Originally posted by Stanfordian
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Originally posted by Boilk View PostGreat! I'm going to brush up by listening to the NMC discs, which haven't been spun for some years. I certainly hope there'll be a Radio 3 broadcast. BBC Four showed The Minotaur when it was done (and recently George Benjamin's newest opera), so fingers crossed for Orpheus.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostA hotel is Tenerife has had to close because 95% of its room were contracted to Thomas Cook. What were its owners thinking of when they entered into that deal?
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostA hotel is Tenerife has had to close because 95% of its room were contracted to Thomas Cook. What were its owners thinking of when they entered into that deal?
But I'm not sure that we are in a position to criticise poor decisions that have adverse economic consequences...
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostA hotel is Tenerife has had to close because 95% of its room were contracted to Thomas Cook. What were its owners thinking of when they entered into that deal?
Easy to be wise after the event.
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London is often described as a soulless, unfriendly place, where no one has any time for their fellow beings. I have to say that I have not in general found that to be the case - though doubtless it was back in the day - but that, on the contrary, more often than not a smile elicits similar from passing strangers, and staff in retailers. From my experience around here, I am certain this is not merely a requirement of their employment, but genuine warmth ... and it extends even to the big megastores. People remember: "It is two, as usual?" asks Luba, the Ukraineian woman on what I call the Lottery counter, referring to my vapes.
These people deal with thousands of stony-faced customers every day. Take just now. In the local Sainsbury's a woman behind me in the checkout queue asked unbidden if I always used a shopping list. I answered in the affirmative, adding that I kept a wodge of old paper strips by the kitchen door clipped topgether for listing items I needed to remember on my next shopping trip. "Sainsbury's and other supermarket bills used to serve well for the purpose", I said, "until they all started printing them on the back as well as the front". At which point the checkout lady said, "Oh that's no problem; here you are, love", pressing a button on the machine that delivers the bill to unfurl a couple of metres of unprinted invoice, which she then tore off and handed to me!
I have a theory - which I won't bore you with the details - that London has actually become a more friendly city as it has become more multiculturalised.
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Nah. When I were a lad, in Penge, the front door was always off the latch during the day and flok would be in and out all day. There was always a cup of tea ready when the coalman or Corona lorry turned up. Perhaps there have been fallow years in between, having moved out of London in the late '50s, but I have always found a smile tends to get reciprocated, no matter where (even in Yorkshire ).
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostNah. When I were a lad, in Penge, the front door was always off the latch during the day and flok would be in and out all day. There was always a cup of tea ready when the coalman or Corona lorry turned up. Perhaps there have been fallow years in between, having moved out of London in the late '50s, but I have always found a smile tends to get reciprocated, no matter where (even in Yorkshire ).
People here MUCH friendlier than where I used to live.
If you smiled at someone there, they probably thought you'd escaped from somewhere and should be put back inside!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostCruel!
People here MUCH friendlier than where I used to live.
If you smiled at someone there, they probably thought you'd escaped from somewhere and should be put back inside!
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