Thursday, 31 May 2007

Ad men plan again

I am pro-Olympics. I'm proud that my city won the bid for 2012. I think it has an incredible potential to positively affect all sorts of things, not least of which would be my immediate neighbourhood. I'm okay with paying for some of that through my council tax. I'm on the pre-reg list for volunteer slots, because - why not?  I can walk to most of the venues!



But this This does not particularly fill me with joy.



Maybe I'm dysfunctional as a member of a consumerist twenty-first century community, but I'm just not excited about the opportunity to be "introduced to the new London 2012 brand".



Mostly I'm just irritated by receiving an email where 5% of the words used are 'brand'.

Wednesday, 30 May 2007

One of many zeroes

Hmm - free Britpop. This looks like it could be a fun blast from the past. (and if it's not - well - it's free and we can always wander off and do something else.)



Bit too late to switch plans for this week, but consider this me making a note for July.



http://www.burnsoobright.co.uk/





Friday, 25 May 2007

And altho' so near the landing, I, alas! was cast away.

Dear Firebugs : Please stop burning up historic locations around me. (That and anything that's going to mess up the trains.)



The poor Cutty Sark isn't going to seem real until next time I head over to that neck of the woods. It's almost impossible to imagine the river front there without her. It seems almost disloyal to go visit the Götheburg, although  I probably still will.



Friday, 18 May 2007

wombling free

So I've been thinking : what is your favourite thing to do for free in London?



If forced to pick only one, I'd have to say 'walking', which is a total cop-out, I realise, but is still true.



If forced to pick one route? (which is hard!) South bank downriver from Westminster to Tower Bridge, and back up the North bank. I do a part of that walk three, four times a week, and there's always something new to notice. (Yesterday I was not only spotting sculptures on the skyline, but also they've covered the NT in grass ...)



In fact - it's Friday. Let's make a meme.



Your favourite _______ in London.



1 -- free thing to do

2 -- cheap (ish) place to eat

3 -- one-off tourist splurge (say, £30?)



________________________



1 - Walking the river

2 - Mother Mash

3 - River boat either up to Greenwich or down to Hampton Court Palace.

(bonus tip - take the boat to HC with a picnic, and then get the train home, which is quicker and cheaper)



Yours?





Technorati Tags:

Wednesday, 16 May 2007

Now above and beyond the roofs of our city

So it's farewell to one student group, and tomorrow will bring a new lot, here for the short summer session.



It's a tight turn around between the two groups, which means early starts, and late nights for a week or so, but - I don't know. I've covered a fair amount of ground today. Marble Arch in the early morning, Bloomsbury this afternoon, Oxford Street and surrounds in between, a quick dive across Waterloo Bridge to pick up something from Foyles on the South Bank. Ten minutes snatched for lunch, sitting on one of the fountains in Trafalgar Square listening to the water and watching tourists climb the lions. It's worth it, you know? Worth all of it. Because this is mine. This is my home town. I love this place.



And I think that the city has meant something to the folks who are leaving, although I guess I'll never know what or how much, and I hope that it comes to mean something to the ones just arriving.

Thursday, 10 May 2007

Nicotine from a silver screen

I won't be able to go, as it clashes with a late working day, but this looks interesting (and free):



An Evening with Alfred Hitchcock

Wednesday 16th May, from 6pm

In 1972, young film journalist Sandra Shevey was granted an audience with the master of mischief, mayhem and murder, Alfred Hitchcock. He was at that time approaching the end of his 50 year career, having just directed the penultimate of his 53 films. The interview was recorded on audiotape, but as befitting the man of mystery, 35 years on, it has never been published or aired...until now!

Sandra will introduce virtually the whole of this fascinating feature-length survey of Hitchcock's career, interspersed with film clips. A word of warning however - some of the subject matter is not for the faint-hearted!

This free event takes place, appropriately, at Westminster Reference Library, in the West End; the heart of Britain's entertainment industry. You will be able browse through the many books relating to Hitchcock, including sixteen books specifically on his life and films.

So is there anything new under the sun to discover about the venerable old rascal? Sandra met him, has seen his complete works, conducts walking tours through Hitchcock's London and is preparing a new book on him: and armed with this priceless recording, if anyone can shed new light on him, she can!

Admission is free, but please book in advance to ensure a place.

Westminster Reference Library,

35 St Martin's Street

WC2H 7HP

Tel: 020 7641 5250

email: pcollins@westminster.gov.uk





Technorati Tags: , ,

Wednesday, 2 May 2007

So melt down all the ornaments

And the story rumbles on : I'm conflicted about Waltham Forest Council's decision to reduce opening hours at it's two main museums. I suspect it's a done deal, but I'd like to believe that it's not.



The Vestry House Museum is a traditional local museum - lots of local history and local knowledge - housed in a sixteenth century poor-house. The William Morris Gallery is housed in one of Morris's family homes, and holds internationally renowned collections of Morris's work.



Both of these are great things.



Neither of them are being closed / sold off / sacked by visigoths.



( Possibly I'm just having an allergic reaction to the tone of some of their supporters. Their website is keepourmuseumsopen.org.uk - just the URL is loaded. )



The council isn't talking about closing them - it's talking about changing the opening hours, partly to save money, partly to extend weekend opening hours in response to resident demand. (OK, so the council aren't linking readily to any evidence of that residents demand, but assuming that they're not just pulling that idea out of thin air ...)



I used to live in Walthamstow, and every time I made it to the William Morris Gallery (which is fantastic) it was on one of it's once-a-month Sunday openings, and because the Vestry House Museum isn't open on Sundays, I never actually visited it. Having them open every Sunday would have improved access for me. In general, more museums and galleries open at weekends is a good thing in my book.



Shifting the museum's 'opening week' to Wednesday though Thursday would be an unabashed good thing. Using weekend opening to distract from cutting hours in total, less so.



The bullet point that most caught my eye on the Friend's site was Education programmes will be taken to the schools rather than inviting schools to the Museums.. And WFC's response flat our contradicts this. We will be actively encouraging schools to make better use of both centres – and will open our doors to them during the week for pre-arranged visits. From a teaching perspective, having exclusive access to a whole museum with a curator-lead education program is also a good thing. If it happens.



But the council's plans are worrying - don't get me wrong - the shift to part time hours is obviously going to affect the staff, and their knowledgebase, their passion, are resources as much as the artefacts of the museum. It's also going to make life more difficult for serious researchers, and it's predicated on the assumption that most of the people most of the time a) work, and b) work in Monday-to-Friday jobs, and I'm not sure that's a truth which can be universally acknowledged.



It's difficult to argue that the day-to-day needs of the residents shouldn't take priority over 'luxuries' like museums, but just by setting the question in those terms WFC are sliding a set of assumptions into the debate which I'm not sure I agree with - that history and art and local roots are luxuries. (Well - they're not Maslow basics, agreed, but I'd argue they meet needs in the second tier...)



They're holding a procession/protest on Saturday, in celebration/support of Vestry House. That might just be a thing to go join in with.



Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,