HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO ALL OUR READERS!
Echo hack defends ‘soft’ interview
The business editor of
the Borchester Echo has pushed back
at critics who accused him of ‘going easy’ on Brian Aldridge when he
interviewed the new Borsetshire Businessman of the Year this week.
In the article, Mr
Aldridge made several controversial pro-Brexit comments, saying that the
European Union had treated farmers like children by telling them what to grow
and where to grow it. But Christian Wvyer said he suspected Mr Aldridge was
suffering from cognitive decline and didn’t want to distress him by challenging
his more outrageous claims.
‘I began to worry when
he said he didn’t mind being a figure of fun, as all my research suggested he’s
a monster figjam,’ said Mr Wyver, who recently joined the Echo from the Lorrawonga
Clarion in Western Australia. ‘And I got really concerned when he said his
ambition was to feed a hungry world, as everyone knows he’s only interested in
the big bucks.
‘When we went into his
office he clearly had no idea where he was, though his wife tried to cover for
him by saying she’d tidied up. But when he said he was looking forward to the
village panto, I knew he’d gone the full galah. I left the snapper to it and swiped
the lemon and ginger cookies. I reckon shadowing him all year is going to be tougher than facing Mitchell Stark at the WACA.’
My Week, by Lynda Snell
It’s been quite a week
for the unlikely star of Sleeping
Beauty, whose performance as Fairy Carabosse thrilled the audience with her
complex characterisation and knack with an improvised rhyming couplet. In this exclusive diary, the Artiste of Ambridge Hall shows us how it’s done:
Monday
What a delightful
Christmas Day,
Leonie, James and
Mungo came to stay.
At Midnight Mass, I
made the time
To speak to Alan about
the pantomime,
But when I said we
were under-rehearsed,
To be honest, he was
rather terse.
It’s plain to see that
even my llamas
Have more idea about
directing drama.
Wednesday
An unexpected call today
–
Tony Archer rang to
say
He was having trouble
milking goats!
I said ‘Tony, I’ll get
my coat.’
At Bridge Farm, I put
Pat at ease,
Advising her not to
pull, but squeeze.
I said: ‘Pat dear, I
think you’ll find
It’s easier to go in
from behind.’
Bless them – they were
so relieved,
They’re naming their
nannies after me!
So Lynda and Scarlett
they will be,
(Father was a fan of
Vivien Leigh.)
Friday
At last it’s clear to
those who doubt me,
There is no pantomime
without me!
Jazzer and Harrison
tried to faze me,
But found that they
could not upstage me,
I made up speeches on
the spot
To foil their naughty
little plot.
And critics said my
Carabosse
saved the show from being a dead loss!
Writing, directing,
acting – wow,
I feel the muse upon
me now.
Ambridge, you ain’t
seen nothing yet –
Lynda Snell is a triple threat!
Lynda Snell is a triple threat!
New Year Charity Appeal
Do you know someone
who wanted to be alone this Christmas? Someone like Oliver, for instance: an
elderly widower who longed to spend the day in his luxury hotel suite, scoffing
liqueur chocolates and listening to Italian opera in memory of his beloved late
wife. But Oliver’s wish was not to be. Instead, he was dragged to a raucous
family party where he was forced to drink strong cider at 10am, eat an enormous
lunch and play endless games of Twister, which at his age could have resulted
in a trip to A & E quicker than you can say ‘slipped disc’.
Don’t let Oliver, and
others like him, suffer next Christmas! A donation of £50 will be enough to
post a guard at their door, to deter friends from staging well-meaning
interventions and to preserve the digestion, dignity and best trousers of those
whose Christmas wish is simply for peace and quiet. Thank you.
Christmas Gift Swap Shop
Did Santa not get the
hint? Exchange your unwanted presents for something more suitable via our new
readers’ forum:
• Dreamcatcher and book on mindfulness. Will exchange for a 20 bore shotgun and
cartridges. Also, will swap my mother for someone who gets me. Contact: Noluthando Madikane, c/o Home
Farm.
• Bottle of single
malt whisky (opened). Happy to swap for someone willing to be a
surrogate for our baby, now we know Adam's firing on all cylinders, fertility-wise. Contact: Adam and Ian, Honeysuckle Cottage.
• Bath salts, cookery
book and new fleece. Perfectly nice, but you feel so guilty when those poor
homeless people at The Elms have nothing, don’t you? Will swap for a hair shirt and a book on
making goats’ cheese. Contact: Pat Archer, Bridge Farm.
Your New Year Charity Appeal is essential to stop interfering do-gooders forcing themselves onto others whether want it or not. May I start the Ball rolling with my £50 towards preventing Oliver, and others like him, suffering next Christmas! No dammit, it IS Christmas - make that 5k.
ReplyDeleteVery generous of you - thank you! Your donation makes you a Founder Festive Foiler (of well-meaning interventions). Congratulations!
DeleteHappy New Year Christine 🥂
Deletegreat stuff, please keep it up!
ReplyDeleteCertainly will; thank you very much and Happy New Year!
DeleteI do so enjoy the AmOb.
ReplyDeleteI always look forward to it and it never fails to put a smile on my face.
Please keep up the good work.
=)
Glad to hear it Ketty - thank you so much for commenting. It's shaping up to be another exciting year in Ambridge already!
Delete