7 Reasons

Tag: kids

  • Guest Post: 7 Reasons Why Your Granny Will Always Prefer Offline Bingo

    Guest Post: 7 Reasons Why Your Granny Will Always Prefer Offline Bingo

    We all love our Grannies, it brightens up our day by just seeing them: well, most of the time they do. It is kind of a stereotypical view to say that only old people play bingo, but this is a misconception with online bingo; however, offline bingo is defiantly more popular amongst the older generation. Below are seven reasons why your Granny can be found chilling at her local bingo hall.

    Guest Post: 7 Reasons Why Your Granny Will Always Prefer Offline Bingo

    1.  Technology. The latest technology/gadgets and the older generation simply do not mix. Usually if your grandma has a mobile phone it will look like the following:

    Guest Post: 7 Reasons Why Your Granny Will Always Prefer Offline Bingo

    As long as it makes and receives calls then that is all that is required. To play online bingo you will need not only an internet connect but a PC and knowing how to operate the PC and the online functionality of flash software. All of which is a pain unless you grew up with your eyeballs glued to a PC monitor.

    2.  Good Old Banter. Your Granny loves to talk…well, mine does. I can never shut her up, lol (bless her). What would be more fitting than a game that revolves around talking? Offline bingo is extremely social, so granny can chin wag to all her friends for a couple of hours. We tend to be at out lowest when we feel alone, a few hours of socialising is just what the doctor order to keep your grandma happy as Larry.

    3.  It Gets Her Out Of The House. As you get older you tend not to go out of the house as much, especially if your partner is no longer with you. Travelling to your local bingo club once a week is something you look forward to. Just logging on a computer in your home still makes you feel isolated.

    4.  It Makes Her Day. We all love to win, even if the price is nothing spectacular. Usually at bingo clubs the prizes are around the respectable £25 per house jackpot that are defiantly worth the 5p/25p a ticket. If she wins you grandchildren are the ones that usually benefit, so keep routing for her.

    5.  She Is Down With The Kids. Grannies are cool, end off. They love to do cool things and they love to be in with the trend. Millions of UK people and people from all around the world love to play offline and online bingo, the gambling sport is huge.

    6.  Not As It Once Was. As you get older your hearing and sight are not as good as they once were. This does not make it any better with a tiny monitor and speakers. At your local bingo club the bingo callers have voices that wish you had a remote control handy and the tickets are easy to see.

    7.  Using The Bus Pass. In the UK, when you get to a certain age you qualify for a free bus pass that entitles you to ride on bus for free (unsure if the US issue them). Visiting her local bingo hall gives her a reason to use her bus pass. Well, if it costs you nothing to get there…why not?

    Next time you ask your Grandma: “Grandma, why do you play bingo all the time, you never win?” Think to yourself, it is not always about the winning.

  • 7 Reasons That A Red Bucket Is The Most Amazing Thing In The World

    7 Reasons That A Red Bucket Is The Most Amazing Thing In The World

    Hello 7 Reasons readers.  Due to unforeseen circumstances we’re going to publish a guest post on a Thursday, which is something that we’ve never done before.  So here, taking up not very much space on the 7 Reasons sofa at all, but making quite a lot of noise and a bit of a smell that we’re pretending not to notice, is today’s guest poster.  Possibly our youngest ever.

    Hello!  My name’s Byron Sebastian Fearns and I’m a baby.  Now I may not have seen much in my five and three quarter months, but today the most wonderful thing happened and I was compelled to share with you what I discovered; it is the most exciting thing in the whole history of the world ever.  It’s something called a red bucket.  Here are seven reasons that it’s more amazing than anything else, even elephants and balls.

     

    1.  It’s Red!  The first thing I noticed when my mother and father wheeled me through the big building full of shiny stuff and dishcloths and picked up my toy that I now know is called a “bucket” (which rhymes with “fuck it”, a phrase I heard my father say once shortly before mother became very cross) was that it is red.  This means that it’s amazing and not blue or yellow like everything else that people buy for me on the basis that “it’s for a boy” or that “yellow is a neutral colour”.  I don’t like blue (it is a colour that makes my father cry at football matches) and I’m not neutral.  If I liked neutral colours I’d hurl magnolia coloured food at the walls rather than orange coloured food.  I like bright colours!  I like red!

    2.  It Makes A Noise!  It does!  As we perambulated through the big building full of shiny stuff and dishcloths Father turned the bucket upside-down and began banging on the bottom of it.  It made a noise like the noise that the man next door makes all day long in his kitchen or the sound that Father sometimes makes with his head on the desk after he has stared at a white screen for a considerable period of time.  I’m relatively new to the concept of onomatopoeia, but it made a noise that sounded like thump-thump-diddle-diddle-ump and was very loud.  The ladies that live in the big building full of shiny things seemed most impressed.

    3.  It’s Hilarious!  Then we took my bucket to the park where the trees and squirrels live.  We lay down on the grass and, after I had completed a short bout of screaming for absolutely no reason, Father said “Look Byron” and put the bucket over his head.  This was the funniest thing I have ever seen.  Ever!  Father then took it off his head and put it back on his head and I laughed again.  We did this for hours!  Father enjoyed this so much that he started rolling his eyes and staring at his watch with delight.

    4.  It Makes Another Noise!  Just when I felt that I might eventually tire of Father putting the bucket on his head, taking it off again and then putting it back on his head, something amazing happened.  Father coughed and it sounded like the deepest loudest sound ever heard by anyone at all.  This was hilarious.  I laughed for ages.  Then Father made other noises in the bucket too and they were even funnier.  They were so funny that I laughed more than I ever have before; they were so funny that Mother had to edge slowly away from us in case she injured herself with all of the fun; they were so funny that Father suddenly became religious and started asking god when he could go home.  He spoke to god in the bucket!  Oh, how I laughed.

    5.  It Moves!  Then Father stood up and started running round the park with the bucket on his head and pretended to be a monster (which is a creature similar to a dog).  “Rooooooooaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrr!” he said as he ran round a tree; “Roooooooooaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrr!!!!!!!!!!!” he said as he ran past a bench; “Rooooooaaaaarrrrrrr!!!!!!!” he said as he ran behind a bush”;  “Aaaaaaaaaarrrrggghhhhhh!!!!!!” screamed a tour group from behind the bush; “Roooooaaaaaaarrrrrrr!!!!!” he said as he ran back from the bush;  “OOOOWWWWWW!!!!!!!!” he said as he fell over a bin.  Then he said a word that I’ve never heard before and Mother shouted a lot and we had to go home.

    6.  It’s Red Inside Too!  On the way home Father put the bucket on my head and I thought it was the most awesome and amazing thing that it’s possible for any human to experience, ever.  It turned everything in the world red and when I made a noise it was the biggest noise that anyone has ever made.  It was bigger even than the noise that Father made when I weed on his coat as he was changing my nappy at the National Railway Museum.  It was amazing!  Then Father took the bucket off my head and the next-door-neighbours were there and they seemed concerned.

    7.  I Can Get In It!  After a long – and really boring – conversation with the neighbours about babies and the bucket and stuff we got home and then something happened that was the most incredible, fantastical and phantasmagorical thing of all.  I got into the bucket!

    Look at me! I’m in the bucket.

    Then Father took the bucket away and told me if I ever wanted to see it again I had to write today’s 7 Reasons post as he has something called a “headache”, which he says is a contagious disease that is contracted by proximity to children.  So now I’ve written it I’m going to get the bucket back and play with it all day every day for a week.  Or perhaps a month!  I’m off to play with my bucket now.  Bye-bye.

  • 7 Reasons To Be A Father

    7 Reasons To Be A Father

    This piece is entitled 7 Reasons to be a Father.  It is not 7 Reasons You Fathered a Child, we all have our own reasons for that, often involving a combination of beer and lust or – for the less fortunate – calendars, timetables, fatigue and oh God, it’s bloody sex again.  This is a plea to bring back into popular usage the title Father.  It’s important that women read this too, as it’s mostly from them that children learn how to address their fathers.  I’m printing this piece out and posting it all around the house when I’ve finished it for my wife to see because I, more than almost anything else, also wish to be addressed as Father.  Here’s why.

    A portrait of a Victorian father with a new baby

    1.  Fathers Have A Day.  Dads and daddies don’t have a day, but fathers do.  It’s called Father’s Day, and it’s a whole day devoted to the celebration of fathers.  Less formally titled male parents have nothing similar to Father’s Day.  The nearest thing they have is Daddy Day Care, which is a film starring Eddie Murphy from 2003, made a mere eighteen years after he ceased to be funny.*  If you want to be celebrated, you have to be a father.

    2.  It’s Not Mentioned In The Phrase “Who’s The Daddy”.  I have an irrational hatred of the phrase “who’s the daddy” that borders on the pathological.  I don’t know why people ever need to say this (actually, it’s usually bellowed, boorishly) but they do.  I dislike this phrase so much that my (fortunately resistible) desire on hearing it is to beat the sayer around the head with the nearest sturdy but moveable objects to hand – which today, would be a large beige parasol and a teacup** – while saying “who’s the father“.  This is problematic as the best known user of this phrase is Ray Winstone (in the film Scum), and in terms of people you’d be ill-advised to assault with a beige parasol and a teacup, he’s right up there with Sebastien Chabal and the hairy-armed woman from my local branch of Superdrug.  If more people used the word father, I’d be in less danger.

    3.  It’s Your Duty. While my son and I were playing our version of peek-a-boo that bears the catchy name, Where’s Father? My visiting mother-in-law looked at me aghast.  “He can’t call you Father” she said, “that sounds horrible.  Fathers are remote and distant”.  While I agreed with the first part of what she said (he can’t call me Father.  He’s a baby.  He usually refers to me as Agoo-Agoo), I wholly disagree with the latter part.  Fathers are not remote and distant; bad parents are.  Father is just a name associated with another age when the social norm was for parents (especially male ones) to be more distant from their children.  Were all fathers cold and distant?  No.  Were all of these men bad parents?  No.  But they’ve been tainted by the modern distaste for the word father.  Don’t we owe it to people who will be forever associated with the word father to reclaim the name, to show that being addressed as father and being a good parent are not exclusive?  Yes.  I think we do.  Being addressed as Father, rather than as Daddy could be seen as performing a civic duty.  A very untaxing one at that, which is by far the best sort.

    4.  The Name Father Lends Itself To Formality.  If you ever ask a child what their dad has been up to, the answer is never good.  It’s usually, “Daddy drank too much and fell asleep on the kitchen floor.”  Enquire after a father, however, and surely you’ll get something more formal and considered: “Father imbibed injudiciously and was importuned adjacent to the pantry” or “Father’s club won a tournament of association football and, on his return to the familial abode, he was so awash with joy and hubris that he swooned in the scullery”.  The more formal account of your character and your recent occurrences will give everyone a much better impression of you.***

    5.  Father Is Right For Our Era.  It’s been a trend in recent years for children to be named more traditionally and formally and Britain is now teeming with Samuels, Lilys, Lottys and Benjamins.  With superb irony, there was even a flood of Noahs two years ago.  What better fit for the era then, than to be known as Father?  Can you imagine any conversation beginning “Hephzibah.”  “Yes, Dad”?  No of course you can’t.  Gary has a dad.  Jeremiah requires a father.

    6.  The Word Father Is Synonymous With Excitement And Adventure.  The word father is redolent of suitably-attired men drinking port in their oak-panelled libraries; of men that had rounded the horn six times afore the mast when they were scarcely twenty; of men that invented telephones and telegrams and multitudinous things that don’t begin with tele; of men that built vast industries where once there had been nothing; of men that – with scant regard for the peril they placed themselves in – explored and charted the world that was their plaything; of unreconstructed men that sallied forth to ride atop elephants and take pot-shots at tigers whilst clad in crisp linen; of men that reposed languidly – though impeccably – in the leather armchairs of their clubs and in the saloons of well-appointed hotels; of men that wore a panoply of hats – tall and short, soft and hard, cloth and silk – for every occasion, but never indoors; of men that marched long in shambling, hobnailed ranks to their capital when their families fell hungry; of bewhiskered men that shrank their world, bringing far-flung and wondrous exotica and ephemera to and from all the ends of the earth; of men that unsealed newly-received missives at their breakfast tables with a silver letter opener and a flourish; of good men whose reliability, indomitability, solidity and sheer bloody ability went unremarked upon though thoroughly remarkable; of men for whom adventure, discovery, conquest, knowledge, power, expansion, great works, boundlessness and greatness were commonplace.  Those men were fathers.  And dad?  Dad drives to B&Q on a Saturday morning in his people carrier, puts up shelves in the afternoon, drinks crap lager while watching Britain’s Got Talent in the evening and then falls asleep at night during Match of the Day.  And Saturday is the highlight of his week.  Being a father is so much more exciting.

    7.  It’s Rare.  There just aren’t many Fathers out there so you’ll stand out.  This has other benefits too.  Should you find yourself in a beer garden populated by the balding, the pudgy, the badly-attired and the bloodshot of eye, observe what happens when a child calls out “Dad”.  Everyone stops what they are doing and looks around, certain that their progeny is in urgent need of their attention, only to discover that it’s the child of someone else who then announces to the assembled company that they have done a big plop.  If your child calls out “Father”, you’re likely to be the only person that looks around so it’s not just more individual, it’s more sociable too, as no one else has their conversation about how much of Match of the Day they missed last night when they dozed off disrupted, and no one gets to hear about the big plop.  Except you.

    So, who’s the daddy?  Who cares?  Who’s the father?  It’s me.  Indubitably.

     

    *Oh God.  I’m old enough to remember when Eddie Murphy was funny.  This is a truly horrific watershed moment.

    **Note to self:  Sit near more manly objects when writing.

    ***This may be fanciful.  Learning to crawl up the stairs would be more efficacious.

     

     

     

  • 7 Reasons Blackout Blinds Are Surprisingly Effective

    7 Reasons Blackout Blinds Are Surprisingly Effective

    My wife and I are trying to train our child to recognise the difference between day and night at the moment and the latest weapon in our armoury is a blackout blind: a blind which prevents any light coming through the window.  This, we not unreasonably thought, would prevent our six-week old son waking up at 5am when sunlight streams through our East facing bedroom window and would help him get into a settled routine of sleeping at night.  So far, it has proved effective (after a fashion).

    a black gif.

    1.  Fitting.  As the member of the 7 Reasons team that is competent at DIY I envisaged that there would be no problems installing our blind, and I was almost correct. It was incredibly simple to fit, with only a bit of light drilling required.  And it was simple right up until the moment  – while I was balanced precariously atop a step-ladder – that everything went dark.  Not just dim, you should understand, but dark.  Preternaturally dark.  Darker than spending a dark night in the darkest room of the Prince of Darkness wearing a sleeping mask.  Darker than anything ever.  There was no light.  “Help!”  “Help!” I called until my wife came up the stairs and opened the door, flooding the room with light from the hallway.  “It all went dark”, I explained to a sceptical wife who couldn’t comprehend – or didn’t believe – that something as insubstantial as a piece of material could block out all light.  I climbed down from the ladder with my reputation for DIY prowess, if not my dignity, intact.

     

    2.  Baby’s Bedtime.  In the evening our son fell asleep before we expected him to and, rather than look a gift horse (or a sleeping baby, which is a very similar creature to a gift horse) in the mouth, we decided we would put him to bed right then.  We gingerly carried him up the stairs and swaddled him in his cot.  We began to sneak out of the room and paused to close the blind on the way.  Everything went black.  We couldn’t see a thing.  We partially raised the blind again so that we could find the light switch and turned on the light so that we could see the door and find our way out.  This woke the baby.  Bugger.

     

    3.  Mummy’s Bedtime.  Eventually, we were able to get our son back to sleep and, quite soon after, my wife snuck up to bed.  I have little idea what happened, but after a couple of minutes, from my position in the room below, I heard a loud bang, followed about thirty seconds later by the noise of the baby crying.  Then I heard the sound of my wife trying to placate the crying baby with a cuddly toy, before my parental selective deafness kicked in and I returned to what I was doing.

     

    4.  Daddy’s Bedtime.  Eventually, the baby became quiet again and, having spent the remainder of a fascinating evening reconfiguring the 7 Reasons W3 Total Cache plugin and our email servers*, it was time for me to go to bed.  I went up the stairs and changed in another room, so as not to disturb anyone.  Then I snuck across the landing into the bedroom and closed the door noiselessly behind me.  Where once there would have had been some residual light filtering through the blind to aid my navigation across the room, now there was none.  I knew roughly where the bed was though, and I took several tentative steps toward it before stumbling over something and letting out an involuntary scream as I lost my balance and landed in a heap on the bed.

     

    5.   “AAAAARRRRRRRRGGGGGGHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!” Shrieked a lump in the bed from beneath me as, in the pitch darkness, a screaming and unknown assailant pounced on her.  I groped around for the switch to the bedside light and, finding it quickly, turned it on.  I looked behind me to see what was on the floor.  “Are you drunk?”, the now slightly calmer lump in the bed enquired.  “I fell over an owl,” I replied.

     

    6.  “WWWWAAAAAHHHHH!!!!!!!” Said a tiny voice from the other side of the room reacting to the sudden light.  Eventually we were able to get him back to sleep.

     

    7.  Sleep.  I was unaware of what occurred during the remainder of the night.  I have since been told that the usual cycle of the baby waking up and requiring feeding and changing carried on unaltered by the loss of the light.  I was told that this morning when, after what I can only describe as the most blissfully tranquil sleep of my life, my rather tired looking wife shook me awake and informed me it was 11am and that we were going to be late for our lunch appointment.  “But it can’t be”, I replied, “It’s still pitch black”.

     

    So there you have it.  Blackout blinds do work, and you can use them to lull the unsuspecting into sleeping longer and later.  They just don’t work on babies.

     

    *I had hoped to watch a couple of episodes of Bergerac.  We sacrifice a lot for 7 Reasons.

     

  • 7 Reasons That Staying in for Halloween was Disappointing

    7 Reasons That Staying in for Halloween was Disappointing

    We never stay in on Halloween and this year we were due to go out for a meal and to see a film.  But my wife decided at the last-minute that she didn’t want to go out; she wanted to stay in and watch Downton Abbey.  So, we braced ourselves for the inevitable throng of trick-or-treaters and settled in for the night.  But none came.  And, though by any normal measure, I should be pleased about that.  It was disappointing.  Here are seven reasons why.

    a scary picture of a spooky house
    We don’t really live in a spooky mansion, this is just for illustration. We live in a spooky town-house.

    1.  Ouch.  Evening came and it became dark.  We had decided on the timeless strategy of pretending-to-be-out, so we didn’t put the lights on.  And, after several minutes of darkness, I fell over the cat in the hallway.  This clearly wasn’t going to work, so we had to limp to the shops.

    2.  Money.  In order to stay in – in our own home – we spent £4 on sweets.  To give to the children that would surely be round coming round in droves demanding them.  Because trick-or-treating isn’t nice.  It’s an old-fashioned mafia style shakedown.  But unlike the mafia, they often come round with their parents, so you can’t tell them to sod off.  Because that would make them cry (the children that is, the parents probably have their own reasons for crying).  So we spent money on sweets for them so that we didn’t have to sit in the dark and pretend to be out.  But they didn’t come.  And that’s £4 wasted.  We could have bought over twenty-four litres of sparkling mineral water for that.  Or two-thirds of a sandwich at a petrol station.

    3.  Money.  But then I realised that it isn’t just £4 that we’ve wasted.  Because we go out every year to avoid the inevitable plague of trick-or-treaters.  But this is expensive and, over the years, we must have spent many hundreds of pounds avoiding trick-or-treaters.  Obviously we’ve had lots of fun, consumed many nice meals and enjoyable beers, and seen many good films; but that isn’t the point.  We were there for Halloween avoidance.  What if the children haven’t come every year?  We’ve spent all that money needlessly, and had all that pointless fun.  For nothing.

    4.  Argument.  We’ve never argued on Halloween before, but this time we did.  We argued about who would go out and give sweets to the trick-or-treaters when they came to the door.  “It’s Halloween”, my wife said, “you could go out there and scare the children with your mask”.

    Yes, but you could go out there and scare them with your dressing gown”, I replied.  And I seem to have won the argument, because she didn’t argue with me further or, in fact, say anything much at all after that.  But the argument was moot, because of the absence of trick-or-treaters.

    5.  Sweets.  Because no children came to our house, we now have a huge bowl of sweets and no children to give it to.  This means that we’ll have to eat them.  But we’re grown-ups, and when grown-ups eat sweets they don’t run around in a sugar-frenzy, they sit still.  And get fat.  And we don’t want to become hideously fat.  We want the neighbour’s children to become hideously fat.  And then they won’t run around playing football in the alley behind our house.  Our plan’s in tatters.

    6.  Rejection.  As we’re usually out for Halloween, we have no idea of how it works.  We sat waiting for trick-or-treaters until gone midnight.  But surely they’ll come, we thought.  Where are they?  We felt unloved and rejected.  We checked our armpits and speculated on why no children had come.  And then, the only possible explanation occurred to us.

    7.  Spooky.  I don’t believe in the supernatural or the sort of strange phenomena that is celebrated on Halloween because frankly, it’s a big load of guff.  But I’m quite happy being a sneering sceptic; in fact, I’m quite well suited to it.  But the non-arrival of the children was a genuinely spooky event.  Because the last time we’d been in on Halloween – six years ago – we’d forgotten about it, didn’t have any sweets in the house, and had resorted to giving the children fruit and telling them that it was much better for them.  And somehow, despite six years having elapsed and despite many children having come and gone from our street, the children somehow knew that we were the house of the fruit and they avoided us.  The children knew.  Creepy.

  • Guest Post: 7 Reasons to Love Peppa Pig

    Guest Post: 7 Reasons to Love Peppa Pig

    It’s Saturday once more, and the 7 Reasons team are taking a day off to indulge their respective hobbies of eating tiramisu and…er…not eating tiramisu.  Fear not though, for we leave you in capable hands.  Strapping himself back into the 7 Reasons sofa, taking a firm grasp of the joystick and doing things that we don’t understand with flaps and ailerons is Richard O’Hagan:  By day a mild-mannered lawyer, and by night a fearless writer, warrior, superhero and defender of owls (possibly).  Here’s Richard.

    I know what you are thinking – why is a grown man extolling the virtues of a TV show for the under-fives? Well, first of all, there’s the fact that it is one of the few kids shows that can be on in the background without raising my blood pressure to boiling point, just by being a steaming pile of old twaddle, such as In The Night Garden. Nor is it a complete rip-off of a fifty year old idea, like Chuggington. In fact, you can watch it as an adult and be far more entertained than you can watching any soap opera. There are many reasons for this, but here are just seven of them:

    The logo for the childrens television programme, Peppa Pig

    1.  The Car Is Magic. Even better, the car is magic and no-one seems to realise it. Whichever way it is parked, the car is always facing the right way when it is next needed. And the steering wheel changes side according to which way the car is going. It is as if it has ESP. In fact, lots of things in this town have ESP. In another episode there is a campervan with an ESP satnav – you just tell it where you want to go and it takes you there. Adding ESP satnav to the magic car is the only thing that could improve it. It would also reduce the number of times that Daddy Pig gets lost.

    2.  Daddy Pig. Daddy Pig is some kind of idiot savant. He is guaranteed to be 100% wrong about everything. If you ever wanted to win the Lottery, just ask him to pick 42 numbers and you can guarantee that the winning seven will be the ones he didn’t choose. Similarly, if he claims to be an expert at anything, he won’t be. Curiously, he never claims to be an expert at civil engineering, which is his job – although on reflection this is probably a good thing.

    3.  Incest. How many other children’s shows deal with this? Yet where Peppa lives, there is only one of each species of animal. Either there is a huge amount of inbreeding or a lot of cross species experimentation (which would at least explain why the elephants are the same size as the cats). The only exception to this rule would seem to be Peppa and her brother George, who have cousins – which leads me to suspect that, despite the accents, the series may be set in Kentucky.

    4.  Madame Gazelle. Mme Gazelle is possibly the scariest children’s character ever. She is clearly some kind of witch, at the very least. She has taught everyone in the town, even the adults, without aging at all. She can play guitar equally well both right and left handed. She speaks with a Franco-Germanic accent and is, frankly, terrifying. I suspect she has a house with a very large and well-developed cellar.

    5.  Miss Rabbit. They say that men cannot multitask, but compared to Miss Rabbit no-one can. She sells ice cream, she runs the fire station, she mans the checkout at the supermarket and is in charge of the recycling depot. And that was just on Monday.

    6.  George Hates Peppa. Despite the facade of a very happy family unit, George actually hates his big sister. Every time he fantasises about something, it involves Peppa being eaten by a dinosaur. Frankly, after your three year old has watched every episode a hundred times, you will be having the same sort of thoughts

    7.  Serving Suggestion. And, at the end of the day, how many children’s characters tell you how to cook them?

    The people behind Peppa Pig went on to make ‘Ben and Holly’s Little Kingdom’, which is rubbish for at least another seven reasons.

  • 7 Reasons to get your Children a Cat.

    7 Reasons to get your Children a Cat.

    1.  Cleanliness.  Cats are self-cleaning.  They fastidiously preen themselves with their Velcro-textured tongues and consequently, unlike dogs, never require bathing.  In fact, cats are much cleaner than children and therefore set a good example to them.  They also bury their own excrement so you don’t have to worry about that either.  If you’re really lucky, they’ll bury it in a neighbour’s garden.  This is probably something you shouldn’t teach your children to do.

    2.  Ninja.  Children are loud and noisy; cats are silent and alert.  You can use the cat to demonstrate silence and awareness to your children.  There is no better stealth training than attempting to sneak up on a cat.  Your children will learn to tread carefully and to watch out for the cat’s ever-alert swivelling ears.  Who knows, they may eventually become domestic-ninjas.  Like me.

    3.  Exotic.  You want a sensible, low-maintenance, low-risk animal, but your children don’t.  Children never want sensible pets.  They always want something terrifying and dangerous like a tarantula, a piranha or a crocodile.  A cat is an ideal compromise.  Cats come with a free snake.  It’s at the back.

    4.  Porn-Star-Name.  The name of your first pet is the first part of your porn-star-name so your choice of a first pet for your children is important.  Tortoises are called things like George and Simon; dogs are called things like Pip and Rover; cats, on the other hand, have cool names like Horatio or Socks.  If you need to know how important the right pet is in determining your childrens’ future porn-star-name you should ask my wife, Fred Townsend.  Or you could ask my friend whose first pet was a cat, Lucifer Jordan.

    5.  Independence.  Cats come and go as they please through a little hole in the door.  They go out to stare at the garden gate and sit under cars for reasons that we don’t understand.  The important thing though, is that they do it unaided.  Unlike dogs, there’s no endless walking and throwing sticks to distract your children from their homework.  Besides, they’ll eventually tire of walking a dog and you’ll end up doing it yourself.

    6.  Biscuits.  Cats don’t have biscuits and chocolate drops, unlike dogs.  This means that your children will have less opportunity to play pet food related practical jokes on you or unsuspecting house-guests.  They will still substitute salt for sugar and gravy granules for instant coffee, but being served dog biscuits with your cup of tea is one less thing you’ll have to worry about if you get a cat.  This is what eating a dog biscuit did to Jennifer Aniston’s face.  Poor, poor Jennifer.

    7.  Respect.  Cats are cute and cuddly, soft and furry, content and purry – until angered.  When you anger a cat it turns from a docile, supine teddy bear of an animal into a hissing, spitting, furious mass of teeth and claws.  Nothing teaches children to respect others like being bitten on the hand or losing an eye.  If they survive cat-ownership, they will be equipped for life.