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Posts by Stuart M

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My Way Home poster by Milos Reindl, 1965

1 week ago 2 1 0 0

I love this.

1 month ago 3 2 0 0
A circular white badge with a cartoon picture of a puffin dressed as a vampire holding a gold topped cane with red capital letters reading I’m a sucker for puffins. The badge is on a pink fabric background

A circular white badge with a cartoon picture of a puffin dressed as a vampire holding a gold topped cane with red capital letters reading I’m a sucker for puffins. The badge is on a pink fabric background

Who could resist this Jill McDonald vampire puffin? Not me, anyway

1 month ago 225 33 4 2

a sombre morning for british columnists as they move their "The electorate has spoken, we must listen" articles to the recycling bin and upload their "the greens victory shows just how far the west has fallen" articles instead

1 month ago 2925 696 10 9
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This might be the worst ADR in the history of television.

1 month ago 5 6 0 3
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Incorrect.

2 months ago 1 0 1 0

Gutted about this. One of my favourite performances in one of my favourite films.

2 months ago 4 1 0 0

Jeremy Bentham’s skeleton, which hangs for candelabra in the library of one of his executors

2 months ago 122 13 4 4

US syndication deals didn't really favour actors until the mid-1970s. A lot of the Love Boat guest contingent were actors from shows being syndicated ten years on, who had stopped being paid after the first couple of years of screenings.

2 months ago 1 0 1 0

reading austen is important for a number of impractical life skills but mostly in how to call someone a wanker to their face in the 18th century — "I send no compliments to your mother" — the recipient would carry that around for 20 years and then kill themselves

2 months ago 188 42 6 0
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The first book I can remember reading on my own. Relentless waxy porridge will conquer all.

2 months ago 8 0 2 0
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John Alcorn, 1971. From: “Circues - A Book To Begin On,” by Mary Kay Phelan.

#illustration #1970s #JohnAlcorn #MaryKayPhelan

2 months ago 41 12 0 0

Nigella to GBBO is, and will be, the best piece of business in the January transfer window

2 months ago 211 34 4 0

Imagine being that bad at your job.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
In practice, though, the experiment has not been a success. Take copyright. The government’s pursuit of economic growth is laudable, even if the chosen route, of piling taxes and regulation onto businesses, is eccentric. In that context, what could be more natural than to open the door of Number 10 to every Silicon Valley huckster who came knocking?

Unfortunately, it turns out that writers and musicians weren’t fully persuaded that giving up all their present and future income is a good idea, even after it was explained to them that this was the only way Sam Altman would be able to afford a new lair under a volcano. Last month a consultation on the government’s proposals to give very rich Americans everything they want found they were supported by just three percent of people who wrote in. If the Department for Culture had still existed, someone there would have been able to save time by warning ministers that creative people – many of them instinctive Labour Party supporters – need m

In practice, though, the experiment has not been a success. Take copyright. The government’s pursuit of economic growth is laudable, even if the chosen route, of piling taxes and regulation onto businesses, is eccentric. In that context, what could be more natural than to open the door of Number 10 to every Silicon Valley huckster who came knocking? Unfortunately, it turns out that writers and musicians weren’t fully persuaded that giving up all their present and future income is a good idea, even after it was explained to them that this was the only way Sam Altman would be able to afford a new lair under a volcano. Last month a consultation on the government’s proposals to give very rich Americans everything they want found they were supported by just three percent of people who wrote in. If the Department for Culture had still existed, someone there would have been able to save time by warning ministers that creative people – many of them instinctive Labour Party supporters – need m

Getting rid of DCMS meant there was no one in government able to warn the prime minister that creatives can't live off thin air. thecritic.co.uk/brin...

3 months ago 194 63 1 4

What a beaut.

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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‘The Shortest Day’ illustrations by Carson Ellis

4 months ago 867 267 3 3
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Preview
Fanny Cradock Cooks for Christmas A collection of traditional recipes, together with Fanny's practical know-how, make for a successful Christmas.

50 YEARS AGO TODAY: Fanny Cradock Cooks For Christmas, her final series (and first in five years so she was probably on the way out anyway) airing every day over a working week.

4 months ago 7 2 0 1
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A 2kg book of Olivetti’s design history.

www.presentandcorrect.com/products/oli...

Our final restock on these for 2025.

4 months ago 39 7 1 3
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RIP Martin Parr. Here are two of my favourite photos of all time. I get such a Proustian rush looking at them that I can hear the “fzzt” of a can of Quatro being opened.

4 months ago 112 15 3 0
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Bar’s open!

Photographer Martin Parr Union Hotel. Manchester, 1974.
Martin Parr, always making the ordinary extraordinary.

4 months ago 246 36 14 6
An illustration of the horrible horned head of Krampus, with green skin, bright yellow staring eyes and with a long protruding tongue emerging from his fanged grinning mouth. He has a beard (but not a moustache - always a bit weird) and long pointy ears. His eyebrows are raised presumably in glee at the prospect of beating up some kids with twigs and carrying them away in his basket. The background is a dull scratchy red.

An illustration of the horrible horned head of Krampus, with green skin, bright yellow staring eyes and with a long protruding tongue emerging from his fanged grinning mouth. He has a beard (but not a moustache - always a bit weird) and long pointy ears. His eyebrows are raised presumably in glee at the prospect of beating up some kids with twigs and carrying them away in his basket. The background is a dull scratchy red.

Spooky advent day 6: Krampus, a traditional figure in Central and Eastern European folklore, is basically a terrifying horned bad santa, accompanying St Nicholas on his visits to children on the night before St Nicholas' Day (6th Dec) and punishing the bad ones by whipping them with birch twigs.

4 months ago 23 4 0 1

Knock-off green and pink popcorn in the Co-Op too.

4 months ago 2 0 0 0
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when MUSCLE BEACH PARTY winds up being one of the most beautiful looking prints you’ve ever seen…

4 months ago 20 5 0 0

This really needs emphasizing. The entirety of the UK media ecosystem is utterly fixated on a 100% fabricated "crisis".

4 months ago 444 135 20 6

Thanks Paul.

4 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Cover design for Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Cover design for Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Internal spread from Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Internal spread from Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Internal spread from Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Internal spread from Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Internal spread from Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

Internal spread from Radio Times: Doctor Who Insiders – The Early Years.

It's Doctor Who Day. To celebrate, I've edited and designed a new digital bookazine for @radiotimes.bsky.social, collecting the best of the magazine's articles and rare photography from the show's early years. Download it FREE from www.radiotimes.com/doctor-who-t...

4 months ago 126 59 5 0

I wrote and drew a magazine at the age of nine, which my headteacher refused to photocopy for me. Foiled by distribution, then and now.

4 months ago 3 0 0 0