I started this thread because I am curious about Polycarp.
Not in that way :dubious: No, I’m curious about his apparent knowledge and interest in many aspects of britain and britishness, The language, the govornment, the History etc…
Poly, I always assumed you were American, and so your knowledge and interest stood out. But it never occured to find out or confirm your nationality. Are you British??? If not, why the interest?
[Anyone] Please feel free to use this thread to ask about anyone.
Ancestry largely from Britain, though mostly if not all before the Revolution – and a lot of curiousity about comparative government – combined with a bulldog attitude towards getting all the information, when I’ve seized on something that interests me.
(Wanna know why the Grand Old Man chatted up prostitutes in the streets? Why Leo Amery quoted Oliver Cromwell? Did you know that Winston Churchill’s son was a great British general? The father-son-grandson combination that separately held three different earldoms? The connection between the erstwhile Lord of Man and the start of the House of Tudor? All these and more can be found in Polycarp’s Store of British Trivia! ;))
I do not know anyone well enough to feel comfortable asking questions, but I would like to mention that, of all the boards I’ve visited in the last couple of decades, this one has the largest number of wonderful usernames.
When I first came here, I saw the names Polycarp and Eutychus, and I was hooked.
I don’t want to know any of those things. I want to know what Scrooge was offering to Bob Crachit on Boxing Day when he proposed renegotiating their business relationship over a bowl of smoking bishop (besides a big raise, that is).
I also want to know what a skiffle band is. As in: Mrs. McCartney thought her son Paul was squandering his potential by continuing to spend his time in John Lennon’s skiffle band.
And what are skittles? As in: Spring is here, spring is here.
Life is skittles, and life is beer.
A skiffle band was a group of teenaged boys whose families could not afford to get them proper instruments, but they had the burning desire to play music anyway. So they used whatever crappy guitar that was in the family or could be borrowed or bought for cheap. The bassist was often thumping on a washtub bass, rhythm was kept on a washboard or any other thing you could bang on, maybe somebody could play a harmonica. The kind of music they would play was American folk blues, and then early rock and roll. Skiffle was popularized by Lonnie Donegan, who turned scores of British kids onto Leadbelly and others. He played it in a stripped down, convincing, inspired kind of way that told aspiring kids right away that they could learn to play this at home. For this reason, the nature of entertainment in pubs went very quickly from old guys playing music hall songs, to kids belting out their best rendition of “Rock Island Line” or “Maggie Mae” until the pub manager told them to stop the racket. And an institution was born.
Skittles are like 10 pins, except there’s no lane, hand dryer or automatic clear away and pick up thing. In other words, it’s the crumby British version of your great game, played in sheds behind pubs by the likes of owlstretchingtime and GorillaMan.
Skiffle was the name given to young louts in England of Irish descent, the first of a whole line of Elvis impersonators, but of Elvis in his pre Vegas, pre bloated days. The most famous skiffler was Lonnie Donegan, from whom The Beatles learned all the things they mustn’t do if they wanted to be original and successful.
Lonnie Donegan in turn gave rise to a whole line of impersonators, the most famous of whom was Val Doonican, who popularised sweaters and paved the way for the influx of cutesy Oirish personalities such as Terry Wogan, Des Lynam and the Kelly brothers.
The name originated with either my AICN forum or Netflix account - I forget which. I like puns, and wanted a movie reference in my “handle”, so I spent a precious few seconds pondering those conditions, and ultimately decided CandidGamera was a pretty decent little pun. And, as I have a tendency to be straightforward and blunt, and at other time defensive and cautious, the name’s two halves suit me pretty well.