Soltalk April 2020 | Page 28

Jottings from previous page creatively recycled rubbish. However, it has been reported that Hollywood has got hold of Madame Cholet, Uncle Bulgaria and the others, and producers are planning a major makeover because ... wait for it ... the original is “sexist and not politically correct.” Reports have suggested that “gender- fluid” Wombles from different cultural backgrounds are to be introduced, while sex and politics will not be ruled out in the storylines. Before publishing her first book in 1968, Elizabeth Beresford made it clear that these subjects, along with religion, alcohol, drugs, violence and smoking, had no place in the world of The Wombles. Her son Marcus says the wishes of his late mother have been ignored by Craig Treharne, a businessman who bought 85 per cent of the rights to The Wombles from composer Mike Batt in 2017. Elizabeth Beresford’s family retain the remaining 15 per cent. Mike Batt is equally distraught at the plans for “Woke Wombles” and said it was “terrible tragedy” to be shut out of a brand which was intertwined with his identity. He wrote the music which took The Wombles to the top of the UK charts with eight Top 20 hits in the mid 70s. Piers Morgan commented that a makeover of The Wombles in this way is, “completely and utterly insane (and) makes a mockery of genuinely important debate about diversity.” However, we can all be buoyed by the famous Wombles’ motto, “Make good use of bad rubbish,” and simply reach for the off switch. Secondly, remember when Greggs the Baker quietly closed its only outlet in Cornwall after just seven months because its pasties had failed to impress? Its short-lived shop in Saltash was boycotted by locals who branded it “junk” and “Satan’s franchise.” They opted to avoid shopping there and remained loyal instead to the traditional Cornish pasty made from beef skirt, swede, potato and onion. It is now reported that Greggs – which has over 1,700 shops in the UK, but none in Cornwall at present - is to open a new store in the county, news which has reignited the ire of Cornish men and women worldwide. Well, in Cornwall at least. But the battle lines for World War Chew (a headline from The Sun last month) are being drawn because the new outlet is to be at Cornwall Services near the village of Victoria on the A30. However, a local baker, who is one of the best-know producers of Cornish pasties, already has a shop in the service area. We predict pastry cutters at dawn. The Cornish Pasty Association refused to get involved. “It doesn’t affect us,” they said sniffily, “because, as far as we are concerned, they don’t sell Cornish pasties.” Our bizarre world An anonymous Tweet from a vegan jogger in California has been widely ridiculed on social media after neighbours were asked to close their windows when cooking meat in their kitchens and to cook only vegetables on outdoor barbeques. This was because, it continued, the smell of meat being cooked was found to be, “overpowering” and “offensive” when out for a run. Put- downs came thick and fast, including from other vegans, while some suggested changing the time of the run or wearing a gas mask. It appears the Oxford English Dictionary has been quietly updating definitions which are now regarded as sexist. “Nagging,” “rabid” and “shrill” are amongst 500 definitions reported to have updated in the last year after researchers spent four years analysing thousands of examples to establish whether they “unnecessarily perpetuated sexist stereotypes.” The OED said it was important for the tome to be in line with political correctness, a philosophy which itself is politically correct. Two toilet paper stories which have nothing to do with panic buying came our way this month. First, was the kangaroo caught eating the stuff in the restroom of an Australian camp site. And second was the birth of a baby in the toilet roll aisle of a Walmart store in Missouri. We thought you should know. Spare a thought for … … an unnamed woman was reported on Twitter by a friend from Hampshire in the UK after she managed to stockpile 18 toilet rolls. She was not criticised for panic buying, but named and shamed after her children decided to wash all 18 of the loo rolls in the bath. ... an American tourist who complained about “that brown tablet bar of soap you put on each of our beds” when he stayed at a guest house in Portree on the Isle of Skye. “Not only was it gritty and left an oily residue but disintegrated before the shower was done,” he wrote. The “soap” was in fact a complimentary bar of 26 tablet, a Scottish sweet similar to fudge, which is intended for eating, not showering. (And it’s scrummy!) ... Caelie Wilkes of California who carefully nurtured a succulent for two years, even getting defensive if anyone else offered to water her beloved and “perfect” plant. Last month, she bravely shared the story of the day when she decided to re-pot it in a “cute” vase she had found. It was only when she pulled the thing from its original container she discovered it was made of plastic, sitting on a bed of styrofoam with sand glued to the top. ... a new species of treehopper discovered by Brendan Morris, a graduate student at the University of Illinois. Experts tell us that the insect, which has pointed horns and a unique body structure, is native to the Pacific coast of Nicaragua. Unfortunately for the treehopper, however, Mr Morris has chosen to name it Kaikaka Gaga, as a tribute to Lady Gaga. The singer has yet to respond to the honour. Ditto the treehopper. ... 14 elephants with a headache in the Chinese village of Xishuangbana. With the population on lockdown, the gang had free reign to explore and found a store holding 30 kilos of corn whisky. They scoffed the lot and were later found, sound asleep, in a local tea garden. They walk amongst us London’s Met Police have released a video of two suspects they want to question in connection with a raid on a jewellery shop in Haringey in 2019. Three men walked in and began ransacking the shop forcing a female staff member to seek refuge in a back room. The robbers then found they were unable to leave because they couldn’t figure out how to open the shop door which remains locked until a switch is pressed. One has since been jailed but his two conspirators remain at large. In the US, brothers Noah and Matt Colvin drove 2,000 miles around the state of Tennessee buying 17,700 bottles of hand sanitiser, hoping to sell them at a massive profit on Amazon for $70 a bottle. But the online store moved fast to clamp down on such exploitative practices and shut down their account after they had sold just 200 bottles ... leaving them with 17,500 bottles they now cannot shift. And finally … Thanks to Howard Jeeves who pointed Continued overleaf