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Originally Posted by kimota (Corin's Crib #1) FAKER # 1:

He was joking of course, but his words are only a slight exaggeration of his views. In his ideal world employees would just shut up and do what they are told!

But do you really know this?  We only know what he blurts out on the TV, in real life, we don't know what his real thoughts are.  

 

I for one, saw the humour in his blurts, but took even more joy by watching Dom Joly (after retweeting it).  Honestly if you tweet, follow Dom Joly, it's hilarious.

Cinds
Originally Posted by Katerina:

I blame Twitter and Facebook for these types of things getting blown out of all proportion. I passed a newsagent stand today and the Clarkson story was on the front pages of some papers, is this really worthy national news?

 

I thought that the Ross/Brand Radio 2 scandal was funny. Sorry but can't help my sense of humour. Brand's podcasts were the best thing on Radio 2 and I still miss them.

 

We are going to end up so PC that we won't be able to say anything......that's what makes me sick, not throwaway comments made in jest from a silly man in double denim.

^This^  and especially even more so the parts in bold.

 

 

 

Cosmopolitan
They did a bit on HIGNFY tonight and I realised that very few people had actually watched the offending prog! I've always thought of Clarkson as being the sort of person who might walk into your local country pub in the seventies. The stereotype who would pull up outside in a daft expensive car, walk in and get a drink, and sit there wearing leather driving gloves, whilst trying to chat up your lovely girlfriends. Meanwhile your best pal, a bit of a hippie but who twenty years later would be a Principal Officer in the Social Work department of a large conurbation might pour a full pint over his head. I suspect these car tossers have been bearing a grudge ever since.
Garage Joe
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
They did a bit on HIGNFY tonight and I realised that very few people had actually watched the offending prog! I've always thought of Clarkson as being the sort of person who might walk into your local country pub in the seventies. The stereotype who would pull up outside in a daft expensive car, walk in and get a drink, and sit there wearing leather driving gloves, whilst trying to chat up your lovely girlfriends. Meanwhile your best pal, a bit of a hippie but who twenty years later would be a Principal Officer in the Social Work department of a large conurbation might pour a full pint over his head. I suspect these car tossers have been bearing a grudge ever since.

Exactly...Internet driven press..got the ball rolling and made ÂĢ

Syd
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
They did a bit on HIGNFY tonight and I realised that very few people had actually watched the offending prog! I've always thought of Clarkson as being the sort of person who might walk into your local country pub in the seventies. The stereotype who would pull up outside in a daft expensive car, walk in and get a drink, and sit there wearing leather driving gloves, whilst trying to chat up your lovely girlfriends. Meanwhile your best pal, a bit of a hippie but who twenty years later would be a Principal Officer in the Social Work department of a large conurbation might pour a full pint over his head. I suspect these car tossers have been bearing a grudge ever since.

What would qualify as a daft expensive car...?

Cosmopolitan
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
They did a bit on HIGNFY tonight and I realised that very few people had actually watched the offending prog! I've always thought of Clarkson as being the sort of person who might walk into your local country pub in the seventies. The stereotype who would pull up outside in a daft expensive car, walk in and get a drink, and sit there wearing leather driving gloves, whilst trying to chat up your lovely girlfriends. Meanwhile your best pal, a bit of a hippie but who twenty years later would be a Principal Officer in the Social Work department of a large conurbation might pour a full pint over his head. I suspect these car tossers have been bearing a grudge ever since.


...and the hippies are still jealous of the cars.....

Kaffs
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
Drifting slightly off topic, yet keeping with the "never trust a hippy" scenario. Most of the ones I knew from up the dales ended up successful and probably have better cars than the rest of us!

Which illustrates my point much better than my simple sentence did.  

 

Pseudo tree huggers most of 'em.

 

I don't understand anybody in real poverty being able to afford a car either (not a taxed and insured one at least).... but then, I don't know anybody I could say for sure who was in 'real poverty'    I know people who don't seem to have much money, or live on benefits, but without seeing their bank balance I don't know if the poverty is real.

Kaffs
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
Originally Posted by KaffyBaffy:
   I know people who don't seem to have much money, or live on benefits, but without seeing their bank balance I don't know if the poverty is real.

You should ask. I'm sure that they wouldn't mind you inspecting their financial arrangements.


I leave that to those better educated civil servants.  

Kaffs
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
Joking aside, the several brilliant scholars at my school (for my younger readers this involved 10 @ O and 3 @ A long before the concept of 15 and 6 with nimbus and stars) all ended up working for HMG.

 

Really?   I think academic qualifications are a bit of red herring (which is why I take exception to your earlier sweeping statement)    Working for HMG is huge spectrum though, from being not necessarily very bright typist in a department somewhere  to being deputy pm... as it happens I'm sure I'm not the only one who know people with little formal qualifications who are highly successful (one I know left school with probably less than the olevels above (I don't understand today's qualifications!) and now sports an OBE for her services as director of a govt deparment) and another who left school with no qualifications, but a passion for computing who now owns a software company operating worldwide.  

 

I save my sweeping statement for hippies...

Kaffs
Originally Posted by Garage Joe:
Originally Posted by KaffyBaffy:
   I think academic qualifications are a bit of red herring (which is why I take exception to your earlier sweeping statement)   


Blimey!

I wish they had been. I left school with a few O levels, and found that they opened only one or two doors.


but they could still open a door on the ground floor.... if you have the ability you don't need to stay there.  I'm pretty sure you didn't.     I'm drawing a comparison between formal 'qualifications' and 'intelligence' in my post.   i think a lot of youngsters leave school with less qualifications than they're capable of, then get on in life when they mature a bit.   

Kaffs
Indeed! Mrs Jer and I have been racking our brains trying to remember the name of an Australian comedian. The guy appeared on Live at the Apollo last year and centred his act on the property of being offended. "have you never heard of sticks and stones?" he said. Much as though I dislike Clarkson and his carcentric claptrap, it's clear to me that this was mainly another thinly veiled attack on the BBC by the usual suspects.
Garage Joe

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