The vintage photo above (click on it for a larger view) was originally taken by me as part of a school geography project on the River Thames, way back in 1981. You can see Erith Police Station - when it still was a police station, and not a seedy and badly converted bunch of apartments as it is nowadays. Next to it are some buildings that were a remnant of the old Erith - they are boarded up in the photo; not too long afterwards they were demolished to make way for sheltered housing. I came across the photo whilst going through a huge pile of photographs whilst clearing out a cupboard in my Mum's house some years ago. Nearly all of the shots were consigned to the bin. A few choice ones I have kept, and may share a couple with you online in the next few weeks. Unfortunately the rest of the geography project photos of Erith have disappeared - I was hoping to be able to archive them, but sadly this is not going to be the case.
For many years Erith has had awful P.R – pretty much since the original town centre was demolished in 1966 to make way for the much hated 1970’s concrete shopping centre monstrosity (that I recall as a child always smelled of a mix of Jeyes Fluid and stale wee) Erith has had a reputation as somewhere that you lived because you had to, not because you wanted to. This seems to have been crystallised in an oft told joke by the late Erith – born comedienne Linda Smith – “Erith isn't twinned with anywhere, but it does have a mutual suicide pact with Dagenham”. I feel that this joke has unfortunately done more to harm the reputation of the town than any single other thing. I feel that relatively more affordable housing prices may be the initial motivation for outsiders moving in to the new housing that is springing up all over the town, but in time the newcomers may well start appreciating the place for the more intangible things it offers – where else within a half hour train journey of central London could you see the classic “Big Sky” – an Erith trade mark – being able to see from horizon to horizon? I have historically had talks with a couple of very prestigious economists whose professional view is that Erith is on the brink of a new time of prosperity, and that “it could well become the next Hoxton”. Whilst time will tell, it is an intriguing possibility. What do you think? Is Erith on the edge of a boom, or would you resent the area becoming “gentrified”? Email me at hugh.neal@gmail.com.
There are fears that the Government’s drive to increase electric vehicle (EV) ownership is currently stalling, as motorists refuse to play ball. While sales from January to July 2024 rose by 10 percent this year, that compares to an increase of about 18 percent the previous year. Many consumers remain put off by high prices, as well as the perception that charging infrastructure is not good enough, according to recent research by Auto Trader magazine. Fundamentally, the biggest barrier to switching to an EV remains price. Many drivers like the idea of a more environmentally friendly car but, after years of being battered by inflationary pressures, they are less willing to spend big on one right now, according to Marc Palmer, head of insights at Auto Trader. This has been exacerbated by a number of factors. Rising interest rates have made the car finance deals that many people use to buy new cars more expensive, while the more affordable segment of the market has also nearly vanished. New car prices have increased by 40 percent since 2019, according to an Auto Trader report this year, driven by both higher price tags of EVs as well as decisions by brands including Ford to stop selling lower-priced models such as the best-selling Fiesta. It means that five years ago about 21 percent of new cars available were priced below £20,000 but only 4 percent are today, Palmer says. the malaise for new cars threatens to store up problems for the functioning of the rest of the car supply chain, including the used market. This is because of the impact on fleet operators, who are by far the biggest buyers of EVs. In the first seven months of 2024, these businesses – such as car leasing companies and rental firms – accounted for about 80 percent of EV sales, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT). Their business model typically involves owning a car for a few years and then reselling it. But EV values are depreciating so quickly that it is putting many fleet operators under serious pressure. Two years ago, the average EV would be expected to depreciate by 40 percent over a three-year period and retain 60 percent of its initial value, according to data from the British Vehicle Rental and Leasing Association (BVRLA). Now, they are depreciating by around 65 percent and retaining just 35 percent of that value – and the decline is continuing to get worse. It prompted Gerry Keaney, the chief executive of the BVRLA, to warn in July: “The used car market for EVs is, I hesitate to say, very close to what any economist would call market failure.”
This month marks the 45th anniversary of the first publication of the anarchic and influential Viz Comic. Viz is a British adult comic magazine founded in 1979 by Chris Donald. It parodies British comics of the post-war period, notably The Beano and The Dandy, but with extensive profanity, toilet humour, black comedy, and surreal humour. It also sends up tabloid newspapers, with mockeries of articles and letters pages. It features parody competitions and advertisements for overpriced 'limited edition' tat, as well as obsessions with half-forgotten kitsch celebrities from the 1960s to the 1980s, such as Shakin' Stevens and Rodney Bewes. Occasionally, it satirises current affairs and politicians, but it has no particular political standpoint. The comic was started in Newcastle upon Tyne in December 1979 by Chris Donald, who produced the comic from his bedroom in his parents' Jesmond home with help from his brother Simon and friend Jim Brownlow. Donald himself cannot remember exactly where the name of the magazine comes from. The most he can remember is: at the time, he needed to come up with a proper name for it, and he considered the word "Viz" a very easy word to write/remember, as it consisted of three letters which are easily made with straight lines. In 1985, a deal was signed with Virgin Books to publish the comic nationally every two months, starting with the 13th issue, dated August 1985. In 1987, the Virgin director responsible for Viz, John Brown, set up his own publishing company, John Brown Publishing, to handle Viz. Sales exceeded a million by the end of 1989, making Viz for a time one of the biggest-selling magazines in the country. Many Viz characters have featured in long-running strips, becoming well known in their own right, including spin-off cartoons. Characters often have rhyming or humorous taglines, such as Roger Mellie, the Man on the Telly; Nobby's Piles; Johnny Fartpants; Buster Gonad; Sid the Sexist; Sweary Mary or Finbarr Saunders and his Double Entendres. Some are aimed upwards, parodying the upper-middle classes and elites, such as the pseudo-leftist but privileged 'Student Grant', 'Nanny No Dumps' and the hypocritical Tory MP 'Baxter Basics', named after John Major's "Back to Basics" speech. In addition to this, the comic also contains plenty of 'in jokes' referring to people and places in and around Newcastle upon Tyne. The comic also prints regular satirical pastiches of typical tabloid and local media news stories, one such story revolved around a man who won an inconsequential amount of money on the football pools, and began living an inordinately lavish lifestyle ("I bought the wife a new cover for her ironing board" being one such example of his largesse), which collapsed when the money inevitably ran out, much to his chagrin ("I wish I'd never set eyes on the money"). A long-running segment has been the Top Tips, reader-submitted suggestions which are a parody of similar sections found in women's magazines offering domestic and everyday tips to make life easier. In Viz, naturally, they are always absurd, impractical or ludicrous: - "Why waste money on expensive binoculars? Simply stand closer to the object you wish to observe." "To stop blue tits pecking at your milk bottles, don't buy any." "Dead moths make ideal hang-gliders for woodlice." I have been a regular reader and subscriber to Viz for many years. Long may it continue. Comments to me at hugh.neal@gmail.com.
The end video this week is a short piece on the history of the former Regal Cinema in Bexleyheath Broadway. It was located where the large Asda supermarket now stands. Comments and feedback as usual to me at hugh.neal@gmail.com.
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