ARE YOU A STEREOTYPE?

A serious report on gender stereotyping from the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) has been met with derision in some quarters.

The ASA’s main concerns are ads that relate to body image, objectification, sexualisation, gender characteristics and roles and mocking those who do not conform to gender stereotypes. Ads that inappropriately sexualise women and girls, and those that suggest it is acceptable for young women to be unhealthily thin are given as examples, as are those that suggest that a woman’s role is cleaning up after other family members, or staying in the kitchen to cook that suggest that an activity is unsuitable for a girl because it is stereotypically associated with boys (or vice versa) or that mock men for being unable to carry out simple parental or household tasks. Continue reading

NO MORE CARD TRICKS

The adding of inflated surcharges for payment by credit card, which costs companies 0.6%, is to be banned from January.

The ban will affect airlines such as Flybe, which charges 3% with a minimum charge of £5, Ryanair, FlightCentre and Thomson Airways which charge 2% and British Airways which charges 1%. Insurer Swinton Insurance charges 2.5% as do North District Council, with other councils such as Wealdon, East Herts, Lichfield and Tameside all charging 2%.

Budget hotel group Travelodge currently impose a £2 fee for payments by credit card or PayPal.

NO ICE THANKS

An investigation by the BBC’s Watchdog programme has found levels, some “significant”, of faecal bacteria in ice served to customers at some of the major UK fast food chains.

The coliforms were found at seven of the ten samples taken from KFC, six of the ten from Burger King and three of the ten from McDonalds. The likely cause is staff handling the ice, and/or the ice making machines, not properly washing hands after going to the toilet.

Last month Watchdog investigated the ice at three coffee shop chains and found coliforms at seven of ten samples taken from Costa, and three out of ten samples taken from Starbucks and Caffe Nero.

SALMON LEAP

Those now including salmon in their diet, as an oily fish and good source of omega-3, might want to note its significantly increased price in the last few weeks.

Our local Asda, which was asking £12 a kilo for Scottish salmon fillet now wants £15 a kilo. Pollution of waters in Scotland by the hundreds of salmon farms that now occupy loch and estuary waters on the country’s west coast has been blamed for the sharply increased mortality rate, said to now be one fish in seven or 14%. This is due, it is said to overcrowding in the tanks that can hold 50,000 fish, and the amount of faeces the fish then deposit in a tiny area of the sea bed. This provides a perfect breeding ground for the sea lice parasites that feeds on the skin and blood of the salmon, leaving them vulnerable to fatal infections, an aspect that affects a half of all farms in Scotland.

ON SOCIAL MEDIA SO IT MUST BE TRUE

Reportedly the efforts of one Jeremy Corbyn to market himself as the young person’s best friend are suffering a few minor setbacks.

Following a dazzling presence on social media and a stunning performance at Glastonbury our Jezza has had to admit that his promise to abolish tuition fees and to “deal with” the problem of student debt – boasts that so impressed some of our student body that they illegally voted for him twice – was more aspirational than factual, leaving some to conclude that he might have got his figures and fantasies from a former girlfriend, a Ms. Abbott, who got them from a bloke down the pub, whose Mum told him.

Politicians, dontcha luv ’em?

BRIT SCAM

The image of Nigerians as people you could trust took a battering a few years back over advance fee “419” fraud, a scam that invited victims to help illegally launder a large sum of money “locked” in Nigeria for rewards in millions of pounds sterling. Drawn in by their own greed victims paid out thousands in advance fees to “smooth the deal through”, only to find there was no deal.

Sadly this old scam is ongoing, and not just from Nigeria these days, but the damage to a specific country and its people has been done. Continue reading

LIVE THERE, MEET THERE

Vienna is the world’s best city in which to live, as well as where the most delegates attend meetings.

The number one ranking for living was awarded to Vienna for the 8th year running by the Mercer Quality of Living Index, and the Vienna delegate count ranking for 2016 by event industry body ICCA. The top ten cities for both organisations follow – the only other city in both of the top ten tables was Copenhagen. Continue reading

TIME FOR SLAVERY EXHIBITION AT BRITISH MUSEUM?

A new book about the naturalist and collector, Sir Hans Sloane, whose extensive collections were the basis for the British and Natural History museums makes it clear that slavers in Liverpool and Bristol were not the only ones to make fortunes from the vile trade, and have streets named after them in their honour, according to “Collecting the World: The Life and Curiosity of Hans Sloane” by James Delbourgo. Continue reading

ART OF ANCIENT ROME

A large collection of 130 paintings by Victorian artist Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema (1836 – 1912) are now on show at the Leighton House Museum, Kensington.

Alma-Tadema specialised in depictions of Ancient Rome, often incorporating beautiful women, usually beautifully dressed, lounging on marble seats with a backdrop of flowers and the bright blue sea. A rather darker theme was his famous “The Roses of Heliogabalus” which showed the debauched Syrian teenage emperor Heliogabalus (203 – 222) enjoying the sight of his guests at one of his orgies smothered under tons of flower petals dropped on them, one of a number of perversions that got him assassinated by the Praetorian Guard, with the blessing of an outraged Senate and people of Rome, when he was 18. Continue reading

BAVARIAN OKTOBERFEST IN GREENWICH

Those who like healthy German pork knuckles and sausages washed down with refreshing and slimming citrus white beer will want to know about the Oktoberfest event being sponsored by beer brewer Erdinger and running in Greenwich, October 5-22.

Reportedly 250,000 pints of beer are being shipped in for the 5,000 expected visitors (5 pints each) and admission prices start at £5 for entrance to the beer garden, £15 for standing room only in the beer tent, £20-£30 for a guaranteed table and seat and a corporate package of VIP tables of 8 for £1480, including some food and all drink.

Web: erdinger-oktoberfest.co.uk