Originally posted by Mr Pee
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The Queen's Jubilee
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amateur51
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Originally posted by vinteuil View PostRoyalists are tiresome. Ardent republicans are tiresome.
But in the end the Royalists are more tiresome.
Lordy, this royal family we have is so boring....
Originally posted by Norfolk Born View Post. If you don't approve of the Jubilee celebrations, why don't you organize your own festivities -
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Originally posted by Norfolk Born View PostIn a Top Ten of unedifying discussions, the one being conducted on this thread will surely rank very high. If you don't approve of the Jubilee celebrations, why don't you organize your own festivities - I'm sure the more reasonable among us will refrain from using it as an excuse for the sort of childish ad hominem outbursts that have regrettably become a feature of this thread.
Originally posted by antongould View PostNow that is posh - you had friends who in 1953 had a telly. We didn't even have friends who had electricity!
and
Originally posted by Ariosto View Post... I played gramophone records (remember those?) and then skulked around outside with a bottle of gin.Originally posted by teamsaint View PostStill looking a pretty good plan for the upcoming events..."...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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All these memories of the Coronation are frightfully suburban ! I watched it on a Philips projection TV, the first of its kind, at MGM's incomplete new offices in St James's Street. My dad and are were in the company of a very noisy bunch of Americans, but they did put on a good lunch. We watched the procession from the windows overlooking the street, and the ceremony in a small viewing room.
I was very monarchistic at 17 years old, and as the Americans treated the whole event as celebrity entertainment with sublime disregard to its solemnity, this annoyed me.
Nowadays I can see that they may have been in advance of their time. In some respects the most exciting sight was the newspaper sellers pushing through the crowds with the news that Everest had been climbed, and this gave me an ambition to see it at close range, if not climb it, and that has been fulfilled.
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Ariosto
Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostAll these memories of the Coronation are frightfully suburban ! I watched it on a Philips projection TV, the first of its kind, at MGM's incomplete new offices in St James's Street. My dad and are were in the company of a very noisy bunch of Americans, but they did put on a good lunch. We watched the procession from the windows overlooking the street, and the ceremony in a small viewing room.
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Originally posted by Norfolk Born View PostIn a Top Ten of unedifying discussions, the one being conducted on this thread will surely rank very high. If you don't approve of the Jubilee celebrations, why don't you organize your own festivities - I'm sure the more reasonable among us will refrain from using it as an excuse for the sort of childish ad hominem outbursts that have regrettably become a feature of this thread.
I need a good laugh asmid these dispiriting times. Goodness knows, if I didn't have discussions like this to cheer me up, I'd probably go and withdraw all my money from the bank!
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm finding it enormous fun!
I need a good laugh asmid these dispiriting times. Goodness knows, if I didn't have discussions like this to cheer me up, I'd probably go and withdraw all my money from the bank!"...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 Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI remember my father buying a television just before the Coronation. It cost around £90 - a fortune in those days. The entire street crowded into our small house. I was only 3, but I remember the visitors - not the broadcast itself.
*This should probably be on the geek page, but it was the Sobell T143 shown here: http://www.thevalvepage.com/tvmanu/sobell/sobell.htm
It cost £72 - 9 - 0. As EA has pointed out, that was a lot of money in those days.
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Originally posted by mangerton View Post*This should probably be on the geek page, but it was the Sobell T143 shown here: http://www.thevalvepage.com/tvmanu/sobell/sobell.htm
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThat's interesting. I think we had a Bush model, but one of the Pye models looks more like ours as I remember it.
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