Because he's at it again:
The singer and activist Bob Geldof (Ed: Surely that's the wrong way round..?) has launched an impassioned defence of his lifetime's charitable work, claiming he has used his fame to persuade world leaders to take global poverty seriously and mocking anti-poverty demonstrators as "wankers dressed as clowns".Ahhh, bless.
His comments were penned in a 6,000-word letter to the director of a documentary that makes stinging and, Geldof believes, entirely unjustified criticisms of his rock concert campaigns.Thou shalt not mock a rock star!
In an attempt to persuade the director to retract the allegations from the film, which will be broadcast next week, Geldof wrote a meandering and at times emotional explanation of his work.Heh. 'Meandering and at times emotional' being editor's shorthand for 'Gather round, folks! We got a live one here!'.
In the letter, seen by the Guardian, Geldof claimed to have had significant influence over world leaders, including Tony Blair, in the run-up to the 2005 G8 summit, and contrasted the achievements of his Live 8 campaign with the global coalition of anti-poverty campaigners, which he characterised as "a bit lame" and almost entirely ineffectual.Well, quite, because Live Aid eliminated poverty forever, whereas the anti-glo...
What's that? It didn't? That can't be right, surely?
Claiming that "all that the combined lobbying might of the total NGO community" failed to ignite public opinion over global poverty, Geldof drew attention to the powerful impact of the Live 8 concerts, which were televised simultaneously to audiences around the world. "They are the vast billions watching," he said. "Brought together around the electric hearth of the TV or computer screen by the Pied Pipers of Rock 'n Roll."Yes, it's a complete mystery why a concert featuring world-famous rock stars drew a bigger global audience than some politicians gathering to eat canapes and discuss the political situation in Africa. Who'd have thunk it?
...Geldof is understood to have been so riled by what he considers the "untruthful and wrong" claims in the film that he wrote to its director, Chris Atkins.That's hardly surprising, is it? An earnest documentary on politics from the guy who made 'Four Weddings and a Funeral' and 'Love Actually', before going on to the dizzy, Oscar-quality material of 'Mr Bean's Holiday' and 'The Boat That Rocked', or Jonathan Ross, who might say something inappropriate on live TV and bring in audience figures that will go through the roof?
A source close to Geldof said he was "not surprised" Atkins chose to ignore his request for the letter not to be made public. It contains a reference to some NGOs as "boring, futile and adolescent" and takes a swipe at the BBC, which Geldof said declined to show films about poverty produced by his friend, Richard Curtis. "Instead we had Jonathan Ross camping around in a yellow suit talking bollocks."
That's a puzzle for a prime-time broadcaster, Bob, I'm sure you'd agree...
He vigorously defended the 1980s Band-Aid initiative to raise funds for starving Ethiopians, though acknowledged his difficulty in dealing with the country's brutal dictator, Mengistu.I'm going to break the habit of a lifetime, and say that that was actually a good thing.
"I approached him and berated him on his "re-settlement" policy. I told him it was mass murder. He simply stared at me. Luckily he decided not to shoot me."
Because Bob Geldof is rapidly becoming something of a national icon. Rather like the loony old uncle who is forever launching into rants about his favourite hobby horse in spectacularly inappropriate settings, like the middle of a funeral. And writing interminable letters in green ink to his local newspaper, that have all the editorial staff weeping into their morning coffee with mirth.
You know he's a total embarrassment to the family and to himself, but you can't help feeling that life is just that little bit less exciting and unpredictable on the day when the doctors finally arrive with the syringe of Thorazine and the butterfly nets...
14 comments:
yes Julia, comedian would be a better description for Bob rather than singer, activist or celebrity.
What's wrong with "cunt"?
well he hasn't got one for a start and it's bit negative, having said that I not sure he is a good comedian. Beauty, as they say is in the eye.....
my ex wife used to tell me she saved the description, cunt, for very special people. Thankfully she used the term in court when I divorced her and that didn’t go down well with anyone, except me rather unsurprisingly.
btw credit to Obnoxio's Utube post his blog re B'stard and the Blairs, classic and v funny, thank you.
Ah yes, the 'He meant well' defence. I'd say Obo has it right, but doubled, redoubled and vulnerable.
OK 2 to 1, cunt it is then ;)
now this singer on the other hand has the right idea:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/8601479.stm
either this is a case of paranoid Americans thinking that the sight of naked flesh will send them and thier chiiiiildren to eternal damnation or a very well choreographed publicity stunt. Either way its virtually impossible for women in this country to fall foul of public indecency laws simply because their genitals are inside so walking around naked does not display them. In conclusion women should walk around naked all the time for the benefit of mankind. Loved the comment from the police about having a statement that allowed them to pursue charges, FAIL, it also allowed them to arrest the complainant for wasting police time.
note on women walking around naked, yes espicaily when its cold, tends to firm things up in my experience
"I coulda bin a contender, bejabbers".
Geldof is embarrassment personified.
Surely St Bob didn't get his retaliation in first?
""wankers dressed as clowns"."
Bob Geldof is rapidly becoming something of a national icon.
I was sure he was the only living person to have been beatified?
"...comedian would be a better description for Bob rather than singer, activist or celebrity."
He never used to make me laugh so much..
"What's wrong with "cunt"?"
You're a man of few (though highly appropriate) words, Obo.. ;)
"...or a very well choreographed publicity stunt."
These days, it always pays to bet on the latter...
"I was sure he was the only living person to have been beatified?"
He's in the Holy Trinity with St Bono & St Sting, I think..
Did Bob not stop to think that maybe we just don't give a shit?
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