Archive for January, 2010

US cult of greed is now a global environmental threat

Wednesday, January 13th, 2010

usaThis report makes interesting reading. I don’t know much about the Worldwatch Institute which calls for a wholesale transformation of values ands culture but doesn’t seem to say how. Unless we understand turbo- consumption and why we shop so much its impossible to move beyond it. People want to create their own lives – this is now hard wired into shopping. We need to come up with better ways of people creating themselves and their world. But the more the problem is pointed out, the more we might look for answers.

Selling sex to kids

Tuesday, January 12th, 2010

cameronPolitics continues to be turned on its head.  Yesterday David Cameron said he would outlaw the sexualsiation of children by shops and magazines if retailers fail to heed parental anger.  This is not the first time the Conservative leader has spoken out about the commercialisation of childhood.  It stands in stark contrast to the recent government report that called for more education to help make children more media-savvy i.e., personalise the responsibility for the march of the markert rsather than see it as a social issue to be tackled collectively.   This is what Cameron said:

It also means working with business to reduce the cruder elements of commercialisation in our society. Children today are being sold the idea that the path to happiness lies through excessive consumption.

It’s high time the children’s market and advertisers show much more restraint in the way they operate. We don’t want to resort to regulation. But we will make it clear that if business doesn’t exercise some corporate responsibility, we will not be afraid to impose it.

Let’s have a heated debate!

Monday, January 11th, 2010

Mrs mertonIn the immortal words of Mrs Merton. Who famously went on in one of her interviews to ask Debbie McGee what attracted her to the millionaire Paul Daniels.

Anyway, here is a debate about shopping between Mica Nava an academic at the University of East London and me about shopping.  Mica doesnt think its so bad. I, if you haven’t been follwing it, do. It first featured on the pages of Chartist magazine and has been kindly reprinted by Open Democracy. Enjoy or not – the consumer is of course king or queen.

No place for product placement

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

productToday Compass, the pressure group I chair, launched a campaign to stop the government allowing product placement on British TV. Ben Bradshaw the Culture Minister seems to think its a good idea. But all it does is blur further the lines between selling and living. Another line is broken. I always feel cheapened watching films like Bond when you know the gadget or the car is just there as an experience in paid for promotion.  You can read more about the campaign here.

The Landfill Prize – the award for Britain’s most useless consumer product

Thursday, January 7th, 2010

landfillAuthor John Naish has just launched  this years Landfill Prize for sueless object.  You can enter here. Anyone who suggest my book gets a special prize.  This is last years top ten:

1 Motorised Ice-Cream Cone

For those too lazy to twist their wrists when eating an ice-cream, there is this stupid gadget. You pop your cone in it, stick your tongue out and it does all the hard work for you, ensuring no drips get onto your hand. You can even stick it in the dishwasher – no need to waste energy on washing up.

2 Plane Sheet

As if flying wasn’t bad enough for the environment, now irresponsible travellers can step up their wasteful footprint with this bizarre plane seat cover. Designed to “transform a tired, overused airline seat into a cozy, happy place… while keeping at bay germs, crumbs and spills from previous passengers”, this lurid example of bad taste will put any fears of catching the plague whilst flying at bay. You can even have it monogrammed. Classy.

3 Motorised fork

We would like to nominate a motorised spinning fork that twirls your noodles for you. It is much slower than using your own hand and we think it is useless and wasteful.

4 Folding Fishing Camping Chair

Just what every fisherman needs. No peace and quiet, but a folding fishing camping chair with four speakers.

5 USB Chameleon

My nomination is the USB powered Chameleon. I mean…. for goodness sakes, the damned thing doesn’t even change colour!

6 Nintendo Wii Fit

I don’t need to pay an extortionate amount of money to get fit – I can do it for free by stepping outside the front door and going for a walk. I can talk to my children or/and wife, listen to music or the wildlife or just think about how good life really is without all the gadgets and gizmos that people seem to attach so much importance to.

7 The Guitar Hero franchise

Rather than learn to play an actual instrument, you can now make a virtual cacophony on virtual instruments by pressing primary coloured buttons on a plastic guitar. (Was learning three chords really too difficult?) For a couple of hundred pounds you can complete the set, and get some friends over to play the plastic drums and plastic bass. There’s probably two or three whole minutes of fun to be had before the buyer’s remorse kicks in.

8 Digital Electronic Jumping Rope

Bored with your ropey old skipping rope? How about an electronic version with batteries in the handles, that counts the number of times you jump up and down and “calculates” how many calories you’ve burned? Of course, you could help to save the world by counting the number of times you skip before collapsing in a sweaty heap. As for the onboard calorie calculator, well, hmm: you can’t accurately gauge the number of calories you’ve burnt without making a highly complex guesstimate based on your weight, age, metabolic rate, skipping speed, etc, etc. But then that’s not the point of convoluted exercise gear. It’s supposed to motivate you to exercise for several days… until the “fun” wears off and it gets stuck in the back of a cupboard.

9 The Toyota Prius

I want to nominate the Toyota Pious (oops Prius), the so-called eco-friendly car, which actually comes with two engines. Is it a car or an overblown status symbol to make one look greener than you? How much energy does it actually take to make, use, and dispose of?

10 The Sat Nag

At £6.99 mocks the Sat Nav device, blasting its owner with 24 annoying comments.  Typical phrases include “You have reached your destination – you may now throttle your passenger.” It’s funny as your mother-in-law sat poking an umbrella in your ear hole.