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Life's Lottery

Page 69

by Kim Newman


  Perry White’s catchphrase on the 1990s show Lois and Clark: The New Adventures of Superman. A replacement for the traditional ‘Great Caesar’s Ghost’

  The theme for Top Cat

  http://www.telesearch.org/themesonline/index.htm

  Blood From the Mummy’s Tomb

  A 1972 Hammer horror film. It features a living, bleeding severed hand and plenty of torn-out throats. Before you do the research, I think I mention it for its associations, not because it actually was on television that evening.

  http://us.imdb.com/title/tt0068290/

  Genesis

  You know he thinks the band sound better with Phil Collins.

  http://www.punk77.co.uk/punkhistory/whendinosaursromaedtheearth.htm

  NHS

  National Health Service

  pulling

  ie: ‘Scoring’, ‘picking up’, forming an instant sexual liaison.

  Hello!

  Celebrity-focused magazine, obsessed with anodyne gossip. Mild-mannered equivalent of a US supermarket tabloid.

  http://www.hellomagazine.com/

  Amazon Queen

  Superheroine staple of the ZC Comics universe. Mickey Yeo kills her in The Quorum.

  Noel’s House Party

  BBC1 Saturday evening show in the 1990s, hosted by Noel Edmonds, who played purportedly humorous practical jokes on minor celebs and members of the public who then had to pretend to be amused. Spun off the unaccountably-popular pretend children’s TV character Mr Blobby. Its popularity was almost certainly a sign of the apocalypse.

  http://www.ukgameshows.com/atoz/programmes/n/noels_house/

  See especially: http://lordofthemoon.com/disasterarea/noel.html

  Gladiators

  The UK version of American Gladiators.

  http://www.ukgameshows.com/atoz/programmes/g/gladiators/

  East Enders

  The BBC’s long-running TV soap.

  http://www.bbc.co.uk/eastenders/

  http://www.jumptheshark.com/e/eastenders.htm

  One Foot in the Grave

  Sit-com about a curmudgeonly old git.

  http://www.tvheaven.ca/victor.htm

  Avengers

  The ITV surreal thriller series, not the Marvel Comic.

  http://theavengers.tv/forever/welcome.htm

  animated Hand of God

  A feature of the initial television ads for the Lottery.

  squirt cider in your ears

  See: Guys and Dolls,, the Broadway musical by Frank Loesser based on the short stories of Damon Runyon, filmed with Marlon Brando and Frank Sinatra.

  public-school

  ie: private, fee-paying

  monstrous snarl and glowing red eyes

  see: ‘Where the Bodies Are Buried’.

  the Wimpy Bar

  UK chain of hamburger restaurants, named after the character in the Popeye cartoons. Superceded by the arrival of American-style fast food chains in the 1980s. But they’re still hanging in there, even if my local Wimpy closed down and was replaced significantly by a Starbuck’s.

  http://www.wimpyburgers.co.uk/

  Shinbone

  The town where Liberty Valance got shot

  petrol tank

  ie: gas tank

  Tom Robinson

  Wrote the gay pride anthem ‘Glad to Be Gay’ in 1977. He briefly went through the absurd indignity of being harried by the tabloid press for having a long-term relationship with the woman he later married and had children with. In case the reference here, filtered through an embittered and cynical character, is ambiguous, it should be noted that Robinson strikes me as a genuinely decent, even heroic public figure.

  http://www.tomrobinson.com/

  Dixon of Dock Green

  In the UK, the BBC-TV series Dixon of Dock Green (1955-76) manages to be the equivalent of both Dragnet and The Andy Griffith Show, at once a reassuring police procedural about how crime is swiftly beaten and a family fantasy about the caring, fatherly copper. George Dixon (Jack Warner), who was shot dead in the feature film (The Blue Lamp) from which the show spun off but resurrected for a long run, epitomises the image of the bobby on the beat.

  http://www.museum.tv/archives/etv/D/htmlD/dixonofdock/dixonofdock.htm

  ‘Tomorrow Belongs to Me’

  The second most famous Nazi anthem ever written by Jews (after ‘Springtime for Hitler’), this John Kander and Fred Ebb number from Cabaret was most remembered at the time this scene takes place for a performance on the satirical puppet show Spitting Image in which a newly-reelected Thatcher government sang it to an effect more chilling than comic.

  Refuseniks

  Those who refused to pay the community charge/poll tax as a protest.

  pull the fanny

  ‘pick up chicks’; ‘fanny’ is a UK vulgarism for female genitalia — so US expressions like ‘fanny-pack’ tend to excite hilarity in Britons. Then again, Americans look askance at Brits asking ‘can I bum a fag?’

  gyp

  n. Trouble. As a verb, ‘to gyp’ means cheat or swindle. Derived from ‘gypsy’, it is probably outmoded because of the implied ethnic slur.

  Top of the Form

  Radio and TV children’s quiz show.

  http://www.staugs.org/television.htm

  Make-your-mind-up-time

  Catch-phrase of Hughie Green, host of the long-running ITV ‘talent’ show Opportunity Knocks.

  http://www.ukgameshows.com/atoz/programmes/o/opportunity_knocks/index.htm

  Goose Green

  Site of battle during the retaking of the Falklands in 1982.

  Black Monday

  October 19.

  http://mt.sopris.net/mpc/finance/blackmonday.html

  Bob Monkhouse

  Lottery presenter. Long-time UK-TV (and film and radio) personality, recently a surprise cult figure as the voice of Mr Hell on Aaaagh! It’s the Mr Hell Show.

  http://www.tvtome.com/tvtome/servlet/PersonDetail/personid-53677

  How to Steal a Diamond in Four Un-Easy Lessons

  UK release title of the 1972 caper movie The Hot Rock.

  the char

  Charlady, domestic servant.

  Captain Mainwaring

  Pompous, inept bank manager/home guard officer played by Arthur Lowe in the sit-com Dad’s Army.

  Girl Guides

  UK equivalent of Girl Scouts.

  http://www.girlguiding.org.uk/

  CID

  Criminal Investigation Division; the rough equivalent of an American police force’s Major Crimes Unit

  Deselection

  The process whereby a politician holding public office is replaced by his or her party as a candidate at the next election; it’s a particularly humiliating way of lame-ducking someone who refuses to resign gracefully.

  The Comet on Sunday

  Derek Leech’s Sunday tabloid.

  benefits

  Welfare

  England lost the Cup Final in 1966

  See: ‘The Germans Won’ in my collection Unforgivable Stories

  the Star Trek episode in which Spock has a beard

  ‘Mirror, Mirror’

  Jeffrey Hunter

  Captain Pike in ‘The Cage’ aka ‘The Menagerie’

  Sausage toad

  Sausages or sausage-meat cooked in Yorkshire pudding, also known as toad-in-the-hole. No amphibians are actually involved. Here are some recipes:

  http://www.west175productions.com/Great_Food/recipes/recipe033.htm

  http://brunch.allrecipes.com/AZ/SvrySsgTdinthHl.asp

  Arthur Mullard

  Gravel-voiced cockney character actor, most often seen as comic criminal dimwits (Two-Way Stretch, The Wrong Arm of the Law, Vault of Horror).

  http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0611972/

  going spare

  Losing one’s nerve, temper or sanity.

  Moose Malloy

  The hulking thug in Raymond Chandler’s Farewell, My Lovely — played by Ward Bond, Mike Mazurki and Jack O’Hallorann in various fi
lms.

  Arthur and Guinevere

  Randomising machines used by the National Lottery, which was then operated by a company called Camelot.

  Match of the Day

  A long-time BBC-TV Saturday evening fixture, this show selects several of the many football matches played on Saturday afternoon and screens them with the duller stretches edited out. Struggling these days thanks to live, unedited football matches on many cable sports channels owned by Rupert Murdoch.

  "http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/match_of_the_day/default.stm

  Mr UN Owen

  This is a reference to the Agatha Christie novel published originally as Ten Little Niggers, but now usually known as And Then There Were None or Ten Little Indians. ‘U.N. Owen’ is the mysterious, pseudonymous host who invites the ten characters to a house party only to accuse them of murder via gramophone record and then kill them off one by one.

  toss off

  masturbate

  crazy-paving

  A jigsaw-like arrangement of irregular slates or tiles, used for patios or garden paths.

  cagoule

  A brightly-coloured, rainproof hooded garment popular among walkers, campers and other wilderness types.

  Doc Martens

  Boots favoured by fashionable hardnuts.

  http://www.drmartens.com/_flash/default.asp?country=USA

  the bogs

  The toilets

  A game of potatoes

  You know the drill: one-potato, two-potato, three-potato, four ...

  kit

  Clothing or gear.

  Bounty bars

  Coconut-filled chocolate.

  http://goodwoods.safeshopper.com/14/971.htm

  sweets

  candies

  Council tenant

  In the 1980s, the Thatcher government allowed tenants of council-owned houses to buy the properties; one effect of this was a drastic reduction in the availability of affordable public housing.

  South-West Gas

  In The Quorum, Candy is told as a teenager at a seance that she will work for the gas company.

  Q

  Glossy music monthly.

  http://www.q4music.com/

  Hallam Moseley

  Star bowler of the Somerset county cricket side in the late 1970s.

  http://www.cricketarchive.co.uk/Archive/Players/3/3727/3727.html

  utility belt

  Batman’s gadget-filled apparel; sometimes, it seemed as if he was likely to keep an autogiro in there.

  queen’s evidence

  the UK equivalent of state’s evidence

  rugby scrum

  Six blokes interlocked and holding each other’s buttocks struggling to control an ovoid ball with their feet.

  You nut Sean

  i.e.: You head-butt Sean

  goolies

  testicles

  pud

  pudding

  the nick

  jail

  Real Records

  A Derek Leech Company

  dabs

  fingerprints

  The TV Times

  ITV’s listings magazine, far more tabloidy than the BBC’s Radio Times.

  Blu-tack

  Putty-like adhesive material used in place of thumbtacks.

  Holloway

  Women’s prison

  The Financial Times

  Daily national newspaper, printed on distinctive pink paper, with an especial bias towards business and money matters.

  the Admiral Benbow Inn

  Site of the marvellous opening chapter of Treasure Island.

  stodge

  Fatty foods.

  bovver boots

  Boots designed as weapons rather than footwear.

  At Her Majesty’s Pleasure

  A prison term. The expression comes from the formal phrasing used by judges in sentencing convicts to serve a sentence ‘at Her Majesty’s Pleasure’.

  Anton Diffring

  German character actor, typecast as Nazis. He was in The Colditz Story and Where Eagles Dare.

  http://us.imdb.com/name/nm0226446/

  Muttley

  Dick Dastardly’s sidekick in the TV cartoon show Wacky Races; his distinctive grumbling sounds like ‘rassin frassin grassin Dick Dastardly!’

  http://www.hotink.com/wacky/dastrdly/

  Sally Rhodes

  See: ‘Mother Hen’, ‘Twitch Technicolor’, ‘Gargantuabots vs the Nice Mice’, ‘Organ Donors’, The Quorum and Seven Stars.

  Myra Hindley

  With Ian Brady, one of the so-called Moors Murderers, among the most despicable of British serial killers. They abducted, tortured and killed children.

  http://www.crimelibrary.com/serial4/moors/moorsindex.htm

  Lord Lucan

  A peer who disappeared in 1974, suspected of the murder of his children’s nanny. It is assumed that he either disposed of himself invisibly or became an international fugitive. Legally, he is presumed deceased. See: http://www.lordlucan.com/

  Bobby Moore

  Captain of the world-cup-winning England football team of 1966.

  http://www.ironworks.com/westham/moore.htm

  the Man From B.U.N.G.L.E.

  character in the British comic Smash.

  ropey

  Cheap and unreliable.

  porridge

  UK slang: time in prison

  transhumance

  This brand of Swiss crop rotation is seared into my generation’s brain by geography O levels. We also know what barkhans are and how a shaduf works.

  Iain Scobie

  See: ‘Where the Bodies Are Buried 3: Black and White and Red All Over’

  GBH

  UK police slang — grievous bodily harm

  Broadmoor

  An Institution for the Criminally Insane.

  Dennis Nilsen and Peter Sutcliffe

  UK serial killers; Sutcliffe was the Yorkshire Ripper. Apparently, they really do argue about what television channels to watch.

  good books

  Killing for Company, Brian Masters, about Nilsen; ... Somebody’s Husband, Somebody’s Son, Gordon Burn, about Sutcliffe.

  Michael Eaton

  Screenwriter of the underrated Fellow Traveler and occasional contributor to Sight & Sound magazine. As a writer for television, he does specialise in true crime drama: The Tragedy of Flight 103 (the Lockerbie crash), The Flowers of the Forest (a child abuse panic) and Shipman (the serial killer doctor). We can assume that Keith’s feelings about Mountaintop are coloured by personal involvement, since Eaton’s work is remarkably tactful and insightful in a genre rarely distinguished by those qualities.

  orienteering

  The practice of being dropped in a wilderness and making your way out using only a map; once a common school afternoon-off exercise, a holdover from the days when British boys’ schools worked some sort of military training (ROTC — Royal Officer Training Corps) into the syllabus.

  treated privately, of course

  ie: Outside the National Health Service. Though NHS care is provided for all British citizens, those who can afford it can opt out and pay for supposedly higher-quality medical treatment.

  an e-bomb

  In this alternate timeline, such things are possible; in our real world, 2001 has come and gone without it. In my defence, Neal Stephenson, who is a lot more clued-up about computers than I am, posited exactly the same thing in his Cryptonomicon, which is set before 2001.

  yobbish

  Thuggish. A yob (backslang ‘boy’) is a young, violent man of limited intelligence. Ooh look, a note on a note.

  Table of Contents

  Kim Newman

  Dedication

  Getting Around in Life’s Lottery

  Life’s Lottery

 

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