Saturday, December 31, 2011

Review of the Year


With 2011 behind us, the release of the dvd box set gives its fans a chance to revisit the series from the beginning. Now considered a classic year by many, 2011 opened predictably with January, a classic choice for a pilot. The success of which (plus the slightly shorter February) lead to a 3 season deal for the year.

The first season, Spring, got off to a good start with March, with the major themes for the series germinating in this first episode, getting nicely bedded down in the April episode, allowing for some real growth by the season finale, May. Having seen how the plot develops in later seasons, there’s always more insight to be gained by revisiting the early episodes and seeing just how the seeds were sown – and watch out for the Easter egg on the dvd release.

Things heated up in the second season, following the classic format for years in the Gregorian calendar. Tried and tested, we don’t seem to be getting bored of years following this pattern, and we shouldn’t be surprised to see new years commissioned that follow the classic structure. Japanese years follow a whole different aesthetic, which is gaining in popularity amongst more alternative Westerners. The traditional format is here to stay, however, and despite all its predictability the plot devices remain able to carve out a well-developed arc.

Summer cleverly developed on the themes of the first season, with many of the major plotlines coming to fruition. With June, the writing began to take on a more colourful nature, as the characters developed from their humble beginnings into increasingly diverse sub-plots. Summer still remains the most popular season of the series, though for some it lacked the charm of Spring. Lovers of the first season felt that by July, with the stories growing in size and many characters finding increasing success, the key theme of struggling against adversity was lost.

Definitely an audience pleaser, the August episode saw a few key characters transplanted to an exotic location for a fortnight. There were some nice moments in this one, but taken out of the context of the year’s through-line, and without the familiar backdrop, it achieved mixed reviews and left many suggesting that it was here that 2011 jumped the shark.

In what for many was a return to form, the third season introduced themes of ageing and death, with many of the more colourful characters being killed off. Much darker than the early seasons, Autumn may have lost 2011 some fans, as it carved out a more austere landscape, and the outlook began to become increasingly bleak. The writing developed a darker humour, with a couple of stalwart, and often overlooked characters showing their strength and proving their well-earned and apparently evergreen popularity.

The Christmas special – December saw 2011 returning to familiar territory. The year seems to have come full circle, with many themes that first arose in the pilot reemerging. The characters may have aged and developed, but there was still room for some lessons to be learned. Too saccharine for some, the plot saw the characters struggling with many of the themes of the Autumn season, but overcoming them together and learning the importance of family in time to save the Christmas celebrations and, perhaps too neatly, tying up plots. Though mainly centering around well-loved characters, a couple of new, younger ones were introduced, which lead to speculation that a spin-off was being planned. Now confirmed - the much-anticipated launch of 2012 is just around the corner. But until it gets underway, it’s definitely worth grabbing yourself a 2011 box set to relive all those classic moments.  

Monday, May 16, 2011

a is for awesome, b is for badass - o



Woah, dude. Space is only the coolest thing ever. In the history of cool. Except dinosaurs, maybe. Actually, it’s interesting that I find dinosaurs (which are from the past) and space (which is excitingly futuristic) incredibly cool. Wait, I don’t mean interesting, I mean the other thing.

Space, however, is incredibly interesting.

That is putting it mildly. And why bother with that? Space is awesome, super cool and downright magnificent. I’ve always thought that, as far back as I can remember. Maybe it started with Twinkle Twinkle Little Star. Stars are definitely one of the reasons that space is so effing cool. There’s more, but we’ll kick off with stars.

Stars
Stars are like nature, but times a million. They are nature, I know they’re not unnatural, or supernatural. But they’re way beyond the nature we’re used to. It’s basically life, but not as we know it. And that’s catchy. They are massive, for a start – like mountains, but way huger, and then at the end of their life they can go crazy and eat everything like big, hungry bears or something.

Plus, some of them look like bears. Not individually, they work as a team. Not just bears – some of them are supposed to look like lions and eagles and water goats. And you can use them to navigate if you don’t have gps or a compass or map or whatever. One of them keeps us alive, so they’re pretty handy to have around.

The night sky is one of the most mystifying and inspiring sights, and we all get to see it every time it gets dark. Imagine standing at the water’s edge, looking out across the ocean, wondering what lies on the other side. We can’t really do that anymore, not if we’ve ever seen a map. But we can look up at the sky with the same awe and wonder. And the stuff that’s out there is just terrific – nebulae and supernovas, black holes and gas giants. It’s nature at its most intense and magnificent, so look around you at the ridiculously complex and diverse natural brilliance and think “woah, dude – that’s effing cool” and then look up at the night sky, and think “woah… dude…”

Space Travel   
When I look up at the sky, as well as thinking “woah, dude” I also think “I quite fancy going there” because space travel is one of the very cool reasons that space is so effing cool. This is in no small part due to zero gravity conditions. You can float around like you’re swimming, but not in water. When I’ve dreamt about flying, that’s been what I have imagined. And when you have a cup of tea, it doesn’t just sit there in the cup, it forms spheres and floats around. This has got to get pretty frustrating after a while, but it would still have to be one of the coolest irritations you’re ever going to experience. If something’s going to inconvenience you, it might as well be magic.

Space travel is how travel used to be. Not in the sense that we were all hopping off to Mars in the 15th Century, but that it is still a massive and heroic undertaking. Like sea travel was in the good old days. When just getting from one town to another meant saddling up the horses and driving for days. That guarantees to make any journey dramatic, which is what is missing from travel today. It’s all too easy – you can fly across the globe in a few hours, and all you need to think about is how to fit all your liquids into a transparent bag, and how to stop your trousers from falling down when you take off your belt to walk through the scanners.

Not in space, though. You have to wear special clothes – like people used to on safari. And you can’t even breathe outside. And sometimes you have to do a spacewalk to fix the engine, and then you have to worry about getting lost in the fullness of space and no-one hearing you scream. That’s hardcore travel. None of your cushioned seating and luggage on wheels.

The Space Race
When I was little I was quite set on becoming a cosmonaut. A cosmonaut, you understand, not an astronaut. Because I was firmly on the side of the Soviet Union. Space and Communism were very important in my early years, which probably explains a lot.

But the Space Race era is just cool, in quintessence. Back when spies were spies and phones were phones and arms races seemed like a good idea. There’s something charming about past ideas of the future – things that used to be futuristic, and now look retro in the extreme. Things like that are great. Much like the mal-constructed dinosaurs at Crystal Palace, space race era visions of our present time give us a brief, illuminating glimpse of how people thought back then.

Perhaps the best of these are the Little Green Men we assume aliens look like. I think it’s probably unlikely that beings from another world look a bit like us but with bigger heads and green skin, but you never know. I could end up looking very silly any moment now. And if little green men (and women, let’s be inclusive) arrive on earth I could look even sillier because as well as the original silly thing I was doing, I’d also be proven wrong about what aliens look like. But either way, if they didn’t eat or enslave you, it’d be pretty awesome to meet an alien.

Not forgetting, we went to the moon. Actual humans from Earth walked on the surface of the moon. They watched their home planet rise over the horizon and looked up at a completely new night sky, still full of the same wonder that had brought them there. Then they planted a flag and played golf, but that’s humans for you.

All the great futuristic stuff like space suits and freeze-dried food is just awesome. Who doesn’t want to write with a zero gravity pen, and eat astronauts’ ice cream even though it burns? Who wouldn’t happily jump into a space suit at a moment’s notice? To be honest, it’s not all ice cream and moonwalking. You have to wear a nappy, and your muscles start to waste in zero gravity. So maybe it wouldn’t be such a great trip, but it sure is tempting.

I’d be up for a trip to the moon, or Mars – I’m not fussy. I’d brave the food and nappies for a chance to stand on the surface of a different world, and watch the earth rise and set. Because the night sky has always filled me with wonder and awe at the vastness of the universe. I look up at the stars and think about the great and terrible marvels of the universe – the extremes of heat and cold, of gas giants and nebulae and I think “Woah, dude, space is frickin’ awesome.”    

Monday, May 9, 2011

lack of direction


Some days you just wonder why everyone is so incompetent. 

It started with a packet of cheese sauce mix, as all great stories do. It started in the sense that I found a packet of it. Legitimately found it – in the cupboard, not in the bin or on the street or in the belly of a whale.

Being open to new experiences, some would say to the point of recklessness, I decided to use it to create a poor imitation of macaroni cheese. I’m pretty well seasoned at making actual cheese sauce (and it’s pretty well seasoned, I don’t mind telling you) which is how I have made it to 25 without using a packet of cheese sauce mix.

The only real bonus of cheese sauce mix is that it’s incredibly easy. When making a food decision you have to balance the scales of effort and pleasure. Real cheese sauce takes more effort, but tastes much better, thus provides more pleasure. So at times when a great taste experience is your goal, real cheese sauce is the only way to go. Some days, though, you might want to minimise the effort side of the equation, and are willing to sacrifice pleasure to achieve this aim. Sometimes, though, you are just a reckless fool who has to cook everything you find in the cupboard, for the sole reason that you’re curious.

Being pretty secure in my cheese sauce making abilities, I ripped open the packet and popped the odd smelling contents in the pan. Some would call my instruction-eschewing vigour reckless – I say, who cares, live a little. But on top of being reckless, I’m also pretty curious if you remember. So I took a cursory glance at the instructions to fully immerse myself in the experience.  

My goodness, I’m glad I did – is this not one of the best things you’ve ever seen?

At first glance, perhaps not. But take a look at those instructions. First you pour a little milk into the pan and mix. Fair enough. Following completion of that step you simply have to pour in the remaining milk. Easy.

Wait a minute… remaining in what? You just said put in a little milk. Do I just put in what’s left? What if that was it? What if I was using up the last of the carton? Do I just put up with it being mostly powder? Or do I open a whole new carton and have at it? Or is it all the milk remaining in the house, or the supermarket, or all cows everywhere, for that matter?

You just have to marvel at the exquisite display of incompetence. Maybe not while your woefully undiluted sauce is in danger of burning, but once you’ve used your own judgment to add an amount of milk to the pan that seems not to be completely awful, you can take a minute to really have a good old marvel at just how incompetent everyone in the whole world really is. Not me of course, I am a consummate professional.

Just a minute, what’s that? What do I see in the corner, there?


Did I just tear through the instructions? Maybe everyone really is horrifically incompetent, including me… I mean, someone else has to share in this one, because they put the quantities right along the perforations. They practically tied them to the tracks in the path of an oncoming train.

But wait just one more second – a closer look reveals that it makes 300ml. That’s makes 300ml. Makes. Because cheese sauce increases in volume during cooking. Millilitres, being a measurement of volume, we’re meant to… what? Work out the percentage of expansion, and from there calculate the amount of milk necessary? This seems a lot more complicated than grating a bit of cheese and getting busy with the flour.  

Having seen the cheese sauce through to completion, I think it’s fair to say that the effort it takes to even think about finding a measuring jug is out of whack with the maximum amount of pleasure that is possible to be gained from the whole experience. Working back from the pleasure side of the equation, I think it’s pretty unreasonable to be expected to walk to the fridge for some milk, even, so maybe it’s better to not have any directions, because then one would feel obliged to follow them, and it really isn’t worth it.  

I probably could have guessed that without going through the rigmarole and heartache of actually making (and then eating) the cheese sauce. But I was curious, and I am an empiricist right down to the bone, although I don’t really fancy testing that one.

I also could have guessed that everyone is completely incompetent, but it’s always worth gathering some good hard evidence. I’m amassing quite a cache of raw data on the utterly confounding state the world is in, so if there’s a budding scientist out there wanting to study the countless fuckups we indulge in on a daily basis, I’m in. We might win a Nobel Prize, for mathematics or something. Then we can drop the cheque in a smoothie maker and win one for incompetence, too. If it comes with a trophy we can use them as bookends.




Saturday, April 30, 2011

I got the fever


We all have our strengths and weaknesses. This is also true of health.

There’s probably something you’re susceptible to, and maybe something you’re just never going to get. It’s a bit like immune system top trumps. I was lucky enough to be immune to TB, so didn’t need to have the horrible inoculation that scars your arm for ever after. I’m not suggesting that a barely noticeable scar is worse than dying of tuberculosis, I was just pleased to be one of the lucky few who didn’t have to faint to get out of it.

Because fainting is not something my body balks at – it loves a good faint. I went to the doctor about it once, he told me some people are just fainters. I’m not sure if this was meant to stop me worrying that it was some kind of precursor to a horrific death, or a terrible slight on my contribution to history – either way, I am much more than a fainter, thank you very much.

I might lose consciousness every once in a while, but my natural resistance to one particular infectious disease kept my upper arm unscarred. Until, that is, my extreme reaction to insect bites left me with a permanent reminder of one particular mosquito. Something’s bound to get you in the end.

With me, it probably won’t be food poisoning. I have a pretty strong stomach, and could probably digest a rhino if I ever had the intention to consume one. Being a vegetarian, this is unlikely. Granted, not eating meat and fish cuts down my chances of contracting food poisoning, but I don’t think we should underestimate my constitution. One long day at college, my class ordered pizza. We all ate the same pizzas, and I was the only one to avoid feeling pretty awful. I’m just not one for vomiting. Not that the others were pro-vomiting, they are just more apt to vomit under certain conditions.

At times like that I’m really proud of my body. It might freak out when confronted with an insect bite, and sometimes at the slightest touch of grass, and collapse full on the floor for no particular reason, but it’s not going to vomit, even if it eats death pizza. At times right after times like that, I start to worry if that’s just my body being really bad at expelling toxins that it needs to get rid of, and right after that I start thinking of all the situations that could prove fatal. I’m also prone to anxiety.

This was demonstrated last time I had flu. I thought I was going to die. I don’t mean I felt really poorly – I genuinely thought I was going to die. I was at university, and my flatmates weren’t around for the weekend. I was feeling pretty sorry for myself, as I didn’t have anyone to look after me. Due to my body’s predisposition for dizziness, my temperature was causing the room to spin. After a while, I decided I had to get myself a glass of water.

Because of my body’s love for hitting the restart button every so often, I have a few stories about hilarious places I’ve fallen over. Once I did it on some stairs, so got a bonus fall. And one Christmas I was ill, and got up in the middle of night, again for a glass of water. I remember reaching up to the shelf to get a glass, and then the glass getting smaller and smaller, and then going into black and white. Then I remember waking up in the bin.

This time was similar. I got out of bed to get a glass of water, and woke up after a while on my bedroom floor. The carpet of my flat was not particularly comfortable, or even clean; so I thought I better get up. Also, I was really thirsty, so up I got. And down I went.

Surprisingly, I had not regained the power to stand in a matter of minutes. I lay on the floor for a bit to regain my strength and then tried again. This time I didn’t even make it to upright. I lay there and resigned myself to the fact that this was how I was going to die. Two facts were troubling me. The first was that flu lasts for about a week, the second being that you can’t last without water for more than three days. My impact weakened mental faculties were still capable of deducing that these numbers did not add up well for me.

I realised that I was about to become one of those awful stories about people dying alone. I pictured my flatmates finding my cold, dead body when they returned. I pictured the local news report, and the misspelling of my name in my hometown’s local paper. It was pretty depressing, but there was nothing I could do but lie there and wait for death.

As well as a good faint, my body has another reaction to high temperature. I have been known to hallucinate. Lying on the cold, hard carpet of my draughty bedroom, I drifted into a strange reality where I was mountaineer making camp in a storm. I remember the snow, and the wind, as my tent took a beating from the elements. It wasn’t very comfortable, but at least I wasn’t thirsty.

When I finally came back to reality I was looking at an upside down bottle of iced tea. A few days ago I had made some for a picnic. I had made two gigantic bottles of it, and still had one of them left. I had then come home and meant to put it in the fridge, but forgotten. And the next thing I knew I had lost the ability to walk upright. It knew it probably wasn’t fit for human consumption – it had been outside and then in my room for a good while, but it was the only liquid within reach.

It was actually just out of reach, I had to knock it over and let it roll towards me. I couldn’t even sit up, so I had to open the lid and just pour it on my face. It wasn’t pretty, but it was fluid. Fluid full of the sugar that was to be my sole colorific intake for the next couple of days. I’m not exactly sure how long I stayed on the floor drinking very-much-not-iced tea, because I kept slipping into a crazy dream world. For a time I must have heard the people upstairs talking, because I thought someone was in my bedroom, shouting at me as I lay in bed. This had its good and bad points. Although I believed myself to be receiving completely unwarranted verbal abuse, I also thought I was in bed, which is better than being on the floor.

I don’t want to spoil the ending for you, but I didn’t die in the end. The tea saved my life. By the time I had drank half of it in brief face-drenching bursts, I had the strength to hold myself upright long enough to position myself so I would faint onto my bed, and when the tea had completely gone, I had rediscovered the ability to shuffle as far as the kitchen, have a lie down on the floor, get myself a glass of water, have another lie down, and then shuffle back to bed in triumph.

I had always felt tea was important, but I hadn’t anticipated it saving my life. If I were a prepared sort of person, I would always keep a large bottle of a sugary drink next to my bed, just in case. But I’m not that organised.

So there you have it, I have the stomach of an ox, and could probably digest one, no trouble, if I wanted to, which I don’t. But on the flip side, when confronted with influenza I am apt to believe I am a distressed mountaineer.  In the (soon to be a sensation) game of immune system top trumps, I score high for constitution, but low for the ability to stay conscious and distinguish reality. That’s just the hand I’ve been dealt. And I have to live with it, but thanks to tea I don’t have to die on the floor with it. So I’m chalking this one up as a success. 

Thursday, April 28, 2011

too much morning


Some days are just slow. If anyone is having one of those, and wants to swap, I’m sure I have a myriad of options available.

I do have one in mind, interestingly enough. The day began like any other -  with me locked out from work because I don’t understand the keys. Let me be clear – I understand the concept of keys, I’m not just bashing them against the lock, or any random rock I find lying about on the ground. These keys and this lock just have a knack to using them, which I am yet to master.

I’ve been locked out of places before by broken keys. Places I was moving into during a heavy shower of rain that I spent sitting on the step of the house I was renting, but unable to gain access to, surrounded by all of my personal possessions that I had transported in a stolen shopping trolley at great effort.

Being an old hand at this locked-out lark, I remained calm. Especially since I was already inside in the corridor of the building, away from the intense heat outside, and also because the only thing I knew to be awaiting me on the other side of the door was a load of heavy bags for me to carry way downtown. A bit like when the bus to school is stuck in traffic and you think, “well, I did all I could, but I can’t fight circumstance”.

I have to say, my lack of distress was unsurpassed by all other bystanders. The other people there, who it was my charge to let in, seemed unable to cope with the situation in the same controlled, collected manner. They kept using words like “ridiculous” and informing me I would need to get new keys. They became quite agitated in fact, so I let them have a go to give them something to occupy themselves. But using a less than perfect set of keys to open a difficult lock, turned out to be a less than restful activity, and they kept on saying things about me needing new keys and not making too many copies of one key, which, aside from sounding contradictory was not much help opening the door.

In the end, one strapping individual managed to conquer the lock, and we all made it in, still with five minutes to spare before the start of the day proper. I had had the common sense to arrive in good time to spend a good few minutes locked out. That’s forward planning, and calm under pressure.

The next stage of the journey was the actual journey I was to undertake. I had a load of heavy stuff to transport in woefully inadequate carrier bags. In the heat. It was a herculean labour, and I bloody well better receive some kind of recognition from the gods for my trouble. I was only about half-way to the bus stop, when I saw a man fall out of the back of a van, in a painful-looking way, and hurt his back as he hit first the metal step of the van, and then the road, leaving him unable to get up. Naturally I sprang into action, discarding my heavy load momentarily to administer first aid and call all manner of ambulances to the scene.

In the end a police officer arrived and I didn’t have to do much other than sit with the guy and talk to him, and remind him every so often that he should stop trying to get up. I did this mainly by making distracting jokes about falling, because it’s never too soon. He appreciated my humour in the face of his distress, and after just a bit too long to be impressive, the ambulance arrived and I went on my way.

Unfortunately my weighty luggage had not been stolen while I was jumping into the fray, so I had to continue my struggle to the bus stop. I would like to take this moment to offer some advice. Never, ever, get on the M11 bus in New York City. This is a bus so full of the aged, injured and infirm that a blind guy had to give up his seat. Can you imagine the average state of the passengers, when this occurs? This was a bus so devoid of health, that after three stops I began to wonder if I had typhoid.

But my fellow weary travelers, decrepit and afflicted as they were, were not shy of poking their stupid noses into the business of where I should put my heavy bags, how I should hold them, where and how I should stand, and what would be a better method of transportation for me. I found none of these suggestions particularly helpful, and came close to snapping at one particularly irritating woman, who had a problem with me “blocking the aisle” by standing next to one of those poles designed to be held onto while you stand next to them, in the designated standing place. I came very near to pointing out that her larger than average body mass requiring two seats was at least a contributing factor to the situation she was so displeased with. But I took the high road, and turned up my ipod.

After I made it off the bus of doom, battled my way through some roadworks, and across a few streets, I was nearly at my destination. I took a rest – one of many along the way. I knew I wasn’t too far, though, and I could do it. I set off again remembering that I had already responded to a medical emergency, so how hard could carrying things really be?

Then the bags fell apart.

This made things decidedly harder. I would like it noted that this is a gross understatement.

I made it, though. And after a slight misunderstanding with a security guard who didn’t understand that I had to crawl through the turnstile with the bags purely because if I put them down they would spill their contents all over the floor, rather than this being a sure sign that I was a terrorist, bent on destroying the office building, New York, and civilisation as we know it, I delivered my cargo and headed back, relieved of my burden.

After all of the physical labour, I was feeling the need to do something that required a bit of a sit down. A lengthy one if possible. Luckily my career is at the point at which you can be faced with any number of challenges in the midst of a normal day. Sometimes you might be asked to write a bit of copy for publicity materials, sometimes it might be making calls or sending emails, and sometimes you just have to repair an antique radio.

I’m not one to turn down a challenge, probably because of my inability to distinguish a challenge from a dare. But even I remembered that I don’t have any training, knowledge or expertise in electronics. I did not excel in technology in school. In the course of our practical lessons I managed to solder my fingers together, superglue my hand to a desk, cut myself on at least three types of saw, sand, bruise and otherwise injure myself in various, less than exemplary ways. In short, I am not the person to entrust the restoration of an antique electronic device to.

My objections made, I dutifully set about following the instructions I had been assured would lead me to success, which I happily achieved. Wait, I don’t mean success. I mean the other thing… a small electrical fire.

It wasn’t like being electrocuted. I know that from the time I was electrocuted, but we don’t have time to get into that. But there was a definite fire, which I deem an unhealthy extra feature in a radio.

Police, ambulances and fire. Three for three for emergencies. All before noon.

No-one can cope with that – I was pretty close to windowing the radio, and following it out, I can tell you. But after the meridian, things took an upward turn. There was popcorn, and then team marketing took a well-deserved trip to the Good Sandwich Place for lunch. And Younger Sister made a series of jokes about me being the one who killed the radio star, which hit the spot.

So if you fancy trading a boring, lazy Sunday, I’m in the market. I’m not really interested in swapping the latter part of the day, though. It’s the morning that’s up for grabs. If no-one wants it I’ll probably just window it.


Wednesday, April 27, 2011

no bs



It’s funny the things you miss when away from home. The food you didn’t give a thought to, the weather you always complained about, the British Standard 1363 electrical plug…

Turns out, what really gets my patriotic juices flowing is a well-designed mains plug. My (somewhat limited) travels have so far taken me across Europe and North America, and I have yet to see a decent plug on either continent.

I define “decent” in the following ways:

1. staying in the effing wall
Most appliances require a constant supply of electricity to function. This is how electricity works. An iron stops being hot when the electrical supply is interrupted, and a vacuum cleaner ceases vacuuming under similar conditions. Why then, would anyone make a plug that finds staying in a socket a near impossibility when the appliance is moved the slightest distance?

It would be fine if I just wanted to iron the one iron-shaped patch of my t shirt, but that actually causes fires, so I’ll give it a miss, if that’s alright with you. And I have this weird thing about vacuuming the whole room, not just a tiny portion of it – it just feels cleaner to me somehow.

So why would anyone think a plug that fails to maintain even a semblance of a connection to the mains, would be anywhere near adequate? It’s not; stop pretending it’s ok. It really, really isn’t.

2. not killing you
The BS 1363 is a fine plug because it has an earth pin, and its corresponding socket has shutters. The earth pin is a safety feature woefully lacking from non-uk plugs, to their detriment, and everyone else’s intense danger.

The sterling design of the good old BS 1363 ensures that the earth pin is inserted first, and removed last, by making it longer than the other two. This means that if the plug is accidentally detached from the socket, the live wire becomes disconnected before the earth pin. Also, no-one gets electrocuted.

It also prevents electrocution through the use of the aforementioned shutters. The socket is also part of the genius, you see. It has shutters, which can be opened, only when the plug is inserted correctly. This means you can’t shove things into it that aren’t meant to be shoved there. Things like pencils, and scissors, and plastic farm animals – basically all the things Younger Sister used to like posting into the video recorder. She would somehow manage to obtain all manner of toys and stationary, and take great glee in having a right old post of them into the video recorder. She would then catch someone’s attention with an angelic yet devilish “look what I posted” and while we were wondering how she had managed to wreak such havoc in under a minute, and whether the video machine would ever work again, we would think “at least she can’t post things into the sockets”.

There’s also switches on the sockets, so you can plug things in when the current is switched off. This is much less likely to kill you. I say “bonus”!

3. glorious history
During the early 40s a committee was convened to assess the problems likely to affect the peacetime rebuilding of Britain. This was established by Lord Reith, who is also known for causing a stir whilst serving as Director-General of the BBC, by reporting multiple points of view on the 1926 General Strike, including the TUC. Not the Labour Party, though – that was a step too far for the Conservative government of the time.

Enough trivia – the point is, after the upheavals of two world wars, the people of Britain had a jolly good think about how to make the world a bit less awful. Out of this period came the welfare state, a new human-centric approach to architecture and town planning, and the introduction of national safety standards.

It was a time when people decided to change the world for the better, and part of that was deciding that homes should be less of a death trap. Part of that is stopping the electrical appliances killing everyone. Now, we complain about needing a stool-standing certificate to be able to use a step-stool. But at one time, there really wasn’t a single safety regulation, and we risked our lives in factories for a penny every three weeks and had to walk seven miles to school in the pouring rain, and if we ever talked to our teachers like that we were for it, “it” being the cane.

So really we should be happy about how the BS 1363 has been designed with the cord at the bottom, so you can’t yank it out of the socket by the cord – which is not safe, and isn't at all clever. The body of the plug is also wide so it keeps your fingers away from the pins when they are near the socket.

All in all, it’s a pretty good plug. You might disagree if you’ve ever stood on one in bare feet, but that’s hardly the plug’s fault, is it? Blame your giant feet, you clumsy, clumsy oaf.

Another British safety feature is not putting power outlets in bathrooms. Tell any American this and they respond "but then how do you use electrical appliances in the bathroom?" You don't. It's to stop you killing yourself. But is that much legislation going too far to protect people from their own incompetence?

I'm all for freedom - freedom to have a legal union with another consenting adult, regardless of gender, freedom of assembly, movement, speech, from disease and danger - these are all good freedoms. I'm not so sure we need to protect the freedom to use a waffle iron three inches from the bathtub. And while I'm generally a peaceable sort, I can see only advantages if an electrical standards obsessed warlord were to conquer the offending weak-plugged countries and bestow in their benevolence the glorious BS 1363 upon their grateful new subjects. It's just something about the BS 1363 that gets me all riled up like that.

Well, come the revolution you'll see what I mean...