Thursday, 30 June 2011

Glastonbury Part 1

My Glastonbury blog will be split into four parts:
1. An introduction
2. A review of every act I saw
3. My Glastonbury do’s/don’ts
4. Chankers


The majority of my adventures were with Emily and Rosie, @lovefromemily and @peggyatthestar respectively. I did meet some lovely folk and a special call goes out to Martin the mortician who could predict the weather to the EXACT minute that the rain would start.

Part 1 – An introduction

Before I start and everyone accuses me of not getting the vibe (man) of Glastonbury, I have to say that as an overall experience, I loved it. This love peaked while watching Beyonce on the Sunday night. Standing in front of the Pyramid stage, listening to what will undoubtedly become a seminal performance in Glastonbury history. I looked across the fields and saw a city alive with a generation of people bursting with colour and love, who were frightening the darkness of the night away with exuberance and lust for that very moment. We were the only ones truly there.

We were the only ones who lived it.

I wanted to stay, I wanted to stay forever.

Glastonbury as god is a concept that I have been playing with since my arrival on Worthy Farm on Wednesday 22 June 2011.

No one will criticise, no matter how much human waste you must crawl through to empty your cider rotted bowels, the Glasto gods know best...you only need 4,250 toilets for 200,000 people don’t you?

To begin with, here are five things I didn’t know about before popping my glastoncherry.

1. There are a LOT of traffic jams on the festival site, mainly involving tractors and lorries pulling containers of human waste (don’t walk behind them as all the ones I saw dripped).

2. By the end of the festival you will look upon someone holding a can of beer with more suspicion than you will the person rolling a spliff, popping pills or getting a line of coke together next to you while you eat.

3. Some people feel that the porch of your very modestly sized tent is the perfect location for their six person tent (for themselves because they couldn’t possibly cope with less room) and gazebo.

4. It is ideal to take your own booze as is it, as with anywhere, cheaper, but you will struggle to carry it, struggle to take it out with you every day and many of the bars are no more expensive than an average London pub.

5. No matter what your drunk girlfriend and drunk friend try to lead you to believe – Michael Eavis has NOT got giant fans with which he can blow away the clouds. If he did, he would have used them already!

So, Glastonbury festival eh? I have watched it on television since the late 90’s and every year I have envied  those who are there but like so many, I have always had my excuses at hand. Too expensive, couldn’t get there, too muddy, no acts I want to see...the list goes on and on. This year I was corralled into it and so no excuse could be forthcoming as before I knew it, my face was slapped onto a bit of paper that I would hand over to an Oxfam volunteer in exchange for a wristband that I now refuse to remove.

The weeks of preparation that I had intended, the diligent gathering of essentials, ended up with a mad dash around London the weekend before to purchase everything and a rather too loud “oh fuck” when I realised that I had forgotten my pillow whilst being driven to the coach stop.
I travelled with the Big Green Coach company who, as well as giving me a comfortable journey, are planting two trees for every coach they send to a festival this year and although I didn’t book it, by all accounts they were cheaper than other coach companies too.
http://www.biggreencoach.co.uk/index.php/musings/festivalwood

I wore my wellies to travel in, a decision well justified as we pulled up outside the festival gates. I was told that from here, it was a mere trot through the car park and then my own personal hedonistic fantasy world awaited me. The mere trot turned out to be a mile or so through a trench like car park to be greeted by what other festival goers called, ‘the only queue to get in that I have ever seen’. The queue turned out to be a pivotal time for me, as I reached the point where I would normally have got very grumpy, I began to chat to others in the line. Being hit by someone’s fold up chair (chankers – more on them later), now became a reason to talk not a reason to scowl and want to throw them in the mud. We shuffled, oh so very patiently we shuffled until we were in. Laden down with rucksacks, bags of cider and tents plus the numerous free things that are thrust upon you, the walk began the very long walk from pedestrian gate D to Kidney Mead. 

For those of you who don’t know me personally, I have a strong physical and emotional dislike of dirty public toilets. Sadly it interferes with a lot in my life as, well, human beings just seem to have very little consideration for others. When I opened the gate of my first Glastonbury long drop, I saw human faeces smeared around the seat. I turned, I wretched until my throat was sore and then went back to my tent. Filthy fuckers. Kidney Mead, for those who didn’t consult a map, was next to the family camping area and this turned out to be my saving grace. Despite there being so many children in prams at Glastonbury that you could mistake it for the Kings Road, the children seem to use toilets in a respectful manner. As such, some palatable portaloo’s for me and my cheeks to do their business.

As the final tent peg in our rapidly assembled camp was hammered into the soft Somerset mud, a woman that one would only describe as a ‘hippy’ strolled up offering valium and cider. Another side point for those who don’t know me, I work in the health sector, I have seen the damage that drugs bought over the internet and from hippies by tents can do. They are poorly manufactured and people sell them to make a profit, not because they give a toss about your health. The same goes for homeopathic medicine, a point well demonstrated by comedic pairing, Mitchell and Webb, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HMGIbOGu8q0 

I do believe in the power of positive thought but I don’t believe in medicines manufactured in dustbins, concrete mixers and bath tubs and I certainly don’t believe that you should stop chemotherapy to follow a homeopathic route.

A big complaint from those camped around us, besides my going off on a tangent and ranting about pills and homeopathy, was that every year more tickets are sold but no more camping space is made available. This point was made abundantly clear to me when we came back to the tent following a wander and discovered a one person tent had appeared in a gap so small that we didn’t even sit in it when we had previously assembled our tent.

Sod it came the cry, we won’t get down over cramped, unsanitary conditions...we will go and experience this wonder for what it is.

We went to the bar.

The Brothers cider bar in West Holts arena was a delight. Proper bar staff, good quality cider at decent prices (£3.50 a pint). The arena area was in a relatively good condition and so we sat down on the grass and enjoyed pints of toffee apple, lemon and festival cider and then we enjoyed some more. We enjoyed so many that when a random person walked past announcing that that had vodka jellies for sale, we jumped at the chance, three times we jumped at the chance. Solidified red paint stripper rolled down our necks and exacerbated our hunger. There was only one conclusion amongst our party, Pieminister.

A chicken of aragon with all the trimmings later and my stomach was feeling the strain. Chocker full of cider, vodka jelly and pie, we went for a stroll only to eventually head back to the tent when the skies got so black we knew that a storm would control the activities of the night.

The storm came and the storm beat us as I forgot to zip up the bottom flap of the tent.

Everything was soaked and this did make me kind of grumpy, so we dried off and went for an explore because food makes things better.

Our first port of call was the Tiny Tea Tent, it had the appearance of an old gypsy trailer but with ornate curtains draped to cover a variety of tables, chairs, sofas and a piano. They served delicious tea in homely mugs and we watched the spells of rain make the pathways thicker with stodgy brown mud. After this we went to Faryes Fare for some breakfast and after much deliberation we ordered...the only thing on the menu.

Man behind the counter: “Beans on toast, who ordered beans on toast?”

Me: “Every fucker, it’s all you have on.”

To be fair to them, their kitchen had flooded and so they couldn’t cook anything else and they were frightfully good beans on toast but the confusion on everybody’s face as “beans on toast” was shouted every ten seconds, was a site to behold.

After a real breakfast, we decided on a cider lunch and so to the Somerset Cider Bus we went. Before I carry on, please let it be known that I have managed bars, I know the rules, so don’t get sarcastic with comments. The barmaid ID’d me...I had no ID but I had a VISA card, a card that the barmaid accepted could only be issued to an over 18. I have a full beard, I look haggered and yet I was ID’d. I didn’t even mind that much but the man at the bar next to me, was smoking a spliff.

Dear Glastonbury Festival,
To ensure that all visitors to the festival have a good time please don’t employ people behind your bars who have no real grasp of working in a bar. If someone appears to be over 18 and can provide evidence that they are indeed over 18, it means that they are. Also, if they then serve someone smoking an illegal substance, then please do not let them be smug and preachy about not wanting to break the law.
All the best,
Dom

After the disappointment of the cider bus, that was never to be returned to because I refuse to do business with jobworths, we went to the craft field. This was incredibly good fun and I painted a spoon! I did, I painted a spoon. It was free to do and I believe that I made a jolly good spoon. It was multi-coloured and said ‘2011 Glasto’ on it because my gorilla like hands aren’t delicate enough to have fitted ‘2011 Glastonbury’ on a spoon. Emily made an incredibly beautiful fascinator for her hair with a very cool material vintage flower lady. I toyed with the idea of making a necklace out of cutlery but feared that I would fall and spear myself in the chest.
I then went to see a few bands with Emily (which will feature in part 2) and then via a lovely cuppa and flapjack at The Tea Shop bus, we went to meet Rosie in the Park.

The Park is as close of an equivalent to what I imagine parts of Paris would have been at the turn of the last century, circa Moulin Rouge. It screamed hedonism, the colours were an explosion and each sense was aroused as I dragged my already sorry and aching body through the mud. I looked in awe at the sand sculptures, the silent disco and the vibrant, florescent watch tower that stands over the Park. Glastonbury is spelt out, like the Hollywood sign, in multi-coloured letters on a hill overlooking this part of the festival, it really set it off.

We all sat in one of the park bars and drank our cider, made jokes and new friends and then undertook, what was now becoming quite customary, the long walk back to the tent in the cold, wet mud.

Tuesday, 21 June 2011

Glastonbury

So...I am going to Glastonbury. I will no longer be one of those who sneered at the television saying 'I didn't want to go anyway' while secretly wishing I was jumping to the bands on screen. Unfortunately there are three headliners that I would rather not see. As is life though sometimes.

People keep on telling me that it's not about the music, it's about the whole thing. The realigning of shakras and such like. I'm not convinced yet that they are right, after all it's a music festival isn't it, or am I just being short sighted?

I do hope that I am proved wrong and that I get carried away with the experience of it all.

I think I have been too scared to go before, too afraid to open myself up to things that I might actually enjoy. The atmosphere during the build up, particularly on the social networks has been one of fun and optimism for a good time. It doesn't feel like it's going to be a struggle and so I have previously created a fight of my own. I'll be in a fucking field in the middle of Somerset, what have I got to worry about?

I'm sure I'll find something...

I feel like one of those people you see on the telly or at a club, you know, the people having fun, the people living. I have always talked a good game but never really played one.

So here goes, in the morning I board a bus and get whisked away to something that I have no real knowledge of something which I am a little bit scared of but something that very well might set me free.

Until next time...
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Wednesday, 15 June 2011

Words that helped me...

(The caveat to this is that my family and friends are incredible and helped me too but I don't want to talk about them as it's a bit too close to the bone.)

When I went through a pretty dark period three men gave me a bit of inspiration to get through it. I have now met two of them and nearly met the third and I feel vindicated in letting these people, regardless that they were unaware that they were doing it, help me.

1. Mr Daniel Wallace - at a very dark time I emailed him. He replied. I didn't expect him to but I guess it's the making of a man when they do the unexpected for selfless reasons. I've since discovered that Danny was abroad when I emailed him and he interrupted his holiday/business trip to email me back. He emailed back and forth for an hour or so I think and coached me through an evening that I didn't think I'd see through to the end.

I met him when I interviewed him for my website and he was every bit as charming, friendly and genuine as he was via email. I thanked him, I tried to anyway but he is a very modest person and just said it's what anyone would do (They wouldn't, they didn't).

2. Mr Dave Gorman - He didn't know that he helped me but he did. He wrote books, he met people and by doing this he proved to me that if I did get through it all, there was another way forward. One where I could embrace it all and take rough and smooth alike. The fearless nature of the man, despite so often being out of his comfort zone, was inspiring.

I met him at the bar at a comedy show one time. I was a tad tipsy and told him that his words meant something. We chatted for a while and he signed a napkin for me. It was lovely and he was kind despite me heavily imposing on his ordering of a rum and coke.

3. Mr Tony Hawks - (comedian/writer not skateboarder) Tony's books, in a similar way to Dave's, showed me the potential for adventure as long as I fought.

I've never met Tony but we've exchanged a few emails and equally he seemed like a friendly and genuine person.

This seems random but what has inspired it is that I am now on my way to the same comedy night where I met Dave before. I just got thinking that's all and I guess that's what blogs are for.

Needless to say there were so many others who rallied around and were there for me but I'd rather keep them anonymous as I am a tad ashamed of what I put them through. They know who they are though and that with them, collectively, I wouldn't be the man I am today, if I was here at all.

I guess the message, if any really comes through, is that sometimes an act of kindness, like replying to an email, can help someone beyond what you'll ever know.

If you have beautiful words, inspirational words or even fun words to write down, do it. It will help people even if you never meet them.

I don't expect that everyone has had such positive experiences upon meeting people who have affected their lives but I would say, be nice and the world will be nice. If you can't be nice, maybe someone will be there when you need them and you'll get back on the path to niceness.

Keep smiling :-)
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Tuesday, 14 June 2011

I can't get no (organisation)

So, it's a Tuesday morning and I felt like writing and then sending off something to the big blog in the sky.

It's strange to think that I am typing this on my phone somewhere under Kings X and soon it will float through the air to a website far far away. I don't know how this works but I guess it isn't my job to know...

Today looks like it will be a warm one but I am more prepared than yesterday. I had a coat with me but today I'm no fool...that coat stays at home.

I know this is crap.

Mornings like this make me even less keen on commuting and my current lifestyle. I'm not really sure that I was meant for the office. Especially one where it is chaos pretty much everyday. My team are great but it's seemingly everyone else who seems to be determined to make things so perilously slow that I could lose my mind.

On the bright side, I have Otis Redding on to clear my head before work. Before that I had The View one...Same Jeans is a very cool song and I love the feeling that they try and penetrate. Going out for days, sweaty, dirty but having fun. Whoop!

Tomorrow it's Comedy Gold with Omid Jahilli or whatever his name is! Another Whoop!
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Sunday, 12 June 2011

Weddings and such

This weekend I travelled up to Nottingham to see my old friend Chris. We've been friends for ten years now, pretty much to the day. We first bonded over a Foo Fighters hoodie I was wearing. Truth be told I'd borrowed the hoodie from a friend as I had forgotten a jacket and didn't know who the Foo's were. Me and Chris have now seen the Foo's play together at Wembley, so a full circle thing I guess. It seems so long ago that college induction day.

The next day (Saturday), I went across to Sheffield, the city of my birth, for my cousins wedding. Naomi Green, now Walker, my eldest cousin (three weeks older than me), got married at the Museum of Sheffield with a reception at the Millennium Gallery.

It was genuinely a magical day and I'm not ashamed to say that I shed a tear or two during the ceremony and speeches.

It was strange watching my cousin get married. I can remember being a child with her, playing games at our Grandparents house in Sheffield and causing chaos. She is now a radiographer at Sheffield Hospital and I am very proud of her. Three out of four cousins on that side of our family all work in healthcare (the other one is a trainee architect), I don't know why!

It was fantastic to see all of my family on that side and to meet extended family that I had only heard discussed in the past. The reception was very playful, sweets everywhere, big photographs on the wall and a room decorated by the couples friends. It was delightful and reflected how I imagine my cousin would have liked it. Her dress was beautiful and she looked every bit the part of the princess bride.

Now it's Sunday and I'm back in London but it's raining. This has put pay to my plans for the day. Improvising time!

x
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Thursday, 2 June 2011

New experiences...

I was dubious...

I've never been invited to a shop opening, never mind a shop opening by artists, designers, journalists and fellow PR folk. With a degree of trepidation I enter the MetricCollective but within seconds all my worries were proved unfounded.

A glass of red was thrust into my hand and I was given a tour of the shop by the designers of some of the most fabulous jewellery I have seen.

Their press pack said, 'a collective of thinkers and doers...' They couldn't have been more right. The shop was decked out beautifully with each piece shown to its best and a bunch of enthusiasts were at hand to guide you around.

The jewellery that I was particularly interested in was from the Esther Benjamin Trust(EBT), a charity based in Nepal. I have worked with them before and so wanted to support this project. In the end, I was also one of the enthused helpers out telling people about the great work that this charity does.

It was just fantastic to see a group of people very actively supporting their work.

I was lucky enough to meet Nic, a volunteer with EBT who had started their jewellery work. She told me about how it was produced and where the project was aiming to go.

It was great to meet with people who had a similar mindset to me and were being productive with their skill and desire to make change.

I can whole heartedly recommend visiting MetricCollective at 94 Columbia Road. Not because they've asked me to, or because they gave me a press pack, but because I believe in what they are trying to do. Real designers, real pieces of incredible jewellery and supporting a cause that I care deeply about.

If there are any reservations about them just trying to make money, have a look at their displays. Note that they have been giving lessons in design to local school kids and as a result are producing jewellery designed by the kids following a competition they have run.

Most of us go to Columbia Road, home to the flower market, and devour the culture, the cool and the sublime, but then we leave and forget the people. They haven't, they're giving back.

Well done MetricCollective. Visit when you can.
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Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Why Jamie Oliver should always be #trending

He is a man who was once naked and 'pukka' and now he is a man who is revered as a potential saviour of our youth. He is a revolution starter.

I know that many will scoff with the comparison and yes, they both work/ed for different causes, but I am sure that Mr Rowntree was dismissed in his day by some sections of society. Similar though is that the sections of society who dismiss both men are most probably those who stand to make a profit from those that Oliver and Rowntree are/were trying to protect.

Jamie food revolution tried to do exactly what it said it would and I am sure in many ways it has succeeded. He wanted to make people think about their lifestyle choices, namely, the food that they consumed. Now Jamie's revolution is in Hollywood and I am keen see how it pans out.

It is wrong that people need to be told how to eat. I don't know what it is, stupidity, nativity, lack of interest or arrogance that self neglect won't affect them. More often than not I suspect, it is a lack of education, a lack of willingness to education themselves and a lack of interest in educating their next of kin.

I am as guilty as the next for eating the odd burger, the odd pizza etc but it is far from a habit. Jamie said something on one episode of his show, "don't buy food if you don't recognise the names of the ingredients on the label".

It seems like such a simple mantra but one that is surprisingly difficult to keep up with. I was shocked when I looked, just how many products had unpronounceable crap on the label.

Why have we allowed companies that produce these products to do this? Are they serving our needs while slowly nurturing us into reliance or are we subservient to an industry that we see as so huge that we cannot ask for what we actually want.

There are many many factors in why we buy what we do.

In Sainsbury's, a supermarket Jamie unfortunately endorses, they sell four frozen meals for three pounds. They also sell four small chicken breasts for four pounds.

Now imagine you're on your way home after picking kids up from school and you've got to get them dinner ready before going to your second job. Do you cook or do you spend five minutes microwaving?

It's not a tough choice, it's not even a case of someone not being able to cook. It is often simply that people haven't got time.

Sometimes it is society that needs to change and sometimes industry must force change. Could supermarkets stop stocking that kind of food and instead stock fresh and healthy options? Silly question because they never will.

This is why I think Jamie Oliver should always be trending. He is trying to help change by developing businesses and organisations that provide food to schools. He is aware that there is no quick fix. His show, Ministry of Food was also another example of how his work can benefit but how people can sometimes reject benefit for convenience.

It is not my place to judge what other people do. It is up to people to do as they will and hopefully with the help of Jamie and others, they can make educated informed choices.

His words are simple and offer guidance...he isn't the Messiah, he is (a very naughty boy?!) though, a revolutionary.
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