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June 27th, 2011 by Louise Mackintosh

Some like it hot

Man, it’s hot out there! Properly hot in a way that England is not normally properly hot.  And of course the Heat Island Effect (thanks, A’Level Geography) makes central London even hotter. Do not even speak to me about my tube journey home….

We don’t cope very well in the heat in this country. As with heavy snow, we are just not used to it. For a country that’s obsessed with the weather we are actually only at home with moderate variations thereof. Predictably unpredictable yet fundamentally bland weather is our national speciality.

And in this extreme heat you must consider the plight of those at risk: pets, the elderly, young children, the organisers of Wimbledon

Because surely it’s not just bad weather that has a knock-on effect on such events, but any weather that is deemed ‘out of the ordinary’. Rain – ok, obvious. It stops play. High winds would bugger up the movement of the balls across the court. And heat? It will affect the players and the spectators alike.

The players just can’t be playing to their usual standards… I’m sorry, but they just can’t! God alone knows what it’s like to have to play in 30+degrees. Eugh. Doesn’t seemed to have stopped Murray though (well played lad). But it clearly didn’t do Serena any favours. But not being a Brit, I am sure she won’t even think on blaming the weather.

And moreover I’d wager that a lot of today’s visitors have actually left early because the highly concentrated heat in those courts has just been too much to bear.

It would be interesting to learn the financial implications of extremely hot weather on such occasion, and indeed the economy as a whole, as much as one would be informed following a spell of snow or flooding. But instead we’ll just be shown pictures of children frolicking and ‘stunning’ girls in their bikinis on British beaches.

(Oh jesus. I just noticed the PR story at the bottom of that last link: 9 out of ten Brits will lose sleep this week because of the humid nights. No Sh*t Sherlock.  Fair play to Travelodge though for getting the story out. I’m just jealous, clearly)

 

P.S. Some like it hot? I don’t. I like it temperate. With occasional rain. Sorry – I’m a gardener.

 

 

 

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February 23rd, 2010 by Chris McCrudden

Trending Today – Justin Bieber

You may not know who he is yet, but Justin Bieber is a 16 year old Canadian R&B singer, and he’s trending very hard right now on Twitter (see the stats here, courtesy of What The Trend).

Regardless of whether an artist best described as a cross between Justin Timberlake and Miley Cyrus makes you want to scream in girlish delight or horror, the Bieber phenomenon reads like a social media fairy tale. He was discovered on YouTube by a record company executive after Bieber’s Mum uploaded videos of him singing to the site, ostensibly so that farflung friends and family could see her boy in action. This early online hype led to a bidding war between Usher and Justin Timberlake to sign Bieber (Usher won), and he went on to record 2009′s second best-selling debut album in the US, just behind the all-conquering Lady GaGa.

From these seemingly humble beginnings, Bieber now has 1.8 million fans on Facebook, his videos attract 5 million views apiece on YouTube and the widget below gives you an idea of how his teenage fanbase uses Twitter as an extension of playground popstar adulation.

That’s the official story anyway. Whether Bieber’s rise to fame is down to serendipity, or just the same kind of hothousing of talented children that’s already given us Beyonce Knowles, Venus and Serena Williams, Britney Spears and, erm, Jimmy Osmond, is a moot point.

Bieber’s current record sales are good, but not astonishing. What is phenomenal, however, is the level to which his fans’ use of social media to share their enthusiasm for Bieber, leaves an enormous footprint over Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, and turns a Canadian hit into a global sensation. The excitement may not last, but chances are the blurring of boundaries between official and fan promotion is here to stay.

new TWTR.Widget({
version: 2,
type: ‘search’,
search: ‘Bieber’,
interval: 6000,
title: ‘Everyone\’s talking about…’,
subject: ‘Justin Bieber’,
width: 250,
height: 300,
theme: {
shell: {
background: ‘#8ec1da’,
color: ‘#ffffff’
},
tweets: {
background: ‘#ffffff’,
color: ‘#444444′,
links: ‘#1985b5′
}
},
features: {
scrollbar: false,
loop: true,
live: true,
hashtags: true,
timestamp: true,
avatars: true,
behavior: ‘default’
}
}).render().start();
>

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