Search the SR website:

18 May 2022
  • Home
  • Sign up free
  • Become a Friend


On Saturday, for the first time since the year of Sandy Shaw, I watched the Eurovision Song Contest. Times have indeed changed. Songs are not what songs used to be – things you could sing in the bath – and mostly it seemed to consist of people either oddly dressed or hardly dressed, gyrating inside a lot of flashing lights, while emitting noises which one presumed was singing.

The Ukrainian group won as was to be expected but our man came second which apparently makes up for decades of nul points. He seemed a genial chap and a future touring in Jesus Christ Superstar revivals as Judas probably beckons once his laurels start to wither, which they will. Otherwise, three persons compered it: the inevitable woman in tight gowns cut low, with a man on either side to chat to. Somewhere off screen, Graham Norton – wearing something colourful it seems from one of the pictures taken – told whoever could make out what he was saying above the racket how wonderful it all was. If you have to be told something is wonderful, it invariably is not.

If anything, the entire show simply confirmed that the past is a foreign country where they do things differently and that the present, as defined by Eurovision 2022, is one to which one does not belong.

On Sunday night, there was the Queen's Jubilee concert which, after it got over a shameless plug for Tom Cruise's latest Top Gun movie, proved to be rather splendid, especially as the Queen turned out. Well, there were lots of horses on show which were clearly far more to her taste than donkeys in parliament. The words were a bit smarmy but the servicemen, performers and horses were magnificent and the royal shrug when her absence from that state opening was mentioned was superb, as was the smile on her face as she left. Katherine Jenkins even sang Rule Brenda. Or at least I thought she did.

Bill Russell

2

Those of us in the autumn of our years are constantly reminded that we are not dying fast enough, soon enough, or cheaply enough. Especially that. 'Auld nuisances' puts it rather well: clogging up beds, A&E slots, waiting lists; care services by the barrowload; medication in cocktail mixes so exotic we don't even remember what half of it is for.

Talking of remembering... did I go to the polling station on Thursday, or, if challenged, would I be minded/tempted to deny fulfilling my bounden duty? I mention this because there is a clear trend in the business of being somewhere then forgetting all about it and moving swiftly into denial having also questioned the why, as in: 'I didn't realise why we were all there meeting, greeting, eating cake. Or was that the curry?' This from younger generations, still a good number of years away from the bus pass and state pension. (Mitigated, of course, by the prospect of generous workplace pensions.)

And talking of the workplace... before I forget. Watch any televised footage of a parliamentary session showing our elected representatives. Heads bowed, draped over a device, a folder, a notepad, thumbs tap tap tapping away like it was already lousing time or the weekend.

Here, lying down in a quiet dark corner of the wee swamp, conserving energy by unplugging the telly and the radio, reading (paper) books about the Great Game and learning how little has changed, watching the feline lodger stretching into a position of total relaxation, thinking...

I'm quite sure I was there on Thursday, not that it matters a damn.

Shelagh Gardiner

2

If you would like to contribute to the Cafe, please email your comments to islay@scottishreview.net



COMMENTARY
Gerry Hassan
I'll be supporting Rangers – with my
fingers crossed

PHILOSOPHY
Robin Downie
How do we acquire knowledge?

CARTOONS
Bob Smith
We're all paying a high price...

NOTEBOOK
Gillean Somerville-Arjat
Letter from Morocco

MEDIA
Hamish Mackay
Protest at SFWA after-dinner speech,
Headliners, Pippa Crerar joins
The Guardian
, and more

SOCIETY
John McGrath
Discrimination is a bit like dark matter

TECHNOLOGY
Bill Magee
We all have the right to make music

CULTURE
Charlie Ellis
Robert Blomfield: viewing life through a lens

CAFE 1
SR Forum
I wish we had shouted louder

CAFE 2
SR Forum
Songs are not what they used to be

2
To access previous editions of SR,
click on the links below

10 MAY 2022

4 MAY 2022

27 APRIL 2022

13 APRIL 2022

6 APRIL 2022

30 MARCH 2022

23 MARCH 2022

22 MARCH 2022:
Scottish Schools' Young Writer
of the Year 2021/22 results

Scotland's weekly current affairs magazine
Sign up free

Editorial

  • Editor
    Islay McLeod

  • Founder

    SR was established in 1995
    by Kenneth Roy

Contact Us

Prestwick International Airport,
Liberator House, Room 216,
Prestwick KA9 2PT
01292 478510
admin@scottishreview.net

Quick Links

Become a Friend of SR
Subscribe to SR
About Us

The Scottish Review is published weekly by the Institute of Contemporary Scotland (ICS)