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This week’s winner of the Caledonian Mercury ‘comment of the week’

March 2, 2010 by Stewart Kirkpatrick · 2 Comments 

 
 

JURA 10 YEAR OLD CLASSIC ISLAND MALTI am proud to announce this week’s winner of the Caledonian Mercury “comment of the week” award. It goes to Diabloandco for this insight into how opinion polling works. Or doesn’t…

Diabloandco

I registered with yougov last year and have never been asked anything other than what electrical equipment/mobile phone/computer I had .

I de registered myself last month ( I am a luddite and my answers to all things techno might have given them cause for concern!)

Just once in my long life I would like some pollster to ask me a question about politics.

Previous winners

Keith Roberts on Iona
Hallelujah – and not every one goes for pilgrimage. Iona has long held a special place. The rocks themselves are almost as old as Uluru and far from being the British portal to Creation this is one of the planet’s oldest lands. Pictish pagans, druids and Norsemen have all been drawn to the isle. The machair has been grazed since Bronze Age times.

It is an isle of silkies and sea monsters, fairies and fantasy. The sheela-na-gig on the nunnery wall; the milk stone now hidden beneath the tarmac pounded by the feet of pilgrims oblivious of the offerings to the gruagach.

The view from the hill is very special, I prefer sunrise, just as sunset bouncing off the red granite cliffs of Mull brings a peaceful close to the day. The island takes back her own self once the last ferry is safely tied up in the bull hole, and the hordes have returned to their coaches.

Can you hear the sound of the Vikings as the white sands run with the blood of the monks? Can you taste that drizzle of garlic butter on freshly caught langoustines, washed down with a fine malt from the comfort of the Martyrs’ Bar as the ferry struggles to make safe haven in the gale. Can you see Fingal out for his morning walk? And can you get that glimpse of the Emerald Isle across the waters when the light is right.

Aye, it is a pretty special place.

disillusioned’s trenchant attack on some aspects of Scottish politics in response:
While these pygmies play politics with people’s lives for their own political gain.
We the public can only look on in disgust.
Elmer as you so aptly name him ,sat in stoney silence as his peers in Westminster(no pun intended ..maybe) gorged at the trough.

While Scotland has some of the worst social deprivation in the developed world, people losing their jobs every day ,houses being repossessed in record numbers.#etc etc.

Meanwhile Elmer chooses to home in on lunches and letters on behalf of a SNP constituent.


Dave on In The Loop
Nope, sorry, it shouldn’t win.

Why? The writing is great, that’s true. But it’s a radio play. The acting and writing is first class, but there was absolutely no understanding of the visual medium made while writing the movie script. The camera work, and camera direction, is awful, truly awful (bog-standard BBC overexposed work, does no BBC camerman understand what an iris control is for? They used to, once upon a time.).

Now, to some degree that is the direction, and sloppy D.o.P. work, rather than the script itself, but there appears to be no attempt in the script to utilise the locations or edit points to make it work as a movie.

You can get all you need from this movie from the soundtrack alone, without having to watch any of the pictures. That’s why it should not win. It’s NOT a complete movie experience.

Steve McCabe on Jennifer Trueland’s analysis of the Kinloch Rannoch GP controversy:
Steve McCabe:

The fact that somewhere like Rannoch had a GP for 110 years is as much a historical quirk as anything else. Such arrangements pre-date the NHS and even the Highlands and Islands Medical Scheme on which the NHS was modelled and which provided remote communities with community nurses and sometimes helped to fund a doctor. But many of these rural doctors were actually paid for (and, therefore, there primarily to serve) a local landowner or major employer. For example, the doctor in Bowmore on Islay was oriniginally a “distillery doctor” paid for by the local laird.

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Comments

2 Responses to “This week’s winner of the Caledonian Mercury ‘comment of the week’”
  1. loveme2times says:

    I have just signed myself up for YouGov after reading your comments, I wonder how long it will be before they ask me any political questions!

  2. I used to wonder why the tick boxes never included Scottish Newspapers. Considering the ownership and orientation of the “Scottish” newspapers then I suppose there is no need to include them. Similarly on Anglocentric TV shows, such as the Wright Show, etc, the comments are always confined to English papers, even when Tame Scots are on the panels. Mister Wright almost had an apoplectic fit over a T-shirt: “ABE”, Anyone But England”.

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