Tuesday, 20 October 2020
Ryan Reynolds
Sunday, 18 October 2020
The length of the M23
I've just been watching Crystal Palace play Brighton. These two football clubs like to term their regular Premier League match "the M23 derby". Presumably to make up for any lack of a traditional rivalry, such as you might get with Arsenal and Tottenham, whose mutual antipathy derives from Arsenal moving from South London (originally as Woolwich Arsenal) to North London in 1913, onto Tottenham's "turf".
The term "derby" is normally used for teams in locations more or less geographically adjacent. Manchester United vs Manchester City (4 miles) is most definitely a derby; Man U vs Liverpool (33 miles) is not. No-one calls it the "M62 derby". Chelsea vs Fulham (1.8 miles) is; Chelsea vs Brentford (5.4 miles) is not. The term is most usually "local derby". Everton v Liverpool (0.9 mile) may be the closest.
How far from Crystal Palace to Brighton? 46 miles. Up the M23. Geographers amongst you may also have noticed that the M23 doesn't go to Brighton, so "A23 derby", anyone? What nonsense.
Maybe every club feels they should have a derby match in the schedule so, for Brighton, Palace are the nearest. But Newcastle don't think of their match vs Leeds as a local derby.
The term derby in this context goes back at least to the mid 19th century. Possibly down to some weird local rivalry (a village vs village punch-up?) which has been lost in the mists of time. In other words, I have no idea where it came from. Which is a pity because that's what this post was going to be about. Maybe I should do the research before I start.
In Spain, Real Madrid vs Barcelona is known as El Clásico - fierce rivalry but not a local derby.
If you were a football supporter in Wellington, New Zealand, your local professional team is Wellington Phoenix and their "derby", in terms of nearest competitor team (they play in the Australian A League), would be Sydney FC. 2,224 km away. Now there's a local derby!
Free agency news
Thursday, 15 October 2020
Peppercorns...
...all over the kitchen.
I was grinding some black pepper over my pizza when the grinder came apart. All over the kitchen; minor problem. Major problem was corns getting stuck in the mayo I had put on the pizza. Which isn't good for either the pizza or future pepper. I know, the foodies out there will be saying "get some fresh food inside you Nigel" and "mayo on pizza? weird". It's what it is; I like it. Although not so much highly peppered.FYI it was spinach and ricotta. And I didn't eat a whole pizza. So no guilt.
Black peppercorns are dried berries from the vine Piper nigrumhealthline.com tells me that black pepper "has been deemed the 'king of spices' and used in ancient Ayurvedic medicine for thousands of years due to its high concentration of potent, beneficial plant compounds". For those of you who need me to enlighten you about Ayurvedic medicine, it's an Indian alternative medicinal system which "provides personalized recommendations about which foods to eat and avoid based on your body type" [healthline.com again]. I asked some Indians for some help but they said "sorry, we don't have anyone of your body type here, Nigel". The Indian Medical Association characterises the system as "quackery". Fake news!
Anyway I'm getting some exercise picking up all the peppercorns, as I don't want them to clog up my Dyson.
Weekly quiz #6
What shall I offer as this week's quiz topic? If I go for "one letter answers" will that be too easy? Everyone knows Bond's tech wizard Q; D is the number plate code for Germany; Juliet is the common phonetic alphabet J. What if I expanded it to two letters? That might be a bit harder. Here we go.
Q1. What is the 9th letter of the Welsh alphabet?
Q2. What area is designated by UK postcode IM?
Q3. ISO 3166-1 includes code SG for which country?
Q4. Which British territory has the internet domain name io?
Q5. Name a two letter Japanese board game.
Q6. What does the Spanish verb ir mean in English?
Q7. Boris III of Bulgaria had a son Simeon with what regnal number?
Q8. In the periodic table of elements, which element is abbreviated as Hg?
Enjoy.
Quiz #5 answers - and a great discovery
Question 1: Which country has the most islands?
Sweden. 221,800 islands.
Question 2: What is the deepest lake in the world?
Lake Baikal. 1,642m.
Question 3: Which is the smallest country by population in Europe?
Gibraltar. 33,691. The Holy See is smaller but I'm not sure that's technically a country. Or Vatican City itself. But give yourself a point if you got either of those. One interesting point I discovered whilst researching this: using worldometers.info, if I click on a country name it takes me to a screen which claims to be a live running total of population. Is that true? If I click on the most populous country in the world, check the live count then refresh five minutes later, will it reflect births and deaths in those five minutes? Let's try it:
14:17 China: 1,440,.....wait! It changed while I was typing it! That's amazing. Keep going - 1,440,849,101 at 14:19. Waiting......1,440,849,152 at 14.24. Interesting. I've just seen 50 babies born!
Wow, that's fantastic; how do they do it? Check it out at https://www.worldometers.info/world-population/population-by-country/
Question 4: How many countries are currently members of the United Nations? (you can have 5 either way)
193.
Question 5: Name a capital city whose name is two words long, both beginning with the same letter of the alphabet.
Phnom Penh. San Salvador. Addis Ababa.
Question 6: How many states does Brazil have?
26 plus one federal district (so you can have half a point for 27).
Question 7: Which EU country has a population nearest to that of Wales?
Lithuania 2,722,289 (live at 14:37 on 8 October 2020). Wales 3,230,490 (1 July 2020; nearest I could get).
Question 8: What is the most recent country to join the UN?
Montenegro. 2006.
Question 9: What is the longest capital city name?
Krung Thep Mahanakhon Amon Rattanakosin Mahinthara Yuthaya Mahadilok Phop Noppharat Ratcha-thani Burirom Udomratchaniwet Mahasathan Amon Phiman Awatan Sathit Sakkathattiya Witsanukam Prasit. The capital of Thailand.
Bet you thought that was Bangkok. It is.
14:48 China now has 1,440,849,409 citizens.




