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Buses, Coaches,Trams & Trolleybus Recollections Scotland 1963 & 1964
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The Recollections seriesThe 66th volume in this growing series taking a nostalgic look at Britain's...
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From Moorlands to Highlands: A History of Harris & Miners and Brian Harris Transport
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This book follows the history and development of Brian Harris Transport Limited, the original red,...
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Rationale-Based Defences in Criminal Law
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PRAISE FOR THE BOOK "Despite the existing scholarly literature on criminal defences, many issues...
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Railway Stations
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From the architecturally significant to the most austere, railway stations of all shapes and sizes...
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A Companion to Friedrich Nietzsche: Life and Works
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Nietzsche looms over modern literature and thought; according to Gottfried Benn, "everything my...
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Goal!: A Cultural and Social History of Modern Football
Fabian Brondle and Christian Koller
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Goal! covers the history of the beautiful game from its origins in English public schools in the...
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Shuggie Bain
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It is 1981. Glasgow is dying and good families must grift to survive. Agnes Bain has always expected...
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Alex Kapranos recommended track Le Pastie de la Bourgeoisie (with Belle And Sebastian) by Belle & Sebastian in Push Barman to Open Old Wounds by Belle & Sebastian in Music (curated)
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Kirk Bage (1775 KP) rated James Acaster: Repertoire in TV
Aug 6, 2020 (Updated Aug 6, 2020)
Over the years I have seen most of the living greats at the art live, be it a full show or a smaller set at the legendary bullpit of Late and Live. Sad exceptions being Eddie Izzard and Dylan Moran, still on the bucket list. It has given me a pretty good eye for who is gonna make it big when they start out. I saw Jack Whitehall aged 16; Jimmy Carr before anyone knew who he was; and many others that have gone on to have decent TV and touring careers.
Having moved to Glasgow in recent years I started to see less comedy. Not that The Stand and other venues don’t have it going on, but because it just feels less of a thing outside of Edinburgh. So, when James Acaster came to my old place of work, the legendary Oran Mor, I booked tickets for myself, my daughter and her boyfriend in a heartbeat.
I had seen him do a lot of Mock The Week and a few other guest spots on TV, and thought from the start that this guy had something kinda special. The main good sign being that he made me laugh! A kind of blonder Jarvis Cocker, with the dress sense to match, he has a quirky, sleepy but cross delivery that is a total winner. He is very fast with an improvised moment, is very clever in his off kilter observations, and charmingly wanders into surreal tangents whenever possible. In other words, totally up my comedy avenue.
I was delighted to see that he had a new four part special on Netflix when I was recently surfing around old comedy shows I’ve seen half a dozen times. Repertoire is consecutive shows that work either alone, or payoff better as a whole, when early jokes get a back reference in a genius fashion. To explain why they are funny is not a thing I’m about to attempt. Comedy is so subjective; if it makes you laugh then it is good, if not… it might still be good, but not for you. You have to watch it to know.
So many highlights. At least three moments that made me have to pause it because I was laughing almost too much and in danger of passing out. Generally, you get a content knowing smile out of it, patting yourself on the back for getting his multi-layered intentions. Some things are just weird or hilarious, but often there is an intelligent point being made on the sly. When the two combine, I find him one of the best around for quality of writing and delivery.
As a side note, in part 3 of Repertoire he makes reference to a recent nightmare gig, when the entire front row of a Glasgow show kicked off and threw verbal abuse at him. That was the show we were at! He handled it remarkably well, turning the final portion of the show into an improv about that, chucked the planned material away. It isn’t every stand-up that can handle hecklers that well. Total kudos, Mr Acaster.
Recommended big time.
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The Health Gap: The Challenge of an Unequal World
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There are dramatic differences in health between countries and within countries. But this is not a...