Archive for December, 2005

What up. I can’t be bothered to write anything today, so I’m going to leave you with this rather amusing and interesting feature from the beeb (bbc.co.uk). Every week they do a feature on ceefax with 10 new things that scientists have learned… this is the best 100 from this year;

1. The UK’s first mobile phone call was made 20 years ago this year, when Ernie Wise rang the Vodafone head office, which was then above a curry shop in Newbury.

2. Mohammed is now one of the 20 most popular names for boys born in England and Wales.

3. While it’s an offence to drop litter on the pavement, it’s not an offence to throw it over someone’s garden wall.

4. An average record shop needs to sell at least two copies of a CD per year to make it worth stocking, according to Wired magazine.

5. Nicole Kidman is scared of butterflies. “I jump out of planes, I could be covered in cockroaches, I do all sorts of things, but I just don’t like the feel of butterflies’ bodies,” she says.

6. WD-40 dissolves cocaine - it has been used by a pub landlord to prevent drug-taking in his pub’s toilets.

7. Baboons can tell the difference between English and French. Zoo keepers at Port Lympne wild animal park in Kent are having to learn French to communicate with the baboons which had been transferred from Paris zoo.

8. Devout Orthodox Jews are three times as likely to jaywalk as other people, according to an Israeli survey reported in the New Scientist. The researchers say it’s possibly because religious people have less fear of death.

9. The energy used to build an average Victorian terrace house would be enough to send a car round the Earth five times, says English Heritage.

10. Humans can be born suffering from a rare condition known as “sirenomelia” or “mermaid syndrome”, in which the legs are fused together to resemble the tail of a fish.

11. One in 10 Europeans is allegedly conceived in an Ikea bed.

12. Until the 1940s rhubarb was considered a vegetable. It became a fruit when US customs officials, baffled by the foreign food, decided it should be classified according to the way it was eaten.

13. Prince Charles broke with an 80-year tradition by giving Camilla Parker Bowles a wedding ring fashioned from Cornish gold, instead of the nugget of Welsh gold that has provided rings for all royal brides and grooms since 1923.

14. It’s possible for a human to blow up balloons via the ear. A 55-year-old factory worker from China reportedly discovered 20 years ago that air leaked from his ears, and he can now inflate balloons and blow out candles.

15. Lionesses like their males to be deep brunettes.

16. The London borough of Westminster has an average of 20 pieces of chewing gum for every square metre of pavement.

17. Bosses at Madame Tussauds spent £10,000 separating the models of Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston when they separated. It was the first time the museum had two people’s waxworks joined together.

18. If all the Smarties eaten in one year were laid end to end it would equal almost 63,380 miles, more than two-and-a-half times around the Earth’s equator.

19. The = sign was invented by 16th Century Welsh mathematician Robert Recorde, who was fed up with writing “is equal to” in his equations. He chose the two lines because “noe 2 thynges can be moare equalle”.

20. The Queen has never been on a computer, she told Bill Gates as she awarded him an honorary knighthood.

21. One person in four has had their identity stolen or knows someone who has.

22. The length of a man’s fingers can reveal how physically aggressive he is, scientists say.

23. In America it’s possible to subpoena a dog.

24. The 71m packets of biscuits sold annually by United Biscuits, owner of McVitie’s, generate 127.8 tonnes of crumbs.

25. Nelson probably had a broad Norfolk accent.

26. One in four people does not know 192, the old number for directory inquiries in the UK, has been abolished.

27. Only in France and California are under 18s banned from using sunbeds.

28. The British buy the most compact discs in the world - an average of 3.2 per year, compared to 2.8 in the US and 2.1 in France.

29. When faced with danger, the octopus can wrap six of its legs around its head to disguise itself as a fallen coconut shell and escape by walking backwards on the other two legs, scientists discovered.

30. There are an estimated 1,000 people in the UK in a persistent vegetative state.

31. Train passengers in the UK waited a total of 11.5m minutes in 2004 for delayed services.

32. “Restaurant” is the most mis-spelled word in search engines.

33. Chelsea boss Jose Mourinho has only been in an English pub once, to buy his wife cigarettes.

34. The Little Britain wheelchair sketch with Lou and Andy was inspired by Lou Reed and Andy Warhol.

35. The name Lego came from two Danish words “leg godt”, meaning “play well”. It also means “I put together” in Latin.

36. The average employee spends 14 working days a year on personal e-mails, phone calls and web browsing, outside official breaks, according to employment analysts Captor.

37. Cyclist Lance Armstrong’s heart is almost a third larger than the average man’s.

38. Nasa boss Michael Griffin has seven university degrees: a bachelor’s degree, a PhD, and five masters degrees.

39. Australians host barbecues at polling stations on general election days.

40. An average Briton will spend £1,537,380 during his or her lifetime, a survey from insurer Prudential suggests.

41. Tactically, the best Monopoly properties to buy are the orange ones: Vine Street, Marlborough Street and Bow Street.

42. Britain’s smallest church, near Malmesbury, Wiltshire, opens just once a year. It measures 4m by 3.6m and has one pew.

43. The spiciness of sauces is measured in Scoville Units.

44. Rubber gloves could save you from lightning.

45. C3PO and R2D2 do not speak to each other off-camera because the actors don’t get on.

46. Driving at 159mph - reached by the police driver cleared of speeding - it would take nearly a third of a mile to stop.

47. Liverpool has 42 cranes redeveloping the city centre.

48. A quarter of the world’s clematis come from one Guernsey nursery, where production will top 4.5m plants this year alone.

49. Tim Henman has a tennis court at his new home in Oxfordshire which he has never used.

50. Only 36% of the world’s newspapers are tabloid.

51. Parking wardens walk about 15 miles a day.

52. You’re 10 times more likely to be bitten by a human than a rat.

53. It takes 75kg of raw materials to make a mobile phone.

54. Deep Throat is reportedly the most profitable film ever. It was made for $25,000 (£13,700) and has grossed more than $600m.

55. Antony Worrall-Thompson swam the English Channel in his youth.

56. The Pyruvate Scale measures pungency in onions and garlic. It’s named after the acid in onions which makes cooks cry when cutting them.

57. The man who was the voice of one of the original Daleks, Roy Skelton, also did the voices for George and Zippy in Rainbow.

58. The average guest at a Buckingham Palace garden party scoffs 14 cakes, sandwiches, scones and ice-cream, according to royal accounts.

59. Oliver Twist is very popular in China, where its title is translated as Foggy City Orphan.

60. Newborn dolphins and killer whales don’t sleep for a month, according to research carried out by University of California.

61. You can bet on your own death.

62. MPs use communal hairbrushes in the washrooms of the Houses of Parliament.

63. It takes less energy to import a tomato from Spain than to grow them in this country because of the artificial heat needed, according to Defra.

64. New York mayor Michael Bloomberg’s home number is listed by directory inquiries.

65. Actor James Doohan, who played Scotty, created the Klingon language that was used in the movies, and which Shakespeare plays were subsequently translated into.

66. The hotter it is, the more difficult it is for aeroplanes to take off. Air passengers in Nevada, where temperatures have reached 120F, have been told they can’t fly.

67. Giant squid eat each other - especially during sex.

68. The Very Hungry Caterpillar has sold one copy every minute since its 1969 publication.

69. First-born children are less creative but more stable, while last-born are more promiscuous, says US research.

70. Reebok, which is being bought by Adidas, traces its history back more than 100 years to Bolton.

71. Jimi Hendrix pretended to be gay to be discharged from the US Army.

72. A towel doesn’t legally reserve a sun lounger - and there is nothing in German or Spanish law to stop other holidaymakers removing those left on vacant seats.

73. One in six children think that broccoli is a baby tree.

74. It takes a gallon of oil to make three fake fur coats.

75. Each successive monarch faces in a different direction on British coins.

76. The day when most suicides occurred in the UK between 1993 and 2002 was 1 January, 2000.

77. The only day in that time when no-one killed themselves was 16 March, 2001, the day Comic Relief viewers saw Jack Dee win Celebrity Big Brother.

78. One in 18 people has a third nipple.

79. The section of coast around Cleethorpes has the highest concentration of caravans in Europe.

80. Fifty-seven Bic Biros are sold every second - amounting to 100bn since 1950.

81. George Bernard Shaw named his shed after the UK capital so that when visitors called they could be told he was away in London.

82. Former Labour MP Oona King’s aunt is agony aunt Miriam Stoppard.

83. Britain produces 700 regional cheeses, more even than France.

84. The actor who plays Mike Tucker in BBC Radio 4’s The Archers is the father of the actor who plays Will Grundy.

85. Japanese knotweed can grow from a piece of root the size of pea. And it can flourish anew if disturbed after lying dormant for more than 20 years.

86. Hecklers are so-called because of militant textile workers in Dundee.

87. Pulling your foot out of quicksand takes a force equivalent to that needed to lift a medium-sized car.

88. A single “mother” spud from southern Peru gave rise to all the varieties of potato eaten today, scientists have learned. More details

89. Spanish Flu, the epidemic that killed 50 million people in 1918/9, was known as French Flu in Spain.

90. Ordinary - not avian - flu kills about 12,000 people in the UK every winter.

91. Croydon has more CCTV cameras than New York.

92. You are 176 times more likely to be murdered than to win the National Lottery.

93. Koalas have fingerprints exactly like humans (although obviously smaller).

94. Bill Gates does not have an iPod.

95. The first traffic cones were used in building Preston bypass in the late 1950s, replacing red lantern paraffin burners.

96. Britons buy about one million pumpkins for Halloween, 99% of which are used for lanterns rather than for eating.

97. The mother of stocky cricketer - and this year’s Strictly Come Dancing champion - Darren Gough was a ballet dancer. She helped him with his pivots.

98. Nettles growing on land where bodies are buried will reach a foot higher than those growing elsewhere.

99. The Japanese word “chokuegambo” describes the wish that there were more designer-brand shops on a given street.

100. Musical instrument shops must pay an annual royalty to cover shoppers who perform a recognisable riff before they buy, thereby making a “public performance”.

Have a good new year people.

Kids thinking brocolli are baby trees > *

My new favouriteeeeeeeeee t-shirt. Bought this the other day. GOOD is Kanye West’s music imprint that has signed artists such as Common, John Legend, GLC (not Goldie Lookin Chain) and Consequence. Not to mention Kanye himself. I <3 it.

Kanye, and probably most of those artists I just named, is touring the U.K. in February. I rrreally want to go but getting from Sunderland to York, and then from York to Birmingham/Manchester or whereever I finally decide is the best venue in terms of travel, will pretty much take 3 days out of my week. One day to get to York (and pick up the car), the next day to travel there early and get a good place in the queue, and then the next day to travel back to uni. Ugh… if anybody knows where I can find coach services for gigs and whatnot, let me know. I’m too lazy to ring each individual venue.

I first heard about this site last week when I took the girlfriend to watch Narnia. The cinema was packed - there were no spare seats - so I was watching the adverts rather than nattering away with the mrs. Anyway, an advert for an ‘unlimited rental service’ for films came up. I’ve seen the new Blockbusters service ads and all the other kinds of postal rental services, but for some reason this one caught my eye. The thing that really stood out for me was when it said “NO late fees whatsoever”. So I quickly punched the website address onto my phone, and watched the childrens film in relative silence.

The next day I made sure to check the site out and see if the deal was really as good as it says. Now as a film studies student I’ve got into the habit of watching some quite obscure films. Films that my local shop don’t offer, infact films that most rental shops in town don’t offer. LoveFilm.com’s advert boasted a library of “42,500+” films which I thought was a rather precise number, but very impressive. I mean, I don’t think I’ve seen a Blockbuster or Choices cram as many DVDs onto their shelves. Even when they have a hefty looking selection you’ll usually come across bullshit such as Love Actually and The Bourne Supremacy several times as you’re browsing. So there’s probably only a few hundred films, but 10 copies of each.

Here’s a quick screenshot of Love Film’s main page:

As you can see, finding something to watch isn’t a problem. If you haven’t got a film in mind you can browse by genre, by year or by any host of “quick picks”. I found the quick picks particularly useful as I found new DVDs (which included a good 15 films from this year that I opted not to go and see at the cinema, but still wanted to check the film out), I also found the Editor’s Choices particularly interesting as some of them have recapped the best films of recent years. You know you’re in good hands when they recommend films such as City of God and 21 Grams. Films that weren’t Hollywood Blockbusters, but were original and well worth watching. Likewise, further down the page there are options to view lists of films based on “Box Office” ratings and also “Top 100″ lists from places like FilmFour, etc. So the better known films are also covered in terms of recommendation. If, like me, you know what you like in terms of film then you’ll have no problem putting together a heavy list of films. I’m sure mine will take me beyond the summer of 2006.

I signed up on the 22nd of December. The way LoveFilm works is that for your monthly membership fee you can keep any DVD as long as you want. When you send a DVD back they send you another. So you could keep one DVD forever, but you’d be paying over ten pounds a month to do so. Or you could get through 30+ in a month and pay the same price. So unlimited films for as long as you want, it just depends how you balance it. This is probably what sold it to me. Anyway, LF offers three different packages - one DVD at a time for £9.99, two DVDs at a time for £12.99 or three at a time for £14.99. I went for two DVDs at a time as I’d like to hold more than one at a time, but I’m not that much of a buff that I’d need three.

Once you sign up you’re asked to make a list of between 20 and 50 films that you’d like to rent, placing them in order. There’s an easy to use section to put them in order, and adding them to your list is as easy as flicking through charts/genres/etc and ticking the ones you want. In 10 seconds you could add over 10 films to your queue, it really is that easy. Once you’ve put them in order then LF sends the first DVD out to you (if its available, if not it sends the first available one), and once you’ve returned that DVD it sends the next one… and so on and so forth.

My first two selections were Crash - a movie that a friend from Uni has raved about - and Napoleon Dynamite - a cult comedy that I’ve wanted to watch for quite some time now but never found the time to go out and rent it. May I remind you that I signed up on the 22nd of December. The DVDs arrived at my house, a rural village in North Yorkshire, on the 24th of December. I was astonished that the company had managed to mail me both DVDs in and amongst the hoard of Xmas mail, and have them arrive at my door within two days. That is just incredible service that any company would be proud to have.

Another huge advantage you get with LoveFilm is their free postal service. The DVDs arrive in small, stylish cases - not the chunky ones that you’d buy them in. The cases are a few millimetres thick and are the shape of the DVD. Just a slimline protective case. Each DVD arrives seperately and with a return envelope, which is also freepost. So… no late fees and it doesn’t cost you to post it back, you don’t even have to buy the envelope. It’s just too easy.

If you hadn’t already guessed, I’m absolutely amazed with the level of service that LoveFilm has given me so far. I signed up for the 2 week free trial to test it out, and within 2 days my first 2 DVDs were at my door step. I now have a list of 60+ films ranging from movies I missed out on last year to french/other foreign cinema. All sorts. The way I see it, I could either buy one DVD a month for £10 and watch it once a year… or I could pay £10 a month to LoveFilm and watch as many new films as I like, keeping those for as long as I like. Next up I’ve got Monica Belluci’s Irreversible and ultra violent Japanese film Old Boy.

www.lovefilm.com - if you love films it is an absolute blessing…

So, anybody want to recommend me some viewing?

Yo. Hope everyone had a good christmas. Now you’ve got the start of ‘06 to look forward to. I’m not really one for setting new years resolutions, because usually I have something that I want to complete by the end of the year… and I usually do it. Usually they’re quite simple things. Last year I think my goal was to pass my driving test. This year my goal was to get into a decent university. They’re not resolutions as such, like “drink less” etc. but they are goals for the year. But… here are my ‘resolutions’ for 2006:


1. Pass my first year of University

2. Get a job (at uni)

3. Get playing regular football again

4. Spend more nights out in Newcastle (because Sunderland is the same old shit now.)

5. Eat a little healthier (which leads into the next one…)

6. Get rid of the tire around my waste (I’m going to make use of that gym membership I paid for at the start of the year. I’ve used it once so far, in three months. That’s going to change.)

7. Goto more gigs (Not entirely my fault - Sunderland is pretty crap for decent bands, and Newcastle has been pretty quiet recently)

8. Listen to all the albums I have that I’ve never actually listened to (there’s a lot of these, like 50+… all the Tupac albums I have, older albums I have, albums I’ve got for the sake of having them… I’m actually going to listen to them all)

9. See England win the World Cup (A little out of my control. I don’t think they’ll have a good a time as they do now to win the WC. Gerrard, Lampard and Rooney are all playing fantastic, and are 3 of the best players the world has to offer. In four years time Gerrard and Lampard won’t be as good as they are now, I think they’ll both be around the 30 mark. Rooney will be in a better position, but I doubt he’ll be surrounded by the quality of players that he is now.)

10. Get some decent traffic on this site

2005 was probably the best 365 days I’ve ever had. I went on holiday with 3 of my best mates, I got fantastic grades from a shitty college, I got a wonderful girlfriend who’ve I’ve been with on and off for about 6 months (although it’s back on now, and looking better than ever) and I got into a decent university (which has been my goal since I was little). The territory that goes with going to university has probably made it the biggest change of my life… I do my own cooking, cleaning, washing and take of myself. I’m independent. I don’t need anybody else. Best of all, I live in a city where there’s always something to do…

If 2006 is as good as 2005 then I’ll be a happy man.

What are your resolutions?

So I’m back home. And I’m bored. Really bored.

I left Uni last friday for the christmas holidays, and since then I’ve been done nothing interesting at all. Friday was supposed to be spent in York, but only four people were up for going out… so it wasn’t worth doing. Saturday and Sunday were spent working. And yesterday I went to the Trafford Centre in Manchester, but spent very little. Not even worth telling you about really was it? So boring is it back home that I’m probably going to work both Christmas Day and New Years Eve. 1) because I need the money and 2) because working is probably more fun than doing nothing.

I’m spending my free time on some assignments that need to be in at the start of January, so I probably won’t be doing too much writing on here. I started a 2,000 words essay on Goodfellas today and managed to write 1,500 by this afternoon… so maybe that isn’t going to be as hard as I thought. I’ve also got a 2,000 word essay on media and culture that should be an absolute walk in the park, although I’m going to have to drag my lazy arse to the nearest library to do some background reading.

I’d like to recommend the remake of King Kong to everybody reading. I’m not one for blockbuster films that are over the top with cgi and last longer than they should… but there are some moments in the film that took my breath away. For those of you that will have already seen it - King Kong’s fight with the dinosaurs was so realistic I didn’t even want to blink, I just couldn’t take my eyes off it. Hell, it’s just a wonderful spectacle from start until finish. If you’re bored this christmas, go check that out.

Anyway… have a good christmas and new year everybody. And try not to eat too much turkeyyyyyyyyy…

Ok, so the end of the year is upon us. Time to give you my best of’s and worst of’s. If you disagree with any then you are wrong…

 

Top 25 albums of the year

25. Franz Ferdinand – You Could Have It So Much Better
24. Coldplay - X & Y
23. Amerie - Touch
(Listen: One Thing)
22. Chamillionaire - The Sound of Revenge
21. The Subways - Young for Eternity
20. Kaiser Chiefs - Employment
19. The Mitchell Brothers - A Fresh Breath of Attire
18. Jack Johnson - In Between Dreams
(Listen: Good People)
17. Gorillaz - Demon Days
16. The White Stripes - Get Behind Me Satan
15. DJ Danger Mouse & MF Doom - The Mouse and The Mask
14. Alicia Keys - MTV Unplugged
13. Hard-Fi - Stars of CCTV
(Listen: Living for the Weekend, Hard to Beat)
12. Damian Marley - Welcome to Jamrock
(Listen: Road to Zion)
11. Kano - Home Sweet Home
(Listen: Typical Me, Nite Nite)
10. System of a Down - Mesmerize/Hypnotize
(Listen: Soldier Side)
9. Jem - Finally Woken
(Listen: They, Come on Closer, Flying High)
8. Kanye West - Late Registration
(Listen: Touch the Sky, Heard ‘Em Say, Gone)
7. Miri Bin Ari - The Hip-Hop Violinist
(Listen: Fly Away, New World Symphony, Miss Melody)
6. Common - B.E.
(Listen: B.E., The Food, Chi City)

5. Game - The Documentary
(Listen: Put You on the Game, Don’t Need Your Love, Church for Thugs)

4. John Legend - Get Lifted
(Listen: Ordinary People, So High, Number One)
3. Flipsyde - We The People
(Listen: Someday, Train, Spun, Flipsyde)

2. Imogen Heap - Speak for Yourself
(Listen: Hide and Seek, Headlock, Say Goodnight and Go)

1. Fort Minor - The Rising Tied
(Listen: Where’d You Go, Feels Like Home, Back Home)

 

Albums that probably would have made the list, but I’ve barely listened to them

Little Brother – The Minstrel Show
Outlandish – Closer Than Veins
Floetry – Flo’Ology
AZ – A.W.O.L.
David Gray – Life in Slow Motion

 

Track(s) of the year

Joe Budden – Dumb Out

 

Top 10 most disappointing albums

10. Paul Wall – The People’s Champ
9. Sean Paul – The Trinity
8. Tony Yayo – Thoughts of a Predicate Felon
7. Beanie Sigel – The B. Coming
6. Staind – Chapter V
5. Twista – The Day After
4. Limp Bizkit – The Unquestionable Truth, Vol.1
3. M.O.P. – St. Marxmen
2. Cassidy – I’m A Hustla
1. 50 Cent – The Massacre

 

Top 5 “I don’t see what all the fuss is about?” albums

Bloc Party – Silent Alarm
Rihanna – Music of the Sun
Lil Kim – The Naked Truth (5 mics and XXL, what the fuck?)
Mike Jones – Who Is Mike Jones?
Slim Thug – Already Platinum

 

Top 10 movies of the year

10. Wedding Crashers
9. Hitch
8. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang
7. The Longest Yard (a.k.a. Mean Machine)
6. Layer Cake
5. Coach Carter
4. Amityville Horror
3. Flightplan
2. Saw II
1. Sin City

 

Most disappointing movies

Goal!
The Ring II
Mr & Mrs Smith
The Descent
The Exorcism of Emily Rose

 

I probably should wait until next week to include King Kong… but I doubt it will top either Sin City or Saw II, and I imagine it will probably just make my ‘most disappointing’ list. So I can’t be arsed to wait for it. Anyway… Roll on 2006.

Taken from: http://www.guardian.co.uk/rickygervais

Guardian Unlimited to podcast ‘The Ricky Gervais Show’

In an industry first, Guardian Unlimited is to podcast twelve exclusive new weekly shows from Ricky Gervais, starting Monday 5 December.

When Ricky Gervais was asked to name the funniest man alive, he said, “my friend Karl Pilkington. The trouble is, I don’t think he knows he’s being funny”.

Each week, award-winning comedians Ricky Gervais and Stephen Merchant rummage around in the mind of Karl Pilkington to prove he’s not just the village idiot, he’s beaten off all competition to take the national title.

Join Ricky and Steve as they help Karl wrestle with such burning issues as:

“Jellyfish - do we need them?” “How could an infinite number of monkeys type the complete works of Shakespeare if they’ve never read it?” “Why do you never see an old bloke eating a Twix?”

‘The Ricky Gervais Show’ on Guardian Unlimited - all new material from Ricky, Stephen Merchant and Karl Pilkington - will be available every Monday from www.guardian.co.uk/rickygervais.

Ricky Gervais says: “I want to do a radio show where I can say what I want, when I want for as long as I want and that’s free for anybody who can be bothered to listen anywhere in the world. We didn’t want it to just be the best bits of a radio programme you’d missed so this is a show that is straight-to-Pod-cast. I suppose we’re trying to create an exclusive club. We’d prefer this to be a few people’s favourite show than a huge samey ineffectual broadcast”

Emily Bell, Editor-in-Chief, Guardian Unlimited, says: “We are delighted that Ricky, Stephen and Karl have chosen Guardian Unlimited for their podcasts - their humour is perfect for our audience, both here and in the US. GU has been experimenting with podcasting over the past year but this represents the start of a much bigger commitment to using different digital formats which give our users the best content in the most convenient way.”

I’ve never tried out the podcasting phenomena before, but I’m going to make an exception for Mr Gervais. “Animals” and “Politics” were very amusing, and right up my street. The “Politics” Extras especially were some of the funniest things I’ve ever heard. Karl Pilkington’s un-P.C. take on the world was so funny because he was genuine and serious rather than comedic. “When was the last time you saw an old person eating a twix” … not to mention his book of freaks, or his take on aging asians. The guy is so wrong that he’s hilarious. I can’t wait for these podcasts, they’re going to be great.

So make sure you check out http://www.guardian.co.uk/rickygervais tomorrow, and every Monday for the next 12 weeks.

My halls of residence is quite literally a stones throw away from the Wear in Sunderland, so I thought I’d take some pictures.

My halls are the flashy apartments on the other side of the river, by the way.

I took these photos today on my walk to university because I haven’t used my new camera much, and I don’t have any photos of Sunderland to send to friends. The photos are in black and white because the Wear is a dirty, dirty river and it looks kind of classy in greyscale.

In the picture with the two bridges, the one on the left is the one I have to walk over to get to uni. I have to walk up a huge hill, over the bridge, and then down another hill. The second bridge is the Metro, the train/tram-type thing which runs from Sunderland to Newcastle (underground). I <3 the metro.

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