lewdandlicentious
I AM THE ALTAR
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2003
- Posts
- 1,992
Does that make Og, Brit no. 7?
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oggbashan said:I'm Brit no. 3 and being a King I look down on him, and on her.
They should look up to me, but they're probably selling stories about my activities to the scandal rags.
Og

Tatelou said:It is a very big honour, and definitely one to be proud of.
You'll have to let me know, next time you are due to make an appearance.
Lou
oggbashan said:

lewdandlicentious said:I'm sure Billy would love to go.
Loads of open area's around dover, the cliffs are magnificent to walk along, and easily accessible too.
I always loved watching the ferries going in and out with fish and chips!




Tatelou said:Yes, Jeanne, you can definitely be Brit No. 7.
The wind is a little urgent along the coastline there, isn't it? Gets pretty bad along the South Coast, too. Nothing better than a bracing walk along the clifftops to invigorate the soul.
Lou
P.S. I imagine Og will be pretty easy to spot, but I'd better not shout out his Lit name if I do see him.![]()
perdita said:Pardon me, Britsters, but can any of you tell me about "SEX LIVES OF THE POTATOMEN"? I read recently that it's the worst film ever produced in Britain. Haven't a clue, please inform.
your personal ally,
Perdita
perdita said:Pardon me, Britsters, but can any of you tell me about "SEX LIVES OF THE POTATOMEN"? I read recently that it's the worst film ever produced in Britain. Haven't a clue, please inform.
your personal ally,
Perdita

jeanne_d_artois said:Particularly as his picture is on the front page of the town guide. I think I remember he had to dye his beard to be Henry VIII so don't look for a ginger beard but a white beard on a large person.
Jeanne
PS. I don't think he could keep the cake on his head in the clifftop winds.
PPS. The National Trust 'Gateway to the White Cliffs' serves disgustingly fattening bread pudding. Yum.


lewdandlicentious said:...
As for Dover, believe me, the cliffs are well worth it. The Castle, as Jeanne well put it, is fantastic for the day. We lived about half a mile from it and visited it often when we lived there.
St Margarets bay is a lovely place, a small enclosed bay, with high cliffs surrounding, only one road in and out. Smashing little pub there too.
I loved the area!
lewdandlicentious said:Jeanne, you wanna be Brit No. 7, with that name, sorry, I'll need to see your passport!![]()
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Lewd, just trying to do what the customs constantly miserably fail at!!!!!
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As for Dover, believe me, the cliffs are well worth it. The Castle, as Jeanne well put it, is fantastic for the day. We lived about half a mile from it and visited it often when we lived there.
St Margarets bay is a lovely place, a small enclosed bay, with high cliffs surrounding, only one road in and out. Smashing little pub there too.
I loved the area!
perdita said:This is what intrigued me, from today's NY Times online (just an excerpt):
British Lottery Funds Help Lowbrow Film Win a Jackpot of Outrage
By SARAH LYALL
LONDON, March 15 — Perhaps the best reason to go see "Sex Lives of the Potato Men," a film that one critic called "a sump of untreated dung," is to investigate whether it successfully lives up to its advance hype. Is it really, as some critics have decreed, the worst British movie ever made?
"It was absolute rubbish," agreed Charles Chandler, 59, who recently took a field trip with his wife to see the film, which opened last month. It chronicles the lewd escapades of a group of puerile 30-ish men who deliver potatoes to fish and chip shops in the Midlands. Mr. Chandler mentioned particularly a scene in which one of the men picks his nose and admires (in loving detail, along with the audience) what he finds there. "There's really no reason for that at all," he said.
What particularly outraged him as well as London's film critics and editorial writers were not necessarily the masturbation sequences involving strawberry jam and fish paste; or the close-ups of piles of freshly deposited dog feces in the park; or the weird sex scenes between Mackenzie Crook, who plays the strange-haired worker in the BBC television series "The Office," and a terrifying, zeppelin-bosomed older woman.
What sent the film over the edge in their minds was that half its budget of $3.25 million, came from public funds. The money was allocated by the U.K. Film Council, a public body financed by the national lottery, whose mission is to promote the British film industry. The critic Peter Bradshaw wrote in The Guardian, "The urgent debate for our native film industry seems to me to be as follows: should we put the gun barrel to our temples, or in our mouths for a cleaner kill?"


Yeah, wish I knew how the Lotto could fund Joe's new script. Do let me know if you see it. P.Tatelou said:Shame a lot of Lottery charity money was wasted on it, though.![]()
jeanne_d_artois said:So did Ian Fleming. He owned the large house on the beach in St Margarets Bay. Channel swimmers leave from there.
Bleriot landed on the first cross-channel flight between Dover Castle and the bread pudding cafe.
Jeanne (Brit born in France of Brit parents.)
Edited for PS. The Coastguard (the pub in St Margarets Bay) is run by the people who used to run The Royal in Deal (as visited by Nelson and Lady Hamilton). The Coastguard's food is worth the visit.