It can be truly said that barely more than a generation ago
you could tell a lot about a British family by how many buttons they had on
their TV set and what they did with them.
This was, of course, back in the days when in order to watch
a TV programme one had to switch on the set approximately 3 days in advance so
it could warm up and that in order to do you had to get up from your sofa,
walk across the room and press a switch (oh, the humanity!), bang the set a little and then wait.
By the time you had sat down again there would be the
beginnings of sound and then, shortly thereafter, there would be a steady
black-and-white picture.
Of course, in these days, there were only 4 buttons on
the telly – the on/off button and 3 channel buttons: none of which were ever
touched because, of course, there was only one channel that any right minded
British person would watch.
For most people owning those early boxes things started
going wrong when those additional buttons started being the home to programmes.
Obviously there was the BBC – that bastion of England, where radio presenters
wore dinner jackets and everyone spoke in a clipped Etonian accent: unless they
were interrupted by Winston Churchill saying something extremely patriotic.
Then later there was BBC 2 and already there were mumblings that perhaps this
was a channel too many.
When ITV came along with its adverts pumping their way into
your home, bringing soap operas and light entertainment in their wake there was
a lot of frowning and disapproving puffing on pipes being done across the land.
My own father can clearly remember watching ITV with his father’s disapproving
glare on his back: the second he glanced anywhere else my grandfather would
reach over and switch back to the only proper channel. In these days of course
there was no morning telly, broadcasting would stop around bedtime for children
and programs would stop entirely at midnight.
When Channel 4 and later Channel 5 came along forcing us to buy sets with extra buttons there was
practically a civil war.
It was whilst I was having a shave the other night that I found
myself thinking along these lines and remembering the old adverts for Remington
that were fronted by entrepreneur Victor Kiam with his 2 famous catchphrases “so
good I bought a company” and “shaves as close as a blade or your money back”
Now I have to admit that I am something of an infrequent
shaver - whereas growing up I was constantly told stories of ancestors who had
survived Ypes and never missed a day’s shave I am often known for going several
days without trimming the old face fuzz and generally only shave when it
becomes properly itchy. Additionally if I am poorly (i.e. cold) I may leave
this longer so as to truly feel well once the symptoms have started to pass.
This is because I truly feel there is something nice about a
really good shave that one has waited for – if you shave every day you can
begin to take this for granted, whereas if you wait a few days until the
stubble is annoying you and then have a really good, close pruning session your face
feels much more refreshed for it. Additionally about 12 years or so ago I went
over to shaving with a blaze and, aside from the inevitable cuts, I have never
looked back.
But even I, on those days when I finally do get round to
momentarily not looking like a vagabond or extremely cheap rate Pirates of the
Caribbean reject, cannot quite understand what it must have been like for
Victor when presented with this amazing piece of technology he didn’t merely
think “gosh this is quite good, I must thank my wife for her thoughtful gift” –
which most sane people would have done – but instead decided to go out and buy
an entire company.
It makes me wonder what kind of life he had lead up until
that point that he could be so amazed by a simple razor (always assuming she
didn’t buy him the Remington Fuzz Away for nasal hair removal) – and I can’t
help but wonder what his wife’s reaction was.
“Honey: I like that so much I’m going to go out and buy the
company!”
“Dammit: I knew I should have bought him slippers!”
Maybe we all need to pay more attention when using everyday
items, perhaps one of you out there reading this could, upon opening your next
tube of toothpaste, realise that this is the minty freshness that everyone
needs and become the next Victor Kiam?
Oh and by the way...I still rarely watch ITV...
We still have some standards here you know!
Oh and by the way...I still rarely watch ITV...
We still have some standards here you know!
3 comments:
I don't think there's much of a chance I'll be buying a company, no matter how pleased I am with their products.
I have the exact same theory about shaving my legs - ha!
And no, I am no entrepreneur - I'd rather just sit around & read blogs :)
Your commentaries regarding anything at all having to do with your life there is always fascinating to me. Who knew about the buttons corresponding to stations? As you know, I am a fan of the BBC, so that would be my worn-out button.
Never heard anyone speak about the joy of a shave after not having had one for a bit. Makes perfect sense. Willow just jumped up on my lap and my comment is, thus, interrupted and over!
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