Well not quite, but I'll ask you this;
If the Super Bowl was on PBS (with no commericals, but instead of commercials every break would be the announcers yapping) and your announcers were Don Cherry, a guy who played division three college football turned announcer, and Willie McGinst would you watch it?
I'll Also throw in that the game doesn't start until 11.00pm.
Life in the UK.
Sunday, February 3, 2013
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Saesneg y frenhines
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An example of a Cornish language sign. |
Apart from English, Welsh is the most widely spoken of these indigenous languages and shares official language status with English in Wales. Many over here treat Wales almost as a fictitious place that you might somehow wander into, like you would Narnia, but it's a real place with a real language, with real people speaking it. (It's probably the second most spoken language in the UK, but we'll have to see what the newest census figures show when they're released this week, Punjabi, could pass it up.) Welsh has a type of sing-song quality to it, and just looks ridiculous on signs. The BBC produces Welsh language content for S4C, an independent publicly broadcast station in the country.
The BBC also produces content for the Scottish Gaelic television channel BBC Alba. This puzzles me a bit since Scottish Gaelic, out of the seven indigenous languages is spoken by the second least amount of people. To me, Scottish Gaelic sounds exactly like a language you'd imagine Scots to speak, if they didn't speak English. (Although to hear some of them, you might think that they don't speak English.)
Out of the seven indigenous languages in the UK, four (Welsh, Irish, Scottish Gaelic, and Cornish) stem from the Celtic language. Two are mixed languages spoken mostly by gypsies (yes that's a politically correct term over here) and one is very closely related to English and is considered by some to not be a language, but rather a dialect of English.
Friday, January 25, 2013
Say What?
Clive has a smattering of vocabulary words, most of them you (as generally non-baby speaking adults) wouldn't recognise as actual words. He tries his darndest and he loves to wave and try to say hasta luego, which often comes out as aa-ta.
I'm not concerned though, according to my mom, I didn't speak until I was two and Erica was late on the scene verbally (mostly because as a multiple she could communicate with Allie and Inga and didn't care to talk to anyone else) so it could be in his genes.
I prefer another explanation:
He listens to mom, dad, and his auntie and then listens to all his friends and can't decide which accent he's supposed to use.
:)
I'm not concerned though, according to my mom, I didn't speak until I was two and Erica was late on the scene verbally (mostly because as a multiple she could communicate with Allie and Inga and didn't care to talk to anyone else) so it could be in his genes.
I prefer another explanation:
He listens to mom, dad, and his auntie and then listens to all his friends and can't decide which accent he's supposed to use.
:)
Friday, January 18, 2013
Eugene Peterson on the Danger of Bible Reading
Eugene (Don't hold the 'Message' against me) Peterson has quietly found his way into a lot of my pre-Bishop's Advisory Panel preparatory reading. He's not known for his quotable quips so for better or worse you have a two paragraph concept to delve into. I think it's for the better, but you have to stick with it. He sums up a concern I've had for a long time that I couldn't quite verbalize; mainly that it isn't enough to tell people to read the Bible, they have to know how to read it. In the rest of Eat This Book (the text where this comes from), he flushes out how we are to read the Bible properly. I've included these paragraphs and some other insights, both from Peterson and others, on my other blog, Quotation Inspiration. Without further ado, Eugene Peterson.
Reading the Bible, if we do not do it rightly, can get us into a lot of trouble. The Christian community is as concerned with
how we read the Bible as that we read it. It is not
sufficient to place a Bible in a person's hands with the command 'Read
it.' That is quite as foolish as putting a set of car keys in an
adolescent's hands, giving him a Honda, and saying,
'Drive it.' And just as dangerous. The danger is that in having our
hands on a piece of technology, we will use it ignorantly, endangering
our lives and the lives of those around us; or that, intoxicated with
the power that the technology gives us, we will
use it ruthlessly and violently.
For print is technology. We pick up a Bible and find that we have God's word in our hands,
our hands. We can now handle it. It is easy enough to suppose
that we are in control of it, that we can use it, that we are in charge
of applying it wherever, whenever, and to whomever we wish without
regard to appropriateness or conditions.
There is more to the Honda than
the technology of mechanics. And there is more to the Bible than the
technology of print. Surrounding the machine technology of the Honda
there is a world of gravity
and inertia, values and velocity, surfaces and obstructions, Chevrolets
and Fords, traffic regulations and the highway patrol, other drivers
whether drunk or sober, snow and ice and rain. There is far more to
driving a car than turning a key in the ignition
and stepping on the accelerator. Those who don't know that are soon
dead or maimed.
And those who don't know the
conditions implicit in the technology of the Bible are likewise
dangerous to themselves and others. And so, as we hand out Bibles and
urge people to read them, it
is imperative that we also say, caveat lector, let the reader beware.
Labels:
Book Club,
Long Term Plans,
Quotation Inspiration,
Thoughts
Tuesday, January 8, 2013
You Say Goodbye, I Say 'Allo 'Allo

Some of the other programs I've enjoyed while over here.
Downton Abbey--The first series (as the Brits call seasons) was certainly the best, but two and three are a nice distraction. It'll be interesting to see how far they can stretch it out.
Fawlty Towers--John Cleese at his finest. (Yep I said it) You also have the loveable Manuel and they only made twelve episodes so it never feels like it jumped the shark.
Top Gear--I find that if I watch too much of it, it can feel very forced. Some of the stuff they do is fun to watch, especially on Youtube. 'Star In A Reasonably Priced Car' (Take celebrities, give them a cheap car and have them race around a track (A real one that's shaped like this and not one like this NASCAR fans.))
Extras--Probably the program I've most enjoyed. It's a Ricky Gervais creation where he plays an out of luck actor who gets work as an extra on movies. Always hoping to somehow get a speaking part, he bumps shoulders with stars such as Ben Stiller, Patrick Stewart, Kate Winslett and Daniel Radcliffe who play themselves with exaggerated or inverted personae. The Daniel Radcliffe episode was my personal favourite.
Friends--I know it's an American show. Brits love it though. For almost the first three years we were here you could basically turn on the TV at anytime of the day and some channel would be showing an old episode. When Erica was pregnant with Clive we worked our way through the complete set of episodes.
Dr. Who--...Dr. Who I feel just demands too much energy. You have to buy into the whole experience. You can't just watch one episode because if you do it just doesn't make sense. I want to want to like Dr. Who, so perhaps someday, but for now I'll just leave the good doctor for all his other fanatics.
Monday, November 5, 2012
Wow, I guess I was important
I left my job at the sporting goods store I had been at in early August. Less than two months later they were in administration (ie. Bankruptcy)
My skills as stock unpacker were obviously what was holding the company together.
It was kind of funny actually, I intended to only be at the job for a month or so until I got a 'real job'. That real job was nearly three years in the coming, and I didn't start getting as many hours as I needed until the week that JJB went under.
God certainly seemed to want me there, and I hope that while I was there I fulfilled his purposes.
My skills as stock unpacker were obviously what was holding the company together.
It was kind of funny actually, I intended to only be at the job for a month or so until I got a 'real job'. That real job was nearly three years in the coming, and I didn't start getting as many hours as I needed until the week that JJB went under.
God certainly seemed to want me there, and I hope that while I was there I fulfilled his purposes.
Monday, October 29, 2012
Life, Recently
A lot has happened in the last month or two, but with limited internet connection we've not documented it very well.
We moved house! We're now living in Coxheath (a village next door to Loose); which makes my cycle commute to church a lot better.
Inga and Simon (new parents to Elsa Simone, dontcha know?) bought the house we're living in. We're participating in a communal living experiment. So far all is well. It's only a two-bed house, but Erica, Clive and I have the third floor all to ourselves.
Communal living cuts our costs quite a bit and for the first time in a while we're ending up with money leftover at the end of the month.
Part of this financial positiveness is because I'm working more hours at the prison. I'm enjoying it and my bosses are giving me more responsibility.
Erica's graphic work trickles in, but is always just enough. If you need a website, promotional material, logos or anything else, just let us know. She'll cut you a deal.
The three of us have been sick with viruses for the past few weeks. Poor Clive is doing his best to stay up beat but has been pretty miserable. Hopefully soon we'll all be healthy at the same time.
Erica's parents are here in the UK for two weeks. They've come over to see the new baby (grandkid number 5) and to help out a bit.
Lastly, I'm still plugging away at my ordination process. I have a day-long panel on December 1st that will determine whether I continue on the process. I'll know the outcome within a week of the panel.
That's it.
We'll get some new pictures up soon.
We moved house! We're now living in Coxheath (a village next door to Loose); which makes my cycle commute to church a lot better.
Inga and Simon (new parents to Elsa Simone, dontcha know?) bought the house we're living in. We're participating in a communal living experiment. So far all is well. It's only a two-bed house, but Erica, Clive and I have the third floor all to ourselves.
Communal living cuts our costs quite a bit and for the first time in a while we're ending up with money leftover at the end of the month.
Part of this financial positiveness is because I'm working more hours at the prison. I'm enjoying it and my bosses are giving me more responsibility.
Erica's graphic work trickles in, but is always just enough. If you need a website, promotional material, logos or anything else, just let us know. She'll cut you a deal.
The three of us have been sick with viruses for the past few weeks. Poor Clive is doing his best to stay up beat but has been pretty miserable. Hopefully soon we'll all be healthy at the same time.
Erica's parents are here in the UK for two weeks. They've come over to see the new baby (grandkid number 5) and to help out a bit.
Lastly, I'm still plugging away at my ordination process. I have a day-long panel on December 1st that will determine whether I continue on the process. I'll know the outcome within a week of the panel.
That's it.
We'll get some new pictures up soon.
Labels:
C.O.E.,
Clive,
Erica's Work,
Long Term Plans,
News
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