What's Up?
The World Cup is here. Woo and indeed Hoo. I've already had to field comments from disgusted football fans because I have no interest in this corrupt and stupid tournament, but this year feels different, perhaps it's the febrile and rampant jingoism of the current mood? I have not watched more than a small handful of games at a World Cup since 2008. I am not interested in international football and have been clear about this for 18 years. So if you think I'm a traitor, I've been one for longer than men under 30 have been able to ejaculate...
However, this year it seems to be different (and I'm not talking about my Scottish friends, who are at the competition for the first time since 1998). Several people I know have expressed dismay and, in one case, anger at my refusal to be interested in it. The thing is, it's not just international football that doesn't interest me; I feel nothing but contempt towards FIFA - the world governing body and massively corrupt organisation - and anyone reading this blog regularly will know that while I have many lovely American friends, I love their country, I just loathe the racist, redneck, entitled twats, who live there.
I've never really been that into international football and after Russia and Qatar my tolerance is so low that I don't expect I'll watch a single game this time around. I mean most of the matches are on when I'd be watching something else and that's how it will stay. Television and media seem bemused and confused that more than 50% of the nation are not interested, so the majority have to suffer this Trump riddled rip-off fest whether we like it or not. It seems to me that if you're not a fan of certain sports (football, tennis, bashing left wing politicians about their alleged antisemitism while ignoring The Clacton Fuhrer's Nazi salutes and crypto-crypto-fascist funders), you have no other options. Let's hope summer makes a reappearance, eh?
***Since writing this, we have discovered there are some good TV shows scheduled during the snorefest and the weather is going to stay shite in the UK, so my ambivalence levels are still very ambivalent.
Modern Horror
Horror films are currently having something of a renaissance in the cinemas; everywhere there's a new horror movie that people are talking about. The thing is horror films are a load of bollocks because we live in a world where the supernatural only exists in our heads - ghosts don't exist and if they did what could they really do? 2026 seems like it's going to be a horrific year in more ways than one, and the first big 'scary' cinematic release was Hokum, a feature by Damian McCarthy and starring Adam Scott.Scott plays an arsehole writer, who travels to Ireland to dispose of his parents' ashes in a place where they were happy - there's a back story about this, but frankly I fail to see how it impacts on anything other than why Scott's Ohm Baumann might be such an absolute cock. Within five minutes of arriving in Ireland he's insulted two locals and by the time he's settled into his hotel he's upset a bunch more. Then the movie goes off in a direction I didn't see coming and we're plunged into a strange mix of aged hippies, suicide attempts, murder cover-ups and is there really a witch living in the cellar of an old hotel? This is an atmospheric and, at times, creepy film that had a cast of characters you cared little or nothing for (except maybe Fiona, but [spoiler] Fiona doesn't last long). The problem I have with 'scary' movies is very few of them are actually scary and this was no exception. 6/10
The Young and the Old
What a delightful but devastatingly sad film The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is. A truly wonderful movie that leaves you feeling like there's an empty space where your heart once lived. Brad Pitt is the eponymous Button and Cate Blanchett plays Daisy, the woman he keeps coming back to (and vice versa), in a story that goes from the last day of the First World War to the early 2000s. Benjamin is born baby sized but like an old man; he is riddled with arthritis, cataracts, wrinkles and like a very old man on death's door, but as time goes on he gets stronger, and then he gets younger. He is raised by a black woman in New Orleans, after his father, in a mad frenzy, dumps him on her doorstep, where she shows him genuine love. In many ways this film is like a post modern Forest Gump. David Fincher, a director who has made some truly disturbing movies, manages to make this a joy to behold rather than something that might be a bit... strange. I'd forgotten what a brilliant and deeply moving feature this was, with some awesome special effects. 10/10Just The Old
I had no idea that Going In Style was actually a remake of a 1979 film starring George Burns. I'm not sure it would have made any difference... Starring Michael Caine, Morgan Freeman and Alan Arkin, this is an updated version of how three old men decide to rob a bank; this time due to banks, corporations and the general shitness of the USA and the way it treats 'normal' hard working people (and how that is an accepted norm by the people suffering it). There are some genuinely funny moments in this movie, but it did feel frivolous, like it was attempting to be a feelgood heist movie. It was all right, but it was nothing I'd be looking at watching again. 5/10The Madness is Strong
Over a year after acquiring it, we finally watched Bugonia and that means you don't have to and I don't have to watch it again. This is a simple tale of a raving mad conspiracy theorist - Jesse Plemons - and his simpleton cousin who kidnap the CEO of a company because they think she's an alien from the Andromeda galaxy. Most of the film takes place inside Plemons' basement as the now shaven headed CEO - Emma Stone - tries to convince her kidnappers that she really isn't an alien trying to destroy the planet. It's a generally slow paced slightly bonkers movie (oddly enough a remake of a South Korean film from the 1970s) until the last fifteen or so minutes when it becomes just bonkers. I didn't enjoy it, but I was distracted, so there are extenuating circumstances. 5/10Have You Seen the News?
I said to the wife the other day that I wish I could just cut the news out of my viewing and reading habits. It's simply too depressing and I no longer trust it to reflect what normal people want or feel - it's always slanted with an angle and that angle feels politically motivated.
Take this unfortunate case in Belfast - the Somalian refugee who stabbed an Irishman or the murder of that Nowak lad, by a British-born Sikh, who obviously had issues. At the same time as these things were reported, a Manchester school girl stabbed to classmates and a teacher and it barely made the news; in fact there were several murders, lots of stabbings (also non fatal) and lots of rioting that gets less coverage because there were no brown people involved or there wasn't a Jewish person connected to it.
We don't need the tin pot Führer from Clacton to stir up racial tension when we have the BBC and all the right wing newspapers doing it for him. It's the news media driving the Zack Polanski is anti-Semitic narrative, despite him being a gay Jewish man opposed to the Zionists in Israel. It's the news that fuels the hate in the hearts of the intellectually-challenged and it will be the news media that 'guides' the ignorant to electing a government this country definitely doesn't need.
I remember Martyn Lewis - an ITN newscaster - bemoaning 30 years ago that there was too many negative news on the news and how it would be nice if we had some Good News every so often. Now, we have 'consumer' programmes that just add to the rhetoric; we have entertainment programmes that seem to be made to deliberately enrage the hard of thinking and we'll soon live in a country where third generation black and brown people will be wondering how long it will be before some Reform supporting Musk financed flash mob will turn up on their doorstep demanding they leave the country and go back to where they come from.
If you haven't got a foreign sounding name and look like a WASP you'll be safe - for the time being - because once all the reasons for this country being so shit have been deported, the gammons are going to have to blame someone else for it not getting any better and the news media will be there, pointing at gays, disabled, single mothers, lefties and people who aren't flying a Union Jack on their houses...
The Last Descendent
Apparently, Widow's Bay is a water-cooler TV show. It's one of the most successful shows Apple TV+ has had in recent years and the Guardian loves it... Usually, that would be a big red flag for me, but I was watching it before the newspaper I've grown to dislike latched onto that bandwagon. Widow's Bay is great and the penultimate episode saw the island go into emergency mode as a north-easterly storm is about to hit it with almost hurricane force winds. There is the usual mix of comedy, but the horror is dialled back a touch because there are other heinous decisions that need to be made, especially when the curse of the island can finally be broken. This has been a quite excellent series and is highly recommended. I'll soon be able to make a long list of reasons why people should receive Apple TV+ by whatever option they choose.Jezza's Farm
This week's double bill of Clarkson's Farm had many LOL moments, also some rather squeamish bits and the usual 'farming is really a nightmare' scenarios. These were the reasons why this show has been so successful, rather than the sermonising and gammony bollocks that Jeremy comes out with from time to time. There are some joyous moments and some really unpleasant things - which I saw coming and I don't know fuck all about farming. The crispy fried squirrel didn't go down too well though...Old Customs
Legends is a Netflix series about how HM Customs & Excise broke the back of some of the worst heroin dealers in the early 1990s. Tom Burke, Steve Coogan, Hayley Squires, Charlotte Ritchie and a few others are the people on the outside trying to be close to and infiltrate the people on the inside. It's gripping stuff and while some of it has been changed for dramatic purposes it's still well worth a watch. It's a six part series, set in London and Liverpool - with excursions to Turkey, Pakistan and Germany - and while no one expects this to have an unhappy ending that doesn't mean it isn't filled with jeopardy. The makers have also captured the early 90s really well.
The Valedictorian Episode?
I have a suspicion that this might be the last series of Welcome to Wrexham. Given the team didn't achieve promotion and another season in the Championship probably won't have the same appeal to casual fans, I wouldn't be surprised if they just quietly shelved this, at times, truly excellent documentary series. The reason for this belief is how this sixth episode seemed to be focusing on all the great players and names we've got to know who aren't at the club any longer, or are no longer there in the same capacity. Take Humphrey Ker for instance, this director has spent less time at the club over the last 18 months and was eager to talk about his diminishing role (almost like he was being forced out). It just felt like a look back at five glorious seasons (because they don't get promoted at the end of this one) and all the great characters who were part of those years. It was a strange episode to have with very little focus on the side's rise to the play-off positions and that, to me, felt like the tying up of certain loose ends...I think Wrexham will be sold in the next 18 months. Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac will ensure that whoever buys it will keep the onus on the town and the people who have followed the adventure, but neither of these Hollywood stars have the power, the money or the skill to turn Wrexham into the team they dream of. They both might retain honorary positions, but I think the club is now worth a shed load of money...
What's Up Next?
The TV show with lots of mumbling and dragons is back next week and four days after that's back The Bear's final season drops. There will be some TV during the World Cup, we're just going to have to search for it...
And the usual stuff...

















































