Is the Guardian worse than it used to be?

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Reynard's right about the amount of trivial toss that gets in there. Mark's also right about the decline of the newspaper in general. Reynard's spot on re. New Labour - the Guardian's frequent criticism of some Blairite attitudes is one of the great things about it.

There's a lot of irritating stuff, yes. My favourite columnist is George Monbiot, by a mile. Something I like about the Independent when I do get it is that its liberalism is less metropolitan and more about the common good. Needless to say, though, the Guardian's series of articles on public service under that very title were awesome.

The Hemulen Who Loved Silence, Friday, 6 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

OK, agree with the Hemulen re. The Common Good.

Today's G2 seems designed to add fuel to my (f)ire: one page of 'Style' after another, including a column on Why We're So Disappointed That Madonna Employs A Stylist.

the pinefox, Friday, 6 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Although Toynbee's piece on Labour post-election is admirable.

blue veils and golden sands, Friday, 6 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Broadly I agree with her, yes. It feels a wee bit ironic given her immediately-pre-election pieces telling everyone how urgent it was to overcome apathy and vote for the people she's now criticizing. (But actually I think she was right both times.)

Also good in Guardian: John Patterson re. cinema.

the pinefox, Friday, 6 July 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

six years pass...

oh god, ask hadley today is just... tooth-grinding.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:17 (sixteen years ago) link

"today"

Dom Passantino, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:17 (sixteen years ago) link

"At what age is a man too old to wear band T-shirts?"

Martin McCall, by email

"About 15 - that young enough for you, Martin? And to follow one rhetorical question with several more, what in God's name is the point of band T-shirts anyway? To show your allegiance to a band? Do you think anyone else cares? To impress onlookers with your esoteric musical knowledge? See previous reply. To make people stare at your bony chest? Again, I refer you to the first answer. To show that you once attended a live gig? Wow, like, a pair of golden headsets to the guy in the Nirvana '91 T-shirt. In case you happen to bump into the lead singer on the street, he sees that the two of you are kindred souls and therefore invites you to join his band and you then go on the road and have all the manly bonding sessions followed by groupies that your heart could desire? OK, I'll give you that one, although this does suggest that you still harbour the fantasy that you might bump into Joey Ramone in Waterstone's.

"As for ladies in band T-shirts, give me a fricking break. First, gals, a badly cut, poorly made, oversized T-shirt is good for nothing other than wearing to bed and the gym. Second, too often women who wear band T-shirts appear to be going for what we shall call Groupie Chic. It is a style amply modelled by Kate Moss in recent years, and can pretty much be summed up as skinny faded black jeans, ankle boots, a ripped band T-shirt and a cropped fur jacket. In other words, a girlified version of Marc Bolan's or Keith Richards' wardrobe, as though the woman has been so busy, um, sleeping on the band bus she hasn't had time to clean her clothes, so she's now wearing ones belonging to her musical companion. This column has no time for such nonsense."

Tracer Hand, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:19 (sixteen years ago) link

Yeah, because women have *no* interest in music whatsoever except for sleeping with musicians. What CENTURY is this cretin from?

Masonic Boom, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:21 (sixteen years ago) link

I think I stopped wearing band T-shirts by the time I was 23. It wasn't necessarily a conscious move tho. I doubt I will ever wear one again tho - I guess it seems lame unless it's an old obscure or overlooked thus hip act (even this I dunno about). I don't notice many people over 20 wearing them. Does Matt DC still have that Save Ferris T?

I only want to sleep with musicians if they are hot as they are (their musical ability is pretty irrelevant in fact).

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:29 (sixteen years ago) link

dear teh grauniad - a long time ago/we used to be friends...

CharlieNo4, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:32 (sixteen years ago) link

It went downhill after I left.

Dom Passantino, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:33 (sixteen years ago) link

or were you PUSHED?

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:35 (sixteen years ago) link

i was being harsh really. i don't care what's on other people's t-shirts that much. just trying to work out why i stopped wearing/wouldn't wear band t-shirts myself.

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:37 (sixteen years ago) link

Any t-shirt which isn't plain white clearly sucks that's why.

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:38 (sixteen years ago) link

i couldn't agree less

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:40 (sixteen years ago) link

I still wear band t-shirts if I like the band. Why not? I don't *define* myself or my personality by my music tastes any more, I haven't done that since I was about 18. But that's not the same thing as wearing a band t-shirt.

I suppose the fashion journalist in discussion cannot fathom the idea that clothes are just something you put on, rather than a definition of or statement about your personality.

This is definitely something that happens as you age - or rather, has happened to me as I aged. There's a subtle difference between Statement Clothes and just things you put on.

Masonic Boom, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:40 (sixteen years ago) link

Guardian editorial worldview circa 2007:

http://www.astucia.co.uk/images/sce/galibier%20tunnel%20_three.jpg

tissp, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:41 (sixteen years ago) link

why else would you buy a band t-shirt if not as a statement or definition of personality?

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:44 (sixteen years ago) link

I didn't know it was a band t-shirt okay?

Matt DC, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:45 (sixteen years ago) link

because you're cold xp

tissp, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:45 (sixteen years ago) link

In the past I've usually just bought them as a keepsake of a gig I've enjoyed. The piece tracer quotes is idiotic fluff, obv. I'd be embarrased to admit I'd written that.

Pashmina, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:46 (sixteen years ago) link

Because you like the design? Because you like the music? Because it was given to you (this is where most of mine come from)? Because it was a souvenier?

x-post

Masonic Boom, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:46 (sixteen years ago) link

you wouldn't actually buy a band t-shirt because you liked the design but not necessarily the band tho...would you?

because you like the music = statement/definition of you/your taste

given to you = not you buying

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:48 (sixteen years ago) link

you wouldn't actually buy a band t-shirt because you liked the design but not necessarily the band tho...would you?

No, plus I've only ever bought them @ gigs.

because you like the music = statement/definition of you/your taste

Probably yeah, but w/smaller bands there's also the knowledge that in buying it, yr helping to supposrt the tour.

Pashmina, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:50 (sixteen years ago) link

i actually bought a comets on fire t-shirt solely because the design was so awesome. (it was at a gig, but they hadn't come on stage yet.) then i heard the music and i liked that too. i suppose if i hadn't liked their music, or thought it was boring, it would have posed a problem.

a friend of mine, who shall remain nameless so that alex in nyc doesn't stalk and kill him, bought a huge iron maiden patch when he was 14 and sewed it across the shoulders of his denim jacket. he had never heard a note of iron maiden, but he wound up becoming the biggest iron maiden fan i know, and even sung in a band later, where his vocal style was almost inseparable from bruce dickinson's.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:53 (sixteen years ago) link

my take on this: do not read hadley freeman.

this resolution made some time ago, stands as strong today as it ever did.

it's a crass and deliberately invidious piece of writing. such an attitude, if sincerely held, could be turned around on pretty much ANY choice of clothing. so forgeddaboudit

Alan, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:53 (sixteen years ago) link

the last band t-shirt i bought - robyn!

alan i can't help myself, i know i'm sick and need help.

Tracer Hand, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:54 (sixteen years ago) link

is there a thread for best band t-shirts? must see

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:56 (sixteen years ago) link

Taste is something that I have. It does not define me. Clothes are something I wear. The statement I am making is "I don't really care about clothes any more."

If I'm going to make a statement about clothes, I'll wear a bright green paisley jacket to a dronerock festival where everyone else is in leather.

I suppose my Hawkwind t-shirt is a statement, it says "ha ha, I'm wearing a Hawkwind t-shirt, I care nothing for fashion, I am wearing the shirt of a band so deeply uncool you can suck my left one because I love them!" But it's certainly not a statement saying that I want to f*ck any of Hawkwind or that I have a musician boyfriend whose Hawkwind t-shirt I'm borrowing, which is the assumption of that article.

Masonic Boom, Monday, 3 September 2007 14:56 (sixteen years ago) link

> I don't notice many people over 20 wearing them.

*SOBS*

> you wouldn't actually buy a band t-shirt because you liked the design but not necessarily the band tho...would you?

EAR t-shirt with the putney on the front = great. EAR live = terrible. (EAR on CD = ok, plus pram and stereolab were supporting)

koogs, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:03 (sixteen years ago) link

"Do you think anyone else cares?"

the core MOTOR of fashion is YES OF COURSE I THINK OTHER PEOPLE CARE THAT I AM WEARING... WHAT'S "IN". no less dumb than wearing something else that forms part of your identity. so it's just a puerile throw away bit of nonsense. heh. fashion in 'being puerile' shocker.

Alan, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:05 (sixteen years ago) link

I gave up caring whether I was too old to wear band t-shirts or whatever a long time ago. Really, if you're getting that worked up about what other people are wearing, the joke's on you, I think. To paraphrase - "Do you think anyone else cares?"

Yesterday I wore an X-Ray Spex t-shirt. I am 31. Oh noes.

Colonel Poo, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:09 (sixteen years ago) link

If a FAC 51 Hacienda T-shirt counts as a band t-shirt, I am wearing one NOW. I am more than 31.

Dr.C, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:14 (sixteen years ago) link

Unless you buy shirts at arena shows or whatever they cost a tenner or less which is cheaper than t-shirts tend to be (aside from plain ones from Primark or something). I guess it bugs fashiony people cos it's fashion for people who don't give a shit about fashion

DJ Mencap, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:33 (sixteen years ago) link

you wouldn't actually buy a band t-shirt because you liked the design but not necessarily the band tho...would you?

whoa there, people do this All The Time! witness all the motorhead/def leppard/poison tees on sale at top shop/debenhams/whatever.

CharlieNo4, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:37 (sixteen years ago) link

What's a putney, Andy?

I bought a Mega City Four t-shirt the other week. I bought it cos I like the band and I like their logo, and out of nostalgia.

Mark C, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:44 (sixteen years ago) link

witness all the motorhead/def leppard/poison tees on sale at top shop/debenhams/whatever

really? since when do those shops sell (official?) band merchandise?

but how do you know people buying them don't like the band (even if it's 'ironic' or just liking the idea OF liking them, if that makes sense) anyway?

i can imagine some people, not just kids or people buying for kids, buy band t-shirts because of the design and without really knowing about the band but can't be that many really. this is even more of a facile 'want to look cool' statement tho isn't it? that sense of knowing what to buy but not really knowing why...

remember the 'little girls wearing Nico 'Chelsea Girl' t-shirt thing (altho i approved of this ha)

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 15:45 (sixteen years ago) link

Uhm yeah, there were tons of high street chains selling classic rock tees (I presume they just bought a load wholesale).

aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:00 (sixteen years ago) link

i figure these are aimed at and bought mainly by teenagers

blueski, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:07 (sixteen years ago) link

really? since when do those shops sell (official?) band merchandise?

since AGES, honestly. i doubt your "average" 14-year-old Miss Selfridge customer would have a clue/give a shit who Def Leppard/insert 80s hair metal band here are. it's just a noisy "cool" design that'll make her look a bit like Peaches Geldof or whoever.

I'm sure I remember even Primark licensing some lame/classic 80s band tee designs recently.

and As Matt DC has admitted, sometimes people buy band tees without even realising that's what they are!

CharlieNo4, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:10 (sixteen years ago) link

nb this whole discussion is clearly on the wrong thread.

CharlieNo4, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:11 (sixteen years ago) link

Someone was selling MC5 shirts a good few years ago and it was the only place that you could get MC5 shirts so I know loads of people that bought them as they had been desperate for years to get them.
I got mine online but it was probably the same shirt.

pfunkboy, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:14 (sixteen years ago) link

a putney

http://www.vintagesynth.com/misc/vcs3.jpg

zappi, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:14 (sixteen years ago) link

so called because they were made in putney (not far from you actually, there's a website that gives the actual address of the place they used to make them, cottage industry style, deodor road, sw15).

http://www.ems-synthi.demon.co.uk/snaps/everynun.jpg

koogs, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:43 (sixteen years ago) link

Hang on a second, I went to primary school at 49 Deodar Road!!

Mark C, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:49 (sixteen years ago) link

Oh, I didn't, it was 95-97 Deodar Road (since moved). My best friend at the time lived at 50 Deodar Road, though.

Mark C, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:50 (sixteen years ago) link

I've got a Synthi t-shirt but my god, I want a t-shirt with that nun on it.

Masonic Boom, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:52 (sixteen years ago) link

I am currently wearing a T-ahirt of a band that I saw live but didn't like much. It's a pretty design and the band aren't well known enough for many people to even know it's a band T-shirt.

I have had it on since yesterday so should probably take it off soon.

Alba, Tuesday, 4 September 2007 11:13 (sixteen years ago) link

xp lol just came here to post that.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 20 May 2024 14:18 (three weeks ago) link

So odd, what does she want to achieve by writing this piece.

xyzzzz__, Monday, 20 May 2024 14:20 (three weeks ago) link

xpost At 97!

So if she was 38 when they married, he would have been... 71!

His kids would likely have been around her own age.

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Monday, 20 May 2024 14:22 (three weeks ago) link

Gee, I wonder why it didn't work out?

I've left the box of soup near your shoes (Tom D.), Monday, 20 May 2024 15:27 (three weeks ago) link

Look the heart wants what the heart wants. And that guy's 71 year old heart wanted 38 year old Lucretia van Grundlesnuff

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Monday, 20 May 2024 15:30 (three weeks ago) link

Hopefully there's a Grundlesnuff out there for everybody

Bitchin Doutai (Noodle Vague), Monday, 20 May 2024 15:43 (three weeks ago) link

You can’t complain about the results! 97!

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Monday, 20 May 2024 16:45 (three weeks ago) link

Oh great a long-form piece about effective altruism. This won’t be mainly be an exercise in normalizing reactionary framing will it? Surely it will touch on some actual issues like say, the climate crisis? No? Oh ok.

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/article/2024/may/25/american-pronatalists-malcolm-and-simone-collins

recovering internet addict/shitposter (viborg), Monday, 27 May 2024 05:55 (two weeks ago) link

The wailing is delicious tbh

i love a man in a unicorn (Noodle Vague), Monday, 3 June 2024 11:47 (one week ago) link

I think SEND places might be exempt but also ‘I’m left wing but…’ 🤮

guillotine vogue (suzy), Monday, 3 June 2024 12:56 (one week ago) link

“My two children both have autism and ADHD, but the state sector denied their needs,”

true, but in my experience when there is no SEND school/college in the council district that meets a student's needs then they can't turn you down for EHCP funding for the nearest school or college that does. If SEND is exempt, then this person is muddying the issue here + needs to STFU immediately!

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Monday, 3 June 2024 13:19 (one week ago) link

They probably spoke up without being across the policy detail or just having a bourgeois whinge, big surprise.

guillotine vogue (suzy), Monday, 3 June 2024 13:37 (one week ago) link

I noticed before that their Scottish football correspondent really isn't very good. He is getting money for old rope, like this on John McGinn:

John McGinn has risen from humble beginnings in Clydebank to captain Aston Villa in the Premier League and become the darling of the Tartan Army. It perhaps helps McGinn that he has no playing connection with either half of the Old Firm, hence this tribal footballing nation can adore him without condition. He is a working-class boy, made good.

Is John McGinn really the darling of the Tartan Army? If he is it's news to me. Also I'm not sure how many of the Scotland Euro Squad aren't working class boys but I'm guessing not many? I do know that none of the rest of the squad's "humble beginnings" include being the grandson of the Chairman of Celtic (what was that about Old Firm connections?) and President of the Scottish Football Association.

Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Friday, 7 June 2024 12:34 (one week ago) link

One spark of radicalism has come from the shadow health minister, Wes Streeting. He has dared to advocate an alliance of the NHS with the booming private health sector. But to reform the NHS root and branch must go beyond party politics, and might conceivably embrace elements of insurance and payment, particularly in the area of wellness and prevention. But to work this requires a drastic restructuring under a cross-party consensus. Is Labour up to this?

The private health sector, booming into your bank balance soon. "Wellness and prevention" = it's your fault so pay up, losers.

prog's nearly man (Matt #2), Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:09 (one week ago) link

tbf this sort of thing is pretty much why they employ Simon Jenkins

Poets Win Prizes (Tom D.), Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:16 (one week ago) link

He’s so utterly deranged. I started reading him in the runup to the Iraq war, on which he was very good, so I formed an inaccurate picture of him as a sensible person

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:24 (one week ago) link

This is top tier shitposting tbf, gotta salute

i love a man in a unicorn (Noodle Vague), Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:42 (one week ago) link

Simon Jenkins is a floating voter?

xyzzzz__, Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:46 (one week ago) link

No, that's an accidental spoonerism by the subeditor

hiroyoshi tins in (Sgt. Biscuits), Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:57 (one week ago) link

lmao

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Saturday, 8 June 2024 19:17 (one week ago) link

:)))

Bernard Quidbins (NickB), Saturday, 8 June 2024 21:52 (one week ago) link

Thread delivers.

Chewshabadoo, Sunday, 9 June 2024 21:06 (one week ago) link

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/article/2024/jun/11/royal-academy-summer-exhibition-2024-review-london

"Pampered pets, polite portraits and enough wan landscapes to fill a field – this show mirrors the numbed, aimless condition of Britain after 14 years of Tory misrule"

art in keith's Britain will be amazing! Can't wait

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 11 June 2024 12:42 (five days ago) link

this would be the same jonathan jones who managed to file numerous anti-corbyn articles in the mid-2010s despite being an arts correspondent would it

katy perry (prison service) (bizarro gazzara), Tuesday, 11 June 2024 13:05 (five days ago) link

the RA summer show is always garbage and always has been a showcase for posh mediocrities with a hobby.

vodkaitamin effrtvescent (calzino), Tuesday, 11 June 2024 13:41 (five days ago) link

I know, but I love the implication it was good before 2010.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 11 June 2024 13:44 (five days ago) link

Not so much a useful idiot as a plain old useless idiot.

ILX: a violent left-wing mob who hate our country (Tom D.), Tuesday, 11 June 2024 14:15 (five days ago) link

On the left is The Guardian refusing to use any pronouns for Lia Thomas. On the right is The Times that genders her correctly throughout. pic.twitter.com/sevbtC8Ma0

— Lee Hurley (@HLeeHurley) June 13, 2024

Chewshabadoo, Thursday, 13 June 2024 18:20 (three days ago) link


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