Originally posted by Stillhomewardbound
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Osborn
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Originally posted by Stillhomewardbound View Post
My best buy has been the excellent 'Private Schultz' (Jack Pulman's wonderful comedy drama with Ian Richardson and Michael Elphick - 1981) for £4.50 from Amazon, ...
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"Private Schultz"
I would easily have payed top dollar for it myself. There's a ropey clip version of the 1st episode on You Tube which is a real tease, because you know the entire thing has to be watched in its entirety.
Richardson is astonishing and his performance far out-ranks House of Cards in my opinion but the meat of the piece has to be Jack Pulmans superb writing.
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Anna
I said upthread that I really find it hard to get my head around labels and 'must-have' brands and have just seen today the mayhem and violence that a re-issue of some Nike trainers have caused in the US. Unbelievable that people are so indoctrinated that somehow owning a pair of these will make their lives ......... better or somehow ..... not sure of the right word ........ meaningful? It's worth being pepper sprayed or tasered for these?
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handsomefortune
oh dear....or is this 'news' part of an extended marketing campaign, the incidents in the news story hyped, emphasising that 'these old plastic pumps are very popular....look at the mayhem they're causing'?
It's worth being pepper sprayed or tasered for these?
probably .....if you can then stick your pumps on ebay at a big mark up. odd to think of them as a currency though! better or somehow ..... not sure of the right word ..........temporarily a bit richer probably covers it.
stick to your yellow wellies anna
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI have never owned a pair of trainers, this makes me a very sad person I think. I just prefer leather
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scottycelt
Originally posted by mangerton View PostNo, not at all, Anna. I've never seen the sense in paying exorbitant prices to advertise so called "designer" goods plastered with makers' logos. In my day, trainers hadn't been invented. We wore sandshoes - "sannies" in the local vernacular.
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostIndeed ... when I first moved South I could never quite grasp why so many of my English colleagues announced they were off to grab a tennis shoe for lunch ...
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostYes, plimsolls were called daps when I was growing up in Wiltshire.
One reads in Wiki: "In the UK plimsolls were compulsory in schools' physical education lessons. Regional terms are common: in Northern Ireland and central Scotland they are sometimes known as gutties; "sannies" (from 'sand shoe') is also used in Scotland. In London and the home counties and much of the West Midlands and north west of England they are known as "pumps". In parts of the West Country and Wales they are known as "daps" or "dappers". There is a widespread belief that "daps" is taken from a factory sign - "Dunlop Athletic Plimsoles" which was called "the DAP factory". However, this seems unlikely as the first citation in the Oxford English Dictionary of "dap" for a rubber soled shoe is a March 1924 use in the Western Daily Press newspaper; Dunlop did not acquire the Liverpool Rubber Company (as part of the merger with the Macintosh group of companies) until 1925."
I love that sort of stuff...
Right, on with the Xmas motley...Last edited by Nick Armstrong; 25-12-11, 09:55."...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View Post... "In the UK plimsolls were compulsory in schools' physical education lessons. Regional terms are common: in Northern Ireland and central Scotland they are sometimes known as gutties; "sannies" (from 'sand shoe') is also used in Scotland. In London and the home counties and much of the West Midlands and north west of England they are known as "pumps". In parts of the West Country and Wales they are known as "daps" or "dappers". / ... / ."
I love that sort of stuff...
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Anna
Originally posted by vinteuil View PostI wonder if the regional divisions between names for plimsolls coincide with those for the different regional playground terms for 'truce'? - My mother, a Londoner, used 'fainites' - but in Wiltshire is was 'creases'. Any other regional variants?
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