Life's Lottery (82 page)

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Authors: Kim Newman

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Among the changes to the laws governing the stock market in the UK, the ‘Big Bang’ included an end to the system of fixed commission for traders, the opening up of stock exchange investments to non-members and the abolition of the Independent Certification System. The changes were a reaction to the increasing globalisation of the money market and the upshot was an influx of new investors, more cutthroat competition and a more extreme boom-and-bust economy.

The City

At once a physical area, the City of London, and a term for London considered as a money and securities market.

Council estates

The rough UK equivalent of American housing projects.

Derek Leech

See: ‘The Original Dr Shade’, ‘SQPR’, ‘Organ Donors’,
The Quorum, Seven Stars
, ‘Going to Series’, ‘Where the Bodies Are Buried’.

56
The Lanes

A warren-like area of Brighton; in 1977, full of gift shops and antiques places.

Evening Argus

The Brighton local paper.

The Big Bang of 1986
[as 55]
The City
[as 55]
Derek Leech
[as 55]
57
Wetland

The Somerset Levels, mostly moorland reclaimed from marshland by drainage schemes.

Glastonbury Tor

A tower atop an artifical hillock; a notable feature of the county.

60
‘There are rules’

Cf: James Stewart in
The Philadelphia Story.

Oxford entrance exam
[as 12]
Flash Gordon serial

‘Flaming Torture’ is Episode Six of
Flash Gordon
(1936).

Spectrum Pursuit Vehicle

From the Gerry Anderson TV series
Captain Scarlet and the Mysterons.
Spectrum, the colour-themed good-guy organisation, had SPVs stashed in hiding all over the world and Captain Scarlet could make use of them if necessary.

61
CND

Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament.

E

Ecstasy.

WPC

Woman Police Constable.

Danegeld

A form of tribute/protection money paid by Saxons to mediaeval Danes in return for not being invaded, raped and pillaged.

DIY
[as 29]
63
They call themselves the Quorum
[as 53]
64
Derek Leech
[as 55]
Heather Wilde

See
The Quorum
, ‘Going to Series’.

65
Les Mains sales
A play by Jean-Paul Sartre.
Mademoiselle Quelou

Has a tiny appearance in
Time and Relative.
Not to be confused with the character played by porn star Selen in Asia Argento’s autobiographical film
Scarlet Diva
, though I assume we both took the name from French filmmaker Quelou Parente (
Marquis de Slime
).

66
Jobsearch

A peculiarly 1990s bit of newspeak renamed the unemployed ‘job-seekers’.

Negative equity

When the worth of your house plunges but you’re still having to pay off the inflated price you paid for it.

Work experience

A scheme whereby students spend time in an office or place of employment, not actually having a job but doing menial chores in the hope that the habit of work will rub off on them.

Billy Bunter
[as 7]
Postal order

A piece of scrip convertible into cash at a post office; now obsolete. Billy Bunter was always borrowing money and promising to pay it back when his postal order arrived – but it never did.

Sellotape

UK equivalent of Scotch tape.

Take the money, open the box

In the ITV game show
Take Your Pick
(1955–68), contestants eventually had to choose between taking the money they had already won and taking a mystery prize in a box which could be valuable or worthless. The studio audience would compete to shout advice, ‘take the money’ or ‘open the box’. Hosted first by Michael Miles, this was the first UK gameshow to give away cash prizes. You can see why the reference fits into this novel.

The Cob at Lyme Regis

The distinctive stone harbour; it’s a key location in the film and book of
The French Lieutenant’s Woman.
John Fowles turns up in his own novel towards the end to toss a coin in order to decide which of the endings you read first.

A pound of flesh

Besides referencing
The Merchant of Venice
, this evokes the Vincent Price film
Theater of Blood
to anyone my age, referring to the death of the character played by Harry Andrews. ‘It must be Lionheart, only he would have the temerity to rewrite Shakespeare.’

Club Whoopee, Rio de Janiero

A joke from MAD Magazine; Club Whoopee was the name of an early 1980s cabaret band I was in.

The Black Museum

Scotland Yard’s collection of gruesome murder weapons and other macabre evidence. See the movie
Horrors of the Black Museum
– the most famous item is the trick binoculars with spikes that plunge into the user’s eyes when the focus is adjusted.

Magic Marker

A brand of thick felt-tipped pen.

Patrick McGoohan

Special Guest Murderer on
Columbo
as often as Robert Culp. See the episodes: ‘By Dawn’s Early Light’, ‘Identity Crisis’, ‘Agenda for Murder’ and ‘Ashes to Ashes’.

Avon and Somerset

At one point, a redrawing of the county boundaries in the west of England created a new administrative entity called Avon in the north of the ancient county of Somerset around the city of Bristol. This was vaguely rescinded later, but the police force of the area remains the Avon and Somerset Constabulary.

67
Biro

Ball-point pen.

J Cloth

A brand of disposable kitchen towel.

Tony Blair

Labour Prime Minister.

Jeffrey Archer

Tory politician and schlock novelist; part of his self-generated myth is that he sank enormously into debt and wrote the best-seller
Not a Penny More Not a Penny Less
in order to escape. A few years after this, he went to jail for perjuring himself in order to win a big-money libel suit.

Reggie Perrin

Created by novelist David Nobbs in
The Death of Reginald Perrin
(1975), this character became a national institution after Leonard Rossiter played him in the TV series
The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin
(1976). Perrin fakes a suicide and starts life over again, rather like Flitcroft in
The Maltese Falcon
. ‘Doing a Reggie’ became police slang for this scam.

John Stonehouse

A former Labour cabinet minister in the Wilson government, Stonehouse saw a series of businesses collapse in the 1970s and perpetrated several major frauds. In 1974, he left his clothes on a Miami beach to give the impression that he had committed suicide and fled to Australia on a fake passport. He was later arrested, convicted and jailed.

A pound of flesh
[as 66]
Sellotape
[As 66]
Postman Pat

Created by writer John Cunliffe and developed for television by Ivor Wood, Postman Pat is a British children’s character, an idealised version of a Royal Mail delivery person.

‘Nellie the Elephant’
[as 40]
70
DSS payment

UK equivalent of a welfare cheque.

Sainsbury’s

A supermarket chain.

The Teletubbies

Very popular UK TV kids’ characters, controversial in America because it was assumed the one with a handbag might be gay.

Crackerjack

Popular BBC-TV children’s show of the 1960s; it always begun with the announcement ‘It’s Friday… it’s five o’clock… it’s time for
Crackerjack
’. Imagine a more educational
Krusty the Klown.

Sellotape
[as 66]
Magic Markers
[as 66]
Thunderbirds

Gerry Anderson puppet series.

Skippy, the Bush Kangaroo

Australian TV series, imported to Britain in the 1960s, well before Australian soaps (
Neighbours
,
Home and Away
) began to fill in odd, popular hours of British air-time.

Plasticine

UK equivalent of silly putty.

April Dancer

Yes, there was a third choice I forgot to mention earlier. Though Mary Ann Mobley was cast in the role in a
Man From U.N.C.L.E.
episode/backdoor pilot, April Dancer was played by Stefanie Powers in a brief run of
The Girl From U.N.C.L.E.

71
The Champions

Unsuccessful ITV adventure series (1968–69) about secret agents who gained mild mystic powers in Tibet.

Space Kidettes

A 1966 Hanna-Barbera cartoon series.

Cup-a-Soup

Instant soup product.

74
A Levels
[as 12]
The
Herald

The local paper. See ‘Where the Bodies Are Buried 3: Black and White and Red All Over’.

77
Never Mind the Bollocks

By the Sex Pistols.

A Day in Marineville

A tie-in with the Gerry Anderson TV show
Stingray.

78
NME

The
New Musical Express
; in the 1970s, much more than a pop music paper.

Launderette

UK equivalent of laundromat.

Doesn’t compute

Catch-phrase from
Lost in Space.

Bender

A type of plastic sleeping bag/cocoon, much in use at Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp.

The Exorcism

Perhaps the single most frightening TV hour of the 1970s, this play by Don Taylor was broadcast in a series called
Dead of Night.
Taylor’s script was briefly a West End theatre production in 1975, and the four-hander has often been done in little theatre ever since.

Habitat

Terence Conran’s chain of upscale furniture and household goods stores.

Betamax

The loser’s home video, though many maintain its technical superiority over VHS to this day.

‘Super Trouper’

A hit for Abba.

80
Batcave

Under Stately Wayne Manor, the HQ of Batman and Robin.

WPC
[as 61]
Sedgwater
Herald
[as 74]
Care-in-the-community

A 1980s scheme whereby patients with mental illness were released from institutions, theoretically to be looked after by relatives or social workers; in effect, a collection of disturbed individuals were thrown onto their own devices.

A Rambo band

A headband, like that worn by Sylvester Stallone in the
Rambo
films. The film director Richard Stanley started wearing hats because he deemed the headband fashion no longer acceptable after it had been usurped by Stallone.

Nescafé
[as 32]
The Archers

‘An everyday story of country folk’; from 1950 onwards, BBC Radio’s longest-running soap opera. The daily instalments are edited together and repeated on a Sunday morning.

Two-Way Family Favourites

Originally
Forces Favourites
, this wartime BBC Radio request music programme continued into the 1970s. It was specifically for the families of those serving overseas in the armed forces.

Round the Horne

A seminal 1960s BBC Radio comedy show, hosted by Kenneth Horne. Best-remembered for Kenneth Williams and Hugh Paddick’s use of gay slang in the ‘Julian and Sandy’ sketches.

The Clitheroe Kid

A BBC Radio sit-com (1957–72), in which middle-aged but diminutive comedian Jimmy Clitheroe played a naughty schoolboy. In retrospect, vaguely disturbing.

Down Your Way

Long-running and excruciating BBC Radio show (first broadcast in 1946) in which a smug presenter visited a region of Britain, interviewed various locals about their work and played a piece of music they selected. Week after week, we hoped some old lady who made corn dollies in Little Whumpington would request ‘Fuck Like a Beast’.

Sing Something Simple

1959–2001. A program of easy listening favourites performed in surreally somnolent style by the Cliff Adams Singers.

Gardeners’ Question Time

Originally entitled
How Does Your Garden Grow?
, this was first broadcast in 1947 and continues to this day. Nobody ever asks the team of experts about growing marijuana.

The God slot

Early Sunday evening prime-time on BBC1, usually occupied by
Songs of Praise
or the like.

Mary’s little cousin Beth

Appears briefly in
Jago.
In the
Where the Bodies Are Buried
stories, she is revealed to be a serial killer.

Andrew Lloyd-Webber

Composer of long-running musical stage shows; one of those enormously successful people whose output no one will own up to liking.

PG Tips

Brand of tea, long-promoted on television by cheerful chimpanzees.

81
Jubilee
[as 53]
85
Survival Kit

See also: ‘Organ Donors’.

The
Guardian

Leftish-leaning daily paper, aka the
Manchester Guardian.

The
Statesman

The
New Statesman.
A weekly political periodical with a left-wing slant.

Privatisation

The process, pioneered by the Thatcher government, of selling off state services and industries into private ownership. Caricatured as ‘selling off the family silver’, this contributed to the bubble economy of the 1980 and, arguably, the lower quality of public services like transport and the utilities.

Poll tax
[as 24]
Margaret Thatcher
[as 2]

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