Thursday disappeared into a black hole of family activity. Well, not a black home in any negative sense, just a lot of family stuff - chatting about books with Granddaughter Number Two, aka The Bookworm, collecting Granddaughter Number Four and Grandson Number Two from school, feeding most of the family + Granddaughter Number One’s friend who is almost family, and chatting and setting the world to rights.
Today dawned cool and fresh but cloudy. By midday the cloud had gone but it was still not too hot.
Some called Dan Hancox, writing in the Giardian suggests this:
“A big screen in every postcode? How World Cup fan zones could inspire Andy Burnham”
He, Dan Hancox, was inspired by watching footballin the open air in the Elephant and Castle bit of London: Colombia v Switzerland. There are a lot of Colombians there.
“Little Bogotá was lit up by a sea of yellow shirts and flags, arrayed across the streets and pavements of “Latin Elphant”. It was, as it always is for Colombia games, a delightful scene: an unofficial, chaotic, self-organised fan zone. The cafes and bars were doing a roaring trade, and a guy with a cleaver standing atop a pickup truck was hacking the tops off coconuts and selling them to drink. Children ran around chasing each other, older couples danced together and hundreds of fans, passersby and neighbours milled happily around, sharing views of the tiny screens and lamentations about Colombia’s inability to score, making new friends and sort of half-watching the game.”
Other places had big screens too:
“For the World Cup, Brighton beach hosted a 5,000 capacity fan zone, in front of a 50-sq-metre screen, while Millennium Square in Leeds hosted 6,000. But why stop at football? On a smaller scale, London’s Canary Wharf and Coal Drops Yard now show Wimbledon and films on big screens every summer: outside, with no ticket or fee required. What if all the country’s best watercooler moments could be shared in the same way? The Traitors final in Hyde Park, anyone? Strictly in Princes Street Gardens? MasterChef: The Professionals in Centenary Square? There is an obvious incentive for privately owned public spaces to draw a crowd, to spend money in the shops and bars nearby, to give their project “life”, and office workers on their lunch breaks something to do. With some startup funding for the infrastructure and stewarding, why shouldn’t local authorities be encouraged to do the same? They’d make it back in food and drink sales in a heartbeat.”
Of course, for sports and cinema and concerts al fresco, you need the kind of summer we’ve been having so far, but maybe that’s not beyond the bounds of possibility if predictions about increased numbers of heatwaves come true.
Perhaps Andy Burnham can encourage big screens everywhere. Will we see drive-in cinemas such as we see in films about the USA.
Meanwhile, here’s a Ben Jennings cartoon on Andy Burnham’s imminent arrival at No 10:
Getting back to watching football, here’s an interesting little item:
“Ahead of the England-Argentina semi-final, it was reported that England was “running out of pub“, in the words of Evan Davis on BBC Radio 4’s PM. The thesis went: 30,000 pubs, with 100 people in each, is a capacity of 3 million. There are about 46 million adults in England. An insufficiency of pub.”
Mind you, some of us very rarely go to the pub. Did he factor that into his calculation?
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!











