7 Reasons

Tag: ten

  • 7 Reasons These Excuses Are Not Silly

    7 Reasons These Excuses Are Not Silly

    Ministers have released the top ten ‘silliest’ excuses as used by benefit cheats. If you haven’t read them yet, you’ll be able to watch the countdown on BBC Three later this year. It’s narrated by Richard Bacon with insights from a bloke who once pretended he didn’t work in Lidl. Understandably. My issue with this programme is that it’s clearly going to be an excuse to laugh at people who are unable to articulate. As such they sound stupid. Having looked through the excuses I am saddened that they are are deemed silly. At least seven are very legitimate. Here’s why:

    7 Reasons These Excuses Are Not Silly
    Ladder Therapy

     

    1.  “I had no idea my wife was working! I never noticed her leaving the house twice a day in a fluorescent jacket and a ‘Stop Children’ sign.” – Hardly surprising given that this man is obviously blind. The ‘Stop Children’ signs don’t come in braille you know.

    2. “I wasn’t aware my wife was working because her hours of work coincided with the times I spent in the garden shed.” – This man’s wife was clearly hiding the fact that she worked by playing an elaborate game of hide and seek. Every morning she told her husband to hide. He scurried off to the shed and only appeared when his wife returned home and shouted, “I give up!”

    3. “He does come here every night and leave in the morning and, although he has no other address, I don’t regard him as living here.” – Shelter are a fantastic charity. For them to be pulled up on this is a disgrace and an insult. I suspect the thousands of volunteers who give up their time to help those less fortunate than themselves feel really great now. Well done ministers.

    4. “I didn’t declare my savings because I didn’t save them, they were given to me.” – Is having a basic grasp on the English language seen as a bad thing now then? Surely to declare savings under the pretence that you saved them is fraud?

    5. “I wasn’t using the ladders to clean windows, I carried them for therapy for my bad back.” – A man (or woman) with a whole lot of common sense. Instead of spending his (or her) benefits on expensive therapists, he (or she) purchased a ladder. It was just as effective and instead of weekly payments of £40, cost just an initial £15. I don’t understand why ministers have a problem with this. Surely they want people to show initiative? If people can find methods of lowering their outgoings how is that not a good thing? One day this man (or woman) might buy a bucket and become a window cleaner. Good for him (or her).

    6. “We don’t live together he just comes each morning to fill up his flask” – Well, this clearly shows that sexism is still rife in the ministerial hood doesn’t it? Just because this woman is single, it doesn’t mean she wants to get into a relationship with every builder whose bum she spies. This woman is perfectly entitled to share her tea bags with whomever she wants. It’s 2011 for goodness sake.

    7. “It wasn’t me working, it was my identical twin.” – Which only goes to prove that one half of Jedward always mimes.

  • Russian Roulette Sunday: 10/10/10 10:10

    Russian Roulette Sunday: 10/10/10 10:10

    It’s Sunday!  But it’s not just any Sunday, it’s 10/10/10.  And, because at 7 Reasons we’re really quite cool – despite all the tea-drinking and war-buffery – we’ve posted today’s piece at ten past ten.  So, at the very moment that this post goes live it is 10/10/10 10:10.  And that causes us a bit of a problem.  Because we only know about the number 7:  We know lots about the number seven, and we know cock-all about the number ten.  But we’ve done some research, and here are five things about the number ten.  Because it’s 10/10/10 10:10 (which is five of them).  I’m sure you get that.

    three men holding up cards bearing the number ten
    Look! Some Tens.

    1.  Binary.  10, as a binary number, means 2.  The binary way if displaying 10 is 1010.  Therefore…er…we really don’t understand binary.  And it doesn’t contain the number seven.  You can only understand binary if you wear spectacles.

    2.  Virgins.  Virgins, according to the bible, come in tens (Matthew 25:1-13); half of them foolish, half of them wise.  We did not learn this by googling “virgins”, by the way.  Mary was also a virgin in the bible, making a total of 11, which is also a binary number.   In Procul Harem’s Whiter Shade of Pale, there are sixteen virgins.  Though I appear to have become become completely sidetracked from the number ten, which is what we’re supposed to be celebrating.

    3.  Lobsters.  Lobsters have ten legs.  As do all crustaceans, apparently.  Which makes them two better than spiders, and eight better than Piers Morgan.

    4.  Italian. The number ten in Italian is dieci.  The Italian for leader is duce (a phrase which is usually associated with Mussolini.  They sound quite similar to the untrained ear.  I once left my wife seated outside a café in Milano to finish her coffee and settle the bill while I bought a newspaper.  Several minutes later, I returned to find an agitated-looking wife still seated at the table.  “I thought you were going to pay the bill”, I said.  “The waitress came out and kept saying, “Duce, Duce” when I asked her how much we owed.  I gave her a ten euro note and she hasn’t come back with the change yet”, my shocked-looking wife replied.  Fortunately we were able to avoid an international incident.

    5.  Harry Potter.  The tenth highest grossing film of all time is Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.  Which is abjectly depressing.  And it’s not even the highest-grossing Harry Potter film.  It does, however, go to demonstrate that money isn’t everything.  And it goes to show that the number ten just isn’t as good as the number seven, so we were right all along.

    Normal service – involving a proper number – will resume tomorrow.  But not at seven past seven.

  • 7 Reasons Australians Shouldn’t Make Television

    7 Reasons Australians Shouldn’t Make Television

    7 Reasons sofa with Australian Television and flag

     

    1.  The Weather. It must be quite easy to present the weather in Australia, it’s always “nice” there, so you probably don’t have to be too bright to do it.  That would explain this weatherman being outwitted by a pelican then.

    2.  Wipeout Australia. In Britain, we have Total Wipeout, a programme in which pudgy, potato-faced middle-managers from Droitwich lumber around a ridiculous assault course.  Wipeout Australia uses the same course, except everything is harder and the machines go at about five times the speed.  The people they send around don’t seem any leaner or sportier though, that wouldn’t be any fun.

    3.  Skippy. In Britain in the ’60s, men whistled at attractive young women in mini-skirts.  In Australia in the ’60s, they whistled at kangaroos.  Still, they seem quite happy.

    4.  Advert. Halfway through, so it’s time for a break.  Would you like one of these?  It’s undetectable, you know.

    5.  Soaps.  The bush, mushrooms, a mysterious pig, a flaming hand – it has to be a soap opera.  Obvious, really.

    6.  Marriage.  This sort of thing never happened on Richard and Judy.

    7.  The dream.  Okay, you knew it had to turn up somewhere didn’t you?  That classic Neighbours dream sequence which came out of left-field and astonished the audience.  No, not that one, this one.  The accents are spot on, by the way.

    Okay, it’s time for an admission.  I was wrong.  All of this stuff is awful, yet somehow brilliant.  I’ve had so much fun putting this post together that I’ve become convinced that Australians should make more television – perhaps even all of it.  As long as I don’t have to watch Paul Hogan again I’d be quite happy.    I might even buy a hairpiece.