Category Archives: Timology

Happy 150th Birthday London Underground

So, London Underground is 150 years old today… despite the drivers, the striking (get it…) thing about this feat of engineering is still its sheer breadth and beauty.

There is a really good birthday article in today’s Guardian (and it must be good for me to recommend it from the Gurinad) that you can read here. There is also a fascinating website all about those disused stations and odd turnings that trains no longer use here. The site is not brilliant, but the content is really impressive!

However, I can’t recommend highly enough this blog. Basically to celebrate the 150 years of the underground this chap has listed and photographed his 150 favourite bits of the network. Its a really impressive selection and images, and serves to highlight just what a wacky and wonderful creation it all is…

My current favourite image is this one from South Ken Station… it’s so evocative of the museum quarter of london that I love so dearly, and I entirely agree with him that “Everything about this entrance, the layout, the lettering, the curve of the pillars, the curl of the brackets, screams – or rather sighs – breezy elegance!”

kensington-005

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London Tank

I have just found this brilliant photograph of a Soviet T-34 tank, that can be found, of all places, on Mandela Way in Bermondsey, South London. 

Leaving any ‘Only Fools and Horses’ jokes about Mandela Way aside, the tank was an elaborate 32-ton gift one father gave to his seven year old son… some toy! Local legend also has it that the tank was installed by a disgruntled landowner who had apparently lost a planning battle with the local council. The council once tried to have the tank removed from the wasteland it occupies, believing it had been dumped, but then found out that the son owns the rights to the land as well as the tank! The tank’s gun sights are also rumoured to be set on the council offices, 

Only slightly more mundane rumours tell how the tank took part in the bloody Prague Spring of 1968 before it was imported to London to be used in the 1995 film version of Richard III before being abandoned on wasteland.

I want a tank for Christmas now!Image

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Young and in love? Eat LARD

It’s that time of year again; middle Britain gets all doe eyed about this year’s overly smug John Lewis Christmas advert, and ASDA are encouraging us to buy an even larger water filled festive turkey … yep, it’s the start of the Christmas advertisement season. Joy. (The more observant of you might just be able to sense my unbridled enthusiasm for all this…)

Anyhow, and humbug aside, this gem from the ‘British Lard Marketing Board’ has to be one of the worst advertising campaign ever…. are they drinking lard?

And for those of you who just can’t wait for Christmas, here is the British Lard Marketing Board’s seasonal merchandise offers… I bet you would just love a lard themed pair of boxer shorts…

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Guess who Friday

Look! Colour photographs! (a novelty on this blog…) but for your weekly instalment of of the marginally popular ‘Guess Who Friday’ try to guess who has a special birthday!

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The last Survivor of the Battle of Trafalgar

I want to tell you briefely about this wonderful image I came across last night; its a photo of a Frenchman, and a Frenchman who fought the British, but let’s not let that get in the way of a good tale; he was quite a remarkable man, if only for his longevity.

Emmanuel Louis Cartigny was born at Hyères on 1 September 1791 and died there on 21 March 1892. He was the last survivor of the Battle of Trafalgar which, as any good history student will tell you, was fought on 21 October 1805… think of Nelson and “kiss me, Hardy!” (oh, and ignore all that populist Victorian nonsense about “Kismet [fate] Hardy!” it is total nonsense… anyway, we digress…)

During the battle he fought on the side of the French Empire, under the command of Napoleon Bonaparte, against the British. Queen Victoria even visited Hyères between 21 March and 25 April 1892, when she stayed at the Grand Hôtel de Costebelle. In the photograph below, taken circa 1891 by Henry Ellis, he wears a small black cap and supports his right hand on a cane. He wears two medals including the Legion d’honneur. The image is in the Royal Collection, and therefore belongs to the Queen (who I doubt reads this blog, and I hope will not mind me reproducing the image…)

To think that a self confessed “old codger” named Sam Ledward is still alive and living in Wales at the grand old age of 106, this makes the Battle of Trafalgar only just beyond one step of living memory. (Leward must have been born in 1906, only 14 years after Cartigny died.) You can read more about the escapades of the “man who was declared dead in 1936” here.

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Guess Who Friday II

“Too easy!” they cry… (well, one of them whimpers …) “More! More!” is the call from the struggling internet hubs…

Ok, so; Who is on the piano… and who else is ‘on’ the piano? [rubs hands with fiendishly cunning hand cream.]

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Guess Who Friday

Hello, and welcome to this week’s installation of the ever (marginally) popular ‘Tim’s Guess Who Friday!’

Last week you had an easy young JFK offering… this week should be a touch harder.

Who are these famous figures standing in front of the Lincoln Memorial?

And for your bonus points, can you tell me who was standing in the exact same spot about ten minutes before this photograph was taken?

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Rowan Williams ‘Dancing the Worm’

Nope, it’t not an euphemism. It is actually the Archbishop of Canterbury dancing Hip-Hop style… perhaps Hip-Op would be more appropriate, but its been amusing me all weekend.

Rowan Dancing

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Guess Who Friday

It’s time the the next round of “Guess Who Friday!” … can you name this well know figure?

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Well said that man…

Tim Shriver's avatarThe World of Special Olympics

The following is a guest post in the form of an open letter from Special Olympics athlete and global messenger John Franklin Stephens to Ann Coulter after this tweet during last night’s Presidential debate.

Dear Ann Coulter,

Come on Ms. Coulter, you aren’t dumb and you aren’t shallow.  So why are you continually using a word like the R-word as an insult?

I’m a 30 year old man with Down syndrome who has struggled with the public’s perception that an intellectual disability means that I am dumb and shallow.  I am not either of those things, but I do process information more slowly than the rest of you.  In fact it has taken me all day to figure out how to respond to your use of the R-word last night.

I thought first of asking whether you meant to describe the President as someone who was bullied as a child…

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