
Jayne MacDonald had a Xmas single. No expense was spared on the video.
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=jonwKvsK6oc&feature=related
"See these people who are on the telly, how the fuck do they get on the telly? They start somewhere...I mean, they're no just born intae fuckin telly aristocracy or that"
According to Brian Limond - more commonly referred to as Limmy - it was this thought that compelled him to start making the videos that earned him a loyal YouTube following, two Edinburgh Fringe shows and now his very own TV programme.
It was in 2000 while working as a web designer that he registered his own website, limmy.com. Boredom led to the creation of numerous Flash toys, including a swearing xylophone that gained cult status as far south as London.
In 2002, the purchase of a camcorder led to the creation of videos like 'What Would You Do?' which sees a sinister moral debate take place between Limmy and a toy snowman. By 2005 his job led him to travel, a period during which he resolved to make it in comedy on his return to Glasgow. Shortly after his arrival back home, an idea to represent the varied characters of his native city was turned into the 'World of Glasgow' podcasts, a series which went to Number 10 in the UK iTunes chart and earned him national press attention as one of the rising stars of new media.
While the English press praise the 32 year old for his innovative use of the Net as a vehicle for comedic success, his popularity in Scotland seems to derive from the fact that his work is markedly different to other successful Glaswegian sketch shows. Programmes such as 'Chewing the Fat' and 'Still Game' offered up painfully unfunny concoctions of tired Scots stereotypes and jokes about schemies. While Limmy undoubtedly draws from this heritage, his work represents the darker underbelly of Scots identity, often depicting pessimism, mental illness, and social alienation.
Additionally, you get the sense that he doesn't confine himself to only writing material relating to Scottishness. Subsequently, this has allowed his Fringe and TV material to become funnier than ever, most memorably in a piece where he concludes a bizarre email correspondence with Dave Gorman by calling him a 'patronising fucking wank'.
As he talks me through each stage of his career, a pattern becomes evident, one in which Limmy alternately courts and then rejects success. This year's Fringe saw a second hit show yet the prevailing gossip on Edinburgh's comedy scene was that Limmy detested live performance and was only coaxed into it with the offer of healthy amounts of cash. "I said 'aye'...well, I mean after I said 'no'. Then I said 'Fuck it, I'll do it'" This is a recurring mantra in our interview and is always mentioned at the point where his career took unprecedented steps up the ladder. It is difficult to distinguish which of two contradictory statements to believe: did he set out with the express intention of becoming famous or was his past aversion to live shows a shying away from unexpected success?
For the most part, it is the latter that's frequently rings true as he expresses surprise at the relative rapidity of his success.
"See Jet, you know the band Jet?" I know them, yes. "The tour manager of Jet is from Scotland and he said 'Jet have seen your stuff, I've showed Jet your videos and that'" At this point he pauses nervously. "You know the band Jet? They've got a few hits, their main one was that 'Are You Gonna Be My Girl'" Once he's assured I've heard of them, he continues with an anecdote that involved clambering on stage at the Carling Academy to introduce the band only to be booed off by hundreds of disgruntled Jet fans following a cringe-inducing air guitar performance.
Curiously, he describes the experience as "exhilarating: it was like a dream where you couldn't get hurt." In a way, you can see what he means; having gone from a small legion of devoted online fans to 2000 people who had no idea who he was came as an inevitable shock to a man who has admitted, both in his live material as well as in past interviews, to harbour a dread of heckling. Surviving the heckle of a lifetime however, turned out to be ideal preparation for a stint at the Glasgow Comedy Festival (a gig where the chances of getting booed were unlikely: the tickets sold out within the first hour of going on sale).
For the sake of long-time Limmy fans, I need to ask him about one of his most popular videos, 'Beatboy', an inexplicably funny piece in which a clip of Limmy dancing is played on an endless loop opposite an image of a man in a suit.
"The [company I used to work for] had an office in St Vincent Street" [in Glasgow] and it backed onto a lane next to a restaurant. I was just watching all the people passing down the lane and I got my video camera out. There was this guy walking - no pure camp but kinda like 'Look at me' and I thought 'Check the state of him, man'"
Has he had any accusations of homophobia in his work (his site also features a Photoshopped image of naked Limmy having sex with multiple other naked Limmys)? "Some of the stuff I dae, it does kinda look like I'm taking the piss out of gay folk but it's cause I like it, I like gay things and I've always liked stuff like that."
He explains this with such sincerity that it would be unfair and somewhat reactionary to say that his work is biased, particularly when so much of it focuses on people who live in the margins of society.
"I've got a certain personality where I kinda come out with stuff in front of other people and I don't know what I'm talking about. I'm no saying I'm all unique and weird and special. I've got a kinda sadistic side."
I ask if he's been at all influenced by Chris Morris' work in 'The Day Today' and 'Brasseye' as his more recent material has displayed the same unusual combination of childish mischief with a razor-sharp intelligence. While he can see the similarities and confesses to watching Brasseye a few nights ago, he also says that "I like Laurel and Hardy. Some people are intae all this intellectual fucking comedy but I just like to see somebody standing on a nail. That's fucking hysterical."
While it's true that many Limmy videos contain elements of slapstick, they almost always have a pervasive sense of melancholy running through them. He admits that "I like things like fights and things going wrong and madness. It just all comes from myself and the fact that I like uneasy situations".
It seems important to point out that the heavy Glaswegian accent you hear in Limmy's material is in no way performative or exaggerated. This comes as something of a surprise and I wonder if he's encountered any difficulties with TV execs during the negotiations over the forthcoming 'Limmy's Show'. "I'd been kinda waiting for something like that to happen. With BBC Scotland I thought whoever gies us a telly thing - if it ever happens - is gonna say 'Well, we like your stuff but obviously we haven't got a clue what you're saying and you're too violent and it's just too horrible'
But the guy at BBC Scotland's pure brand new so I've not came up against any kind of bullshit. There was another production company down in London that were a wee bit shite but not for any pure wanky reason."
Seeing my look of disappointment, he laughs. "I'd like that to happen so I could give you an interesting answer."
Limmy worried that he's no longer entertaining? He needn't be. With his name popping up in various 'coolest people' lists (he is number 37 of '200 coolest things' in this month's edition of Arena magazine) and the move to TV making him a household name, restricting Limmy's success to the margin of 'internet phenomenon' will soon be a thing of the past.
Limmy's Show will be broadcast in January on BBC Scotland
"...So I've been getting the headaches for three months and that's why I think I have brain cancer."
The doctor stared back at me with a cold, reptilian gaze.
"And this worries you...?" He smirked while still managing to look incredibly weary.
I skulked out, humiliated. Then I went home and switched on 'Embarrassing Teenage Bodies', another TV show that promotes a Disney-esque dreamland in which general practitioners are positively eager to work tirelessly with a sick general public..
And the doctors are so cool! They get on stage at music festivals! They have names like Pixie! They take to the streets dressed as Bond and distribute condoms to youths while making flippant penis jokes!
Most of all, they want to see your repulsive, hormonally-charged body. Every single aspect of it. This is done partly out of concern for today's teens, of course, who we're led to believe are now shagging at such a frantic rate that they're creating new STDs, all by themselves (Gonophylis, Syphorrea). Largely however, its appeal lies in the 'freakshow disguised as health programme' genre, spawned by Gillian McKeith's laugh-at-the-obese-shitting-in-a-hat shows.
For all the gag-inducing close inspections that went on, it became increasingly disturbing to note the heavy use of euphemisms when referring to people's genitals. Surely, once the TV screen is filled with images of a fanny resembling war-torn
It's weird when one considers that the people on this show go on an entirely voluntary basis, as most of the participants now face lives devoid of the prospect of sex.
So, this week's list is called "Becoming Celibate (And Staying That Way!)":
1) Cover yourself in fake menstrual blood while throwing it across paper. Think ‘Carrie’ meets Jackson Pollock. (It’s called a 'Period Painting', apparently).
2) Tell the whole country that you, your three brothers and your mum are unable to stop wetting the bed. Hammer the point home visually by cutting to repeated shots of your mum changing soggy sheets with a look of grim resignation.
3) Reveal to all (in gloriously technicoloured close-up) that you have a vagina which looks like [delete as applicable] a crime-scene/a dog sticking its tongue out/the Google Images result when you type in "genital herpes"
Sometimes if I’m too busy or I can’t be bothered properly researching an article I’ll use a tactic called Making Things Up. “But Fern,” you cry, “you’re not a real journalist so it doesn’t matter”. And you’d be right. Dispatches, on the other hand, is made by respected documentary-makers who lead you to believe that they’re getting to the heart of the matter. Unfortunately, The Hidden World of Lapdancing had more holes in it than a pair of crotchless knickers. And yes, I see the flaw in that metaphor as crotchless knickers have only one hole.
As investigative journalism goes, this was one in a long, long line of badly-researched pieces on sex work in which the programme makers, having already decided what their viewpoint is (namely, that all strippers are whores), reveal nothing new whatsoever.
Instead, we were subjected to an hours’ worth of a man expressing amazement at the fact that the girls didn’t stand three feet away from him interspersed with shots of lapdances as absurd ‘high-jinks’ music played (let’s face it, they may as well have played the fucking Benny Hill theme tune). Consequently, the tone alternated confusingly between one of moral outrage and pointless titillation.
Annoyingly, in an attempt to distract viewers from the fact that there was very little content, they would repeatedly play what appeared to be the opening titles of a James Bond movie, in which a silhouetted lady gyrates around appealingly. It was the adult equivalent of trying to distract a screaming toddler by saying “Look! Look at the pretty lights!”
On the upside, the programme unwittingly provided excellent publicity for the strip clubs featured, as I can’t envision many stag parties watching in horror when they discover that for £20 a pop you can see live lesbian action (“Did you SEE the tits on the women in Secrets nightclub? Let’s go there!”)
“Many of the lapdancers we spoke to were reluctant to be interviewed on camera” said the smugly judgemental narrator, sounding confused. What? You mean, ex-lapdancers refused to be interviewed for a programme that would be heavily biased against them, destroy their present careers and reputations and ultimately blame them as part of the problem and not a society which constantly renders women’s bodies as objects for purchase?
How strange.
Have you ever seen that film with Russell Crowe? This genius mathematician is asked to carry out top-secret codebreaking work for the
As I watched Channel 5’s ‘Extraordinary People: The Million Dollar Mind Reader’ the parallels with ‘A Beautiful Mind’ were startling. Derek Ogilvie, a guy from
“I gotta mission for ya, Ogilvie” the figure said in a husky
“Wh-who are you?” asked Derek shakily.
The figure peered up from under his black panama hat. Chewing on a fat cigar, the baby growled through clenched teeth “Ya don’t need to know who I am. I represent babies from all over the world. Babies desperate to articulate their innermost thoughts. You’re the only one who can help us, Derek. You must be the spokesperson for babies everywhere!”
“I can’t!” cried Derek. “No one would ever believe me! They’d think I was mad, exploitative – maybe even a bit of a paedo.”
The baby chuckled softly before exhaling a long wisp of cigar smoke.
“They’ve fallen for Derek Acorah, Sally Morgan and Mystic Meg – why wouldn’t they believe you?”
And so it was that Derek set off around the world in his unlikely quest. Success came quickly yet it was only when challenged by James Randi, a skeptic who fittingly resembled Charles Darwin, that things began to go wrong.
“Derek, you have no psychic abilities. You can’t communicate with babies.”
Tears streamed down Derek’s face. “You’re wrong! I’ll prove it to you!”
Turning to the spy-baby, he cried “Ed, tell him!”
The child gurgled nonsensically. The skeptic gently pulled Ogilvie away from the child.
“Derek, calm yourself. Your belief is called a delusion. You are a very sick man.”
Howling in anguish and disbelief, Derek allowed himself to be enveloped in Randi’s strong arms, his tears becoming gradually quieter.
“There, there” said the skeptic, patting his back, “we’re going to give you the help you need.”