We've All Got Exactly The Same Quiff, And It's Ludicrous.

Apr 09, 2011 08:12

There are only three episodes of 10 O'Clock Live left! I'm going to miss it when it finishes, even though it doesn't have nearly enough interaction between the presenters. It was very wobbly indeed when it started out, but I think it's really found its feet, and the past few episodes have been great.

The problem with 10 O'Clock Live is that it ( Read more... )

british comedians, i disapprove, music, video, charlie brooker, mitchell and/or webb, politics, feminism, riona's slightly scary family

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wolfy_writing April 9 2011, 08:45:07 UTC
Do I want to know what's happened to your tongue? Is there a deadly tongue disorder going around?

'On Tuesday [Sienna Miller]'s prancing around in front of a camera; why on Wednesday should she complain about it because she happens to get caught by a pap who's maybe listened in to her messages to see where she's gonna go?' THIS IS A VERBATIM QUOTE. If you're happy being in front of a camera on your own terms, what right do you have to complain when people listen in on your private conversations?

What the fuck is wrong with some people? Seriously? There is a difference between doing things with a person who is a willing participant, and doing things to a person against their will. The first is generally okay, and the second is generally not (with certain narrow exceptions, like shoving someone out of the street so they won't get hit by that oncoming car they didn't know about). That's a basic ethical principle that should really be learned by anyone who's going to interact with other people in any way. It's right up there with "Don't take anything and everything you like just because you want it" and "Don't hit people every time you're mad about something."

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rionaleonhart April 9 2011, 09:12:47 UTC
I want to know what's happened to my tongue. It's not quite as painful as it was yesterday, though, so with any luck I'm over the worst of it.

Every word that came out of that man's mouth was appalling nonsense. The audience ended up making pantomime booing noises. He tried to defend phone hacking by saying that the electorate had a right to know what the people they might be voting into power were up to; Mitchell pointed out that a) politicians' private lives were largely irrelevant, and b) that really wasn't a defence one could use when tapping into the phones of, say, actors.

(A classic News of the World front-page headline, incidentally: F1 BOSS HAS SICK NAZI ORGY WITH 5 HOOKERS. I don't know about you, but I think this sounds exactly the place to go for cracking investigative journalism.)

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wolfy_writing April 9 2011, 09:36:27 UTC
Hopefully, it'll blow over. The nurse at work generally goes with "See a doctor if it doesn't seem to be getting better, don't worry about it if it does", and she's the one who keeps worrying about me coming down with hemorrhagic dengue, even though I never have and they don't have that in this country, so she can hardly be accused of being insufficiently cautious.

Yeah, that's an incredibly transparent after-the-fact justification. Digging through the privacy of every famous person just in case some of the ones who are politicians are discussing anything relevant? Ick. I mean if you installed spy cameras in their bathrooms, there's a microscopic chance that you'd learn something relevant, too!

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