P45! The lot of them!
I like telly. I like it a lot.
At the moment I’m too busy for much telly and to be honest nothing is really banging my gong. Except the Apprentice. Love that.
I look forward to 9pm on Wednesday every week with such excitement that I can barely contain myself. I shout at the telly every week, and I refuse to learn the names of the contenders as I don’t need names, I just need swear words and insults.
Who do I think will win? I don’t care; they are all arses. I just want to see them be arses every week. You couldn’t honestly couldn’t write this stuff. Favourite thing? The way they all call Alan Sugar “SRRALAN”.
Here’s a run down of ones I can be bothered remembering:
Army Arse
Kicked out by SRRALAN after trying to flog the raw material for Cheesestrings at a French gourmet food market. Possibly the best episode yet. Would not admit fault even when he had to throw all the unsold Cheesestring in the bin and get the hell out of France quicker than the Scarlett Pimpernel. Also was getting it on (ewww) with the horsey sloaney one with the bad eyeshadow. I cannot put into words how much of an arse this one is. He is so posh that you can’t understand what he says. Is there a word for prejudice against the upper classes? If there is then I’m it….and he’s made me it.
I’m nicking this name from my mate Cammy, as it’s spot on. I believe he’s called Trey but in our house he is called “The Evil Jafar” as he looks like the Evil Jafar from Disney’s Aladdin. Look below if you don’t believe me.
If Evil Jafar wins it’ll be so funny. In fact if he wins I want to see a show dedicated to his first year working for SRRALAN. He’s is as politically incorrect as they come, and everythng he touches turns to poo, but as TV shelf life goes, Evil Jafar is this year’s Badger.
Sloaney Smacked Arse Horseface.
She is needing a good kicking. I want to see this woman helicoptered into the Possil Estate in Eastend Glasgow and made to work in a chip shop for the rest of her life. Has been getting it on with Army Arse and disgusting as that is, they deserve each other. The image of them at it makes me want to dash out my eyes with a spike. She has a face I would never tire of slapping and has upset the whole of the North of England with her snooty remarks about Northerners (mainly Acned Car Salesman). She’d be best advised to stay firmly in the South East for her own protection. About as welcome in Bolton as Jimmy Hill is in Glasgow.
Quite like her, but wouldn’t want to work with her as she’s naaaasty. She may seriously win. She’s brutal but usually right about everyone she’s brutal about. Grassed on Army Twat and Horseface getting it on to SRRALAN. Wonderfully evil.
She may win as she’s a bit like SRRALAN’S type who won last year (Michelle, I think) except she’s not getting it on with any of the other contestants yet (like Michelle), so unlike last year’s winner won’t get up the duff, five days into the Apprenticeship and have to hand in her notice. There’s nothing of note to say about her other than that though.
DID you see this utter twat last week? The Fresh-Prince-of-Maudlin-College-Oxford. Boooyaaaa! Him breakdancing for the trainers ad last week had me simultaneously peeing my pants and hiding behind my hands. Still, you caught my attention, I’ll give you that. Was like watching Prince Edward having to blend in to downtown Compton in order to make it out alive and unnoticed. (Now there’s a film idea for ya.)
Token gay Asian bloke.
He is the only one I would have in my house. Noticeable for genuinely not being a twat. I’d like him to win, but he won’t. He just won’t make an impact in amongst all the big characters.
Sadly kicked out last week because she was utter shit, frankly. I liked her kinda because she was Scottish, high pitched and only my cats could hear her once she got into a tizz. I’m a bit like that. Unlike her though, I can walk and chew gum at the same time. Absolutely beautiful til she opened her gob and let out banshee wail. I’ll miss her.
Clueless Acned Car Saleman.
You know I quite liked him, but I think he might have taken a wrong turning on his way to the X Factor auditions…. He was rubbish and SRRALAN was right to get rid but he seemed an okay guy. Everybody else hated him though. I can’t imagine him selling any cars, and frankly that’s not a good thing. On the show after the Apprentice his mum was in the audience. She was so sunbed tanned that she looked like the animated Pepperami from the ad, but with a bobbed dark wig on.
This one wants it too bad. She will kill. She will maim. If SRRALAN fires her, he better watch his back, that’s all I can say. Come to think of it, if he hires her he’d better be careful too.
Can’t remember any of the others that have gone…they’ve melted into nothingness like so many of the Castaways, Housemates and Pop Idols of yesteryear.
I am worried about what I’ll do when it’s all over . What can possibly give me that regular injection of voyeuristic schadenfreude?
Shhhhhh! Big Brother starts in three weeks…….sorry. I know…….I could pretend that I won’t watch it this year, but who am I kidding?
Raging Bowl and Other Stories…
So now that Jessie has gone, our family has lost its last remaining blood tie to Clydebank, where we originally came from.
If you Google Clydebank, it’ll probably come up with “the Clydebank blitz” as it’s most famous for the worst Nazi bombing raids outside of Eastend London. Except they rebuilt Eastend London, they left Clydebank as it lay, or so it seems. The place had its heart ripped out and no real attempt has been made to give it a transplant. Clydebank was heavily targeted as the town made ships for the navy and had munitions factories during the war. Both sets of my grandparents met one another working in those factories.
The John Brown shipyards in Clydebank made the QE2. They also gave Billy Connolly years worth of comedy material. Our family left Clydebank to move to Aberdeen, leaving the dying shipyard industry for the new oil industry. Transferable skills you see. Even today the rigs in the North Sea are populated with Glaswegians who did the same thing.
To us, though, Clydebank meant the grandparents. And now that Jessie is gone, we realised that yesterday could easily be the last time we ever have reason to set foot in Clydebank. We ended our possible last visit at one of the places that me and the other two siblings have the most memories of; my Gran and Papa’s bowling green.
In the seventies my brother, sister and I spent a lot of time there, as my whole family were champion bowlers…and the bowling green bar was the cooling off station after games. So we had to entertain ourselves quite a bit as we kids were not allowed anywhere near the bar.
Each of us said yesterday, independently of one another, that we distinctly uneasy about being in the club bar, expecting at any moment my Papa would catch sight of us and chase us out. The nearest we got was standing at the door, waving frantically to catch the eye of my Dad or Papa, with one of two pieces of info:
1. We’d run out of crisps and coke
2. Our little sister had done something that warranted a telling off. That’s called “cliping” in Scots. I believe it’s similar to the phrase “to grass on someone”.
When our parents and grandparents were in “the club” as it was called, there were a few recreational activities on offer to the three of us. They fall neatly into two sections; Fairweather and Rainy
Fairweather
1. If weather was good we could play outside. We might even watch Jessie absolutely gub some other lady at bowling. She was that good. Papa was also a great bowler, and we nicknamed him “Raging Bowl” after watching him take someone up on some rules transgression or lost point. I think we were teenagers at this point. The name stuck. Not that we ever called him it to his face.
2. We could look for tennis balls in the abandoned tennis court next door.
3. We could try and move the massive ton weight roller for the green, dicing with death by crushing. If only our parents knew…
4. We could slide down the silver painted railings at the steps. Or do gymnastics round them. Until someone shouted at us. Or a head got cracked.
5. We could put chuckies (little stones used for paths) down stanks (drains) for hours at a time. Magic fun, for some reason. We may be responsible for recurrent drainage problems in the Clydebank area.
6. We could fight with each other.
Rainy
1. If the weather was bad (and we’re talking the West of Scotland here, folks) we had to sit in the “TV Room” in the basement of “the club”. A stale-smoke-smelling window-less dungeon with a wooden TV up on the wall.
I don’t know if any of you remember television in the 70s. There were 3 channels. Crappy programmes interspersed with periods of time called “Close Down” where nothing was broadcast and this little girl appeared.

You may have seen her recently on the excellent “Life on Mars”. There isn’t one seventies kid that doesn’t know her intimately.
I remember that if a cartoon came on, it was like flipping Christmas! Five minutes of “Bugs Bunny” or “Tom and Jerry” before endless hours of flaming Grandstand on a Saturday afternoon. A double bill if you were lucky and Grandstand was running late. (Producers frantically searching the vice clubs for Frank Bough could be a reason for a late start. We didn’t know then, but we sure know now! Cups of black coffee poured down his throat, a bit of slapping about, a production assistant trying to get the lemon Pringle jumper on over the nipple clamps…am I taking this too far?)
2. The “TV room” was also a locker room. So when there was only horse-racing on (i.e all the bloody time) we would entertain ourselves by rifling through people’s lockers. We never nicked anything, but we did tamper with stuff. We would run around with other folks glasses on, or their club blazer, that kind of thing.
I remember my brother putting a lady’s tan pop sock or stocking over his head and me and my sister peeing ourselves laughing.
3. We would play with the bowls. In an ideal world we would all have grown up to be champion bowlers and I would be reminiscing about my early days in the TV Room with Hazel Irvine on BBC 2 after winning some big game. But since we were more into shot-putting them, or throwing them at one another, our bowling skills were never discovered.
4. We would eat snooker chalk.
5. We would dare each other to run into the loos of the opposite sex.
6. We would sniff the pineapple ring shaped toilet cubes in said loos. We were kids, give us a break!
7. We would draw on each other’s faces with snooker chalk.
8. We would perform acts of wanton vandalism.
9. We would fight with each other.
Yesterday in “the club”, a million little old dears that I didn’t know or recognise came up to me to tell me how much I looked like my mum, or how they recognised me straight away, or talk about Jessie. They were all called Bella, Ella, Isa, Minnie and Jeannie and wore their bowling blazers festooned with badges.
If they only knew about the pop socks…..
Sixteen Year Old Misssymartin, Doris Day and Me
Will I be a top journalist, covering breaking news all round the world?
Will I be a defence lawyer going to the wire for my client in every case?
Will I be a writer of non-fiction travelogues that would make people long to follow in my footsteps?
Will I be the first female Director General of the BBC?
Will I be the first Prime Minister of Scotland?
Will I win the Eurovision Song Contest?
“No, you’ll be writing offshore training modules”
Que sera sera…etc.. Thanks Doris.
(Check out how I make no attempt to make that rhyme or fit in with the tune of “Que Sera Sera”. I’m tired and should be in bed. )
Started the freelance job today. Worked til my brain exploded and then scraped it all back into my skull and drove home checking out new Minis on the way to keep me going. Still grimacing wildly at the drivers, by the way.
Funny how life turns out. I wonder what the sixteen year old MisssyM would have to say about all this. I think about that sometimes. I think I would be astonished that someone agreed to marry me for one. I was never very confident on that front. On the career front I think sixteen year old Misssy would be a little confused. She may even be disappointed. In fact I know she would.
Last week some BBC ladies came to speak to my students and very nice they were too. When I was about 20 I would’ve been peeing my pants in excitement at the prospect of getting a foot in the door at the Beeb. Certainly, the general feeling that I got from the women was that people should be peeing their pants in excitement to get in at the Beeb. (Personally, I think anyone wanting to work in telly is better off scoping out the indies, as they make all the programmes these days).
However, I felt completely numb to it. Instead I was excited for my students…and even a little worried for them. What was really on offer here? Unpaid work, digitising and logging tapes for hours on end? The occasional running job, getting coffee for Sally Magnussen? Answering the phones on “Children in Need”? If you’re lucky in five years you might get a researcher’s job on some farming programme that is broadcast on a Sunday afternoon?
Even to get in to do these poorly paid, bottom rung of the ladder running jobs you’d have to jump through a million hoops, “Apprentice” style, to even get shortlisted. Fighting for floor space in a group exercise with some over-confident, over-bearing wannabes that would stifle your every attempt at being heard above them *Shudder*
It’s fine for those who want in…and maybe that was me fifteen years ago, but thank God it’s all over! Something has made me stay in Scotland and take a different path into teaching and writing/producing commercial and technical stuff and it doesn’t bother me anymore that what I said I’d do on leaving school hasn’t happened. Because other things have.
So for now, it’s procedural training, offshore safety and risk assessments for me. Last year it was programmes for schools. You can’t say my life isn’t varied, I s’pose. And I’ve only had to sell a bit of my soul to Satan…..
By the way, you’ve not heard the last of Sixteen year Old MisssyM. She and I have more conversations to have.











