Civil Unrest
Polite, pensive, mature, reserved...Civil Unrest is none of these things and less.
Friday, 16 December 2011
Happy 50th Bill Hicks
This is the last picture to be taken of Bill, Christmas Eve, 1993. He has his arm around his father. Happy 50th Bill, your words still burn a hole through all the bullshit.
Friday, 14 October 2011
Andy Milonakis' Big Grapefruit
The most incredible thing has just happened. Andy Milonakis replied to me on twitter. I asked him whether or not he'd be making a Big Grapefruit Part 3 video at any point in the future. His response: "yes eventually". Fucking awesome.
You may be wondering what exactly the 'Big Grapefruit videos' are. Well, why don't you see for yourself:
Big Grapefruit Part 1
Big Grapefruit Part 2
Pure genius I think you'll agree.
You may be wondering what exactly the 'Big Grapefruit videos' are. Well, why don't you see for yourself:
Big Grapefruit Part 1
Big Grapefruit Part 2
Pure genius I think you'll agree.
Thursday, 11 August 2011
Life. What’s The Fucking Point?
Boredom and death. Two inevitable cornerstones of the human condition. The solution? A good old fashioned moan.
I’m bored. So very bored. A profound existential boredom that’s corroding my soul. The monotony, the routine, the grey calendar of existence, the blah blah blah more boring words, BORED!
I’d like to share a quote - taken from The Dice Man - that captures exactly how I feel:
“Life is islands of ecstasy in an ocean of ennui, and after the age of thirty land is seldom seen. At best we wander from one much-worn sandbar to the next, soon familiar with each grain of sand we see.”
I’m drowning in an ocean of ennui. And the closest I’ve come to a cure is HBO. Yes, Home Box Office, the American cable network. HBO offers some of the highest quality escapism there is. The Sopranos, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Boardwalk Empire, The Wire, Band Of Brothers – in other words some of the best TV ever made. All wonderful, all offering momentary respite from the grinding reality of life. But once you’re done watching The Pacific DVD boxset, what then?
What other brightly coloured baubles are there to distract us from our slow inevitable slide into the grave? Sex, food, porn, booze, - an endless list of comforting self-indulgence , each performed with mechanical regularity to help divert us from our meaningless trudge towards oblivion.
Knowing too that others have articulated this age old battle with boredom better than I ever could - Nietzsche, Camus, Dostoyevsky, Kafka, to name a few. The helpless realisation that the more you learn, the more aware you are of your own ignorance, and the equally sickening epiphany that life is simply too short to do much about it, to even scratch the surface.
Begrudgingly accepting that there’ll always be someone better than you, no matter how hard you try, no matter how much you sweat and toil and fret over a personal undertaking, there’ll always be someone who’ll undermine your effort.
And secretly, perversely, enjoying the fucked-up pointlessness of it all. The helpless frustration, the ridiculous unbearable boredom. Somehow there’s a freedom in it.
And that is why I am lost.
Yup, it's not easy being a human being. Ever since evolution saddled us with self-awareness, we've been wallowing in existential angst. Why are we here? What does it all mean? What's the fucking point? Life is complicated enough without the added burden of unanswerable questions plaguing our every thought. Add to that our inherent ability to feel guilt, shame and paranoia and you begin to wonder how we ever make it through the day.
So then, how to cope with the problem of being a living breathing human being? Well, if you're a veteran curmudgeon, like me, you'll write whiny articles, like this. Because writing about people, and why those people are such insufferable bastards, is undeniably cathartic.
When the simpleton in front of you takes longer than five minutes to withdraw money from the cash point, they should be put on the sex offenders register. All those humourless wankers who write to The Daily Mail because they were offended by a joke they heard on TV should be rounded up and bulldozed into an industrial meat grinder.
When confronted, day after sodding day, with this endless conveyor belt of cunts, it takes an iron will not to indulge the murderous fury that lurks deep within our souls. And so I write, to help ease the pain, and the red mist of rage dissipates. But one day, when words are no longer enough to tame the devil inside, and I finally snap, I hope you're not in the immediate vicinity. Because, baby, it's gonna get messy.
I’m bored. So very bored. A profound existential boredom that’s corroding my soul. The monotony, the routine, the grey calendar of existence, the blah blah blah more boring words, BORED!
I’d like to share a quote - taken from The Dice Man - that captures exactly how I feel:
“Life is islands of ecstasy in an ocean of ennui, and after the age of thirty land is seldom seen. At best we wander from one much-worn sandbar to the next, soon familiar with each grain of sand we see.”
I’m drowning in an ocean of ennui. And the closest I’ve come to a cure is HBO. Yes, Home Box Office, the American cable network. HBO offers some of the highest quality escapism there is. The Sopranos, Curb Your Enthusiasm, Boardwalk Empire, The Wire, Band Of Brothers – in other words some of the best TV ever made. All wonderful, all offering momentary respite from the grinding reality of life. But once you’re done watching The Pacific DVD boxset, what then?
What other brightly coloured baubles are there to distract us from our slow inevitable slide into the grave? Sex, food, porn, booze, - an endless list of comforting self-indulgence , each performed with mechanical regularity to help divert us from our meaningless trudge towards oblivion.
Knowing too that others have articulated this age old battle with boredom better than I ever could - Nietzsche, Camus, Dostoyevsky, Kafka, to name a few. The helpless realisation that the more you learn, the more aware you are of your own ignorance, and the equally sickening epiphany that life is simply too short to do much about it, to even scratch the surface.
Begrudgingly accepting that there’ll always be someone better than you, no matter how hard you try, no matter how much you sweat and toil and fret over a personal undertaking, there’ll always be someone who’ll undermine your effort.
And secretly, perversely, enjoying the fucked-up pointlessness of it all. The helpless frustration, the ridiculous unbearable boredom. Somehow there’s a freedom in it.
And that is why I am lost.
Yup, it's not easy being a human being. Ever since evolution saddled us with self-awareness, we've been wallowing in existential angst. Why are we here? What does it all mean? What's the fucking point? Life is complicated enough without the added burden of unanswerable questions plaguing our every thought. Add to that our inherent ability to feel guilt, shame and paranoia and you begin to wonder how we ever make it through the day.
So then, how to cope with the problem of being a living breathing human being? Well, if you're a veteran curmudgeon, like me, you'll write whiny articles, like this. Because writing about people, and why those people are such insufferable bastards, is undeniably cathartic.
When the simpleton in front of you takes longer than five minutes to withdraw money from the cash point, they should be put on the sex offenders register. All those humourless wankers who write to The Daily Mail because they were offended by a joke they heard on TV should be rounded up and bulldozed into an industrial meat grinder.
When confronted, day after sodding day, with this endless conveyor belt of cunts, it takes an iron will not to indulge the murderous fury that lurks deep within our souls. And so I write, to help ease the pain, and the red mist of rage dissipates. But one day, when words are no longer enough to tame the devil inside, and I finally snap, I hope you're not in the immediate vicinity. Because, baby, it's gonna get messy.
Monday, 25 July 2011
Tom
The smiling surgeon approached Tom brandishing a black marker pen.
“Have to make absolutely sure”, he said. “Pop yourself on the bed for me young man."
Tom sat on the hard mattress. He was naked beneath the flimsy hospital gown.
The surgeon, still smiling his benign smile, said, “Human error is inevitable, even in the esteemed echelons of ontological surgery”. He uncapped his black marker pen and lifted Tom’s gown.
“There!” he declared triumphantly. “Didn't tickle too much I hope". He scribbled on his clipboard and disappeared behind the curtain rail that surrounded the bed.
Tom was alone now, the walls of his isolation strengthened by the chipper surgeon’s departure. Since his diagnosis, Tom had done everything he could to avoid being alone; it gave him too much time to think.
In his darker moments, during that awful purgatory before sleep consumed him, Tom understood that, one day, and maybe far sooner than he’d hoped, he was going to die.
By God he was going to die.
Not that God had anything to do with it. What kind of benevolent, merciful deity would allow a cancerous cell to flourish in the testicle of a blameless young man? Only an omnipotent prankster, dark and foul of thought, would treat his life with such callous indifference.
A beautiful black face appeared in the curtain. It was the ward nurse.
“How are you feeling sweetheart?”, she said.
“I’m fine." Despite his dread sense of impending annihilation, Tom fought any outward sign of weakness. He would not break character, not now.
“Okay my dear, I’ll come get you in ten minutes”.
Ten minutes.
Ten years.
Ten millennia.
All insignificant, arbitrary units of time when compared to the infinite, unknowable universe. Tom felt acutely attuned to the crushing indifference of the world around him. Time would eventually consume everything, including itself.
One day it would all be gone.
Charles Darwin’s brutal hammer blow to creationism; Albert Camus’ measured response to the profound absurdity of it all; Bill Hicks' righteous indignation; every homicidal religion and all our conjured Gods – all of them lost, plunged into the void from which they were born.
The day would eventually come when some hapless soul had the historical misfortune to utter humanity's last ever words. But when faced with outright extinction, what words could possibly suffice? A proud and noble tribute to humankind's greatest achievements? Or would civilisation's final spokesman scream in feral terror as the encroaching darkness smotherd him forever?
Tom lifted his gown to inspect the surgeon's handiwork. An ugly black 'X' stained his inner thigh, like an obscene treasure map.
What was it the surgeon had said to him?
'Human error is inevitable'.
Quite, but did he have to be so blunt? It reminded Tom of those cheesy hospital dramas where the Doctors conversed in cliché.
'Unforseen complications'.
'He put up one hell of a fight'.
'We did all we could'.
Cosy euphemisms to placate the pre-watershed audience. Stock phrases spoken through ice white teeth. Bloodless bandages, pristine wards and Hollywood nurses – anything to distract the masses from their slow slide in to the grave.
But Tom was all too aware of the horror stories. A sleep-deprived surgeon might amputate the wrong limb - or remove the perfectly healthy testicle. And sometimes the surgeon would doodle on the moribund appendage using a black marker pen, to avoid such catastrophic mishaps.
The sudden swish of the curtain rail startled Tom from his solipsistic stream of consciousness.
It was time.
Tom began to shuffle off the bed but was interrupted before he could plant his feet on the floor.
"No need to get up sweetheart", said the nurse. "These beds have wheels. You just lay back".
She pulled the bed away from the wall with minimal effort. Tom gripped the sides of the mattress.
"I'm fine to walk, honestly", said Tom. "More than happy to walk".
The nurse had seen Tom’s haunted look of apprehension a thousand times before.
She said, “It's no trouble at all, sweetheart”.
The nurse wheeled the bed out of the ward and in to the main corridor.
No trouble at all, thought Tom. What the fuck do you know? I'm having a nut removed, you clueless bitch.
Tom looked up in to the Nurse’s face and smiled. He restrained the swelling impulse to scream and spit and swear; to leap from the bed and run; to rage against the piss-soaked unfairness of it all.
The fucking injustice of it all.
Why me?
WHY ME?
The nurse pushed Tom through the double swing doors at the end of the corridor.
“Have to make absolutely sure”, he said. “Pop yourself on the bed for me young man."
Tom sat on the hard mattress. He was naked beneath the flimsy hospital gown.
The surgeon, still smiling his benign smile, said, “Human error is inevitable, even in the esteemed echelons of ontological surgery”. He uncapped his black marker pen and lifted Tom’s gown.
“There!” he declared triumphantly. “Didn't tickle too much I hope". He scribbled on his clipboard and disappeared behind the curtain rail that surrounded the bed.
Tom was alone now, the walls of his isolation strengthened by the chipper surgeon’s departure. Since his diagnosis, Tom had done everything he could to avoid being alone; it gave him too much time to think.
In his darker moments, during that awful purgatory before sleep consumed him, Tom understood that, one day, and maybe far sooner than he’d hoped, he was going to die.
By God he was going to die.
Not that God had anything to do with it. What kind of benevolent, merciful deity would allow a cancerous cell to flourish in the testicle of a blameless young man? Only an omnipotent prankster, dark and foul of thought, would treat his life with such callous indifference.
A beautiful black face appeared in the curtain. It was the ward nurse.
“How are you feeling sweetheart?”, she said.
“I’m fine." Despite his dread sense of impending annihilation, Tom fought any outward sign of weakness. He would not break character, not now.
“Okay my dear, I’ll come get you in ten minutes”.
Ten minutes.
Ten years.
Ten millennia.
All insignificant, arbitrary units of time when compared to the infinite, unknowable universe. Tom felt acutely attuned to the crushing indifference of the world around him. Time would eventually consume everything, including itself.
One day it would all be gone.
Charles Darwin’s brutal hammer blow to creationism; Albert Camus’ measured response to the profound absurdity of it all; Bill Hicks' righteous indignation; every homicidal religion and all our conjured Gods – all of them lost, plunged into the void from which they were born.
The day would eventually come when some hapless soul had the historical misfortune to utter humanity's last ever words. But when faced with outright extinction, what words could possibly suffice? A proud and noble tribute to humankind's greatest achievements? Or would civilisation's final spokesman scream in feral terror as the encroaching darkness smotherd him forever?
Tom lifted his gown to inspect the surgeon's handiwork. An ugly black 'X' stained his inner thigh, like an obscene treasure map.
What was it the surgeon had said to him?
'Human error is inevitable'.
Quite, but did he have to be so blunt? It reminded Tom of those cheesy hospital dramas where the Doctors conversed in cliché.
'Unforseen complications'.
'He put up one hell of a fight'.
'We did all we could'.
Cosy euphemisms to placate the pre-watershed audience. Stock phrases spoken through ice white teeth. Bloodless bandages, pristine wards and Hollywood nurses – anything to distract the masses from their slow slide in to the grave.
But Tom was all too aware of the horror stories. A sleep-deprived surgeon might amputate the wrong limb - or remove the perfectly healthy testicle. And sometimes the surgeon would doodle on the moribund appendage using a black marker pen, to avoid such catastrophic mishaps.
The sudden swish of the curtain rail startled Tom from his solipsistic stream of consciousness.
It was time.
Tom began to shuffle off the bed but was interrupted before he could plant his feet on the floor.
"No need to get up sweetheart", said the nurse. "These beds have wheels. You just lay back".
She pulled the bed away from the wall with minimal effort. Tom gripped the sides of the mattress.
"I'm fine to walk, honestly", said Tom. "More than happy to walk".
The nurse had seen Tom’s haunted look of apprehension a thousand times before.
She said, “It's no trouble at all, sweetheart”.
The nurse wheeled the bed out of the ward and in to the main corridor.
No trouble at all, thought Tom. What the fuck do you know? I'm having a nut removed, you clueless bitch.
Tom looked up in to the Nurse’s face and smiled. He restrained the swelling impulse to scream and spit and swear; to leap from the bed and run; to rage against the piss-soaked unfairness of it all.
The fucking injustice of it all.
Why me?
WHY ME?
The nurse pushed Tom through the double swing doors at the end of the corridor.
Monday, 23 May 2011
The Butcher
Isn't it exciting that out there, somewhere, there is music, beautiful life-enhancing music, that we've yet to discover.
One thing I've learned: It's no use trying to persuade someone to like your music. I guess discovering a song for yourself is part of the magic.
But maybe this will be one of those songs, something you've not heard before, but once you have...BOOM. Bliss city
One thing I've learned: It's no use trying to persuade someone to like your music. I guess discovering a song for yourself is part of the magic.
But maybe this will be one of those songs, something you've not heard before, but once you have...BOOM. Bliss city
Tuesday, 12 April 2011
OMG! With Peaches Geldof
Friday, 1 April 2011
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