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The Court of Social Media

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9.00am on a late October morning. Scene: Waiting room for the overground train at Willesden Junction station. Almost everyone seems to be scrolling on their phones, or listening to something (myself included). Nothing unusual,except one woman is playing music loudly on her phone, disturbing everyone. After a respectable nod to British reserve, people inform her that her music is disturbing everyone, and ask her to stop. She responds that her music isn't loud. Impasse. But after a few seconds, and man starts filming her on his iphone. She goes up to him, and says that he is infringing her human rights. Everybody laughs. After a brief pause, she picks up her belongings and leaves. She didn't seem to care about other people's basic rights, but the threat of an appearance in the court of social media is too much to bear.   

Chess, Diversity and Eco Bags

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Diversity is a champions league buzzword. But what does it mean as a chess player in the London area? How does it score on race/religion/age/sex? Women and chess seems to be the hottest potato, so I will start with the cold Jersey Royals and work my way up. Please Note: This blog has not been submitted to the Inclusion Council, and I beseech you to accept a virtual sin offering for any mansplaining. Chess scores highly on age diversity. Possibly better than any other pastime (I could write sport, but that's another debate). Personally, nothing scarier than playing a young, cherubic opponent who's head only just peers over the board, yet bangs out opening moves like a veteran. Last summer, I played an 8 year-old in a tournament. Major fright for the first 10 moves - till he made a faux pas. Superannuated players regularly feature in the same teams as juniors. Ability is what counts. It is also worth recognizing the many dedicated people, particularly parents, who help with ...

Hubble - And The Art Of Repentance

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NASA's Hubble Space Telescope was launched from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida on April 24, 1990. Expensive Cargo onboard the space shuttle Discovery. Hubble marked the most significant advance in astronomy since Galileo's telescope 400 years ago. Our view of the universe has never been the same since then. But, shortly after the Hubble Space Telescope was switched on, the pictures were coming back fuzzy. 2.5 billion US Dollars had been spent developing and launching Hubble - a public relations disaster! Following much checking and searching, it was found that a part of the mirror had been overpolished. This caused the telescope's primary mirror to have an aberration, affecting clarity of the telescope's early images. A committee was tasked with fixing and defuzzing Hubble.  Around 30 proposed solutions were submitted to for study: “Move the focal point back”,  “put in another mirror” etc.. Interestingly, the approach they accepted was to exactly replicate the ci...

Going Veggie at a Jewish Wedding

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Unless the bride or groom is a card carrying tree hugging vegan, a Jewish wedding will almost certainly involve meat being served for the main course. This is a long standing tradition based going all the way back to the Talmud declaring that there is no simcha (joy) without meat and wine. People choose to see this as an excuse for a good boozy meal, rather than a reference to the temple service (which preceded the advent of tofu burgers and a pint of old peculiar). Personally, I haven't eaten meat since kindergarten, and the thought of gefilte fish or wild alaskan pollock goujons doesn't greatly appeal. Milk is verboten at a meat meal, and a Spanish omelette feels more roadside café brunch than a nuptial repast. As a result, opting for something veggie or vegan is the default choice. One cannot begrudge carnivores their Angus steak or chicken thighs. After all, one should respect the will of the majority (no brexit jokes here). I do, however, think that some caterers lack ima...

How did Eastenders viewers react to the chess storyline?

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The classic British soap opera is a unique specimen. Working-class neighborhood with rows of small houses, a thriving communal pub, and local shops including a chippie. This is supposed to mirror the lives of their viewers, who hang their washing in the garden and often struggle with important real-life issues like childcare, unemployment and rent arrears. Any character who is vaguely 'middle class' has clearly been teleported from planet Zog and struggles to fit in. There is often a tangible resentment of success and betterment. People should know their place. Hopefully this is now a diminishing trend in British society. The strange thing is, the Brits like their American soaps too, and the expectations are a polar opposite. Good looking actors, conspicuous consumption, a few idle rich, and hair that stays in place during a force 9 gale. No small terraced houses in sight, mostly palatial houses and plush apartments. There is a tangible whiff of success. ...

Chess on Eastenders!

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It was a typical dull November day. An email arrived from a researcher at the BBC wondering whether Borehamwood Chess Club might know of anyone who would be willing to devise chess board set-ups for a soap opera? Yes - me! But, the cynic did not get his hopes up as odds on it was likely to be a spam email. Who asks for a copy of your passport photo and National Insurance number in a chatty follow-up email? To my surprise, it turned out that the request was genuine. The program was Eastenders, and Ted (Christopher Timothy) was to be playing chess with some teenage characters for a bit of inter-generational bonding. In my mind, Christopher Timothy is James Herriot in 'All Creatures Great and Small'. But that was over 25 years ago. Time flies. Ted has had his own shenanigans with a gun a few months ago. But now, his prowess at chess would presumably provide some light heart interludes between affairs, rows and heists. That is how the journey began. In case you are curiou...

Counting Up, Counting Down, Staying Level

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Perhaps the most famous countdown ever preceded the launch of Apollo 11 on 16 July 1969. There was worldwide excitement as the day and hour of the launch approached. The anticipation heightened as the Apollo 11 crew left Kennedy Space Centre's Manned Spacecraft Operations Building  after dining on a breakfast of steak, scrambled eggs, toast, coffee and orange juice. The count  reached its dramatic conclusion during the last 10 seconds (Ignition sequence starts...All Engines running...Lift off, we have lift off...). B ut, once Apollo 11 had been launched on top of a Saturn V rocket from Merritt Island, Florida, the epic journey was under way. The spacecraft traveled away from Earth at high speed, and within 4 days, man stepped on the moon for the first time. The countdown was great fun, but it was only the prelude to the main event - landing on the moon. The same also applies to the final seconds of New Year's Eve or shopping days to Chanukah. T he party only starts once  ...