I’m in a cottage that would suit Wuthering Heights – well, bar the wireless broadband, the Sky Freesat and a kitchen to dine for – but otherwise, Bronte territory. Well, I say her territory, it’s actually the Lake District.
Okay, I’m in a place called Stone Cottage but whirling around outside is a storm the like of which Cathy would feel at home. The view out of the window is the same as the view inside: the night is so dark the windows are like mirrors. And they got that dark around 4pm this afternoon.
It’s only December 15 but since I’m on a holiday that has been planned all year, that is something Angela has been looking forward to all year, and since it’s been a chemotherapy-laden year, I’m now so relaxed that I feel 2008 is over. It helps that I just did an end-of-year edition of UK DVD Review.
For which I’ve got to thank all the listeners who came on: I’ve thanked them personally but they’re so good on the show, they should be shouted about here. Have a listen to them all in the best edition I’ve done all year.
What’s great for me is that while you only hear a minute or two of each person, I got to have a great blather with them all. In each case I could’ve played out twice as much as I did, it was difficult to slice in and out to keep the show flying.
In one such conversation, Richard Smith brought up the topic of how I apparently sound as if I’m talking just to you, not to some large group. I think that’s the greatest compliment I can remember: it’s how I believe radio should be done, it’s how I think it’s best and why radio is so great, and it’s of course what I always aim for.
Can’t bear the zoo format where a presenter has a posse and we’re blessed to be listening in. Even when there is a pair of presenters, it’s rarely good for me. In the eighties there was suddenly a fashion for TV shows to be fronted by two hosts who, basically, told each other what was going on. I could never watch that without thinking the other fella should’ve paid more attention in rehearsals.
Anyway, I slugged this entry Location Aware. Do you know the term? Obviously you understand it but it happens to be what iPhone applications are called when they do something that requires them to know where you are. The great Vicinity, for instance, uses GPS to check where you are and then offers you lists of the nearest banks, restaurants, hotels, endless other things.
And now Blogger is location aware. Hang on, I have to press a button.
Oh. I pressed it. Has anything happened? I’m in Patterdale, Cumbria, and you may or may not see a map of this. I’m not excited yet.
This relaxing lark is so complicated.
William