Monday, 9 February 2009

2009 Predictions Part 5 - Bankers' Prison Island

The Hutchback is not normally an angry man. Yes, he performs hideous acts of barbarism on a daily basis, but these are not done out of anger, merely boredom.

(off topic: yes that was a reference to the Golden Dawn on tonight's Eastenders, what next Aleister Crowley turns up and sacrifices Minty to the god Horus).

These Bankers (or as we should refer to them Banksters) are set fair for a good few billion in bonuses. This is surely the equivalent of giving a mugger a tip after he has kneed you in the testicles and stolen your watch, wallet, and mobile phone.

So my prediction is that by the end of the year the world community will have set up prison islands in the South Atlantic, and we will ship the whole festering lot of them off to these desolate windblown frozen hellholes.

They can then sub-prime eachother to their hearts content.

Sunday, 8 February 2009

All Talk 59 - Animals in Hardware

(they’re now walking down the street to the tool shop)

HUTCHBACK

Ok, so, here. She told me I can’t go in here. No. I need to buy a.. I need to buy a.. What does she want?

DR. NOSTRUM

Who?

HUTCHBACK

She. The wife. (mocking) Who? Who’s she? She wants to get some kind of.. oh, fuck, some kind of jar.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, you can always ask in the shop. “I’d like some kind of jar.”

HUTCHBACK

A jar to put something into, but I can’t remember what, because...

DR. NOSTRUM

Flowers?

HUTCHBACK

No, cause we’ve already flour.. no, n, no, no, no, we’ve got a flour.. I need.. I said I’d buy her a cake tin, (pause) but she also wanted a jar.

DR. NOSTRUM

Pickles?

HUTCHBACK

No, to put stuff into.

DR. NOSTRUM

Get her a Mason jar.

HUTCHBACK

Well, yeah, I know, we’ve bought loads of them, but I don’t know what size to get if I don’t know what’s going in it, do I? I mean I might buy this small one and she goes “NO!” or, I might get a huge one and...

DR. NOSTRUM

(imitating) “NO!”

HUTCHBACK

...and it’s just for nuts.

(they walk a little further to the ironmonger, it’s an old fashioned shop with a sparse selection of tools in packs hanging on pegs on the wall – HUTCHBACK points to a lonely tool high up, out of reach)

Ah, you see, look, there it is! That’s just what I want!

DR. NOSTRUM

But do you want that, or do you want that?

HUTCHBACK

Huh?

DR. NOSTRUM

Those. The water pump pliers?

HUTCHBACK

Oh.

DR. NOSTRUM

More secure. Too big maybe, but if you get a smaller version of that, they’re better than those.

HUTCHBACK

And cheaper.

DR. NOSTRUM

Are they? Then they’re probably worse.

HUTCHBACK

No, cause those (his first choice) slip.

DR. NOSTRUM

But they don’t look like they’ve got them, so..

HUTCHBACK

You know what, I don’t think that’s going to work because it’s round. I need something that clamps. I need a monkey wrench!

DR. NOSTRUM

No, you just need an adjustable, er..

HUTCHBACK

I need a monkey wrench, yeah, the one that you can clip together.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well.. where did that come from, when do monkey’s..?

HUTCHBACK

I don’t know where it came from but it’s called a monkey wrench.

DR. NOSTRUM

Are you sure?

HUTCHBACK

Yes. It’s definitely called a monkey wrench. You know, cause monkey’s are very.. they’ve got flexible tails, haven’t they? They’re very pre-hensile.

DR. NOSTRUM

I’m not sure that’s what they are.

HUTCHBACK

Well shall I ask him for a monkey wrench and see what he brings out?

DR. NOSTRUM

What kind of monkey?

HUTCHBACK

(scouring the display)
He doesn’t have a monkey wrench.

DR. NOSTRUM

A Rhesus monkey? An orangutan? That’s an ape.

(They move to the counter, where there’s a customer being served)

HUTCHBACK

Well, if it’s not up there he’s not going to have one is he? How about just getting those large pair of secuters?

DR. NOSTRUM

I’ve bought a few of those.

HUTCHBACK

Or an axe?

DR. NOSTRUM

Yep, I’ve bought an axe. I’ve bought most of the things on this wall actually.

HUTCHBACK

You could basically.. I mean, this is where serial killers come isn’t it?

DR. NOSTRUM

They could get better tools than this.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but they wouldn’t go to a big store cos then they might be on cctv, they’d come to a small shop like this.

DR. NOSTRUM

You think?

HUTCHBACK

Yep. Hacksaw, axe, secuters. That’s all you need. (beat – The Ironmoger finishes with his suspiciously serial killer like customer and is ready for HUTCHBACK, who speaks very slowly fearing the man is of poor education) Do you have a monkey wrench?

IRONMONGER

Yes

HUTCHBACK

You do?

IRONMONGER

Yes.

HUTCHBACK

Is it what I think it is though? I’m asking for something and I don’t actually know if it’s the right thing.

IRONMONGER

Right.

HUTCHBACK

I need something to clamp onto a round.. thing.. to, like, er... (mimes clamping a wrench)

IRONMONGER

Yes.

HUTCHBACK

...to turn.

IRONMONGER

Okey-doke, I’ll pull out something from the back (he scuttles off)

HUTCHBACK

(to the DR.) See?

DR. NOSTRUM

Let’s see what he brings out.

HUTCHBACK

He’ll bring out a monkey holding a wrench.

DR. NOSTRUM

Maybe. Maybe that’s what it is.

HUTCHBACK

They are called monkey wrenches, I’m sure that’s what it is. Thing is, I’m buying this for a very specific purpose, will I ever need it again?

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, they’re very useful.

HUTCHBACK

You don’t even know what it is!

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but I know a clamping wrench is very useful. For all sorts of things.

HUTCHBACK

Mainly clamping type activities. Anything here take your fancy?

(the IRONMONGER returns)

IRONMONGER

Is that what you want?

HUTCHBACK

That is what I want! I don’t know if it’s big enough though, um, let me have a look. Ooh. How wide does it open? (the IRONMONGER shows him)

DR. NOSTRUM

No, it’s not big enough.

IRONMONGER

No, I’ll see if I’ve got bigger ones.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah

DR. NOSTRUM

(to IRONMONGER) Why are they called monkey wrenches?

HUTCHBACK

No one knows.

IRONMONGER

Well, these are mole grips actually. I mean.. yes...

HUTCHBACK

Oh, are they called mole grips? Well, Mole Grips!

IRONMONGER

...I think monkey wrenches are the waterproof ones.

HUTCHBACK

Oh, right.

IRONMONGER

I sell these all the time, I got 2 or 3 types. (he disappears again)

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s the logic behind it.

HUTCHBACK

Well, monkeys are more waterproof, typically, than moles.

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t know.

HUTCHBACK

No, they would be! Moles and water don’t go together at all.

DR. NOSTRUM

A monkey wrench and mole grips. A parrot..?

HUTCHBACK

Parrot claw?

(a call comes from the back)

IRONMONGER

That’s the biggest one we’ve got at the moment.

HUTCHBACK

Oh. Ok.

IRONMONGER

Are there any hanging up?

HUTCHBACK

No, you’ve just got, um, normal, er wotsits. Alright then.

IRONMONGER

Sorry

HUTCHBACK

Alright, no worries.

IRONMONGER

Er, Thomas Brothers at the Archway, where the roundabout after Suicide Bridge is, try them.

HUTCHBACK

Alright then, thank you. (they leave and walk off at pace back towards the car) See!

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, I’m wracking my brain now, I’m trying to think what other implements there are.

Saturday, 7 February 2009

All Talk 58 - Shopping at Warmongers via Will Self

SOME MONTHS PASS...

DR. NOSTRUM and HUTCHBACK have taken a break to write the second draft of their meisterwerk CELEBRITY AUSCHWITZ, but more of that later... As we drop in, The DR. is telling HUTCHBACK of a radio station he picked up by accident but could only find in an extremely small area of North London. It may have been Will Self on his CB.

HUTCHBACK

Is it aimed purely at Jews?

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t know, I don’t think so.

HUTCHBACK

You could only pick it up between Swiss Cottage and Golders Green; The Hampstead, Swiss Cottage, Golders Green golden Jewish triangle.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, but I mean I tried to find it later, but all I could find was dance music.

HUTCHBACK

Well, search for it, search for it.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, maybe..

HUTCHBACK

Are you sure it was Will Self?

DR. NOSTRUM

No I'm not sure it's Will Self, but he was talking about.. and then..

HUTCHBACK

I mean there can’t be that many people that sound like Will Self.

DR. NOSTRUM

No… and that's what I thought and also.. also it was the manner of the speaking.. he was talking about (puts on Will Self voice and starts misquoting) "the Great Emblotchment of the 1920's was a scandal that reached worldwide" and then went on to tell a 10 minute story about the Great Emblotchment about how "and Emblotchment spread throughout the Universe and thus we all became Emblotched, it was started accidentally by William Pitt the Elder.”

HUTCHBACK

Ah

DR. NOSTRUM

It just seemed to be, er, (pause) him.

HUTCHBACK

Or someone pretending to be him.

DR. NOSTRUM

Someone pretending to be him. Which seems pointless

HUTCHBACK

Why pretend to be Will Self when you could pretend to be, you know, George Bush Senior?

DR. NOSTRUM

Are you recording?

HUTCHBACK

Yes, I’m recording. This is a recording.

(They leave the HUTCHBACK's lair, the hated Blue Van is parked just down the street a little)

HUTCHBACK

You see I’m so paranoid now about the Blue Van that I get nervous when I think, ‘Well, how long am I going for?’

DR. NOSTRUM

Thinking he’s going to move it back in.

HUTCHBACK

‘Will he be looking out of his window...

DR. NOSTRUM

Waiting for you.

HUTCHBACK

...waiting for his moment so he can reverse into my space and break down again. The cunt. The Great Emblotchment.
(They get onto the HUTCHBACK's Trap, the search for tools has begun)

HUTCHBACK

Should I go to a Corporate Megastore..

DR. NOSTRUM

No! It doesn’t matter, anywhere.

HUTCHBACK

No, no, I’m not asking you...

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok.

HUTCHBACK

...I’m debating it out loud...

DR. NOSTRUM

Well...

HUTCHBACK

...deciding whether to give my money to a Corporate Megastore..

DR. NOSTRUM

...don’t debate it out loud, just debate it internally and turn up somewhere.

HUTCHBACK

No, well, either I go left or.. oh, I’m going straight on. cos now this is more of a random drive, than an actual focused..

DR. NOSTRUM

What, are you just going to drive until you see a Bee and queue?

HUTCHBACK

No, no, I know where the Bee and Queue is..

DR. NOSTRUM

Well there’s one every 600 yards.

HUTCHBACK

Particularly on this stretch of road. No. You know what, I’m being an idiot there is a Tool shop just down the road.

DR. NOSTRUM

So you go in there and say “I need a tool.”

HUTCHBACK

I need a tool, can you help me? I’m missing a tool.

DR. NOSTRUM

And he brings out a row of, er, characters, from the back of the shop. (pause) So what..

HUTCHBACK

Along with one slightly, slightly used penis.

DR. NOSTRUM

What is the..

HUTCHBACK

Oh, that was quite good.. Oh, sorry, go on.

DR. NOSTRUM

What will this tool be used for?

HUTCHBACK

I just want a tool.

DR. NOSTRUM

That will both butter my toast and unscrew a light bulb.

HUTCHBACK

And make my wife love me, again. (pause) See, now I’ve forgotten what I was going to say, you see, that’s the problem.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, it’s not a problem, cos if it’s good enough it’ll come back.

HUTCHBACK

No, it isn’t good enough, it’s actually something I wanted to say.

DR. NOSTRUM

Oh (pause) something about tools? Something about a tool that you need?

HUTCHBACK

No. If I’d have interrupted your interruption I’d have been alright.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, but it can’t have been.. Nothing is important. (pause) Really.

HUTCHBACK

In the great words of Freddie Mercury.

DR. NOSTRUM

Is that what he said?

HUTCHBACK

(a near miss whilst driving) Ooooh!

DR. NOSTRUM

D’you ever have that opinion that Talk radio is just a lot of people’s opinions about stuff.

HUTCHBACK

I don’t think that’s so much an opinion as a statement of fact.

DR. NOSTRUM

It just seems that when I think about how they promote themselves and then they’ve got all these programmes relentlessly on where people call in and tell you what they think about things. It’s just, all they are is just a series of people calling up and telling you what they think about things, it’s just a waste of time.

HUTCHBACK

Mm.

DR. NOSTRUM

It’s really pointless. I mean the idea of broadcasting that... as if people calling you up and telling you what they’re thinking is worth broadcasting to the nation...

HUTCHBACK

It’s a public service.

DR. NOSTRUM

...It’s a crazy idea.

HUTCHBACK

It’s a public service.

DR. NOSTRUM

It seems that the chief quality required by the DJ is the ability to say, “I just need to hurry you up there.” (pause) Um, this is where I was driving down where I saw a guy wheeling a gurney with a body on it...

HUTCHBACK

Really

DR. NOSTRUM

...under a sheet, yeah.

HUTCHBACK

See, there you go, ‘Local Ironmongers’. You don’t see Ironmongers much anymore, do you?

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t know how you monger iron anyway.

HUTCHBACK

(irate member of the public voice) “Stop mongering that iron, yer bastard! Didn’t anyone tell you it was rude?”

DR. NOSTRUM

I wonder what the difference between mongering iron and fish is? Not much.

HUTCHBACK

Yep

DR. NOSTRUM

It’s all in the display.

HUTCHBACK

(musing) Mongering.

DR. NOSTRUM

There aren’t many mongers. It’s not.. There’s no.. there’s no Greenmonger...

HUTCHBACK

Well no, but the.. the...

DR. NOSTRUM

They’re grocers.

HUTCHBACK

But then what does a Warmonger do?

DR. NOSTRUM

He lays all the wars out...

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, puts out a nice bit of green baize, sort of a green artificial grass, erm, price’s it up, and um, and then you get, you get your...

DR. NOSTRUM

Dictators coming in buying ‘em up.

HUTCHBACK

And then you buy it by the pound.

DR. NOSTRUM

“How much is your 1914-18?”

HUTCHBACK

“How much is the, um, Crimea? Nice bit of Crimea.”

Friday, 6 February 2009

Love in the time of Diarrhoea

You may wonder where your loyal humpback has been these past weeks. Let’s put it this way, you know what an admirer of Joseph Fritzl’s work the Dr is, well he calls it a re-enactment, I call it unfair working conditions. But we are expecting our first child in 13 months time (the Hutchback biology is somewhat unique) so some good has come of it.

Now when we last spoke I mentioned the fact that I had met a French jolie dame and was in love. I feel now is the time to expand on this. As you know I spent a hectic few days in a rather odd French town, I believe the locals referred to it as Seule. And the dialect of French they spoke was incomprehensible to these cauliflower ears. My last night was rather incident packed and now I can recount the tale.
Having spent the day with a gurgling bowel from my strange breakfast of gristly soup (with added dog collar) – I was in need of some kind of assistance. I wandered the frantic streets and alleyways, the whole town seemed to be out and I had to dodge many a careening Frenchman. I at last found some peace in a side street that looked empty except for one small café.





I include the picture here for elucidation. It was a jolly enough place and I thought that a coffee would calm my intestinal torment. The French make a good coffee and as you can see from the photograph the two Frenchmen (or is one a ventriloquist and the other a dummy, can’t quite make out) appear to be enjoying a cup of their national drink.

So I entered and sat down. The café was empty except for a very old and frail lady who stooped at the counter with a damp cloth. Eventually she noticed me and came over. Now as you know my attempts to converse in French had so far been quite futile. I must have really forgotten so much as to be incomprehensible. Mr Wilson the erudite owner of the travelling freak show where I spent my formative years would have been so disappointed with my decline in linguistic skills he would have loudly tutted, then he would have lashed me to within an inch of my life and thrown me into a pit.

I tried to ask her for something calming for my poor gut, but she didn’t understand. So sign language would have to do. I mimed drinking a cup and grimacing and rubbing my stomach. She looked at me sadly through rheumy eyes and said nothing, I then stood up and mimed (convincingly) a man in desperate need of a shit. Something seemed to click and the ancient barrista uttered a few garbled words of English. “You wan spesho bowl coffee?”. Bowl coffee, Bowel coffee, hmm sounded just what I needed.

The kindly old lady moved away towards the back of the shop and then for some reason beckoned me over to the shabby curtain that barred entry to the back room. I assumed this was the room where the Bowel Coffee was served.
I followed her inside and saw a bed covered in a plastic sheet in the middle of the room. Most odd. Then the oddness increased by a factor. The wizened crone said something remarkable: “Drop your tlousa, prease” Incredible, what was this – a come on – how marvelous.

Now you may wonder about Mrs H, and where my heart lay. Well I refer to Mrs H as my wife but she is not really my wife, in fact she hardly knows me. You would more accurately describe her as being vaguely aware of me as an unspecified sense of dread that accompanies her when she walks home. We have never actually met, but this is purely circumstantial for she will at some point come within grabbing distance of the laurel bush where I lie in wait for her every evening.

Anyway though I love Mrs H the offer of a night of torrid (though rather dry) passion with the old coffee lady seemed a wonderful prospect. I dropped my pants and unwrapped the old newspapers that I use as underwear. The lady then made me lie face down on the plastic wrapped bed. What delights lay ahead. I close my eyes and waited for the hand of pleasure to be applied to by crumpled body.

Aargh, my poor piles. She had shoved some kind of pipe right up my arsehole. She liked it rough clearly. I opened my eyes to see what was happening back there just in time to see her pour the entire contents of the coffee urn into a funnel which was attached to the tube which had been mainlined straight into my rectum. Now I’ve heard of this type of things before, but I believe it is more normal to use cold coffee in this process. As I passed out from the pain I caught a glimpse of my new love as she went back in the front room no doubt to fetch a freshly boiled refill.

Thursday, 5 February 2009

Paris Hilton - Fast Food Fame

Paris's BBF, yet more aspirants munching on the quim of celebrity.

It's pretty much beyond reviewing to any purpose as a television show; Paris makes folks do things for her and then judges them whilst they shake and cry because of course her opinion defines their universe.

Dr. Nostrum can't help remembering the callous spoiled joy with which Nicole and her ruined a day's business for a random blue collar family one episode of The Simple Life. Yes, I'm sure they compensated them financially, yes, that was the show, no, it didn't matter.

There's no joy here, no point, purpose or permanence, and nothing positive that starts with any other letter of the alphabet either.

I know why it's on and I even think I know why it's popular. She is the living Celebrity Embodiment of Fast Food. The McDonalds of Reality TV. Everything you can think of about The Big Mac is true for Paris.

Paris Hilton. More famous than Paris France. What does that say about Google searches?

Be my BFF Paris! ;-) Everything you touch turns to gold.

(do you really think so?)

Wednesday, 4 February 2009

Jade Goody Media Martyr - Cashing In On Death

Can you believe it, a serious article from Dr. Nostrum as I take a moment to reflect on a recurring nightmare.

Though we are no closer to finding a meaning for Jade Goody's life, in one of the clearest predictions of 2009 (and yes, foul and cynical as I am, hopefully beyond) there will be a long examination for the meaning of her death and it's place as 'Entertainment' on our screens.

(cue bubbly airhead teen voice over) 'Read all about brave Jade's losing battle with Cancer and get 20 great Credit Crunch Cancer beating looks! Only in this week's edition of Uber-Voyeur, only £1.20 at all good Newsagents!'

I really don't think I will. In fact I know I can't. So I will become one of those hated commentators (surely - 'contentators') that pontificate on the morals of this most exquisite hell of an exploitation at a distance. You see, I'm not interested in the minutiae of Jade's serialised death throe, but then, I don't like Slasher films or Grand Theft Auto so I probably exist in a tiny vacuum. No, more than not interested; phobic.

There isn't a simultaneously less important yet more vicarious life and all it's for is so we can enjoy our pity and scorn at a scripted reality the Truman Show would've junked as unbelievable.

Look, there is a regular lighter and crueler side to Dr. Nostrum's Jade jibes and yes, saving her skin is a reasonable charitable enterprise so it can be pegged out and displayed as a lesson to all those who seek fame for fame's sake, but something has clearly gone wrong and not only in my brain.

There must be a point at which we recognise our Nero's fiddling as Rome burns. I humbly submit that serialising, trivialising and repackaging the slow death of a young, questionably smart, woman into a Television Reality Soap and glib Trashazine Hooks for the financial benefit of the Media well beyond the financial benefit to her family is one of those markers.

I don't have any morals up here in the cloud, because it's all make believe, but you down there...

Friday, 30 January 2009

I Don't Want To Work For Diddy

Dr. Nostrum has been tuning in occasionally to I Want To Work For Diddy. Now, I never really wanted to see this, but was wooed by the diddy blogs into a false sense of optimism (but note that there's no diddy blog celebrating the win - I guess the Democrats didn't pay for that one). In fact it was quite hard to watch it a very real sense because it disappeared from one channel after just a few episodes and I haven't had the discipline to keep track of what episode airs when on MTV.

But, of course, having seen it for a few seconds, I have seen it all. Formula stuff, with a vaguely cheap and hugely self important tone from the 'playa's'. Obnoxious and unpleasant ego masquerading as successful and aspirational business acumen - maybe these have always been the same thing.

There was a fabulous highlight with Diddy explaining how far he could achieve anything he set his mind to, which I wish I could find to print verbatim but somehow I have it imprinted on my memory as a dream inspired rant culminating in Puff riding a giraffe bareback and naked in Zimbabwe, that, strangely, being the task he wanted to achieve.

Don't let the highlight fool you though, it's the usual misfits being humiliated into obescience.

I think it is time for the series 'I Don't Want To Work For Diddy' in which every member of the human race bar 20 publicity obsessed lunatics go about their normal life completely bemused by the fact that some people want to debase themselves daily at the whim of egomaniacal celebrities for money and a seat in a muddy trench at the foot of fame.

I see many such programmes ahead, including the Paul McKenna inspired 'I Can't Make You Thin' and 'I Can't Make Him Stop', 'The Price Is Wrong', hosted by Jordan, 'Who Doesn't Want To Be A Millionaire?' and so on. Perhaps we could just make one programme that lasts all day called 'Why?' although to keep it Yoof perhaps just 'Y?

In 'Y?' we, the public, use Torquemada's technique of having TV execs spin out the premise of a story interesting enough to prevent themselves being dropped into a pot of burning pitch.

I'd probably watch it for 10 minutes before turning over to 'My New BFF'

Monday, 26 January 2009

Trans Gender Agenda for Tyrant

And so begins another series on the relentless hagiography that is the America's Top Model conveyor belt. Dr. Nostrum has often said that before she's in the grave every girl in America will be able to say Tyrant belittled her on National TV. In the UK we stay resolutely just behind, as we do with all things American since the 50's, so this is cycle 11.

We're put straight as to the purpose of the show from the get go. The entirely predictable system overload for the glaminator machine "to make better models" must mean Tyrant Tyra Banks is inside, cos no way can she pass up a chance to show us Tyrant is as good as it gets. (This is the point of the show - there, now I've told you the scales will have fallen from your eyes forever more) She seems to have some top lip issues today, with a smeared and shiny barracuda pout to the fore and oddly, they seem to have based the beginning of the show on The Tomorrow People, but i can't believe any of them have seen it. She also has some thunder-thigh issues too, I doubt they'd seem so on a normal woman, but on Tyrant they stand as two thumping revolutionary insurgents despoiling the landscape that is Doriana Gray, still a good looking woman, but one who has lost every shred of inner beauty.

Last Series was Plus Size, this series is Trans Gender. Now, have no doubt, the contestant may not have an agenda but The Show does. "What would being a part of this show do for the Gay and Lesbian community?" asks Tyrant, and the answer; it will increase the profile of Tyra Banks.

Saturday, 24 January 2009

All Talk 57 - 2009 Predictions - The Rise Of The Tramps

DR. NOSTRUM

I fear what most people will do is just roam the streets looking for food, in which case it’ll have been an advantage being a bin man cos you’d know where to look.

HUTCHBACK

So bin men will become the...

DR. NOSTRUM

The hunter-gatherers.

HUTCHBACK

...guru’s for the new age.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, no.

HUTCHBACK

They’ll be the wise..

DR. NOSTRUM

They’ll be just underneath Ray Mears.

HUTCHBACK

Alright, but they’ll be consulted, they’ll be able to charge..

DR. NOSTRUM

Now That..! No, wait a minute! That is one of the predictions that is reasonably obvious, is that people who forage will become leaders of the new age.

HUTCHBACK

Yes, absolutely.

DR. NOSTRUM

So your new age, you’re actually envisaging the Apocalypse, the complete breakdown...

TOGETHER

...of society...

DR. NOSTRUM

...So how do you make money out of it?

HUTCHBACK

...that’s a little bit extreme.. What do you mean how do you make money out of it?

DR. NOSTRUM

(poking fun at HUTCHBACK’s new catchphrase) Is it a business?

HUTCHBACK

Is it a business? I don’t.. I don’t th.. alright, it might happen but I don’t think so. I think what’s nore likely is that there are lots of people who lose their jobs, that’s clearly going to happen.. Make yourself another tea.

DR. NOSTRUM

Right, but if you could teach hunter-gatherer techniques to all these people who lose their jobs..

HUTCHBACK

Urban hunter-gatherer techniques, that would be a big boon.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, you could do it as a government scheme. For all the people who are out of work you send them on schemes...

HUTCHBACK

And you know who becomes...

DR. NOSTRUM

...to learn how to become Ray Mears.

HUTCHBACK

...No, you know who become the real figureheads, the CEO’s; Tramps. Tramps.

DR. NOSTRUM

Who’ve been doing it..

HUTCHBACK

They’ve been doing it for years! They know more than bin men. They definitely know more than bin men. So, suddenly, society gets inverted and the people at the top are Tramps.

DR. NOSTRUM

So this is our..

HUTCHBACK

So this is our second prediction: Takeover of the Tramps.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok, we got there quicker this time. So prediction number two is that the world order is turned on its head and that Tramps become the leaders of the New Society.

HUTCHBACK

Because they have all the skills needed to survive the recession. The oncoming onslaught.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok.

HUTCHBACK

And it’ll actually become a desirable career path for children who are growing up, you know, “Son, you really need to work hard on your foraging and your begging techniques..

DR. NOSTRUM

No, there’s no-one to beg from, so maybe it isn’t tramps?

HUTCHBACK

No, but foraging, they’ve got foraging down pat, oh yeah, rummaging through bins. Except no-one will have any rubbish...

DR. NOSTRUM

No, wait a minute...

HUTCHBACK

...there won’t be any rubbish any more, that’s the problem...

DR. NOSTRUM

...Maybe...

HUTCHBACK

...that’s where this thing falls apart...

DR. NOSTRUM

...but maybe, you know...

HUTCHBACK

...is that people won’t have anything to buy so they won’t have anything to throw away.

DR. NOSTRUM

...as a sideline to the prediction industry is the TV thing, which, is not, you know, Ray Mears Bushcraft, but, you know, Ray Mears...

TOGETHER

...Bincraft.

HUTCHBACK

Ray Mears Bincraft!

DR. NOSTRUM

And it wouldn’t be Ray Mears it would be..

HUTCHBACK

It would be, you know, Uncle Barney, or whoever...

DR. NOSTRUM

It’s a weekly TV series.

HUTCHBACK

Johnny Hull’s Bincraft.

DR. NOSTRUM

(recognising the name of the well known North of England Tramp of some repute from the dim past) There you go, Johnny Hull’s Bincraft. So even if we don’t have the correct prediction for society, we’ve got a potential television series.

HUTCHBACK

Tramp CEO’s, which actually is in the script come to think of it, but we’ve actually worked out how it could happen.

DR. NOSTRUM

No. Yeah, well, no.

HUTCHBACK

We now have a logical framework for Tramp CEO’s to exist, because before, it was just blind luck.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok.

HUTCHBACK

Whereas now it’s perfectly logical.

DR. NOSTRUM

In this..

HUTCHBACK

In this future prediction, for there to be Tramp CEO’s.

DR. NOSTRUM

Donald Tramp.

HUTCHBACK

But what do they get paid in?

DR. NOSTRUM

Cardboard boxes.

HUTCHBACK

Cardboard boxes and rotting food.

DR. NOSTRUM

No. There’s no-one to pay them.

HUTCHBACK

No, no. They will get paid.

DR. NOSTRUM

By who?

HUTCHBACK

They’ll have..

DR. NOSTRUM

What do tramps earn?

HUTCHBACK

...they’ll have donations. They’re so important that all the under-tramps will donate some of their foraging. There, because they’re teaching them all the skills.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok, well, as you pointed out, it’s mainly a post opalyptic, er..

HUTCHBACK

It’s post apocalyptic.

DR. NOSTRUM

...apocalyptic society.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah. So, you know, they give their..

DR. NOSTRUM

So the first prediction is the Apocalyse! (disappointedly) But lots of people have been predicting that. So, it’s not the Apocalypse, though, it’s just the re-distribution of wealth. (pause) Hmm. I think that maybe a more reasonable prediction for 2009...

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, because that one is slightly unreasonable.

DR. NOSTRUM

...is that that becomes part of the curriculum.

HUTCHBACK

Tramp studies.

DR. NOSTRUM

Bincraft, I suppose.

HUTCHBACK

Bincraft

DR. NOSTRUM

Yes, Bincraft becomes part of the curriculum, as well as maths and English and all that. That seems alright for 2009, and then as it progresses...

(pause – The DR. is distracted by the sports ticker on the TV)

Sasa Papac. Sasa Papac. That’s good. He’s got an ‘a’ every other letter.

HUTCHBACK

Sasa Papac. Yes, good. It would be good if Sasa was his middle name and Asa was his first name.

Friday, 23 January 2009

All Talk 56 - 2009 Predictions - Living Your Life In Your Spare Time

HUTCHBACK

So, we’ve cracked one prediction. That must have been the most ludicrous prediction that anyone has made in this end of year predictions farrago.

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t know, I haven’t been looking.

HUTCHBACK

No, but I’ve been looking at them and none of them are as insane as that. They’re all things like ‘People will stop going out and spending money.’

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, one thing about this is that there’s not enough time to write 10 predictions if this is how we’re going to do it, but I could summarise them.

HUTCHBACK

Well, we’re not going to come up with 10 today.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, that’s cos no-one’s paying us.

HUTCHBACK

No.

DR. NOSTRUM

If someone was paying me, believe me, I’d come up with 10.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, well, I’m now doing my job in my spare time for no money..

DR. NOSTRUM

No you’re not.

HUTCHBACK

I am!

DR. NOSTRUM

Oh well. I’m doing my life in my.. um, my life has become..

HUTCHBACK

“I’m doing my entire life in my spare time.” Now that.. Let’s work that out. Now that’s a prediction; people start living their entire lives in their spare time...

DR. NOSTRUM

As their hobby.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah. No, because there won’t be any jobs, so you now have to live your whole life in your spare time.

DR. NOSTRUM

What do you mean there won’t be any jobs?

HUTCHBACK

Well, no, cos everyone’s going to lose there jobs.

(Edit Point)

DR. NOSTRUM

So, I’m living my life in my spare time.

HUTCHBACK

Yes, living your life in your spare time. You are a pioneer. You’re a pioneer.

DR. NOSTRUM

There must have been others before me?

HUTCHBACK

Well, they were called the terminally unemployed...

DR. NOSTRUM

Or, the mentally ill.

HUTCHBACK

...the mentally ill, or the clinically insane. However, you are actually doing it intentionally, as a career.

DR. NOSTRUM

As a career.

HUTCHBACK

You are doing everything in your spare time.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah. I’m not making a success of my career. It’s true, if your career becomes successful you no longer have time...

HUTCHBACK

Yes, that’s it.

DR. NOSTRUM

...to live your life.

HUTCHBACK

That’s exactly it.

DR. NOSTRUM

But that’s a truism, not a prediction.

HUTCHBACK

No, but what will happen is that people will start doing all their work in their spare time.

DR. NOSTRUM

And what will they do in their work time.

HUTCHBACK

They won’t have any work time.

DR. NOSTRUM

So it’ll swap?

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

It’ll swap, so your work time..

HUTCHBACK

So everyone will be doing work, but not as their job, but just to keep themselves busy. So if you’re a bin man, you’ll carry on being a bin man, but you just won’t get paid for it. You’ll go around just taking people’s rubbish away...

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah

HUTCHBACK

...and emptying it onto the street just cos it makes you feel better.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, you gotta keep yourself busy.

HUTCHBACK

You’ve got to keep yourself busy.

DR. NOSTRUM

I fear what most people will do is just roam the streets looking for food, in which case it’ll have been an advantage being a bin man cos you’d know where to look.

HUTCHBACK

So bin men will become the...

DR. NOSTRUM

The hunter gatherers.

HUTCHBACK

...guru’s for the new age.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, no.

HUTCHBACK

They’ll be the wise..

DR. NOSTRUM

They’ll be just underneath Ray Mears.

HUTCHBACK

Alright, but they’ll be consulted, they’ll be able to charge..

DR. NOSTRUM

Now That..! No, wait a minute! That is one of the predictions that is reasonably obvious, is that people who forage will become leaders of the new age.

HUTCHBACK

Yes, absolutely.

All Talk 55 - 2009 Predictions - Practical Joke To Appear on The Law Statute Book (Part 2)

HUTCHBACK

Ah, no, but then it gets a bit more complicated, because some practical jokes would not lead to a conviction.

(pause the DR. is bemused)

Ok. Say for instance, Practical Joke; I left a sword on the staircase and someone fell over and died on it. No court in the land would send you to jail for that.

DR. NOSTRUM

What, as opposed to pushing someone off a cliff?

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, because pushing someone off a cliff is much more.. No, because if you left.. you know, and then sometime later someone came down the stairs, tripped over and fell on the sword and it killed them.

DR. NOSTRUM

Maybe Negligence?

HUTCHBACK

Negligence. You wouldn’t go to prison for that.

DR. NOSTRUM

(not getting it) So that would be ‘Negligent Practical Joke’?

HUTCHBACK

Ok, that’s a nonsense.. that’s a silly example. Say you leave a knife..

DR. NOSTRUM

(sarcasm) Yeah, that’s a silly one, forget that one.

HUTCHBACK

No, okay, you leave your washing machine open with a big knife pointing up out of the tray (pause) as a practical joke, hoping someone might trip over and fall on it. For a joke.

DR. NOSTRUM

The dishwasher?

HUTCHBACK

The washing machine, er, the dishwasher.

DR. NOSTRUM

What, hoping that someone might fall over?

HUTCHBACK

Trip over, fall on it. (the DR. is shaking his head) Why not, that’s happened

DR. NOSTRUM

No, no, that’s not a practical joke.

HUTCHBACK

Why is that not a practical joke?

DR. NOSTRUM

Because the likelihood of someone tripping over as they reach the dishwasher is nothing you can rely on. The practical joke is something where you know someone’s going to do something, so you’d have to...

HUTCHBACK

Ok, so you to set up..

DR. NOSTRUM

...you’d have to, No. You’d have to lift the.. you’d loosen the floorboards.

HUTCHBACK

Well, there you go.

DR. NOSTRUM

You loosen the floorb..

HUTCHBACK

No, no, you just squirt some washing up liquid on the floor.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok, washing up liquid on the floor and knives sticking up out of..

HUTCHBACK

There’s no court in the land would convict you of that. I’d stake my legal reputation on it.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, I think that’s too much, I think they would convict you.

HUTCHBACK

No, why would they convict you?

DR. NOSTRUM

Because the intention is to harm.

HUTCHBACK

They could never prove that you..

DR. NOSTRUM

No, the intent is to harm.

HUTCHBACK

They could never prove you intended it.

DR. NOSTRUM

To do what?

HUTCHBACK

You would say, “I never planned that as a practical joke, it was just an unfortunate accident.”

DR. NOSTRUM

What are you talking about?

HUTCHBACK

That would be your defense.

DR. NOSTRUM

But how can that be your defense?!

HUTCHBACK

That would be your defense!

DR. NOSTRUM

But it’s a circular argument. “I did this thing, but I never intended to do it.” What’s that?

HUTCHBACK

No, because the prosecution investigation, that would be their case; that it was a planned practical joke and your defense would be that it was just an accident. (pause) I can see you’re struggling with that.

DR. NOSTRUM

I am struggling with that.

HUTCHBACK

Why? Why are you struggling with it?

DR. NOSTRUM

So you’re saying the charge. The charge is Practical Joke...

HUTCHBACK

Yes, the charge...

DR. NOSTRUM

...not the defense?

HUTCHBACK

...yes, of course!! What?

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s what I was struggling with...

HUTCHBACK

You go in..

DR. NOSTRUM

...you do something that’s a practical joke and you say that “I didn’t do it.”

HUTCHBACK

Well yeah, but no, because.. Well, people could accuse you. You could be accused of Murder by Practical Joke. You wouldn’t go in and say..

DR. NOSTRUM

But you would be wholly innocent! Cause if they accused you of doing it by Practical Joke, isn’t it too obscure? What’s the point of charging you with ‘Practical Joke’, why can’t they just charge you with murder?

HUTCHBACK

Because they’d never get murder. They’d never get a murder conviction for that, but they might get death by practical joke, if ty can prove that you put the.. It’s easier to convict someone of ‘Death By Practical Joke’.

DR. NOSTRUM

Sound like a lot of the Inspector Morse, um, mysteries, you know. Where there’s a very convoluted way of killing someone. In fact, there was that Columbo one where he was murdered by the dogs. The defense could have been a practical joke that went wrong.

HUTCHBACK

It was a practical joke to set the dogs on him?

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, you didn’t know the dogs would kill him, but you thought it was funny.

HUTCHBACK

You thought it was funny.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, there we go, so it’s not manslaughter cause, no, but it would be man.. no.. why..

HUTCHBACK

No, you can be accu.. you can go to prison for dog attacks. You can definitely go to prison for dog attacks.

DR. NOSTRUM

Mm. To me now I can only see it as a defense rather than an accusation. I don’t think it’s worth making the accusation, but I can see it as a defense.

HUTCHBACK

Alright, so the accusation would be murder and then your defense is practical joke.

DR. NOSTRUM

And it’s a.. no, it’s a plea, it’s a plea. The plea is, it was a Practical Joke that went wrong, which is not as serious as manslaughter.

HUTCHBACK

Yes. So then they’d have to come up with a...

DR. NOSTRUM

Sentence tariff.

HUTCHBACK

...crime and a sentence called Practical Joke. Yep, I think that’s perfectly reasonable.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yep. Ok, so that’s one.

HUTCHBACK

That’s one, we’ve cracked one prediction.

Sunday, 18 January 2009

Farewell Tony Hart

Yes, it was Tony Hart that gave Dr. Nostrum's his first break in the entertainment business, in his very first solo series too, also occasioning (now there's a word that always looks wrong) the purchase of a Video Tape machine, by Ma and Pa Nostrum, to record the young Dr.'s breakthrough moment. We were the first house on the street to have such a machine and none of the neighbours were invited round to see it, seeing as we were a somewhat anti-social family.

Anyhow, the familiar strains of 'Marguerite' began and after several dull but worthy pictures passed us by, there was young Dr. Nostrum (aged 6) Art Work, peering at us through the magic of the television screen for at least 6 or 7 seconds. I would have worn the tape out watching it over and over again had the machine not broken within a month. In my memory the drawing was a beach scene, depicting some stick like figures floating precariously above their sun loungers in the late afternoon sun, but according to my mother it was a precocious work of great merit that would have stood the test of time had it not been chucked in the bin immediately after the show was filmed.

I had some history, you see, having had a piece exhibited at the Royal Academy aged 4, but I can't credit that with any furthering of my ambition as I don't remember it and my parents didn't keep the picture or any record of it ever actually happening. Readers of the blog may notice uncorroborated stories from my childhood here and there - the most odd being the place of my birth changing over the years, my mother never being easy to pin down, the only constant being the day.

I digress. Tony Hart, then, had given me my first taste of fame and my journey had begun. I remember him fondly (perhaps not as fondly as he looked like he might remember the many small boys he helped reach for the star) especially his white line paintings on huge brownfield sites, they linger like the Chalk Hill Drawings except in the sense that I can't remember a single one of them, just that he did them. In truth I preferred Wilf Lunn.

But Tony brought us Morph, in much the same way Tracey Ullman gave us The Simpsons, and made it through Mr. Bennett's complaints, then went on to Hart Beat which strangely became a cop show in later years.

So, goodbye Tony. I hope God has a white line painting machine for you to join up all the constellations for us in the heavens. I shall keep my eyes peeled.

All Talk 55 - 2009 Predictions - Death By Practical Joke Part of The Law Commission Review

HUTCHBACK

Maybe there isn’t that much of a distance between a really bad practical joke and murder. There isn’t you know, a really bad practical joke often could end in death. So, at what point do you stop being a practical joker and become a murderer?

DR. NOSTRUM

What, like the second world war?

HUTCHBACK

No, but, you know, like accidentally pushing someone off the edge of a cliff, sort of thing, as a practical joke. I mean, that’s an extreme version of pushing someone off something.

DR. NOSTRUM

So is it called a practical joke because you’ve done something?

HUTCHBACK

Yes.

DR. NOSTRUM

You’ve actually practically done something?

HUTCHBACK

No, no, no, no, no.

DR. NOSTRUM

You’ve pushed someone over.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah. It’s physical humour.

DR. NOSTRUM

Physical humour, so as opposed to a, um...

HUTCHBACK

As opposed to a verbal joke, that’s why it’s called a practical joke.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, no, I wasn’t thinking verbal joke, no, cos then the difference would be a physical joke and a verbal joke. No, I was thinking, as opposed to a, um, metaphorical joke.

HUTCHBACK

(more mocking) A metaphorical physical joke, where you do an action that is a metaphor for something funny. No, I don’t think so.

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t think there is a metaphorical joke is there? Oh, no! A literal joke, that’s what I meant, the difference between literal and metaphorical as opposed to between practical.. so there’s a practical..

HUTCHBACK

There’s a practical and an impractical joke.

DR. NOSTRUM

Impractical joke, that’s it.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, an impractical joke, one that’s just slightly too burdensome to undertake.

DR. NOSTRUM

Hmm. Why are they called practical jokes?

HUTCHBACK

Cause they’re physical!

DR. NOSTRUM

So why aren’t they called physical jokes?

HUTCHBACK

I don’t know! I’m not a linguist.

DR. NOSTRUM

Practical Jokes. They always seemed a bit of a leap. I never, I mean, as far as I know, I never played one.

HUTCHBACK

You’ve never played a practical joke?

DR. NOSTRUM

No, I don’t think so.

HUTCHBACK

You’ve never put a bucket of water.. a bucket full of nails...

DR. NOSTRUM

...over...

HUTCHBACK

See, that’s it: bucket full of water; practical joke, bucket full of razor blades; murder.

DR. NOSTRUM

Hmm.

HUTCHBACK

So, it would be quite good to find out at what point it becomes murder, in the eyes of the law. See.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ah, as opposed to manslaughter?

HUTCHBACK

Yes.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but they’re doing that now, they’re putting a category between murder and manslaughter – practical...

HUTCHBACK

Practical joke. Practical Joke Murder.

DR. NOSTRUM

...because murder was too far away from manslaughter.

HUTCHBACK

Right. But that’s not bad, working out the exact point at which a practical joke..

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but they’re doing that, they’re doing that.

HUTCHBACK

What do you mean they’re doing that?!

DR. NOSTRUM

It’s part of the Law Commission Review at the moment..

HUTCHBACK

For Practical Jokes?

DR. NOSTRUM

No! Not practical jokes, but the idea that there’s a big gap between murder and manslaughter.

HUTCHBACK

Oh, yeah, that, but it’s nothing to do with practical jokes.

DR. NOSTRUM

But that must come into it.

HUTCHBACK

That probably does come into it.

DR. NOSTRUM

If your defense is that it was a practical joke that went wrong..

HUTCHBACK

No, no, no, cause manslaughter, you can be done for manslaughter for stabbing someone, that’s clearly not a joke.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, but you didn’t mean to kill them. Manslaughter is anything where you didn’t mean to kill them, right?

HUTCHBACK

Yes...

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t know, we need our advisor.

HUTCHBACK

...but what I’m saying is that if you can be done for manslaughter for
stabbing someone there is no practical joke you can ever think of that would end up with a murder conviction because the intention of stabbing someone is much greater than the intention of leaving a sword poking up out of a staircase...

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t think...

HUTCHBACK

There’s no way anybody would get done for murder for that.

DR. NOSTRUM

...not that our legal advisor...

HUTCHBACK

They wouldn’t get done for anything.

DR. NOSTRUM

...not that our legal advisor is here, but I have a feeling that stabbing someone and not meaning to kill them isn’t manslaughter..

HUTCHBACK

It is manslaughter.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, no, it’s attempted murder.

HUTCHBACK

No, it’s manslaughter. Because if they die, the often get done for manslaughter.

DR. NOSTRUM

Really?

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

Oh.

HUTCHBACK
Like that guy..

DR. NOSTRUM

So there’s no point in trying to figure out where practical jokes become murder cause they never will.

HUTCHBACK

That’s true. (thinks) No, no, pushing someone off a cliff is murder.

DR. NOSTRUM

But what’s the difference between that and stabbing them?

HUTCHBACK

No, because...

DR. NOSTRUM

(gets it) Oh! Because you know it’s going to kill them

HUTCHBACK

...because you know that if you push someone off a cliff it’ll kill
them.

DR. NOSTRUM

But only at some deep level, so, maybe there is a point, there is somewhere between the cliff and the bucket of nails?

HUTCHBACK

It’s how high.

DR. NOSTRUM

How high the cliff is.

HUTCHBACK

You can actually measure it on how high the cliff is; at what point you know the drop will be enough to probably kill them. See, that’s it. That’s exactly how you work out the difference between a practical joke and..

DR. NOSTRUM

That would be some court case.

HUTCHBACK

It’s the height of a cliff.

DR. NOSTRUM

Ok.

HUTCHBACK

It’ll be the height of the cliff. I’m pleased with that.

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s one. What else is there?

HUTCHBACK

One what?

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s one..

HUTCHBACK

..Prediction for 2009!

DR. NOSTRUM

Practical Jokes will appear as a new category of Homicide under the Law commission review.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah

DR. NOSTRUM

There you go.

HUTCHBACK

And murders will be rated in cliff height.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, no, it’s not that. It’s the height of the cliff defense.

HUTCHBACK

Ok, so also, the other one will be the, er, the weight of the big black weight thing that you balance on the door. Up to 5 kilos and over 5 kilos it’s murder.

DR. NOSTRUM

So then it becomes ‘The Practical Joke Defense’?

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

“My client didn’t know...

HUTCHBACK

...that the weight would kill him.” Yeah. It was just done as a joke...

DR. NOSTRUM

“...he’d seen on television a one ton weight falling..

HUTCHBACK

That’s it, “He’d been watching a Tom and Jerry cartoon earlier in the week...”

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, “...where Tom survived several..

HUTCHBACK

“...and seen Tom survived several one ton weights being dropped on him.”

DR. NOSTRUM

“And didn’t realise the one ton weight was hollow.”

HUTCHBACK

Huh?

DR. NOSTRUM

Didn’t realise the one ton weight was hollow.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, “didn’t realise it was a drawing.”

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, yeah, but even the real life ones.

HUTCHBACK

They did a real life Tom and Jerry?

DR. NOSTRUM

No! You know those sketch shows where they drop a huge one ton.. you know, the old Monty Python’s.

HUTCHBACK

Oh, Yeah. “He was watching Monty Python and didn’t realise the giant foot...

DR. NOSTRUM

No, not the cartoon, the real one!

HUTCHBACK

Yeah alright. No, they must’ve had one where they had a real giant foot falling on them, didn’t they?

DR. NOSTRUM

No, I don’t think so, feet were too difficult.

HUTCHBACK

The feet were too difficult back then, back in those days.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah. Well, there’s one prediction.

HUTCHBACK

One prediction for 2009.

All Talk 53 - A Gap In The Murder Business

DR. NOSTRUM

So, your idea for a Dragon’s Den business is good, you know, murdering.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah

DR. NOSTRUM

I like it, he comes in with someone and he murders them, you know, he kills them, the panel say “Well, it’s very efficient, it’s quite good.” And he says “Well, I can do a lot of it.”

HUTCHBACK

Yeah “But what kind of annual turnover do you think you can get out of that?” “Well, I reckon I could charge 10 grand...”

DR. NOSTRUM

Mm

HUTCHBACK

“...10 grand’s a reasonable amount for a murder, depending on the, you know, er, the difficulty, maybe up to 30. I reckon I could do one a night, maybe two a night.”

DR. NOSTRUM

I like your two-fer, you know, 9 and you get the 10th one free.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, and then, “Yeah, we have a loyalty scheme. If someone has had me murder 9 people, you get the 10th one free.”

DR. NOSTRUM

Or if you do a family?

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, “If you do a big family, we’ll...

DR. NOSTRUM

..throw in the Grandma

HUTCHBACK

...throw in the children.” Yeah, “throw in the Grandma.”

DR. NOSTRUM

We’ve got, er...

HUTCHBACK

“Maybe witnesses?”

DR. NOSTRUM

There’s that thing, you know, having watched the programme, one of the things the really don’t like is when they ask them weel, what is the money for? You know, they ask them to break down the money and he says “Well, you know I’d want 30 grand out of that for me..” and they hate that and they’re “So you want me to pay you, just to pay you to live? I’m not putting any money into the business...”

HUTCHBACK

What about the marketing?

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah all that, “I hate that selfishness in people, you want to take my money, my children’s money...” That fucking Theo Paphites, yeah, I’m sure he’s giving his children money every saying “This is your money that I’m not giving to people on Dragon’s Den.”

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, they’re saying “So you’re not putting any money into your equipment, you know, you’re starting off with a knife. How much volume can you get with that? Surely you want to be expanding your operation, going into machine guns...”

DR. NOSTRUM

Taking on apprentices.

HUTCHBACK

...yeah, “taking on staff...”

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, for the British market, those business ideas are good...

HUTCHBACK

“How are you going to franchise it? You need to franchise it out” We want to be able to get the hat, the bag...

DR. NOSTRUM

You know, the person that’s pitching, you’d pixilated their face. You’d do it properly. Re-animating dead people’s not a bad one.

HUTCHBACK

Hmm.

DR. NOSTRUM

It’s not a business idea though. Murdering’s a good business idea.

HUTCHBACK

It’s good.

DR. NOSTRUM

Assassins. It’s a business.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah. “But rather than just being a hired murderer, we’re intending to give a full service. 24 hour hotline...” you know all that.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah.

HUTCHBACK

“Money back guarantee, service with a smile.”

DR. NOSTRUM

Mm.

HUTCHBACK

I reckon that would be quite a good business.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, I think it is a good business. Probably, it is a good business.

HUTCHBACK

Sure.

DR. NOSTRUM

What other businesses are there like that? Whore house I s’pose?

HUTCHBACK

Prostitution, yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

Porn films?

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well bringing someone on and murdering them’s a good pitch. “I enjoyed your presentation.”

HUTCHBACK

“It was a very arresting presentation.”

DR. NOSTRUM

“We like you as a person.”

HUTCHBACK

Yeah. “I’d hire you, but I don’t think your projections are in any way realistic. How you think you can value your business at 2 million pounds is beyond me. Go away, do your sums, kill a few more people, get a bit better at it...”

DR. NOSTRUM

Some publicity.

HUTCHBACK

“...get your advertising right, then come back.” “You’re telling me people aren’t just going to go out and murder their own victims, see, that’s where it all falls apart.”

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, “Why should they come to you?”

HUTCHBACK

“Why should they come to you? Surely any murderous thug would go out and kill their own victim?”

DR. NOSTRUM

Mm. It is cheaper. But there are pitfalls. So, you know, that’s probably one of the advantages of the business, if you can point out how you keep the identity of the client completely anonymous...

HUTCHBACK

Mm

DR. NOSTRUM

“Oh, no, it works, because we don’t know the identity of the client.” That probably would be a good idea, in terms of murdering, if you don’t know who’s asking you to kill someone. Why don’t they do that in films? That’s where it always falls down, that the murderer knows who it is who’s hired them.

HUTCHBACK

No, that isn’t where it falls down. It falls down because usually the person being murdered has some connection with the person doing the murdering.

DR. NOSTRUM

But, what if you set up a business for just random murders?

HUTCHBACK

Random murders?! Just go out and murder someone just for fun? Just for fun? Yeah, that would work, but, a bit pointless really. It’s like, basically, “Are you a homicidal maniac? Yes? To scared to do your own murder, then come to us. We’ll do it for you. We’ll kill a random person...

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s right.

HUTCHBACK

...and it will never get back to you. We’ll just send you the video”.

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s probably a business.

HUTCHBACK

And that’s your business.

DR. NOSTRUM

See, that’s an advance on Assassination and it’s quite current.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

You present it as a vicarious pleasure business.

HUTCHBACK

Mm. Mm.

DR. NOSTRUM

I’m not sure about posting the video to someone. I think you’d probably want to leave it. No, but they’d want to know you did it.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

Otherwise you could just sit there with the money.

HUTCHBACK

No, you could just put it up on YouTube.

DR. NOSTRUM

YouTube? That’s alright.

HUTCHBACK

Perfect.

DR. NOSTRUM

And if you cut at the right moment, there’s nothing criminal about it.

HUTCHBACK

(witheringly) Except the person on the video then was found dead somewhere.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but that’s alright. Well, no, I suppose it’s not alright.

HUTCHBACK

(mimicking) “That’s alright, we can get around that.” No, well, what you do then, is get some other random person to put the video up on YouTube, via another random person. So you’re just paying someone to pay someone to put a video up on YouTube. And they don’t know what the video’s of.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but I remember Inspector Quantum saying that, apart from the most important thing in Homeland Security being the quality of the Airbed you’ve got, all that jealousy going on in Homeland Security about whether you’ve got a foot-pump or a compressor for you air bed..

HUTCHBACK

Well, it’s very important.

DR. NOSTRUM

It is very important, when you’re trying to keep peace in the world. It’s either terrifying or very reassuring to think that the people trying to kill us are the same as Inspector Quantum, I’m not sure which. Anyway, no, random murdering, he was saying that that is where it falls down, that mostly they know, people know the people they kill...

HUTCHBACK

Mm.

DR. NOSTRUM

...and it’s easier to catch them because of that. But if you don’t know who you’re hiring and you don’t know who they’re killing, that is not bad. That’s not a bad premise for a business.

HUTCHBACK

I think we’ve got a business there.

All Talk 51 - Josef Frtizl's Dungeon Incest Community Legacy

DR. NOSTRUM

I was thinking, in good taste actually, that bloke in Austria who, er, imprisoned his daughter and had kids by her, er, that there must be a lot of people out there with their children imprisoned who they’ve had kids with, they’re sitting in fear. Cause you know, with the Austrians saying, “This can never happen again!” they’re thinking, you know, “Blimey, they’re starting to catch us.”

HUTCHBACK

Yup.

DR. NOSTRUM

Can you imagine the internal panic of the people out there who are doing this, knowing one of their brethren got caught. Who else would it actually bother? I don’t think it’ll bother anyone else that he got caught.

HUTCHBACK

Yes. But, unfortunately the police weren’t really on the case.

DR. NOSTRUM

I don’t see how they could have been on the case though.

HUTCHBACK

No, unfortunately they weren’t on the case. The fact that they, um, neglected to, um..

DR. NOSTRUM
(he’s forgotten to honour HUTCHBACK’s rule to remove all shoes in the cellar) Do you have to take your shoes off if you sit still?

HUTCHBACK

Yes. They.. the fact that they neglected to do any kind of surveillance on the ‘Dungeon Children Support Group’ that he ran...

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah.

HUTCHBACK

...you know, like a social club...

DR. NOSTRUM

Social experiment.

HUTCHBACK

...Social club for people who like imprisoning their children...

DR. NOSTRUM

See, I imagine there is a network.

HUTCHBACK

...and then meet up every, er, couple of months...

DR. NOSTRUM

And have a wife swap parties.

HUTCHBACK

...and swap children; children swapping parties. You know, here’s the keys to my dungeon, you give me the keys to.. Yeah, just basically you have a bowl and, um, you pick the keys out of the bowl and that’s the cellar you go to that night. They probably have them.

(long pause)

DR. NOSTRUM

Odd thing to do...

HUTCHBACK

Yeah.

DR. NOSTRUM

...in some ways, you know, really. I was thinking that maybe what it was, was that the guy just couldn’t, er, kill them, so he had to keep them alive...

DR. NOSTRUM

He couldn’t bring himself to kill them...

DR. NOSTRUM

No. that’s what I was thinking.

HUTCHBACK

...cause he was..

DR. NOSTRUM

Too kind.

HUTCHBACK

He was too kind. Too nice. He was just that little bit too nice.

DR. NOSTRUM

He couldn’t go the whole hog. Cause M said to me that she couldn’t think of anything worse, but, of course it could have been a lot worse, (pause for thought) you know, it can always be worse. That’s the lesson, it can always be worse.

HUTCHBACK

Everything. Anything. No matter how bad something is, there’s always something worse.

DR. NOSTRUM

That’s right.

HUTCHBACK

What’s the worst..

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, you get a lot of time for contemplation, er, in those circumstances, I suppose, the girl.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah. You know, you’re living with, basically, er, a group of incest born half-wits..

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, we don’t know that, they might be very smart.

HUTCHBACK

No, but probably...

DR. NOSTRUM

Troglodytes.

HUTCHBACK

Troglodytes, who can’t speak, who are your children, you know. (the DOCTOR chuckles) You know, it’s kind of (pause) Anthropology. It’s like living Anthropology.

DR. NOSTRUM

Actually, the picture of the guy, he does look evil. He had killers eyes...

HUTCHBACK

Yeah

DR. NOSTRUM

...like the Pope, er, except he wasn’t a killer so there’s a lie there, somewhere.

HUTCHBACK

He had Dungeon Master’s Eyes.

DR. NOSTRUM

Dungeon Master’s Eyes. He had a good head of hair though

HUTCHBACK

He had a fine moustache...

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah

HUTCHBACK

...and a good head of hair. In fact, his daughter might have fancied him in different circumstances, you never know.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, if he was a younger man, (pause) well, he was once.

HUTCHBACK

Yeah, when she was a younger girl.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, but tastes change.

HUTCHBACK

Well, when you get to a certain age a good head of hair...

DR. NOSTRUM

Important. No, but I thought...

HUTCHBACK

...it’s quite a plus point.

DR. NOSTRUM

No, but the thing is, he just ran out of steam, the guy. If he’d have just persisted for another 10 years, he’d have been dead and no-one would have known.

HUTCHBACK

They'd have all...

DR. NOSTRUM

Rotted...

HUTCHBACK

...starved to death.

DR. NOSTRUM

...starved to death and no-one would have known, ever, until they dug it up, like that school in Jersey. Oh, no, lots of people knew about that.

HUTCHBACK

They all just kept it quiet. Yeah, well, ok, there you go.

DR. NOSTRUM

So, there we go.

HUTCHBACK

Life’s a big shit sandwich, sprinkled with urine.

DR. NOSTRUM

Not pleasant really; comedy out of misery, but...

HUTCHBACK

No, but all comedy comes from misery.

DR. NOSTRUM

Yeah, and do you think the more miserable it is, the funnier it is?

HUTCHBACK

No. In our case, no.

DR. NOSTRUM

Well, whose case would it be yes?

HUTCHBACK

Well, let’s say...

DR. NOSTRUM

If you were a Nazi party comedian making great humor out of when you pulled out the teeth of your former friends...