advertising vs protesting
June 28, 2007
Originally uploaded by Luis Rubim.
Oh dear, a good idea in the brainstorming session… a very bad idea to do it next to soliders mothers who are holding large images of their dead sons.
Mind you there were all sorts of protesters there. I saw one guy protesting on his own about Freemasons.
Gordon Brown about to visit the Queen
June 28, 2007
Tony Blair - Gordon Brown handover - 14
Originally uploaded by eyedropper.co.uk.
He looked very happy, there was some polite clapping, in contrast to round the corner on Whitehall where every car that went in or out of Downing Street was boooed.
More here http://www.flickr.com/photos/eyedropper/tags/gordonbrown/
Let there be light…The end of an era.
June 27, 2007

Lambeth council finally finished installing new street lights along the length of Gipsy Hill this week. A job they started in November 2006! Well done Lambeth, only took you eight months! I wonder what will happen to the old 60s concrete ones? The replacements are design to look Victorian as Gipsy Hill is a conservation area.
There’s a lot in the news at the moment looking at Britain’s recent architectural past and what should be saved or flattened. The 60s and 70s now seem a very long way away, coupled with the change in Prime Minister maybe we’re mentally and physically spring cleaning our society ready for - shudder - a new era? Look at the Millennium Dome, at last seeming to find a true purpose as proper music venue. Mr Brown constantly sells the image of Modern Britain, not a city of Europe but of the World, it’s what won us the Olympics.
A few months ago I read a guide to the South Bank when it was first opened as the Festival of Britain in a second hand bookshop. It described what was coming as ‘A New Elizabethan Age’, as the current Queen had recently come to the throne, strange how that term didn’t really catch on. We don’t seem to measure ‘ages’ in Royal reigns anymore but in other things…. like lampposts.
An Italian approach to food, it’s in the details…
June 26, 2007
So if you’ve seen my Flickr you’ll know I recently came back from La Marche. Now you don’t need telling that the produce over there was fantastic, that’s a given, so I won’t bang on about that. But I’d like to share this little story that sort of sums up the difference in attitude.
So I’m in Ancona airport post security check in one of the two duty free shops, which are more like booths really as the airport is so tiny. I’m looking around for something to spend my last 20 euro’s on. There’s a classically slim, mid 40s, lots-of-make-up Italian lady who’s running the smaller shop, I ask
“Have you got any Truffle oil?” Thinking that’d be a nice little present to myself.
“No, I don’t sell truffle oil, when a they make the truffle oil, they use a extract - a chemical - because truffles don’t last, I recommend this…” She guides me to a small jar of small truffle pieces, carpaccio bianchetto - made by T&C just up the road.
“When you want truffle oil for pasta, take a few pieces out and soak in Extra Virgin olive oil for four days before you need it” She pinched her fingers and thumb together in the foodie way, and finished with the killer line…
“Truffles don’t want to be in oil, they just want to be.” Brilliant! Sold, I was totally sold on that line, on the story, on the way she saw them as a thing, as something alive, something that just wants to be. What a poetic way to describe a fungus.
And it’s true, back in CP Sainsbury’s tiny end of isle ‘posh food’ stand, I see a small bottle, costing twice as much as I paid for the truffle shards. Ingredients: Olive oil, truffle extract.
From must-be-true!opedia‘Truffle Oil - It is an important distinction that truffle oil, with the exception of a few very small producers, does not contain any truffles. Most truffle oil is olive oil with chemical compounds added. For the purposes of flavoring some things, the oil, which is, relatively speaking, very inexpensive, is a decent substitute.’
More on La Marche truffles here and truffles in food here. On the plane back I tried to imagine a UK equivalent.. or someone at Gatwick Duty Free trying to explain the differences between loose leaf tea and tea bags or something. But wait, Truffles are native to the UK too! So much so that there’s Truffle UK, a company that specialise in dealing ‘truffle infected’ trees. They also sell truffle products, there’s lots on the press cutting page, including a box out from Country Life on how to train your hound to be a truffle hunter.
Anyway, to the kitchen. So I took her advice, and made a few dishes with my holiday spoils. Here’s the ingredients. Tasted fantastic, tasted of the earth.

Message to Wayne Hemingway…
June 26, 2007
.. it’s just pronouced ‘flicker’ not ‘Flickcaaaaaaaaarh‘ as you said on BBC Breakfast this morning!
ITV - Tough Gig - Episode 2 - Dara OBriain
June 21, 2007
ITV - Tough Gig - Episode 2 - Dara OBriainReally enjoyed the other night, great to see something original, interesting and watchable on ITV… they returned to form with Cops with Camera’s after the news mind. Larping, even people who play Warhammer and D&D think larping’s weird. Most blokes have been paint balling on stagnights, but who goes larping? D12 hitpoints with +1 agression modifier - attack!!
Email from a Friend at the BBC
June 21, 2007
Barclays eagle causing a flap after 317 years
June 19, 2007
More logo bafoonery with the news that Barclays are to drop their ‘Tutonic looking’ eagle logo lest it offend the mild mannered Dutch who proabbly couldn’t care less. Ditch it because you don’t like it, or that you want to create someting new, but don’t ditch it because it may offend… customers are offended by sloppy service and outrageous bank charges, not this surely?! Also, there’s a reason for the eagle, from Barclay’s history page “1728 Freame and Gould move to 54 Lombard Street at the sign of the Black Spread Eagle.”

Furthurmore plenty other country in Europe neigh the world has used the eagle at somepoint, including the dutch town of Berg en Terblijt.
Looking at the list of FTSE 100 top 30 Co.’s with a large market cap it’s worth noting that Royal Dutch Shell, BP, Barclays, Lloyds, and BAT are the only ones to use anythign from the natural world in their branding…
| 1 |
Royal Dutch Shell |
|
| 2 |
BP |
|
| 3 | HSBC | |
| 4 | GlaxoSmithKline | |
| 5 | Vodafone Group | ![]() |
| 6 | Royal Bank of Scotland Group | |
| 7 |
Barclays plc |
|
| 8 | HBOS | |
| 9 | AstraZeneca | |
| 10 | Anglo American | |
| 11 |
Lloyds TSB |
![]() |
| 12 | Tesco | |
| 13 |
British American Tobacco |
|
| 14 | Rio Tinto Group [1] | |
| 15 | Diageo | |
| 16 | BT Group | |
| 17 | Xstrata | ![]() |
| 18 | BG Group | |
| 19 | BHP Billiton [2] | |
| 20 | Aviva | |
| 21 | Standard Chartered | ![]() |
| 22 | National Grid | |
| 23 | Unilever [3] | |
| 24 | SABMiller | ![]() |
| 25 | Prudential | ![]() |
| 26 | Reckitt Benckiser | |
| 27 | Imperial Tobacco Group | |
| 28 | BAE Systems | |
| 29 | Scottish and Southern Energy | |
| 30 | Centrica | |
| 31 | Marks & Spencer | ![]() |
| 32 | Cadbury Schweppes | |
| 33 | Scottish Power [4] | |
| 34 | Land Securities | |
| 35 | Legal & General |
Creative of Tonbridge Wells
June 8, 2007
There was a nice article in the Independent yesterday talking about the outpouring of creativity following the new Olympic logo announcement. Send us yours they say, shame they’ve not got round to publishing any yet. The Daily Mail has, along with the Sun and BBC online as well as the 2012 group themselves.
Let’s face it this logo was doomed from the start, the likes of the Mail and Express had probably written the copy months ago, they were only going to be satisfied with the Queen mum dressed as a beefeater upon a union jack draped bulldog jumping Big Ben or something. There’s now a a lot of ‘what’s wrong with the old one!’ (We see this a lot when the Bank of England introduces new shaped currency – though there was little fuss about the new £20 notes strangely) A lot of people want to keep the logo that won us the games, maybe because it’s tied up in our minds with 7/7?
So, as in times past, there was much wailing and gnashing of teeth, outrage, disgrace, and a ‘child could do that’ etc… so far so British. The natural perpetual state of the Englishman is to believe the country’s going to the dogs, to rack and ruin, stop the world I want to get off. We’ve become a nation of complainers, not in a ‘out on the streets storming the barricades’ kind of way, but in a moaning letter writing way, complaining not about erosion of our civil liberties or the right to protest within 1 mile of the ‘cradle of democracy’, but on the choice of contestants on a TV game show – after all it’s far easier to dash off a email or add a splurge a comment on a website about something inconsequential these days that actually do anything about it.
Except in the case of the London Olympic logo lots of ‘children who could do that’ have actually had a go, as well as teenagers and adults. Despite what you think of the logo, you can’t deny it’s been a catalyst for the public to start designing – that’s a good thing I think. No one did this when the Millennium Experience man logo came out, and everyone hated that remember?
So a similar outpouring of moaning; ‘waste of money’ looks rubbish – zero creating a better version as far as I remember. Why is that? Well I reckon its two things. One, we have better access to creative digital technology, we can not only create stuff much easier, but we can distribute and promote it much faster too. We’re more visually fluent, we’re taking more and more pictures of our lives, and are world is now saturated in imagery. Second is the fall of the expert - or perhaps that should be the rise of the amateur – With vast amounts of information and increased leisure time, anyone can voice their opinions on everything from creationism to composition.
This isn’t always a good thing mind. If you look at a lot of the entries, they look like t-shirts you see in souvenir and other tourist stalls and shops don’t they?
And I should know having had a job in Athena on Trafalgar square in 97. Is London no more than Big Ben, beef eaters and the underground roundel? We’re often guilty of over-venerating our design classics. The routemaster bus: outcry at its replacement, but they were cramped, noisy, a nightmare for the disabled and most were over 50 years old. Scott’s Phone box: 80 years old and now only used for prozzie cards and for drunks to have a piss in, be honest when was the last time you used one?
You can see how this design came about, ‘we want something youth, something different’ was the brief, it’s in every brief. And so they tried for something different, and let’s be honest, every other Olympic logo has sucked; 5 daubs of abstract colour and the rings, silly mascot, and forgoten before the Olympic flame has cooled – yawn.
We’ve got five years; maybe it’ll grow on us? Here’s my favourite.

Diana: the Witnesses in the Tunnel - special debate
June 6, 2007
Diana: the Witnesses in the Tunnel - Topic Powered by eve communityLots of New Members on the C4 forum which means lots of SHOUTING IN CAPS!















