Tags
Ashes to Ashes, Doctor Who, Glee, Music, Nerdgasm, thumbs way up, TV
Sweet and I aren’t big TV watchers. For the longest time, we didn’t even have cable (only signing up for the “3 months free” promotions, and promptly cancelling at the end of each trial, resulting in a strangely large collection of remote controls, and much to the chagrin of the installation guy). We watch our favourites online, mostly, or on DVD box set – sometimes there’s nothing better on a dreary Saturday than curling up with back to back episodes of Star Trek and a cup of tea! But this month, we had no choice but to succumb. Three of the best programmes on TV are all starting new seasons, and I’m BEYOND excited.
#1: Doctor Who

It’s no secret I’m a huge Whovian and, after a 2-year hiatus and much anticipation for the latest incarnation of the Doctor, it FINALLY returned to our screens last week. For those of you who’ve never seen it, Doctor Who started back in the 1960s in black and white, and rather low budget, and has continued to this day, remaining the longest running science fiction show in the WORLD. It follows the story of the Doctor, the last of his race, travelling through space and time with various companions, battling evil and saving the Earth. He has the ability to regenerate into a new body near death – and the current series marks the eleventh actor to play the role. I hope it goes on forever!! Generations have grown up “hiding behind the sofa“, and this series’ new writer definitely has a taste for the darker stories – last season had episodes which literally made me afraid to turn off the lights, and this week showed one of the most chilling, and best episodes I’ve ever seen. Humanity fleeing to space after a major catastrophe on the Starship UK, led by a gun-wielding, cape-donning Queen Elizabeth X, going undercover to find out what her government is up to while voters are given the option to “protest” or “forget” – and the Doctor left with a choice between killing the last of a race or saving humanity – this episode was to DIE for. And next week? Winston Churchill building an army of “English Daleks” to win the war? COUNT ME IN.
#2: Ashes to Ashes

This may VERY well be the new highlight of my week. It’s in its final season and was a spinoff of the amazing Life on Mars (the UK version – please, America, never try and remake anything again…), which, if you didn’t catch, was a sci-fi police drama (I know, brilliant), telling the story of a present-day police officer who is hit by a car, and wakes from consciousness in 1973. We don’t know if he’s gone back in time, in a coma in the present, or if anything is real – the story is full of wonderfully creepy “signs” he might be in a coma, like hearing present-day voices on the radio, or ’70s television characters stepping out of the TV into his apartment and talking to him about his “real” life…
Ashes to Ashes followed the incredible finale, telling the story of a female police officer (played by Keeley Hawes, of MI-5 and Death at a Funeral fame) who is shot, and inexplicably regains consciousness in 1981. When she wakes up, she is shocked to meet the head of the same police department she’s read about (in researching what happened in Life on Mars). Throughout the series, we don’t know whether she is dead or alive in the present day. Gene Hunt, the DCI, is one of the most brilliantly written characters I’ve ever seen. He’s hilariously politically incorrect (“This case is going as fast as a bunch of spastics in a magnet factory“), unnecessarily brutal, and has lines that’ll have you splitting your sides one minute (“I”m not a religious man, Mr Warren – but isn’t there something in the Bible that says, thou shalt not suck off rent boys?”), and full of hope and absolute fear the next. The season 2 finale remains hands-down the best finale of any TV show I have ever seen in my life, and this series is proving to be simultaneously full of wit and spine-tingling chills, leaving me HANGING off the edge of my seat with a blanket half over my eyes.
#3: Glee

I’ll admit I was a bit of a new kid on the Glee block, but since starting the season in February (and subsequently buying both soundtracks, converting officemates on lunch breaks, and watching the whole thing through about three times since), I’m officially hooked. Another hilariously politically incorrect antagonist (“I empower my cheerleaders to be champions. Do they go to college? I don’t know. I don’t care. Should they learn Spanish? Sure, if they wanna become dishwashers and gardeners”), an ongoing theme of losers and nerds coming out on top, half the cast of Heroes, and amazing numbers – this one has it all.
Do watch the videos! What’s keeping you glued to your seats these days??
So I know a couple of weeks ago I mentioned I was going to be doing this regular feature… did anyone SEE the crazy bizarre Hot Chip video from
I’d been toying with the idea of a regular feature for a while, and last week, I found the perfect fit over at
Saturday night we went to see Valentine’s Day, hoping it was going to be just as good as Love, Actually. It wasn’t, it was kind of a ripoff, pretty pointless, but sappy enough to get us both in the spirit, and we came home and shared wine and Rock Band sing-offs until we fell asleep. We awoke on Sunday morning to fresh snow, and spent the morning snuggling inside, cooking breakfast together, and watching episodes of Glee. Can somebody tell me why I only discovered this show now?! We’re almost done the first season (so no spoilers!) and we’ve both been blown AWAY at how amazing it is. It’s hilarious, wonderfully cast, and
We also had a kind-of couple’s massage – I’d apparently left it too late to book (I thought a week would be plenty of time!) so the couple’s room was fully booked, but we both went at the same time in separate rooms for some relaxation. Well, for Sweet anyway. I took advantage of the fact that this massage therapist stopped halfway through to examine my spine and leg movements and diagnosed me with something that’s evaded countless doctors, chiropractors and therapists for years. Because he’d had the same thing. It’s been about ten years now of this pain becoming increasingly worse, and now chronic, and I’ve tried more stretches, exercises and tortuous methods in the hope of relief than I can even count. He explained what he thought the problem was with complete certainty; something I’ve not seen in the vague and frantic diagnoses of other specialists who’ve been quick to get
this anomaly out of their offices. I’m going back weekly for the next month (exhausting my coverage for the year, but for some reason I totally trust this guy), so fingers crossed. I left however with my hip flexor going into TOTAL spasm after being shown a stretch, and hobbled out in tears barely able to walk, but remaining hopeful! At home, Sweet set me up with blankets and an ice pack, and after a few hours it calmed down enough for us to carry on with our Valentine’s day plans.
We exchanged gifts, went for a slap-up dinner, shared wine and wrapped up the night with my other ‘surprise’ present – an acoustic song Sweet had written just for me, which left me bawling. I taped it so I’ll have it forever and made him give me the lyrics sheet, covered in revisions and the words that made me cry so hard! I’ve been with a fair amount of tossers in the past, and I couldn’t believe I had somebody so wonderful, singing his love from the heart, to hold onto forever. This past week I’d read a great deal of blog posts about how Valentine’s day isn’t a big deal for people, how people shouldn’t need a Hallmark holiday to tell people how they feel about them… but I think it’s a lovely holiday. Even when I was single I took the opportunity to send cards to friends and family telling them how much they mean to me, and yes, people should do
that throughout the year, but if Valentine’s is the one day some people do – then for one day, maybe the world can feel that much more love. I feel naive and childish in feeling this way, in a world so quick to condemn February 14th as invented, saccharine, money-grabbing rubbish – but I see it as just one more day in the year when the world focuses on love instead of hate, and I count my blessings for having an amazing fiance, family, and friends like you reading this right now.

Releases over the next six years were consistently brilliant, though their penultimate-to-date verged into new territory – and to be honest, I felt like I did when Radiohead pulled out Hail to the Thief. But after seeing them live at Wembley in the most heart-stopping performance (to a crowd of >70,000) I’ve ever seen, I was still excited about The Resistance. And it just so happened to be their best and most impressive record yet. It’s a powerful, political, intelligent, and overall stunning epic, and I struggle to find another band even close to being in the same league in terms of creativity, boldness and sheer imagination. And the first single sounded like the Dr. Who theme, which in my opinion, only means bonus points.
Another incredible album 2009 brought to my door was the wonderful Sigh No More by
It wasn’t too long before I did, and it’s quite honestly the strangest and most wonderfully artistic thing I’ve heard in a very long time. It’s the only place I’ve ever found such
and with an entirely new life. I see wonky teeth gone forever and braces finally removed. I see nervousness, and excitement as I left my life behind and started fresh on an entirely new continent, initial feelings of anxiety quickly surpassed by those of enthusiasm, as I was thrown into high school, and everybody wanted to know the new kid in town. It seems a million years ago, but we were all still using Napster, Britney Spears was the freshest thing since sliced bread, and Madonna was getting ready to take over the world all over again.
money, lack of time, and our eventual breakup. This year, I worked as a postal clerk! X Factor mania began its reign of television supremacy, and a tsunami took the lives of hundreds of thousands. This was the year I discovered the magic of the 
for three years. This was the year I got my beautiful little cat, too, but it was also the year my parents split up. An extremely close relationship with my dad began, but my relationship with my mother went in the opposite direction. In 2006 I
I lost a lot of my self-confidence and started questioning the person I was. I learned a lot of valuable lessons, and I wish I could go back to my 2007 self and give her a slap in the face and tell her to stop being so naive. But 2007 had lots of good moments too – I visited England, France, went to the
In late spring, Sweet came back into my life after about 5 years not being in it, shortly before another trip back to the UK. I visited old friends, fell in love with Ireland, and discovered I missed Sweet more than anything, and came back into his arms, where we officially decided to give it another go. My best friend got married in a beautifully intimate ceremony, and I experienced my first moments of real, true love. I had to give up my second cat, Chloe, and wept for days. Heath Ledger passed away and the world was in shock. I was encouraged to leave my comfy job at the print shop and
go for something more, so I took a chance, quit, and spent the
amazing music



