Wednesday, 21 January 2026

Baby no more

Sharing the day with another mismatched assortment of names, including Telly Savalas, Plácido Domingo, Martin Shaw, Benny Hill, Billy Ocean, Cristóbal Balenciaga, Steve Reeves, Christian Dior, Geena Davis, Edwin Starr, Jack Nicklaus, Lola Flores, Phil Neville, Richie Havens, Karl Wallenda, Wolfman Jack and - erm - Rasputin, our own ickle Baby Spice is (gulp!) fifty years old today [born the same day as the first commercial flights by Concorde]!

Now I feel old...

Here she is, with her biggest solo hit:

This cover of an old Edie Brickell song, however, remains my favourite:

Many happy returns, Miss Emma Lee Bunton (born 21st January 1976)!

Tuesday, 20 January 2026

Satire's not dead yet

A new study has found that taking part in “Dry January” leads to a sharp and measurable increase in smugness, with partners, friends and bar staff reporting noticeable behavioural changes within days of the month beginning.

Researchers said participants displayed heightened levels of self satisfaction, particularly in pub settings, where abstinence was often announced loudly and repeatedly, despite no one asking.“It’s not just that they’re not drinking,” one increasingly weary partner lamented. “It’s the way they sit there watching everyone else like they’re morally superior. It’s made me drink even more if I’m honest, mainly out of spite. Sometimes I just go to the pub without them.”

Friends reported similar responses.“They can’t just quietly not drink,” harped one disgruntled drinker. “They have to mention it. In the pub. Over and over. It’s quite annoying.”

Bar staff said the behaviour was instantly recognisable. Jim Bingham, bar manager at The Bouverie Tap in Folkestone, Kent, said Dry January customers tend to let you know as soon as they walk in. “They want to chat about how well they’re doing. But we’re busy,” he bristled. “We don’t need your life story. Just order a fucking drink.”

“No one orders a lager and explains they’re doing Fat February. But in January, ordering a lemonade comes with a TED talk. We don’t care.”

Pubs confirmed sales of alcohol free beer, cider and spirits rise sharply throughout the month.“We order extra every January,” Bingham said. “It’s not a trend. It’s for these numpties.”

Alex Furness, a bartender at the pub, said customers often seemed disappointed by the lack of reaction. “They announce they’re doing Dry January and just stand there,” he said. “Like we’re meant to clap. I don’t give a shit.”

The study revealed the most common phrase recorded was “I’m actually doing Dry January”, often delivered with a smug expression, as if they’re quietly enjoying the smell of their own fart.

Researchers also noted a marked increase in phrases such as “I don’t even miss it”, “I actually feel amazing”, “I’m sleeping so much better” and “I’ll probably just carry on in February”, usually spoken while staring longingly at someone else’s pint.

They found smugness typically peaked in the second week of January, before collapsing rapidly following phrases such as “I might just have one” or “I’ve still done really well”.Pubs expect behaviour to return to normal by early February, when participants begin saying they have “basically cut down now” while ordering a pint.

The report concluded that while Dry January may offer personal benefits, it places “considerable strain on pubs, relationships, and anyone seated nearby”.At time of publication, bar staff confirmed they had ordered enough 0% options and were “looking forward to Full Fat February”.
- this post from The Bouverie Tap in Folkestone makes me want to pay them a visit!


Brooklyn Beckham and Nicola Peltz have never worked a day in their entire lives.

They really do believe they are suffering over a wedding dress and a typical in-law disagreement.

Zero adversity in life is what creates this phenomena [sic]. People worldwide are starving, dying, and being slaughtered in their hometowns - but poor Brooklyn and Nicola had a dust-up at their billionaire wedding.

They are so wealthy, they were then able to organise another wedding to make up for the first - but they want the public to realise how stressful it is that they had to have TWO multi-million dollar weddings because his brother said something mean to him and his mother danced with him at the wrong time.

Truly traumatising. Pray for them.
- Candace Owens

[The "real" story]


“Retaliatory tariffs are a bad idea,” said Starmer. He isn’t wrong. A trade war would undoubtedly harm the UK economy. And falling out with your most important ally who helps maintain your nuclear deterrent can generally be filed under “bad idea”. But where do you draw the line when The Donald goes ahead and does all the things he says he is going to do? Imposes tariffs; annexes Greenland; trashes Nato.

In KeirWorld where no boat should ever be rocked, The Donald operates in a world without consequences. Where every humiliation is only greeted with an invitation to inflict further humiliation. Were Trump to take a fancy to Scotland - hell, he owns a couple of golf courses so why not the whole country: first he takes Turnberry then he takes Holyrood - what would Starmer do then? Apart from saying how disappointed he was and that we needed to maintain good relations with the US at all costs.

Maybe Keir will prove us all wrong. He will secure a meeting with the president in Davos and The Donald will see the light. But you wouldn’t put money on it. Starmer has acquired the reputation of being the world’s best Trump wrangler but right now it’s hard to see we have got that much in return.

It could just be that Keir used his best bargaining chip long ago when he offered the president a state visit on the first date. That’s the only thing The Donald has ever really wanted from us. We gave it away too cheaply.
- John Crace in The Guardian

Amen.

Monday, 19 January 2026

Tumble out of bed and I stumble to the kitchen

  • "God tells us not to judge one another, no matter what anyone's sexual preferences are or if they're black, brown or purple. And if someone doesn't believe what I believe, tough shit."

  • "If something is bagging, sagging or dragging, I'll tuck it, suck it or pluck it."

  • "It costs a lot to look this cheap."

  • "If I hadn't been a woman, I'd be a drag queen for sure. I like all that flair and I'd be dressing up in them high heels and putting on the big hair. I'd be like Ru Paul."

  • "The way I see it, if you want the rainbow, you gotta put up with the rain."

  • "I look just like the girls next door... if you happen to live next door to an amusement park!"

  • "I'm no natural beauty. If I'm gonna have any looks at all, I'm gonna have to create them. Thanks to Botox and fillers, as well as the work that I've already had, my face pretty much maintains itself."

  • "I'm old enough and cranky enough now that if someone tried to tell me what to do, I'd tell them where to put it."


Dolly Parton, Goddess.

Our Patron Saint of Rhinestones, the ever-adorable Miss Dolly Parton is - gulp - eighty years old today!

On this Tacky Music Monday - as we adjust ourselves once again to the fact that, yes, we do have to go to work in order to pay the bills - there is only one song in the great lady's repertoire that fits the bill, really...

Many happy returns, Dolly Rebecca Parton (born January 19, 1946)!

Have a good week, dear reader.

Sunday, 18 January 2026

Ecco nuova musica! Può darsi...

A very mild, pseudo-Spring-like weekend is upon us, despite the fact that the sun barely rises over the houses over the back from the extensive gardens here at Dolores Delargo Towers at this time of year. We may be tempted outside to tackle some of the inevitable tasks that need to be done (in the quest to "banish death" from the garden in preparation for new growth to come)! [I did make a start yesterday, chopping back the old flowering stems of the Verbena bonariensis and Salvia ulignosa - both of which throw out over 5 to 6ft of growth every year, but once the flowers are dead, look ugly. Browned fern fronds are next on my radar.]

Meanwhile, how about another selection of some of the "newer" music that has caught my ear of late..?

Let's open with a number that's not new at all - in fact it was released in 1967! - but it appeared on the lovely Rylan's show on Radio 2, as he was in conversation with two of the stars of Strictly Come Dancing [where it has apparently been a regular dance choice; I dunno, I never watched the show in my life]. Having never (knowingly) heard it before, here it is! A slice of irrestistibly catchy cha-cha-cha:

Back to the present...

Our Glorious Leader Queen Madge has - out of the blue - released a cover of the song that made Patty Pravo [see here and here] a massive star in Italy (in support of a marketing campaign for D&G, it appears). Quite a departure for her, but beautifully done!

I only very recently stumbled across this one - and I rather like it!

A jolly enough number, from an ex-girlband member (Little Mix), with a rather odd video - what more do we need?

Yay! Another new choon from our favourite eccentrics du jour! Pain? What pain?

And finally, saving the best to last, it's another cracker from the eternally-sexy Mika!

Hello!

As ever, dear reader, let me know your thoughts...

Saturday, 17 January 2026

Viva la Diva(s)!


It's another Betty White Day today!

There's a huge cornucopia of birthdays today, including the remarkable and beloved Betty White, Our Patron Saint of purring Eartha Kitt, and (Lord) David Lloyd George, Muhammad Ali, Vidal Sassoon, Jim Carrey, Paul Young, Calvin Harris, Shari Lewis, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Neville Shute, Andy Kaufman, Susanna Hoffs, Mack Sennett, Chris Montez, Benjamin Franklin, James Earl Jones, Michelle Obama, Tiësto, (Lord) Keith Joseph, (Sir) Compton Mackenzie, Al Capone, Shabba Ranks, Richard Hawley and Sheree North, and today marks the centenary of the birth of Moira Shearer...

...but it is to our most regularly-featured Patron Saint (of Hair-Swishing?), stalwart employer of every safety gay in France, and (another) "birthday girl" Dalida to whom we turn for respite today, dear reader! Enjoy...

Dalida était l’une des plus grandes de toutes les divas!

Friday, 16 January 2026

Everything I touch turns to...


Wise words of the day

Another very odd week crawls to its inevitable demise. I have found myself feeling a bit like a prisoner, working from home [a thing I hate, and never did before the pandemic arrived in 2020]. Today I feel so "stir-crazy" I am finally going to venture into the office (now the rain and murk has stopped, for a while at least). Woo-hoo.

Just one day more, and it'll be time to breathe again...

To prepare ourselves for the weekend ahead, we need to get into more of a party mode - so let's apply the "super-gloss" hair gel, dig out our best padded shoulder floral print jackets (with clashing shirts, of course) and a little touch of diamanté, and boogie on down with Midnight Star [whatever happened to them?]. Thank Disco It's Friday!

Have a good weekend, dear reader!

Thursday, 15 January 2026

Got to be strong to be good

And so, farewell then, Sheila Bernette.

An obscure name even over here in the UK nowadays - but to anyone of a generation that remembers 1970s British telly, she was everywhere!

A naturally gifted and very funny woman, she appeared in The Dick Emery Show, Coronation Street, Butterflies and with Morecambe and Wise, Larry Grayson, Leslie Crowther and Jimmy Tarbuck, was Tommy Cooper's "magician's assistant", regularly sang and performed on The Good Old Days, and was probably best-remembered as one of the pranksters (often as a "little old lady") on Candid Camera.

And then there was this - her famous advert for Extra Strong Mints:

Simply faboo! 

Another little piece of the fabric of my childhood, gone. RIP.

Wednesday, 14 January 2026

Of beards, cultural deficit, zero zero, rough trade, Dilbert, fake pandas, Welsh Romans, Bowie and Gallic electro


A gamble that paid off news: a Belgian art dealer who bought a painting that caught his eye for under €100,000 (£86,600/$115,000) "on a hunch" is now the owner of not only a Rubens, but a Rubens "two-in-one" - if you flip the picture upside-down. [click any pic to embiggen]

It's another snippets post, dear reader:


RIP, Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert.

And the weather? Rain, mizzle, rain, ad infinitum...

Tuesday, 13 January 2026

Dry January?

A man who has sworn off drinking this month has clarified that it only counts as drinking if it is in the pub, for God’s sake.

Wayne Hayes has proudly told everyone he is laying off the booze for the month but was flabbergasted to learn they expected that meant at home as well.

He said: “You can’t not drink at all, can you? In January? I’m not superhuman.

“I will keep my promise not to set foot in the pub all month, even on quiz nights. Not a pint of Guinness will pass my lips. If you don’t think that’s an accomplishment you don’t know me.

“But at home? That’s my own business. You can’t stop me and you’ll never even know I’ve been drinking unless you see through the kitchen window where I don’t have a blind because it caught fire.

“It’s still one hell of an achievement. Drinking without the camaraderie, the warm haze of shared intoxication, the fruit machine. I tell you, I’ll be bloody glad when John’s pouring me a pint again. Don’t tell me that’s not hardship.”


He added: “Actually, I’m getting to quite like drinking alone at home now. You can start earlier.”

The Daily Mash

Of course.

Monday, 12 January 2026

Sugar Plums and vibrators

Groo!

I'm sort-of back to work today - basically checking emails and with an agreement that I can log off intermittently to rest my leg (it needs to be raised to heal properly and I can't do that without dispensing with the laptop from the corner of the desk where it sits while I am working from home).

To help ease the burden of dealing with the same old, same old shite - on this Tacky Music Monday, how about a little something from today's birthday girl (and staunchly out lesbian) Miss Patsy Kelly (and chum)?

...and here's an old fave, to boot. She knows exactly what she's selling...

Have a good week, dear reader.

Sunday, 11 January 2026

It's behind you!

Despite the fact my leg is purple and bruised from where the sun don't shine to below my knee, it's not as painful as it has been - and what better way to take my mind off it than our annual pilgrimage to the glittering London Palladium for the panto [in its very last weekend]? Oh, yes we did!

Panto has a long, long history in the UK, arising as it did from myriad sources including Medieval mummers' plays, troubadours, jesters and the European "Harlequin and Pierrot" masques, through taverns and music halls to the traditional tongue-in-cheek ribald comedy shows we know today. It stands alone amongst other "variety show" traditions, however, as being an event for all the family - the ever-present near-the-knuckle double-entendres being included for the adults, but with enough fairy-tale enchantment, colour, flashes, bangs, audience participation and spectacle for the little 'uns, to disguise the essentially smutty nature of the humour on offer. When I read supposedly "outraged" reports in the papers about parents walking out of this year's production with their kiddies because of all the alleged "filth", I continue to despair, in this day and age when just about every thick twat on social media is seeking attention for attention's sake and whose opinion is of no consequence whatsoever to anyone with a brain, as to why tabloids no longer employ real journalists - rather than people paid to gather the most "clickbait" bits off Tw*tter, Reddit or F**book and pass them off as if it were a real story...

I digress. This year it was the turn of Sleeping Beauty to get the Palladium/Michael Harrison/Crossroads Pantomimes treatment - and in its tenth year [a milestone they endlessly, somewhat tiresomely at times, kept reminding us about throughout the show] of similar spectacles, the old stalwarts were all lined up to appear again - dear old Nigel Havers, ventriloquist Paul Zerdin, host/"continuity" Rob Madge and, of course, the centre of it all, the peerless Julian Clary.

Again, there was a guest star to get the "bums on seats" [past "guest turns" have included Paul O'Grady, Elaine Paige, Lee Mead, Dawn French, Jennifer Saunders, Janine Duvitski, Beverley Knight, Donny Osmond(!) and Jane McDonald] - this time, to our joy, it was Catherine Tate!

And again - inevitably - there was a mere nod to what scarcely resembled a "story"; Princess Aurora (whose name Julian as "the King", despite being ostensibly and unbelievably her biological father, never gets right, played by Emily Lane) is cursed by the villainous "Carabos" (Miss Tate) to prick her finger, sleep for a hundred years, and only be awoken by a kiss from her "true love" - the very hunky (especially when he and the chorus dancers get stripped down to their undies for the number Splish Splash) "Handsome Prince" Amonik Melaco, and they all live happily ever after. Ten minutes' worth of plot. That does need quite some padding-out - and that, dear reader, its what makes a show!

Indeed, of all the reviews I've read [and they are a mixed bag of good and bad], perhaps a fellow blogger, Yank in London Kara Dennison summed it up most succinctly:

"...there’s a story we all know, and there is a central title character, but really we’re all here to see a big group of very specific talents show off. The plot is secondary, perhaps even tertiary.

...There was no plot, the skits barely hung together with each other by a thread, and I had a great time."

Amen to that.

It was flimsy, it was basically a succession of variety-show numbers welded together in an effort to make a show out of nothing, and it did sometimes give the impression everything was about to fall about at the seams [although - as I have been reading from reviews from different stages during the run about similar "hiccups" to what we saw - this was all probably carefully scripted]] - but we had a bloody good evening's entertainment nonetheless! [In spite of the whole thing being interrupted and having to stop for a good fifteen minutes last night, when there was shouting from the stalls - which we immediately took for some kind of demo - that, as it turned out, was someone calling for help because an old lady in the audience had collapsed.]

The sets were utterly amazing. The dramatic end to the first half - where gigantic (inflatable) thorned vines expanded from ceiling, walls and orchestra pit to fill the entire vast auditorium (representing the bit in the fairy story where the sleeping princess is hidden behind a thicket of brambles) - was phenomenal. The choreography, and all the dancers, were excellent. The costumes - in particular, of course, our star Julian Clary's - were dazzlingly brilliant!

The "other guest star", impressionist John Culshaw (as "the King's private detective"), added some variety to the show, taking on Donald Trump, Kier Starmer and others, including Julian himself, which was very amusing. Julian was every bit as outré as we expected - even if the scripts this year gave him even less to work with as we may have hoped. His relationship with the ever-willing "foil" Nigel Havers - in particular a late-in-the-show duet - worked well. Mr Havers himself got a funny part of his own, in a parody of the Evita "balcony moment" [NB in the recent Palladium production, Rachel Zegler sang Don't Cry For Me Argentina every night from the theatre's balcony overlooking Argyll Street]. The inevitable comedy "four-performers-in-a-line-sing-a-manic-song-with-props" routine, a panto staple, was hilarious.

However it was Catherine Tate who, despite initial protestations, brought her audience favourite character "Nan" (among others) to the stage - first in a song-and-dance routine to Don't Stop Me Now and then in a brilliant tongue-twister routine based on the classic I'm not a pheasant plucker - really stole the show, and got the biggest round of applause of the entire evening.

Including the curtain call finale...

In spite of its faults, this was a genuinely fun evening, of that there is no doubt!

Same time, next year? Oh, yes, we will!

Saturday, 10 January 2026

And you, you will be queen

Fuck, how time flies! Remarkably it is TEN YEARS today since we lost the greatest of all my icons, the god who walked amongst us, the peerless David Bowie.

As you will be more than aware, dear reader, I have paid due homage to the great man many, many times on this very blog...

Read my week-long series of "Bowie Tracks of the Day" following his untimely death:

Read my two-part magnum opus in tribute to the great man on his 65th birthday in 2012:

I still mourn his loss, needless to say.

As does, it would seem, our "house band" here at Dolores Delargo Towers...

RIP, David. Well done, Sara, Scott Bradlee and the band.

Friday, 9 January 2026

No-one wants to dance


Living in a fantasy. Yeah!

As is its wont, BBC Radio 2 has been going overboard over the last couple of weeks to recognise the arrival of the new year 2026 by going backwards, marking "all the sixes" - 1966, 76, 86, 96 and even 2006 in especially-themed shows.

As it's the end of another week [albeit a very odd one for me after my leg operation on Monday, having yet to set foot outside the front door, and being signed-off work], let's bring to the fore, shall we, a remarkably catchy number that I hadn't heard in ages, until it re-emerged into my conciousness courtesy of one of those "single-year-focused" shows.

From this week forty years ago in 1986, here's a song that just about encapsulated the exact words I would have been saying to any man with a dick and a pulse at the time...

Thank Disco the 80s It's Friday!

Have a good weekend, dear reader...

Thursday, 8 January 2026

Of Shirl, sacrilege, sheep, sausage poisoning, stolen penis and "a statement, darling!"


Many happy returns, Dame Shirley Bassey!

It's another snippets post, dear reader!


The Daily Mash. Of course.

And the weather? Grey, with storms and rain forecast. Yuk!

Wednesday, 7 January 2026

Sorted


NOT him, but he'll do.

"Fortunately, I've just had my TV mended. I say mended - a shifty young man in plimsolls waggled my aerial and wolfed my Gipsy Creams, but that's the comprehensive system for you."

After years of unreliable signal strength from our cable/wifi, we'd finally had enough. So today, a very cute young engineer in a figure-hugging uniform arrived at Dolores Delargo Towers, to cheer me up in my convalescence and to finally - for £75, ker-ching - move the modem from the front room (where we never sit [it's mainly used as a spare bedroom], and don't have any computers, laptops nor a telly) to our living-room at the rear of the house.

That's cheered us up no end! [We did allow him to escape unmolested, in case you wondered...]

Meanwhile, this [from whence the opening quote originated, of course...]!

Tuesday, 6 January 2026

Mere class on a higher plane


Let them eat cake! Gâteau des rois from southern France.

Yes, here I am, leg all bandaged up in wadding [like "Rubbatiti" the mummy in Carry on Screaming, John-John says!], hobbling about the place, feeling a bit sore and bruised, looking out at the dismal wintry weather (it snowed, briefly, earlier) - yet feeling a huge sense of relief that the operation's all over and done with [again]!

Meanwhile - apparently it's Epiphany ("Eppy-fanny" as we usually call it), or Twelfth Night, after which it's supposedly unlucky to still have your Xmas decorations up. If you put any up, of course, which we did not. It's also a time for old pagan traditions - but needless to say, I'll be doing my Wassailing at home with my feet up.

Epiphany is also celebrated in many countries as "Three Kings Day/Driekoningen/El Día de los Reyes Magos". Here at Dolores Delargo Towers, we generally prefer Three Queens. Like these:

A classic.

Sunday, 4 January 2026

How does it feel?


Our Sal's garden in freezing Newcastle - somewhat colder than ours...

The UK is in the middle of a nasty "cold snap" (not unexpected at this time of year, of course), and the extensive gardens here at Dolores Delargo Towers are starting to look a bit sorry for themselves. No snow yet, but frost has nipped the salvias and a load of the fuchsia flowers are brown...

We're hunkering down indoors, needless to say. I'm taking it particularly easy, as I will be heading off at the crack'o'doom tomorrow to University College of London Hospital (UCLH) for another varicose vein operation [I had it done way back in 2012, but the damned veins made a comeback a few years later].

Meanwhile, it's Bernard Sumner's - gulp - 70th birthday today, so I think it appropriate that we feature his band New Order's greatest hit - in my favourite arrangement (of course):

I never tire of it!

Saturday, 3 January 2026

Bring us back together

Among a raft of fellow celebrants today, including Beatles impresario Sir George Martin (whose centenary it is), Mel Gibson (70), J.R.R. Tolkien, John Paul Jones, Victoria Principal, Anna May Wong, John Thaw, Ray Milland, Michael Schumacher, Sergio Leone, Victor Borge, ZaSu Pitts, Stephen Stills and Florence Pugh, it's Thomas Bangalter's birthday...

Who? I hear you ask.

He's probably most famous as one of "the men beneath the helmets", one half of the groundbreaking electro duo Daft Punk, but he was also responsible for this classic:

Ah, happy memories...

...from - gulp - 28 years ago!

Friday, 2 January 2026

What's super about it?

This is a mindfuck. Because of the way the dates fall this year, I'm getting that "Monday Morning Horror" experience - on a Friday!

Yes, being back to work for one day, then into another weekend is simply weird...

We need something to lighten our spirits - and I have found the perfect one. Blurring the boundaries somewhat between "Tacky Music Monday" and my usual "Thank Disco It's Friday" slot, I'm not sure which I love the most - the "Disco Granny chic" of Miss Celi Bee, or her fabulous pirouetting safety gays!

Enjoy...

Thursday, 1 January 2026

The party's over?

Happy New Year, dear reader!

We're having a very slow, woozy day after the excesses of last night's party here at Dolores Delargo Towers.

How about some footage..?

Yeah, baby, yeah!

[Music: 00:00 Gert Wilden - Hot Dance; 02:55 Orchester Wolf Gabbe - Swinging Nordwest]