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11th September 2013: The world's gone mad and I'm the only one who knows
13th August 2013: Black is white. Fact. End of.
11th August 2013: Electric cars, not as green as they're painted?
18th June 2013: Wrinklies unite, you have nothing to lose but your walking frames!
17th May 2013: Some actual FACTS about climate change (for a change) from actual scientists ...
10th May 2013: An article about that poison gas, carbon dioxide, and other scientific facts (not) ...
10th May 2013: We need to see past the sex and look at the crimes: is justice being served?
8th May 2013: So, who would you trust to treat your haemorrhoids, Theresa May?
8th May 2013: Why should citizens in the 21st Century fear the law so much?
30th April 2013: What the GOS says today, the rest of the world realises tomorrow ...
30th April 2013: You couldn't make it up, could you? Luckily you don't need to ...
29th April 2013: a vote for NONE OF THE ABOVE, because THE ABOVE are crap ...
28th April 2013: what goes around, comes around?
19th April 2013: everyone's a victim these days ...
10th April 2013: Thatcher is dead; long live Thatcher!
8th April 2013: Poor people are such a nuisance. Just give them loads of money and they'll go away ...
26th March 2013: Censorship is alive and well and coming for you ...
25th March 2013: Just do your job properly, is that too much to ask?
25th March 2013: So, what do you think caused your heterosexuality?
20th March 2013: Feminists - puritans, hypocrites or just plain stupid?
18th March 2013: How Nazi Germany paved the way for modern governance?
13th March 2013: Time we all grew up and lived in the real world ...
12th March 2013: Hindenburg crash mystery solved? - don't you believe it!
6th March 2013: Is this the real GOS?
5th March 2013: All that's wrong with taxes
25th February 2013: The self-seeking MP who is trying to bring Britain down ...
24th February 2013: Why can't newspapers just tell the truth?
22nd February 2013: Trial by jury - a radical proposal
13th February 2013: A little verse for two very old people ...
6th February 2013: It's not us after all, it's worms
6th February 2013: Now here's a powerful argument FOR gay marriage ...
4th February 2013: There's no such thing as equality because we're not all the same ...
28th January 2013: Global Warming isn't over - IT'S HIDING!
25th January 2013: Global Warmers: mad, bad and dangerous to know ...
25th January 2013: Bullying ego-trippers, not animal lovers ...
19th January 2013: We STILL haven't got our heads straight about gays ...
16th January 2013: Bullying ego-trippers, not animal lovers ...
11th January 2013: What it's like being English ...
7th January 2013: Bleat, bleat, if it saves the life of just one child ...
7th January 2013: How best to put it? 'Up yours, Argentina'?
7th January 2013: Chucking even more of other people's money around ...
6th January 2013: Chucking other people's money around ...
30th December 2012: The BBC is just crap, basically ...
30th December 2012: We mourn the passing of a genuine Grumpy Old Sod ...
30th December 2012: How an official body sets out to ruin Christmas ...
16th December 2012: Why should we pardon Alan Turing when he did nothing wrong?
15th December 2012: When will social workers face up to their REAL responsibility?
15th December 2012: Unfair trading by a firm in Bognor Regis ...
14th December 2012: Now the company that sells your data is pretending to act as watchdog ...
7th December 2012: There's a war between cars and bikes, apparently, and  most of us never noticed!
26th November 2012: The bottom line - social workers are just plain stupid ...
20th November 2012: So, David Eyke was right all along, then?
15th November 2012: MPs don't mind dishing it out, but when it's them in the firing line ...
14th November 2012: The BBC has a policy, it seems, about which truths it wants to tell ...
12th November 2012: Big Brother, coming to a school near you ...
9th November 2012: Yet another celebrity who thinks, like Jimmy Saville, that he can behave just as he likes because he's famous ...
5th November 2012: Whose roads are they, anyway? After all, we paid for them ...
7th May 2012: How politicians could end droughts at a stroke if they chose ...
6th May 2012: The BBC, still determined to keep us in a fog of ignorance ...
2nd May 2012: A sense of proportion lacking?
24th April 2012: Told you so, told you so, told you so ...
15th April 2012: Aah, sweet ickle polar bears in danger, aah ...
15th April 2012: An open letter to Anglian Water ...
30th March 2012: Now they want to cure us if we don't believe their lies ...
28th February 2012: Just how useful is a degree? Not very.
27th February 2012: ... so many ways to die ...
15th February 2012: DO go to Jamaica because you definitely WON'T get murdered with a machete. Ms Fox says so ...
31st January 2012: We don't make anything any more
27th January 2012: There's always a word for it, they say, and if there isn't we'll invent one
26th January 2012: Literary criticism on GOS? How posh!
12th December 2011: Plain speaking by a scientist about the global warming fraud
9th December 2011: Who trusts scientists? Apart from the BBC, of course?
7th December 2011: All in all, not a good week for British justice ...
9th November 2011: Well what d'you know, the law really IS a bit of an ass ...

 

 
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In the Grumpy Old House this article by Sam Leith went down rather well ...
 
'Whassup mumble mumble. Dasheeeyid mutter mutter. On da corner mumble mumble Omar mumble. McNulty, mumble mutter. Shee-yid.'
 
So runs, to my straining ears, the average line of dialogue between the characters in the BBC's latest gritty drama series The Wire. David Simon's drama of Baltimore's criminal underworld is one of the most critically admired pieces of television in the history of the medium. Yet, as anyone who has watched it will know, it is all but impossible to make out a word of what anybody in it is saying.
 
Most people I know - and these are people in their mid-30s - prefer to watch The Wire with the subtitles switched on.
 
But it's not just the mumbled patois of the Baltimore dealers, and it's not just The Wire. A whole range of programmes on modern television - from documentaries and game shows to comedies and drama - suffer from what I think of as 'sonic squelch'. People have problems with programmes that deploy music heavily to help give a sense of time to the action - the BBC's Ashes To Ashes is a case in point. Dialogue is often drowned out by scene-setting songs from the Eighties, such as ones by The Stranglers and Ultravox.
 
Now, after an approach from the campaign group Voice Of The Listener And Viewer, BBC1's controller Jay Hunt has promised to look into the problem. She admitted: 'There are particular issues with background music that make certain programmes difficult for older viewers. It's massively important to that audience and is something that we are taking seriously.'
 
The BBC's decision to pay attention to this issue (described by the experts as 'ambient audio') deserves our hearty - our deafening, if you like - applause. Let us hope that not only do they now listen to their viewers, but that they act on their recommendations.
 
There are good arguments to say that we are living through a golden age in television screenwriting: from America, complex and intelligent dramas and sitcoms such as Generation Kill, The West Wing, Seinfeld and even Friends; and from the UK, shows such as Spooks, Skins and Life On Mars snap and crackle with invention. Some of the best dialogue in the history of TV is also being produced: but the tragedy is that we can hear only one word of it in three.
 
The problem started, if you ask me, in the cinema. Today's blockbuster movies make so much of surround-sound that the dialogue is the least of the producers' interests.
 
John Cleese said recently that he had stopped going to the cinema because there was too much prominence given to sound effects. He said: 'No older person goes [to the movies] any more. It's harder for me to hear the dialogue than it was 20 or 30 years ago. . . The problem is that when they [the sound editors] mix movies now, they forget that the audiences have not heard the dialogue. They've heard the dialogue hundreds of times before and take it for granted.'
 
I couldn't agree more. For example, if you watched Dark Knight in the cinema last year you'll remember Heath Ledger struggling in vain to deliver his lines through a non-stop chain of ear-battering explosions and over-amplified musical score.
 
But how many times while watching telly, too, have you heard the punchline of a sitcom drowned in a cascade of canned laughter or - as irritating as a rustled crisp-packet - a torrent of over-amplified studio applause? How often have you misheard the crucial line of dialogue in a drama because the so- called 'background music' has galloped excitedly into the foreground? How often have you found yourself straining to understand lines mumbled out of the corner of a teenager's mouth into the turned-up collar of his coat while an express train thunders over the railway bridge under which he moodily shelters?
 
Such scenes are often defended in the name of 'realism' - but realism in art isn't about reproducing reality, it's about creating the impression of it. In actual reality, after all, you'd be able to grab the little scruff by his earlobe, lean down and shout: 'WILL YOU BLOODY SPEAK UP?'
 
I can already hear the objections, though, from the directors and sound-mixers who fear their artistic visions will be compromised by audibility. 'Turn it up, Grandad,' they will say. 'It's not our fault you're as deaf as a post.' Well, actually, it is their fault for not understanding that the hearing of us all deteriorates as we get older, and the fact is that, whether we like it or not, Britain has an ageing population.
 
As I say, it's sad to acknowledge the deterioration of our hearing: but at least most of us do acknowledge it. Is it so unreasonable to ask the makers of the television programmes we watch to acknowledge it, too? The makers of film and TV have a duty to make their dialogue audible to the elderly: and for the purposes of this discussion, 'the elderly' doesn't just include me - at the pensionable age of 35 - but everyone past his or her early 20s.
 
Regarding the case of the BBC, it is a duty owed to their customers and employers. The BBC are, let us not forget, public servants - and the vast bulk of their funds are provided by people older and deafer than even me. In the case of commercial broadcasters, it is a duty they owe to themselves. As Richard Ingrams - founder of The Oldie magazine - has long pointed out, advertisers obsessively target teenagers and twentysomethings, when the demographic with all the money is the over-40s.
 
There is a huge market there - and it's not going to watch your advertisements if they're embedded in a programme that it has long since turned off because it can't hear what anyone is saying.
 
Is it enough to leave this in the benign hands of Auntie and to the good sense of advertising executives? I wish it were so. But considering those two near-oxymoronic propositions - the benign hands of Auntie and the good sense of advertising executives - it may be a stretch. This problem needs invigilating. I propose a campaign to Stop The Sonic Squelch. If enough of us sign up, write in and make our voices heard, it won't be possible to ignore us.
 
Limits have already, rightly, been placed on how loud adverts are allowed to be compared to the surrounding programmes. Why should not the same be done for background noise compared to dialogue?
 
Our campaign slogan will be: 'Whassup mumble mumble. Dasheeeyid mutter mutter. On da corner mumble mumble Omar mumble. McNulty, mumble mutter. Shee-yid.'
 
And when we march in our millions on Television Centre, wearing it on our T-shirts, we will usher in a new age of audible television. Are you listening, out there?
 

 
The GOS says: I have to stick my oar in here, though. This is NOT entirely a problem of deafness. I experience this problem when watching television too, but in a hearing test three years ago I was found to have particularly acute hearing. Might be something to do with having been a musician in a previous life. In fact it's so acute that I avoid going to the cinema because the damn places can be so loud it causes me discomfort.
 
Obviously many older people do go a bit Mutt and Jeff, but what nobody tells you is that however good the hearing, the ability to discriminate deteriorates with age. Older people like myself are just less able to filter out the sounds they don't want to hear, and concentrate on those that they do want.
 
Young people can watch television and carry on a conversation simultaneously. I can't, and what's more I'm damned if I can see why I should try. So if I'm watching television, you can all bloody well shut up!

 

 
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