Flying Ants

Today is the day of the ants. Everywhere across London, conditions are perfect and the ants are swarming. There is a bit of wind, it’s warm, it’s not going to rain. All the colonies blow out all at the same time, reducing the chances of predation, raising the chances of interbreeding. They have bred a huge number of virgin queens and winged males per colony. The males exist purely to inseminate the queen, who will attract as many as she can in a short space of time. Sex for these ants takes place on the wing, and the male essentially explodes his own testicles into the queen and dies shortly thereafter. The queen will eventually settle. She will shed her wings and ground herself forever in order to become a mother. She will never fly again. She will try to found a new colony, and the stored up semen from all of those kamikaze males with their explosive balls – that will serve for the life of the colony, giving birth to hundreds of thousands of ants. But she only wants the strong males so she makes them fly for it. And statistically her chances of founding the colony successfully are around 1 in a million. More likely she’ll land on a road or get eaten by a bird or hit a spiderweb or get killed by a rival queen. This day ain’t a celebration. It’s a war.

What this means practically is that you are going to get ants in your hair. You are going to get them on your glasses. Down your shirt. In your drink. In your shoes. In your mouth. And they don’t give a fuck. It’s not like they have a survival instinct. The males are just zooming around chasing pheromones and hoping not to die before they have their explosive moment but they haven’t perspective on the world. They land where they land. The queens have just been born, and after today are going to be either dead or protected at the heart of a colony. It’s like Fresher’s Week at university. Thousands of clueless animals randomly banging around trying to have sex with as many people as possible. Survival of the fittest. May the best ant win, so we can pour boiling water into her statistically unlikely successful colony and say “That’ll sort the little fuckers out.”

Ant colonies are amazing. Let’s just take a moment. They are basically just that one queen. She breeds what she needs with her massive semen stash. But all those individual ants are pretty much just extensions of her. It looks like millions of separate creatures, but in reality it is just that queen, and the ants are her external organs. Kill her and the colony loses purpose and dies.

My skin is crawling as I write this because they keep going down the back of my bright T-shirt. I’m in Hampstead, near the heath. Despite the fact that I live in a house with a fridge in the middle of the living room and piles of pants outside the kitchen door, I am tidying my friends flat because she has an Airbnb guest in tomorrow and I’m her key holder. I can tidy when it’s not for me. But sitting out here, despite it being beautiful, is risky. I went shopping earlier to get milk and bread and so forth and almost inhaled a horny male ant. Another one refused to get off my glasses while his mate went down the back of my T-shirt and wandered around in the bit that’s hard to scratch. Still, I’m happy to be outside. The tumble drier is tumbling, and the robot hoover is robot hoovering, so I am having a bottle of Corona and listening to the wood pigeons.

It’s peaceful here. This little corner of London near the heath. And on this evening of perfect flying ant conditions, sound is carrying a long way on the wind. I can hear the banging of pans, children playing, the inevitable cars and planes but also the chatter of nature. All the birds, happy after their formic feast, are krarrking to themselves in the dusk. And a rain cloud suddenly passes overhead. Is this why the ants swarmed? Are we reaching a change from this absolute delight of a summer that we have enjoyed? Or is this just a spit to refresh the lawns? Either way, I’m going in. Happy flying ant day.

Colombia

I’m almost done with this lovely driving job, although I still have to do some Heathrow runs. Mostly I’m finished though. It’s been delightful. I’m good at this sort of work, which is simultaneously delightful and bullshit. Validation is how they get you. “You’re so good at taking out the bin bags, so much better than I am, baby.” But I’m genuinely good at this. Even if I might not action it.

In my entire life I reckon I’ve covered 4 weeks in an office – tops. I hate the fucking places. 3 weeks receptionist for Ambassadors Theatre Group Turnstyle, back when I was auditioning for drama school. I stayed there long because Lorna was kind. I didn’t hate that job but I left it immediately I was accepted to Guildhall. Before that, I detested 1 week temping for Babtie Finance in Reading. I was supervised by an idiot, micromanaged by another one and realised extremely quickly when I suggested a better use of their software and found my thoughts ignored because they weren’t fed up the chain properly that I had no desire to hurtle my young life towards these catastrophic oubliettes, no matter how widely they yawned at me. I could’ve been fired up by positivity, but in these places all it takes is one person who doesn’t love you, and an office can become poison.

Blah. I watched a football match tonight. I went to the only proper boozer in Chelsea. The Royal Oak. It’s a rarety, in that it’s one of the last bastions of old Chelsea. I hung out with people from all round the world. There was a couple in Colombian strip. An old millionaire with his grandchildren. All sorts of people. I got to hang out with Tristan, but in terms of long thoughts I’m done. I’m even more knackered than I was last night.

Hooray win etc. Early bed. Short blog. Too tired.

dav

 

 

Shoot day

Long long amazing day. I am running on positivity and nothing more as I lie in bed at last wondering how the hell I can be stubborn enough to still try and write. But I guess that’s the deal now.

If CVs were important to me I’d have no idea how to credit myself. Voice Actor, driver, casting director, recruitment consultant, PA… That’s some of it.

Today was full on. I rolled with some punches and converted a lot of energy. I enjoyed every second of it, and was thrilled to see some old friends of mine absolutely killing it. There was one job I knew was going to be a nightmare. I gave it to a man who can turn that nightmare into a joy. He did precisely that. It was a remarkable feat and I loved watching him do it.

I got to go round the back of things. I love that about this business. I did a show in the Tower of London, and got to hang out there after hours. I was playing Buckingham, and was free to wander. In a gap, shortly before I was executed, I wandered over to the block and briefly lay my head on it. Then I went back and spoke my “lead me officers to the block of shame. Wrong hath but wrong and blame the due of blame.” A remarkable thing to have had that chance. And today there were many chances like that.

I got to drive around in a park for the first time ever. I learnt that geese genuinely don’t give a shit about cars.

dav

I spent the morning ferrying around a hungover Czech and a highly strung Dutchman. I couldn’t really be bothered with either of them. They struck me as bored and entitled, but it’s likely they were just exhausted. They’ve been rushing around all over the place. Kim was with me and I liked her more, despite her ambition and the fact she had the hump about not being a driver. We got to go places people normally can’t go. We were following a well known kiwi who blagged us in to shoot from the roof of New Zealand House.

We covered a fair amount of ground and ended up in a market watching loads of people run around. There was a lot of craziness. We came out on top. I saw parts of the market I never knew existed.

I then got home and had a beautiful evening, unexpectedly, with a remarkable human who is staying on the sofa. She has gone through a deep change this year, and was sitting on my roof watching the sunset and playing her ukelele. I was expecting to just crash, but instead I sang songs to the sunset with a bottle of prosecco, and then we grabbed a cheap Monday steak.

I’m totally exhausted now. I’ve had just one eye open throughout this exercise, but remarkably it has taken me no more than 20 minutes. That’s my word-rate nice and high. Now for the novel…

Jobs for the boys and girls

This morning I drove to the coast with Kimberley. I got her to DJ and she played Oasis, which was a good nostalgia trip as we screamed out of London. The roads were empty that early on a Sunday. And the Nissan is so smooth you barely notice you’re driving unless I try to start it in fourth which might happen occasionally.

In no time I was in a castle, standing behind some friends of mine in costume, hearing : “So, how do you know Al Barclay then” That’s a friend asking a man I don’t think I’ve ever met. “Oh, we’ve been in a pub together some time,” he ventures, which is a very good guess and not unlikely. Outside of social niceties I think I’ve just … never met him before. I stop him going any further into it by announcing my presence. Don’t want to make him feel awkward.

There are six actors down there who I cast. None of them had to audition. All of them are being paid nicely for an easy gig where you are looked after. Three of them I have never met until today, and those three have genuine, serious military experience. The other three are various very different forms of solid. The extent of their casting process? I rang them. That was all I needed. All of the strangers had third party recommendations. None of them immediately struck me as tricky. That was good enough for me. I won’t sit at a table with a pencil and a power dynamic if I can help it. That table is an impossible place for them to show anything other than tricks unless it’s run better than most of the tables I’ve been at lately. Plus it costs money. Better to walk down a road with them, or have a coffee. If you’re still here in the industry, you’re not shit. You might be a narcissist though. Or some sort of borderline personality.

I was a tiny bit worried but now I’m relieved. I liked them. I wondered if one of them might be angry. I wondered if another might be lost. I wondered if one might be arrogant. To see them form their dynamic together I realised all those concerns were nonsense – stuff my stuff had put on them. I remembered the special skill of the jobbing actor: we walk into a totally unfamiliar situation with a load of strangers and immediately feel at home and get it done. Plus these guys used to serve. They aren’t fucking around. They’ll be great tomorrow, and all of them are getting more than I do per day. Which feels strangely brilliant.

I’ve found work for 15 people on this job, maybe more. It’s been very satisfying. The bulk of the people I’ve found have been actors who are willing to wait until the last minute to know what they’re doing tomorrow, and who need the money. Employing actors is a double edged sword. You often get highly intelligent eloquent diligent workers who are great at teamwork, but unless you’re employing them to act they’ll always be looking out the window and if that fucking unicorn runs across the lawn they’re off after it before you can stop them and I’m off pacing them with a saddle. But damn, it’s lovely seeing people happy in a job and knowing you put them there.

This whole concept was put in place close to 20 years ago and they must have gainfully employed hundreds of thousands of people over the years, worldwide. Everyone is working bloody hard but glad to be doing so because it’s worth their while. I shook hands with the man who created this whole thing today, and said “It’s good to see you.” I meant it. What a legend, to still travel with it after so many years and in that time to have changed so many lives for the better.

Tomorrow is going to be mental. I’ll see if I can post a generic enough photo not to break this NDA. Ha yes. Here’s me pretending to relax. Lies, I tell you.

dav

 

Driver

It’s about to go extreme. Everything is slotting into place. Everything is on fire. Everything is fine. My major concern is that I might have to swap my wheels. Transport are fighting fires so I might end up in a transit van while some bastard zooms all around London with my beautiful X-Trail that talks to my phone and has my resident parking permit in the window. Although that seems less likely now considering all the executives have missed their plane. Flights were delayed.

But people are flying in now from all over the place and there are so many drivers and PAs and fuck knows what managers and executives and producers and camera folk and location folk. I’m quite happy to be invisible. I’m on the road. People often forget I’m not my car. Another reason why I don’t want to change it. I don’t want to be a van thankyouplease. I’m a very nice brand new Honda SUV full of Percy Pig, and I want to stay that way until Enterprise pry the thing back from me at the end of the job.

The invisibility of being a driver is the big draw for me. Whether or not I like it, I’m reasonably visible day to day. I disarm that by playing the unthreatening alien. “Goodness I’ve never seen a gun before! You must be really important!” That sort of shit. You’ve been reading this long enough to see that habit in many different contexts. But driving…?

The woman from last night has initiated a habitual banter with me that she employs globally with her drivers. It’s part flirt part power and means nothing other than passing the time. It helps us remember each other. But I’m just the driver. I like that. You see your passenger. They present what they choose of themselves. It’s always interesting. It’s why films get made on this. Baby Driver. Collateral. Driver. Even Deadpool plays with it. It’s a great view. You have a job to hide in. You see your passengers sharper than they see you if they’re strangers.

And now as I write I just got a message telling me my start time and it’s early. Bum. This job is hilarious. So many people, so many vehicles. And I’m the willing one with the sexy car. I don’t have to swap my car anymore. I drive it a long bloody way first thing in the morning. And I’m happy with that. But oh fuck and now it’s half an hour earlier than the last message.

Al Barclay. Cavalier of willing. Lord of the yes. Marvel as he overlooks his own comfort in favour of being amenable. Wonder as he throws his considerably intellect into making his own existence more complicated. Become perplexed at the fact that somehow he seems comfortable and happy because he is needed. Realise he is clearly just throwing himself at anything he can throw himself at with full force as he always fucking does. Shrug because he can choose to spend more energy on others than himself. Get on with your life.

Bed.dav

 

 

Sun

This is perfect weather. Everyone is full of vitamin D. They’re striding around the pavements and parks, full of confidence, full of power. Just don’t let them get behind the wheel of a car. The roads today are full of little pocket Genghis Khans. One guy blankly waited for 4 vehicles to reverse in order for him to continue, when all he needed to do was pull in himself for a while. I called him “Your majesty” as he went through. Little arse.

I’ve worked a pretty long shift. I thought I was getting a lunch break but I ended up driving to Camden with a hot toasted sandwich in the glove compartment. Then I sat in the parking lot at Morrison’s eating it cold, constantly expecting the call to leave, for way too long. Then it was a late trip to Heathrow that turned out stressful. But more on that anon. First the weather.

I’ll go right out there and say it: with all this summer going on I’m finding it impossible not to have my head turned by the constant parade of beauty on the streets. Everyone looks great at the moment, especially you dear reader. Here am I with my pale and bleeding legs under the first shorts of the year and whatever T-shirt was on the top of the pile, and I’m walking past women of my age who probably have two kids and still almost make me go slam into a lamp post. Immaculate summer dresses and all that work in the gym plus vitamin D. I’ve got a six pack under here somewhere… I just need six months to find it. I’ve got to get back to that shit. Speaking objectively, it works.

But summer doesn’t just bring beauty. It brings rage. I picked up someone from Heathrow who had a shitload of camera equipment. “You better have a big vehicle,” she tells me as she comes through with a tank sized trolley of camera-boxes. “It’s an SUV” I reply. She goes silent. “We should be fine,” I venture, keeping the doubt from my voice.

While I’m trying to load it, she isn’t helping at all. Instead she’s taking endless photographs and repeating: “Call the production office. This is ridiculous. This always happens.” Personally I think that if she were to help and stop moaning, with goodwill and a bit of squishing we’d get it all in, and her too. But she wants this to fail because she has a point to make. I try my usual attitude of “Yes it’s not ideal but we can make it work.” But the problem is that, unlike me, she was expecting this to happen. And she wants to make a point so it doesn’t happen again. She ain’t gonna help. She’ll just take photos of me struggling. So I slice up my legs on her blimming cases, get it all in on her personal youtube Laurel and Hardy show, and put her trolley and some bags on the passenger seat. She’s making sure I know she’s tired. I take her downstairs and put her in a black cab. She inexplicably high fives me as she gets in the back. I return to the car and crawl back to London with too much kit. She’s probably right. I can’t see her fitting in this car as well. But I don’t like giving up. It’s not in my nature. And she gave up before we started which made it impossible.

dav

The only photo I took today. At Biggin Hill at 9.15am. Before the day even started. No reason for it to be there. But it’s just shy of 3am now. I’m turning in.

Moons and mooning

Just to clarify, the Orwellian dystopia I described yesterday with the Perivale Police Pound – we were not getting back a bike that had been wrongly parked or left untaxed. We were getting back a bike that had been stolen, and recovered by the police. Hooray for the police for finding it. But the problem is, once you’re in that desperate shithole, all the staff immediately assume you have transgressed. And even a minor transgression that has cost you a large amount of money – that’s enough for all the people that work there to scale you down in status to the lowest possible tier of humanity. I wouldn’t write so baldly about it if it had been my bike, or my money. I’d worry that my perspective was being skewed by my personal discomfort or financial loss. But because I was just there as a friend and observer I felt the full brunt of the bad thinking here. There is no kindness or humour in that place towards the people that come in from outside, no matter their circumstances, no matter why their vehicle ended up there. It’s a hard unkind place. They could go about it differently.

And they are printing money there. Every few minutes another tow truck goes in with another vehicle. Minimum £130. Likely much more. And lots and lots of lovely tasty tears : “mmmmm yes cry little hewmann cry. We likey taste of hewmann crytears.” We watched the trucks coming in and out for hours ferrying misery. Dark dark place.

Whoever had taken Brian’s bike had jammed a screwdriver into the ignition, and completely fucked it so we ran the gauntlet of recovery vultures that sit already engorged but greedy at the gate (£130 to get it back to Chelsea ha ha ha). We ended up down the road and I rang the RAC. Membership is on my bank account. It’s free but very very slow. We got there before 7. It was after midnight by the time we got home, and the foul energy of that place is still clinging to me now.

I’ve been sad all day. For absolutely no reason. Occasionally tearful. God, I’m way too sensitive. I eventually sat in the car and chanted for ages, which took the edge off and means the car is resonating nicely now. I’m partly blaming the pound, partly blaming the full moon. They always pull at me for crazy or for sad.

mde

Now I’m home and I’m already in my dressing gown. I just played Moby’s album “Everything is Wrong”, which I haven’t even thought of since I was an angsty 20. This evening you’re getting the emo version of me. But that emo version of me is about to watch the football…

Oops and there’s Phil on a Volkswagen advert. Part of me is thrown off kilter because yesterday I turned down the first audition I’ve ever turned down in favour of a dayjob. Just an oil commercial. But after years of bloodshed I don’t like that the focus has temporarily shifted to guaranteed money over rolling the dice for my vocation. I did just do some lovely fringey work with The Factory so maybe it’s okay to chase Mammon. I’m going to spend some of my earnings on a stunt horse riding course, and some more on workshops. I might even have enough to suck it up and do something interesting and low budget on the fringe for a bit and remind people I exist. Work breeds work etc, even if you’re usually unwilling to work for peanuts.

Or maybe it’s time to make something mine that I give a shit about and that speaks to my ideals, smash the crap out of it, and have to change my Facebook profile name to stop the endless job offers and marriage proposals…

Police Pound

It’s too fucking hot to be in a vehicle pound filling in forms. Way too hot. Don’t worry, I didn’t get towed. We are getting Brian’s bike back. It’s a bureaucratic nightmare in a horrible place that smells like feet. Nothing is working with his insurance documents. The guy in the window is treating him like a criminal.

First we had to drive up the westway in horrendous traffic. Some fuckwit inevitably back-bumpered me in his Range Rover and then drove off. I got his numberplate because he was just ahead of us in traffic for ages. No visible damage but while I was still fretting about it I ran a red light so it might turn out to be an expensive journey.

Now the guy in the pound is a horrorshow of a human being. Just down the corridor, another unfortunate is getting the fourth degree from another window person. They hang out behind glass being obstructive and contextually powerful. There’s noa culture of self-importance. Perivale Police Pound, aka The seventh circle of hell. It’s vile here. Unutterably dank. Grey walls and the buzzing of bad neon lights. People pretending not to shout at each other through windows. The polite power game. “I have you by the balls, sir, and I’m going to make your life as shitty as I can. But you have to be nice and call me sir and yes sir no sir three bags full sir me or I’ll just tighten this little thing here … aaahhh.” These people are monsters. They are The Demon Headmaster. Like the bike thieves they trade on misery, but this misery is government sanctioned.

Brian has moved to another window. Windowlady is using all her obstructive ingenuity now. She wants the receipt for his purchase of the bike. She is trying everything in her power to make this a wasted trip. She’s such a villain I’m going back to where I left the car to make sure what looks like a parking slot is not in fact a honey trap designed to lure the unwary and refill the pound so every time someone picks up a vehicle their friend’s vehicle goes in. I actually wouldn’t be surprised if, once Brian has successfully jumped through all the flaming hoops, they look at the clock and say “oh sorry sir. It’s too late to release your vehicle now. You’ll have to come back tomorrow.” And then slam the shutters down, kill a virgin goat and dance in its blood like they do in the hospitals, and laugh their way back to Gibboleth and the banquet of souls.

Now they’ve shut the door to stop me giving Brian his helmet. So they can say “Oh we can’t release the bike to someone with no helmet.” I hate them. I hate red tape generally. But this place. These people. These are the enemy.

The bike eventually comes out in the sunset. I take some great photos but here, in this little palace of evil, they do not allow such things. Twice I am told I can’t take photos. They make me delete them. Do I? Or do I just pretend to delete them? The guys waiting outside shout “You can’t stop him”. But I’m not posting anything I might not have deleted on social media. I know I wouldn’t be breaking the law. But these people in this pound? Of course they don’t want their photo displayed. And they are capable of making my life hell with the sheer depth of their spite. They’ve bypassed their misery receptors. I’m not risking it. I wait until nobody is in shot except for Brian.

sdr

The bike doesn’t start.

This is going to be a long night.

 

Dachshund

There are a few jobs where you probably have to be a sociopath to be able to sustain doing it really well. Traffic Warden is in that list. This wasn’t even my money in the long run and it’s eminently contestable. But the events company were almost like “nah it’s not worth the hassle, we’ll just pay the fine.”

We all went to Hyde Park. IT WAS WORK. I was sitting with the car when I got a call. I needed to go and look after Booboo, the needy dachshund. Booboo was in the park. I needed to leave the car and put some money in the meter.

So I went to work out the system with the parking machine. You put in the last few digits of your numberplate. Then you insert a card. Then you wait. Then you wait. Then you wait. Eventually the machine behaves as if it has done its job, and no ticket comes out. So you do it again. This time it tells you you have been declined. Then you check your Monzo account to find that both transactions have come out of your balance. So you leave a note on your car saying “I have already paid twice and the machine is broken. The money has been debited from my account.” And you get into the park because there is a dachshund that needs you. At that stage you are willing to give a fiver to Royal Parks for nothing so you aren’t that bothered about paying twice. They help maintain beautiful places.

But then some illiterate clodhopper slaps a ticket on you despite the note and despite you having paid twice. And your old friend RAGE comes in. My biggest rage instigator comes when I get punished for something that I didn’t do. I used to frequently nightmare that I was being wrongly executed. Maybe a past life. Who knows. Anyway, it pisses me off. So RAGE. And I go looking for the attendant, who thankfully for both of us is nowhere to be seen. Chump.

Irrespective of whose pocket it’s coming out of, I was willing to go to Birmingham with a mob of chanting villagers carrying torches and pull out all the people at Royal Parks head office to tar and feather them while chanting “I paid twice. I paid twice.” But Kester just calmly says “Don’t worry. Just imagine that Royal Parks makes you pay £40 to park, but they don’t announce it. You just find out later. We’ve budgeted loads of money for parking. We can pay it.” YES BUT THAT IS NOT THE POINT. I PAID. TWICE! Why should the production company pay a fine? Or anyone? I would sooner contest that fine, make sure the attendant doesn’t get his bastard commission, and then donate 40 quid to Royal Parks.

So many fines are issued in this city in the full knowledge that they are wrongly issued, knowing that people will take the path of least resistance and just pay the reduced rate rather than paying double. Contest them! Back when I first moved here I paid hundreds of pounds in fines before I became a ninja at getting off wrongly issued ones. This is one of those. But I don’t work in the office, I work on the road for this gig. Although I think Steve in the office has caught on that this is retrievable, as he asked me to send the photos. He should go for the extra fiver as well. I’ll have words with him tomorrow. I went off fully intending to fight it, and telling Kester I would pay if I lost. Steve, out of the blue, asked me to send the details. It’s their credit card, so that makes more sense…

Anyway I was paid today to sit by the Serpentine with a dog. The dog needed constant hands on comfort because she could see her sitter on the water and she wanted to try to swim past all the pedalos and join him. She was a needy doggy. With her little fat legs she wouldn’t swim ten foot, but she was willing to try it anyway. Nothing if not ambitious, this hound. I approve of the ambition if not so much the neediness. Still I was willing to roll around with her a bit while we waited. Especially on such a glorious day. Long may this heatwave continue. Particularly since I have a fridge on the fire escape and need to work out how the hell to get it into my flat before it rains. The fire escape door proved too narrow and Brian and I have been too busy since I got it up there with Jitz the Romanian…

Anywhere. Here’s the dog. She’s got the title. False advertising. She might as well get the photo too.

Percy Pig

Thankfully the people I work with on this show are very used to traveling. At the International Arrivals area of Heathrow Terminal 5, hordes of disconsolate men stand in lines, brandishing hopeful name-boards at anyone who might be the right gender. When I got here I felt I had to step up, so I improvised with my iPad, and held it for all of five minutes before the passenger I’m meeting rang me. She has a working phone. She knows my number. Fucking great. I can sit down.

dav

It’s about two hours since I got to the airport, now. I only just got there in time for the landing after a pile-up on the M4 forced me to Waze my way through Chiswick. Then I stood, shiny with my iPad board until some geezer glanced over to me and said “Don’t sweat it. It’s about two and a half hours wait.” Shit. I’m meeting someone with an American passport, coming in from Switzerland. Thank God she has a phone that works.

I’ve been watching all the meetings. Arrivals is definitely a more pleasant place to wait than departures. People emerging to tears of joy and long happy hugs while the people next to them resent their blocking the gangway as they hit this city with determination. Lovers and families reunited. Strangers meeting in circles around people with boards, awkwardly introducing themselves like the first day of a conference, forcing laughter.

Also there’s a Marks and Spencer’s, which temptingly sells beer – no thanks. There’s already been one pile-up on the M4 today. More pertinently it sells buttered flapjacks, chocolate cornflake clusters, and Percy Pig and Pals. Yeah so she’s been round the world 31 times or something. But I reckon I might be able to feed her a Percy Pig. Are they vegan? I was told they’re vegan. Her number registers as Los Angeles so I’d better check. The pig thing implies they aren’t. Hmmm. Maybe best find out the dietaries first. West Coast Americans in media are a hard lot to snack.

It’s twenty to ten at night. My first pickup was at 8 in the morning. Compared to the time when I sat on my ass on the sofa all day until they delivered the car, I’ve definitely earned my daily rate. I’m hungry. I might eat all the Percy Pigs. It says they’re suitable for vegetarians though. Maybe I’ll leave her some nome nom nom nom oink

I spent this morning at a tiny airfield out near Slough, watching 50 year old white males jacking up their helicopters, fiddling with their propellers, comparing flaps. Now I’m at this much bigger airport, and the world is pushing past. Orthodox Jews with their families next to a guy with a T-Shirt saying “Power Bottom for Jesus.” Young and old and sick and well. Dressed for sun or rain or fighting or wearing a suit because they have to. And here she comes.


Two and a half hours wait… At least it gave the M4 the time to clear. And we came out to a glorious sunset as she gomped through the remaining Percy Pigs.

“They should export these gummies.” Word. But then there’s fewer for us.