- ---

 

     Home | Councillors | Previous Articles | Plans | Public Opinion | Madness

 
Pub Terminology
Alcohol Warnings
You've had too much when...
DRESS CODE
Our bars and clubs rip us off left right and centre with the cost of drinks or admission fees. To add insult to injury many of these places are now starting to insist on a dress code before you can even get through the door with jeans and trainers not being considered suitable attire.

And there is no reprieve for white jeans, chinos or whatever you like to call them (denim is denim whatever the colour or label) or any trainers that resemble “normal shoes” but are in fact not as they are made of fabric not shiny leather or leather effect plastic.

So what makes this form of dress offensive? It may be that the wearer is deemed too poor to drink in the place as he can only afford jeans and trainers to wear but everyone knows that a decent pair of jeans and trainers costs quite a lot of money.

Maybe the management assume that the wearing of these items turns the normally mild mannered person into a beer swilling trouble maker who has nothing better to do than start a fight and wreck the establishment.
NO STRIPED SHIRTS
Nightclub bosses have banned customers in striped shirts because they claim they are usually worn by troublemakers. The Opus club in Manchester introduced the dress code after analysing who got into fights at the venue.

Bosses also barred clubbers in dark clothes in case they are mistaken for bouncers. No caps, football shirts, trainers, overalls and now striped shirts. Maybe we should be issued a uniform to be worn while on the premises! (Source:
Sunday Mirror, Feb/07)
       


DERBY - CITY OF PUBS

Page 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5
 

This is a city of pubs and the surest way to become an honorary Derby citizen is to go on a pub crawl. We love our beer, but are a moderate people, and don't like to spend every evening in one pub having drink after drink. So, some evenings, we do something different. We spend an evening having one drink in pub after pub. In a few hours, you share details of your life with strangers, who become close friends. You're accepted into a social circle. You just hope that they were so drunk, they can't remember what you said the next day. Because we are moderate, pubs must stop serving at 11pm and you must drink up by 11.20pm. This is to stop people drinking all night, like in France. We drink the same amount as the French, we just drink it all before 11.20pm.

Pub crawls are rarely planned. They just happen. Nobody says 'How about a pub crawl tonight?'. When work finishes, someone might glance at the clock and say, 'Fancy a quick drink?'. This is an invitation to a pub crawl. They say it as if the idea just came, but in fact they've been planning it since the morning. The correct response is for everyone to look doubtful, and to study their watches. 'Well - yes, just a quick one,' you say, as if you have important things to do later on. It's important to know your pub types:

Old people's pubs:
Names such as 'Red Lion', 'Rose and Crown', 'Railway Inn'. Ancient decor. Cold, smell of damp walls and stale beer. No music. Outside toilets. Silent local men inside. Beer is sometimes very good. Food is out of a freezer, microwaved and awful.

Young people's pubs:
Stupid names like 'Ferret and Firkin', 'Kebab and Calculator' which are constantly changing and completely redecorated each year. Very hot, smell of teenage perfume and aftershave. Very loud music. Toilets always full. Shouting young locals inside. Beer usually mediocre. Food is out of a freezer, microwaved and awful.

Middle-aged people's pubs:
Artificial names such as 'The Jolly Ploughman'. Look like traditional old farmhouses inside, but all done this year. Air-conditioned. Full of men in suits and quiet easy-listening music. Beer variable. Food is out of a freezer, microwaved and awful.

For a pub crawl, the first type is the best, visits are interesting, but a little sinister. When you try to sit down, the landlord says, 'You can't sit there, that's Old Tom's chair.' When you ask which one is Tom so you can apologise, he says, 'Oh, Tom's not here. He moved to Australia in 1984.' It's considered bad manners to buy only your own beer. When a group of people enter a pub, one person buys drinks for everyone - a round. In Derby, we like to be fair. So in order to be fair, everyone else in the group then has to buy a round as well, one by one. This is what turns the 'quick drink' into a pub crawl.

For the first round of a pub crawl, there's a ritual. Everyone will say, 'Just a half for me'. The person buying the round insists, 'Are you sure, can't I get you a pint?' Everyone reluctantly agrees to a pint. For the rest of the evening everyone drinks pints. Though Britain's 'Big Six' breweries produce the majority of beer, there are also hundreds of smaller independent breweries, some local, some national. Some are 'bitter' (dark beer), some lager, some 'stout' (black, like Guinness) some 'Pale Ale' etc. Some are 'keg beer' (carbonated and stored in metal casks, clean tasting but characterless) some 'real ale' (not carbonated and stored in wooden casks, less reliable but more interesting tastes). Some are bottled, some are draught, pulled from the pumps displayed on the bar.

This makes it very confusing which beer to buy in a strange pub. The easy answer is to buy the first round and have whatever someone else is having. Or to ask the person behind the bar for a recommendation. Or just to have the one with the most ridiculous name, usually the more bizarre its name, the stronger it is. When you get home, or when you tell friends about it the next day, you never say, 'I went on a pub crawl to ten pubs'. Instead, you should say casually, 'Oh, we had a few'. We are a very moderate people.


As part of a drive to curb alcohol abuse across Europe, EU health chiefs are drawing up plans to close thousands of British off-licences. Other measures include a Monday to Friday ban on off-sales and huge booze price hikes through tax rises. A blueprint masterminded by EU health commissioner Markos Kyprianou also contains moves to control sales through a state-run monopoly and stricter drink-drive penalties. A Federation of Licensed Victuallers Associations spokesman said, “It is another of these silly EU moves where they come up with daft proposals that benefit no one.” (Source: The Sun)


Police have warned women "intent on getting ratted" to make sure they had waxed and were "wearing nice pants" in case they collapsed. The advice was contained in a free magazine launched by Suffolk Police which officers say is aimed at keeping women safe when they go out drinking and clubbing.

Safe! magazine also contained a picture of a girl in a mini skirt with the caption "if you've got it, don't flaunt it" and warned that alcohol could leave women looking like "wrinkly old prunes". The magazine includes an article next to a photograph of a scantily clad woman collapsed on the floor.

"For those of you intent on getting ratted this weekend, think," says the article. "If you fall over or pass out, remember your skirt or dress may ride up. You could show off more than you intended - for all our sakes, please make sure you're wearing nice pants and that you've recently had a wax." (Source:
Daily Telegraph, Jul/06)

Next >>>--

 

     Home | Councillors | Previous Articles | Plans | Public Opinion | Madness

These articles have been collected from various sources. If you are the copyright owner of any of them contact us for either a credit and link to your site or removal of the article.