Saturday 4 July 2020

Everything Doesn't Work

In which The Author reverts to Plan A
In the course of this blog I've mentioned James Burke's landmark 1978 BBC TV documentary series Connections a number of times. For the last couple of weeks I've been thinking of something from the very first instalment, as it seems to sum up what's been happening to the country of late.
In 'The Trigger Effect', Mr Burke talks about the possible effects of a prolonged electricity blackout on an advanced, economically developed industrial First World country. (The clip comes and goes from YouTube, but here it is for the time being.)
Probably because the series was a co-production with Time-Life, Mr Burke chose the USA to illustrate his example. Some four decades later, I think the UK probably comes close enough for jazz to his requirements. The remarkable thing is, even that with abundant electricity to power our civilisation, a reasonable standard of secondary education for the majority and advanced technology at most people's fingertips, (to borrow Mr Burke's phrase) everything doesn't work.
I've been thinking about this for a very long time, but the rot really set in at the start of Lockdown, when it seemed the entire country was in a panic-buying hysteria over toilet paper. Apparently the thinking behind it went something like this: toilet paper comes from China; China is in lockdown; therefore we won't be able to get any toilet paper. A couple of people posted this reasoned argument on Facebook and human stupidity did the rest. When Italy went into lockdown, pasta vanished from the shelves as well. I'm fairly sure that the majority of pasta on our supermarket shelves isn't actually made in Italy (for all that the packets bear red, green and white logos and evocative names), for the same reason that most frozen pizzas aren't. Probably the best known brand of 'Italian' pasta sauce – Dolmio – doesn't go anywhere near Italy during its time in the jar. But online idiocy spreads more quickly than a pandemic, and can't be tracked and traced electronically.
It turns out that we didn't need a technological breakdown for the average British consumer to be thrown into a tailspin. By chance, I was asked to copy-edit the debut novel by Susannah Wise, This Fragile Earth, at around the time everyone started working from home. It's a grim near-future tale of England after the internet stops functioning – and without the internet, nothing else can function either. I was reading the panic-buying scenes with horrid fascination, wondering how on earth Ms Wise had been able to predict the future so accurately. I'd like to see Mr Burke update his series to take account of the Wired World, and to see how long it takes his worst-case scenario to come about in the light of current technology.
For over ten years now, my brother has been asking anyone who'll listen, 'Why is nothing straightforward any more?' At first I thought he was exaggerating. He doesn't use the internet, or have a smartphone, so by opting out of the Scissors Age (see Stone, Paper, Scissors), I thought he'd just made a rod for his own back. However, I'm fairly well tuned in to the digital world, and I've seen it slowly start to break down over the last few years. But the internet is only one factor at play in the chaos of modern life. Our old friend Human Stupidity seems to underpin much of the rest of the story.
This particular story starts on the afternoon of the Saturday after Xmas. I was reading the paper over a pint in the National Tap, and I came across an interview with Prof. Richard Dawkins. His new book had been published shortly before. If I'd still been in the bookshop, I'd have known about it ages before that. I'd probably have bought my own copy for Xmas. (Back in the good old days, I might have been able to bag a sample copy from the trade sales rep. When publishers still had trade sales reps, that is.) I also knew that Gollancz had published a collection of Christopher Priest's short stories. With the Dawkins book at half-price on Amazon that weekend, it seemed a good excuse to buy both and get the free delivery. That was the easy bit. I logged on to Amazon on my phone, added the books to my basket, and went to the checkout page.
End of easy bit.
I knew there was a good chance I wouldn't be at home when the postman came. With the extended break reducing the opening hours at the sorting office (not the easiest place to get to), I decided to have the books sent to a 'Local Hub'. I used to do that anyway, and have them delivered to one of the newsagents in Aberdare. As I'm in town most days, it was no hardship for me to call in and pick up my parcel when I was passing. The problem was that they seemed to have given up being an Amazon Local Hub. The nearest alternative I could find listed was in Hirwaun – the little supermarket opposite the Lamb Inn. It's a bus ride away, but the services were frequent and I had my Stagecoach weekly ticket, so I didn't mind the prospect of a little excursion. I amended the details, processed the payment through PayPal, and a few minutes later the confirmation email arrived. Needless to say, the delivery address was my house.
I had thirty minutes in which to amend my order – but not on the app. If I could have logged in on a computer, I could have sorted it out fairly easily. But that option didn't seem to be available on a phone. I resigned myself to a missed delivery and went back to the crossword.
On the Monday afternoon I had an email from Amazon, telling me that my parcels (plural) had been delivered to a neighbour. As soon as I saw the name and address my heart sank, because this had happened once before.
The old boy living opposite is a real gentleman, but I think he must suffer with dementia. Last time Ken took a parcel in for me, a couple of years ago, he vaguely remembered it but neither of us could find it. The following day my friend Gail, two doors away, messaged me to say my parcel was in her house. Ken must have dropped it into her house when the kids were there, and they hadn't thought anything of it. When I saw Ken's name in the email, I had a horrible feeling history was going to repeat itself.
It kinda did.
I didn't get home until very late on the Monday, so I left it until Tuesday morning (New Year's Eve) to knock Ken's door. Not surprisingly, he didn't remember taking in a delivery the previous day. In fact, he didn't remember anyone coming to his door – not even his carer, who calls every lunchtime. Together we hunted for some time, while I explained at least four times what the books were and what the parcel would probably look like. Eventually I had to leave him to it. I gave him my number and asked him to ring me when the parcel turned up, so I could arrange to collect it later. Then I went into town, caught up with some friends, and got home before the buses stopped running.
I was heading to the party in the Welsh Harp when another neighbour spotted me leaving the house and called over to me.
'Did you get your Amazon stuff?' he asked.
He told me he'd been rushing off to work earlier in the day and had spotted a parcel on my windowsill. He hadn't had time to pick it up and take it in, and assumed that I'd seen it myself. I hadn't, of course, but someone else obviously had. I half-hoped it was one of the junkies on their way back from getting their methadone fix in the pharmacy at the end of my street. The thief probably thought the parcel was something s/he could sell for drug money. Well, I can only hope the early stories of Christopher Priest have fried her/his brain, as they did with mine back in the day.
I contacted Amazon Customer Service on 2 January, and after a while I got to speak to a real live human being. I explained the situation, and she raised a new order for me. Just like that. The previous two books – combined value over £30 – were presumably written off by Amazon as just another glitch in the supply chain. This time I checked that they'd be delivered to the Local Hub in Hirwaun (which seemed to tax the woman on the phone for a while) before confirming the replacement order.
When my books did finally arrive (having been dispatched from the same warehouse at the same time), they were in two individual padded bags. In an attempt to swim against the tide, Amazon had stopped using their recyclable cardboard packets and switched to plastic instead. And they hadn't sent them to the Local Hub at all. I ended up collecting them from Hirwaun Post Office, in the main street. Not even the guy behind the counter knew what they were doing there. I gave Amazon quite a low rating in the questionnaire which arrived on my phone before I'd even got on the bus back to Aberdare.
I didn't order any physical books for a while after that. With lockdown in effect I didn't know how couriers would be faring. (I found out when it came to the desk.) But three weeks ago I decided to order two books from Amazon, which were on offer and selling in large numbers. This time I placed the order on the laptop, making sure all the 'local collect' details were correct. At the time, one of the titles (I'll call it Book A) was out of stock, but they confirmed that Book B had been dispatched to my Local Hub the same day and would arrive within two days.
Three days later I had an email informing me that Book A was ready for collection. Not Book B – Book A. It was a very pleasant day, so I walked to Hirwaun along the Cynon Trail and called to the shop around lunchtime. I had to show the lady behind the counter the barcode Amazon had sent to my phone, and show her my ID, before she handed the book over. (I can understand why the shopkeeper would ask to see ID, of course – which is why the subsequent developments made me so angry.) There was still no sign of Book B, so I joked that I'd be back up to collect it the following day.
That didn't happen.
Five days after allegedly sending it, Amazon admitted that it had got lost in transit and offered to send a replacement copy at no extra cost. It was the Xmas debacle all over again – except that this parcel should have been tracked from portal to portal, and not left with some random bloke who happened to be at home when the courier called. I agreed to have a replacement, and a couple of days later you'd have found me on the Cynon Trail again. The woman in the shop laughed when I told her what had happened, and didn't ask to see my ID this time. She scanned the barcode from my phone and I finally went home with Book B.
Once bitten, you'd think – but no …
I decided to try my luck a third time, and this time things got seriously fucked up.
Amazon had a single copy in stock of Investigating Alias: Secrets and Spies, a fairly academic treatment of the surreal TV show I mentioned last time. As the book was published fifteen years ago by a specialist British house, I decided to grab it without further delay. To an ex-bookseller, it was the sort of scenario that spells 'Out of print' in big letters on one's mental stock control system.
Did I say 'without further delay'? Well, that's a fucking joke!
I ordered it on Saturday 20 June. At 5.34 p.m. on Sunday I had an email saying it had been dispatched for 'next day delivery' to the Local Hub. At 10.34 a.m. on Monday, Amazon emailed me to tell me the book would be delivered 'today'. On the Monday afternoon, at about 4.00, I had a message via the app to tell me my parcel was 'eight stops away'.
And that was the last Amazon knew of it.
I wasn't going to head to Hirwaun in the evening on the off-chance (especially with the restricted buses running at the moment). I decided to wait until my collection email arrived before going up on Tuesday. And no collection email arrived.
Early on Tuesday morning, I accessed the Customer Service part of their website and had a long text chat with the woman who'd dealt with my problem over the Xmas holidays. (I assume it was her, anyway. Her name is so unusual I doubt there can be two people with it in the same call centre.) She was apologetic (of course) but not very helpful.
She told me I could go to the shop and show my ID and the dispatch email, and that would be enough to allow me to collect the parcel.
I told her I wasn't prepared to walk for over half an hour on a fool's errand, and I didn't want to have a stand-up argument with the shopkeeper in front of a queue of customers.
She asked me if I could give them '24-48 hours' to sort it out and contact them again if I hadn't heard anything by then.
I reluctantly agreed. I had a book to work on anyway, so I didn't want to waste time walking to Hirwaun and coming back empty-handed.
On Thursday morning, pretty much 48 hours to the minute since I'd ended the previous online chat, I was back on to Customer Service. Luckily for me, the previous exchange was still in the window, so I gave the guy a few minutes to get up to speed before I started on him in earnest.
There was still no trace of my parcel on their system, so they couldn't issue me with a barcode to collect it.
I asked him what had happened after 8.27 p.m. on Monday evening (the last they saw of it, when presumably it was delivered to Hirwaun).
He didn't know. He offered to order a replacement copy. I vetoed that on the grounds that I didn't expect them to receive any more stock of that title. He offered to credit my account with £5 for the inconvenience. I kept arguing with him, and eventually the bid went up to £15. Then he asked me if I'd prefer a refund instead. I asked him to wait for a while and I'd get back to him.
So I set off for Hirwaun, armed with my ID and the dispatch email, as well as a screenshot of the earlier conversation telling me that I'd be able to show them to the shopkeeper. I also had a screenshot of my statement that I didn't want to argue in front of a shop full of customers.
Well, that's exactly what happened!
I walked to Hirwaun by lunchtime and made my way to the shop. The woman behind the counter smiled when she saw me and held up not one but two Amazon parcels with my name on them. But when I explained what had happened, and the fuck-up with their Customer Service people, that was as far as things went. No barcode, no collection: computer says no.
I argued with her for a few minutes and showed her the communication with Amazon, but apparently unless her little machine agrees, she can't do anything. So I got straight on to Amazon again while I was in the shop, text-chatting an increasingly angry exchange to a supervisor (by now the issue had been 'escalated'). The Amazon system didn't know where the parcel was, and so she couldn't issue a barcode for its collection, I told her the fucking parcel was about three feet away from me – I could see the fucking thing. It had my fucking name on the outside. I had my ID and my dispatch email with the parcel reference number. The woman behind the counter fucking knows me! Computer says no.
No go. She couldn't issue me with a collection barcode either, because the refund had already been processed. As far as Amazon were concerned, the matter was at an end.
I told her to re-charge the original price of the book to my PayPal account, send me the barcode, and I'd take it there and then. Couldn't be done. Computer says no.
I told her to think of something before the next bus to Aberdare arrived, because once I set foot on it the matter would be at an end. She asked me to hold while she spoke to a colleague. She came back and asked if I could give them '72 hours' to look into it. I told her they'd already had 72 hours to sort things out, and that I didn't care what she said after this. I was going to go to the media instead. (Which I did, incidentally. I spent quite a while on Thursday afternoon tracking down contact details for print and broadcast consumer journalists and emailing each one with a cooked-down version of the story.)
She offered me more compensation for the wasted time, raising the stakes to £35 by the end of the argument. I told her that the credit would sit in my account until the end of time, because I had no intention of buying any physical items from Amazon again. Then the bus came, and anything she said after that was irrelevant. I was already deciding on the wording of my email to the press while she was messaging me on the way home.
Anyway, that night I had a look on eBay and found a second-hand copy of the book for £5.99, including postage. (That's half the price Amazon wanted. It's not in perfect condition, but who would be after fifteen years?) It arrived in the post on Wednesday.
The great British SF/fantasy novelist M. John Harrison has a new book out this month. I toyed with ordering it online, but I'm through with Amazon and their broken promises. I could have ordered Mr Harrison's book from Waterstones and got it in a couple of days, as well as earning points on my loyalty card. But Waterstones are big enough to look after themselves in the present crisis.
I ordered a copy this morning, from Storysmith in Bristol. They're a relatively new independent shop in Bedminster, and hosted the Ben Aaronovitch signing during which I unexpectedly changed gender last summer. They're nice people, and small bookshops need to try and get through the next few months by any means necessary. At the moment, Amazon seem to be doing their best to drive customers back to the independents, so I'm more than happy to join the exodus.
As for the other parcel in Hirwaun with my name on it …
I can only assume it's the original copy of Book B – the one that got lost in transit. Or possibly it's the replacement copy. It doesn't matter, because it'll sit behind the counter, next to Investigating Alias, for ever. The most surreal aspect of the entire story is that I know exactly where they are, and the shopkeeper knows exactly whose they are. And there's no way in the world that we can reconcile these two facts.
Everything doesn't work …

Spatial Unwareness

In which The Author finally has an office
I told you last time about the Problem of the Time-travelling Parcel. It eventually turned up on the Saturday morning, more by luck than judgement. I had a notification from DPD that it would be delivered 'between 9.30 and 10.30'. That gave me time to nip to the shop before the courier was due. At about 10.10 I heard someone knocking my neighbours' door. Thinking it might be the courier dropping off something there first, I waited for a minute. Then my phone rang. It was the courier, wondering if I was at home. He claimed to have knocked my door and had no answer. Now, if I could hear him knocking two doors down, why didn't I hear him knocking my own door?
He couldn't bring the desk in, of course, because nobody is allowed to go near anyone else at the moment. I couldn't even sign his manifest. Instead, he photographed the parcel in my doorway as proof of delivery. It didn't matter. Even with his help, I probably wouldn't have been able to get it around the awkward angles at the top of the stairs. Instead I opened the packaging in situ and carried the pieces upstairs a bit at a time.
Then I had to assemble it.
As I've noted in a previous entry, words are going out of fashion as well these days. The clock has turned full circle and we've reverted to the dawn of civilisation, using little pictures to communicate. To show you what I mean, here's a page from the 'instruction manual' for the desk. No, it's not from Ikea, but I think it might be from another Scandinavian manufacturer – possibly part of their best-selling Bølux range of office furniture.
I'm glad I spent so much time building Lego, Meccano and Airfix kits when I was young, as this is pretty much meaningless unless you're familiar with their assembly diagrams. I'm also fairly used to assembling flatpack furniture. The manufacturers recommend two people to put it together. (How the fuck can you do that when you're not allowed visitors?) At that point it turned into a question from an old maths exam: if it takes two people one hour to build a desk, how long does it take one person?
The answer is: about three and a half hours.
Admittedly, I wasn't working on it to the exclusion of all else. To begin with, there was the disappointing Tom Clancy reboot The Hunt for Red Screwdriver. After that, there were several breaks to study the instructions again, a couple of reassessments of progress hitherto, a few glasses of squash, several posts on Twitter charting my adventures with the bloody thing, and much swearing. Have you ever come across the type of fixings labelled A and B in the diagram before? I don't know what their proper name is, should you ever feel the urge to buy some from a DIY shop. However, 'bastard fitting' seems to work well – as in 'How the fuck do these bastard fittings work?'
At one point I posted on Twitter:
The desk is half completed. If you're a fan of the bizarre SF/martial arts/espionage/occult TV show Alias you'll know all about Project Christmas. Well, now I know why the CIA didn't recruit me straight from university: no bloody spatial problem solving ability whatsoever.
A little while later, I made another reference to the same mind-bending TV drama:
Also in Alias, the main villain kidnaps an expert in Knot Theory to help him assemble 47 artefacts into an extremely complex machine. It's given me an idea.
If a top-flight mathematician goes missing in the next few days, try my house first. He'll be building a desk.
Anyway, with the evening approaching I completed the desk and vowed never to undertake something like that again without help, or at least a shoulder to cry on. I moved the majority of my style guides and reference books to the desk. The following day I moved my history books as well, and they're now conveniently to hand if I need to check something in a novel. That involved dismantling a bookcase, taking it upstairs in dribs and drabs, and reassembling it in its new home. After this weekend-long flatpack frenzy, you can imagine how I laughed when I watched an episode of the aforementioned Alias a couple of days later, which ends on this touching father-and-daughter bonding moment:
 
And speaking of Alias – my recent adventure with online suppliers and useless couriers continues in the next entry. (You've gotta love a good cliffhanger …

Friday 12 June 2020

The Problem of the Time-travelling Parcel

In which The Author has fun with a courier
In the absence of my usual working environment in Aberdare Library and/or various cafes and pubs, I've decided to make my back bedroom into an office. It's small enough to accommodate everything I need and heat quite economically during the cold weather. (Having said that, it's quite chilly here today, a week or so short of Midsummer Day.) With this in mind, on Wednesday morning I ordered an item from a UK seller on eBay. They're based in London, with a warehouse in Northampton. A few minutes later the order confirmation pinged into my inbox. With a two-day delivery service, I could expect my item to be delivered on Friday (in other words, today).
So far, so good …
At 10.15 p.m., I had an email from DPD telling me my item would be delivered 'tomorrow' (in other words, 11 June).
Ordinarily, that would be very short notice. If I'd still been working in Cardiff, it would open up a whole can of worms involving 'Sorry we missed you' cards and/or redelivery to more or less reliable neighbours. It's a good thing nobody has any great plans to do anything in the current situation, isn't it? As things stand, a Thursday delivery would have been much better than I'd expected.
But, of course, this is 'Great' Britain in the year 2020 – and nothing ever goes according to fucking plan.
To monitor the consignment's progress, I decided to install the DPD app on my phone. I did have it on my old handset, and I think I actually used it once. It's supposed to send you a notification when the delivery leaves the depot, and again when the driver is in the vicinity, so you (in theory) don't miss the knock on the door. I decided it would be handy, because there's nothing more frustrating than waiting in all day with no sign of the driver, popping around the corner for a pint of milk at 5.30 – because who on earth delivers parcels at that time of day? ‐ and getting back to find the inevitable card on the doormat. At least I could plan my visit to Lidl around the driver's ETA.
I logged into the app once it was installed. At 2018 on Wednesday evening, my parcel apparently still hadn't arrived at the depot. An hour later, I knew (via email) that it had arrived at the DPD 'hub' at Hinckley in Leicestershire – not the geographical centre of England, but close enough for jazz. It's not too far from South Wales either. We were on course for delivery on Thursday.
Allegedly …
You can probably imagine my surprise when I logged on to the app on Thursday morning to check the delivery window, and found this:
The next part of the notification was even more worrying:
I logged on to the DPD website to see if I could find any contact details for them. As I'd half expected, there was no phone number, and no link to social media feeds; just an email form to complete and send to Customer Service for a response 'within 90 minutes'. I filled it in and sent it off. It wasn't a complaint. It was a light-hearted dig at the time-travel device which was currently conveying my delivery. No response.
I logged on again before going to bed on Thursday, to check the state of play. Nothing had changed since 0915. I figured that things would move overnight, and I might get my delivery on Friday.
No such luck. I logged in to the app just after 7.30, and this is what I found:
There's an absurd tradition in Aberdare that the town's war memorial wasn't meant to be here at all. If you listen to assorted Pub Bores and Myth-makers, they'll tell you that the impressive slab of granite, some three metres high and weighing several tons, was originally intended for Aberdeen. The driver misread the delivery note and it ended up here …
Here's a good crossword clue: Any pub story you hear about Aberdare's past (8).
I've filled in some of the letters for you …
B _ L L _ _ _ _
(Actually, there are two possible answers, both of which are correct.)
Anyway, that load of cobblers came to mind at 7.45 on Friday morning, when I found out that my parcel was at the wrong end of the neighbouring country, and (presumably) was destined to head even further north as the day wore on. Where would it end up? Aberdeen? Aberdour? More to the point, when would it actually get to Aberdare?
After fiddling with the app for a minute, I found the 'contact' options – a live text chat or a phone call. I opted for the phone call, but their customer service line wasn't open until 8.00. No problem; I waited until just after 8.00 and hit the button. After a few minutes of listening to recorded messages, I spoke to a cheerful lad in the West Midlands and explained the problem. He laughed and told me this sort of thing happens all the time. A parcel gets put in the wrong cage in the depot, and ends up being loaded into the wrong lorry.
I said I completely understood.
When I worked in the book trade, we were always getting parcels for other branches, or other shops in Cardiff, or even shops miles away that were completely unrelated to ours. The sheer volume of stuff moving through the system means that you don't have time to check every individual parcel coming off a lorry. You just count the total number of boxes you're unloading into Goods In, make sure it agrees with the driver's manifest, sign the sheet and away goes the lorry. It's only later – quite often, after you open the box and you're wondering why the order numbers don't look familiar – that you realise it was intended for WH Smith in Cheltenham, instead of Waterstones in Cardiff.
I told the guy about a funny incident that occurred shortly before I finished in Waterstones. Borders, a short walk down the road, were hosting a signing to tie in with the launch of the Gavin and Stacey TV tie-in. On the morning of the signing, one of the couriers (who shall remain nameless) delivered about six hundred copies of the book to us. Now, had we had decent relations with our bookselling cousins two hundred yards away, the situation could have been sorted out easily. We'd have slung their parcels onto a couple of trolleys and wheeled them round the corner ourselves. We'd have had to go past the very long queue of people waiting to meet the stars of the show, of course, but at least the books would have been in Borders when the event started.
But we didn't have a good relationship with them. Quite the opposite, in fact, following a nasty incident after a publisher event in Bristol, which almost ended up in a full-on brawl outside the Hayes Island Cafe. We took the opportunity to get our revenge by ringing the courier to report the misdelivered consignment. They duly collected the parcels the following day and delivered them … well, who cares when? It was after the signing. That's all we were worried about.
However, my rogue item isn't a small parcel containing a few books.
It's a fucking flatpack desk!
It must have taken some effort to put that in the wrong cage, and then in the wrong van.
The guy and I had a good laugh, and he told me he'd arrange a 'priority delivery' for Saturday morning, by way of apology for the fuck-up. And he was as good as his word.
I think …
Shortly after we wished each other a good weekend and I hung up, I had another notification from the DPD app:
So, will my parcel arrive tomorrow, or will I have to wait until 2026 for it?
The suppliers themselves don't seem to be any the wiser. Here's what eBay have told me this afternoon:
As usual, boys and girls, watch this space …

Tuesday 3 March 2020

I Hate it When a Plan Falls Apart

In which The Author is at home
This afternoon, I should have been on the way to Victoria Coach Station in London, in time for the 1830 departure to Cardiff. Instead, I'm in Aberdare. It's a long story, so let's start at the beginning.
In November 2012, I had the great pleasure and privilege of recording a heat of Brain of Britain, the long-running general knowledge quiz, for BBC Radio 4. (I told you the whole story of my trip to Manchester – and its disappointing epilogue – in It's Grand Oop North.) I didn't progress any further in the 2012–3 series, and there's a five-year embargo before one can enter again. Thus it was that I logged on to the BBC website in the summer of 2018 and requested an application form once the new series went into pre-production.
As before, the audition took the form of a phone call, on the afternoon of 29 November 2018. I'll admit that I wasn't exactly prepared for it. In fact, I was in the Glosters after an old friend's funeral, nursing a pint and enjoying some memories of our time together. But I took the phone into the lounge, chatted to the production assistant for a while, and managed to pull out some answers and make a few guesses. I must have done all right, because a few weeks later I had an email confirming my place in the next series. The recording was scheduled for the end of January 2019. They booked my hotel for me, and I'd sorted out my coach ticket as soon as the dates were pinned down. The game, it seemed, was afoot.
A few days before I was due to travel, I was struck by the flu virus that had taken most of Aberdare out during the preceding couple of weeks. I emailed the BBC from my bed, apologising that I probably wouldn't be well enough to make the journey. Even if I had made a miraculous recovery over the weekend, I wouldn't have given my best performance on the evening. It seemed I wasn't alone, because a number of contestants and a few of the production team had also been off sick. Unfortunately, my heat was one of the last to be scheduled, so I couldn't even swap with someone else and go up later. Instead, they offered to keep my place open for the following season.
By the time Xmas 2019 rolled around, I was starting to wonder if they'd forgotten about me. A good few of my friends had asked whether I'd heard anything from the BBC. It crossed my mind to drop them a line, to be on the safe side. But I didn't need to bother. As soon as everyone went back to work in January, I had an email asking if I was still interested in taking part. I told Lizzie, the production assistant, that I definitely was interested, and a few days later she confirmed my recording date: 2 March, in London. Soon after that she confirmed my hotel booking. It was right around the corner from the British Museum – perfect, because I wanted to check out the exhibition on the Trojan War on the Tuesday. I booked the coach the same morning and started making plans for the rest of the Tuesday. Today, in other words …
On 15–16 February, Storm Dennis came along and wrecked much of South Wales, including Pontypridd town centre and a fair section of the Valleys. Needless to say, public transport was particularly badly affected, with railway lines flooded and bus services cancelled. In fact, it took until last Wednesday (26 February) for the trains to start running from Aberdare to Pontypridd again. A half-hearted and chaotic Replacement Bus Service had tried to plug the gap in the meantime. My friends didn't have anything positive to report about the emergency provision, so I was already dubious about the idea of travelling any great distance. Can you imagine getting off the bus in Pontypridd and running up the steps just in time to see the Cardiff train pulling away from the platform? It happened to a few people I know. Then you'd have to get off the train at Cathays and force a path through the crowd on the footbridge to Park Place, undoubtedly in time to see the London coach pulling away from the stop about 50 m away. I wasn't optimistic.
Last Thursday lunchtime, the weather forecast gave a yellow warning in advance of Storm Jorge, which was – apparently – due to hit Wales on Saturday morning. Call me pessimistic if you like, but I emailed Lizzie and said I might not be able to travel up on Monday after all. I explained about the fuck-ups with the Replacement Bus Service over the previous fortnight and outlined the possible situation in Cardiff. Lizzie replied shortly afterwards; she'd seen the forecast herself and thought I might be right. She said she'd try and contact the other contestants to see if anyone could swap with me, and offered me an alternative date in April as a Plan B.
In the end, Storm Jorge arrived early. By Friday afternoon the roads around Aberdare were in chaos and the newly reintroduced train service was at a standstill. Again.
A gang of us from the National Tap were meant to be travelling to Chepstow on the Friday evening, for a 'tap takeover' at the Queen's Head. I phoned the bus company and we agreed that we were doing the right thing by pulling the plug on the trip. (Incidentally, our trip to the Brecon Tap in January fell apart as well. Everyone thought someone else was organising the bus. In the event, no one did. That's 0 from 2.)
Then Transport for Wales announced that there'd been a landslide on the railway line between Mountain Ash and Abercynon. Apparently it took ages to sort out a Replacement Bus Service – to the extent that my pal Martyn E. bit the bullet and slept in the pub where he works as a chef.
I emailed Lizzie just before close of play on Friday to update her. She got back to me straight away. Unfortunately, they hadn't found anyone who was able to swap recording dates with me. Instead, they're holding my place open for next year. Sound familiar?
Who knows what fun the Goddess of Chaos will have in the run-up to the next recording date? Watch this space …

Wednesday 12 February 2020

A Found Poem

In which The Author digs out an old magazine
Back in September, I signed up for a Creative Writing course. Again …
It was a random sort of Monday, really. Chazz and I had been for lunch, and she'd commented that she needed a new dictionary. So we strolled over to The Works, because I knew they'd have the 'Back to school' offers in place. While we were in there, I bumped into David and Andrea from New Horizons. I'd met them shortly before, when I sat in on a taster session for Psychology and Criminology. Unfortunately I wasn't able to sign up for the full course because it took place at an inconvenient time (and venue). But they asked us if we'd be interested in the Creative Writing course, which was starting that very afternoon. I twisted Chazz's arm by telling her that she might get a song out of it (at least), and the two of us strolled around the block in time for the kick-off.
It turned out that I already knew Steve, the tutor. He used to teach a group in Aberdare Library, and also takes the guitar classes that happen there in the evenings. We'd chatted a couple of times, so it was nice to know I wasn't going in cold.
Anyway, I've put in a few pieces of work already, some of which I'm quite pleased with, and one is taking shape into a longer piece which might become an Actual Completed Project. (Don't stake your life on it, though.)
However, I don't like poetry.
I didn't enjoy studying poetry at school; I don't enjoy reading it, listening to it (with a very few contemporary exceptions such as Ian McMillan and Roger McGough), or writing it. My heart sinks whenever Steve says the word 'poetry'. So when he asked us a week last Monday to write a 'found poem', I realised I could do it without too much need for heavy lifting.
A 'found poem', in essence, relies on taking pieces of existing text and rearranging them into a new form. Now, I knew that with over two thousand books and many old magazines at home, I could probably find something interesting to work with. On Sunday, having finished a copy-edit and with Storm Ciara raging in the background, I pulled out an old copy of the London listings magazine Time Out and got to work.
This particular edition was dated 1–8 March 1995, so it's a whisker short of 25 years old. (If only we'd waited a couple of weeks, I could have taken it to class and we could have had some birthday cake.) I wasn't in London at the time, needless to say. I bought it purely because the cover photo was a head shot of the actress Jennifer Jason Leigh wearing a stunning studded collar.
If only I had been in London that week: Kevin Ayers was playing a rare gig that week; so were his fellow Soft Machine alumnus John Etheridge (a free Sunday lunchtime affair), Kevin's former musical collaborator Lol Coxhill, and a young sax player named Theo Travis, who (along with Mr Etheridge) is in the current Soft Machine line-up, when he's not moonlighting with Andy Tillison's band the Tangent.
I was in Aberdare when all this musical activity was going on. Go figure …
Anyway, I'd already decided to adopt the cut-up approach pioneered by William S. Burroungs and Brion Gysin – not literally, because I hate defacing books or magazines. Instead, I flicked through the pages and typed out the odd string of text that caught my eye. There was no structure to begin with; all I wanted were some interesting phrases or lines of text that could be stitched together in a new sequence. The more I read, the more I found. And, after a few hours messing around with the word processor, I came up with twenty stanzas.
In the spirit of 'found poetry', I need to acknowledge my sources, of course. All the text can be found in that particular edition of Time Out, so I won't credit all the people involved. (When I say 'all the text', some of it is so well hidden I couldn't find it again when I came to scan the sections in question on Sunday evening. But I swear to Goddess it was all there on Sunday afternoon.) There's a sidebar on page 3 of the print copy which lists all the contributors.
I've preserved much of the capitalisation and most of the punctuation from the original texts. I've added one or two line breaks and removed a few others. Some of the stanzas are more ridiculous than others; none of them make any real sense. But I think it's an amusing exercise, and it got a few chuckles when I read it out in class on Monday afternoon. Here goes …

'Plastic and TV are our natural world'

or

The next eight days in full


Until 5 March a spectacular full-scale replica of
Oscar Wilde's London
Situated in a herb garret in the roof of St Thomas' church.

So, the Brits finally hit
Men with animal skulls
'I mean, has she got a face?'
Ever been a perpetrator …?

Never mind politics
in this portrait of life in a north Wales village at the
Grace Theatre at the Latchmere pub
Roy Smiles' shoestring musical spoof,
rather than being political statements,
tempts you with a promise to make it all better.

Those who received a copy of
the first season of Danger Man
Wish I hadn't …

A famous de Kooning aphorism:
Why have so many people had a charisma bypass?

London't acute shortage of
A chic Italian restaurant
Serious without being earnest
Defies easy definition.

The thing about the best road movies
If in doubt, add a serial killer.
Preview tapes were unavailable.

Controversial, we know, but
Philosopher, wit, fearless experimentalist and oddball
Pierre Boulez has marked this century both with
This bawdy, modern-day version of 'Cinderella'
and with a taut, swinging delivery.

PARACHUTING, SKYDIVING, BUNGEE
JUMPING, FLYING, GLIDING, HELICOPTERS
Denotes activity or entertainment particularly
suitable for under-fives.

Are you violent? Do you want to stop
Entering the gallery, you'd be forgiven for
Photographing naked people in city streets;
'Flesh is the reason oil painting was invented.'

The Courtauld has a splendid permanant
collection of old masters such as Rubens and
Beveridge, Watson & Crick, and Hancock.

Pentangle founder-member Jansch, one of the finest
exponents of the ornate finger-picking style he
helped popularise in the 60s
When Starr Faithfull's body was
Pronounced a delight by our
Young Gay and Lesbian Writing Workshop

Excellent and always playful,
Two physically identical girls, living in Poland
In this rich, evocative feast of puppetry and
board-game action hosted by Steve, Figs and Mike
on the main floor. Or you can revive the black leather
girl traumatised by childhood rape.

The songs themselves proffer a mildly
affectionate and very funny odyssey through
Getting Away with Murder.

The German audience and critics were
absolutely clear about it: the only film
that deserved to win Berlin's top prize
– the Golden Bear – was Wayne Wang's
Starsky and Hutch

Waxworks of the famous and infamous, now with
Ming Ming, also Nile crocodiles, rare Asiatic lions
and cubs and a large aquarium with sharks and
former Italian leader with a
child's toy arrow attached by its sucker
to his nose

For dirty, fuck-faces and elemental punk,
Exceptionally adventurous female
Jennifer Jason Leigh's filmography reads like
The best of American modernist art.

Lovely, lithe female graduate, 40
years experience as a clairvoyant, proven
slighly scatty, into real ale and good living,
bit scruffy, veggie, lefty, daunted by new capital
surroundings, looking for woman with or without
ANY NATIONALITY for long-term friendship.

Following last night's orgy of marijuana.
In the best surrealist tradition, Buñuel
involves shifting disembodied brains from
a compendium of favourite elements
and the same two old stalwarts as before.

Beirut bombshell
Abbot still a Virgin
Game for a group blind date?
Bad sex
Love and Bullets
Wee-wee in the wind
Reefer Madness
All slap and no tickle
AIDS memoirs
Next Time I'll Kill You