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Transcript of Issue Seven MEAT Magazine
‘Lovingly done, incredibly creative, and well executed...’ TH
E GU
AR
DIA
N/
‘A
n effective calling card for artists...MEA
T Magazine are creating career opportunities...’ TH
E INTER
NA
TION
AL H
ERA
LD TR
IBU
NE /
‘Bedroom
publishing is back and as lawless as ever’ TH
E SU
ND
AY
TIMES
IT’S NOT ABOUT SAUSAGES
PUBLISH OR PERISH, PUNK
THE SHOWCASE OF NEW ARTISTIC TALENT FROM ACROSS THE UK
Hairy earlobes, heavy cussin’ and a prissy little fellawith beautiful comics from Messrs Cowdry and Kolokovic
ILLEGAL BETTING, FIERCE LOYALTIES, AND AN APPETITE FOR GLORY:
COMPETITIVE EATINGGZA OF THE WU-TANG CLAN MAYORAL POMP LIFE BEYOND LONDON ENGLISH BASTARDS AND AMATEUR BOXING
REAL BRITTANIA
PUBLISH OR PERISH, PUNKstill only £3.75
#7
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About MEAT MagazineMEAT MAGAZINE is a project dedicated to publishing the work of up-and-coming artists and writers. We get pretty hot-under-the-collar about new talent and we want to get it on our pages for all to see. MEAT Magazine is an independently published magazine with nationwide distribution which can get new talent on display on the same shelves as Vogue, Creative Review, Angling Times and the like...
Get your work seen. Publish or Perish.
SUBSCRIBE TO
MEAT MAGAZINE
for sure fi re success in life
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ADDRESS AND WHICH ISSUE YOU WOULD LIKE YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TO START FROM...WWW.MEAT-MAG.COM/SUBSCRIBE
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“WE HAVE STRONG PREVAILING WINDS AND 52% OF OUR DAYS ARE OVERCAST, SO AS A NATION WE ARE INFUSED WITH
A WHISTFUL MELANCHOLY. BUT WE REMAIN A RELENTLESSLY CHIPPER
POPULATION, PRONE TO MILD ECCENTRICITY, BINGE DRINKING AND
CASUAL VIOLENCE....”
BILL BAILEY
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the contents FEATURESTHIS SPORTING LIFE The likes of Henman, Southgate and Beckham offer a chance for England to gracefully duck out of this superpower nonsense / by Nico Hines, illustrated by Leigh Pearson / p19
ENGLISH BASTARD Our son of St. George in the land of St. Andrew reassesses his identity and finds out what it really means to be English / by Robert Wringham, illustrated by Jess WIlson / p22
LONDON: THE FAT HAS-BEEN Londonophiles, take heed, here’s a broadside from someone who knows life begins beyond zone 6 / by Gavin Webster / p31
INTERVIEW WITH GZA OF WU-TANG CLAN He the head; MEAT Magazine barely contains its enthusiasm as the master story-teller from the bed-wettingly good Wu-Tang Clan, gives us the benefit of his wisdom / Interview by Renko Heuer, illustrations by Leigh Pearson / p35
PHOTOGRAPHYIT’S NOT ABOUT TAKING PART. IT’S ABOUT WINNING MEAT Magazine exclusively reports from the seedy underbelly of the North London competitive scene. We find an internationally-ac-claimed competition, fierce loyalties, a ruthless appetite for glory and vomiting / by James Pallister / p10
THIS MAN IS THE MAYOR OF LONDON The Lord Mayor that is. Pageantry, pomp and circumstance makes one man choke on his cornflakes/ by Nick Hayes, photos by Clive Totman / p25
WE DON’T FIGHT Photographer Madeleine Macrae gives us a snapshot of her work with the men and boys of the Staffordshire amateur boxing scene, with a commentary from MEAT’s favourite pugilist-cum-journalist, Mark Hudson / Photography by Madeleine Macrae text by Mark Hudson / p40
COMICSLES BANDITS JOVIALES Zut Alors! That madcap misanthrope Mr Cowdry is back, keeping bad company as ever; this time with some cackling cons/ by Richard Cowdry / p8
SIGN OF THE TIMES The bus starts in Camden but the destina-tion is ubiquitous; touching four six, with gob on his side, this young man has ire and plenty of targets / by Nick Hayes / p49
SHORT FICTIONEDWARD’S TURMOIL Hairy earlobes, heavy cussin’ and a prissy little fella on a car trip / by David Goo, illustrated by Nick Hayes / p55
AND THE REST
CONTRIBUTORS PAGE All the details you should need to inundate the excellent people within these pages with bouquets of flowers, breathy praise and offers of work / p47
MEAT LIKES...Stuff from the small press and indie zine scene we like. This issue MEAT Magazine enjoys pretending to be a giant whilst reading Stuart Kolakovic’s miniature comics / p54
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Different concepts of England are repeatedly shoved down our throats – and none of them really seem to chime. Ok, its not as bad as America, where an entire nation’s identity is fabricated into one homogenous ideal, and anything that doesn’t slot perfectly into that box becomes a Jesse James, Donnie Darko, or Columbine killer. But over the pond it seems that our national identity is still forged and pro-moted by those who seem entirely out of touch.
MEAT’s seventh issue aims to deal with this, whilst conjuring up an image of what we per-ceive England to be. Gloriously grey days, jubi-lant cynicism, tongue-in-cheek self-depreciation, chippies, wind and rain. We take a look at
England’s obsessive London-centricity, how 95% of it is overshadowed by a capital city totally unique to the rest of its country. We take a look at sport, and how our reaction to it defi nes us as a nation. We gargle with the buffoonish pomp of English ‘tradition’ and spit it down the plughole. We publish an interview with the Wu-Tangs GZA, accepting of the fact that it has no relevance at all to the theme this issue. We just liked it, and we hope you do to.
And, of course, like the brown sauce to your bacon butty, there’s the usual dollop of comics, short stories and photography, just to help it down. Issue 7, on a plate. Go clog yer cerebral arteries.
ISSUE SEVEN / MEAT MAGAZINE
This is England. Or so we think. Meat magazine is back for its seventh issue, this time with its brows knitted, lining up for some serious navel gazing. This is England. We all live here, at least for the time being, but does anyone actually agree as to what it is?
ISSUE SEVEN / MEAT MAGAZINE
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Six weeks in planning, £57.30 spent on doughnuts, ninety-eight invitees and one basement. The second annual Competitive Eating jamboree is back in town, easing its fat arse down the stairs into a Tufnell Park basement.
This, ladies and gentlemen, is where one dream will be realised. And 7 reputations shattered. The bare light bulb hanging from the ceiling accompanies a pink neon ‘DONUTS’ sign that throws a pink glow on the hand-painted banners strung up on the walls.
Things start quickly with the weigh-in. Ringmaster
Hines shout out the poundage of our contestants. Straight out of rehab is reigning champ Mikey ‘Rolls n Folds’ Lear followed by next favorite, the man-mountain Girli ‘Doughnut Puncher’ Lewis. Snapping at their napkins are Dom ‘The Doughnut’ Ceglowski, James ‘All In’ Lewis and Ed ‘EATBOT’ Speyer.
Despite spirited recent performances Felix ‘Fe Fi Fo Fuck Ya’ll’ Hobson has slipped down in the book-ies eyes. Same for that tenacious northern fighter, Stephen ‘No Win No Feen’ Feeney. This will be ‘No Win No Feen’s first return to the field after his
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IT’S NOT ABOUT TAKING PART. IT’S
ABOUT WINNINGMEAT reports from The First Annual Doughnut Eating Spectacular Raveley Street, Tufnell Park, London
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CONTENDERS
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well-documented outage after a particularly virulent strain of munchers jaw. A return to form tonight perhaps? Hauling ass at the back are newcomers Christopher ‘Squirrel Nutcase’ Longden and Pete
‘Where’s My Insulin Injection?’ Lawrence. These brave boys at the peak of their glucose-guzzling form, hoping to dazzle the expectant crowd and win the ultimate prize.
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PREPARATION
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ELIMINATOR ROUND
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MIKEY ‘ROLLS N FOLDS’
LEAR5-4
Current Weight: 175 pounds (Recently dipped due to absteining from solid food during Lent)
Why will you win? I’ll probably take the whole thing slightly more seriously than anyone will expect me to. And they’ll probably expect me to take it pretty seriously. Plus I won last year.Favourite Food PancakesRelevant Experience Won last year. Pancake Wednesday when I was 19 – 3 litres of pancake mix between two people every week - A lot of practice. I have also eaten the sole of a shoe (leather) to raise money for charity (£16.58)Technique / strategy Roll and fold. Although this only really ap-plies to pancakes.Preferred motivational music to eat to 80s sweetness like the Rocky soundtrack. Maybe Billy Joel.Slogan / rhyming couplet “When the going gets tough, the players play their game”Nemesis Gurly, I suppose. I don’t really want a nemesis, but certainly Gurly’s going to be the biggest hurdle. It was far from a walkover last year. Eating Hero Sonya Thomas, the Black Widow. (from Wikipedia): ‘At a single-person exhibition in a rock festival in Indi-anapolis, she ate 65 hard-boiled eggs in under 7 minutes, setting a record and amazing the skeptical concertgoers’. SWEET. Also, she’s only 105 pounds, which is about 7 stone.
FINAL SHOWDOWN: LEAR vs LEWIS REIGNING CHAMP ‘ROLLS ‘N’ FOLDS’ vs THE CONTESTOR ‘DOUGHNUT PUNCHER’
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GURLI ‘DOUGHNUT
PUNCHER’ LEWIS 3-2
Current Weight: More than the rest. Comfortably over 200 hundred doughnutsWhy will you win? Cos I dont make the same mistake twice. And revenge taste sweetest when its Jam filledFavourite Food Chips and gravyRelevant Experience 25 years of being me. Moma wanted a big boyTechnique / strategy Take the first doughnut hard and ruin the competition’ s state of mind with my sizePreferred motivational music to eat to FOG ON THE TYNESlogan Size does matterNemesis James “dark side of the force” lewis and Mikey “didn’t really win” LearEating Hero Barry ‘Walrus Of
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MARK ‘GURLI’ LEWIS: CHAMPIONAFTERMATH: Mark vomited shortly after this phtograph was taken. Members of the competitive eating fraternity from places as afar as Alberta, Canada
followed the comptition. Lear called for an inquiry into counting irregularities. At the time of writing the report is yet to be published
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Sport: it’s our only hope. Plenty of people imagine sporting glory will roll back the years to revive a once mighty nation, but there’s no chance of that. Instead it’s going to build an all new, even better England.
It may not be capable of turning the tide of history, but sport is teaching us how to behave. It’s Sesame Street for grown-ups.
Number one. Our sporting exploits constantly remind us that, globally speaking, England is well and truly mid-table; World Cup quarter finals, an occa-sional Ashes win and the odd Wimbledon semi. It’s time we got used to this idea. This is nothing to be ashamed of and once we accept it, we can return to the world stage with a little humility.
Number two. We will be forced to stop bitching about multiculturalism. Immigration is good (Kevin Pietersen, Lennox Lewis), different races are the equal of white folk (Lewis Hamilton, Thierry Henry) and British Asians are delighted to integrate with English society (Monty Panesar, Amir Khan).
The lessons may not be welcomed by every fan
with the Cross of St George inked on their bloated gut, but there’s nothing they can do to stop them. What England wants from sport and what England gets from sport are diametrically opposed and thank fuck for that.
Sport will not transport us back to a bygone era, but might just catapult us into a shiny new one.
There is an undeniable yearning to return to the days of glorious battle and that is a sad indictment of Englishness. Just look at the popularity of Stuart Pearce, a man born 50 years too late. He could have lead dozens of idealistic young men to a certain death in no-man’s-land, instead he can be found nurturing the England under-21 football team.
“For me, representing your country is not about what suits you, it’s about what suits your country, whether it be on the sporting field, whether it be in the armed forces. When your country comes calling, you put them first and yourself second,” said Pearce, failing to clarify whether a missed penalty should result in a court martial.
This Sporting LifeClinging to the hangover of an empire long since dismantled, England’s delusions of grandeur remain. Nico Hines heralds our
repeated sporting failures to help release us from the charade of trying to sound like a
superpower.
Illustrations by Leigh Pearson
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Anyone who denies that sport is a substitute for war is a fool. Of course it is, but don’t bother to resist it. Let fat men at England matches sing about shooting down German warplanes and sinking the Belgrano. It doesn’t do any harm and it gives the wobbling Frank Lampard a moment to sweat and fret outside of the spotlight.
We are crap at war these days anyway. Germany and Argentina are just fond memories and for a good war you need a more even sporting fight. If Iraq had a half-decent football team, Gulf War II would never have become the most hated foreign adventure since Kevin and Perry Go Large.
Once upon a time when a map of the world was dominated by the pink tone of imperial dominance, we were great at sport and even better at war. We did invent sport, the good ones at least: football, cricket, tennis, rugby and billiards. As a result we thought we would be able to play better than our
subjugated opponents.It’s just a shame we were on a “civilising” mission
at the time and our proselytizing zeal encouraged us to let everyone to have a go at our games.
Sharing can be risky. We also invented concen-tration camps during the Boer War and as the Germans proved: once an idea has been shared, more ruthless and better proponents will push the limits. Whether it’s the 1970s West Indian cricket team showing us how to smash six after mighty six, or the 1940s Germans reaching a new low in the grimy history of the human race, we will always be outdone. We are English after all.
So, we were once a great industrial nation, the sun never set on the Empire and we were the mas-ters of the LBW law, the offside rule and wartime internment camps. We are no longer great. We bow to America’s foreign policy, cower in the shadow of China’s manufacturing strength, and only that brave
JUST LOOK AT THE POPULARITY OF STUART PEARCE, A MAN BORN 50 YEARS
TOO LATE. HE COULD HAVE LEAD DOZENS OF IDEALISTIC YOUNG MEN TO A CERTAIN DEATH IN NO-MAN’S-LAND, INSTEAD HE
CAN BE FOUND NURTURING THE ENGLAND UNDER-21 FOOTBALL TEAM.
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little boy Ellen MacArthur keeps us in the running when it comes to ruling the waves.
Even politicians think sport can put us back at the heart of global diplomacy. Tony Blair got us the Olympics and Gordon Brown wants to bring the World Cup “home” to England.
But don’t worry - eventually our repeated sport-ing failures will help release us from the charade of trying to sound like a superpower. Once we’ve accepted England’s limitations we can revel in our strengths.
There is one argument that cannot fail to make an impact. His name is Lewis Hamilton. When fat-white-man-with-a-moustache, Nigel Mansell, was England’s greatest driver, you can be sure millions of fat white men with matching moustaches sat watching his success on their sofas with a can of John Smith’s, and thought “yeah – he looks like a fine driver”. Hamilton will have their attention now.
John Barnes and Luther Blissett started a process in England, which has all but wiped out the abuse of black footballers and has inevitably rubbed off in pubs and offices across the country. When Darius Vassell came on for Michael Owen against Brazil at the 2002 World Cup there were more black than white England players on the pitch for the first time ever. Who’s booing now?
Even in the most old school of all sports there is hope. Monty Panesar has bounded into English cricket at the best possible time. When the Gov-ernment is encouraging the idea that we should be afraid of our Asian neighbours, Monty is skipping, slightly off-balance, right into our hearts.
Sport tells us what England wants to do – go backwards. But it doesn’t care. It’s too powerful, and it’s taking England forward, whether we like it or not.
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English BastardYour nationality casts a long shadow, not least than when you move to a far off land - or even Scotland.
Firmly ensconced north of the border, Robert Wringham reassesses his identity
There’s something mildly pathetic about being an Englishman in Scotland. Whenever I accidentally utter a Scottish colloquialism (“Och, Aye”) in my Brummie accent I can’t help but think of decrepit, benign Hans Moleman on The Simpsons wheezing, “Cowabunga, dudes”. It’s tragic. It’s sad. It’s Neil Kinnock dancing to Things Can Only Get Better. It’s Richard Madeley dressing up as Ali G. “Is it ‘cos I is black?”
Despite the fact that I left England because its climate, people, diet, politics, history and scen-ery make me want to be sick into a big bag, the only way to avoid becoming the aforementioned monstrosity is to become even more English. Sincerity is everything. So against all expectation, I have moved my accent half a degree south of its natural tendency and have taken up drinking copi-ous amounts of tea. I have even started following Midlands football for the first time in my life: Up, may I venture, the baggies.
At the recent parliamentary elections, I voted for the Scottish National Party. Peculiarly, it felt like a
betrayal – peculiar in that I quite frequently thrash around laughing manically, to vivid fantasies of England being hit by a massive asteroid with every-thing in it being reduced to dust and ash.
Back in Birmingham, I never identified with England. I was, like my hero Kurt Vonnegut, a man without a country. Perhaps I was too close to England and unable to see it without warts and all (by warts I refer mainly to ASBOs, skinheads, rot-weillers, tabloid witch hunts and Johnny Vaughan). From here in Scotland it looks like a silly little BBC wonderland. I’m quite fond of it now. Through my binoculars, it’s about David Attenborough and Dressing Gowns and Doctor Who.
It’s a truism to say that you have to remain an outsider in order to properly understand a given place or society. I recently interviewed Judith Lev-ine, author of the acclaimed book Not Buying It. I had asked her about the anthropological approach she adopts in order to study her own America; she said that she often felt divorced from her culture because of this approach but that it was necessary
Illustrations by Jess Wilson
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in order to act as critic. I can’t help but feel something of a fish [and
chips] out of water myself but at least it allows me to put some thought into my own never-before-bothered-about nationality. Whenever Stephen Fry and Hugh Grant appear in American movies, they are sold as being quintessentially English; while on British screens they come across as cultured, witty gentlemen but ones not necessarily grounded to any particular nation.
You can’t help but be an ambassador for your country when you visit another one, hence the perennial media outrage to yobbish behaviour of English tourists abroad. I didn’t even know I was English until I stepped off the plane at Glasgow Prestwick and got called an ‘English Bastard’ by a passing drunk.
When going abroad, you can’t help but take a bit of your atmosphere with you in a bucket. People are fascinated with diversity in this modern globalised world of ours: they want to know about where you’re from, whether the stereotypes are true, what the difference is. When Scottish friends ask me how different England is to here; I tell them that it’s about the same as Scotland except that you can’t get proper haggis or decent medical attention.
England, of course, is a complete myth. The only red telephone box I think I’ve ever seen is
actually in the grounds of Glasgow University. In American movies, you can usually see Big Ben from the window of any British house, yet I only walked past it two or three times when I lived in London. Tea, by the way, comes from China. Fish and Chips, if anything, are Scottish since the cheap fish required by the working-class dish comes from the North Sea where shoals of cod were abundant in the nineteenth century. Even the Queen is Ger-man. The only actual English thing I can think of is the humble faggot – a foodstuff that mysteri-ously never did well in America. Perhaps I’m being a tad glib – England gave us the World Wide Web. And Tarmac.
In spite of my ‘become more English’ strategy, I’ve actually taken up Scotts Gaelic lessons: surely a skill so Scottish that it would impress even the most hardened Scottish nationalist. In my first lesson, I was to be taught to say, “Hello. My name is Robert. I am from England”. But instead, I persuaded my teacher to change this to “Hello. My name is Robert. I am from Nowhere”. Since the concept of ‘zero’ didn’t hit the Scottish islands until the twentieth century, the Gaelic lingo has difficulty with negative words such ‘nothing’ or ‘nowhere’. So the best we can do is “ Tha à Sas-ainn, ach chan eil ‘n àite sam bith”, which roughly means, “I am from England but not that England”.
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This man is the Mayor of London....
Nick Hayes chokes on his cornnflakes over a capital display of pomp and circumstance
Photography by Clive Trotman
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Sporting an ice-cream haircut that Douglas Hurd would envy, the Lord Mayor of London beams at me from my television set. “This is a wonderful day for London...vital to recognise such an historical moment...wonderful to be here...” I tuck into my crunchy nut.
England’s at it again. Another parade. Another slow procession of white haired people, crawl-
ing their way through the streets of a rainy town. There’s the military, right on cue with regulation frowns, and look, they’ve even put a harrier jump jet on a float. Blimey! And, of course, there’s the crowd. Those same people, dressed in dirty ano-raks and waterproof young children, the type that have scrapbooks at home detailing every twist and turn of the Diana saga. They’re there.
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Oh! and it’s that big chinned lady who does the racing. Telling me how fantastic this is, and how really quite superb that is.
I drain the sweet milk at the bottom of the bowl, and sit back. I’m surprised. Why all this welling sarcasm. What don’t I like about this?
Surely I haven’t turned against history, against my cultural heritage. Surely I still recognise the living
effect of our past, and what it means to hang on to that. But that’s just it. This isn’t history. This is the laminate on history, a gaudy show, a touristic charade. This is the England that we’re supposed to be. Told to be, by an ever diminishing and taper-ing breed of Englishman, the ones that still went to Eton, went to Oxbridge, got first class degrees, wives and jobs, however archaic that process now
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sounds. This is a breed of conservatism, monar-chism, staunch religious hypocrisy: the right wing.
This is a blinkered breed that has hijacked words such as “history”, or even more irritatingly, “val-ues” as if they apply to the rest of England.
And up flops the Lord Mayor once again. A face, moulded by privilege gurns at the paltry crowd from his Cinderella-inspired horse and carriage.
I look him up as he speaks. The wonders of the internet.
The Lord Mayor’s Show, the website proudly states, has continued, without pause, for 784 years. Replicas of that same gold carriage have trundled gloriously past its crowds, cutting a path through the Black Death, the Great fire, the Blitz and “countless insurrections”, oblivious to the chang-
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ing landscape of its course. It is emblematic of that great golden glory of English tradition, that blind refinery that exists above and beyond the real world. It is tinsel on the tree of England, twinkling and pretty, but irrelevant to its growth. But my problem here is that this tinsel still holds sway in the corridors of power, constructing our moral values and heritage, designed to a blinkered blue-
print. It makes me think of the Royal family, the silly public school playground shenanigans in the House of Commons, refined fantasy irrelevance that actually affects our real lives. BAAAH!!!!
I change the channel. Dangermouse repeats. “Be alert!”, it says. “Britain needs lerts”. This is more like it.
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LONDON:THE FAT
HAS-BEEN
WE ARE NOT ENGLISH, WE ARE NOT ENGLISHMEN AND ENGLISHWOMEN, WE AREN’T GENTEEL, WE ARE NOT HARBINGERS OF GOOD MANNERS, GALLANT LOSSES AND IMPECCABLE BEHAVIOUR. WE’RE ALSO NOT RAMPANT ROYAL-ISTS, MARKET TRADERS WITH QUIRKY RHYMING SLANG, CRICKET FANATICS, PARTICIPANTS IN MAYPOLE DANCING, MARBLES LEAGUES AND GAMES OF AUNT SALLY IN THE PUB BACK GARDEN. NORTHUMBERLAND AND DURHAM ISN’T A
GREEN AND PLEASANT LAND, ISN’T AN ENGLISH GARDEN, ISN’T PART OF LYRICS BY THE KINKS, BLUR OR XTC, DOESN’T HAVE A RECORD FOR THE AMOUNT OF HIGH SPIRES ON IT’S CHURCHES AND DOESN’T HAVE SWATHES OF LAND
PROTECTED BY THE NATIONAL TRUST. WE DON’T DO WI, WE DON’T DO THE VILLAGE GREEN PRESERVATION SOCIETY, MR. BURTON SMYTHE DOESN’T CATCH THE 6:33 EVERY MORNING TO PADDINGTON SO HE CAN GET TO HIS DESK ON TIME AND WE DON’T GET THE BUNTING OUT EVERY YEAR FOR THE ANNUAL FETE
WHICH STRETCHES BACK TO 1467 AND INVOLVES ARCHERY, TUG OF WAR AND MEDIEVAL DRESSING UP.
SO HERE’S UP FOR THE NORTH.
Rather like the fall of Rome, the fall of the British Empire was a denial thing to most people,
not least to the peoples of the South East of England.
They shake their fist and say that they will never surrender to those bureaucrats in Brussels, that the French, unlike us English, folded to the nazis and that England won the World Cup in 1966.
Pan north of the home counties and you will find most of us have moved on. We have had to re-eval-uate the way we thought about nationhood after the 1980s Thatcher ‘revolution’ where, over a five year
time span, lots of towns in the north of England had their heart ripped out and people either had to move, change careers or become professionally unemployable through prescription drugs, industrial deafness or the mental health act.
Our dignity was taken away many years ago so we have learned that old English ideal of make do and mend. Now, our once towering provincial towns
Text by Gavin Webster, Illustration by Jess Wilson
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and cities are starting to creak back into shape again and civic pride – albeit saddled with some social problems – is slowly returning to the fold.
To walk along the Quayside in Newcastle and look at both sides of the river and the hive of activity – the Baltic art space, the winking eye footbridge, the Sage opera house – makes you realise that here in the north (and Newcastle is the real north) we have hopes and civic expectations. Let’s not forget that if you were to walk around old Newcastle, you will see streets that resemble Edinburgh’s new town. Architectural visionaries like Richard Grainger and John Dobson built this post Georgian utopia in their individual style. What you have now in Newcastle is a great mix of the old and the new and anyone coming from a different part of Europe would be forgiven for thinking that this must be England’s second city behind London.
Compare this to our crumbling capital, old grey and very brown for some reason. So-called luxury flats – those post war ones in small brown brick with curved windows– look like mental institutions and stand next to some ‘sink’ estate that’s been crammed in like someone fitting children’s toys in a walk in cupboard. Then there’s the Victorian back streets with cars on either side of the road.
Rather like an ageing Mohammed Ali, Paul Gascoigne or Rolling Stones, London thinks it’s still ‘got it’ but unlike most has-beens it still manages to carry it off. People think that it would be really cool to live there, that everyone’s really forward think-ing and tolerant, and that for some reason creative juices flow when you’re within spitting distance of Soho or Shaftsbury Avenue or Chelsea’s King’s Road.
There’s something just a bit shit about London. Every time I go there I find myself whingeing. It normally starts just halfway through Hertfordshire
or in South Essex or wherever I feel the whiff of the place depending upon which route I’ve taken. I try not to be prejudiced, I try to go with an open mind, I try to look at the place with a different slant to the last time I was there but no matter what I do, I don’t feel inspired. I start talking to myself saying ‘look at the state of that garden, look at this dismal street, imagine living next to a crappy main road like this‘, the whingeing normally stops in exactly the same spot whenever I’m leaving the place and heading north and I’m convinced that it’s not just me, it’s just the fact that London is crap, full stop.
The big irony of all this is the fact that London-ers, right from Brian Sewell down to Garry Bushell, foolishly think that the North is shit and they thank god they don’t live there. There is so much that I could say to both of them but I fear I would be shouted down and talked over and I wouldn’t change their tiny minds anyway. That though, is why the North is great, because spanners like that think it’s dreadful. Those two people seem to have a lot of supporters and long may that support con-tinue because it’s playing right in to our hands. They are the epitome of all those fanatics that I despise. They appear to make the product so appealing but scratch away the surface and you’ll still find it an exclusive club that they want in their utopia. Sewell doesn’t want art wasted on Northerners but if a busload of morons from Basildon or Southend or Romford turned up at the Tate Britain every day, you’ll find that he would want to put a stop to that ilk turning up to his culturist love-in.
Bushell loves all things English and all things in their correct place in the Ing-er-lund he has in his mind. However he wouldn’t want Labour voters, right on people, people with any celtic sympathy, alternative comedians, football fans that don’t sup-port other English clubs in Europe, people who
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want to run their own regional affairs, Cornish flags, Northumbrian flags, anti royalists etc. No, these people want to see their dream but it’s a specific dream exclusive only to them and isn’t all encompassing, it’s a terrible society in a time warp that goes against the brave new world.
This, however is not just synonymous with the right wing leaning dinasours, this view of the north and particularly Scotland is also shared by left wing luminaries also. Ken Livingstone and Billy Bragg to name but two. Ken Livingstone has been a thorn in the establishment’s side since he burst on the scene in the nineteen eighties but he is just as much part of the establishment as Thatcher, Blair or any other ‘status quo’ orientated MP. Ken strikes me as a bit of a closet racist. He’s very right-on when it comes to Afro-carribeans and West Africans living in his city. He wouldn’t dream of having a go at Asians of any description living on benefits in what was his own city but wait till he gets on about Jews living in Israel or Scots living in, well Scotland. His words were that the Scots were becoming ‘dependency junkies’. A remark rich coming from the former Mayor of London and the ex-leader of the GLC. Let us ponder for a moment and think of our won-derful capital city and the amount of dependency they’ve become accustomed to over the years. The 2012 Olympics, The Dome, the Wembly stadium rebuilding project , The Picketts Lock Athletics stadium project, Westminster’s Portcullis House, Canary Wharf, Crossrail (£10 fucking billion!!) and let’s not forget the London parliament, the fact that Londoners get to decide on their own fate, run their own affairs and get their own form of govern-ment, something the rest of England doesn’t get.
Ken Livingstone hasn’t ran a successful rags-to-riches business, hasn’t as far as I’m aware brought inward investment to the capital city and doesn’t
possess a single attribute that makes you think, ‘thank god Ken’s around , otherwise London would be buried by now’! When the GLC was around in the 1980’s, Asian youth clubs were built, Gay pride was formed, the IRA’s top brass were invited round to London for tea and biscuits with Ken and his pals, Ken also organised marches for the unem-ployed amongst other things. All these things sound quite noble and forward thinking but who paid for all this? Well you don’t have to be a genius to work that one out. Fast-forward to 2008 and his ’depend-ancy junkies’ remark sounds hypocritical and just plain nasty.
London though, feels that it represents England. It feels that it represents Britain. The last place where the penny dropped when it came to rum-blings of a Scottish breakaway was the south east of England. Londoners had no idea the Scots were interested in divorce. Lots of those people regarded Scotland as part of England and then couldn’t get it when the Scots wanted England to lose in inter-national football matches. Elsewhere in England we’ve been aware of this for years but rather like a bloated self-interested gin soaked pensioner, London expressed revulsion at this. Nowadays our English chippiness is orchestrated from London and the South East and as a result of their oblivion to what’s happening in the provinces, they think that the rest of England are very much on their side.
The thing that annoys me is that the cultural nu-ances of the north have a tendency to get sucked in to being an English thing. Football, for example, was a proletariat game for people up north but now that it’s trendy it’s apparently England’s game. Talk about Hackney marshes as though that was where all English footballers were discovered ignores the fact that without northerners England would never
MY ENGLAND IS SO DIFFERENT FROM THE ENGLAND OF THE THAMES ESTUARY BUT
FOR SOME REASON LONDON DOESN’T LET IT BE SO
MEATSEVEN.indd 35 13/5/08 00:18:45
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have qualified for a World Cup never mind won one.
I’m sure the glitterati would say that there’s noth-ing more English than The Viz, Johnny Vegas and The Grand National, that something revolutionary like the forming of FC United of Manchester to oppose the fundamental takeover of football clubs by money making American businessmen was a great English thing.
The way that the London establishment talks makes me not feel at all English. There are other things that the South East middle classes do that they claim that the rest of the country do. Like complaining; ‘oh it’s such an English thing to complain profusely and then when there’s a chance to complain we never do’, ‘oh it’s so English for things not to work properly’, no that’s just London mate. Since British-ness went by the wayside and a new English-ness has begun, I feel like I am not part of it. I feel as marginalized as the Scots once did, I do now feel a kinship with people from my own area and feel that when I go to London it’s like I’m visiting a different country.
So here’s up for the north. We are not English, we are not Englishmen and Englishwomen, we aren’t genteel, we are not harbingers of good manners, gallant losses and impeccable behaviour. We’re also not rampant royalists, market trad-ers with quirky rhyming slang, cricket fanatics, participants in maypole dancing, marbles leagues and games of Aunt Sally in the pub back garden. Northumberland and Durham isn’t a green and pleasant land, isn’t an English garden, isn’t part of lyrics by The Kinks, Blur or XTC, doesn’t have a record for the amount of high spires on it’s churches and doesn’t have swathes of land protected by the national trust. We don’t do WI, we don’t do The Village Green Preservation Society, Mr. Burton Smythe doesn’t catch the 6:33 every morning to Paddington so he can get to his desk on time and we don’t get the bunting out every year for the annual fete which stretches back to 1467 and involves Archery, tug of war and medi-eval dressing up.
We also don’t take up huge amounts of our
time saying how much we hate our neighbours the French, the Germans, and the Scots. We find this alien to us but at the same time we’re not Scottish either. We don’t have countless gift shops selling family tartans, we don’t have distilled alcohol in different corners of the region, we don’t sing songs of epic battles fought several hundred years ago, we don’t have an obsession of which church peo-ple go to and we don’t take up huge amounts of time hating our neighbours The English. And for the record we’re not Irish or Welsh either!
What we do have though is land, land sitting on top of coal, and land sitting on top of steel in the south, this is very unique, as is the culture that goes with it. We do coal, we do steel, we do ships, we do heavy engineering, we do social clubs (loads of them), we do club committees, we do football, god do we do football! We have huge football clubs, we have histories of football teams, world class foot-ball players and football leagues in every inconse-quential part of the region.
We have Northumbrian pipes, we have leek shows, we have stotties, parmos, pease pudding and Brown Ale. We have a folk tradition, our own folk songs, our own poetry and our own humour. We have our own history, our own saints, our own literature and we had our own land many years ago. We’re not a bitter people and take up a lot of our time saying how much we have in common with our neighbours. We have no quarrel with Scottish people or Yorkshire people. We do feel a lot of empathy with both, but we aren’t the same as them, we are unique, we are Northumbrians.
That’s it, that’s my England, my England is so different from the England of the Thames estu-ary but for some reason London doesn’t let it be so. I really think if the rest of England had their own cultural voice (as it’s starting to now) London would become very inconsequential.
That fall of Rome surely can’t be far away now and people of my daughter’s generation will say ‘why was London still so important at the begin-ning of the century’?
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GENIUS/GZA OF THE WU-TANG CLAN
MEAT Magazine has long been fans of the Wu-Tang Clan. Their heavy beats, kung-fu samples and surreal flows have kept MEAT going over many a long night. It’s with pleaseure that we reproduce exercpts from
an interview from our German pals at MONO.KULTUR magazine
‘YOU JUST HAVE TO BE RESILIENT. YOU HAVE TO
BE ABLE TO GET BACK UP WHEN YOU’RE KNOCKED
DOWN.
AND I NEVER GAVE UP.’
Interview by Renko Heuer, Illustrations by Leigh Pearson
MEATSEVEN.indd 37 13/5/08 00:18:45
/ 38 /meatmagazine
Go
ing
bac
k to
the
ear
ly d
ays,
I he
ard
th
at R
ZA
use
d t
o w
ork
as
a m
esse
n-g
er. H
ow
did
yo
u m
ake
a liv
ing
unt
il yo
u w
ere
fina
lly a
ble
to
mak
e m
one
y as
an
MC
?
I al
way
s fo
und
a w
ay to
sup
port
mys
elf:
I w
orke
d on
a b
ridge
sel
ling
pape
rs, w
hich
was
on
ly fo
r a s
hort
per
iod
of ti
me.
I a
lso
did
som
e m
esse
nger
wor
k; I
alw
ays
had
a jo
b,
ever
y no
w a
nd th
en. B
ut y
ou g
otta
real
ize
that
whe
n w
e fir
st fo
rmed
the
All
In T
oget
her
Now
cre
w w
e w
ere
teen
ager
s so
we
wer
e st
ill
livin
’ off
our
par
ents
at t
hat t
ime.
Whe
n I
first
ca
me
out w
ith th
e C
old
Chi
llin’
reco
rd [W
ords
Fr
om T
he G
eniu
s; 19
91] I
was
alre
ady
a gr
own
man
, but
by
that
tim
e I
was
wor
king
for t
he
Tran
sit A
utho
rity
– w
hich
was
a jo
b so
me
peop
le w
ould
kill
for b
ecau
se y
ou h
ave
to ta
ke
a te
st a
nd w
ait f
or y
ears
for t
hem
to c
all y
ou.
So I
wor
ked
for t
he C
ity, I
dro
ve tr
ucks
. It
was
the
best
bec
ause
I c
ould
hav
e a
fam
ily a
nd
heal
th in
sura
nce
and
all t
hat.
Gen
eral
ly w
e w
eren
’t ju
st s
ittin
g ar
ound
tr
ying
to b
ank
off
rap
beca
use
whe
n w
e fir
st
star
ted,
we
didn
’t ge
t int
o th
is to
mak
e m
oney
. W
e go
t int
o th
is b
ecau
se it
was
a h
obby
, it
was
som
ethi
ng w
e lo
ved
to d
o, w
e ha
d a
lot
of lo
ve fo
r it,
and
it w
as ju
st th
is th
ing
that
w
as h
appe
ning
and
we
took
a li
kene
ss to
it.
Man
y ye
ars
late
r we
wer
e ab
le to
just
mak
e a
livin
g of
f it,
whi
ch w
as e
ven
grea
ter
beca
use
ther
e’s n
othi
ng m
ore
fun
than
ha
ving
a jo
b th
at y
ou lo
ve. N
owad
ays,
MEATSEVEN.indd 38 13/5/08 00:18:48
/ 39 / www.meat-mag.com
thou
gh, i
t’s a
lot d
iffer
ent b
ecau
se a
lot o
f ki
ds, t
hey
just
wan
t to
be a
n M
C b
ecau
se th
ey th
ink
it’s
a w
ay to
mak
e m
oney
. The
y ju
st w
ant t
o be
a b
all
play
er b
ecau
se th
ey fi
gure
that
’s an
eas
y w
ay o
ut –
not
real
izin
’ tha
t edu
catio
n is
firs
t and
all
thos
e ot
her t
hing
s ar
e se
cond
ary.
And
yet
, the
ab
solu
te b
reak
thro
ugh
of
the
Cla
n ev
entu
ally
hap
-p
ened
due
to
a b
usin
ess
stra
teg
y, t
he ‘fi
ve-y
ear
pla
n’, a
co
m-
ple
te o
utlin
e o
f th
e C
lan’
s ca
reer
. Wer
e yo
u no
t in
volv
ed w
ith
crea
ting
tha
t p
lan?
The
onl
y in
volv
emen
t of
min
e ha
s al
way
s be
en th
e m
usic
. It w
as R
ZA’
s id
ea,
it w
as re
ally
his
five
-yea
r pla
n; I
had
not
hing
to d
o w
ith it
con
cept
ually
– o
ther
th
an m
usic
, oth
er th
an b
ringi
ng m
y rh
ymes
, my
thou
ghts
, my
idea
s –
lyric
ally
an
d m
usic
ally
– to
the
tabl
e. W
hen
it co
mes
to th
e co
rpor
ate
side
of
the
mus
ic
indu
stry
, I’v
e al
way
s be
en in
the
back
grou
nd. I
nev
er s
tudi
ed it
to a
poi
nt a
s so
me
othe
r peo
ple
wou
ld: l
ike
the
who
le m
anag
emen
t sid
e, th
e bu
sine
ss s
ide
of it
. I w
asn’
t try
ing
to b
e an
exe
cutiv
e or
CE
O o
r to
form
a c
ompa
ny; i
nste
ad
I ju
st w
ante
d to
mak
e m
usic
, whi
ch is
pre
tty m
uch
wha
t I s
till w
anna
do
now
–
even
thou
gh m
any
year
s la
ter w
e fo
rmed
our
ow
n co
mpa
nies
and
we
did
our
own
thin
gs. B
ut a
s fa
r the
bus
ines
s pl
an u
nder
lyin
g th
e W
u-Ta
ng –
like
, ‘W
e go
nna
star
t Wu-
Tang
this,
and
then
we
gonn
a st
art t
his
com
pany
, we
gonn
a st
art a
clo
thin
g lin
e.’ –
that
was
RZ
A’s
plan
.B
ut it
feel
s gr
eat t
o be
abl
e to
mak
e a
care
er, a
nd I
act
ually
mad
e a
liv-
ing
and
rais
ed m
y ch
ildre
n fr
om h
ip-h
op m
usic
. The
y w
ere
able
to g
et g
ood
thin
gs in
life
, you
kno
w, a
s fa
r as
mat
eria
l thi
ngs,
thou
gh m
ater
ial t
hing
s do
n’t
mea
n m
uch,
but
it s
till f
eels
goo
d to
hav
e th
ose
thin
gs a
s lo
ng a
s yo
u do
n’t g
et
caug
ht u
p in
it. W
hich
is th
e th
ing
of n
owad
ays:
peop
le a
re s
o m
ater
ialis
tic,
clot
hing
mea
ns s
o m
uch
to th
em th
at th
ey h
ave
to rh
yme
abou
t it.
Inst
ead
of
just
look
ing
nice
they
wan
t to
look
nic
e an
d ta
lk a
bout
how
nic
e th
ey lo
ok.
Tha
t m
akes
me
wo
nder
ho
w y
ou
felt
ab
out
the
who
le id
ea o
f C
.R.E
.A.M
. [ac
rony
m f
or
‘Cas
h R
ules
Eve
ryth
ing
Aro
und
Me’
],
whi
ch is
an
earl
y W
u-Ta
ng s
tate
men
t an
d t
he e
xact
op
po
site
of
wha
t yo
u ju
st s
aid
.
I m
ean,
if y
ou
look
at i
t, ca
sh in
deed
do
es r
ule
ever
ythi
ng
arou
nd m
e –
thou
gh it
’s ev
eryt
hing
aro
und
me;
not
me.
We
didn
’t sa
y ‘c
ash
rule
s us
’; w
e ju
st s
aid
cash
rul
es e
very
thin
g ar
ound
us.
True
. Yo
u w
in.
And
it d
oes,
man
. I m
ean,
it ju
st ta
kes
mon
ey to
do
thin
gs. I
can
’t ev
en ri
de
publ
ic tr
ansp
orta
tion
for f
ree;
I c
an’t
go in
to th
e st
ore
and
get a
bot
tle o
f w
ater
with
out h
avin
g ca
sh, o
r with
out h
avin
g so
me
sort
of
cred
it. I
t rul
es. B
ut
know
ledg
e is
a w
hole
lot m
ore
pow
erfu
l tha
n m
oney
bec
ause
with
kno
wle
dge
you
can
get m
oney
. I re
cent
ly re
ad o
n th
e ne
ws
that
ther
e w
as s
ome
man
who
pa
id 6
00,0
00 d
olla
rs to
hav
e lu
nch
with
War
ren
Buf
fett.
And
he
didn
’t pa
y ju
st to
sit
arou
nd a
nd e
at w
ith h
im; h
e pa
id b
ecau
se h
e w
ante
d to
get
som
e of
hi
s kn
owle
dge.
Thi
s m
an h
as e
noug
h kn
owle
dge
abou
t wha
t he
does
as
far a
s in
vest
men
ts a
nd s
uch
that
som
eone
will
pay
that
muc
h m
oney
to s
it do
wn
and
have
lunc
h w
ith h
im! S
o ca
sh d
oes
rule
a lo
t of
stuf
f ar
ound
me.
And
, you
kn
ow, t
his
song
was
mad
e m
any
year
s la
ter,
and
it w
asn’
t a s
ong
I w
as o
n; th
is
was
Rae
kwon
’s.
I kno
w. S
till,
it s
eem
ed a
pre
tty
in-y
our
-fac
e st
atem
ent
by
the
enti
re C
lan.
So
it m
ade
me
wo
nder
…
Yeah
, may
be it
was
how
the
othe
rs w
ere
feel
in’ a
t the
tim
e, b
ut e
ven
whe
n th
ey g
ot in
to it
they
just
had
the
love
for h
ip-h
op. L
ike
whe
n R
aekw
on s
tart
ed
out r
hym
in’,
he d
idn’
t rhy
me
to m
ake
mon
ey ‘c
ause
we
just
did
n’t m
ake m
oney
. It
was
just
the
love
for i
t at t
he ti
me.
Sp
eaki
ng o
f m
one
y: w
here
as it
to
ok
you
ano
ther
five
yea
rs t
o fi
-na
lly k
ick
off
yo
ur o
wn
care
er. D
id y
ou
ever
get
to
a p
oin
t w
here
yo
u w
ere
real
ly p
isse
d o
ff a
bo
ut t
he s
tate
of
affa
irs?
A p
oin
t w
here
‘the
po
litic
s o
f th
e b
usin
ess’
, to
use
a P
rinc
e P
aul t
erm
, w
ere
just
to
o m
uch
to h
and
le?
MEATSEVEN.indd 39 13/5/08 00:18:51
/ 40 /meatmagazine
Of
cour
se, o
f co
urse
, the
re’s
been
ple
nty
of ti
mes
like
that
. But
you
ju
st h
ave
to b
e re
silie
nt. Y
ou h
ave
to b
e ab
le to
get
bac
k up
whe
n yo
u’re
kn
ocke
d do
wn.
And
I n
ever
gav
e up
. I m
ean,
ther
e’s b
een
times
whe
n I
prob
ably
felt
like
cryi
n’. L
ike,
‘Dam
n, is
it e
ver g
onna
wor
k ou
t?’ A
t one
po
int w
e’d a
lread
y do
ne it
for s
o lo
ng a
nd w
e w
eren
’t ev
en m
akin
g ta
pes,
we
wer
e ju
st rh
ymin
g in
the
stre
ets
and
in s
choo
ls. W
hen
we
first
sta
rted
do
ing
dem
os, w
e ju
st w
ante
d to
do
them
so
we
coul
d he
ar o
urse
lves
on
tape
. We
wer
e ab
le to
hoo
k up
with
som
eone
who
had
som
e m
usic
al
equi
pmen
t in
his
hous
e –
that
was
a c
hang
e. T
hen
whe
n w
e w
ere
able
to
go in
to a
reco
rdin
g st
udio
– th
at w
as a
noth
er s
tep
up. A
nd th
en tr
ying
to
shop
our
son
gs a
nd g
et a
dea
l – th
at w
as th
e ha
rd p
art.
Bec
ause
at o
ne
poin
t, w
e w
ere
like,
‘You
kno
w w
hat,
hip-
hop
is b
ecom
ing
too
big.
We
wan
na m
ake
reco
rds,
too.
’ You
kno
w, s
udde
nly
we
wan
ted
to, b
ut th
at
turn
ed o
ut to
be
the
hard
est p
art,
the
frus
trat
ing
part
, and
it s
eem
ed li
ke it
to
ok 2
0 ye
ars
to g
et o
n w
hen
it on
ly re
ally
took
thre
e or
four
yea
rs.
But
aft
er fi
nally
hav
ing
sign
ed a
dea
l, an
d un
fort
unat
ely
thin
gs st
ill n
ot
real
ly w
orki
ng o
ut fo
r me,
that
was
ano
ther
har
d pa
rt, t
hat w
as h
ard
times
–
door
s w
ere
clos
ing
in o
ur fa
ces.
I us
ed to
act
ually
sen
d ou
t tap
es to
re
cord
labe
ls a
nd th
ose
tape
s w
ere
just
sitt
ing
ther
e in
a b
ox w
ith to
ns o
f ot
hers
.Yo
u kn
ow w
hat:
som
etim
es it
’s go
od to
wat
ch a
bio
grap
hy o
f so
me
othe
r art
ist,
I th
ink,
whe
ther
it b
e ro
ck, h
ip-h
op, h
eavy
met
al, j
azz,
bec
ause
al
l of
them
hav
e in
tere
stin
g st
orie
s to
tell.
I re
cent
ly s
at d
own
and
wat
ched
a
docu
men
tary
on
Loui
s A
rmst
rong
, whi
ch w
as ju
st a
maz
ing,
his
life
sto
ry
is a
maz
ing.
He
mad
e m
usic
for f
our o
r five
dec
ades
, bril
liant
son
gs, o
ne o
f th
e gr
eate
st tr
umpe
t pla
yers
eve
r, an
d to
hea
r abo
ut h
is p
light
s, hi
s up
s an
d do
wns
and
how
it re
late
s to
you
r ow
n st
ory!
So,
you
kno
w, n
ever
giv
e up
, th
at’s
all I
can
say
. Do
it be
caus
e yo
u lo
ve to
do
it an
d pe
ople
will
resp
ect
your
wor
k an
d he
ar y
our w
ork
soon
er o
r lat
er. T
here
’s be
en ti
mes
that
w
ere
real
ly ro
ugh;
ther
e’s b
een
times
that
wer
e re
ally,
real
ly g
ood.
And
the
good
alw
ays
outw
eigh
s th
e ba
d.
WE
LE
AR
N M
AN
Y D
IFFE
RE
NT
TH
ING
S
EV
ER
Y S
ING
LE D
AY,
AN
D I
DO
N’T
TH
INK
T
HE
RE
’S O
NE
MA
IN L
ES
SO
N T
HAT
I C
AN
P
INP
OIN
T.
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Ho
w d
id it
fee
l to
be
do
ing
yo
ur s
olo
alb
ums
com
par
ed t
o b
e-in
g p
art
of
the
Wu-
Tang
Cla
n, m
eani
ng y
ou
wer
e a
ches
s p
iece
o
n yo
ur o
wn
all o
f a
sud
den
?
Of
cour
se it
felt
very
diff
eren
t. T
here
’s a
who
le lo
t mor
e de
dica
tion
and
time
that
goe
s in
to a
sol
o al
bum
. You
kno
w, I
hav
e m
y ow
n th
ings
; I d
on’t
have
eig
ht o
ther
diff
eren
t opi
nion
s in
volv
ed w
ith m
y pr
ojec
t. T
hat m
eans
th
ere’s
a lo
t mor
e I
have
to g
ive
of m
ysel
f. T
here
’s a
lot m
ore
plan
ning
, a
lot m
ore
mat
hem
atic
s an
d a
lot m
ore
wor
k. I
t’s fu
n w
orki
ng w
ith th
e C
lan,
’c
ause
it’s
less
wor
k fo
r me.
I m
ean,
it’s
defin
itely
pre
ssur
e be
caus
e th
ere’s
co
mpe
titio
n. A
nd th
ere’s
real
ly n
o co
mpe
titio
n w
orki
ng a
lone
; it’s
just
me
wor
king
aga
inst
me.
So,
with
the
Cla
n, it
’s ju
st a
lot m
ore
com
petit
ive
with
al
l the
oth
er s
wor
dsm
en; y
ou’re
con
stan
tly tr
ying
to s
harp
en y
our s
wor
d, a
nd
keep
in’ i
t sha
rp, a
nd tr
yin’
to m
ake
ever
ythi
ng g
ood.
It i
s fu
n on
bot
h si
des,
but I
real
ly, re
ally
like
wor
king
alo
ne.
Loo
king
bac
k no
w, a
fter
so
man
y ye
ars
in t
he b
usin
ess,
is
ther
e a
mai
n le
sso
n yo
u le
arne
d?
I do
n’t t
hink
ther
e’s a
mai
n le
sson
. I d
on’t
thin
k so
, jus
t bec
ause
hip
-hop
is
a c
ultu
re th
at a
lway
s ch
ange
s –
thin
gs c
ome,
thin
gs g
o. I
t’s a
par
t of
life,
so
met
hing
you
live
. Mus
ic is
just
som
ethi
ng th
at’s
alw
ays
been
a p
art o
f m
y lif
e. A
nd it
’s so
met
hing
that
I w
ill a
lway
s be
a p
art o
f. W
e le
arn
man
y di
ffer
ent t
hing
s ev
ery
sing
le d
ay, a
nd I
don
’t th
ink
ther
e’s o
ne m
ain
less
on
that
I c
an p
inpo
int.
The
onl
y th
ing
it al
way
s bo
ils d
own
to w
hen
you
thin
k of
hip
-hop
is th
is: b
e yo
urse
lf, c
ontin
ue to
be
your
self,
and
mak
e m
usic
that
yo
u fe
el, t
hat y
ou lo
ve, b
efor
e yo
u tr
y to
mak
e m
usic
for o
ther
peo
ple.
You
do
thin
gs fo
r you
rsel
f an
d no
t for
oth
ers,
and
then
if o
ther
s ca
n ta
ke a
like
-ne
ss to
it, i
t mak
es it
eve
n be
tter b
ecau
se th
ey c
an re
late
. Bec
ause
we
all h
ave
sim
ilar s
torie
s, w
e al
l hav
e si
mila
r thi
ngs
we
go th
roug
h. S
o I
have
to s
peak
fr
om m
y ex
perie
nce
and
wha
t I’m
thin
king
and
from
my
thou
ghts
, and
then
se
e if
oth
ers
can
rela
te to
that
.
Fina
lly, s
ince
yo
u’re
the
mo
st v
ersa
tile
‘bo
dy
dro
pp
er, t
he
hear
tbea
t st
op
per
’ whe
n it
co
mes
to
fig
htin
g w
ith
‘Liq
uid
S
wo
rds’
: hav
e yo
u ev
er t
ried
mar
tial
art
s yo
urse
lf?
No,
nev
er. I
’ve
wor
ked
out a
t tim
es: I
did
pus
h-up
s, pu
ll-up
s, an
d as
a
kid
we
was
into
mar
tial a
rts
as fa
r as
wha
t we
liked
to s
ee. W
atch
ing
Bru
ce
Lee
was
like
wat
chin
g a
supe
rher
o. I
n fa
ct, h
e w
as o
ur s
uper
hero
, bei
ng a
ble
to h
ave
thes
e m
agni
ficen
t thi
ngs
that
he
can
do a
nd fi
ght m
any
diff
eren
t pe
ople
. But
I’v
e ne
ver b
een
to a
kar
ate
scho
ol; I
’ve
neve
r tra
ined
. It’s
am
az-
ing
that
we
wer
e ab
le to
sta
y ou
tta tr
oubl
e, y
ou k
now,
bec
ause
I d
idn’
t rea
lly
play
che
ss a
s a
child
, I d
idn’
t tak
e up
mar
tial a
rts,
we
wer
en’t
in a
ny ty
pe o
f ac
adem
ic s
choo
ls o
r any
thin
g w
here
we
lear
ned
spor
ts. I
nste
ad w
e ju
st d
id
thin
gs o
n ou
r ow
n. I
f w
e pl
ayed
bal
l, w
e pl
ayed
in th
e pa
rk. W
e ha
d a
lot o
f ga
mes
we
mad
e up
, we
play
ed ta
g, w
e w
ere
crea
tive
in o
ur o
wn
min
ds.
And
yo
ur s
on,
he’
s no
w a
rap
per
, do
es h
e li
sten
to
cur
rent
hi
p-h
op
, the
tel
evis
ed s
tuff
?
Of
cour
se. E
ven
thou
gh th
at’s
not h
is c
up o
f te
a –
or th
e m
ajor
ity o
f it
isn’
t. H
e lo
oks
at it
the
sam
e w
ay a
s I,
like,
‘Dam
n, w
here
is h
ip-h
op g
oing
?’ B
ecau
se h
e’s fa
mili
ar w
ith th
e m
usic
I g
rew
up
with
. He’s
fam
iliar
with
a
lot o
f th
e M
otow
n so
und,
a lo
t of
the
grea
t gro
ups.
And
he’s
fam
iliar
with
th
e go
lden
era
of
hip-
hop
whe
re m
ostly
eve
ry M
C w
as s
tron
g ly
rical
ly, a
s op
pose
d to
toda
y w
here
mos
t MC
s ou
t the
re, e
spec
ially
on
MT
V a
nd B
ET,
ha
ve n
o ly
rical
tale
nt W
-H-A
-T-S
-O-E
-V-E
-R. H
e’s a
war
e of
that
, but
he
wat
ches
it e
very
day
– y
ou k
now,
they
’re c
hild
ren.
He’s
defi
nite
ly m
ore
awar
e of
wha
t’s o
ut th
ere
than
I a
m, ’
caus
e I
don’
t rea
lly p
ay a
ttent
ion
to it
. He’s
in
to a
ll of
that
.
Is it
tru
e yo
u d
on’
t ev
en li
sten
muc
h to
hip
-ho
p a
nym
ore
yo
ur-
self? I do
n’t.
I m
ean
I ra
rely
turn
on
the
radi
o w
hen
I’m in
my
car.
And
if I
do
, I’d
rath
er li
sten
to th
e ne
ws.
Bas
ical
ly I
’m ju
st c
heck
ing
out w
eath
er a
nd
traf
fic a
nd lo
cal n
ews.
I do
n’t l
iste
n m
uch
to th
e ra
dio;
I d
on’t
real
ly w
atch
T
V a
s fa
r as
vide
os a
nd s
tuff
like
that
. Eve
ry n
ow a
nd th
en, I
turn
on
MT
V
and
BE
T ju
st to
see
wha
t’s n
ew. A
nd th
en th
at’s
it. Y
ou k
now,
eve
n la
tely
–
with
in th
e la
st e
ight
mon
ths
to a
yea
r – I
hav
en’t
even
turn
ed m
y T
V o
n in
th
e ro
om, a
nd in
stea
d I
just
try
bein
g to
mys
elf.
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‘WE DON’T FIGHT...’ As part of her photography BA, Madeleine Macrae documented
amateur boxing in Staffordshire. These words from trainer Gary Ashton put
Macrae in her place when she entered Burslem ABA’s gym for the first time.
Her story is told to Mark Hudson, journalist and amateur boxer.
Burslem ABA trains in a typically Spartan gym. One room, above a garage; no heating, old equipment and gritty buzz. It’s run-down outside and freezing cold in-side. The dedicated boxers, some as young as ten, are raring to spar on every training night. Even younger boys train but are too young to fight. They content themselves staring at the photos of the greats on the wall or gawp admiringly at the older boys trading punches in the shabby training ring.
There are many reasons why boxing clubs are rarely housed in the plushest of gymnasia. The sport’s proletarian roots go a long way to explain but the aus-terity serves other functions too. It helps to ward off freeloaders and ensures that only the most dedicated will become regulars. It’s not supposed to be pleas-ant and if you’re put off by the stench of stale sweat, the taped-up punch bags, the blood-stained concrete floors and the icy drafts, there’s always LA Fitness.
“We don’t fight. We box. There’s a difference,” says Gary, who trains the younger kids at Burslem every weeknight between 6 and 7pm. The difference is the dedication and discipline that produces true sports-men.
Dave takes over from Gary for the 7-8pm session with the older lads. He’s a local ex-pro. He’s out of shape now but none of the old passion has waned.
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MEATSEVEN.indd 43 13/5/08 00:18:54
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It’s competition night in the smoke-filled Wolver-hampton Working Men’s Club. There will be nine bouts in all. The taller boxers’ heads almost scrape along the ceiling as they move around the ring. Homemade sandwiches are on sale for £1 and there are pints and men everywhere. The room is packed.
Ian and Alan are ABA referees. They wear all white. Pure, crisp, clean, perfectly-ironed white. Even down to their shoes. Their black dicky-bows are all that break up the white. Ian even wears white clinical gloves.
It’s a funny uniform. Any blood is easily seen.
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Maybe that’s why they wear it. Ian is repeatedly spot-ted with blood throughout the night.
Backstage, the boxers wait. Their nerves are writ-ten all over them. Some jump about. Some sit very still, very focused. All are clearly on edge.
At Burslem it’s getting busier and there is a better vibe in the gym. Dave is chatting animatedly. Like all boxers, he gets excited thinking about the sport and his involvement in it. He talks rapidly and not totally coherently about a book his trainer wrote and he is in it. He promises to bring it in next time. His
MEATSEVEN.indd 45 13/5/08 00:18:55
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license was revoked by a professional association – he doesn’t say what for – and after that, he never boxed competitively again. That was at nineteen. He also got married that year and had a baby. His priorities changed.
He clearly regrets leaving it behind but his coach-ing seems now to be making up for it. One of his charges, Steve, is a 16 year-old Irish traveller. He doesn’t go to school but turns up to training every evening. He has been boxing for a year. Steve looks
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impressive in the ring but Dave is less confident. “He’s alright but he gets over-excited and loses it.”
Dave carries on, deviating slightly to talk about Steve’s dad, who sells TVs to people. Apparently, they have nothing in them apart from bricks for
weight and would never work. Sounds like the sort of story you hear a lot about Irish travellers. Perhaps it’s another old wives tale. If it’s true, though, the sort of person who would buy a telly loaded with bricks off the street from a man with an impenetrable Irish
MEATSEVEN.indd 47 13/5/08 00:18:56
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accent, kind of deserves what they get. It’s a lesson in stupidity to be a learned.
When training has finished, the gym is locked up and the cessation of the activity and rhythm brings
dereliction back to the building. Dave drives away, recounting victory after victory at one hundred miles an hour. The car, however, does not break the 25 mph barrier.
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NICK HAYES is a gallant crusader for the elderly. He also keeps a close watch on the youngerly. Collec-tions of his short stories lurk in the shadowy shelves of the ICA, Gosh and Orbital Comics. Go. Buy. Or email him on [email protected]
STUART KOLAKOVIC is a freelance illustrator and comic creator. He won the D&AD new blood award for his comic Milorad and has just set up a virtual shop for you to purchase his many wonders. Check him out on www.stuartkolakovic.co.uk.
DAVID GOO is an acrobat of talent. He hosts his own variety show, numerous open mic nights across London, he writes, he sings, he plays, and in many ways, is the greatest human being alive. Churchill got nothing on Goo. Lincoln limps pitifully in his wake. Go seek him out at www.davidgoo.com
RICHARD COWDRY lives in a twilight world of silent fi lms, Russian novels and Betty Boop cartoons. He won a New Talents award at the Sierre Comics Festival in Switzerland and his cartoons have ap-peared in the Oxford American, Vice Magazine and Serbian comix anthology Slutburger. See more of his drawings at: www.absurdart.com. He also edits Brit-ish outsider comics anthology, ‘Th e Bedsit Journal’. www.bedsitjournal.com
JAMES PALLISTER has risen, like the proud member of a Jilly Cooper novel, to become a leading expert on Design Writing. Th is has nothing to do with his fascination for competitive eating nurtured early at his mother’s teat. He is a staff writer on the
highly esteemed architecture weekly Th e Architects’ Journal and occasionally dabbles in graphic design. Get in touch on [email protected]
ROBERT WRINGHAM is a writer, stand-up comedian and general wizard of words. Editor of the magazine project “Th e New Escapologist”, he is also a playwright and reviewer of novels. My God, says his mother, my son is a rich man! He smiles ambiguously and accepts another custard slice. Get in touch at www.wringham.co.uk
JESS WILSON is an illustrator whose work has appeared on the telly. BBC’s “Hustle” to be precise. Her clients also include Amelia’s magazine, notion magazine, and You magazine. For commissions and fawning praise, email her on [email protected]
NICO HINES is a professional hack. He writes and investigates. For Th e Times no less. Th is is his day job. By night, however, he dons the top hat and moustache of a semi-professional ring-leader, and does his best to contol the mania of onlook-ers to competitive eating exhibits. For more in-formation on expert writing or mob contol, email [email protected]
MARK HUDSON is a journalist, middle-east expert and gentleman brawler in possession of an exquisite selection of tailored jackets, drop him a line for ex-quisite prose, hot dates or some sparring practice on [email protected]
/From this issue..
contributing artists and writers...
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/ 50 /meatmagazine
RENKO HEUER is a freelance writer who special-ises in music, literature and other wayward non-sequiturs. He is a contributor to various magazines in Germany and elsewhere. He currently enjoys his headphones in the streets of Berlin. Get in touch on [email protected]
Forget BMWs and bratwurst, MONO-KULTUR is one of Germany’s finest exports. Subscribe at mono-kultur.com
LEIGH PEARSON is a freelance illustrator working in Edinburgh. The hardest working man in illustra-tion. Find out more on www.thunderheart.co.uk.
MADELEINE MACRAE is seduced by art and fascinated by people. By day she assumes the cloak of an editorial picture assistant, but by night she stalks the street with a pair of sharp eyes and a lens. These pictures are an extract from her book ‘We don’t fight’, of which she is very proud indeed. Give her a commission. We rate her. A lot. Make contact on [email protected]
NAOMI WOOD is about to complete a creative writing course at UEA, the finest cathedral of words known to man. She will then no doubt write a couple of books that illustrate the human condition in tear-inducing precision and then retire with a dog on a hill. For this is the way she works. Email her on [email protected]
GAVIN WEBSTER drinks the blood of southern
fairies. His patio is stuffed full of the corpses of Londoners, and still he wants more. He has managed to fool the world however, into thinking of him as a stand-up comedian, and not a psychotic vigilante. He came to use recommended by Simon Donald of The Viz. The Daily Mirror once spoke of his ‘tough talk-ing, no nonsense, very very funny Geordie wit’ and Ross Noble has called him ‘a cross between Bill Hicks and Geoff from Biker Grove’. [email protected]
RYAN TODD is a very good illustrator we found out about. He is currently working for Glue London and also producing work for various personal and freelance projects. Email him on [email protected]
CLIVE TOTMAN photographed the Lord Mayor’s Show for The City of London. Contact him on [email protected]
LIZZIE CAPON spends her days curating at the Victoria and Albert Museum. More importantly to this proud nation’s culture however, she regularly organises competitive eating competitions, attempts at breaking world records and (very) amateur boxing duels taking place in woodland at the dead of night. [email protected]
GZA ‘And the GZA, the Genius, is just a genius; he’s the backbone of the whole joint...He the head...We form like Voltron and the GZA happens to be the head.’. Nuff said.
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The police in their hi-vis jackets
though the youngest was barely out of nappies.
rubbing shoulders with anoraks in baseball caps.
with the smell of threat in the air.
It was a menacing night, typically Camden,
were fussing with their walkie-talkies,
while throngs of skinny jeans ruffled their feathers,
We exchanged
and I was off.
whilst some sixteen year old fumbled around in his boxers for the right draw.
and had ended up queuing for a burger I didn’t want
I was there for the usual ten-pound-note-bag-of-grass shuffle
Half way home, a group of no more than five kids threw themselves onto the bus.
They must have been about 8 years old,
So, I was on my way back from Camden on the no.29.
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(it’s a common form of social intercourse in London).
mythologised middle-england terror, made manifest.
These were THOSE sort of kids,
The polite silence of the bus was ruptured,
and the kids took centre stage,
punching, swearing, fronting. By this time, everyone on the bottom floor of the bus, and probably the top, was listening intently, judiciously avoiding eye-contact
they were angry pink faced mother gorillas on heat.
With rage disproportionate to their size.
they weren’t boisterous boys-will-be-boys,
they weren’t collect-ing conquers,
They weren’t scrumping,
No knives, No murdered grannies. No formulaic article in the Camden Gazette.
A collective sigh of relief. Thank God!!! But then the bus jolted and halted.
The bus was silent, eyes timidly daring to face this outburst.
the veins in his downy neck bursting to accommodate the fury that flowed through them.
Again
and AGAIN, In a flash he pulled back on all his rage and sprang an open fist into the bus drivers protection screen.
The smallest of the lot,
the asbo-merchants that stalked the columns of the press,
The doors swished, and they were getting off.
who had been trapped in a headlock for most of the journey
caught the bus drivers eye as he got off. This was his chance.
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(it’s a common form of social intercourse in London).
mythologised middle-england terror, made manifest.
These were THOSE sort of kids,
The polite silence of the bus was ruptured,
and the kids took centre stage,
punching, swearing, fronting. By this time, everyone on the bottom floor of the bus, and probably the top, was listening intently, judiciously avoiding eye-contact
they were angry pink faced mother gorillas on heat.
With rage disproportionate to their size.
they weren’t boisterous boys-will-be-boys,
they weren’t collect-ing conquers,
They weren’t scrumping,
No knives, No murdered grannies. No formulaic article in the Camden Gazette.
A collective sigh of relief. Thank God!!! But then the bus jolted and halted.
The bus was silent, eyes timidly daring to face this outburst.
the veins in his downy neck bursting to accommodate the fury that flowed through them.
Again
and AGAIN, In a flash he pulled back on all his rage and sprang an open fist into the bus drivers protection screen.
The smallest of the lot,
the asbo-merchants that stalked the columns of the press,
The doors swished, and they were getting off.
who had been trapped in a headlock for most of the journey
caught the bus drivers eye as he got off. This was his chance.
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hung in mid air
The doors still open, the kids kicked and slapped its metal exterior.
And in a moment of sweet inspiration,
the boy left the bus to rejoin his circle of misplaced machismo.
with a self-conscious swagger,
In a burbled mess of street Creole,
Unlike a bullet, it limply slipped down the window,
he turned and launched a glob of gob back onto the bus.
Like a bullet, it shot into the protection screen.
and so for that matter, was every-one else on the bus.
The bus driver was a wanker, and slopped into the coin tray. WHAT?!!
You, was the resounding sigh of the passengers.
You, and much more, said the ensuing silence.
What was our problem?
And as the bus pulled away,
each passenger was rehearsing his version of events,
to tell in the café,
in the queue,
Our little warrior child leant down, and rolled up his trouser leg.
over the kitchen table.
his bare, hairless knee a firm, filmic threat to society.
And off he went, a six year old, with a knife in his heart.
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hung in mid air
The doors still open, the kids kicked and slapped its metal exterior.
And in a moment of sweet inspiration,
the boy left the bus to rejoin his circle of misplaced machismo.
with a self-conscious swagger,
In a burbled mess of street Creole,
Unlike a bullet, it limply slipped down the window,
he turned and launched a glob of gob back onto the bus.
Like a bullet, it shot into the protection screen.
and so for that matter, was every-one else on the bus.
The bus driver was a wanker, and slopped into the coin tray. WHAT?!!
You, was the resounding sigh of the passengers.
You, and much more, said the ensuing silence.
What was our problem?
And as the bus pulled away,
each passenger was rehearsing his version of events,
to tell in the café,
in the queue,
Our little warrior child leant down, and rolled up his trouser leg.
over the kitchen table.
his bare, hairless knee a firm, filmic threat to society.
And off he went, a six year old, with a knife in his heart.
MEATSEVEN.indd 55 13/5/08 00:19:27
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meat likes...
This issue, Meat Magazine has the pleasure of introducing you to Stuart Kolakovic, and his miniature comics empire. A recent graduate from Kingston University, Stuart is a full-time illustrator living in the Midlands. His comics explore his interest in Eastern European folklore, a surreal world of she-wolves, magical flutes and dark woods. He has already made a mark of the British comics scene, winning the D&AD New Blood Award, coming second place in the recent Observer /
Jonathan Cape competition, and exhibiting a 10 metre long canvas in Manchester.
Based on a Serbian folk song, Ja Ljubav Te (‘I love you’) leads the reader through a wordless narrative. Its beautful pastel pallette combines with the delicate line drawing, to make the comic a miniature treasure. Not only this, but you feel like a giant having stumbled on some dwarve’s library whilst reading it.
Geeks corner: 42 page full colour | Machine stitched | Laser printed onto Five Seasons (100% recycled) paperto purchase the comic, email [email protected]
Miniature Comics by Stuart Kolakovic
Keeping true to our endless efforts to champion the small press and in a shame-less bid to get sent free stuff, we have introduced a new feature – ‘MEAT likes...’ We will cover good stuff going on in the small press, craft and zine scene and get it out to a wider audience. If you are creating stuff you think we would be interested in then send us pics and tell us how you do it... myspace.com/meatmagazine
DIA
RIES
PR
INTED
BY
EXW
HY
ZED
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Hoy.This was going to be one long drive. What was he
going to talk about with this kid? A whole afternoon with his vacant grandson was not Gramps idea of a good time. ‘So’ Gramps said, changing gear. ‘Do you like sports?’
Edward was sitting completely still in the passenger seat, nervously watching every swerve the car made. Life was so much better in the safety of his room. ‘Not really,’ he said.
‘How can you be twelve years old and not like sports?’
‘I’m thirteen actually.’‘And you think that makes a difference’
Edward knew for a fact it did, a whole world of difference. ‘I don’t like sports.’
‘Crazy, that’s what you are. Here, poke around in the glove pocket and look for a tape or something.’
Edward did as he was told, finding nothing but old rusty cassettes with faded psychedelic covers. ‘I can’t find anything.’
‘What are you talking about, there’s plenty. What,’ he picked up a cassette at random and held it to his grandson’s face, ‘Syd Barrett, he’s nothing?’ He stuck the tape into the cassette player irritably and carried on driving. Ah, to hell with the kid. If he didn’t want to talk, fuck him.
A few moments later, he looked to his side and
noticed Edward staring at him. ‘What?’‘Nothing, sorry,’ Edward said.‘No, no nothing sorry, you tell me what you were
looking at.’‘Nothing.’‘You tell me or I’ll leave you on the sidewalk here
and you can walk back home.’‘I was looking at the hairs in your ears.’Gramps grinned cheerfully. ‘You like ‘em? They’re
quite a bunch. You can put your finger in it if you want.’
‘No, thank you.’The old man shrugged. ‘Your choice. Feels good
though, I’m telling you. Last offer.’‘It’s okay, really. Thanks.’‘You’re one polite son of a bitch, aren’t you?’Edward twitched, his nose doing a roundabout mo-
tion. Hoy. What a freak.‘So listen, I’m going to this restaurant your parents
recommended, I could give you a few squid if you want to go to the pictures or something.’
‘That’s okay.’‘What are you saying, you prefer eating with an old
turtle like me?’ Take the offer, freak.Edward shrugged and said, ‘I don’t mind.’‘Listen kid, don’t do me any favours.’‘I’m not. I want to eat with you.’Gramps shook his head. ‘Crazy.’ They carried on
driving. ‘Could you find a different tape, I don’t think
Gramps smiled his best salesman smirk, ‘Wouldn’t you feel so much better Eddie, if you could just say a really
filthy, dirty, curse of a cuss-word?’
Edward’s Turmoil
Text by Dave Goo, Illustrations by Nick Hayes
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I can take any more of the Syd right now, maybe one of those – Jesus!’
The car swerved by them, missing their vehicle by inches. As he zoomed past, the jerk gave both Grand-pa and Edward the finger, blaring his horn. ‘Son of a bitch!’ Gramps yelled. ‘Fucking son of a bitch! Did you see that? Inches! Inches! We coulda been killed! These fucking animals! They have no courtesy! No fucking courtesy!’ He looked over at his grandson, who was blinking and twitching furiously. ‘Hey, are you okay? What’s wrong?’
Edward stuttered. ‘Sorry.’
‘Did you get nervous? Are you having a fit? Have you got some kind of epilepsy? Because your mother didn’t tell me a thing about that!’
‘I’m sorry… that word.’‘Huh?’‘That word you said. Sorry, it makes me go funny. I
should have told you, sorry.’‘“Word?”’‘The F one.’Gramps scratched his furry ears. ‘You mean fu-?’Edward put his hand on Gramp’s shoulder, actually
touching him. ‘Please don’t. Please. I’m sorry.’The old man raised his eyebrows. ‘You can’t be
serious.’‘Sorry Grandpa.’‘But people say that word all the time.’‘I know. It’s not easy.’‘I bet it isn’t. Bloody hell.’
Edward twitched once more.‘Don’t tell me you’re sensitive to other words, too?’‘I’m sorry.’
‘Stop being sorry, damn it.’Flutter of eyelids.Gramps studied his grandson as if for the first
time. ‘How long has this been going on for?’‘Since ages ago.’
The old man was frowning. ‘I never remembered you being like this.’
‘That’s because we never actually talked before today.’
The old man was shocked to realise the truth in that. They’d never spoken until now, not really. Maybe a sentence of greeting and departure here and there, if that. ‘But I would have noticed, surely.’
Edward shrugged.They carried on down the highway, Gramps won-
dering what other fuck ups his various grandchildren possessed. Man, he was glad he hardly talked to them. ‘Say, Edward, did you ever think perhaps you just need to hear those offending cuss words more often? Maybe it’ll desensitise you to them.’
‘No, I don’t think that’s true.’Gramps nodded, clearing his throat. ‘Well let’s try
anyway. Fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck-’‘Ah! Aye! Stop! Stop!’Next to him on the seat, his grandson had turned
into a quivering, shaking wreck of a human.‘Hey, it’s okay, shh, I’ve stopped, I’ve stopped!’Slowly, Edward sat up straight as if crawling out of
bombed ruins.‘My God. This stuff seriously harms you.’The kid looked at his lap, ashamed.‘But how can you live like this? It’s like being aller-
gic to breathing for God’s sake. I mean, how can you watch TV, or films? What else do kids do all day but watch that garbage?’
‘I read the Bible.’‘The Bible?’‘Or watch Disney films.’Oblivious to the traffic, Grandpa gazed at his
grandson. ‘Amazing...’
At the restaurant he was still peering at him closely, as if observing an experiment or bug he’d never seen before. ‘Is there any food I should know you’re sensi-tive to before I order?’
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‘No. I’ll eat anything.’‘Well that’s a relief. So tell me Eddie have your par-
ents considered sending you to a shrinker?’‘Yeah, I go to one actually.’‘Oh. And?’‘And he heals me with his magical shrinker powers.’Gramps chuckled. At least the kid wasn’t all idiot.
‘So you’ve never said a curse word yourself, huh? What is it, an allergy of some kind?’
‘It’s not an allergy.’‘A disorder then.’Edward folded his arms angrily. ‘Disorder?’‘Is there a nicer word for your disease I should be
aware of?’‘It’s not…’ Edward huffed in exasperation. ‘As far
as I’m concerned the world is diseased, swearing all the time. They’re the evil ones.’
Gramps nodded, as if acknowledging these words. He smiled. ‘So. What happens when you do it?’
‘What, swear?’‘Yeeesssssss.’ He eyed his grandson greedily.‘I wouldn’t know, and don’t want to find out.’‘Oh, but I’d very much like to find out. Who
knows? Perhaps you’d be cured.’‘I don’t need the curing, it’s the-’‘Of course, of course it is, but still. Are you telling
me you never get pissed off?’‘Yes, of course I do.’ He was bloody pissed off
right at that moment.‘What do you do when that happens?’‘I click my fingers.’ He quickly demonstrated this.‘And it all gets better, does it?’‘Usually.’Gramps hunched his shoulders up and moved clos-
er above the table, smiling his best salesman smirk. ‘Wouldn’t you feel so much better though Eddie, if you could just say a really filthy, dirty, rotten-’
‘Grandpa.’Click click click, Gramps heard coming from under
the table. ‘-biting, scathing, angry, teeth clenching-’
click click click‘-foul mouthed, blasphemous curse of a cuss word?
Huh? Think of the release, Eddie! What’s the worse that could happen? Huh?’
‘It’s wrong,’ Eddie whispered. Click click click.‘But it would make me so happy to hear you say it.’
And that was no lie.click cli-The clicking stopped.
MEATSEVEN.indd 59 13/5/08 00:19:33
He’d got him.An innocent, lost-boy expression appeared on
Gramp’s face. ‘Come on Edward. Make a dying man happy.’
Edward pondered these last statements carefully. ‘Well, the Bible does say to respect your elders’
If you say so, freak. ‘That’s right, it does. Go on. Say it. For your Grandad. Say the F-word.’
Edward’s eyes fluttered as if in nervous premoni-tion.
Gramps leaned in closer again. ‘Say it Edward. Don’t be afraid. Say it.’
The bottom lip on the kid’s mouth started quiver-ing violently.
He had him all right, he had him. ‘Say it. Never fear my wonderful grandson, never fear a thing. Say it. Say it.’
‘Are you ready to order-’Without even looking at the waiter, Gramps barked
as fierce as a lightning bolt, ‘Shut up we’re in the mid-dle of something!’
After the initial shock, the waiter glanced over at the shivering boy. ‘Is he okay?’
‘He’s fine. Hush! Not you Eddie, you carry on. You can speak. You will speak. Say the word. Say the word. I’m an elder. Respect the elder. Respect your dying grandpa. Say the word.’
‘F-f-’
‘Yes, yes.’‘Grandpa could feel his heartbeat racing.’‘Ffffff-’‘Yeeeesssssss.’An effect more powerful than Viagra was pumping
through his groin.‘F-f-f-fffff-FUUUUCK!’
The next sound that came out of Edward’s mouth after the F-word was a high-pitched holler like the shriek of a raging banshee:
‘AYEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!’
Then the soft slap of Edward’s fist hitting his Grandpa’s nose: ka-thud-crunch!
The creak and snap of Gramp’s chair tipping back, the soft crack of his skull meeting wood floor. And it all went black for the kid.
The waiter who saw the ensuing chaos of sirens and spilled coffee was sent home early. He spent the remainder of the evening watching Oz reruns and wondering what the hell he’d just seen.
And, on Gramp’s tomb, it simply said, ‘Here Lies Grandpa Meadows. He Died A Happy, Happy Man.’
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The House of Her
www.meat-mag.com
The lock would not give. I twisted and turned the key, which was warming from the friction, but it would not give. I tried to create as much noise, as much activity as I could muster. My grunts sounded animal in the cool night air, and I was glad of it, glad of the sweat working its way up on my forehead, and the pain of my stiff fingers twisting the metal. At one point the lock did seem to give a rheumatic sigh, as if it were to grant me a boon and give in to my efforts.
I should not have been surprised that my key did not unlock her house.
The white sash window gave easily with a tug, and I slipped myself through the window and into the kitchen sink, an eel into its creel, all rhythms.
I should not have been surprised by the silence, wearing itself in the house as the damp chill hung onto the furniture. Neither did I hear people walk-ing past. I half expected the telephone to ring.
Margaret’s voice, on the phone, had been paw-ing and insistent. I thought it was unfair of her to demand this of me – me, with the rights of the affronted lover - I wouldn’t go, didn’t want to go, it was too much to ask, it was a job for Matthew. And after all of that, these twinges of self-pity, I said to Margaret I would go. ‘For old time’s sake, John,’ she had said at the end of the conversation. When I replaced the telephone it was warmed from me,
shouldered as it had been for the hour, listening to her creole of silence and sobs.
The kitchen smelled perhaps of what she had cooked last. Mushroomy, certainly, with the faint penicillin smell of some bread, staling itself against the hungry air. On the wooden side-dresser sat some pictures; none of me, one of Emily, looking more like her than me, another of Margaret, when she was younger, and looked a lot more like Beth. Matthew was oddly absent as well. I gave a small yelp of triumph into the air and then stopped short. Her house didn’t need to hear my victories. Not yet.
I walked away from the kitchen. The smells of her scared me, as if she might appear any minute and offer to make me breakfast. She was a terrible cook! Good God! Even alive the suggestion might have been terrifying, and it was a game with Emily, that we used to play before she quite decidedly turned adolescent, of where best to squirrel away the remainders of a limp-eyed poached egg, or the carbonated ends of a piece of toast.
I found myself in the long reception room, familiar and not familiar at the same time. When I switched on the light the flowery borders of the wall-paper, which ran straight on the white paneling, looked odd and ancient, and I couldn’t remember why we had chosen to buy it. It didn’t go with the room at all. I didn’t go into the yellow room.
By Naomi Wood
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I placed my hand on the banister instead, follow-ing the smooth oak line leading me upstairs. The only light came from downstairs, and I refrained from switching on anymore. Perhaps it was some-thing morbid inside of me, that my grief would be better staged in ill-lit silence. I don’t know. Who am I to lecture on the aesthetics of grief ? I was a bad griever. I sulked in its shadows, I didn’t admit it, I over-worked, I suffered from constipation and breakouts of acne, and a rash of shingles on my stomach, just now starting to scab over. Grief was my quiet kidnapper, and I didn’t even know the ransom, so how could I have paid? Emily’s was just the opposite. Hers was a murderer and a rapist and she was so fucking angry when she looked at me and I looked at her with my grey dead eyes and I envied all of her rage.
Our old bedroom had new sheets: they were sand-coloured and crisp. I wonder who’d changed them before Beth left. I saw the old gilt mirror, propped against the shiny mahogany table, that we bought in a flea market in Liverpool when Beth was pregnant and moody, and I’d bought it for her, when I decided to stop being a miserly old cunt for once. I wrote a little note on it, in her red lipstick I found at the bottom of her old-smelling handbag. I wrote: For my square molar, with all my love, your sharp incisor. She was chuffed and flushed, she was, my big-bellied woman in her hippy smock and plait. And little Emily, making her mother’s belly a round plump pudding for other women to feast upon.
The curtains were closed, the heavy Liberty’s print still persisting in being there. I expected her to have changed more of the house. Made more dramatic my departure. The tracery of the vines
and flowers I knew from heart, my eyes followed them during conversations, confessions, battles. The first time I learnt of one of her strays the cur-tains were too weak for my fury. We fought like we were full of vitriol, and I was full of it, alright – my anger blue, like electricity in my vertebrae – and everything I said, I said to hurt her; to damage her. The second time was quieter, and by the time she told me about Matthew, my eyes were already trained to the leafy circuitry of the curtains.
I left our bedroom, trying not to think of her and Matthew in that bed, and Emily’s voice, telling me how mummy and Matt had taken her for the weekend to the countryside, and how I had bolted in fury, accusing Beth of robbery.
I walked into her study, her office, and set myself to Margaret’s mission. That was why I was here, after all. It is not my habitude to stalk the houses of dead wives. Everything was mindlessly disor-ganized. I couldn’t believe she had left things in such a state of disarray, even when she knew it was ending. Probably a last laugh at me, knowing her mother would enlist me, not Matthew, to clear up the last bureaucratic complications of life.
I worked quietly for the hour, methodically filing away tax returns, old utility bills, and threw out a lot of stuff she had thought she had had to keep. I put in my pocket a letter Emily had written to her, which asked if she could watch Neighbours if she promised she would tidy her room not like yesterday and that she was very sorry Mummy but if she didn’t let her she would have to run away to Ostralia, with some big kisses at the end for good measure. I threw out some old magazines, and looked through an old mobile phone bill from two years ago, one number repeated over and over
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again: not mine. I put it away. I suppose I didn’t come here for that.
Under my arm I took the three grey cardboard files I had organized, life’s duller litany, and left the study, switching the light off as I went. Downstairs, I looked back up above again, checked all the lights were off, and I was about to leave when I saw the door to the yellow room just ajar. I put the files down on the corridor table, with the prim black telephone and doodled note-pad, and considered leaving. But I found myself at the door, and I twisted the handle.
The switch on the wall gave a plastic snap and threw everything into a surprising brightness. The yellow wallpaper, still there, bought by me, had oddly displeased her. She had disliked the tart uniformity of the lines, though she liked the colour. It was in here she had lain during her illness, I think because the room caught the sun in the mid-af-ternoon, came in through the French windows, and disappeared, hot and pleased with itself after a long day’s work, over the leafy trees, shriveled by the warm summer. It had been so warm, so hot, so bountiful, so un-English! The nation was happier for that sunshine; as was Beth, and myself, and Mat-thew.
It was in here too that Matthew told me. Matthew – who had taken my place in our bed, my chair at the kitchen table, my sovereignty of her lips; my place at her side, in her hand, in the crook of her back, the base of her ass, in the vice of her thighs, the whispering places of her cool long neck – here where he told me what was going to happen to her. He was like a doctor, telling me, he was so calm. And there was something new between us that day: some new and difficult accord.
When she died of course the amity wilted. Both of us wanted to be the bereaved husband, and the other’s presence seemed to distract the attention away from one another. The funeral had been a farce, in a way, both of us dandying for attention as Beth’s widowed spouse, no-one looking after Emily, and the priest had looked abashed; his sermon at the burial verbose and inappropriate.
I looked around the yellow room. The house would go up for sale. I didn’t want it, and Matthew wasn’t willing to buy my share of it. The house was Beth, and if she wasn’t here anymore, I didn’t want anything more to do with it.
Suddenly I ached, quite magnificently. I sort of half-fell to the sofa, a crooked old arm out in front of me, my legs tumbling behind me. The air was still, and I longed for sound. I let out a brief howl. Tears came, quarrying up grief ’s hard-baked clay. I didn’t want her gone; I wanted her here, cheating on me, falling in love with another, divorcing me, mar-rying him. Stupid Beth, wonderful Beth. But there was no-one left to hate anymore; not even Matthew.
After five minutes I got up, switched off the light in the yellow room and picked up the files for Mar-garet. I had made the house colder with the open window. I made my way out over the sink and into the long back lawn, and I made sure it was firmly shut.
In the cold car I resisted, an instant, revving the engine. The car was quiet too. I wound down the window. The night air seemed different; a little ruffled. I looked back at the house, a strong-willed, strong-walled Tudor affair, and I thought of the swift-told stories of her.
I LOOKED AT HER WITH MY GREY DEAD EYES AND I ENVIED ALL OF HER RAGE
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Commander Of Fleet: James Pallister Rear Admiral: His Excellency, Nick HayesSubmariner At Arms: Adam Richmond
DISTRIBUTIONMEAT is published by MEAT Publishing Ltd. Printed by Lavenham Press. Distributed by COMAG, get in touch if you would like to stock the mag and we can sort it out. ISSN number is 1751-5432. Company No. 05692685.May 2008. At long last. All rights reserved and ting.
SUBMISSIONSGet in touch with us at MEAT Magazine: send us artwork, pitches for articles by email or just give us a ring. Any artwork sent to HQ should be accompanied by an SAE so we can return it to you, or email [email protected]. We cannot guarantee a prompt response to all correspondence but we will try.
THANKS to Miss Nicola Read, the scale game: half pint glasses, abnormally small chairs. Pally would like it put on record that he won the cracker-eating competition, the patience of our contributors especially Madeleine. Nick has been press-ganged back on board so it’s ‘Full Speed Ahead!’ for issue eight. Swarthy Chris and the sirens Hannah and Madeleine. Thanks to those lost in the Scapa Flow straits Nana Opuku and Kris Feldman. The ever-changing round up on the Good Ship Sixty-Three; message in bottles go to men overboard Tori, Rachel, Mark, Zara, Joe and Francesca, medal of Meritorious Service goes to long-staying Rupert, Lesley Read for helping us with the log book, all the people we forgot, and as ever Mike ‘Mad Dog’ Heaton of ExWhyZed, suppliers of the best sail, rope, and rigging as well as all your printing needs this side of the Cape of Good Hope. Voyage continues. Please send rum and limes.
details.../About us . .
CONTACTMEAT MAGAZINE docks at the massive corporate behemoth that is Meat Publishing Ltd. If you want to get in touch you will find the main sextant, drawing boards and war room located on the bridge at:
MEAT MAGAZINE,63 Third AvenueQueens ParkLondonW10 4HU07875348056/ [email protected], come and be our friend at myspace.com/meatmagazine Geeks Corner. Yes we mean you: Covers weigh in at a massive 360gsm. Buff Malago Board supplied by Arboreta Papers. Inside is a svelte 100gsm Cyclus. Anchor chain (over-used) 20mm multiplait steel rope by Windlass Supplies. We used Zapfino, Eurostile, Garsmond, Baskerville, Helvetica Neue, good old Impact and Folio (T1) Recycled paper and vegetable inks used throughout. Got your seedy kicks now?
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MEATMAGAZINE OFFICIALLY ENDORSES COMPETITIVE EATING
CONTRIBUTIONS FROM FAT BOYS AND FATTER GIRLS INCLUDING MIKEY ‘ROLLS N FOLDS’ LEAR / GIRLI ‘DOUGHNUT PUNCHER’ LEWIS DOM ‘THE DOUGHNUT’ CEGLOWSKI / JAMES ‘ALL IN’ LEWIS / ED ‘EATBOT’ SPEYER / FELIX ‘FE FI FO FUCK YA’LL’ HOBSON / STEPHEN ‘NO
WIN NO FEEN’ FEENEY / CHRISTOPHER ‘SQUIRREL NUTCASE’ LONGDEN / PETE ‘WHERE’S MY INSULIN INJECTION?’ LAWRENCE / MARK HUDSON / NICK HAYES / STUART KOLAKOVIC / DAVE GOO / RICHARD COWDRY / JAMES PALLISTER / ROBERT WRINGHAM / JESS
WILSON / NICO HINES / RENKO HEUER / LEIGH PEARSON / MADELEINE MACRAE / NAOMI WOOD / THE GZA / GAVIN WEBSTER / RYAN TODD / CLIVE TOTMAN / AND THE MORBIDLY OBESE LIZZIE CAPON. MEAT MAGAZINE, FEEL THE GIRTH.
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