28th October
Work again today. The quality of these blogs has taken a serious nosedive and I'm afraid it's going to get worse. If the last two days are anything to go by, I will lack the time or energy to write anything of real substance. There are two issues really. One, nothing tremendously eventful takes place. Two, talking about my new place of employment in depth is probably unwise.
My neck hurts. My back hurts. I feel about a million years old. I'm waiting for news of Manchester United's league cup tie against Middlesbrough, after watching an utterly dull Liverpool victory over Bournemouth. As I write, it's 0-0 in the second half of extra time and simply want it to come to an end. EDIT: It went to penalties. United lost 3-1. Tremendous. Wayne Rooney was one of the players who missed. He turned 30 at the weekend and I increasingly fear that he is an example of nominative determanism
I watched the video of Sonic Boom Six's new single "No Man, No Right" this morning. It's a bouncy, fun ska tune that raises some salient points about the experiences of women in society. Based on the comments underneath and the discussion on SB6's Facebook page, there are some who disagree. The band have a long history of innovative, intelligent work and am of the opinion that good art provokes debate. Decide for yourself here. There is a lot of new music out that I want to review and hopefully I'll get round to it soon.
My neck hurts. My back hurts. I feel about a million years old. I'm waiting for news of Manchester United's league cup tie against Middlesbrough, after watching an utterly dull Liverpool victory over Bournemouth. As I write, it's 0-0 in the second half of extra time and simply want it to come to an end. EDIT: It went to penalties. United lost 3-1. Tremendous. Wayne Rooney was one of the players who missed. He turned 30 at the weekend and I increasingly fear that he is an example of nominative determanism
I watched the video of Sonic Boom Six's new single "No Man, No Right" this morning. It's a bouncy, fun ska tune that raises some salient points about the experiences of women in society. Based on the comments underneath and the discussion on SB6's Facebook page, there are some who disagree. The band have a long history of innovative, intelligent work and am of the opinion that good art provokes debate. Decide for yourself here. There is a lot of new music out that I want to review and hopefully I'll get round to it soon.
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