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 Post subject: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 0:31 
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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-13971770

Create your own! Read out any of these in any order you like!
* The government has responded in a reckless and provocative manner.
* Parents and the public have been let down by both sides.
* Strikes are wrong at a time when negotiations are still going on.
* I urge both sides to put aside the rhetoric, get round the negotiating table and stop this happening again.

I watched this and I thought, is this clever editting? No, it's a continuous shot. Is it a parody then? No.

This is actually Ed Miliband, the reason Labour won't be winning an election any time soon.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 1:22 
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Yeah, he's fucking awful. Massively unpopular with grassroots supporters too, as you can imagine.

(I didn't vote for him to be Labour leader, incidentally – I refused to fill out the leadership ballot as the choices on offer were so terrible!)


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 2:05 
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Jesus christ. That is staggeringly awful, even for him. He literally repeats the same three or four things with every single question he's asked. Word for word. It's like ... well yes, it's like he's a robot helplessly stuck in some kind of loop 8)

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 2:16 
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Despite my Union recommending I vote for him, I refused and voted for his brother instead. Can't they just swap now?


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 3:36 
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I doubt the electorate would notice. In fact I doubt HE would notice.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 8:27 
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Bloody hell, he is a total moron.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 8:30 
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Fucking hell. What a loser.

"Ed, here's what we want you to say, but y'know, jazz it up a bit, give it your own touch"

*watches interview*

:facepalm:


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 8:32 
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That's amazing... I would expect the people I work with to do that, not the leader of the labour party.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 9:01 
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That is just astonishing, it makes Clegg and Cameron look like world class statesmen.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 9:08 
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Good lord. Talk about 'staying on message'. :facepalm:

Say what you will about American politics, excepting some notable individuals they do nail it on the gift of the gab. Even George Bush Jnr had folksy charm when out vote-hunting.

Could a quality politician please step up to the plate? Any plate? I'm getting worried about the parlous state of British politics.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 9:19 
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Ridiculous.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 9:39 
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NervousPete wrote:

Could a quality politician please step up to the plate? Any plate?

Ahem ... in this country we step up to the crease. Stepping up to the plate just isn't cricket, old fruit.

(It was a shocking performance though.)


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 11:38 
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I keep watching it. There's something amazing about it. What's wrong with his voice?

His head-nodding in-between questions must be his system rebooting.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 11:45 
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It's a stable time loop. He keeps hearing the same question.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 11:47 
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http://www.thedailymash.co.uk/politics/ ... 107014023/

Thank you, Daily Mash, thank you :D

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 12:13 
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http://newsthump.com/2011/07/01/ed-mili ... ring-test/

Also amused me.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 12:29 
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The guy's in charge of New Labour - what do people seriously expect? He's cretinous, but there again are people honestly saying that Bliar or Brown were any better, in any respect?

People can say what they like about the Tories or Lib Dems for that matter. But at least those parties are led by moderately intelligent, educated, articulate people, who actually have at least a semblance of political conviction - and talent - between them. This, by contrast, is just laughable - or it would be, were it not so utterly tragic, given the fact of how precisely people like this and their lousy sham of a political party have wreaked such havoc and calamity upon us all. 'Discredited' doesn't even begin to cover it... and yet, there is STILL the serious prospect of these wankers being elected back into government at the end of this current parliament. Why? Because the British Electorate is self evidently idiotic; they'll blame the Tories and Libs for all the pain they've necessarily had to endure as a result of Labour's last disastrous administration, only for them to royally fuck things up once more, just as we're coming out of it. Seriously, Democracy has its limitations at times.

I've said it a million times but I truly, truly cannot understand anyone - anyone - in the context of the last 15 years and given the individuals concerned with running that party and the Country for that time (and given what has actually happened to the Country as a result, as well as elsewhere thanks to foreign policy) - voting Labour for ANYTHING, EVER. That's the honest truth...

... Oh hang on, there ARE people precisely that stupid:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-g ... t-13980594

(QT last night was also almost unbearable to watch, for the same reasons).

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 12:38 
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Please please let the guy who does the wallace voice dub over that.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:04 
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oh lord, I may never get this Thatcher autotune dance mix out of my head
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0XG7OAnV ... re=related

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:05 
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Captain Caveman wrote:
People can say what they like about the Tories or Lib Dems for that matter. But at least those parties are led by moderately intelligent, educated

Much as I dislike to defend him, Brown has a PhD! Hardly uneducated. Blair and the malfunctioning robot went to Oxford, which is meant to be generally rated as a good university last time I checked.

The problem with Labour in Westminster is that it feels like the US Democratic party: The opposition by default as it isn't in power, but not different enough to the party in power, and a pathetically weak opposition.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:12 
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Anonymous X wrote:
The problem with Labour in Westminster is that it feels like the US Democratic party: The opposition by default as it isn't in power, but not different enough to the party in power, and a pathetically weak opposition.


Not sure whether pathetically weak is the right word - unless you mean in terms of spine, rather than clout. They just seem to play politics by deciding what headline they want to see. The Daily Heil shrieks and screams and Miliband cowers because he doesn't want to upset someone who will never support him anyway.

CallMeDave failed to get a majority because he didn't convince people to vote for him. He was happy to try and slip into office by "not being Labour". Well, look how that panned out electorally. Now Labour are doing the same thing, and a hell of a lot of people are thinking "for fucks sake, stand up for something in your life. Give me a reason to vote for you and not against the other guy."

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:18 
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Anonymous X wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:
People can say what they like about the Tories or Lib Dems for that matter. But at least those parties are led by moderately intelligent, educated

Much as I dislike to defend him,


;)

Quote:
Brown has a PhD!


Just goes to show the real world value of a PhD, then, is all I can say. Perhaps Lord Alan Sugar's stance on such things is right.

Quote:
Hardly uneducated.


But of course, I mean 'uneducated' in a broader sense, including such simple matters as being able to even understand a question, let alone formulate an intelligent, relevant answer. You can have as many degrees as you like; if you cannot do this, you are not 'educated', at least in my book.

Anyway, many senior members of the Labour Party are clearly 'uneducated' in a literal sense - how many PhDs did the outgoing Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer (FFS!) have, when he failed to understand precisely what VAT actually is and/or where it is applied? How about their illustrious outgoing Deputy PM, with his penchant for inventing words during speeches and swinging right hook? Then there's the swathe of dumbass senior Union affiliates/figures, the list goes on and on.

So, intellectual snobbery on my part...? You betcha, particularly when it comes to those who purport to be fit to, like, run the country.

Quote:
The problem with Labour in Westminster is that it feels like the US Democratic party: The opposition by default as it isn't in power, but not different enough to the party in power, and a pathetically weak opposition.


Hah. That's the very least of the 'problem' with Labour, in Westminster or anywhere else, trust me.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:18 
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Problem is that Labour is just dull right now, they had some nice "which brother" drama and then just pootled out into grey and the gerneral public stopped paying attention. Tories still have the tea boy and people betting on when he will crack and samcam Vs Kate, who is the more stylish. What labour need is a nice big sex scandle, at least then the papers may actually write about them.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:24 
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Decca wrote:
Problem is that Labour is just dull right now, they had some nice "which brother" drama and then just pootled out into grey and the gerneral public stopped paying attention. Tories still have the tea boy and people betting on when he will crack and samcam Vs Kate, who is the more stylish. What labour need is a nice big sex scandle, at least then the papers may actually write about them.


... so it all boils down to who's 'in' or 'out' of the news as regards salacious Hello!/X-Factor/tabloid tittle-tattle/Tweeting bollocks?

You're probably actually right, itself a tragedy. As I've said, the British electorate - as compared to 20 or 30 years ago - is a vastly inferior beast. Of course, the main driver and architect of this crass soap opera-isation and dumbing down of top level politics was Bliar/Campbell/Mandelson/Nu Lab in general anyway, one of the many things we can now hate them for.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:24 
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Plissken wrote:
Now Labour are doing the same thing, and a hell of a lot of people are thinking "for fucks sake, stand up for something in your life. Give me a reason to vote for you and not against the other guy."

Yes, exactly. We don't need a third right-wing neoliberal party, offer us a bloody alternative.

Captain Caveman wrote:
Just goes to show the real world value of a PhD, then, is all I can say. Perhaps Lord Alan Sugar's stance on such things is right.

Without doctoral graduates, Sugar wouldn't have had electronics to sell in the first place.

Captain Caveman wrote:
So, intellectual snobbery on my part...?

Inverted snobbery.

Decca wrote:
What labour need is a nice big sex scandle, at least then the papers may actually write about them.

A British Strauss-Kahn? :o


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:25 
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Plissken wrote:
a hell of a lot of people are thinking "for fucks sake, stand up for something in your life. Give me a reason to vote for you and not against the other guy."


:this:

Politics these days is purely about trying not to say anything at all, in the hope that the other guys do and you can jump in a say how it is all wrong.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:27 
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The Tory party isn't made up of the brightest and best, their front bench being made up largely of a small clique of Etonian pricks who got where they are through birthright.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:28 
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Trooper wrote:
Politics these days is purely about trying not to say anything at all, in the hope that the other guys do and you can jump in a say how it is all wrong.

That's the nature of conservative (small 'c', Cavey) politics though. Try and keep the system in place which works for those currently with the money and the power. Labour was formed as a radical alternative to that, literally a Power to The People stance. Nowadays, those who try and foster real political change are marginalised as loony lefties or neo-nazis.

Mainly because they are.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:28 
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Anonymous X wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:
So, intellectual snobbery on my part...?

Inverted snobbery.


No, inverted snobbery is a loathing of those who are rich, not something I have ever been guilty of, even when I was utterly potless.

Intellectual snobbery is contempt for the stupid, 'not suffering fools gladly'.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:32 
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Plissken wrote:
Anonymous X wrote:
The problem with Labour in Westminster is that it feels like the US Democratic party: The opposition by default as it isn't in power, but not different enough to the party in power, and a pathetically weak opposition.


Not sure whether pathetically weak is the right word - unless you mean in terms of spine, rather than clout. They just seem to play politics by deciding what headline they want to see. The Daily Heil shrieks and screams and Miliband cowers because he doesn't want to upset someone who will never support him anyway.

CallMeDave failed to get a majority because he didn't convince people to vote for him. He was happy to try and slip into office by "not being Labour". Well, look how that panned out electorally. Now Labour are doing the same thing, and a hell of a lot of people are thinking "for fucks sake, stand up for something in your life. Give me a reason to vote for you and not against the other guy."


Unfortunately, the Lib Dems started trying that, and now everyone hates them, because Nick Clegg si evil because of tuition fees (regardless that both Labour and the Tories were going to increase them by as much if not more), ignoring the fact that the LDs scuppered the proposed NHS changes and have pushed through an impressive amount of their manifesto.

But the bleating fools who voted for the LDs without actually really knowing what they stood for, because it was the cool third option, they all got upset Clegg didn't ride in on unicorn and save the world, that... oh hell, I can't be bothered with this again!

:D

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:35 
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Captain Caveman wrote:
Anonymous X wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:
So, intellectual snobbery on my part...?

Inverted snobbery.


No, inverted snobbery is a loathing of those who are rich, not something I have ever been guilty of, even when I was utterly potless.

Intellectual snobbery is contempt for the stupid, 'not suffering fools gladly'.


I think he means inverted intellectual snobbery.

IE - "These intellectuals with their degrees and research and doctorates are all fools compared to me and my mates down t'pit!"

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:37 
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Interesting post from Damon Green, the journo who did the interview: http://www.twitlonger.com/show/bfensm


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:44 
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Curiosity wrote:
I think he means inverted intellectual snobbery.

IE - "These intellectuals with their degrees and research and doctorates are all fools compared to me and my mates down t'pit!"

That's exactly what I mean, yes. Inverted intellectual snobbery.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 13:54 
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Jesus. Has he been fired yet?

Or would that be wrong (reckless and provocative) at a time when negotiations are still ongoing?


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 14:24 
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Anonymous X wrote:
Curiosity wrote:
I think he means inverted intellectual snobbery.

IE - "These intellectuals with their degrees and research and doctorates are all fools compared to me and my mates down t'pit!"

That's exactly what I mean, yes. Inverted intellectual snobbery.


Well, that's not 'inverted snobbery', which is distinctly and definitively something else, as per previous post. If we're going to level criticisms at people here, let's at least get the 'insult terminology' right first.

If you actually meant 'inverted intellectual snobbery', I can hardly be accused of that either, given the whole context and content of my entire post, not just my very specific comments about Brown in particular and in isolation (which is what I presume you are referring to, but don't actually know, since you've not explained yourself here).

Anyway, whatever. We can nitpick about my alleged, supposed faults and foibles in this case as an individual and/or the precise wording of posts - in which case have a ball/count me out - or we can engage in a mature, constructive discussion regarding the actual subject matter at hand and/or attempt to address the substantive points made.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 14:24 
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Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
Interesting post from Damon Green, the journo who did the interview: http://www.twitlonger.com/show/bfensm


Could you cut and paste that here, Doc? Can't get at the link from where I am. :(

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 14:26 
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NervousPete wrote:
Could you cut and paste that here, Doc? Can't get at the link from where I am. :(
Sure:

ZOMG Spoiler! Click here to view!
To a TV reporter, political PRs can seem incredibly fussy, often to the point where it takes vast tact and patience not to pick them up bodily and hurl them off the nearest tall building with a joyful shout. Common sense, they say: you could be laying a trap, hiding a loaded question, trying to make us look silly. But occasionally a politician needs no help at all to look silly. And that is how it turned out with Ed Miliband yesterday.

Buggins’ turn for me was a round of interviews at Westminster, hoovering up political reaction to the public sector strikes. Ministers drift like smoke around the corridors of 4, Millbank where the broadcasters have their offices, and you grab them on the stairs or the landing. We found Francis Maude and he said his piece obligingly, but we had to be quick: at nine was a sit-down interview with Ed at his office in Portcullis House and we scampered across to find him. The interview was a `pool’ arrangement - to be shared by the three main broadcasters to save time and resources - and I’d been named to do it for ITV News.

There is an etiquette involved in pooling, which everyone understands. Ask the obvious question, and get the obvious answer. Don’t try to be too clever or esoteric, either with your questioning or your camerawork. Make sure the material is usable by everyone (reporters: stay out of shot) and relay it as soon as the interview is done.

To me it seemed simple enough. But I hadn’t bargained with the team of three handlers waiting for me in the Opposition Leader’s office.

They demand control of the interview location. Well… OK, we are in Ed’s office, fair enough. They want him in front of his bookcase, with his family photos over his left shoulder. Er… sure, is he going to be long? We are running late.

It isn’t that unusual for political PRs to demand control over the composition of an interview shot. I gather that David Cameron’s people will never let him be filmed in front of anything expensive, or ornate, or strikingly Etonian. But it isn’t until our shot has been checked by all three press officers – all peering into our viewfinder and offering helpful advice about framing and depth of field (a term they turned out not to understand, as my cameraman Peter Lloyd-Williams triumphantly established) that we turn to the topic: `What questions are you going to ask?’
I hate being asked that. Partly, because it is none of their business. But mostly, if I am honest, because I don’t really know. I don’t have an interview `technique’, and this lack of technique has been honed constantly since my earliest days of not using it at the Bermondsey News. Its absence never troubled me until yesterday. You see, getting a `grab’ for a television report is a simple enough business. You say the first thing that comes into your head. The interviewee responds with the first thing that comes into his head. And you take it from there. Almost like, well, a conversation.

But when your interviewee has only one answer, and repeats it back to you whatever you say, things go downhill very fast.

Ed Miliband thinks that the strikes are wrong at a time when negotiations are still underway. The government has acted in a reckless and provocative manner, but it is time for both sides to set aside the rhetoric and get around the negotiating table and stop this from happening again.

I know this because he told me six times. His PR must have known that was what he was going to do. And yet he still went through a convincing charade of pressing me on my line of interrogation, urging me to keep my questions brief, and even – this was a macabre touch – placing a voice recorder on the table beside me as a kind of warning not to try and misquote his boss.

As it turned out, the first take was drowned out by a passing siren on the Embankment, but seemed like a thoughtful and precise position for a Labour leader to take. Clear in his condemnation, hopeful of a negotiated settlement. Not partisan, but engaged. Detached, but not aloof.

The second time it seemed like a less original statement. The strikes are wrong… the rhetoric has gone too far… parents across the country…But then, I’d heard it before and it was useful to have a clean version, unspoiled by a siren.

The third time… the third time I was struggling a little bit. I’d asked him how his opposition to the strikes fitted with his position as leader of the Labour movement. I thought it was quite a clever question. Silly me. The strikes were wrong at a time when negotiations were still underway. The government had acted recklessly. It was time for rhetoric to be set aside.

Some reporters like to have their questions written on a piece of paper, and tick them off one by one as they are asked. It’s something I’ve never done, but at this moment I wished fervently that I had a piece of paper in my hand, just to give me something to look at, and scratch away thoughtfully just buy some time.

I asked another question. Something about Francis Maude, and his tone of conciliation. Not very good, I know, but the best I could manage. Get him to say something about Francis Maude, I was thinking… his hairstyle, his glasses, the way he peers over the top of them as he drones on, anything, just stop already with the strikes are wrong while negotiations are underway, and the rhetoric has got out of hand…

I’m not sure what I asked next. Frankly I was in danger of losing it. On my own, with the eyes of Ed Miliband and his three handlers boring into me but apparently oblivious of my presence, I was getting twinges of what I can only describe as existential doubt. So I said some words. And Ed told me that the strikes were wrong, and the rhetoric was out of hand, and both sides needed to sit down…

That was the worst one, I think.

If news reporters and cameras are only there to be used by politicians as recording devices for their scripted soundbites, at best that is a professional discourtesy. At worst, if we are not allowed to explore and examine a politician’s views, then politicians cease to be accountable in the most obvious way. So the fact that the unedited interview has found its way onto YouTube in all its absurdity, to be laughed at along with all the clips of cats falling off sofas, is perfectly proper.

Afterwards, I was overcome with a feeling of shame. I couldn’t look him in the eye.

But before I dried up completely, and had to be led out of Westminster with my mouth opening and shutting, I had an opportunity to ask one last question. I had an urge to say something so stupid, so flippant that he would either have to answer it, or get up and leave. `What is the world’s fastest fish?’ `Can your dog do tricks?’ `Which is your favourite dinosaur?’ But, of course, this was a pool interview, and I had no wish to feed out the end of my television career to Sky and the BBC.

I realise now, of course, the perfect question to ask, to embarrass him and to keep my job. I should have asked was whether the strikes were wrong, whether the rhetoric had got out of hand, and whether it was time for both sides to get round the negotiating table before it happened again.

Because that was the only answer I ever got.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 14:42 
Filthy Junkie Bitch

Joined: 17th Dec, 2008
Posts: 8293
My interest was finally piqued enough to watch the original link.

Wow.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 14:55 
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Ticket to Ride World Champion

Joined: 18th Apr, 2008
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Captain Caveman wrote:

So, intellectual snobbery on my part...? You betcha, particularly when it comes to those who purport to be fit to, like, run the country.


Anonymous X wrote:
[I think that would be] Inverted [intellectual] snobbery.


Captain Caveman wrote:

If you actually meant 'inverted intellectual snobbery', I can hardly be accused of that either, given the whole context and content of my entire post, not just my very specific comments about Brown in particular and in isolation (which is what I presume you are referring to, but don't actually know, since you've not explained yourself here).

Anyway, whatever. We can nitpick about my alleged, supposed faults and foibles in this case as an individual and/or the precise wording of posts - in which case have a ball/count me out - or we can engage in a mature, constructive discussion regarding the actual subject matter at hand and/or attempt to address the substantive points made.


Christ on a bike, he was making a single comment about something you claimed to be - that is - agreeing and expanding upon. You are the one who sees slight at every opportunity, and is the one taking it off "the actual subject matter by doing so.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 14:58 
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markg wrote:
The Tory party isn't made up of the brightest and best, their front bench being made up largely of a small clique of Etonian pricks who got where they are through birthright.


And the fact they won elections.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 15:16 
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Bobbyaro wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:

So, intellectual snobbery on my part...? You betcha, particularly when it comes to those who purport to be fit to, like, run the country.


Anonymous X wrote:
[I think that would be] Inverted [intellectual] snobbery.


Captain Caveman wrote:

If you actually meant 'inverted intellectual snobbery', I can hardly be accused of that either, given the whole context and content of my entire post, not just my very specific comments about Brown in particular and in isolation (which is what I presume you are referring to, but don't actually know, since you've not explained yourself here).

Anyway, whatever. We can nitpick about my alleged, supposed faults and foibles in this case as an individual and/or the precise wording of posts - in which case have a ball/count me out - or we can engage in a mature, constructive discussion regarding the actual subject matter at hand and/or attempt to address the substantive points made.


Christ on a bike, he was making a single comment about something you claimed to be - that is - agreeing and expanding upon. You are the one who sees slight at every opportunity, and is the one taking it off "the actual subject matter by doing so.


*sigh*

I claimed to be an intellectual snob, specifically when it comes to those who would run this country. I was then labelled an inverted snob, which I am self evidently not. When I pointed this out, it was then a case of "well, actually, when I said 'inverted snob', I meant 'inverted intellectual snob'", which again, I am demonstrably not, the precise converse in fact. So it's not a case of 'expanding' on anything; the premise and accusation was plain wrong in the first place, on both counts. Sorry for having the temerity of pointing this out or this being my 'seeing slight at every opportunity'. :roll:

As for taking the subject matter off course, it wasn't me ignoring 99% of someone else's post, only to level a personal, completely irrelevant and incorrect criticism at that individual poster, so I've no idea why you seem to blame me for this. But hey, let's not let the facts get in the way. (Not that I have a major issue with it, just pointing out the facts of the situation. Call me old fashioned, but I'm not going to be accused of being something that I'm not, without making a perfectly measured and polite rebuttal).

Same old, eh? Flame away.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 15:17 
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Joined: 18th Apr, 2008
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*sigh* yeah same old.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 15:21 
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Bobbyaro wrote:
*sigh* yeah same old.


Anyway, Ed Miliband, Labour, politics... :roll:

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:06 
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Peculiar, yet lovely

Joined: 30th Mar, 2008
Posts: 7046
Quote:
I’m not sure what I asked next. Frankly I was in danger of losing it. On my own, with the eyes of Ed Miliband and his three handlers boring into me but apparently oblivious of my presence, I was getting twinges of what I can only describe as existential doubt.

...

Afterwards, I was overcome with a feeling of shame. I couldn’t look him in the eye. But before I dried up completely, and had to be led out of Westminster with my mouth opening and shutting, I had an opportunity to ask one last question. I had an urge to say something so stupid, so flippant that he would either have to answer it, or get up and leave. `What is the world’s fastest fish?’ `Can your dog do tricks?’ `Which is your favourite dinosaur?’ But, of course, this was a pool interview, and I had no wish to feed out the end of my television career to Sky and the BBC.

I realise now, of course, the perfect question to ask, to embarrass him and to keep my job. I should have asked was whether the strikes were wrong, whether the rhetoric had got out of hand, and whether it was time for both sides to get round the negotiating table before it happened again.


Excellent. I wish he'd asked that last question now, too :DD

Also, Daily Mash :luv:

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:11 
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LoL. :D

An exercise in recursion, then. He may well have imploded at that point.

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:12 
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Peculiar, yet lovely

Joined: 30th Mar, 2008
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http://twitter.com/#!/damongreenITV/sta ... 2527131649

Quote:
Before I wrote the blog, I contacted EdM's PR. He said 'no worries' about the itvw going viral: 'it means we are getting message out'.


:facepalm:

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:15 
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Heavy Metal Tough Guy

Joined: 31st Mar, 2008
Posts: 6608
Captain Caveman wrote:
LoL. :D

An exercise in recursion, then. He may well have imploded at that point.


:D
Ed Millibot would have stood up, started yelling "Danger! Danger! Does not compute!" whilst waving his arms about, before a puff of smoke came out of each ear, at which point he would have just slumped and started singing "Daisy Daisy" in an increasingly slow and robotic voice.


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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:16 
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@ Sinister

Hey, any publicity - such as "the leader of our moribund, discredited, morally and politically bankrupt party is a moron" - is good publicity, right? No? :D

I seriously can imagine these people thinking like this!

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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:20 
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Posts: 9521
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Squirt wrote:
Captain Caveman wrote:
LoL. :D

An exercise in recursion, then. He may well have imploded at that point.


:D
Ed Millibot would have stood up, started yelling "Danger! Danger! Does not compute!" whilst waving his arms about, before a puff of smoke came out of each ear, at which point he would have just slumped and started singing "Daisy Daisy" in an increasingly slow and robotic voice.


:D

Class.

The image I got was akin that geezer in The Fast Show:

'Mr Miliband, were the strikes were wrong, do you feel that the rhetoric had got out of hand and is it now time for both sides to get round the negotiating table before the strikes happen again?'

'................................... Black.'

'No Ed...'

'Black. Black! BLACK!!!1 BLACK!!!'

/smashes iPad over interviewers head, runs off sobbing

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Dr Lave wrote:
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 Post subject: Re: Ed Miliband
PostPosted: Fri Jul 01, 2011 16:56 
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Sleepyhead

Joined: 30th Mar, 2008
Posts: 27354
Location: Kidbrooke
I loved that sketch.

BLACK!


You lock me in the cellar and feed me pins...


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