How to optimize your synergy with holistic bandwidth to disrupt hyperlocal customer journeys. Ping.
Posted: April 25, 2024 Filed under: Brief...therefore witty. | Tags: bees, business, corporate, dinosaurs, funny, honey, honeybees, Humour, language, local, nature, Summer, words, writing Leave a commentBuzz words, don’t really buzz.
They stab, in the eyes – sure.
But they don’t buzz with that warm, buzzy feeling.
I’ve no doubt they help articulate something people in corporate structures appreciate. But corporate structures also don’t have that warm, buzzy feeling.
Do bee hives have corporate structures?
Do corporations have honey?
Ping?
Would optimizing your synergy with holistic bandwidth disrupt hyperlocal customer journeys? And would that be a good thing? Sounds to me like the sort of buzz-words in action that help bees get lost on the way home to the hive.
Bastards. Leave the poor bee be.
Lost and confused, and pollen sacs full of the heavy stuff.
And it’d think: “Damn! They optimizzzzzed their synergy with holistic bandwidth to disrupt my hyperlocal journey as a customer. When will they learn!?”
All bees ever wanted to do was sniff the flowers, make honey, and otherwise just generally contribute to the overall jolly and peaceful ambience of the countryside in summer.
But we just had to go and start optimizing synergy, and that was totally uncalled for. Distasteful, even.
Buzz-words should be kept away when everything is fine. Absolutely fine. Fine – absolute.
Bees were fine, until optimization.
So were the dinosaurs, until their hyperlocal journeys were disrupted by a meteor that suddenly became holistic as hell and set the sky on fire, which was fine thanks to the global tsunamis, which were convenient since the earthquakes weren’t so troubling when everything was drowning.
Toxic, choking atmosphere though. That something the bees can also relate too.
And let’s bear in mind that whilst we’d all like dinosaurs to still be around – it is phenomenally fantastic that dinosaurs aren’t around any more.
They might have been a good source of a comically-large steak. But as far as I understand, or at least as far as I’m willing to imagine: dinosaurs proffered no honey.
We might not have bee steaks (someone should probably look into that) – we do have bee honey.
In fact, we’ve honey from nothing but bees.
Ergo; optimize it not.
There’s one positive to buzz-words. They might make more sense than everything I’ve just written.
Apart from “ping”. I saw it on Google. No idea what it means. But to give my above words any credibility – I hope it doesn’t mean “honey”.
I’ve just re-Googled and can no longer find “ping” has a buzzword. Great. Now my blog, my darling blog, is littered with “pings” and it looks far more stupid than I could have hoped.
Ping.
Sam

Local football – the difference between quality and enjoyment
Posted: April 21, 2024 Filed under: I've been about | Tags: Culture, dad, football, funny, Gillingham, glory, grass, Humour, life, litter, local, News, passion, pigeons, premier-league, soccer, sports, spring Leave a commentBefore I begin – I’ve looked up the rules of WordPress (by which this blog is generated) and whilst I can’t play music over the top of these words – I can link you to websites that play music – meaning you can enjoy sounds from one tab whilst reading words on this tab .
So I’m linking to some suggestions I’ve had from YouTube: Deep Space Banjo Ambience, A playlist to feel like you’re inside a Monet painting, and Rest Here a Moment.. Tomorrow We Start Again. I don’t know if you’ll like them, or if I do – but the internet seems to feel these pieces summarise me.
My dad and I travelled to watch Gillingham FC play yesterday. The Gills are a Kent-local team with a respected regional history that is over-shadowed by an incredibly devoted fanbase that reminds you that people are dedicated to all sorts of things, including screaming.
I find going to the stadium quite intimidating due to the crowd all around – especially behind me. There’s something about a mob that hasn’t realised it is one yet – it really makes me stay home.
I’m not really frightened of having a fight because no ones tends to start fights with me. However, I’d be quite tentative about starting a fight because I don’t know how to do it.
At what point am I allowed to punch you in the nose?
What happens if we’re exchange insults and threats, and I punch first? And then, everyone gasps and suddenly my wouldn’t-be opponent sobs with hysterical confusion, questioning what drove me to do such a thing – and then I’m politely asked to leave?
Unthinkably embarrassing and really not what the beautiful game is all about.
There are other aspects to the game which is beautiful. Elements that one can’t perceive through the screen watching premier league fixtures.
For one, the litter
There’s litter on the pitch and trundling down the stadium steps.
I think this comes down to two issues.
One – the stadium is draughty, being a stadium, which facilitates litter blowing into the goalmouth and clattering against the fanbase.
Two – the local stadium doesn’t have a two-deep line of hi-viz staff constantly trawling through the square footage to clamp down on the litter that risks being a form of unlicensed advertising (“a Snickers wrapper?! I didn’t approve that flutter by!?”).
Plus, everyone keeps dropping litter, which is likely the most crucial cause of littering.
Pigeons are fucking on the stadium roof
It’s spring, and nature is springing, which is beautiful.
Pigeons, fucking on the stadium roof, is also beautiful, but is that kind of beauty nobody really wants to see. Or hear.
If they could smell it, this sport wouldn’t exist.
It does make one feel lucky to be alive though. Spring is here!
Football! Sunshine! Pigeon eggs (eventually)! And god knows these past few months of dark winter, we’ve all been looking forward to more pigeons. The thought of that got me through Christmas.
The elements are real, not like on TV
I remembered to bring my hat this time, as previously I’d spent the entire 90 minutes saluting the spring-time sun in a vain effort to protect my eyes and see a single moment of play. And I don’t like saluting.
I could probably take eye-damage more seriously though. We all could. But I’m still not going to.
The sun hit my forearm for a long time that afternoon. Feeling something, as opposed to that dulling sensation of generally sitting – in which one only feels anything when they’ve been sitting for too long – I don’t get that at home watching TV.
It’s good to feel something, from the sun on my forearm, to the breeze that helps the litter along.
THUDS
Sitting 3 rows back from the field – you can hear the real thud of the game – thuds of players colliding, landing after tackles and the ever-thwack of the ball.
The same ball that everyone cheers as it makes it way by means of foot-empowered-flight out of the stadium towards brown top-hat chimneys of houses just feet away; it thuds when kicked, it thuds when it hits the roof, and it thuds and beep-beeps when it lands on a car just outside the stadium.
That ball is what makes me feel even more on edge than the mob around me and the procreating pigeons above me. There is a constant feeling, sitting so close to the pitch, that the ball is going to be kicked (perhaps…passed) right into my nose with such power it would colonise my face in the name of football.
It’s brilliant.
Fear can be a good thing, especially when it only relates to cosmetic issues and minor brain damage.
‘THUD‘ personifies that.
Money where it can be found
Each goal was sponsored – something I’ve never encountered before.
I wasn’t sure after the first goal, thanks to the roar of the crowd, but after the second – I’m sure the stadium announcer declared: “In the 47th minute, goal scored by JOSHUA ANDREWS!!! This goal was sponsored by Mr and Mrs Potts, of Twydall.”
Not only did this hyper-localise the local football game, but it made clear that ways to make money are discovered through ways to spend money. In this case, hyper-local; to donate money.
Outstanding.
Unbalanced and loving it
With my Dad – I think we were too balanced to fit in properly. When the ref judged a handball, we’d quietly agree with each other, whilst all about us let there position known not so much by direct disagreement, but by calling the ref a cunt.
It’s a matter of passion over facts. Everyone’s got a football opinion, because that’s the point. If you’ve got a football fact – that’s nice, but one hardly screams it at the opposing fanbase.
All about me were the folk who came to slightly decrease their overall long-term blood-pressure by drastically increasing it for a highly vocal 90 minutes (with a quick 15 minute break for liquids – in and out).
The referee represents the villain in the pantomime – you just know you’re supposed to boo them, regardless of what they actually do on the field/stage. The Gillingham-devoted have no idea of this ref’s name, they just want to enjoy the hour and a half of absolute love and total hatred; football.
The greens are greener
You can see the blades of the grass.
Not just general greeness – like on TV, but actually blades, and flying tuffs as boots dig in deep to the pitch whilst missing the ball somewhat.
It’s the same with the players’ hair, the swish of limbs, and – again – the pigeons fucking.
It’s spring!
Glory. Real glory
There were children asking for autographs from players in case they’re not nobodies, and the players were dutifully signing them. It’s wholesome – live with it.
But whilst they’re potentially not nobodies in the future, right now their names are revised and celebrated by the kids who have this hyper-local passion that is, I expect, replicated up and down the country and probably the world.
And then there is that particular moment of glory, when it comes – as it did for Joshua Andrews (sponsored by Mr and Mrs Potts) in which the ball came to him, he paused for a moment and thought (visibly) – “why the fuck not? I’m supposed to aren’t I?!“. And he kicked it, almost a punt on a punt…and it went in.
And a collective of associates who either know one another by name of the fact that they’d also die for this football club, felt every theme of joy conceivable – and they showed it.
By god, or more importantly – Gillingham FC – they showed it.
That’s a glory that cannot be compared.
But it can be beaten, by this:
There are other nobodies, ones you’ve not heard of and I’ve since forgotten, who played with this club for years and may have enjoyed times such as Joshua – the current number 9. Decades later, they passed away, and yesterday, they and their name received a standing ovation over 60 seconds in honour, absolute honour, of their life and service to this club.
There’s glory on these Saturdays, and dreams come true on the field, but it is in the stands that the living of life can be found. It’s excitement – and it is contagious.
All in all – you might get a bit of it, but there’s no way you get all the above from watching the Premier league on the TV.
Some, not all.
3-0 to the Gills it was.
Me and my Dad went.
Sam

Genitals in a tornado – and other topics that don’t get you far as a writer
Posted: April 12, 2024 Filed under: Brief...therefore witty. | Tags: architecture, Art, genitals, health, history, Humour, life, News, philosophy, tornado, tornadoes, weather, Weird, writing Leave a comment‘Whirly whirly whirly‘ they’d go.
There’s something to it as a topic….the topic being genitals in a tornado.
It’s got depth, and history. It’s also metaphorical, but that’s not as important as literally having your genitals in a tornado.
Which genitals? You name them, they’re there. In fact, bring your own! BYOG!
Which tornado? I don’t know – I don’t any tornados. Obviously they’re all named, but I don’t know the depth of their character in the same way I do genitals.
Either way, I like the idea of genitals in a tornado, because that implies being naked in the elements.
And being naked in the elements, the wind and the rain, the sun and the snow, that in itself implies something too.
There’s depth to these genitals, especially hers.
I think it’s an epic representation of how tiny you are, an insignificant little human in a slightly larger universe, which is entirely indifferent, but the stars are out and pretty, and though you might be insignificant – feeling the rain and the wind and the starlight proves you’re alive.
Which is nice.
You might be able to picture the scene:
A person (perhaps yourself) looking up at an unending sky and appreciating all that living can be, whilst the turbulence of life on Earth increases – the wind rises and makes the person sway and lean into the now-raging storm threatening to rip them away, the will to be and live swells greater than the storm, and proof of living is undeniable and powerful, and all the while their genitals are going round and around like the clappers.
I’ll bet it’s good for them.
Doctors should recommend a tornado for your blood pressure, variations of hair-dos, and for your genitals. Or perhaps, just for the experience – why shouldn’t a doctor want you to have a fun time?
These. These are the topics that don’t get us far as writers. Probably because they’re so interesting, we don’t want to move.
There’s history to these genitals.
Well, really pre-history, but mostly guesswork and even statistics. There’s no way you’re the first person to have genitals out and about in a tornado.
And there’s absolutely no way in hell that you’re the first person to helicopter your penis hands-free but elements-dependent, such as a tornado provides.
The likelihood of this happening goes back further than even helicopters, further back than lassos, further back than any other things you might consider waggling round and round. A penis was doing it first – and I’ll bet there was a tornado right alongside it.
This is history that wasn’t written down at the time it happened, but I bet there’s an undiscovered cave painting somewhere in the world, with storm clouds and rain depicted – with a focus feature of a simple human figure encumbered with a penis so overly large it upsets other people’s balance, surrounded by motion lines to indicate rapid revolutions, and other members of the tribe keeping an awed-whilst-embarrassed distance.
That’s art that I wouldn’t pay for, but I would paint it.
I think they have something similar in the Vatican. Maybe on the walls that hold the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel up.
Turns out – there’s art and architecture to this.
I don’t know about breasts, since they seem to wobble most of the time anyway, but when it comes to history, I’m sure I’ve heard the term “like tits in a wind-tunnel” is one I’ve heard before. I just can’t recall when. I can recall why though – things were going extraordinarily well at the time – like tits in a wind-tunnel.
Vagina-wise (which is a theme, not a given-title for experienced gynecologists) – I’d have to imagine that whilst the tornado might make one’s ovaries a tad chilly, the hollow vagina in a tornado would emit a pleasing ‘toot‘ sort of noise – like when blowing into a half-finished bottle of beer. And you’ve finished the second half, first.
These are the topics that get one nowhere, not even preferably lost.
The important point here, is that writings on topics like these are the guarantee of successlessness. In addition to the creation of unreal words such as at the end of the last sentence, they are not what you want to read about.
But by golly, they’re enjoyable to write about.
And I write, to write.
Doing it this way is to ‘other’ yourself, which gets you attention such as I’m not getting, but the potential is still there.
These are the topics, as you’ve seen above: history, depth, metaphors, art, and architecture – who could possibly be interested in such subjects as these?! Thank heavens there was a unifying theme.
Maybe ‘genitals in the breeze’ would be a better title?
Sam

The internet isn’t sexy, and it isn’t helping
Posted: April 6, 2024 Filed under: Matters that Matter | Tags: blog, Culture, funny, Humour, internet, life, pokemon, sex, sexy, smell Leave a commentI was distracted after writing the above title, by brief segment from a chat-show featuring a guest speaking about why having core stability is important for Formula One racing.
Apparently, it’s very important. For Formula One racing.
I don’t like Formula One racing, though I admit I’ve a soft spot for core stability.
The time I spent on the…….sorry I became distracted again and started browsing for cigars online.
The internet – it is distracting, and not in a good way.
The internet is only as wonderful as it is – and that’s about it.
When I think of the internet being most useful and worth keeping, I picture vital research being finalised in a lab in Australia thanks to some AI programming, then being discussed on a video-conference-call with Europe-based colleagues, and then shared with a children’s hospital when it saves a baby’s life in the nick of time. And then the news is celebrated amongst Facebook friends.
Yes, there’s also music, online communities, access of life-saving information, and occasionally – OCCASIONALLY – a funny video of a cat having a slightly bad time; all of which is tremendous.
Otherwise, it is a unsexy place – location undetermined but seemingly everywhere – and stopping people from approaching one another normally. Of course, ‘normally’ for humans – online or ‘off’ (I like that term – I am “off“) will remain as strange as it ever was before, thanks to people having it within their DNA to make things interesting.
These engagements don’t need to be online. It is preferable to take a single step out doors and try it thus instead. It’s better for your cardio.
The internet is not good for your cardio.
Cardio is sexy, leads to sex, and actually is sex too.
Whilst the internet might lead to sex – it certainly doesn’t do so in a sexy fashion; a click of a button is neither romantic, or attractive. ‘Sexy’ is almost as important as sex itself.
‘Sexy’ is a reason I am involved in things and with people, but aside from my wife – they’ve nothing to do with sex, but they sure as hell are sexy.
Indeed, I have many sexy friends that I don’t find remotely attractive, which I tell to the remaining few of them all the time.
In fact, the benefits of the internet, as broad, varied and accurate as they may be, seem to be proven in the individual instead of en masse.
The individual – who used internet forums to lose weight. Most are gaining weight from lack of movement.
The individual – who developed their friendship circle of like-minded folk to enjoy happily. Must feel more alone than ever, especially when self-judging in comparison to the beautiful people online.
Beauty is important a point that the internet has hammered-home and lost altogether. Once, physical beauty of a person was an exception. Of course everyone is beautiful but no they’re not. Quite a few are pretty, or kind of handsome, but few are beautiful.
The internet has reduced the unique advantage of beauty as something special. Beautiful is now ‘just-another-beautiful‘.
Naturally, everyone wants to breed with someone that is actually attractive – and all the more so if beautiful. I do, anyway. But now that physical beauty is everywhere, thanks to an online ubiquity, it’s not quite the same selling point as it once was.
Therefore, I predict now that in soon-years, physical beauty as a focal point will be replaced in favour of a unique face, one that suggests character over symmetry; balls over cheekbones. Smells good.
The internet has no scent.
It is whiffless, and this should tell us all we need to know.
But there’s more.
Dogs do not approach the internet, despite being such as prominent feature on social media and veterinary sites. If a dog doesn’t trust it,
If the internet were to attend parties, it would be the rather uncouth character fraudulently telling everyone about ladies he’s been with, attempting to sell you a variety of essentially unnecessary items but primarily penis enlargement pills, and speaking in acronyms and then delightedly rolling his eyes when older folk don’t understand.
The internet ain’t got no class.
Oscar Wilde would not invite the internet to one of his soirées, nor would he have need to use the internet as I just did to spellcheck “soirée”.
Another subject I needed to check with online help was the names and faces of the original 150 Pokemon.
I’ve wondered for a while if my two young children (3 and 5) would have their attention held by the programmes I watched when I was their age. So I gave the original pokemon series a go on YouTube.
Sure enough they loved it, but whilst they enjoyed the stories – laughing and silent at all the right moments – I was squirming with resistance to the urge to search online for the full 150 names and faces of each Pokemon.
I succumbed.
This is the data I do not need, but in that scenario I felt I could not do without it and now, in my brain, its there.
150.
So many minutes.
Afterwards, and indeed at the time, I preferred to spend the time with my children, watching them enjoy the cartoon, or I could have turned to this blog and make it a little better, or even dropped and given a solid round of push-ups. But instead, I had to have the instant knowledge, and it is distinctly unsexy.
Yes, of course the internet is fantastic when it’s needed, but we don’t need it as much as we use it.
There’s nothing wrong with a healthy thirst for knowledge, but there’s nothing wrong with not knowing something every now and then, let alone immediately.
And yes, this blog is on the internet, but nobody is trying to suggest this blog is a good thing. I could take it offline, and just comment your address below so I can post each blog to you in the mail.
The internet isn’t sexy. I don’t like online banking, which is remarkably more convenient and cost-effective, because I prefer bank tellers. I dislike home online-streaming services, but really want to go to the cinema and smell the popcorn. I prefer not to order online goods, as I really enjoy getting lost and confused in a department store, hoping my wife will come and find me.
It makes the world something you view, rather than be party to the people in it, and with head full of the kind of inane you don’t want. And I know what kind of inane I like – it smells like popcorn and is trusted by dogs.
If you haven’t got people – you haven’t got much.
And I’ve got some.
Sam
