Yes, Friends, do YOU ever think you're maybe in the QUOTE UNQUOTE 'wrong' job? Well, maybe it's time to widen your horizons haha!!!!
There's a good example in this morning's Onion News for East Hampshire, but it's a bit hidden. So 'thumb' your way through YOUR copy, to page 94, would you believe, and do it now haha!!!
Kudos, that man!!!!
And reading Whalen's story this morning, here in semi-tropical Liphook, Hampshire brings an ironic smile to the faces of me and my wife Lois, that's for sure!
me and my wife Lois - a recent picture
We're smiling because, by a total coincidence, we've got our regular Sunday zoom call at 1:30pm today with our daughter Sarah and her 12-year-old twins Lily and Jessica, 9000 miles away at their home in the northern suburbs of Perth, Australia, and the kids are big Harry Potter fans, just like Whalen in that Onion News story.
So much so, that they've put in yet another special request (!) for their upcoming holiday, when they arrive next month in the UK, which Lois and I are so looking forward to. They don't just want to visit like, a billion museums - more probably! And they don't just want to go on the London Eye, and do a river cruise along the Thames and, like a billion other things! They also want to somehow fit in a visit to the Harry Potter World at the Warner Bros studios, at Watford, just north of London.
What madness!!!!
Their poor old Granny and Poppa - a.k.a. "us"! - are certainly going to need our afternoon naps with all that going on during the family's visit, so we've somehow got to "re-work" our planned schedule for the trip. We're hoping we can squeeze all that frantic 'visiting' into the mornings of their upcoming stay, so it all gets done by 1pm each day, which will give Lois and me a chance to get into bed for a bit - no question about that!!!
The twins have been busy making a huge artificial skin, such as are made in nature by some species of spiders and caterpillars. They say it's all part of one of their so-called 'scientific' experiments - the little monkeys!!!
a typical 'web' made by some species of spiders or caterpillars
And during our zoom call I half-jokingly suggest that the twins can bring the 'skin' with them to Britain, so that they can lay it over Lois and me when we're in bed in the afternoons for 'statutory nap-time', to ensure maximum peace and quiet, at least for a couple of hours each day !!!
our weekly Sunday catch-up call with our little Australian family in Perth, with (bottom right) a piece of the artificial 'skin' the twins are producing, which will
certainly come in handy to throw over their 'aged grandparients' [sic] during 'nap time' (!)
What a crazy world we live in !!!!!
As you may have guessed, Lois and I aren't exactly doing a lot during the current heat-wave, just 'hunkering down' in the house till it's all over (!). This particular crazy heat-wave came a bit out of the blue (
no pun intended!!!!). To think that, just 6 days ago, last Monday featured highs in the 50's F (about 13C), whereas today, Sunday, there's going to be a high of 88F (31C) - it's total lunacy!!!!!
What a crazy country we live in !!!!
[That's enough madness! - Ed]
And many's the time today that Lois and I have wished we could just find some way of feeling cooler, without going to the extremes that American Independence hero Benjamin Franklin went to, while staying in London back in the 1770's - that's for sure!
Yes, Franklin knew how to stay cool, as Lois and I find out tonight in the first part of historian Lucy Worsley's new TV documentary series about America's War of Independence, just 250 years ago this coming July 4th, would you believe!!!
Yes, in one of the surprising little snippets that Lucy comes up with in this programme, is all about American scientist Benjamin Franklin, who, before the Revolution, lived in London for 16 years between 1757 and 1775. And despite his love of Britain, he was, however, one of the big American heroes, and to prove it, he's still pictured today on the US hundred dollar bill.
In tonight's programme, presenter Lucy goes to see Franklin's house in Craven Street, and describes his somewhat eccentric morning routine.
What madness! But Franklin loved to just let the London air 'wash over him', and he wasn't going to miss out on that! Luckily the authorities didn't mind such things in those far-off crazy days, and Franklin wasn't reported or arrested for his antics. And the rest is history, with America eventually able to secure its independence, with Franklin's help, which was nice!
And it's the snippets about the personalities that makes this programme so fascinating tonight, Lois and I think.
Lois and I didn't know, for example, that King George III had a real thirst for knowledge - and for knowledge about everything in the world, as Lucy explains when she visits the King's private observatory in Richmond, Surrey.
These were exciting times for the King, because Britain had just beaten France in the Seven Years War, and had acquired vast swathes of territory in North America as a result.
Lois and I didn't know that the King personally ordered the purchase of 300 books about his North American colonies, so that he could read about subjects ranging from their individual tax laws to the kind of birds you could hear singing in Massachusetts, which was mad!
What madness!!!!
And in those crazy, far-off days, before Amazon's online service had been established, it must have been quite a chore for him (or maybe his servants (!)) to order them all by post, hoping that the delivery guy would be able to find the address of his observatory in Richmond, with no close neighbours around to take them in, if he were out for the day, for example!

[That's enough whimsy! - Ed]
George certainly liked to study, and he liked to be well-informed. Lucy tells us that the King had a huge collection of maps which he kept at Richmond.
What a great pity the internet hadn't been invented yet, because the King would have been a big fan, and Queen Charlotte would have been saying to him, "You're on that thing all day and all night, George!".
And on the plus side, the lack of Internet probably gave the couple more time together - hence their somehow finding the time to conceive 13 children, which was a bonus, to put it mildly!
And tonight's programme, finally, doesn't blame the King for the American Revolution but instead puts the focus on the King's politically short-sighted ministers.
And finally, Lucy compares the Revolution to a break-up of a personal relationship. And this was how Thomas Jefferson saw it too. In his first draft of the Declaration of Independence, Jefferson talked of 'regret', and 'roads not taken'.
Benjamin Franklin and his colleagues, however, thought that Jefferson's words were far too sentimental, and cut this bit out for the final draft, which was a pity!
Fascinating stuff, though, isn't it!
Will this do?
[Oh just go to bed! - Ed]
22:00 We go to bed - zzzzzzzzz!!!!!