I was a mere 4 years old when Seinfeld was first aired. I started watching odd episodes when I was about 9 and to be honest, a lot of the jokes tended to go over my head. I liked the show, plus because it was PG, I was able to watch it. New episodes only aired on TV for another 3 years. As an adult, I decided to re-watch the show, and it appealed to me on a different level. I grew to really appreciate the writing, the jokes, the storylines and the characters, and to this day I still quote lines – however I’m sure there are a lot of people who are certainly sick of that. Continue reading “Seinfeld – How a show about nothing became everything!”
April 16th 2015 – It was a beautiful crisp Spring morning, as my partner and I strolled for the first time through Central Park in New York. Most of the trees were still bare and the leaves were just starting to grow back. The air was fresh and ground still a bit dewy. As we gripped our coffees and casually strolled, a thought occurred – I actually couldn’t believe that I was in New York City. Almost to the point where I had to do one of those over the top rubbing your eyes in disbelief moments. Finally I was here! Continue reading “New York City – 10 things I love about thee!”
Darwinian evolution and the process of natural selection, it’s how we came to be who and where we are today. Natural selection is the processes of selecting the fittest genetics for survival in an organism’s environment and ensuring that these genes are passed on to the next generation. For example, cheetahs evolved to be fast to enable them to catch their prey. Slower
cheetahs would be unable to catch prey as effectively as faster cheetahs, and so may die of starvation, hence the faster cheetahs breed and this trait of fast speed is passed on from generation to generation, and the species evolves.
The same process has worked for humans on many difference traits across millions of years. However one trait that seems to be persisting and, somewhat alarmingly, increasing is human stupidity. Stupidity is being propagated and nurtured by an increasing amount of ‘nanny-ing’ from regulators, government and professional warning-sign writers.
We all know the clichéd warnings of ‘caution: contains nuts’ written on a packet of peanuts and ‘do not use hair dryer in bath’ that have been around for years, but it seems that these inane and, frankly insulting, warnings are on the rise. In today’s society of anaphylaxis, food intolerances and people that like to think that they have a food tolerance (but are simply just annoying and/or fat), I acknowledge that labels declaring ingredients and warnings about nuts and dairy are necessary. However, if you’re allergic to nuts, buy a packet of peanuts (and don’t see the warning that the packet of nuts contains nuts), pop a peanut and then asphyxiate on your own self-induced stupidity, well, frankly, you’ve done society a favour by removing yourself from the gene pool!
Similarly, signs directing us how to do things for our own safety are now appearing in abundance. In a world of litigation, law suits and the inability of people to look where they are going because they are too busy reading on Facebook what Rhonda (who they met once, haven’t seen since but have in their ‘close circle’ of Facebook friends) just had for lunch, these signs, under the guise of ‘public safety’ are really just to protect against being sued. What’s really annoying me at the moment is the tendency to, when an escalator breaks down, put a barrier in front of it with a sign that says ‘out of service’. When escalators stop working, they become stairs. Many people have stairs in their house- they don’t just suddenly get to the edge of the stairs, scratch their head and call work telling the boss that they can’t come in today, as they can’t figure out how to get down the stairs. We have been successfully negotiating stairs for a good few hundred years. Why now, can we suddenly not walk down an unmoving escalator? Why do I need to walk out of my way because Cletus McBumble-dumb might wander along, misplace a step and fall down to his death? Should we not be fencing off all tiered descents to protect the innocent public from the innocuous temptress of death that we call stairs? I acknowledge that mobility impaired people may have difficulty if the escalator isn’t moving, however if they are unable to descend using a railing, there is usually a lift nearby. It is unlikely that someone, out of a sudden desire to create the worlds worst slip and slide, will have poured detergent on the unmoving escalator (stairs) and the person will suddenly slip to their untimely stair-induced death.
People need to think for themselves. It’s how we evolved to be the superior species that we are today. I fear what will happen if we continue to let other people think for us and we blindly follow the plethora of inane warning signs that bombard us everyday. The Darwin Awards exist for a reason. If you can’t negotiate the simplicities of life, perhaps you shouldn’t pass on your genes. Darwin would want you dead!

Public transport is there to be shared, not hogged. And many of us have been guilty of bad behaviour on public transport at one time or another. But it is time to amend our ways and start being more considerate. Here’s a list of the top 5 inconsiderate things that people do on public transport: Continue reading “PUBLIC TRANSPORT SUCKS BECAUSE OF YOU”
* WARNING SPOILERS
I saw Jurassic Park when I was 10 and it blew me away. The Dinosaurs realness factor was phenomenal and it honestly made me want to be a Palaeontologist. I loved Dinosaurs and to see them bought to life in such a grand scale earned a place in my heart as one of the best movies for that genre. So when they announced Jurassic World, my heart skipped a beat. How would they do it? What direction would they take? Continue reading “JURASSIC WORLD”
Oh what fun it is trying to find love. And if you’re wondering that was sarcastic or genuine, it’s written with a bit of both. There are some great people online, but the alarming fact is that 10% of sex offenders use dating apps to meet people (according to Statistic Brain). Continue reading “12 SAFETY TIPS FOR OLINE DATING”
Welcome to the most common response I get when I ask a customer how they are going or hello. Rarely do I get an “I’m good thanks” or “I’m well”, it is a cold, blunt often rude line of “I’m just looking” which if you really look at it, it translates to leave me alone.
Continue reading “I’m just looking!!”
This series has a lot of potential, as its central characters Rob and Sharon navigate through their unplanned pregnancy together.
Continue reading “Catastrophe season 1: A lovely couple in the making”

There’s something about British comedies, they’re charming, sarcastic, witty and more often than not, politically incorrect and completely on the money and hilarious. The only downside is that they’re always too short, and the seasons leave you wanting more. Catastrophe definitely falls into this category.
Catastrophe is about a one night stand in London that turns into a Continue reading “CATASTROPHE EP01: FUNNY AND CHARMING”
Ban-nan-na! Si.

The cutest creatures to grace the silver screen in the last 10 years has returned for their Origins feature film. Continue reading “Minions: Clumsy Cuteness at its best”


