Charlie
Brooker
Sat 23 Jul 2005 00.22 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/culture/2005/jul/23/screenburn.features16
Hard
scientific fact: unless you're a member of the gentry yourself, it's
neurologically impossible to feel in the slightest bit sorry for posh people
under any circumstances whatsoever. It's true. A team of researchers proved it
in a laboratory. They took a random bunch of proles, wired them to some
electro-magnificent brainscanner widgets, and showed them footage of top-hatted
aristocrats falling from buildings, tumbling into threshing machines, and
inadvertently poisoning their own children. No one exhibited the faintest
glimmer of pity for any of them. I think it's something to do with the accents.
Actually
there is one exception to the no-pity-for-toffs rule, and that's journalist
James Delingpole, who pities them so much he's made a documentary called The
British Upper Class (Sun, 8pm, C4) - a passionate defence of roaring snobs and
everything they bally well stand for. Delingpole himself is middle class and
sincerely wishes he wasn't. "I'm no toff, and I never will be," he
confesses. "But I've always been curious about the upper class - it all
started when I was at Oxford back in the 80s."
Having
established his credentials, James (who went to Oxford) sets out on "a
journey" to discover just what it is about the gentry that gives him such
a broom-handle. First port of call is a posh party thrown by historian Andrew
Roberts, who reckons the upper classes are "impossibly romantic and
splendid". Rubbing shoulders with earls, viscounts, dames and princes,
James (formerly of Oxford University) seems happy as a pig in shit. But alas!
Not one of the toffs he approaches wants to take part in his documentary. Not
even Earl Spencer. Not even when James walks right up to him and bellows,
"I'm James Delingpole, I reviewed your book about Blenheim," by way
of introduction.
The poshos,
James reckons, are "terrified of being stitched up", although I
suspect their reticence has more to do with James himself, who looks like a
cross between Mick Jones and Mr Logic, and is cursed with a floppy bottom lip
which dangles so perilously low it's a wonder he doesn't trip over it. They're
probably just freaked out.
Never mind.
James leaves the party and sets about persuading us the upper classes are
inherently admirable because they're jolly keen on rough-and-ready games. To
prove it he visits St Moritz and has a crack at the Cresta Run (an extreme
tobogganing event favoured by blue bloods). It's dangerous and thrilling, sure
- but a taste for perilous activities is hardly limited to the aristocracy. You
don't need a coat of arms to go skateboarding, just a benevolent attitude
toward shattering your hip on a concrete step. Idiotic thrill-seekers exist in
all classes. As do tossers called James.
Next, James
mourns the passing of two other favourite posho sports - fox-hunting ("a
magnificent sight!") and hare-coursing. The latter, he reckons, is under
attack because it's "a ritual that flies in the face of sanitised
bourgeois morality... it's too messy, too visceral - too real."
"Nowadays
it's the middle classes who are running the show. For many of them, traditions
are all very well, so long as they're cleaned up, packaged, and sold back to us
as products in the National Trust gift shop. But [hare-coursing] isn't
'chocolate box' heritage, it's the real thing - and the chattering classes
simply can't hack it."
Yeah, James
- you tell 'em! Screw the nanny state! Let's see that rabbit blood fly! Let's
get naked and dance around in a big fat spray of it! And since you're keen to
preserve noble English customs that celebrate "the cycle of life and
death", let's reintroduce some others - such as the tradition of sticking
criminals' heads on poles above the entrance to London Bridge, where they can
be pecked at by crows until they go a bit mushy and topple off and burst on the
cobblestones below! Like to see what those Islington pussies make of that! Ah
well. At least Delingpole succeeds in improving the image of the upper classes.
Whenever he opens his mouth to defend them, they magically become 50 times less
irritating. Than him.
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