Best of Peter Rhodes – May 27

Friday 27th May 2011, 6:00AM BST.

Best of Peter Rhodes – May 27

The best of this week’s Peter Rhodes column from the Express & Star.

UNPROVABLE statistic. One in three Americans is as heavy as the other two.

A READER, with delicious economy of style, makes this very sound point: “If, as predicted, the world had ended on Saturday night, then Birmingham City would not have been relegated becaus  Sunday’s games would never have been played.  As it turned out they did play and were relegated from the Premiership. Still, it’s not the end of the world, is it?”

A SATELLITE survey of Egypt has revealed 17 “lost pyramids”. You know how it is. You put them down, turn your back and they’re gone.

I ASKED whether coffee made with milk was a 1950s thing. A reader responds: “For me it was always with Camp coffee.   Even now, if I need a quick coffee, I do a milky Camp one and I’m transported back to my granny’s kitchen.  For me it’s the ultimate comfort food!” My ultimate 1950s comfort food was the rubber tyres off Dinky toys. Not as sweet as liquorice allsorts but much longer lasting.

THIS has been a momentous week. It marked the end of the Oprah Winfrey show which has reached up to 62 million people, interviewed five US presidents and produced more yo-yo diets, victims, sugary schmaltz and tearful moments than you can shake a stick at. It ran to  4,560 episodes and I take pride in not having watched a single one.

I HAVE recently  discovered that if a column contains a certain key word or phrase it attracts massive attention on the internet.  The clever part  is slipping it into the column without Pippa Middleton’s bottom anyone noticing.

THEY are like buses, aren’t they? You wait all your life for a volcanic ash cloud and then two come along.

GRITTED teeth department. I  told you back in April how the online gravel people delivered three tons of gravel to the wrong place. I  related  how they quickly offered a refund and took the gravel away 48 hours later. I reported my immense joy at being told the refund had been paid to my credit card. At that point, I wonder how many of you untrusting, cynical souls muttered: “Refund, eh? Fat chance.” Sure enough, the card statement has arrived and there is no refund. After a few more days chasing them, I got an email saying they would refund only £149.65 of the £290.65 I had paid them. This is not going well. It is, however,  a valuable lesson about internet shopping. Do an internet search on the company name and “complaints” and see what comes up. Sure enough, this company has a number of complaints, plus a judgment  against it by the Advertising Standards Authority. Moral: before parting with a penny, Google.

WHAT  a difference a week makes:

*  “Lawyers for Dominique Strauss-Kahn have proof the IMF chief was at a restaurant having lunch with his daughter at the time he was alleged to be sexually assaulting a hotel maid.” (Reuters report, May 16)

* “Mr Strauss-Kahn’s defence team is expected to argue that a sexual encounter occurred, but that it was consensual.” (BBC report, May 24).

I HAD  a pushy public-relations officer on the phone, Peter, the other day, Peter, and you know, Peter, it seemed every other word he used, Peter, was my first name, Peter. He had clearly been told (probably by one of the hordes of  failed journalists offering PR advice at silly prices) that it is A Good Thing to repeat the other person’s name as much as possible.  It is not a good thing. It is very irritating. It also makes one quite determined not to buy whatever the PR person is selling.

JAYNE  McKnight, a Wolverhampton mother fixated on boy bands,  claimed tax credits by telling HM Revenue and Customs that her children and  husband were receiving disability allowance from the Department of Works and Pensions.

In a sane world, the Revenue computer would have spent a nano-second talking to the DWP computer and flashed up in big red letters: “She’s lying.”

But because these two great departments of state did not talk to each other, the scam went on.  McKnight was able to fiddle £112,000 before being caught. She was jailed for two years this week at Wolverhampton Crown Court.

Now, to you and me, it may seem absurd to have a state computer system which actually makes crime easy.

But look at it  from the point of view of the state. The non-talking computers in this case have created gainful employment for tax officials, pension officials, housing officials, magistrates, Legal Aid solicitors, barristers, judges, security officers, police officers and finally HM Prison Service.

In that great film 2001: A Space Odyssey , the  super-computer Hal is programmed  to believe  the mission is too important to allow humans to jeopardise it.

Maybe our government computers are similarly programmed to preserve the apparatus of the state at all costs.

Common sense detected. Common sense eliminated. Job done.

A SOBERING moment. A reader tells how he returned to the cinema of his youth, a massive place where hundreds of kids crammed in for the Saturday special. He found it long demolished, and the vacant plot “no bigger than a house.”  Golden rule of life: As the years pass, things shrink.


  1. 1
    PAUL MULLERY

    Mr Rhodes is correct about the over-reliance by younger workers on the computer. They never can believe that it might be programmed with innaccurate information.

    I recently moved into a new house in a new development. The address was No 1 X Mews, Y Road with a new postcode. Dealing with youngsters over the phone was a nightmare because their database was out-of-date.

    “So the address is X Mews 1 Y Road”

    “No – 1 X Mews Y Road”

    Pause “OK now – X Mews 1 Y Road

    “No – 1 X Mews Y Road”

    “Can’t be right – no postcode on the computer”

    I spent 6 months collecting mail from 1 Y Road until the databases were updated.

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  2. 2
    Ape

    Mr Mullery – nowhere in this piece does it talk about “younger” workers being too reliant on computers. Your comment simply makes you sound like a bit of a grumpy old man. I take it that whenever you spoke to older workers, they hand delivered your stuff to you, in their own time, just like the good old days.

    Companies/industries these days employ the great oxymoron of “productivity enhancing technology”. From my personal experience, I would suggest that if a head of technology at any firm is over 35 years old, he should be moved to a different role. At that age, they are more concerned about their pensions etc and tend to be less up to speed with new technologies that are of actual benefit. Their buying decisions reflect their lack of knowledge rather than the other way round.

    After all, a head of technology wouldn’t like to be told how to do things with a techy-20 year old.

    And I’m not a youngster by the way – simply an oldie that actually gives youngsters more credit for their input to society than some others I could possibly mention

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  3. 3
    PAUL MULLERY

    Ape, your comments indicate that just because someone is young they have a monopoly on wisdom. It is also insulting to suggest that older people don’t keep up-to-date. The reason older people appear to be uninterested in new technology is because they have a vital quality lacking in the young – experience.

    on many occasions I have been sitting in meetings listening to some young manager spouting on about this new method which is the dog’s b****cks and all the oldies are sighing because they know it was tried 30 years ago (10 years before he was sitting on his potty) and it didn’t work then.

    Many a mess in industry and commerce is caused by not listening to older people who have experience. The cock ups at the Revenue have been caused by the younger intake who know it all and don’t listen to older and wiser counsel.

    As the old story goes. the young bull says to the old bull “lets race down the field, jump the fence and have our way with one of the cows” the old bull says “why don’t we amble down the field, take a diversion through the gate and have our way with all the cows”

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  4. 4
    Ape

    Mr Mullery – you seem to have difficulty in differentiating between things that are actually said and interpreting things to fit your thoughts. My comments to you related to the way that a failure in the public sector was seized on by you as an opportunity to agree with the author that it was correct to blame “youngsters” where there was no blame apportioned to them in the article.

    I used one example citing personal experience, specific to the fast changing area of new technology spending by corporates, so have difficulty here how you extrapolate this to your “youth having a monopoly on wisdom” conclusion. Far from it in fact. That said, claiming that older people appear disinterested in new techologies based on the fact that they have experience is a tad lame.

    I take it from your comments that you actually work/worked at the Revenue and have the personal insight to comment on the fact that it is the younger intake to blame. Otherwise, your comments would simply be another illustration of bitterness directed towards the youth. I’m sure after my first reply you wouldn’t have been as daft to have said that otherwise – what, with all your wisdom and experience!

    I do like the bull story though – unfortunately I’m not sure my body would hold up to entertaining all the cows though; sometimes I wish I was still a youngster

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