Tuesday, 26 April 2011

Trying something different

If I'm going to be sitting around doing nothing, I reckon it's time to try and get one of these books out of me. Haven't finished one in years. So I'm going to change things up a bit.

When I used to get things done, I always worked solid for two or three hours from the end of school till the folks got back with dinner, then generally another few hours late at night until sleep happened. So I'm going to try imposing this schedule on myself again, see what I can get done. Yesterday I  managed to get a fair amount of background work done on a novel I tried to write for NaNoWriMo a couple years back, which fell flat on its face. I'll keep you posted.

-j

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

"Well excuse me all to hell..."

Interesting Diversion of the Day: The people at ToolShed got annoyed that March Madness (whatever the fuck that is) ended, and have instituted Tool Madness, a round robin tournament to determine the greatest Tool song. Get on it here.

Turns out Tool is the best room-cleaning music known to man - I've just turned my hovel from a Fukushima impersonator into something resembling human living quarters in the time it took Maynard and the boys to get through three songs. The things a man does when he's nothing better to do...

Speaking of, a documentary I found myself watching yesterday. I want that guy to be my granda... and this guy on my da's side. The family functions would be immense.

Keep it simple, keep it honest
-j

Friday, 25 March 2011

I have a new favourite sport

Fan as I am of men with unusually co-ordinated feet and men falling over, on discovering these lads, I decided we should all just stop inventing games - it's been sorted people, everyone just get onto their nearest oversized net dealer and have a nice game of Sepak Takraw. I'll see ye's in hospital.







Keep 'er airborne

-j

Thursday, 24 March 2011

Fuckit, why not...

I may - *hack hack cough* blue thundering fuck it's dusty in here - as I was saying, I may just have been persuaded to scribble about things over the tubes again about things slightly less fictional, by Grieve, the man behind TheGrieve and Capsuleering (I may have had a hand in the latter, you can tell by the foulness of some of it). So I thought I'd give this place a spring cleaning while I'm about it. Updates to follow.

[Wow, six... seven spurious links and two cusses in under a hundred words? Right back in the saddle...]

Friday, 12 November 2010

Footballing Philosophy Corner

This week, Spurs legend Danny Blanchflower, on seeing a 35-yard punt let in by a woeful keeper in the formative years of US televised sah-kerrr, and being told by TV chiefs to 'be positive' about it, i.e., not slate the ballbag. The bigwigs told him "We think there are two truths, a positive truth and a negative truth." They struck a nerve.


"Why had such inventive souls stopped at only two, I wondered? Why not four truths? Or 10? The philosophical winds of it swept through my mind. If they had two truths they must have two gods … But if there was no bad, how could there be good? What would their reactions have been if I had said of the goalkeeper at St Louis: Well, folks ... that sure was good negative play on his part, making it easy for them to score that great goal."


More great criac in the footballing sense here, here and here.

Monday, 13 September 2010

For a Few Dollars More...

Return to Belfast is it, aye? Not fucking likely.

Predictably enough, you find me in a fairly strident frame of mind. Here I sit, with the flat in a reasonable state of repair at last, at half nine in the morning, with fuck all to do, and a little fire in my belly (along with some Nesquik cereal).

Since my last little missive I've been turned down for a gig in Teletech, the job equivalent of a Roma accordion player throwing your twenty pee back in your face. Cue an exponential increase in the applications being sent out - everything from window cleaner to shop manager, from sofa salesman to financial advisor- if there was a hole in a business in Liverpool, Belfast, or anywhere else, I stuck my oar in it. I thought I'd sniffed out a few promising leads, and was kind of half-way preparing to shift myself back off to Belfast.

But no. Every alley turned out to be a blind one. Never has one man been told politely to fuck off so many times. And with the landlord having the cheek to threaten legal action, despite the walls being the only consistently working thing in the flat, I was forced to pawn my guitar and bass. In all my years of dodging creditors, this was a new low. But I suppose there's no point having an electric instrument if it's getting wrecked in the rain as you sleep in the park.

I may well have skipped town at this point, and probably would have done if I hadn't signed a nasty little contract on the flat, which would have nicely shafted my new housemates. And just as I was about to steal a dirigible and start paddling, I got a call back off one of the sheaf of call centre applications I'd fired out over the last month. They told me to land down with some paperwork, and I'd have an interview that week. So pausing to thank whatever idiot spirit it is that smiles on me at these times, off I strut to a dole office in town.

Imagine my pleasantly surprised face as Blue Bill (one of my housemates - rampant Protestant but nice bloke, as long as you're not female and within fifty yards) sashays up for the same interview. Now imagine my look of can't-believe-my-lucktitude as the interview goes thusly:

Bint Interviewer: You done this kind of thing before?
Me: What call centre work? Yeah, I worked in-
B: Good. Have you got a valid passport and some National Insurance details?
M: Yeah, I-
(B stands up, and snatches my vaguely waved passport)
B: Good stuff, I'll just go and get these photocopied...
(B blusters out the door. I sit and twiddle my thumbs for five minutes, not moving much in case this is the Hidden Camera portion of the interview.

I started quite enjoying myself at this point, as I sat visualising myself rolling around in a big bath full of money, with my bass back, and a guitar I actually liked, with a bottle of Morgan's Spiced in one hand, and a sandwich larger than my head in the other. Full-time employment goes to my head rather quickly.

In she swings again, this time with a scowl halfway between confusion and indignation, like I'd just sneezed splatteringly over her dog)
B: This letter won't do at all, oh no. Haven't you got anything else?
M: But my housemate just landed up with exactly the same paperwork, and you said he was sweet-

Cue garbled conversation with many interruptions and talking-overances, which resulted in my having to naff off up to a different dole office to get a slightly different shade of letter from them. This proved difficult. Another cock-up had been made with my paperwork, and I wouldn't be able to get the appropriate letter until I'd submitted a form (which should have been done a month and a half earlier when I changed my address with the dole folks), which was likely to take a good week to process. Which meant the job was out the window.

But did I despair? Did I up and sell the rest of my furniture, and lope off to Belfast to hide? Not likely. And why? Because whenever you get a stroke of luck of this kind, you inevitably get a barrage of them, if you know where to look. Mine came along rather quickly.

As I sat in a not-particularly-greasy spoon eating a halal fry (how could I tell it was halal? No bacon, and beef sausages. Wasn't the best) I got a call from a number I didn't recognise. I answered tentatively. Over came a voice that suggested a forty-something divorcée with a short skirt and a smoking habit that ran into its second box by tea time. Could I make my way to Kirkby by the end of the day, she asked? No, I said. I hadn't a clue where Kirkby was, and was unsure about finding out. Could I be there by eleven tomorrow morning, she asked? I said I'd try. She husked an address to me, bade me wear a suit and bring a passport, and hung up.

I sat and sipped my mediocre tea, unsure what to make of this. Had I slipped into a Bogart film? What the hell kind of jobs had I been applying for? Only one way to find out.

The reality was a little less cinematic. The place was a call centre on the other side of Liverpool, with the feel of an airport- tight corridors, air conditioning, not enough natural light and a scrubbed formica cafeteria. It turned out I was right about the voice on the phone- she had strawy bottle-blonde hair, she'd seen far too much sun over the years, but she kept in shape. She took me to an office at the back and asked the standard call centre interview questions. I jumped through the hoops. I didn't even remember applying for this job, but I wasn't going to argue. Then she said something they always say on TV, but never in real life: "You start on Monday." I very nearly kissed her, but didn't like the thought of the sexual harassment suit.

That was a month ago. During that month I've sat and slogged through some of the most stultifyingly boring call centre training I've ever been a party to. The job doesn't seem that bad, but my classmates are idiots. Not just stupid people, the loud kind that shout over you and then blame you because they're not picking anything up. Must be hell teaching these classes, and that hell is reserved for a quiet mousy grandmother from the Midlands somewhere, who avoids passive-aggressiveness by being incredibly nice (actually unbelievably- no idea how she does it).

So what am I doing lazing about the house, with a very nice bowl of cereal, on a Monday morning, when by the terms of another nasty little contract I should be sitting wringing my hands taking my first couple of calls? Well for that you can blame banks. Generally a good crowd to blame if you're stuck, but this time may well be justified. For some reason Santander are refusing to give me the last twenty or so quid out of my account. This means I can't afford a bus, which means I can't get to work. Which is nice. And may well lead to me sitting about the house like this more often on a Monday morning. Either way, expect more of these scribblings over the next while. I'll give myself carpal tunnel otherwise.

In the words of James Brown, "Uuunnnn"

-J

Friday, 9 July 2010

Another Day, Another Dollar...

...and another fucking library. As a fat scouse mother mewls to a spluttering milk-covered baby, and some teenagers outside bray away to each other in that cadence reserved solely for young Liverpudlian reprobrates and mentally ill Norwegians,  it becomes irritatingly clear to be once again that the more things change, the more they stay the same.

You find me in a n uncharacteristically foul mood. We moved into a new house on quite a nice main road over here; the place was looking quite nice, if a bit unfinished, but Plastic Gav (the new landlord- a six-foot-plus rugby-shaped Southsider with a penchant for see-through shirts) assured us that despite the disarray of the electrics and appliances that the joint would be finished within a week.

One week on, there's no washing machine, cooker, internet or light bulbs in the hall, and the lad's only come round to fix the hot water today. So off I trot, in my usual fashion, to the library, to get some of the tension out of myself.

And to add to all this tension, every bank I've ever talked to seems to be asking me for money. And there aren't any jobs. So I'm sober. And it's not very nice.

Upshot? Well, I may be coming back to Belfast, at least for a few weeks. I hear Teletech are still hiring. Think it's time to report back to the Sky Broadband barracks... Lance IT Ballbag Lackey Hutcheon reportig for duty, carrying the last shred of my soul. It's overrated anyway.