute on the first anniversary of HM Queen Elizabeth II's funeral eleven days later. To be fair, the anniversary was marked by gun salutes at Hyde Park and the Tower of London, and I saw the King on BBC Breakfast and so it wasn't completely overlooked. In Scotland, King Charles attended the Scottish coronation at St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh.
As a result, Norway's King of the Kings and the Czech Republic's (aka Czechia) My Sister's Crown were two Royal-related song titles in the Eurovision Song Contest just a week after the coronation which I had both supported via the expensive telephone vote - the United Kingdom hosted the contest in the British culture capital of Liverpool despite not winning it last year although Sam Ryder took us quite close to the top. As Ukraine was at war, the British stood in as hosts, and we sunk back to the bottom of the table, points-wise. Sweden won, which meant that Abba's Waterloo will probably get its 50th birthday officially celebrated in its home nation. Staying in Europe, on the May Day Bank Holiday this year I congratulated Belgium's Luca Brecel on winning World Snooker championship. Thankfully the baize was a traditional light green colour unlike the "Tangoed" orange which was criminally-damaged by Just Stop Oil protestors in an earlier round two weeks before, causing play between Robert Milkins and Joe Perry to be halted. Even our hero Rob Walker helped out with the vacuuming. Never mind getting the boys on the baize - let's get the orange powder off the baize instead. What was just as much a shock was Ronnie O'Sullivan not making it to the final, but he made up for it in a later tournament this year. The Lionesses of the England women's football team got to the final in August but Spain won 1-0 against us, and thankfully they did refer to them as Lionesses and not Lions a la actresses being referred to as actors.
A bit of seriousness now: In my own neck of the woods of Nottingham on Tuesday 13th June, I was shocked and saddened at what had made the national news, although I didn't know of the victims. Just after 4.00 am on that day, the 999 Emergency Service had received reports of an incident in which two Nottingham Trent University students and a caretaker was stabbed to death by someone driving a van. I was given the impression that Nottingham news never becomes national news considering the Liverpool bias of the Hillsborough disaster back in April 1989 (by virtue of Nottingham Forest playing Liverpool on that day). I watched the One O'clock News on BBC One and it seemed strange to hear familiar Nottingham street names such as Ilkeston Road, Milton Street and Magdala Road being featured on the national news. The police cordoned off many parts of Nottingham City Centre. However, travelling there by bus the following day, things seemed to be back to normal which one feels to be a relief. I did go along to the front steps of the Council House overlooking the Old Market Square on the Friday morning to see the flowers and tributes to the victims from various people. I feel for all them concerned including the three members of the public who survived but were injured.
Staying in Nottingham, just after Birmingham City Council declared itself bankrupt, Nottingham City Council (where I had to live under during the earlier part of my life due to some inner-city curse which affected generations of my own family), followed suit, which made me glad that I no longer lived under them anymore. Thank goodness for the two-tier council system that I live under as I have always assumed that unitary authorities were vulnerable for this thing to happen, and it was a mistake for Nottingham City Council to "leave" the County Council back on April Fool's Day in 1998. Boris Johnson finally did the decent thing and resigned as a Member of Parliament thanks to Partygate, triggering a by-election in Uxbridge which was held by the Conservatives. Nadine Dorries eventually resigned as well after a couple of months of "should I or shouldn't I?" in the hope for a reward or a peerage. Rishi Sunak made it to his first year of his Premiership but I don't think that he will make it to the end of his second year as Prime Minister. Saint Keir seems to be the official patron saint of the Labour Party; Keir Hardie founded the Labour Party; Sir Keir Starmer is the incumbent leader of the Labour Party; and Keir Mather is the new Baby of the House, winning the Selby and Ainsty by-election for Labour. .
I was disgusted and angered at Levi Bellfield wanting to marry his "partner" in prison and I personally thought that prisoners should not have these rights considering the fact that law-abiding people like myself even have difficulty with relationships due to personal reasons; in a nutshell, crime should not pay. After all, his victims such as Amanda Dowler was denied any chance of getting married as an adult. As for Russell Brand and all the allegations facing him, it did make me wonder why the legal age of consent is 16 in this country and not sensibly raised to 18; the same age of being able to democratically vote. These two men absolutely disgust me. The Jake Davison inquiry took place in Plymouth which I was glad for it to be eventually concluded. I was angered and upset that two youngsters (who will eventually be named) had tortured and killed poor Brianna Ghey in February, although justice had been done in time for Christmas. I personally don't have a single transphobic bone in my body and my sympathies are with Brianna's family, and I know what it is like to be different. Despite having Asperger Syndrome, I don't really have feelings for the two people who did that shocking and evil thing to her, despite the autism connection. Even I was shocked when it was revealed that Huw Edwards (who was the man who announced the death of HM Queen Elizabeth II in September 2022), was also announced as the man who by his wife as the BBC presenter being investigated for allegedly paying a 17-year-old for sexually explicit photographs. According to Wikipedia, his wife also says that he was receiving in-patient hospital care after an episode of depression following the publication of the allegations. Sadly, because of this, the historical footage of Edwards announcing the death of the Queen probably won't be used in an official context anymore which is a pity.
(Continued...)
A chance to be both in the pink and orange...
After what happened in 2022; one change of monarch and two changes of Prime Minister, one wonders whether it could have been bettered? Even I changed over to an academic year diary so that I could record both of them in one volume. There was a coronation to look forward to, and that suited me fine. The start of a year without HM Queen Elizabeth II seemed strange, even though the Christmas Day message a week earlier reminded us who our "new" monarch was; it almost like an epoch into the unknown similar to the start of the year 2000 and the Millennium Bug.
I just couldn't wait to see HM King Charles III crowned; in fact, I had waited years just like anyone else, but the moment finally came on former Prime Minister Sir Tony Blair's 70th birthday of Saturday 6th May. The familiar heavy objects of silver was placed on both His Majesty and his wife's head and one was proud to be British. I toasted the Royal couple on some horrible "grass-cuttings" taste of alcohol-free wine from Tesco as they stood on the balcony, and I sent off for the special Coronation plate that the Daily Mail was offering, paying £15 online and supplying the code number from two copies of the paper; the second one happened to be the 14th May edition of the Mail on Sunday. The irony is that May 6th will be a Bank Holiday in 2024 as well, courtesy of May Day. The King reached his full year of his reign in September and I was probably one of very few people who had taken a two minute silence at around 3.10 pm on Friday 8th September, exactly a year after his late Mother had passed away. I made a similar tribute on the first anniversary of HM Queen Elizabeth II's funeral eleven days later. To be fair, the anniversary was marked by gun salutes at Hyde Park and the Tower of London, and I saw the King on BBC Breakfast and so it wasn't completely overlooked. In Scotland, King Charles attended the Scottish coronation at St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh.
As a result, Norway's King of the Kings and the Czech Republic's (aka Czechia) My Sister's Crown were two Royal-related song titles in the Eurovision Song Contest just a week after the coronation which I had both supported via the expensive telephone vote - the United Kingdom hosted the contest in the British culture capital of Liverpool despite not winning it last year although Sam Ryder took us quite close to the top. As Ukraine was at war, the British stood in as hosts, and we sunk back to the bottom of the table, points-wise. Sweden won, which meant that Abba's Waterloo will probably get its 50th birthday officially celebrated in its home nation. Staying in Europe, on the May Day Bank Holiday this year I congratulated Belgium's Luca Brecel on winning World Snooker championship. Thankfully the baize was a traditional light green colour unlike the "Tangoed" orange which was criminally-damaged by Just Stop Oil protestors in an earlier round two weeks before, causing play between Robert Milkins and Joe Perry to be halted. Even our hero Rob Walker helped out with the vacuuming. Never mind getting the boys on the baize - let's get the orange powder off the baize instead. What was just as much a shock was Ronnie O'Sullivan not making it to the final, but he made up for it in a later tournament this year. The Lionesses of the England women's football team got to the final in August but Spain won 1-0 against us, and thankfully they did refer to them as Lionesses and not Lions a la actresses being referred to as actors.
A bit of seriousness now: In my own neck of the woods of Nottingham on Tuesday 13th June, I was shocked and saddened at what had made the national news, although I didn't know of the victims. Just after 4.00 am on that day, the 999 Emergency Service had received reports of an incident in which two Nottingham Trent University students and a caretaker was stabbed to death by someone driving a van. I was given the impression that Nottingham news never becomes national news considering the Liverpool bias of the Hillsborough disaster back in April 1989 (by virtue of Nottingham Forest playing Liverpool on that day). I watched the One O'clock News on BBC One and it seemed strange to hear familiar Nottingham street names such as Ilkeston Road, Milton Street and Magdala Road being featured on the national news. The police cordoned off many parts of Nottingham City Centre. However, travelling there by bus the following day, things seemed to be back to normal which one feels to be a relief. I did go along to the front steps of the Council House overlooking the Old Market Square on the Friday morning to see the flowers and tributes to the victims from various people. I feel for all them concerned including the three members of the public who survived but were injured.
Staying in Nottingham, just after Birmingham City Council declared itself bankrupt, Nottingham City Council (where I had to live under during the earlier part of my life due to some inner-city curse which affected generations of my own family), followed suit, which made me glad that I no longer lived under them anymore. Thank goodness for the two-tier council system that I live under as I have always assumed that unitary authorities were vulnerable for this thing to happen, and it was a mistake for Nottingham City Council to "leave" the County Council back on April Fool's Day in 1998. Boris Johnson finally did the decent thing and resigned as a Member of Parliament thanks to Partygate, triggering a by-election in Uxbridge which was held by the Conservatives. Nadine Dorries eventually resigned as well after a couple of months of "should I or shouldn't I?" in the hope for a reward or a peerage. Rishi Sunak made it to his first year of his Premiership but I don't think that he will make it to the end of his second year as Prime Minister. Saint Keir seems to be the official patron saint of the Labour Party; Keir Hardie founded the Labour Party; Sir Keir Starmer is the incumbent leader of the Labour Party; and Keir Mather is the new Baby of the House, winning the Selby and Ainsty by-election for Labour. .
I was disgusted and angered at Levi Bellfield wanting to marry his "partner" in prison and I personally thought that prisoners should not have these rights considering the fact that law-abiding people like myself even have difficulty with relationships due to personal reasons; in a nutshell, crime should not pay. After all, his victims such as Amanda Dowler was denied any chance of getting married as an adult. As for Russell Brand and all the allegations facing him, it did make me wonder why the legal age of consent is 16 in this country and not sensibly raised to 18; the same age of being able to democratically vote. These two men absolutely disgust me. The Jake Davison inquiry took place in Plymouth which I was glad for it to be eventually concluded. I was angered and upset that two youngsters (who will eventually be named) had tortured and killed poor Brianna Ghey in February, although justice had been done in time for Christmas. I personally don't have a single transphobic bone in my body and my sympathies are with Brianna's family, and I know what it is like to be different. Despite having Asperger Syndrome, I don't really have feelings for the two people who did that shocking and evil thing to her, despite the autism connection. Even I was shocked when it was revealed that Huw Edwards (who was the man who announced the death of HM Queen Elizabeth II in September 2022), was also announced as the man who by his wife as the BBC presenter being investigated for allegedly paying a 17-year-old for sexually explicit photographs. According to Wikipedia, his wife also says that he was receiving in-patient hospital care after an episode of depression following the publication of the allegations. Sadly, because of this, the historical footage of Edwards announcing the death of the Queen probably won't be used in an official context anymore which is a pity.
(Continued...)
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