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Souvy Sep 26th 2012 3:19 am

The Olympics effect
 
I wonder if anyone else has picked up on this.

I just got back from 10 days in the UK. It was my first visit in a year. I was quickly struck by how bloody nice everyone was being to each other. It wasn't like that last year. My colleagues in London told me that it was all down to the Olympics.

Did the event really have that much impact on people?

Auld Yin Sep 26th 2012 3:28 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 10301145)
I wonder if anyone else has picked up on this.

I just got back from 10 days in the UK. It was my first visit in a year. I was quickly struck by how bloody nice everyone was being to each other. It wasn't like that last year. My colleagues in London told me that it was all down to the Olympics.

Did the event really have that much impact on people?

Don't worry, they'll soon revert back to their old ways.

dbd33 Sep 26th 2012 3:29 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 10301145)
I wonder if anyone else has picked up on this.

I just got back from 10 days in the UK. It was my first visit in a year. I was quickly struck by how bloody nice everyone was being to each other. It wasn't like that last year. My colleagues in London told me that it was all down to the Olympics.

Did the event really have that much impact on people?

My informant complains that they put "a bloody shuttle boat stop right under our balcony, the boats were noisy" so, no, the entire population of London was not made happy and nice by the Olympics.

Souvy Sep 26th 2012 3:40 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 10301167)
My informant complains that they put "a bloody shuttle boat stop right under our balcony, the boats were noisy" so, no, the entire population of London was not made happy and nice by the Olympics.

Would this have been a relative of yours, by any chance?

dbd33 Sep 26th 2012 3:43 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 10301193)
Would this have been a relative of yours, by any chance?

Indeed. She was really quite grumpy about the Olympics, having been mildly inconvenienced and unable to obtain tickets.

Tangram Sep 26th 2012 3:58 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Auld Yin (Post 10301165)
Don't worry, they'll soon revert back to their old ways.

You can't revert back.... you can revert to ;)

Souvy Sep 26th 2012 4:00 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by dbd33 (Post 10301199)
Indeed. She was really quite grumpy about the Olympics, having been mildly inconvenienced and unable to obtain tickets.

I think my mob got quite a few tickets. One of the younger ones, a rather prim chap, went to the Greco-Roman wrestling. He was heard to remark that the audience appeared to be comprised largely of men. Bless.

bats Sep 26th 2012 4:08 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 10301235)
I think my mob got quite a few tickets. One of the younger ones, a rather prim chap, went to the Greco-Roman wrestling. He was heard to remark that the audience appeared to be comprised largely of men. Bless.

There were naked men wrestling? Were they covered in baby oil?

Atlantic Xpat Sep 26th 2012 4:11 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 
I too was back in Blighty recently...my fourth trip this year but first after the Olympics. Talking to colleagues in London, friends and family etc there does seem to have been an outpouring of general goodwill, positive thoughts & even a soupcon of national pride. I think it's to do with the natural British reserve about it all going to be an utter disaster - fuelled in part by the meedyah and then being pleasanty surprised that it went off rather well and doubly surprised at how well Team GB did.

How long this lasts, is of course, to be seen.

dbd33 Sep 26th 2012 4:26 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Souvy (Post 10301235)
I think my mob got quite a few tickets. One of the younger ones, a rather prim chap, went to the Greco-Roman wrestling. He was heard to remark that the audience appeared to be comprised largely of men. Bless.

I'd ask for clarification but, as always when not physically at work, she's buggered off to somewhere in Europe.

Souvy Sep 26th 2012 4:37 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat (Post 10301265)
I too was back in Blighty recently...my fourth trip this year but first after the Olympics. Talking to colleagues in London, friends and family etc there does seem to have been an outpouring of general goodwill, positive thoughts & even a soupcon of national pride. I think it's to do with the natural British reserve about it all going to be an utter disaster - fuelled in part by the meedyah and then being pleasanty surprised that it went off rather well and doubly surprised at how well Team GB did.

How long this lasts, is of course, to be seen.

There was a triffic cartoon in the Private Eye I bought while there. A spectator at the paralypics.

"Oi ref! Are you f*****g blind?"
"Yes"
"Oh. Sorry".

Auld Yin Sep 26th 2012 8:28 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Tangram (Post 10301230)
You can't revert back.... you can revert to ;)

Thank you for that and may I add you are just the educated presence this site needs........not.

Tangram Sep 27th 2012 2:08 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by Auld Yin (Post 10301682)
Thank you for that and may I add you are just the educated presence this site needs........not.

Lighten up AY, I did wink so it wasn't meant nastily.

geedee Sep 27th 2012 5:05 pm

Re: The Olympics effect
 
I was in town during the Paralympics... I was surprised how clean it looked. I mentioned it to a cabbie and he said they'd done a lot of work in the City.

Still, none of the staff in the hotel were English.....

mandymoochops Sep 27th 2012 5:40 pm

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by geedee (Post 10304025)
I was in town during the Paralympics... I was surprised how clean it looked. I mentioned it to a cabbie and he said they'd done a lot of work in the City.

Still, none of the staff in the hotel were English.....

That's probably because the "English" don't want to work. Whats the problem what nationality staff are as long as there are staff willing to work?

geedee Sep 28th 2012 4:01 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by mandymoochops (Post 10304048)
That's probably because the "English" don't want to work. Whats the problem what nationality staff are as long as there are staff willing to work?

Goodness me.... someone got out of bed on the wrong side this morning!!

mandymoochops Sep 28th 2012 4:14 am

Re: The Olympics effect
 

Originally Posted by geedee (Post 10304663)
Goodness me.... someone got out of bed on the wrong side this morning!!

Not really just stating fact. When I lived back in the UK I had a friend who owned care homes, he always had loads of jobs going and even though the local populous always complained about there being no work (I heard it all cos I ran a pub!) none of them would go and work in a job they deemed to be below them, so he employed lots of eastern europeans - and tbh he said that they worked dammned hard.


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