Russell Davies

As disappointed as you are
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day 20 - east london morning

First thing to report - I actually achieved something last night. My first sabbatical achievement. I actually learned how to do this - the t-shirt origami thing. It's brilliant.

Then got on my bike and headed to the city to visit Obertelli's Eating House for eggbaconchipsandbeans. Very pleasant. Then wondered around the city for a bit. Then back on the bike to visit herhouse, which is a really interesting shop and a brilliant idea. And while I waited for them to open (they don't open until 12, how civilised) I had a nice cuppa at da andrea.

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Then called in at international magic to get a book of card tricks, I need to get learning something, I need to make this sabbatical meaningful. Got some great playing cards too. This is a fantastic shop. Exactly the atmosphere you want from a magic shop; lots of slightly odd people giving the impression there's something they're not quite telling you, all while being tremendously helpful.

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Then bumped into Chris Riley while I was out for a coffee. He normally lives in Portland. So quite an unusual bump into. And of course he had to deal with the slight awkwardness of not having called to say he's in town, which I quite understand. I do it myself, go to Portland and not call him. You can't always call. Sometimes you're just not in the mood, or you don't have time, or you can't be arsed. He's a top bloke. Visit his website and learn about his splendid brand consultancy thingy.

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England 3 - Switzerland 0

No blogging for a few days, we're off to the Peak District.

June 17, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (1)

day 19 - west london morning

Had a West London morning. Therefore quite an upmarket experience. Starting with breakfast with Cams. She claims not to exist on the internet - so Cams here you are, you're a webpresence now...

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Then off to indulge a new fad of mine. I realised a while ago that I had no real sin-type indulgences. (Apart from eggbaconchipsandbeans.) I don't do any drugs. I very rarely drink. (So rarely that the last time I had a small glass of whisky I had to immediately go and lie down with a bucket.) And I've never smoked. This seemed unacceptably boring. So I decided to start smoking cigars. I only do it very occasionally but I really like all the paraphanelia (sp?) involved. And this is a great shop to visit. Very non-intimidating.

Then off to the V&A for the Sounds in Spaces exhibition. Not great but not bad. It definitely hinted at an interesting future where locations and things can trigger connections with your personal audio and play you stuff, which I think would be very interesting. And it kept me in the museum longer than I normally would. I'm usually only good for about 20 minutes in a museum and this kept me in there for an hour. Mostly walking around. This is the stuff I noticed on my way around.

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The David Byrne section (which was the most thoughtful, if sonically rather annoying) took you into some spectacular toilets. Which I wouldn't normally visit because a) they're in a museum and b) they're disabled toilets. But they are great, and apparantly they used to be part of the original refreshment room. Well worth a visit.

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Then, a nice cup of tea at Picasso's before...

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Russia 0 - Portugal 2

June 17, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (1)

18a - the rest of the day

Went to the gym this morning. A burst of enthusiasm. Decided to have someone instruct me - give me a programme of exercise. And even as I was listening to the nice young man explain how all the weights worked I realised I was never going to do any of it. I just can't be arsed with weights and stuff. That kind of fitness demands too much time. So I'm going to try and make exercise fit in my life. I'm just going to do an hour of something everyday. Walking. Cycling. Swimming. Something I can do and listen to music at the same time. (At least when I get my Swimman)

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Czech Republic 2 - Latvia 1

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Germany 1 - Holland 1

June 15, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

day 18 - from marble arch to a big pile of wood

Decided to go for a walk up the Edgware Road (what used to be Watling Street).

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Started at Marble Arch, one of those odd bits of nowhere in London, left isolated by traffic. Even at lunchtime on a sweltery day there's almost no-one sitting on the grass. I've always wondered what the hell this thing is, until I just found out - that it was originally the entrance to Buckingham Palace. It got moved up here by Victoria and Albert. You can see what's going on around there by looking at the BBC London jamcam.

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The road starts with a fantastic area of Arabic culture. Lots of cafes with blokes smoking hookahs (is that what they're called?) And there's all these fantastic shops selling odd stuff - luxury goods, electronics, fruit, lots and lots of phones.

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How did they ever go out of business with a fantastic strategy like 'everything for everyone at discount prices'? How do you lose with that? This is just down from the Metropolitan as featured at eggbaconchipsandbeans.

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I love these shops selling phone cards and internet access and calls and stuff. Basically they're not selling anything. Just air. Yet, as this shows, it's all about knowing your audience, knowing their needs, knowing their language. And obviously, graphic design.

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And then there are other businesses which never need to change anything.

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After a little while the Arabic dynamism gives way to the sleepy mansions of Maida Vale. Huge blocks seemingly full of little old ladies with tiny dogs.

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But then, and this is what I love about London, as soon as an area decides it might be a bit fancy the council come along and erect a load of estates. There's huge bits of the road where you have dead posh mansions on one side of the road and huge estates on the other. That's stirring the melting pot.

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So you get an actual tradesman's entrance on one side...

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...and some great 70s type on the other.

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Then, you're into Kilburn.

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Ellie's Cafe, as featured in a good place for a cup of tea and a think.

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How long must this have been in the window?

Hmmm, just noticed I seem to stop taking photos at this point, for quite a while. Perhaps that tells you something about the stretches through Cricklewood and Shoot-Up Hill and all that. Which are just kind of average. Until you suddenly pass through a little furniture district and then emerge into all these retail sheds and you realise you're in Brent Cross.

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More enterprising behaviour. Selling England flags at the side of the road.

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Staple's Corner, the bottom of the M1, is not the nicest bit of town.

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Of particular note is this enormous pile of wood. You can just see it beyond the trees. It's always been a talking point for us when we head up North. Presumably it's some scrap thing, but it never seems to get any smaller, and always seems on the point of collapse.

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This is a sign on the bridges around Brent Cross, maybe this kind of sign is on loads of bridges, I've never noticed. But it seems somehow less than thorough. What do you do if the bridge collapses at the weekend?

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Ah, those elegant North Londoners and their love of nature.

June 15, 2004 in diary, walking | Permalink | Comments (4)

day 17 - uttoxeter, markeaton park, home

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Went to see what Uttoxeter is like. Didn't see much. Except this car park for JCBs which is fantastic.

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Then to Derby's Markeaton Park, great place.

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Now this is grafitti art. This is what I want to see in galleries.

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One thing that's better about the modern world - the spongey stuff they have on the ground in playgrounds now. it looks like the stuff that used to graze our knees, but it's lovely, soft and bouncey.

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Sweden 5 - Bulgaria 0

June 15, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

day 16 - anticipation

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The advantage of having a bit of rough old track up to your house is you can abuse the laws of the highway. This is Arthur's first driving lesson.

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Then we went off to a slightly rubbish antiques fair thing in Ashbourne's splendid new leisure centre. Two good ideas - this way of hanging on to your locker key (a wristwatch-type thing) and...

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...this machine for dispensing leisure essentials.

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Then we went for a little stroll around the lanes near the house. For some reason Arthur decided to take Anne's clarinet.

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Then off to visit the same retail park all over again. This time for Pizza Hut. Because we thought Arthur would like it.

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He wasn't that impressed. We should probably go to Pizza Hut a lot less. They do what they do very well, but it's a better thing as an occasional treat.

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France 2 - England 1

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Nice sky on the way home.

June 15, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

day 15 - retail weekend

It's one of the things about moving into a new house. You always have to spend time at retail parks.

First thing Saturday we had to go to Halford's to get a new radio put in the car. Halford's clearly isn't just one place. It's a load of car brands lumped together. So we had to go back and forth from the ripspeed desk (where we bought the radio) to the AA desk (who fitted it). Still, it all worked.

Then to my favourite cafe ever. The bus on the A52 between Derby and Ashbourne. The food is great, incredibly cheap and the owners seem to know every one of their customers by name.

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Then back to Ikea, for some serious shopping this time. Nowhere looks quite like Ikea.

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Then the rest of the day is spent unflatpacking and tidying.

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Portugal 1 - Greece 2

June 15, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (2)

day 14 - not much, thinking about airports

Flew back from Copenhagen yesterday. Travelling to the airport reminded me of a game I used to play when I worked in the States. We did a lot of flying around, a lot of traveling to airports in places I didn't know at all. And you notice that the areas around airports always had more in common with each other than the places where they were. (If you see what I mean.) Firstly, of course, no hills. First you notice a higher than average number of corporate headquaters - especialling US technology compannies. Then a band of cheap housing and light industrial units. Nothing high of course. Then you notice companies you don't see anywhere else - logistic businesses, and importers and stuff. Then you notice that the roads you're on have odd names - named after people like Frank Whittle. Then you start to see businesses that are definitely linked to airports - like Lufthansa catering.

The game we used to play was to identify precisely at what point - if you'd just parachuted in, without seeing the surrounding area - you could definitely tell you were near an airport. Not just probably, but definitely. Not very exciting, but it passed the time.

Friday was a bit of a nothing day. Lots of blogging and stuff, then up to the Peak District, driving under interesting skies.

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Then we called in at Ikea near Nottingham. Because we had to do a recce for buying some beds on Saturday and because Arthur really likes it there.

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June 15, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

day 13 - wonderful wonderful

Great day in Copenhagen starting with the biggest latte I've ever seen in my life.

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Then I strolled up and down the Stroget, which claims to be the longest pedestrianised shopping street in the world. They were just installing an, er, installation. A hugely long red carpet, the length of the Stroget. I liked it. It's the work of an artist Marco Evaristti - and supported by cities for people, a conference on urbanism and transport in stuff. Which I could have stayed for that. I especially liked that they were going to "focus on research, case studies and experiences in the integration of walking policies into a wider context." Made me wonder about my own walking policies.

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I immediately thought this would be a good name for a brand consultancy or something, but someone's beaten me to the punch.

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Then off to the conference. Really nice people, really well organised. I've no idea if they thought what Mark and I did had any relevance at all. I think I'm going over people's heads a lot of the time. Being too abstract and high-flown. Making it sound impractical. I dunno. It's easy to dismiss because it's Nike and Honda and that. They gave me a nice Georg Jensen bowl as a thankyou. Great people.

Mark Earls was very good as useful. Never seen him presenting his book before. Great stuff.

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Very excited by this. A piece of promotional literature featuring my name.

Here they all are watching the Honda Cog ad.

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June 11, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

day 12 - going to denmark

Didn't really achieve much today either. Did some APG banking stuff. Had a nice breakfast at a good snack bar on the Euston Road, opposite Great Portland Street, but forgot camera. Then off to Heathrow for trip to Denmark for this conference.

I don't like terminal four. All the romance of travel has completely gone. It's just a mall and a bus station.

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Nice hotel in Copenhagen but still reminded me of all that Lost In Translation ennui and anonymity. And I was only there a night.

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June 11, 2004 in diary | Permalink | Comments (0)

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