Popjustice is a reliably bonkers website. If you can get to the end of the About section without smashing your screen, well done.
When Popjustice tweeted this...
... I clicked on the link. Before you do:
Imagine you are 18 years old and your grandfather, who has dropped by for the weekend, says:
"Remember when we made the newspaper front pages, thirty five years ago, because they heard we had stumbled across the ability to turn base metal into gold? Well, we didn't. We failed. We tried, and we nearly did it. The results were very impressive. But, essentially, we failed."
And you nod, and you say (because, in my mind, you are Peter the Goatherd from the Heidi books) "Yes Grandpa. I wasn't alive then, but I remember that's what made you famous around the world, and brought you the riches you have kindly bestowed upon this family."
"That's right." says your Grandpa, "That's right..."
He beckons you over, and his voice drops. "Last night... for the first time... we got the formula to work..."
You stop, wide-eyed with amazement.
"It isn't all that different. It's just... thirty-five years ago... we didn't have the tools to do what we are doing now..."
You stare at him, wondering what is going to happen next.
"I want you to tell me what you think of this..." he says, opening a box he has set down in front of you.
F*** my old boots. There is magic coming out of that sound system. Magic.
.
Journalist, broadcaster and author of The Great Post Office Trial and Depp v Heard: the unreal story
Sunday, 11 August 2013
Wednesday, 7 August 2013
Christian O'Connell Edinburgh comedy show "radio" review
Christian O'Connell has been getting good reviews (Chortle: "a decent fist", The Independent: "solid", The List: "moments of genius") for his Edinburgh show, which runs for another couple of weeks. There is also a wonderful interview with him in The Stage, which is revealing and rather touching.
Here is the "radio-skewed" review of his set I sent to RadioToday, which they said they'd run and don't seem to have done. Seems a shame to waste it. If you're really bored you can see how it compares to the review of the same show I wrote for the Dorking Advertiser.
Okay, RadioToday review follows:
"Being funny on the radio is a very different discipline to being funny on stage - but with this set Christian O'Connell proves he can do both.
Christian's one-hour Edinburgh show inhabits the same blokey universe he cultivates on his Absolute Radio breakfast show. It's a world populated by men staring aghast at the encroachment of responsibility on their ever-diminishing island of fun.
The show is based on Christian's discovery of a list he wrote at the age of 13, describing various things he would like to achieve by the time he reaches 40. The list has provided copious material for his breakfast show this year and provides a series of useful jumping off points for his set.
References to the day job are well-handled. He has a routine about teaching his daughter how to deal with bullies at school ("all you have to do is show them this - my Q1 2013 RAJAR results - and they'll see my year-on-year audience share has increased 17.6%. So you can tell them I do have listeners…"), as is the what-happened-next story following David Cameron's potty-mouthed outburst on Absolute Radio in 2009.
Other subjects include Kelly LeBrock (with a brilliant one-liner about her former husband Steven Segal), Darth Vader, Ferris Bueller, marriage, fatherhood and online porn. The latter becomes something of a theme throughout the set (I'm not judging) and Christian's stories about hunting through bushes for magazines as a teenager ("in the 80s we didn't have Google - we had to forage") were very good.
The show ends with a listener email (in Edinburgh it will end with a video, which wasn't quite ready for this preview), which is deranged enough to be hilarious in itself, but is then superbly deconstructed to ensure the evening finishes on a high.
It's not for everyone - the woman sitting next to me went long periods without laughing, presumably because she'd never been a 13 year old boy or a 40 year old man. But for someone like me, who was a 13 year old boy and who also turned 40 this year, the material rang true, far too often.
If you like what Christian does on the radio and you are going to Edinburgh, make sure you see this. It's rude, it's honest, it's funny and as the redoubtable Comedy Cottage host Sajeela Kershi said to me after his set, far better than many other experienced comedians.
End note: Christian very kindly sent me the finished video this morning. It's ramshackle and charming and sums up his set, but being honest, I reckon he should finish on the listener email.
Christian O'Connell is appearing at the Udderbelly, Bristo Square, Edinburgh, from 31 July to 20 August 2013
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