So, I’m still recovering from my experience on BBC 5 Live’s
Richard Bacon show last Thursday (available to listen to for four more days on http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007lb08) Supposedly, it was to debate the issue ‘We’re all
bisexual- yes or no’. I should have had alarm bells ringing when the producer called beforehand to ask me ‘what percentage’ of people I thought were bisexual. I told his I didn’t go for such a simplistic line and that I was more into
Dr Kinsey’s famous Kinsey Scale, invented in the 1940s with 0 being ‘exclusively heterosexual’ and 6 being ‘exclusively homosexual’.
‘Yes but what percentage of people would you say are bisexual!’ the producer’s hysterical Northern Irish toned screeched down the line as if he hadn’t heard what I’d just said.
I should have told him then to bog off and go get a job with The Sun but the appearance fee was £75.00 and seeing as I haven’t paid anything into my bank since May I thought I’d better do it. This, by the way, illustrates the funny old rocky terrain in the life of a writer. Two years ago I was complaining about having to report on
Karl Lagerfeld’s party at Nobu for Harper’s Bazaar for £750.00. It was a cushy gig I had going for a whole year- I’d sit in Sitges writing my novel and then once a month I’d call up Frances, the editor’s secretary who used to be sent off to do the party reporting and I’d ask her something like, ‘So Frances, I’m assuming it was the usual dullness. Did
Mickey Rourke say anything good?’ Then I’d write the party up as if I’d been to it (take it from me: once you’ve been to one party you’ve been to them all.)
Anyway, that journo gig, like all good journo gigs, came to an end and now here I was with the choice of A) going on the dole (they pay £60 a week AND your rent and my musician friend, Belle, says that once you get over the psychological thing it’s fine. And Britain is so namby pamby that you don’t even have to get a job).
B) going on some lame BBC radio call-in show that starts at midnight and anyone knows that most blokes who call up late-night radio shows about bisexuality are just after seedy lesbo info.
But still, I went for B because I thought I might be able to contact that elusive 13-year old girl in the middle of
Wales who is worrying that she doesn’t find boys attractive (bisexuality is a bollocks subject to talk about because all anyone is interested in is the pussy-munching side of the concept) and she might be comforted to hear that she’s not a freak. And I also did it because it’s always a big ego trip to be on national radio.
So there you go. I was really asking for it. It turned out to be even worse than I’d expected. The presenter, Richard Bacon was apparently too full of his
suburban pretty-boy looks to even greet me as I entered the studio which also contained a ‘bubbly’ female vicar, a sour-faced, lank-haired blonde Richard’s side-kick who was obviously fiercely ambitious (but why would people be ambitious in radio? Do they hope one day to read news about
Swine Flu to 1 million listeners, as opposed to 20- as appeared to be the audience of this show?) Then there were 2 other bisexual experts down the lines. When I arrived at the BBC studios in Shepherd’s Bush, the Northern Irish producer bloke said there’d been a mix up with the taxis and so the other guests hadn’t been able to make it (number two alarm bell which should have gone off…). One of the down-the-phone bisexual experts was some worthy type from the Bisexual League or something who kept talking about help lines you could contact. He sounded like a right
Walter The Softee. I thought maybe he was a gay bisexual ie a fag who’s teamed up with a chick just because he wants to have babies. The other speaker was some chick who reckoned everyone was bisexual even though she herself had never had a lesbian relationship. This, I said to Bacon, was like those T-Total restaurant critics. Ie you can’t do the job properly unless you go the whole way…
At one point I did manage to get in the fact that the first time I thought I might not be exclusively lesbian was the night I went to the Way Out club in east London and saw a cute guy in a red dress with massive cleavage and I thought, ‘How sexy
a man with tits and a dick’. Suburban Richard Bacon looked like his eyes were about to pop out of his head and just for the benefit of the Northern Irish man who’d said as he led me to the studio, ‘no swearing, now’, I added again, ‘Yeah, a man with tits and a dick, very sexy’. Bacon then regained his senses and started to sound angry whereupon I sounded even angrier and said, the show was lame because how come they got shocked by sexuality stuff when nobody got shocked by that war drivel they’re always going on about on the radio, TV and in every paper you read.
What a bunch of cowardly, mortgage-paying media types they were, I thought as I got the train down the Essex this weekend to go visit my mother for her 70th birthday. But more horrible hypocrisy and antediluvian gender politics were in store for me last night when we watched
Strictly Come Dancing. I have only ever watched clips of this show before but as I watched the parade of glittering male and female dancers last night, it became clear that the biggest crime (from the judges’ point of view- especially that old bloke called Len) was for women not to be ‘feminine’ and the biggest crime for men was not to be ‘masculine’ - even though most of the male dancers on this show are big batty boys and how must it feel to have to swallow that kind of shit all the time? Not that I want to stick up too much for the gayboys- at least there were 2 of them on the panel. Naturally, no woman on the show was over 30 whereas two of the main men on the show were 60 and 70 plus.
Sometimes I wish I didn’t notice things like this. That I could think something like, ‘oh well, it’s only a TV show.’ Actually, I've noticed people are saying bland things like this more and more- especially my formerly political friends from Cambridge who have now got kids and proper jobs and are too knackered to be angry any more.
On a plus point,
my mum’s 70th birthday was really cute. It was a surprise visit to
Essex that I made. I hid behind a table and then popped up when my mum came into the house and she cried and I cried and we hugged each other and I felt that intense closeness that I haven't felt since I was a child and I felt hugely lucky that we were both around to do this. So it was worth doing the crummy Richard Bacon show to get the train fare to come. That’s the thing I’ve learned about life. People like my mum and Dad will watch Strictly Come Dancing and take in all that horrific gender politics and yet they’re still nice people. Even people like
Bernard Manning, I still have good memories of ie the day he came into my Dad’s fish and chip shop on my 12th birthday for
double cod, chips and peas and left me and 87 pence tip. When I was at Cambridge as an undergraduate and i told someone this story, they frowned as if I shouldn’t dare mention such an occurrence- but on some levels I got on well with Bernard Manning. I mean, if you were falling into a burning
chip fryer, he’d definitely try and pull you out, even though you wouldn’t necessarily want to get stuck with him at home of a Saturday night. (This same Cambridge person also told me off once for waving at
Shirley Williams when she was doing the rounds on an open-top bus when the what were they called? The Social Democrat party? Late 80s…Well, those ones- when they’d just been formed. I waved because I thought she looked lonely up there and none of that miserable
Socialist Worker’s Party lot was waving at her at all).
I thought the Socialist Workers Party lot were lame. They were the ones who blocked
Prince Edward’s way when he was trying to get into the halls of residence on his first day at my college- Jesus - and had placards saying things like ‘Down with Prince Edward.’ Lame. I ended up having a room above his in the modern block North Court- which was so badly designed that if you went onto the balcony you could see the people in the rooms below you having showers. That’s when I first realised he was seriously balding, poor bloke, and he was only in his early 20s. Naturally, I couldn’t tell anyone that I felt sorry for him.
Here’s a pic of ma in the upper gallery at a 15th century hotel in Lavenham in Suffolk called The Swan.

We had a cream tea here at The Swan which was good but why oh why do hotels
skimp on things like
jam when it’s not that expensive to give the punters a bit more. Ma said it was the best birthday she ever had. Her favourite birthday cake as a kid in the 1940s was when her mother used to divide the mixture into 3 bowls and then add colouring to each bowl and then you’d mix it all together for a
marble effect cake. There’s also some game where her mother made a tower of flour with a fruit pastel on top and each kid had to take a spoonful of four away from the tower until the pastel fell off and then kid who did that had to pick it up with their mouth…
Sounds like a good game for London fashion week which starts tonight although, ha, ha, they probably wouldn’t use flour…