-
Celebrity Mastermind
Specialist subject: Laura Ingalls Wilder
Follow me on Twitter
- Well thanks all. My column about my life in municipal pools (including the one with Paul Weller in it) is for next week’s @BigIssue 1 day ago
- So is the Streatham common concrete paddling pool at the bottom the bigger one? 1 day ago
- Help a Sarf London hack filing a column: Is Streatham Common paddling pool ever filled anymore? Lambeth Council website is vague about it. 1 day ago
- Dad been telling me about his wedding day 1961.Bus to registry office.Wedding breakfast in the Maharani on Queensway with luncheon vouchers. 2 days ago
- If you missed: Joss Whedon on evil studio execs, how Hollywood betrayed Buffy & why he added fratboys to Shakespeare. bbc.in/17ni7FG 3 days ago
Category Archives: Books
Plotting the arc of darkness with Joss Whedon
Here’s a link to my interview with Joss Whedon for Radio 3′s Night Waves on June 12th. We covered his writing for Roseanne, Shakespearean superheroes, his love of musicals — especially Brigadoon – the way studios treat writers, (take Firefly … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Children, Comedy, Comics/graphic novels, Culture, Media, Radio, Science Fiction/Fantasy, TV, Uncategorized
Tagged BBC, books, Brigadoon, Buffy The Vampire Slayer, cinema, culture, feminism, film, FTW, Hollywood, Joss Whedon, literature, media, music, Musicals, Roseanne, tv, zombies
4 Comments
Lessons from Italy’s Mafia Republic
Every weekend when I was 10 years old, I had to write an English composition for homework. It was 1978 and drawing on the daily news on my TV screen for source material I wrote one imagining I was the … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Crime and Justice, History, journalism, Politics, Uncategorized
Tagged cosa nostra, Giovanni Falcone, Italy, John Dickie, Mafia, Mafia Republic, Naples, ndrangheta, Paulo Borsellino
23 Comments
Billy Liar, Bradford and the birth of the dollybird
“A lazy, irresponsible young clerk in provincial Northern England lives in his own fantasy world and makes emotionally immature decisions as he alienates friends and family.” Everyone loves Billy Liar. Apart from whoever wrote imdb’s current bizarrely censorious plot summary … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Comedy, Film, Uncategorized
Tagged 60s, books, Bradford, cinema, culture, feminism, film, Helen Fraser, John Schlesinger, Julie Christie, kitchen sink drama, Peter Handford, tom courtenay
12 Comments
Malala, Muslim women and “misery” memoirs
I was reading memoirs and novels by the authors taking part in Thursday’s Asia House panel discussion about women, freedom and the Islamic world, when the multimillion pound book deal of Malala Yousafzai was announced. What does the apparent popularity … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, Religion
Tagged books, feminism, Islam, literature, misery lit, publishing
Leave a comment
How The West Was Fun: When Britain loved cowboys
The Unforgiven (1961) – The Searchers in reverse This is about the back ground to the April 6th documentary I made for Radio 4 about the Western in British culture. You can listen again here: Archive on Four documentary Riding … Continue reading
Philip Larkin and how internet porn began in 1963 (sort of)
1963 was a remarkable year. Among the glut of cultural and historical anniversaries — Dr Who, the assassination of JFK, Billy Liar and Oh What Lovely War! — we should I reckon be marking 50 years since the invention of … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, Media, Uncategorized
Tagged 60s, advertising, Betty Friedan, culture, feminism, junk food, media, Philip Larkin, The Feminine Mystique
Leave a comment
Alan Bennett: Why spilling all is not the art of the monologue
I was lucky enough to be asked to chair an In Conversation with the playwright, diarist and screenwriter Alan Bennett at the British Film Institute last night. It was focussed on his skills with the monologue, as part of a season of TV monologues. … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Comedy, Culture, Film, Media, Theatre, TV, Uncategorized
Tagged Alan Bennett
Leave a comment
Murder, Mirth and Care Bears: The uses of an Oxford English degree
Writing for news bulletins, writing for standup comedy, writing murders for tv drama, writing for comics and fantasy gaming novels. These were some of the uses to which a group of graduates from my old Oxford College have put our … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Comedy, Comics/graphic novels, Culture, Education, Media, Uncategorized
Tagged culture, elitism, English literature, FTW, journalism, literature, media, oxford, publishing, St Edmund Hall, Stewart Lee, terrorism, tv, universities
4 Comments
How The Middle East Became Another Planet
From Flash Gordon’s Ming the Merciless with his harem and his war rocket Ajax, to Frank Herbert’s prophecy-obsessed desert tribes in Dune battling over a valuable resource, the Middle East has always been another planet to western science fiction creators. … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, History, Politics, Religion, Science, Uncategorized
Tagged 70s, Arab Spring, Argo, books, cinema, culture, Egypt, film, Iran, literature, Planet of the Apes, politics, terrorism, war, zombies
Leave a comment
Call Me Sir: Ben Kingsley, Anne Rice and novel erotica
A tech journalist once told me that if watching tv on your mobile phone was such a great idea, loads of people would have been walking around with a primitive giant tv on their brick sized phones long ago. By … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Culture, Film, Media, Uncategorized
Tagged 80s, books, cinema, culture, feminism, literature, media, Porn, publishing
Leave a comment