Clarkson: Racist

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Discussion

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

256 months

Sunday 25th May 2014
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wc98 said:
B17NNS said:
craigjm said:
Media are now reporting he has been offered a new three year contract by the BBC
Good.
yep,end of thread,if bbc say he is not racist ,it would take someone that is left of a very left thing to disagree
It's more likely that the ultra PC lefty BBC management does consider him racist, but he brings in a pile of money. As a consequence, they have to support him, even though it makes them shake, turn purple, sweat a lot and grind their teeth until their fillings drop out...

Which is nice. Very nice....smile

Tunku

7,703 posts

229 months

Monday 26th May 2014
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Even left lefties of a very left sloping lefty persuasion understand money.

Chlamydia

1,082 posts

128 months

Monday 26th May 2014
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Tunku said:
Even left lefties of a very left sloping lefty persuasion understand money.
How to spend it, certainly.

bloodorange

151 posts

184 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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Ten packets of microwave rice...
Or if you have 2 microwaves..
Twenty..

Ping!!

scenario8

6,580 posts

180 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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You've lost me.

Hugo a Gogo

23,378 posts

234 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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anyone read his most recent article, referring to the recent carry-on?

http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/comment/column...

Butter Face

30,379 posts

161 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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If you've got access can you post the article?

colonel c

7,890 posts

240 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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IS this it?

"My Mum’s Final Act Of Love Was To Throw All Her Stuff Into A Skip
Right in the middle of all that brouhaha about sloping bridges and Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Moe, my mum died.

So there I was, in Russia, in the middle of a Top Gear tour, trying to organise her funeral and tell the children and sort out all the legal stuff, with the BBC moaning at me in one ear and a reporter twittering on in the other, and I knew that if I wept, which is what I wanted to do, because I was very close to my mother, the Daily Mirror would run pictures and claim they were tears of shame. It was a gruesome time.

And I knew that when I came home the BBC would still be bleating and the reporters would still be calling, and I’d have to go to her house and start sorting through her things. And where do you start with a job like that? Where did she keep her pension details, the deeds to her house, her insurance certificates? How do you cancel a Sky subscription? Did she have any shares? Premium bonds? And how do you find out if you haven’t got a sister who’s a lawyer?

Luckily, I do have a sister who’s a lawyer, but even though she could handle the paperwork, I’d still have to go through my mum’s things, and that would be a nightmare because I’m such a sentimental old sausage I even find it difficult to throw away an empty packet of fags. I think of the fun I’ve had smoking them and the people I’ve shared them with and I want to hold on to the wrapping as a keepsake, a reminder of happy times.

So what in God’s name would it be like in my mum’s house, surrounded by everything that made it hers, except her? And there’d be all those childhood memories. At some point it would be inevitable I’d find the egg cup I’d used every morning as a child and the cereal bowl with rabbits on it. That would tear my heart out.

At one stage I received a call from a middle-ranking BBC wallah saying they’d had a letter from some MPs, asking if I was going to be sacked, and I really wasn’t paying much attention because I was wondering what on earth I’d do with the mildly fire-damaged Dralon chair that my dad had bought for £4 in 1972.

Even by the standards of the time it was a truly hideous piece of furniture, and the years had not been kind to it. Any normal person would give it to charity or use it as firewood. But it was the chair my dad used to sit in. It had a cigarette burn in the arm from the time when he’d nodded off while smoking. I couldn’t possibly give it away, or burn it. And I sure as hell didn’t want it in my house. So what would I do?

There is no single thing in the house of anyone’s mother that isn’t infused with a gut-wrenching air of sentimentality. It’s not just her jewellery or her clothes. It’s the little things as well. Her kitchen scissors, her bathroom scales, her flannel. Every single thing in each and every drawer is as impossible to discard as a first teddy bear.

I would need a very big lorry to handle all the stuff I’d need to bring home. I’d also need at least two months to go through it all. And I’d need about 4,000 boxes of Kleenex.

However, here’s the thing. My mum did not die unexpectedly. She’d known for some time that the cancer was winning and had therefore had time to put her affairs in order. A job she had undertaken with some gusto.

I’d always assumed that “putting your affairs in order” meant writing a will and remembering to reclaim your lawnmower from the chap at No 42. But in the weeks since my mum’s death I’ve learnt that actually there’s a lot more to it than that.

First of all, she had left many helpful instructions about what sort of funeral she wanted. No friends. No flowers. And no mention of God or the baby Jesus. My sister and I didn’t even have to guess what music she would have liked because she’d told us: Thank You for the Music, by Abba.

All the financial stuff was in a neat box with everything clearly labelled. And she hadn’t stopped there. Before she became too weak, she’d had a massive clear-out. Pretty much everything she owned had been thrown into a skip. “It’ll save you the bother when I’m dead,” she had said.

But by far and away the best thing she did in those last few months was to sort out a lifetime of photographs, putting the ones that mattered into albums and, crucially, writing captions. So now I know that the time-faded sepia image of a stern-looking woman in a nasty hat is my great-aunt and that the blurred picture of what might be a corgi was my grandad’s dog.

Ordinarily, I’d have thrown away the endless pictures of what appear to be a building site, but thanks to my mum’s diligence, I now know it was the house in which I was born. And how it had looked when she and my dad bought it in 1957.

I don’t know how long she had worked on her downsizing and the clear-out and the organisation of her things, but it’s something we should all try to do when we know the Grim Reaper is heading our way. Because not only does it spare our loved ones from the hassle of going through every single thing we’ve ever owned but also it spares them from the grief of deciding that the horse brasses and the Lladro figurines really do have to go to the tip.

The only trouble is that there’s one thing my mum did not sort out. Back in 1971 she made my sister and me two Paddington Bears. They were the start of what became a very successful business and they were very precious, but over the years one was lost.

I maintain the sole survivor is mine. My sister insists it’s hers. And she’s the lawyer … so I have the cereal bowl with the rabbits on it, and the Dralon chair."



From:
http://justjezza.tumblr.com/

I guess it was from the comments section frown


Edited by colonel c on Tuesday 10th June 22:24

tumble dryer

2,024 posts

128 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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...and in that dawning moment, at the end we're all equal.

TD


slippery

14,093 posts

240 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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That's a very good piece of writing.

Butter Face

30,379 posts

161 months

Tuesday 10th June 2014
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Cheers for that.

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

256 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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Jemmery said:
I received a call from a middle-ranking BBC wallah saying they’d had a letter from some MPs, asking if I was going to be sacked
Bunch of miserable arsed slime....

Triumph Man

8,712 posts

169 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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I felt slightly sad when I read his mum had died frown

Tiggsy

10,261 posts

253 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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I think the article would read better for many if it was written in the future looking back and the events - post hoo haa.

It feels a little x factor to me.....not the death of his mum, his use of it in the article.

Mr Snap

2,364 posts

158 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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slippery said:
That's a very good piece of writing.
I think calculated might be a better choice of words. Should the middle manager from the BBC - who probably knew nothing of his personal situation - not have informed him that an MP was asking questions?

When I was staying at my mother's place when she was dying, I picked up several phone calls from people regarding perfectly appropriate, but irritating, stuff - like, 'why hadn't she paid the milk bill?' I didn't go to the local paper to complain about it, though...




mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

256 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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Mr Snap said:
slippery said:
That's a very good piece of writing.
I think calculated might be a better choice of words. Should the middle manager from the BBC - who probably knew nothing of his personal situation - not have informed him that an MP was asking questions?

When I was staying at my mother's place when she was dying, I picked up several phone calls from people regarding perfectly appropriate, but irritating, stuff - like, 'why hadn't she paid the milk bill?' I didn't go to the local paper to complain about it, though...
What a strange response. Forgive me if the assumption is wrong, but you weren't a journalist and TV presenter, unjustly under fire in the public arena by the massed PC hordes of the unwashed left and certain elements of PH, with no other means of hitting back.

FredClogs

14,041 posts

162 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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Clarkson claims to be sentimental old sausage, I read it as limp, weeping, rancid old pork sword.

Tiggsy

10,261 posts

253 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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Mr Snap said:
I think calculated might be a better choice of words.
Yep

Mr Snap

2,364 posts

158 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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mybrainhurts said:
Mr Snap said:
slippery said:
That's a very good piece of writing.
I think calculated might be a better choice of words. Should the middle manager from the BBC - who probably knew nothing of his personal situation - not have informed him that an MP was asking questions?

When I was staying at my mother's place when she was dying, I picked up several phone calls from people regarding perfectly appropriate, but irritating, stuff - like, 'why hadn't she paid the milk bill?' I didn't go to the local paper to complain about it, though...
What a strange response. Forgive me if the assumption is wrong, but you weren't a journalist and TV presenter, unjustly under fire in the public arena by the massed PC hordes of the unwashed left and certain elements of PH, with no other means of hitting back.
No, I wasn't a "journalist and TV presenter, unjustly under fire in the public arena by the massed PC hordes of the unwashed left and certain elements of PH, with no other means of hitting back."

I was a journalist and TV presenter who apologised abjectly on video for something I didn't do purely in order to salvage my career. Apparently.

"PC hordes of the unwashed left"..? Were you created by Johnny Speight by any chance?

boyse7en

6,768 posts

166 months

Wednesday 11th June 2014
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Mr Snap said:
I didn't go to the local paper to complain about it, though...
No because your job doesn't involve writing about what you do on a daily basis for publication in newspapers, magazines and online blogs.
Clarkson is paid to write stuff about what he is doing, and so he did.