About

Hi, I'm Richard Matthias - a 30-something software developer in the UK. This blog is one of many on this site that I post to, but this one is just for me to write stuff that doesn't fit in elsewhere, whether that be because it's about sport (except motor-sport), politics, films or is just random comments about what's in the news.

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22 May 07 - 17:38Al Gore doesn't practice what he preaches

OK, so slamming Al Gore for being hypocritical about energy usage isn't exactly new (see the fuss back in February about the amount of power consumed by his Nashville mansion). But I saw this Time article today (via BoingBoing) and was struck by the photo of Al Gore's office. All the blog I read that linked to it just said something along the lines of "what a mess his office is". Never mind the mess! The guy has three, count them, three 30" widescreen monitors hooked up to his Mac Pro and not content with that he has what looks like a 32" LCD TV running in the background. Oh and despite the fact that it's clearly a very bright sunny day as evidenced by the open window to his right, he also has a desk lamp shining down on his keyboard (not sure why, it must be shining on his monitor as well and I know I hate that).

By the way, in searching for a link to the Februrary story I was pretty amazed by the way it was handled in the coverage that Google could drag up. The story I linked above was about the most neutral I could find. One of the top links was this report in the Minneapolis Star Tribune. This commentary doesn't even bother to go to the effort of digging up the lower (and apparently correct) energy usage figures for Gore's home. It basically says in many more words that nothing in the story is wrong but you shouldn't take any notice of it because the originators of the story are a Republican policy group. Now I know there's something subtle going on here so I'll try and be clear: If the story was wrong it would be fine to absolve Gore from any guilt. It is also fine to be suspicious of the story because it came from a Republican source. But if you make the assumption the story is true (which it is mostly), then it doesn't matter what the source is. You can't tell people that the story isn't a big deal because it came from a biased source. The fact is that Al Gore is a big fat hypocrite.

Another great example of telling the truth, but still trying to make it fit your own completely opposite political affiliation comes from the Crooks and Liars blog. So they've done some research and found out that the figures put out by the evil Republicans are wrong! Surely that is vindication for Mr. Gore? No, because although the 'true' figure is less than half the original headline figure, it is still ten times what a normal Nashville house consumes. That, by my reckoning, still makes Al Gore a BIG FAT HYPOCRITE. They also take time to mention that Dick Cheney's federally funded home had an equally extraordinary electricity bill in 2001 and why isn't anyone complaining about that then? I'll tell you why: Becuase Dick Cheney isn't going around telling everyone to use less! This isn't a story about whether people use too much power in general, it's a story about whether people who want to tell everyone to use less power should perhaps set something of an example.

Anyway, I could go on for ages about how Al Gore has used every political trick in the book to represent and misrepresent the issue of global warming. It's not that I disagree with the science that does exist, but I disagree that just because there is a concensus among scientists that their current version of this theory (and there have been plenty of discarded versions in the last 30 years) is fact, let alone truth. The issue of global warming is particularly attractive to liberals and left-wing campaigners simply because energy companies are a right-wing target, owned and run by people like Dick Cheney. The attractiveness of the target has got to introduce some bias into the way the issue is pursued by these campaigners and with the (at first sight unassailable) backing of science, it gives them an almost religious desire to convince everyone that they are right.  That is fine if they live what they preach, but with Gore, it's not very convincing is it? When you see him burning power like he is, you have to wonder if the global warming issue isn't just another political campaign for him... a way of getting back at the Republicans that beat him to the presidency. Really, the green movement should be just as pissed off with Gore as Gore's supporters are with the Republican thinktank that produced this story.

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19 June 06 - 15:45A Behringer grand piano?!

When I first saw the Behringer brand advertised around 15 years ago, they were promoting themselves as a quality vendor of studio outboard gear. I don't know if they ever were that, but now they are very much regarded as a company that produces cheap copies of other companies audio products as well as tons of cheap generic hardware. So I was surprised when I saw that Behringer are now moving in on the Yamaha Clavinova series with their own electronic grand piano! It actually looks looks pretty good in the photo, I wonder what it plays like...

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19 June 06 - 14:50Stuck accelerator driver arrested

Back in March, this guy claimed his accelerator was stuck and he had no way to stop his car in a bizarre re-enactment of the tv movie Runaway Car. Looks like the police have now decided he wasn't a victim of a malfunctioning car, but was actually using it as an excuse to drive and high speeds without stopping while trailed by a police helicopter. My favourite part of the story is that he "decided not to turn off the engine incase it made the steering lock". It's true that on cars with power steering, the steering becomes almost useless when the engine isn't running. But still, if the engine isn't running you can stop pretty quickly so as long as you're on a straight bit of road it's a much better plan than just going along at full-throttle while you burn out the brakes trying to keep the car from going over 70mph. It has to be said, the plot of that movie isn't any more plausible (yes, I did sit through it once :).

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12 June 06 - 09:58John Cleese to retire from performing

I read with some amusement that John Cleese has decided to retire from performing comedy because he "will never manage to top the success of Fawlty Towers."

How long has it taken him to realise that? Could we possibly have been spared Fierce Creatures and any number of smaller parts in the meantime? Admittedly he's done a good, if character changing, job as Q in the most recent Bond films, but still, he hasn't really done anything of note since A Fish Called Wanda. Most of his guest appearances in film and television seems to involve extremely bizarre behaviour for the sake of it - I mean surely he can't think he can be funny even when the script isn't? 

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04 June 06 - 18:21Mark Frauenfelder is the jackass

In a recent post on Boing Boing one of their editors, Mark Frauenfelder relates how they have been sent a "pre-emptive nastygram" concerning illegal streaming of FIFA World Cup footage. Let me get of the way to start with that I think the lawyers in question are stupid for sending out such letters, creating ill-will and bad PR as they do so. Also FIFA, as with the governing bodies of many sports these days, seem more interested in protecting the commercial value of their "rights" than anything else, and I feel absoltely no fondness towards them.

It would be understandable if Mark was annoyed or upset, or wanted to ridicule the law firm of Baker & McKenzie LLP, or Infront Sports & Media, but Mark goes the extra mile with:

Oh brother. I don't even know what the FIFA World Cup is. I'm guessing it's soccer, which I hate just as much as any other pro sport. Every editor at Boing Boing detests professional sports, and we would sooner stream a video of a crumpled up paper napkin in the corner of a room than show some jackasses running after a ball. The only time we would ever post anything about pro-sports would be to make fun of them.

Mark thus demonstrates that he's the jackass, and a bigoted one at that. First he demonstrates the kind of ignorance that actually puts him in the same group as the sports fans he seems to detest by claiming not to know what sport the world's biggest sporting competition is, because it's pretty certain you'd get the same reaction to the world cup from most sports fans in America. Only the USA could be so arrogant as to not only invent all it's own sports, but then deride or ignore the single most popular sport in the world as a game for kids or women (or in particularly obnoxious circles call it "fagball"). Yes, Mark Frauenfelder might hate football (sorry, soccer) simply because it's a professional sport, but in the way he dismisses it with such ignorance he sounds just like every braindead jock he most likely got beat up by at school.

Yes, the FIFA World Cup is the world's biggest sporting competition, bigger than the Olympics even though only 32 countries make it to the finals and far bigger than the Superbowl that I'm sure he also detests. While "pro-sports" in the USA may be dominated by "jackasses" (and no doubt Mark is jealous of the phenominal amount of money they are paid for simply being good at playing a game), soccer is a powful force for good in the world's poorer countries, particularly in north Africa where a lot of the players in Europe's top leagues come from. It's fine for "intellectuals" in America to be dismissive of sports and sit on their butts while they argue about bullshit subjects like copyright and whether it's more ethical to do this or that, but for kids in poor countries who have nothing much to look forward to in life, the game of soccer is not only the cheapest form of entertainment they have, but becoming a player in Europe is the best possible outcome for them. Many of those that made it have been able to build schools and clinics with the money they made.

As for the whole thing of "detesting professional sports", I wonder why Mark doesn't expand on that. I've come across people who variously hate competitive sports (as if it would be sport if it wasn't competitive), hate team sports (presumably because they got picked last at school) or hate international sports competions (because it's supposedly encourages xenophobia and racism). They're all wooley-minded people who think of themselves as intellectual and think that sports are below them, that competition is wrong or that because they don't like the way some sports fans behave, that sport itself is somehow bad. All pathetic attitudes in my opinion. I could write at length about all the good aspects of sport, professional or otherwise, but people with such attitudes uniformly have their heads shoved so far up their own arses that there's no reasoning with them.

I can completely understand someone not being interested in sport, I wasn't really interested in anything but motorsport until five or six years ago and I wasn't even into motorsport until I left school, but to "detest" sport, wow, that takes some effort. I tried but struggled to think of anything I actually detest that isn't something anyone in their right mind would hate like terrorists (or animal-rights activists as they like to be called). There are a lot of things I don't like and an even larger number of things I'm not the slightest bit interested in, but it must take some real vindictiveness to actually detest something that a large percentage of the population derive a lot of enjoyment from.

Boing Boing is a web-zine that bills itself as "A Directory of Wonderful Things". Sure, there are occasionally wonderful things on there if you don't get bored to tears by Cory Doctorow's inceasant whinging about copyright or all the political posts which might satisfy the 'editors' of Boing Boing, but it's hard to argue any of them are "wonderful things". In fact there's a great post where Mark Frauenfelder further demonstrates his extreme arrogance by openly insulting anyone who would dare to complain about the more than occasional political post they publish. Of their 'editors', only Xeni Jardin seems to stick to the web-zine's breif, although there is an amusing post where she laughs at CNN's use of the term "rim-shot" in a headline because, according to her, it referrs to a sexual act. Then she gets all uppity at the legions of people that email her to say that it just refers to that thing the drummer does when the stand-up comic finishes the punchline, thus completely missing the point: it's not at all funny or controversial that CNN would use "rim-shot" in a headline unless you're in the same tiny group of people as Xeni herself, thinking that "rim-shot" means a sexual act. Oh well, there must be something about writing for a web-zine that has hundreds of thousands of readers that makes you unwilling to accept criticism.

Oh, if you're wondering why I keep referring to Boing Boing's 'editors' in quotes like that, it's because I wonder how much actual editing they do before they publish items. If you read it via an RSS reader you'll notice that stories are corrected over and over as they seem to rely on their readers to research everything for them. They must get a hell of a lot of dross in their submissions bin in order for what they publish to be considered "edited". Oh, and I refer to Boing Boing as a web-zine rather than a blog because I think one of the things that makes something a blog rather than just a webpage that gets regularly updated, is the provision for people to add comments. If you've got something to say about a post on Boing Boing, you can try emailing the 'editor' who posted the story and they might add your correction to the original post, or they might just completely ignore it. You're only real option for commenting on their stories is to bitch about them on your own blog, if you have one. I suspect they'll claim that with so many readers, they couldn't support a workable comments system, but for gods sake, even BBC News Online allows commenting on many stories now and they have enough readers they make Boing Boing look like, well, my blog.

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21 February 06 - 18:52European football is weird sometimes

won the first (and away) leg of their tie with Real Madrid 1-0 making them the first English club to win at the Bernabeu. I did hope that Arsenal would score there, but I didn't expect Arsenal to keep a clean sheet themselves. Nobody expected that in fact as this season their defense has been as leaky as a very leaky thing. But they did it! What makes it strange to me is how European form can be so different to league form. Arsenal are only 5th in the English Premiership, but finished top of their Champions League group only drawing one of their games and now they'll host Real Madrid at Highbury with the advantage of that all-important away goal.

By contrast Manchester United are 2nd in the Premiership and failed to make it through the group stages of the Champions League. Liverpool FC are 3rd in the Premiership and had an unbeaten run in Europe up to tonight when they finished their match at Benfica 1-0 down to the Portugese side. Last season as we know, Liverpool won the Champions League but only finished 5th in the Premiership and had to be granted special dispensation by UEFA to enter this season's competition. I'm still not expecting Arsenal to win this this year, but the comparison is uncanny as Liverpool were not at all fancied last year either.

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21 February 06 - 14:36Gary Neville: Stop whining at take it like a man

Today captain was found guilty of a misconduct charge by an FA disciplinary panel. This was in relation to his goal celebration in a match against Liverpool FC. A celebration that involved him running the length of the pitch from where teammate Rio Ferdinand had scored, to do the full Tom-Cruise-on-Oprah's-sofa act infront of the Liverpool fans who had been verbally abusing him earlier in the match.

He did however escape a ban and was fined only £5000 - next to nothing for a top Premiership player. And even though this is a textbook case of crowd incitement - something the rules are very clear about - Neville has the audacity to react like his fundametal rights as a player have been infringed. He says: "I believe it to be a poor decision, not only for me but for all footballers. Being a robot, devoid of passion and spirit, is obviously the way forward for the modern-day footballer.''

No Gary, lots of goals are scored each week and very few players are booked for removing their shirts or diving into the crowd. And it's very rare for someone to be charged by the FA for their celebration. Alan Shearer doesn't get booked for his goal celebrations - is he a 'robot, devoid of passion'? What Neville did was totally over the top anyway, but to go out of his way to do it infront of the Liverpool fans is completely wrong. To not have the decency to admit it and even complain about the punishment just shows how self-righteous the Manchester United attitude to discipinary matters is - manager Alex Ferguson is in full agreement with his players.

This goes back some years as well. There was the incident in 2003 when visited Old Trafford and played an ill-tempered match which came to a climax when United were awared a penatly in the dying seconds. Ruud van Nistelrooy took the penalty kick and missed and the celebrating Arsenal players mobbed him as the referee blew the final whistle. The FA looked into that one and charged five Arsenal players with misconduct and two Man U players for their involvement. The Arsenal players admitted the charges and served bans which was the right thing to do. By contrast Manchester United played the "they started it" card, denied the charges and were found guilty. Even so they only had to pay fines which were, again, small to a Premiership footballer and yet they still complained like children. It looks like nothing has changed since.

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06 February 06 - 18:05Two of the best quotes ever

I'm cross-posting this to my personal blog as well as to The Racing Blog because I think these quotes are so great they deserve a bigger audience even though they are both from the world of motor-sport.

I mentioned the Ask Nigel collumn on Autosport.com before where he answers questions submitted by readers. In one question he's asked if it is "fair" that Valentino Rossi should be able to jump straight into Formula 1 with a top team when other drivers have built their whole careers on getting that same seat. It's not the answer to that question that got my attention though, it's the quote from Frank Williams..

Frank Williams said, years ago, after the death (from cancer) of 28-year-old Gunnar Nilsson, "Don't make the mistake of thinking life should be fair - life is not fair, and the sooner you accept that that's the case, the easier it will be for you."

What I like about that quote is that he doesn't just say "life isn't fair, deal with it" like a lot of people do, he says "don't make the mistake of thinking life should be fair". He's telling you accept the unfairness for your own benefit. Lets not forget that aside from his experience with Gunnar Nilsson, Williams himself was left paralysed from a car accident in 1986 and has gone on running his Formula 1 team with great success from a wheelchair. He is truely an inspiration, not only in what he's achieved, but in the outlook on life that's let his achieve it.

The other quote is from Nigel Roebuck's 'Fifth Column' in Autosport magazine. I don't know whether he's quoting someone else or whether he came up with this himself, but it's a good one. Talking about Ron Dennis signing Fernando Alonso to drive for his McLaren team in 2007 - a whole year ahead of his becoming available, he said "Long ago Ron Dennis realised that the things that come to those who wait are the things left by those who got there first."

I don't take that to mean you should go out and grab whatever you can, hoarde it and stuff everyone else. What I think it means is when you have an opportunity to do something great, don't spent too much time worrying about whether it's the right thing or whether it's a classy thing to do. Just do it!

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27 January 06 - 18:05Dance Dance Revolution in Schools

The state of West Virginia is to install Dance Dance Revolution games in the classrooms of public schools (note: in Britain a "public school" is actually a private/fee-paying school). This sounds like the answer to child obesity - give the kids a game they like to play and at the same time they get exercise, almost by stealth.

It seems like a good idea, but it's important to bear in mind that a lack of exercise is only a small factor in someone's weight. Weight and fitness are related, but they are actually different things. It is possible to be skinny and horribly unfit if you don't exercise but eat little and at the same time it's possible to be fit enough to run a reasonable time in a half-marathon and still be considered fat (BBC Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles has never lost much weight, but through daily training runs in a park, managed to run the Great North Run sucessfully).

If kids are overweight it is mostly a combination of what they eat and how much of it they eat. It's all too easy to blame the sedentry modern lifestyle for obesity and while I think there are many life-changing benefits to hard aerobic exercise, it doesn't in and of itself make you lose weight. Besides, this guy obvsiouly spent plenty of time on DDR and he's still pretty heavy :).

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26 January 06 - 15:30Useful, but strangely named Blog: Lifehacker

Here's a quick link to a useful blog I found: Lifehacker. "Computers make us more productive. Yeah, right. Lifehacker recommends the downloads, web sites and shortcuts that actually save time. Don't live to geek; geek to live."

The site contains a ton of useful tips but why isn't it called Lifetips or something like that - why Lifehacker? I think this all goes back to an O'Reilly book on modifying TiVo's called TiVo Hacks. The book did well and launched a whole series of books called Something Hacks even though in the case of most of the books that followed, they weren't hacks, they were just tips or shortcuts. The term hack has now morphed in internet culture to mean tip or shortcut. I find it a bit hackneyed personally.

UPDATE: They did just post an item about a site StopBadWare.org - "Viruses and worms are no longer the biggest threat to computer users – now it’s badware. Badware is a term we use to encompass the broad range of malicious software that is sneaking onto people’s computers, including spyware and deceptive adware." There is a term for this already but I guess someone already registered StopMalware.org.

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26 January 06 - 13:48Crappy part-work offer

Do they have the part-works in other countries or is it just a British marketing phenomenon? A part-work is where you buy part of some larger item each week, usually in the form of a magazine with the part attached, from a newsagents or supermarket. Offers range from small model cars and figurines of all kinds to components to make a radio controlled car. One of the most common schemes is to sell a popular television series one DVD at a time. Oh, they add a little value by providing a magazine all about the episodes and characters on that week/months DVD, but it usually only runs to 10 to 20 pages.

Another characteristic of all part-work offers is that the first issue will be heavily advertised and sold at a large discount to the normal price in the hope that lots of people will buy the first issue with the assumption that a good percentage will buy following issues. The advertising standards authority clamped down on this practice a few years ago and now insists that adverts also indicate the regular price of each issue. Another hazard of part-works is that if they don't sell well enough they can be 'suspended'. If you're part way through building a collection of Napoleonic Cavalry figures, or worse, part way through making a radio controlled car, you're basically stuffed. Sometimes they'll let you buy the rest of the kit for a set fee if they had it made up in advance, but that's not always the case - sometimes the product doesn't even exist to buy.

One part-work being heavily advertised at the moment is The X-Files - The Complete Collection On DVD. Each DVD features 4 'classic' episodes (I guess they're all classic since it's no longer made). The first issue is £2.99. Lets call it 3 quid. After that it's 8 quid an issue (once every two weeks). There are 49 issues in total, so the total cost I make £387. Currently you can buy the entire run of The X-Files from Amazon.co.uk for £139.99. That's quite a saving!

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26 January 06 - 08:51The Liberal Democrates really are liberal

I wrote the other day about Mark Oaten's breif candidacy for the Liberal Democrat leadership. Now it turns out the party grandee SImon Hughes has admitted having both gay and straight relationships in the past. Not that that is a problem in itself, for me anyway, but he's in hot water now for initially denying it. Of course there are also some more conservative (with a small 'c') party members who are now wondering if the party leadership is a bit too liberal. Just give the party leadship to Menzies Campbell already!

Technorati Tags (experimental): UK Politics, Liberal Democrats, Simon Hughes, Mark Oaten

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23 January 06 - 16:08My old school, bottom again

My old secondary school never had a good reputation. In Kent we still have selective secondary eduation with the highest graded juniors going to what used to be called grammar schools. I didn't work hard enough at junior school so while my brother went to Chatham Grammar School for Boys, I went to Upbury Manor High School (for dimwits and future car thieves ;)

I left there in 1990 and not long after the schools inspectors, Ofsted, named it as a "failing school". A new headmaster was brought in and it improved just enough to avoid being closed. Later in the '90s it joined the trendy government program to become a 'specialist' school and gain some extra funding for it's chosen area of speciality. They chose arts (presumably because it's easier to bump the grades a little than it is for maths or english) and the school was renamed Upbury Arts College to make it sound more impressive. Another Gillingham school (Woodlands road) was closed with pupils transferring to Upbury. Then the government came up with another scheme to try and improve failing schools by attracting more funding through gimmicks and the Academy schools program was born. Upbury joined up and the school was renamed again to New Brompton College (Brompton is an area of Gillingham near the school).

Today New Brompton College was in the news because it was the lowest ranked Academy school in the country. A table from the BBC website shows that of the schools in the local area it is ranked last with an astoundingly low figure of only 9% of pupils achieveing the basic standard of 5 GCSE passes at grade C or above - a standard that is really, really easy to gain. The most amazing part of the story is this quote from the Reuters story on Academy schools:-

Headteacher Judy Rider said she recognised that the results were "extremely poor", but Medway Council said it had every confidence in her and her management team.

Well, the council would say that as they appointed the management.

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22 January 06 - 14:54How do politicians think?

Britain's third (and largely pointless) third political party, the Liberal Democrats, has been leaderless since Charles Kennedy was forced to resign after admitting that he was receiving treatment for alcoholism. That sounds a bit harsh, but I think it had more to do with the fact that he'd been an alcoholic for a couple of years at least and had done everything possible to conceal this from the party and the country at large. People don't like it when politicians conceal things.

In the race to suceed Kennedy, the first to declare an interest in the leadership was Sir Menzies Campbell, the party's elder statesman. Another was the young-gun, home affairs spokesman Mark Oaten. He was looking quite competent on camera and with the Conservative's recently electing a younger leader, many thought he might be in with a chance against Campbell.

That was until a newspaper revealed that Oaten, married with two children, was having an affair with a 23 year old man with allegations that the man was a 'rentboy'. Now leaving aside all arguments over morality etc., you have to wonder what was going through Mark Oaten's mind when he decided to run for the party leadership. Didn't he think for even one second that this would come out in the press? It never ceases to amaze me how that when people get on a roll in public life and are popular, they can't resist reaching for the next level regardless of whether it's actually a good idea or not.

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21 January 06 - 14:54Review of Napster Subscription Service

My PC recently suffered yet another harddrive crash (I'm never buying another Maxtor drive) resulting in the loss of about half of my mp3 collection. Although I could rip my own CDs again, I have to admit there was a large number of files there that I, erm, don't have on CD. Since I was also temporarily down on HD space I thought I'd give a music subscription service a go. Napster is only £10 a month (and yet somehow it is also US$10 a month - how does that work?). They also have a free one-week trial.

(more)

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20 January 06 - 19:53NBC Nightly News thinks we are backwards

I sometimes catch NBC Nightly News as CNBC Europe show it each week night at 11:30pm after Late Night with Conan O'Brien. It's interesting to see things from a US perspective and although the broadcast is not really in-depth (with all the ad breaks there's probably only about 20 minutes of actual news), it is usually a decent enough show. Today though they amazed me with a piece on marathon runner Paul Tergat's role with the UN's food program in Kenya. I don't know how well known he is in the USA, but due to the coverage the BBC gives athletics (because it's the only sport they can afford to show), Tergat is no stranger to UK viewers. What amazed me though wasn't that he was on a major news show as part of their "making a difference" feature, but that they decided it was necessary to subtitle him! He speaks perfect English and maybe his accent sounds more familiar to me because of the number of African football players in England, but still, I'd be amazed if anyone actually needed subtitles to understand what he was saying.

In the same broadcast they managed to insult us English a little more by claiming the only thing anyone was talking about over here was that Whale that swam up the Thames. Brian Williams actually said "A whale in London, but how did it get there?" - IT SWAM UP THE THAMES! Duh. Actually the news here was more concerned with the issue of sex offenders working in schools and the event in Iraq and Iran. OK, Sky News did spend most of the day showing live footage of the Whale, but then they showed hours and hours of live footage of a man standing on a window ledge at Buckingham Palace as a protest last year. That's what 24 hour 'news' channels do. It's up to scheduled news programming like NBC Nightly News to raise the bar and cover stories that actually matter.

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04 December 05 - 19:47Rich's first blog post

Hi, welcome to my personal blog. Whereas the other blogs on Exaflop have a specific purpose, this one is just for my posts on whatever crosses my mind. Usually this is going to be about current news and occasionally sport. Don't let the name mislead you though, this is NOT going to be one of those personal blogs that's full of angst and bad poetry. It's just called a personal blog because it (a) contain's only posts by me (Richard) and (b) because the only criteria for those posts is that I'm interested in the subject and have something to say about them.

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