HOW TROLLS LIKE THESE ARE DESTROYING FANDOM

Interview by Brian Grant 

*British toilet paper brand famed for it’s advertisements featuring Labrador pups.
*A ‘Bob’: British colloquialism for a Shilling in pre-decimalised UK currency.

“Don’t worry, Prime Minister. When it goes t*ts up, it’s the idiots in charge of the quango who’ll take the blame!”  “Sir Humphry, you’re a genius!”

*’Strictly Come Dancing’. BBC television show.
*British colloquialism for a police informant.

 And…      

*Incitatus was the notorious Emperor’s horse.
*Tetley’s: British tea brand.

*A Brew: Colloquial English for a cup of tea.
  • 1: I couldn’t be a**ed and,
  • 2. The prospect of him responding with another dose of electronically delivered anesthetic was not at all desirable, regardless of its comic value.”

“He was from the tip of South-West England, which isn’t exactly the end of the world, but you can probably see it from there. With his severe buzz-cut and Japanese sniper specs which looked as if they’d been fashioned from secondhand reentry shields, he had all the charisma of a lavatory brush.”

While he’d make a number of very serious allegations about Tina and Thomas via social media, rather than put his real name to these claims, he instead adopted the name of someone from Tina’s book, ‘Peter Wyngarde: A Life Amongst Strangers‘ to secrete himself behind.       

*Marks and Spencer. A well-known British fashion, homeware and food retailer.

“Most people would find it difficult to make sense of the types that join online hate mobs, but then idiots like those spoken of here simply don’t have the same emotions and feelings as the rest of us. The individuals that chose to leap aboard Mr. W’s rickety three-wheeled bandwagon were sad, middle-aged men with beer bellies and comb-overs whose wives probably paid them to go out. There was, however, at least one woman amongst them – namely Ms. Z (delegated Minister for Paperclips): an old boiler with the voice of a Klaxon and a face as hard as a dressed crab. She’d been prowling the touchline for some time with shades of a KGB agent eavesdropping at a Leningrad bus stop. I wouldn’t describe her as a dung beetle exactly – more something a dung beetle might eat! She came across as the type that no one had ever taken the slightest scrap of notice of her entire life, including her ‘partner’ – a keen fisherman by all accounts – who’d apparently rather sit dangling his tackle into a freezing canal than spend time with her. Now suddenly she was a great white shark in a goldfish bowl. For the first time in her pointless existence there was a group of mindless clowns who were not only willing to acknowledge her, but who were actually prepared to listen to what she had to say.   

“Tina’s life story of Peter is a must-read from the one who knew him best.” Sam J. Jones

*Arthur Daley and Terry McCann – the two main characters in ‘Minder’.

“They obviously expected us to come crawling, cap in hand, while declaring unconditional surrender. Again, this demonstrated their boundless conceit. These people had written themselves into our story, then felt we owed them something. It seemed their collective egos required someone to bend the knee to them, when what they really needed was the Wizard of Oz! ”   

Thank you to Ryan Church for the above. Sent to him by Google after he lodged a complaint about the contents of ‘The Covens’ website.

Despite the horrendous abuse and harassment, there were a few moments of hilarity. I suspect that most right-minded people would find the following both hilarious and pitiful in equal measure, if only for the rank stupidity of the perpetrator. It would involve Mr. Y attempting to take the public for fools by posting a yarn on his website about a British Gas engineer who had, purportedly, visited Tina’s parent’s home to carry out work on their central heating boiler (this despite the fact that her parents home is heated solely by electricality!). By an absolutely mind-boggling quirk of fate this engineer, it was claimed, was also a card-carrying member of ‘The Coven’! The odds of this happening must have been, well, astronomical!     

Do you think these bullies will have moved on to someone else by now?       

“It’s really quite frightening to consider, given the lengths to which they went to over this, what Mr. X and his hired guns might’ve been capable of if we had done something to offend them personally. X certainly didn’t cover himself in glory here, and rather than discrediting us, he succeeded only in debasing himself. He certainly has no justification in peering down his snout at anyone else after this performance.

“I’ve always maintained that sunshine is the best disinfectant”

The National Stalking Helpline:
0808 802 0300

https://www.suzylamplugh.org/Pages/Category/national-stalking-helpline
Practical advice and information to anyone who is currently or previously been effected by harassment or stalking.

Victim Supportline:
0808 168 9111
www.victimsupport.org.uk
Helpline for anyone affected by crime

REVIEW: The Relapse (A.K.A. ‘Virtue in Danger’)

Some Background

‘The Relapse’ was written in 1696 by John Vanbrugh as a sequel to Colley Cibber’s comedy ‘Love’s Last Shift‘ (1696). Amanda, Loveless, and Lord Foppington (known as Sir Novelty Fashion in ‘Love’s Last Shift’) are the only characters to feature in both plays.

At the time ‘The Relapse’ was screened, there had been much discussion in the press concerning what is and what is not “obscene” on stage in the theatres, and moreover on TV. Naturally, views diverged. I was an age whenever the subject of sex was raised there were inevitably cries of “FILTH” from certain quarters followed, followed by indignant phone calls to the ‘papers and the BBC.

Media commentators believed that the broadcast of Vanburgh’s play would have a particularly hard time of it. As Phillip Hope-Wallace of The Listener was to put it, “Evidently the notion that anyone is free to inflict his own phobias on the public dies hard.”

There was speculation amongst drama critics that this BBC version of the play might be ‘tidied up’, as the original form of ‘The Relapse’ couldn’t be defined as family viewing. Some of the antics of Vanburgh’s characters barely skirted propriety. There certainly appeared to be much confused thinking on the subject.

On a general level ‘The Relapse, which had been so carefully prepared for the ‘Stage By Stage’ series of plays, was said to be superior to in style and spirit to the famous production at the end of war (with Cyril Richard as Lord Foppington), and was a true reproduction of the theatrical mode of its day, and a fully fashioned piece of television. As one critic stated, “The whole piece strikes a blow at hypocrisy and, if it didn’t put people off by being too long (2 hours), it may have sparked some interest in Vanburgh’s other works, if not in his architecture.”

Story Synopsis

In what the author seemingly intended to be an antidote to the play’s liberalism, the once amoral libertine, Worthy, has a sudden repentance and reformation, resulting in his becoming an admirer of female virtue. This change of heart, we’re told, has came about after Amanda resisted him to remain loyal to her husband.

A bit of Trivia

BROUGHT TO BOOK

Written by Alex Thorpe

Have you ever read a really good book which the vast majority of people concur with you over, but then you spot a really peevish review that has you wondering if the person responsible for it has read the same thing as you?

I bought Tina Wyngarde-Hopkins biography/memoir, ‘Peter Wyngarde: A Life Amongst Strangers‘ on the day of publication in February 2020. I read the whole thing; all 532 pages in just two sitting as I just found it too compelling to put down. With hand on heart I can say it is the best book of its kind I’ve ever read. It’s candid, detailed and honest; written from the standpoint of someone who actually knew Wyngarde intimately. Ms. Wyngarde-Hopkins has taken further steps in publishing many of the documents referred to in the book (see the A Life Amongst Strangers Companion) and provided strong supporting evidence in the form of Peter’s letters and personal writings (see You’ve Read The Book… Now Read It In Peter’s Own Words ). I know of no other author who has done this.

With this in mind, I’ve been stunned to read some of the nonsense posted online by persons unknown about the book in so-called ‘reviews’. I say this because none of the people who have written this stuff appear to have any real conviction in what they’re saying. Why? Because they choose not to put their real names to it,

I know what you’re all thinking: ‘Everyone is entitled to an opinion’, and you’re right. The Oxford English Dictionary’s definition of the noun ‘Opinion’ goes something like this: “A view or judgement formed about something, not necessarily based on fact or knowledge”. I ask you to keep the final section of that sentence in mind as you read the following ‘review’ for ‘A Life Amongst Strangers’ which was posted on Amazon on 27th December 2023 by someone calling his or her self ‘City Bookworm’:

I’ll take a wild stab in the dark here and say that dear old ‘City Bookworm’ probably never came within a 100 mile radius of PW or anyone who knew him, but is sufficiently conceited to shout down “the person who knew him best” (a description given to Tina Wyngarde-Hopkins by Flash Gordon himself, Sam J. Jones). We now seem to be living in a world where there are no longer facts, only opinions. What is being created is a wholesale denial of truth in almost every sphere of life. We suddenly find ourselves in a situation where people with absolutely no authority, personal experience or knowledge of a subject are attempting to beat down those that have. 

With very special thanks to Pam, Tina and Thomas of the Official Peter Wyngarde Appreciation Society

INTERVIEW: Love Affair

Back on the subject of Jason King, he said.

REVIEW: ‘Timeshift: How to Be Sherlock Holmes, The Many Faces Of A Master Detective’

Broadcast: Monday, 23rd December 2013

Character: Narrator


© Copyright The Hellfire Club: The OFFICIAL PETER WYNGARDE Appreciation Society: https://www.facebook.com/groups/813997125389790/