One day left motherfuckers! That’s right – as of tomorrow you can wipe the tears away and get over the demise of 24, and the loss of Lost. You can immediately forget that the final Big Brother has only just begun – it’s going to be around the whole fecking summer anyway so you can [...]
Archive for the ‘Sport’ Category
Here We Go, Here We Go, Here We Go
Posted in Sport, tagged 24, Adrian Chiles, Alan Hansen, Alan Shearer, BBC, Bebeto, Big Brother, Blanco, Diego Maradona, Dizzee Rascal, Gary Lineker, Gordon Strachan, ITV, James Cordon, Kevin Keegan, Lost, North Korea, Roger Milla, Ronaldo, South Africa, Steven Gerrard, Wayne Rooney, World Cup 2010 on June 10, 2010 | 1 Comment »
How To Avoid The World Cup
Posted in Media, Sport, tagged FIFA, football, North Korea, Seoul, South Africa, South Korea, World Cup 1966, World Cup 2010 on May 11, 2010 | Leave a Comment »
While I personally cannot wait for the FIFA World Cup to begin on June 11, those of you who can’t stand football should spare a thought for those on the planet who don’t even get the choice whether to view it or not. The North Korea national team arrived in South Africa last week to prepare for their [...]
It’s only a game…
Posted in Media, News, Politics, Sport, tagged Alex Salmond, Creamola Foam, England, Euro 96, football, Ghostbusters, Home Nations, House Of Commons, Jim Murphy, Las Vegas, porn, Ron Jeremy, Scotland, SFA, Sonic The Hedgehog, Toeam and Earl, violent video games, Wikipedia, World Cup on January 14, 2010 | 1 Comment »
“Violent video games are a much bigger negative influence on kids than porn”, so said, umm, a porn star last week. Adult film icon Ron Jeremy has been reading a lot of studies lately it seems, but he wouldn’t reveal which studies he got his information from. Of course, if Sonic The Hedgehog or ToeJam and [...]
Cheaters Always Prosper
Posted in Media, Sport, tagged bloodgate, Champions League, cheating, crashgate, diving, Eduardo, football, Formula One, rugby union on September 17, 2009 | 2 Comments »
I’ve discussed a couple of times in previous posts what should be viewed as ‘hard’ news and what should not. The hardest of hard news obviously includes terrorist attacks, economic recessions and general elections – events which affect millions of people, at home and abroad. Something that I felt shouldn’t be considered hard news is the [...]




