Tuesday 16 June 2015

Female Scientists Yet To Explain Boris Johnson’s Popularity

A group of prominent female scientists claimed they had failed to understand the inexplicable popularity of Mayor of London, Boris Johnson.


Despite sustained and continuous study, the group of female scientists had been unsuccessful in their attempts to explain the phenomenon, a spokesperson describing it as “baffling and frustrating, like trying to explain the offside rule”, in a statement yesterday.

The news comes just hours after the part-time Bungle impersonator and Mayor of London attracted criticism for his defence of Professor Tim Hunt, who was in turn heavily censured for comments made about female scientists.

The bebicycled whiff-whaff enthusiast resisted protests that the professor’s statement, claiming women cried more readily in the workplace, were sexist. His assertion that the comments were made during a “light-hearted, off-the-cuff speech” echoed Sir Tim Hunt’s own statement shortly before his resignation from University College London.

The Conservative politician is not shy of controversy, being a Conservative politician, and it has been suggested that he could have breached the Sex Discrimination Act by defending the Professor. Although Johnson would usually look to add the breach of another sex act to his tally, it is thought he would look to avoid contention ahead of a return to frontline politics.

In the face of such overwhelming evidence to the contrary, it remains all the more frustrating to the group of female scientists, as to how Boris Johnson retains his overwhelming popularity.

“We’ve honestly no idea,” the spokesperson continued, “So far, everything seems to point to the kind of resentment levels usually associated with Nick Clegg… but everybody bloody loves the blustering buffoon.”

The spokesperson would not be led on claims that the test results had been contaminated by the scientists’ tears.

Wednesday 13 May 2015

Beer And KP's Nuts

My girlfriend, Lucy, has never banned me from drinking beer before midday. It remains a practice which is strictly frowned upon, but not actively opposed. Discouraged, but not prohibited. I only mention this, because I recently found myself “in between jobs”. I joked about sitting around in my dressing gown, drinking special brew and watching Judge Rinder on TV, before Lucy remarked that I was describing a normal Sunday.

I will only remain unemployed for a week or so more, but I have found it difficult to use my time productively. For a while there was the distraction of finding a job. Then the election. There’s always Twitter to occupy me, of course, and it was on Twitter that I found myself reading about a particular incident that put me in mind of the recent bank holiday weekend.

There’s a zoo in Bristol, called Bristol Zoo. It isn’t by any means a large enterprise. There are penguins, and in Lucy’s book, that is enough reason to warrant a visit. The love for an animal, based on its propensity to trip over rocks into small bodies of water, can be deceptively strong. Presumably there’s a link between that and her love for me.

We spent a couple of hours wandering the exhibits, before we made our way to a pub for some lunch. I fancied a pint of lager, and like the human adult I claim to be, I ordered as such.

“Beer?” Lucy exclaimed, with a look of stony reproach. It was well past 2pm, but I knew the rules had been changed. She had the air of a repressed tyrant. For a moment, she was Genghis Khan’t.

“Well, I just fancied a beer with lunch…” I muttered, feeling like a child being unfairly denied chocolate before dinner.

“Oh OK, you can do what you want,” she shrugged, and returned to perusing the menu, despite having already ordered. The passive-aggressive force of the action would have made David Cameron vote Green.

I wasn’t banned from drinking beer with lunch, but to do so was to risk being shot, hanged, or worse: spurned.

And so, when I came to hear of Kevin Pietersen’s recent plight, I could sympathise. Here is a man teased with the prospect of a return to international cricket. A man who had made a career best 355 not out, on the same day he was told he would not figure in England’s “short term” plans. I should add, he has not been explicitly banned from the England squad, but he’s got as much chance of making the England test squad as Ed Balls1.

He seems pretty good at his job. There are plenty of people that aren’t good at their job, remaining in prominent positions. Everyone in the ECB for instance. David “Ham Face” Cameron has retained his appointment as Prime Minister, looking like the cunt that got the cream, despite… well, everything.

I know he did some things that has strained relationships. I changed Lucy’s phone so it referred to her as “Piers Morgan” whenever she asked it a question, but she eventually forgave me. We all do things we regret, or things we should regret, but don’t because having a computer call your girlfriend “Nigel Farage” is never not funny, even if your girlfriend is Nigel Farage.

KP’s nuts, but he’s the best. So have a beer, swallow your pride, and get him back in the England squad.


1Whose chances did, admittedly, increase markedly this week.