It occurred to me today that my Melvyn Bragg impersonation will probably never again be fully appreciated. I live in a country where he’s not widely known. Or at all. My wife looks askance at me when I add an adenoidally compressed Braggsian commentary when feeding the dogs, unaware of its satiric nuance. Similarly, the number of requests for me to perform “Anji”, or the first few bars of “Oh Well Part 1”, on guitar have fallen to their lowest ever for many years now. And who will gasp anew in amazement at my uncannily realistic Owl Hoot, produced with just my cupped hands?
It is nothing short of tragic that these finely-honed life skills have no value in today’s couldn’t-care-less world. Perhaps you have specialised abilities that will likely never be called upon? Why not join me in compiling a useful Skills Bank, right here on this lively on-line community? Plenty of reasons. But join in anyway.
I’m sure some insufferable know-all will link to an identical thread started by nbweeble563 back in 84. (Dai, probably. Or Moose.)
Obsolete? I’ll give you obsolete! I am a gifted mimic and I coasted through my young adulthood, basking in the warm golden sunshine of astonished adulation with my best and most uncanny impressions; namely Rolf Harris and Jimmy Savile. All I have left is Terry Christian but this had a limited audience even in the early 90s.
Hmm. Terry Christian is Platinum material, the other two …
Impressions is it? I can still do a range of brilliant impressions of my teachers at school.
“Come along now, JC” – that’s ‘Ibbo’ – Mr Ibbertson, our head teacher. He was from West Yorkshire and wore a green tank top. Within months of arriving in the village he’d organised a barn dance in the village hall. In Midsomer Murders he’d have been done in by the end of part 2.
I’ve tried taking my act around the clubs, it turns out these people are not nationally famous.
I can touch my nose with my tongue. Strangely enough, the only person impressed by this was my five year-old grandson.
Virtually all my life I have interjected song lyrics into conversations
“There must be”……… “somewhere out of here?”
“Excuse me”……”while I kiss the sky?”
“My mother”….”likes shortenin’, shortenin’?”
Strangely enough, this skill 99.87% of the time only gets puzzled looks.
I can play the William Tell Overture simply by tapping my fingers on my cheeks whilst making strange shapes with my mouth.
Strangely enough, the only person impressed by this was Willie Mathers back in 1956
I used to be able to play Eine Kleine Nachtmusik by flicking my school bus pass against my teeth, but haven’t had a go at it for a while. Perhaps there’s a use for my redundant Blockbusters membership card.
You need to introduce me to Willie Mathers. Oddly enough, that was the first – well, only, actually – thing that I can do that came to mind when I saw this thread, only no one has ever been impressed.
Was this a thing at some point in the seventies? Where did we get the idea to even try it from? Did someone do it on Crackerjack or something?
I was taught by Alan McRae who is now Head of the Scottish FA. I wonder if, when the Board is discussing the national team’s latest defeat, he says ” Let’s not be so sad, I’ll just play you a wee tune. A one, a two…”
I can touch my nose with my tongue, too. And can put the tip into a nostril. Too much info…
I can do the Vulcan salute.
Why, so can I! Both hands!! At the same time!!!
Kids today, they don’t appreciate the old artisanal skills…
I can do the Spock Touch. It doesn’t actually work, but I can do it.
Playing God Save The Queen with armpit farts
A skill unrecognised- or ignored- by the One Show earlier this month
Traditional or Pistols?
Both – my armpit fart talent knows no bounds.
Pachelbels Canon is a bit of a stretch though
Well I never.
I can also do a Melvyn Bragg impression. Specifically the version of him lampooned by the original Spitting Image team decades ago. They made him sound like he had a permanent head cold. I’ll do it for you now;
‘Gurd ebening. And on der Saath Bank sherr t’naaght…’
Also I can do ‘The Kurgan’ out of Highlander (a fillum). One line of dialogue only though. The rumble I have to make at the back of my throat sometimes activates my Sick Trigger and I gag. This is me doing it now;
‘Ramirez! So. That was not your woman…?’
I can also roll my tongue into a tube. As in to the shape of a tube. Not an actual external third party tube.
Several decades of human existence not wasted, I think you’ll find.
Shove ha’penny. Can you find a ha-penny now? Can you bugger.
Kids today, no interest in craftsmanship, grumble (cont’d pg 94)
I am quite good at unmangling chewed-up cassette tapes. I used to be, anyway.
I still have the aluminium editing block in a box somewhere, and plenty of razor blades, but I bet the special sticky tape has gummed up by now.
Speaking of which, when’s the last time you saw a mangled tape in a hedge?
Or a mucky book.
VT Time Code, lining up multiple slide projectors, 3 gun video projectors: all obsolete but they were every day equipment and skills years ago. It’s all digital now and much better for it.
Ooh you are awful but I like you. Blank looks all round. Dick Emery like many a wildly popular prime time light entertainment show did not entertain me or make me laugh. Bafflingly successful. Dress a man up in women’s clothes and suddenly it’s hilarious, supposedly.
Doing that thing with your legs with your hands on your knees so they move in and out as if they swap places in a mind blowing illusion. It was a thing. Now not so much.
Derek Griffiths was the master of the “I’m Swapping my Knees” manoeuvre.
I can mould a recognisable Superman’s leg from any suitable material given an idle minute to fill – plasticine, modelling clay, blu tack or leftover dough. For any Superman aficionados, it’s in the style of Neal Adams version with the leg in a vertical position as in take off with just the balls of the foot and toes touching the ground. (For 2000AD fans, think peak Ron Smith era Judge Dredd). I leave them around the house as I tidy up after my kids like the origami unicorn in Blade Runner. They are usually scrunched up rather than treasured as the works of art they truly are.
The winner, I think.
A legend.
It might be my favourite comment this year.
Jeepers. I feel I’ll have to try and post a picture of one now…
Thanks Lads.
Here’s one I made earlier, about 20 years ago. Not just a leg but the whole body and a cloak to give a 3D effect. The weight at the other end is a bullet.
What do you take us for? We weren’t born yesterday, y’know. This is a DEAD LEAF what you found on the Nature Walk.
It was your brother who could play blow football with his back passage, n’est-ce pas?
Always the gentleman was Henry.
Voila!
Bloody hell!
The Macca Set creation….
Advanced, forthright, signifficant.
My best impression is that of a Spitfire Mk.V doing a victory roll at 500 feet over Kent in the summer of 1940. Even Rolls Royce engineers find it hard to distinguish from the real thing. For the encore I can do the sound of six Browning .303 machine guns at full chat at an altitude of 2,000ft, as heard from a village green at about 3pm on a sunny afternoon, closely followed by the distinctive sound of a Messerschmitt BF109E ploughing into a field about half a mile away at a speed approaching 450mph with an impact angle of around 85 degrees to the horizontal. I usually sign off with a cheery shout of, “Take that, Fritz!”.
“Even Rolls Royce engineers find it hard to distinguish from the real thing.” They’re just being nice to you, Foxy. I read about it in the Rolls Royce Engineers Distinguishing Things Newsletter.
My much underused skill is pointing out to anybody who cares that the Spitfire V didn’t enter RAF service until 1941. How are your impressions of Spitfire I and II? Achtung Spitfeuer indeed!
There’s always one, isn’t there?
Your Cherrrman accent showed there, Foxy! Or should I say – Fritz????? HANDE HOCH!
Arrrrrrrrg Gott in Himmel!!
For you, Herr Bartlett, ze vor iss over.
If you ever need somebody to program your video recorder (Betamax preferred) so that it records two weeks’ worth of programmes over Christmas, my rates are very reasonable. I only require one pristine copy of the double-issue Radio Times – never, ever the TV Times – fresh from the shop, and several hours to consider exactly what will be worth taping (I may listen to your opinions about different shows, but I think we’ll both agree that I’m right in the end).
I’ve been poised by the phone, ready to solve a video-programming emergency, but demand has definitely slackened off. (I blame Brexit or something.)
This is indeed a Platinum Skillset. Well done you!
I found the bottom dropped out of that particular market when they introduced those new fangled VideoPlus codes!
I used to make the most perfect roll-ups you’ve ever seen, and could use every scrap of tobacco in a straight to create an immaculate 3-skin spliff. It’s been years since I smoked anything though, and those artisanal skills will be lost to time.
Not in Siam they ain’t, mate!
Unjamming a slide in the magazine in the projector.
Ooh, I know this: pull the lever in centre of the projector back then remove and return the carousel plate to zero. Don’t turn the carousel over without the lid on unless you like picking slides up from the floor and trying to work out which way round they go.
Quite right. Slide shows were a thing growing up. My Dad used only slide film. It was a bit of a palava/event to view them.
Carousel, eh? Middle-class snobs. T’ sled-style slide were good enough fer uz.
This was the extremely dull world of corporate AV, pre Power Point.
… when it got … exciting?
Despite what conference organisers would have you believe, 3 days of Power Point presentations are never interesting.
PowerPointStock.
Don’t eat the brown Clipart.
I can raise one eyebrow, which seems to be a lost art. Sadly my ability to emit an ear splitting whistle with pairs of fingers in the corners of my mouth has now left me.
It hasn’t, you’re just too old to hear it.
*silent laugh*
I can do that… and wiggle my ears at the same time…. it’s as useful today as it’s ever been!
Driving in the left hand lane of a motorway, and only using the outer lanes for overtaking.
A lost art? Very much so – I have followed many people driving at 65mph in the middle lane.
Annoying, certainly but aren’t the lanes supposed to be slow, fast and overtaking? As a regular van driver, moving in and out of the inside lane usually means getting stuck behind an HGV. I do try and stick to 70 if I’m in the middle lane though.
Certainly seen that way, but driving in the middle lane at 65 when there’s no sod about is just plain stoopid.
It’s a safety measure. It’s far too easy to veer sideways a few feet when updating one’s FarceBerk page while travelling at speed, so a top tip is to stay in the middle lane, thereby giving yourself a few yards of leeway in both directions! It’s all about thinking of others, innit?
The same thing goes for applying your makeup too.
I have another one. I can fold a crisp packet into a little triangle in about six seconds flat.
Ah, but can you carefully hold one in the tongs over the fire so that it becomes a miniaturised version of itself?
Got a Proustian rush there. (ouch)
I can fold one into a pentagon – even a pentagram if you ask nicely.
Cripes, I need to up my game. I’ve been a big fish in a small pond for too long.
Hold a crisp packet in one hand, chuck an invisible stone in the air and catch it in the crisp bag so it makes a satisfying sound.*
(*Alas, I’ve been told by The Magic Circle I’m not allowed to reveal how this is done).
I’ve perfected this complex art with any empty non-plastic bag, to the daily delight of my biggest fan, Betsy the black Sprocker.
Toad the wet sprocket, however, looks on indifferent.
How is that an obsolete skill?!
Far from it! We were just amusing ourselves with a crisp packet digression..
Which is in itself very much an obsolete skill.
Crisp Packet Digression – TMFTL.
My ICL George 3 DME skills have not been in demand for some decades.
Not interesting or funny but I thought I would try and give fentonsteve a run for his money in the dullness stakes in this thread.
Who said this had to be interesting or funny?
Good point. My Filetab experience fits the bill as well.
Filetab? *leans in*
*Rubs thighs*
Anyone need any programming done in Ada? Or that other one I was taught at university, Pascal, was it?
It never got better than Machine Code. Assembler – pah! Kids today, eh?
Bet they’ve never even kicked off a program using paper tape.
Ada?
Fuckin’……. hell!
She was a big lass.
Ha! Kid’s stuff…I too spent many a long year converting DME to VME, but Beaugal was another thing altogether. A specialist language to crunch insurance company valuation data, I was the sole practitioner. I was a wow at the Christmas party…’and what do you do?’.
The snowflakes wail about the disappearance of the bong-wonga nose-click language, so why not some love for Beaugal? A specialist language to crunch insurance company valuation data has earned it’s place in the Platinum Collection. Illustrated booklet with attached C30, introduction by fentonsteve, available now.
I think you should add Filetab which was not what you may have hoped but a way of producing reports using decision tables rather than having to code them.
Even better! Beyond my expectations! This is the thread that keeps on giving.
Long years indeed. I can’t get near that but have remembered the joy of typing jobs with lots of parameters onto a punch card on an obsolete machine for which we couldn’t get ribbon anymore and then shading it with a pencil to check for the inevitable typo.
I then moved to the glamorous world of 2900 VME and the joys of the largely unknown and certainly unlamented CODASYL database.
Another skill was getting the database administrator to make a bloody change to the Codasyl database …bribery, blackmail, threats of extreme violence…ah, those were the days. Tell that to kids today with their fancy relational dtabases and they wouldn’t believe you…
Fashioning a zilch from a plastic bag (I know weve discussed this before at least).
Ah, happy memories. My mum was impressed when my mate and I borrowed the washing-up bowl to carry out, ahem, a science experiment for school in my room. She wasn’t too impressed a bit later, however, when the smell of burning plastic filled the house. The zilch was good while it lasted though, especially after taking it in turns to lean out of the bedroom window to disperse the smoke from our, erm, roll-ups.
I also had a home-made strobe light. It would never compete with, say, early Pink Floyd or Hawkwind (oh the memory of Stacia dancing with not a lot of clothes on), not least as it was merely a light bulb in a box with a small square cut out at the front. The ‘psychedelic effect’ was made by a rotating cardboard wheel with slits in it running at the front of the box via a hastily wired-up (i.e. dodgy) electric motor.
To be fair, my technical skills never progressed much beyond these two items. I can, however, still lodge a blade of grass between my thumbs and make a noise by blowing through cupped hands using the grass as a sort-of reed. Who needs a Korg or VCS3 or whatever to make music?
You could have joined Faust with that kind of musical talent.
A very satisfactory noise can be produced by stringing an elastic band between thumb and fingers, and then sticking the hand out of the car window as it is moving. Car speed changes the note, as does tightening the band.
Is it any better if a passenger does this?
Not for the driver, no. I find about 30 seconds of thrrrrrrrrrrrbrrrrrrrrrpppppp is allowed, before the driver puts my window up.
Oh deep joy. My true skill. Joining pieces of paper together. In the days of large paper maps, copied in A3 chunks.
The trick is to allow an overlap, put the two pieces on a light table, overlap, cut through both with a scalpel against a straight edge, and secure on the reverse side with Scotch drafting tape.
I dreamed of opening a little shop a la Emily in ‘Bagpuss’ to offer this service.
*jumps up and down on the spot clapping hands like a girl*
Used to have these lead weights about the size and shape of a computer mouse to aid the process. Some sort of leatherette on top, with a cork-covered base.
I AM LITERALLY WEEPING WITH JOY.
Is “blowing a raspberry ” still funny. My Harry Secombe raspberry is still a showstopper but my “Phantom Raspberry Blower Of Old London Town” is reserved for only three most special of occasions…
Yes. It is.
I do it. A lot.
… every one a “special occasion”, eh, Beez?
May as well be. At my age.
’Ere. I want a word with you.
Ohhh! I’ve never been so… oh…!
Spike Milligan wrote those sketches, I think the only time he wrote scripts for other people.
And a gentleman…
Spike Milligan and a gentleman if I remember correctly.
As I age I find my prodigious capacity for a resounding fart to be less popular. I perhaps need to wait another 30 years. Mind you, the applause then may be muted by the realisation of the laundry consequence. Which may then be no longer any concern of mine.
A friend of mine’s grandmother was completely deaf and farted loudly, oblivious or perhaps not caring.
Is it possible to fart loudly without being aware of its exit through the gift shop?
Maybe she didn’t give a shit, errr….
“A friend of mine’s grandmother …” Ri-i-ight …
My best man is the undisputed heavyweight champion of the loud and stinky fart world.
We once had to pull onto the hard shoulder of the A1(M) has his noxious guff resulted in stinging eyes and shortness of breath, and I could no longer drive. When the rozzers came to check on us, I had to explain why the car doors and windows were open… without laughing.
His wife is a paramedic and has never smelt anything like him.
Sorry, late to this. Outstanding.
I can burp at will. He’s getting a bit sick of it but that’s not my problem.
I don’t wish to know that.
Kindly leave the green gage.
….music hall rejoinders, completely redundant for at least sixty years – ain’t that right Archie Rice?
My dog goes for a tramp in the woods every day. He also has no nose.
The spider on the bread roll will get him.
I am quite good at getting Vox AC30s and Minis going again with a threepenny bit. Not much call for it these days…
I keep wondering if there are any reformed (or indeed unreformed) criminules amongst us who can TWOC a Ford Popular or get a sash window open from the outside.
In other news, I used to be brilliant on Kazaa Gold.
I’ve heard that using an X-ray fillum (like what you get from the hozzer) is brilliant for sliding between a locked door and the jamb, just above the Yale, and forcing it down to spring the lock. You have to fold the X-ray a couple of times for strength, and give the door a good jiggle as you work it down. Apparently.
What happened to those poor sods in Russia who used to put Hey Jude on x-ray films? Probably down the salt mines. Saying “Fookin’ ‘ell”
I was, and daresay still am should the opportunity arise, a dab hand at getting free telephone calls from the phone box with those A and B buttons.
The face of the box is loosened, ok, jemmied and a slit of cardboard is slid along the edge flicking the lever to simulate a coin dropping.
Excellent! You could finesse the football table in the uni bar with a shilling on a mandolin string. Insert coin, pull knob out (@moose-the-mooche), carefully retrieve coin as you let the knob back in. In the old days you could use cotton, but the boffins upgraded the technology to include a cutting blade. It was a battle of wits between the money-grabbing mafia-linked pub games cabal and a bunch of stoned hippies. Kids today? Eh?
How is the mandolin string affixed? Glue or wound through a hole?
Would a guitar string work just as well? Some picture hanging wire, or even some thin ordinary wire?
You’ve really opened up a can of worms here HP.
Ah, but how did he open it? Old-fashioned analog tin-opener or new-fangled ring pull?
Me or HP? In my case we prised the box using the little lever you get to prise a bike tyre off its rim when fixing a puncture.
That was a can of worms question…
Aaah. Bit slow today. Need a spell on the rowing machine.
Be my guest.
– Fix coin in vise
– Smallest bit you can fit in yer B&D
– Drill through as close to the milled edge as you can. Nice n’ easy does it! HM currency is tough. File a notch through the raised edge next to the hole each side of the coin so the thickness isn’t increased (PRO TIP).
– Mando string (about 10″) because superfine, light, and yet very resistant to crimps and cuts – too thick and the coin wouldn’t drop properly. Through hole, twist a quarter inch or so back up the string with pliers and nip tight into the notches – harder than it sounds – this is craftsmanship.
– Attach duffel coat toggle or similar to the other end of the string – this makes it much easier to pull the coin back out.
– Hey presto! Infinite number of free fussball games!
I dried my entire weekly wash in the local launderette for over 2 years using a 5p folded into a 6″ strip of Sellotape. Pop it in the slot, click the knob three or four times, retrieve 5p then read a book for half an hour. One day the Sellotape broke and I ended up losing it into the machine which was annoying.
Anyone else here do the old trick of tapping the number of digits (ten times for zero, nine times for 9, etc) on the cradle in public phone boxes to get free calls in the 70s?
How many numbers were there. That’s a lot of tappng.
Yes, except it was the 60s…don’t remember it actually working though.
You had to do it really, really fast.
Keeping count was even harder than the tapping.
It’s no wonder The Man’s arse continued to remain unnkicked
Don’t underplay your blows for freedom, Jaygee. Those free calls – and my free fussball games – were genuine victories for the revolution, as effective as any Parisian cobblestone.
More blows against the Empire.
When you could buy those old cardboard train return tickets that were valid for 3 months, we would buy one, travel on it. Then buy a single back. For the next 3 months we would travel in, single back. Thereby a return trip would only cost the price of a single, at the end of the 3 months use the ticket as normal. Then buy a new one.
I recall several of us had our tickets inspected on the train, there was nothing the inspector could do, but they stopped the 3 month validity some time after.
Good while it lasted. Sorry @thecheshirecat
We used to do that at work where the extensions to ring were just 4 digits. It was also possible to ‘add’ a couple of extra clicks when you had two phones for the same extension and you wanted to annoy the person using the other one who was convinced he was dialling to right number but repeatedly rang different wrong ones!!
I’m very talented at making farting noises with the palms of my hands. It leads to lots of glamorous women throwing themselves at me.
I can make terrific farting noises blowing down the cardboard tube from a kitchen roll or roll of foil etc. The tube from a toilet roll doesn’t have the right acoustic effect, so it’s straight in the recycling.
(Low, posh voice) “Can I have a bun, pleeeeasse?”
You see, the long cardboard tube is now an elephant’s trunk – your victim has their back to you and the tube is presented close to their ear. As they good-naturedly react with a delighted scream, you continue brandishing the cardboard “trunk” and triumphantly make that trumpeting sound they do.
I use a similar technique to imitate the moo-cow noise Lee Perry was so fond of.
It seems that most of our obsolete skills are fart-adjacent, or coding-contiguous. How will we survive in the post-apocalyptic wilderness?
Communicating by farting in code, possibly.
Smoke signals?
Especially if you light them
Strike a match near this thread and we’ll all go sky high, you mad fool
As I recall, post apocalypse, it will all be spoors and droppings that we communicate with. Nobody here will ever become lost from the rest of the tribe, so easy will we be to find.
Spoors and droppings
Spoors and droppings
Go together like a horse and carriage
Will that be by Scatomancy?
….with the laughing face
(sorry, I seem to have gone all Sinatrafied)
What about coopers?
There’s no-one around who wants barrels any more, let alone has their turn in one.
Shall I say something hilariously satirical about using grammar, punctuation and spelling, during which I make several howling errors, undermining my argument and making me look a twonk?
We’ve grown up in the golden age of farts. It’s like winning the lottery of life. Pity the young who never get to experience cutting the cheese in different time signatures after copious pints of Whitbread and Watneys. They just don’t make them like that anymore. And the silent but deadlys that lingered for decades. That special combination of dodgy bitter and methane producing snacks.
Sunday lunches. Stuffing, gravy, roast onions and sprouts. A veritable intestinal chemistry set.
Stewed prunes and custard.
Also, we didn’t hold with any this exercise nonsense. Except shuffling off to the pub for ten pints, four pickled eggs and some pork scratchings, and pie and peas on the way home. Smog had nothing to do with factories.
Oh, so many. I’m generally a good mimic, but obviously all my mimicry passed its sell-by in about 1998. An apparently genuinely uncanny impression of Danny the drug dealer from Withnail & I used to make a former colleague laugh til he doubled up, because I’d do likes of Shakespeare in his voice and English teacher just be like that. These days? Not a sausage. (I also do a very good pigeon noise.)
I also used to be able to take apart and reassemble the heating system of a Mk 1 Renault 5, if necessary in a dark layby at 3 in the morning. No call for them Skillz these days: I opened up the bonnet of my car the other day and it looked like Robocop’s ballbag in there.
I bought a new car recently. Sales guy lifted the bonnet to display a few slabs of plastic and said “this basically says , dont touch”.
And here was me thinking I’d be changing the plugs and renewing the edge on the rotor button.
“Robocop’s ballbag” ! Love it.
There’s an on-line community just for you. Somewhere.
I once attended a family do at a friend’s house; New Year’s Eve, if I recall correctly. I was absolutely horrified/grotesquely compelled when they played a family game – passed down through the generations – called ARSE: Anal Retention Sterling Exchange. The aim of the game is to grip as many coins as you can between your (mercifully clothed) buttocks and transport/deposit them in a specific place.
The worrying thing was how normal it all seemed. We could have been playing charades, such was the semi-drunken insouciance with which the game was played. Apparently, my mate’s kids aren’t keen, and she doesn’t see it making the shift to a new generation. I’m not sure how I feel about this.
I feel pretty disturbed by it and I’m a very long way away.
Presumably lycra would be apparel of choice fir such events.
Unclothed would be an unfair advantage to those with a, um, loose sphincter, the seepage giving some unfair traction on her Maj’s face. I imagine.
Yes, ah … thank you for that … moving on … gentleman at the back waving a copy of Watchtower?
Dylan or Hendrix?
Spirit.
I can name any James Bond novel just from its opening line.
Come on then – which one’s this?
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times …”
I’m guessing No Time To Die.
I take my hat off to you @Leicester Bangs!
Now there’s a skill that will make you the life and soul of any party.
If ,like me, you are very envious, this will help you get up to speed.
https://www.shortlist.com/news/james-bond-opening-lines#:~:text=I%20was%20running%20away%20from,life%20had%20collected%20around%20me%E2%80%A6%22
I’m not sure if this is the appropriate thread, but I’ve just cleaned some “100% pure cotton, professional dry-clean only” curtains on a 20 degree C cotton cycle in the washing machine.
“Dry-clean only” labels turn me into Hull’s Tom Morello.
Fook you, I wern’t do what you tell me!