The Business Exchange Swindon & Wiltshire Edition 43: June/July 2019 | Page 31
IS IT ME?
John Davies is a senior corporate partner at leading commercial law
firm Thrings. In each edition of TBE John addresses a topical news or
business-related issue. This time he’s hoping for a happy ending.
Thrings
@ThringsLaw
www.thrings.com
Spoiler alert!
I’ve just had a conversation with Kate
Westbrook, one of my partners at Thrings.
Kate and I have been working about three
feet from each other for the past 18 years.
We’re colleagues in what we agree is a great
team. But we don’t necessarily agree on
everything.
Case in point: ‘Game of Thrones’. Kate
recently announced that while scrolling
through her Twitter feed she’d learned
what was going to happen in Westeros in
a forthcoming episode. Despite not having
watched it, she was fine with that.
As someone who hates getting spoilers
about things I’m yet to watch, I, on the other
hand, would not be fine with that.
My wife does very little to annoy me but
she does have a habit of clicking the Sky ‘i’
button so she can read about programmes
we’re just about to watch. Half the time the
information gives the whole story away. The
twists and the turns. Gone. The hero that’s
going to die. Revealed. Why would anyone
IT SUPPORT
want to know this? Kate’s argument is if it’s
a good story, it’s a good story and it’s worth
watching despite advance knowledge.
Something happened to me which makes
me right on this. In 1996 I went to see a film
called ‘From Dusk till Dawn’ featuring a
very odd Quentin Tarantino and a rather foxy
George Clooney. I knew absolutely nothing
about this film; I’d literally walked in to
the cinema to find it was the only film with
spaces left. And I loved it because the film
took a turn I wasn’t expecting, on a surprise
journey I hadn’t anticipated. Had I known the
story beforehand I suppose it would have
been enjoyable, or ‘fine’. But ‘fine’ doesn’t
cut it. You want it to be ‘brilliant’. Spoilers
have the habit of turning ‘brilliant’ into ‘fine’.
There are exceptions, of course. I’d read
‘The Hobbit’, ‘The Lord of the Rings’ and
every one of Harry Potter’s adventures
before the films were released. But generally
speaking, it irks me if I learn the outcome of
a film or drama series before I see it.
So tell me, is it just me who objects to
spoilers? Am I the only one who won’t read
on if there’s a juicy little morsel about an
upcoming show? Do others ban radios, TVs
and phones in the house to avoid hearing the
result of a sporting event they’ve recorded
and yet to watch? And surely there are
people out there who, like me, stick their
fingers in his ears and sing ‘la la la’ when
family members, friends or colleagues begin
talking about things they’ve yet to see?
Would you watch the final of ‘Bake Off’ if
you knew the winner in advance? I for one
wouldn’t.
I’ve just asked Kate and she said she
would.
She is, of course, wrong.
John Davies
e: [email protected]
t: 01793 412634
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THE BUSINESS EXCHANGE 2019
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