DAVID QUANTICK
A Manual for the British Malcontent
Cover
Title Page DAVID QUANTICK
Introduction
ENTERTAINMENT
Cinemas
Movie Trailers
Hair Ads
Perfume Ads
Loan Ads
Booze Ads
‘Irish’ Pubs
The Theatre
DVDs
Plays
Rock Musicals
Theme Pubs
ANIMALS
Cats
Squirrels
Wasps
City Pigeons
HOTELS
Hotel Rooms
Hotel Bathrooms
Hotel Towels
Hotel TV
Hotel Keys
Muzak
Tipping
ROADS
Speed Bumps
Speed Cameras
Parking Meters
Clamping
Minicabs
Black Cabs
Trendy Scooters
Urban Cyclists
Mountain Bikes
Penny-Farthing
FOOD
Burger Bars
Celebrity Chefs
Take-Away Pizza Parlours
Hot-Dog Vendors
Bad Restaurants
Supermarkets
Supermarket Trolleys
THE FRENCH
Parisians
French Music
French Hotels
French Design
French Toilets
LEISURE
Caravans
The British Seaside
Airports
Airport Book Stores
Luggagey Shops
Airport ‘Pubs’ and ‘Restaurants’
MODERN LIFE
Sports Casual
Call Centres
Banks
Cashpoints
Meetings
The National Lottery
Ikea
School Reunions
Squeegee Bastards
Language Pedants
Split Infinitives
Business Words
TRAINS
The Railways
Train Carriages
Train Staff
Reserved Seats On Trains
First Class
Train Food
Buffet Trolleys
Virgin Trains
OCCUPATIONS
Estate Agents
Estate Agentese
Hairdressers
Builders
Dentists
Astrologers
Traffic Wardens
Traffic Police
Royalty
‘Chuggers’ the Charity Muggers
Fourth Rate ‘Sporting Figures’
‘D’ List Celebrities
Magicians
Clowns (1)
Jugglers
Mime Artists
Pizza-Delivery Boys
Clowns (2)
Buskers
THE YOUNG
Babies
Schoolchildren
Teenagers
Students
PUBLIC HOLIDAYS
Christmas
Valentine’s Day
Bonfire Night
Greetings Cards
PEOPLE WHO…
Use A Train Like It’s Their Office
Throw Things Out of the Car Window
Haven’t Bought a Weekend Saver
Prefer Animals to Human Beings
Have Too Much Luggage
Are Obsessed With Their Country
Find Accidents Fascinating
Think They Have Street Cred (1) & (2)
Put Pictures Of Their Family On Their Christmas Cards
Park In Disabled Spaces When Not Entitled
Litter
Collect Toys
Play Poker
Let Their Children Record Messages On Their Answering Machine
Send ‘Round Robin’ Letters
Drive with ‘P’ Plates
Own Personalised Number Plates
Have Tattoos
Have Goatee Beards
Grow Designer Stubble
Wear Bow Ties
Wear Tops That Show Their Stomachs
Wear ‘Porn Star’ T-Shirts
Tie Their Hair In A Pony Tail
Keep Talking
Don’t Listen
Drink on the Pavement
Skate on the Pavement
Have No Manners
Picture Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements
Copyright
About the Publisher
Arecent survey – no wait! come back! – a recent survey indicated that the grumpiest people in Britain are men aged between 35 and 54. Not, as you might think, proper old people with creaking joints and memories of when it was all fields round here.
Today’s grumpy old men are not just the older generation. We’re not all going round acting like extras from Dad’s Army, whingeing around on the seafront moaning about the Hun. No, today’s grumpy old men, like policemen and Sting, are getting younger every day. We know the difference between CD and DVD, we remember when ‘boy bands’ meant The Sex Pistols and The Clash, and we dress more like our sons than our dads. Today’s grumpy old men are stuck between devil-may-care youth and past-all-caring old age, griping and groaning and generally having a miserable time.
It doesn’t help that we’re British, either. Looking around at our international neighbours, we Brits do seem to be a lot grumpier than them. Whoever even heard of a sulky Spaniard? A bad-tempered Dutchman? A cranky Italian (well, apart from Mussolini). Even the French are less irritable than we are, and that’s saying a lot. But cross the English Channel and you are in a land of grump.
Some facts and figures: 36% of us can’t even afford a week’s holiday away from home, compared with 12% in Germany, France and the Netherlands. This is probably because we live on a big wet rock, or ‘island’, whereas people in Germany, France and the Netherlands just have to step outside the front door and hey presto! they are in the Netherlands, Germany or France.
The weather here is shocking. It rains in summer, it snows in spring, it floods in autumn and it’s unspeakable in winter. Living in Britain is like living in a cold swamp. Foreigners notice that we talk about the weather quite a lot. And we do, nervously, as the people of a village terrorised by a wolf or a serial killer might.
Also there’s not much room in here. There are 78 people per square kilometre in Spain, 106 in France – and 243 in the United Kingdom. 243 people per square kilometre! Never mind enough room to swing a cat, that’s not enough room to frisk a cockroach. And it is us British men who get the worst of it.
Scientists working in science labs in Edinburgh – real scientists, with leather elbow patches – have identified what they call ‘Irritable Male Syndrome’, caused by sinking testosterone levels. IMS affects 30% of all men – that’s all men, not just Old Man Steptoe – and manifests itself in the following ways: depression, loss of energy, low self-esteem, reduced libido and… irritability. Doctor Christopher Steidle, an eminent urologist (now there’s a job to make you grumpy), says, ‘Many of the symptoms are indistinguishable from old age, and for years you’ve always thought of it as “grumpy old man” syndrome. Now we know what the grumpy old man probably has.’
So what, as we all become grumpy old men, does this mean for the future? This. As our testosterone levels go off to join the dodo, the passenger pigeon and decent plays on BBC1, it is going to get more and more rubbish being a man these days. Sexual equality in relationships means we can no longer roll home drunk at lunchtime and expect a roast dinner and all the ironing done. Erosion of the traditional family means that kids grow up faster and therefore notice what prats their dads are at an earlier age. This in turn is worsened by a tide of new technologies which leaves many of us feeling like Piltdown Man on a stupid day. We’re supposed to be the ones who tell kids how to work machinery, but these days only the under-tens know how to reconfigure a computer, plug in a PlayStation, or upload into an mp3 player.
Add to this mixture the fact that if you’re aged between 35 and 54, you’re too old to be running round high on alcopops, and too young to be cheating at dominoes in the snug. The results are clear: the new generation of grumpy old men is caught in a cleft stick of general lifey crapness.
This book is written by grumpy old men for grumpy old men. It asks ageless questions like ‘What’s the point?’ and ‘When will it stop?’ and answers them as unreasonably and bad-temperedly as possible. We can’t make it better but we can shout at it and spoil its day. This book exists to put the ‘rant’ in ‘intolerant’ and the ‘bastard’ into ‘go to hell, you bastard’.
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