bobby47 Posted May 11, 2014 Report Posted May 11, 2014 After watching an hour of this cultural dross I sat there nibbling on a packet of Pork Scratchings thankful for one single thing. That we, Great Britain, four nations of greatness and incredible important gifts to the world are separated from mainland Europe by the salty brine of the Channel. Thank God for the Ice Age and thank God for the science of Geology. My only regret is the Channel can be navigated within ninety minutes on a ferry from Calais. Good bloody grief, if I ever had to sit there listening to their music and witness their cultural way of life I'd take a small fruit fork and stab myself in each ear. As I sat there listening to some bloody offering served up by a European backwater of a Country, that told a musical story of how high the milk yield was from the local community goat, my mind wondered to the thought of death not being such a terrible thing to happen to me. As I viewed the voting process that saw some Austrian bearded man or woman dressed up in a lovely frock win this garbage of a competition, I chanted to the Gods to deliver me from the pain and serve me up a minor heart attack so that I could lay down in bed and be excused from having to listen to the winner sing the rotten winning song again and weeping before the watching world proclaiming, 'this is the best day of my life'. The pain and anguish could have been lessened if only they'd chosen to warble their tuneless dross to me and the World in their own Mother tongue. At the least, I wouldn't have been able to understand why the goat was so loved in this small poverty stricken hamlet and why its milk was so appreciated by the villagers who choose to suck on this beasts teat to extract the milk. No such bloody luck. They all gave it to me in English, thus ensuring I was fully cognisant of the corny lyrics they'd attached to the surge of noise they'd shoved down my ears. As for the lyrics, moreoften than not they all held one common theme. The local wench dances around the old tree, a passing minstrel who owns a gaggle of geese and a herd of goats passes by. They fall in love. Run away and up the bloody mountain they go, never to be seen again. We've gotta get out of this European Union. If only to escape their music and the endless agony that's heaped upon us every single year they hold this unholy celebration of ' music you'll never buy and never wish to listen to again unless you are mad'. Quote
Alex Posted May 11, 2014 Report Posted May 11, 2014 Conchita, eat a Snickers because you turn into a right diva when your hungry Quote
dippyhippy Posted May 11, 2014 Report Posted May 11, 2014 Cheer up Bobby! It could have been worse. Much worse. We could have won!! At least next year it will be Austria having to foot the bill for this europewide warble - a - thon!! Quote
silent bull Posted May 11, 2014 Report Posted May 11, 2014 I enjoyed it Does that make me mad?? ;-/ Quote
Bill Thomas Posted May 11, 2014 Report Posted May 11, 2014 Conchita, eat a Snickers because you turn into a right diva when your hungry Diva.jpg WTF is that thing? World has gone mad. Eurovision is too political for me and has been for too many years. Quote
silent bull Posted May 12, 2014 Report Posted May 12, 2014 "Eurovision is too political for me and has been for too many years." The voting? Yep agree. But the madness and the 'mostly' god awful singing (for me) makes it entertaining! !! Or maybe I'm the strange one? ;-) Quote
Biomech Posted May 12, 2014 Report Posted May 12, 2014 I'm actually quite surprised how freely they use her his name on TV considering A: how PC TV is and B: What the name actually translates to Quote
Roger Posted February 26, 2016 Report Posted February 26, 2016 Joe & Jake to represent the United Kingdom in Stockholm London, United KingdomJoe and Jake have won Eurovision: You Decide tonight at the O2 Forum in London, and will represent the United Kingdom in Stockholm with the song You're Not Alone. Mel Giedroyc presented the programme, kicking off with last year's winner of the Eurovision Song Contest, Måns Zelmerlöw, before introducing the six songs that had made it through one of the biggest song searches the BBC has ever held to find its Eurovision entry. Although there was an expert panel including Eurovision veterans Carrie Grant (UK 1983) and Katrina (winner for the UK in 1997) in Eurovision: You Decide the United Kingdom public made their choice with 100% televoting, and it was the duo Joe and Jake with the song You're Not Alone that received the most votes. Eurovision.tv We have decided on our song that will come near the bottom in the 2016 contest ... Quote
Pete Boggs Posted February 28, 2016 Report Posted February 28, 2016 It's not the same without Wogan. Quote
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