Month: May 2005

  • EU exists: official

    Don’t tell the islanders, but the CIA’s world factbook – which lists countries and their vital statistics – now lists the EU. Link: A Fistful of Euros.

  • Hotel Babylon

    Hotel Babylon is an entertaining book – it takes you through a fictional day in a fictional hotel, but is a vehicle for real stories and anecdotes about life working in a luxury London hotel. It feels like a snack rather than a full meal – the type is large, and the margins wide – but it’s written in a punchy, cynical style that keeps the pace going. In its darkness, it reminded me slightly of the Mike Leigh film Croupier. Not as disgusting as Kitchen Confidential, and unlikely to be as controversial, but a good read.

  • Two railway links

    Pictures of Historic & Listed Railway Buildings.

    And the New Adlestrop Railway Atlas.

    That is, if you like that sort of thing, ahem.

  • rule forty-two

    rule forty-two, home of misheard lyrics, interesting articles about English life c. 1998, and photos of NYC.

  • Exciting Beaconsfield

    There is a small chance that this mighty organ will need to go into voluntary exile in Buckinghamshire, specifically Beaconsfield, for a year or two.

    Were that the case, I’d at least be sure that my adrenalin levels would be kept high. The current news headlines on the site (which have been there since February, so there’s a fair chance they’ll still be there when you come to read this) are:

    DOG FOUND IN GERRARDS CROSS – FEBRUARY 13TH
    DOG LOST IN OLD TOWN – FEBRUARY 12TH

    You can just see the development of the story right there, can’t you?

  • Global Cooling

    Will climate change cause the Gulf Stream to stop, plunging northern Europe (and particularly Britain) into the freezer? Well, do you want the bad news or the very bad news.

  • End of the season drama

    The end of the season in the Premiership is looking interesting. Three teams will, as always, be relegated out of the Premiership into the second division, confusingly called the Championship. But this year, for the first time, the four teams at the bottom are so close that no team has definitely been relegated. It all depends on their final games.

    The four teams in jeopardy are Norwich, West Bromwich Albion, Southampton and Crystal Palace. Norwich are currently just outside the relegation zone, so they have, as the football commentators say, ‘their fate in their own hands’. If they win (away at Fulham), they send the other three teams down and stay up themselves. All the other three teams need a particular permutation of results elsewhere, with West Brom being the closest to the trapdoor.

    All the last games will be played together on Sunday afternoon (coverage on the Internet at http://www.bbc.co.uk/fivelive), and are:

    Fulham v Norwich
    Southampton v Manchester United
    Charlton Athletic v Crystal Palace
    West Bromwich Albion v Portsmouth

    To give you an idea of the different permutations, here’s the BBC clarifying what Southampton need to do to stay up:

    “A win would relegate West Brom, but would be immaterial if Norwich win. If Norwich fail to win and Crystal Palace win, Southampton would need to win by the same margin as Palace win at Charlton. If Norwich fail to win, and Palace win, a Southampton victory by one goal less than Palace’s margin of victory would keep them up on the next criteria, goals scored. A draw would be enough if Norwich lose and Crystal Palace lose or draw and West Brom lose or draw.”

    All the permutations in full at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/eng_prem/4526865.stm

  • Conversate

    I’m going to be sure to try the Participatory Politics Foundation’s newConversate online discussion tool.