The Butch[er][s] is[/are] back

FRANK! EastEnders, BBC One, Mon & Fri 8.00pm, Tue & Thu 7.30pm

Exciting and solemn (mainly exciting) times in EastEnders this week, as the soap pays a very special tribute to the late Mike Reid with four episodes centred around the funeral of Frank Butcher. Pat and Peggy’s health spa / civil partnership witnessing break is interrupted by the arrival of Ricky and Diane (DIANE!) with some grave news about their mutual ex-husband, and over the course of the week the Square’s residents (the few who’ve been in it for longer than two years, anyway) pay their respects in true East End style. There may be piano playing. There could be arguments. It’s going to be quite a week.

Of course, it’s not Frank’s first funeral, and the biggest tragedy of all is that with the magnificent Mike Reid officially dead in real actual life, there’s no chance of Frank popping out of the coffin mid-service in one of those moments of supreme good taste with which he was always so closely associated (see Fig. 1). So now the REAL thrill is the return of three of Frank’s offspring (advance reports make no mention of Clare ‘occasional table’ Butcher, the Belinda Slater of the family, but we live in hope), with Sophie Lawrence briefly reappearing as Diane (DIANE!) after her last brief reappearance 11 years ago, Charlie Brooks temporarily dragging Janine out of cold storage for the first time since 2004, and serial returnee Sid Owen returning PERMANENTLY (or at least until the lure of To Buy Or Not To Buy and I’m A Celebrity becomes too great) as Ricky, conveniently at exactly the same time as Patsy Palmer makes a similarly permanent return as Bianca ‘the former Mrs Ricky Butcher’ Jackson, now with added kids, added not a very good singing voice and apparently no money.

So what’s everyone been up to in their absence? Well, Bianca’s been collecting kids and failing to have any money (see above), while Ricky’s bafflingly been doing rather well for himself money-wise, and has landed a gold-digging girlfriend in the shape of Siobhan ‘not former-EastEnder Daniela Denby-Ashe’ Hayes from My Family. Janine’s been hard at work competing with Leanne Battersby in the perpetual ex-cocaine addict, ex-prostitute, money-grabbing bitch parallel life stakes, and appears to be back mainly for the reading of the will (presumably hoping for some cash to cover the cost of the petrol she’s presumably planning to buy for the small Italian restaurant she’s presumably been running for about a year – looks like Leanne’s about to pip you to the post on that one, Janine!), while Diane (DIANE!) has taken responsibility for her son (the frequently offloaded Jacques), is training to be a doctor and has already trained to be a lesbian, evidently hoping to minimise the risk of accidentally falling into bed with Ian Beale or Phil Mitchell during her slight return to Albert Square.

Naturally, the return of Sophie Lawrence is the most exciting part of all this for us, with the early-90s episode where Frank found Diane (DIANE!) living in Paris being our earliest memory of that peculiarly EastEnders thing of having someone only appear right at the very end of an episode and then putting them at the top of the cast list in the end credits, adding SIGNIFICANCE and INTRIGUE and EXCITEMENT to their appearance.

Elsewhere, Pat and Peggy obviously use the funeral as an excuse for another punch-up, selfish Chelsea goes in search of her apparently-selfish father to erroneously claim some bone marrow or bum some cash for a dress or something, and Honey probably does the whole death-related malapropism thing quite a lot (to death, in fact). Ricky, Diane (DIANE!), Janine: please accept our sincerest condonances.

"I was possessed on Shipwrecked!"

There’s a new series of SHIPWRECKED coming soon on Channel 4 – great news for people who enjoy watching attractive young people marooned on a desert island, having arguments while not wearing very much.

It’s the usual deal – two tribes battle it out to trouser the £100,000 prize money, vying for the attention of new arrivals and running around getting off with each other.

If you simply can’t wait for it to appear on your telly, you can watch the opening show RIGHT NOW (yes, RIGHT NOW) at this website – the perfect opportunity to make snap judgements about who you like and dislike before your friends do.

We can’t help but worry about the emotional health of someone who finds themselves stranded on a desert island for five months once they return to the real world, so we caught up with lowculture forum member Rory, who appeared on Shipwrecked a couple of years ago, to see how he fared.

“I was possessed by a spirit on the island!”, he raved. “It used to be a leper colony where they were left to die. I was talking to my parents about it this week, and they agreed I haven’t been the same since.”

Blimey! And how has this sinister possession manifested itself?

“I started smoking more and became more promiscuous. Obviously the habits of a leper!”

Obviously.

"The most important things in the whole world"

Nurse Dunkley writes: Lowculture is ace because it realises that the most important things in the whole world are fun entertainment things, and not in an annoying ironic way. It is very refreshing to find such discussion without phrases like “this is such a guilty pleasure”, “Susan Kennedy is a LEGEND”, or “how random” cropping up.

And that it is, in a nutshell. Thank you for reading, see you for the next five years.

We LOL LOLyoaks

The Lovely Kate writes: On what other site could you find such wonders of humorous bad taste as the Hollyoaks rape sweepstake?. In fact the Hollyoaks thread may be my highlight of this board, particularly now that it has spawned the genius that is LOLYoaks.

One of our proudest achievements is that lowculture has made Hollyoaks accessible to the many people who simply cannot be arsed to watch it. And how have we done it? Well, with these! Whatever they mean, we love ‘em.

A post which is mainly concerned with the sexual objectification of a male pop “star”

Al writes: I officially heart lowculture. A place where Lolcat speak is acceptable; a place where I can enjoy reading other people’s critiques of Hollyoaks, despite having not watched an episode in years; a place where you can question whether Sean from Same Difference is fit without fear of retribution; a place where Charlie Brooker is king.

seandifference

Al, don’t worry, he’s definitely fit. You can ALWAYS trust lowculture about this sort of thing.

Jamie’s (Way With) Words

Jamie was knowledgeable, opinionated, moralistic and always, always right. And he had 50 words a day to tell it like it was. Or like it wasn’t, mostly. Then he fucked off to China, but we never forgot him…

» JAMIE SAYS: Woo! wow that’s crazy I was there almost at the beginning… nearly 21 now! Happy Birthday LC from China.

Well, that was quite a long way shy of 50 words, but as we’re celebrating we will let it slide.

Fuck Me Facts!

Amazing things about January 25:
» It was on this unhappy day in 1994 that our old mate Gillian Taylforth faced financial ruin after losing a libel case against The Sun. The newspaper had accused her of getting up (or going down) to all sorts in a layby. She was so horrified at the outcome that she collapsed with shock and had to be rushed to hospital.
» Disney’s 101 Dalmatians went on general release on this day in 1960. Cruella De Ville remains a lowculture heroine to this day. We firmly believe that if a woman so fabulous had wanted those puppies, they should have been handed right over. In a big sack.
» On this day in 1999, MPs voted to lower the homosexual age of consent from 18 to 16.
» Michelle McManus was riding high at the top of the singles charts on this day in 2004 with her hit… erm… what was it called again?
» lowculture shares its birthday with Angela Thorne, aka Audrey’s mate out of To The Manor Born, and gay rights bloke Peter Tatchell. Happy birthday to both of you!

Hard on

Al writes: My favourite Lowculture memory was a picture from several years back featuring Helen Daniels and Beyonce with the same hair. I distinctly remember my face hurting from laughing so much. “Oh Jim, you’re much too hard on Todd.”

Well, let’s just have one more look at that, eh?

The Lowculture Laws of Soap

Our mad messageboard crowd have been listing the laws of soap. This is what they came up with:

1) No matter how poor you claim to be, you will still be able to go to the pub every night and get a round in.

2) All sex will end in simultaneous orgasm, and no one will ever compalin about Mr Droopy or period pains.

3) Your partner will shag your best friend within six weeks of their arrival.

4) All divorced people will sleep with their ex – normally the day before they marry someone else.

5) Weddings will never got to plan.

6) Births can only be on Christmas day or whenever someone else dies nearby.

7) When you get divorced, instead of starting a new life you will move to a dingy flat 50 yards away.

8) All members of the opposite sex must fancy the show’s star no matter how ugly the star is (see Phil Mitchell or Bet Lynch or Bev)

9) Babies must fall ill and be rushed to hospital at some point during their first three months of life.

10) All children under 12 will spend 90% of the time in the bedroom or eating beans and chips.

11) No one will ever cook breakfast.

12) People just standing around in the background of pubs do not obey any known laws of pub standing around.

13) As soon as children reach the age of 13 they mutate into a much older actor and develop a sociopathic disorder.

14) If a married woman has an affair, the cuckolded husband immediately becomes best friends with the bloke she’s sleeping with, and has always been best friends with him, regardless of all evidence to the contrary.

15) It never rains… but it pours.

16) No-one watches soap operas.

17) People can easily be placed into boxes marked “Good”, or “Bad”

18) All situations resolve themselves within a month.

19) If in doubt, give one of the characters amnesia.

20) There will be only one well-known, but usually quite small, venue that will be used for all events – weddings, christenings, birthdays, bar mitzvahs… etc.

21) Normal acoustics do not apply. People can talk normally in crowded nightclubs. Also, people can hear softly spoken conversations from across the room despite lots of people talking and the radio being on.

Neighbours-only rules:

22) When something dramatic has happened, the music fades up at the end of the scene while there is a close up on the affected party – which lingers far longer than any normal person would hold the same expression for.

23) If someone doesn’t live in Ramsey Street they are instantly EVIL. However, this fades depending on how long they spend on the show.

24) The more comfortable and open a gay character is about their sexuality, the less attractive they willll be (eg Lance in Brookside, Derek in EastEnders and Vince in Crossroads). This also explains why Nick from Hollyoaks becomes less appealing with each passing episode.

25) If you know a very private secret about someone, you will reveal it at the top of your voice in the Vic.

26) Hardly anyone goes to university, and if they do, it’s always a local one. This excludes Hollyoaks, which has a reasonably high student population, all of whom seem to live in nicer accommodation, wear nicer clothes, and generally spend more money on having exciting adventures, like being murdered, than real students.

27) Dogs never die of natural causes. They will always be run over.

28) Any pets or children can be passed on to new owners at any time.

29) People never buy alcohol from an off-license – it comes from the local pub.

30) Everyone listens to the same radio station.

31) The local paper always looks like something a infant school kid knocked up in a very poor word processing package.

32) You can blag your way into any job – from supermarket trolley man to solicitor.

40) The only music teenagers ever play loudly will be heavy rock with no lyrics.

41) If you develop a severe mental illness, eating disorder or pathology such as self harm, all symptoms will miraculously cease a fortnight after this fact is discovered. Unless you go to a clinic, where you will have no therapy but make a new best friend or fall in love with the one person who sees through all the bullshit.

And one of our own:

42) If you ever hug someone, you must always pull a face over their shoulder to indicate your secret displeasure.

The dark forces of Mr Udagawa

Odd things are happening in the world of lowculture – we are being haunted by the spirit of Mr Udagawa.

As everyone knows, Mr Udagawa was an important Japanese businessman whom Paul Robinson was on a constant mission to impress in Neighbours, circa 1987.

The presence of Mr Udagawa set in motion a chain of events that saw Paul propose a marriage of convenience to Gail Lewis, in the hope that his Japanese friend would invest more money in the Robinson Corporation if he was a respectable married man instead of a wealthy playboy gadabout. This led to a series of 375 hilarious misunderstandings, one minor confrontation with Mrs Mangel and, eventually, Gail having triplets and running away with them, never to be seen again.

As if this was not enough, Mr Udagawa returned some five years and 1000 episodes later, in the thick of a plot in which Christina thought a suicidal Paul had been burned to death in a derelict country house.

With Mr Udagawa cast as some kind of comedy harbinger of doom, we were more than a little bit concerned when he appeared to us in a dream last Thursday night, but thought no more of it until yesterday, when we downloaded something called The Book Of Many Little Things from disappointment.com.

There, on page two of the book, was a note thanking Mr Udagawa. Our blood ran cold.

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We’re thinking of going into hiding, but fear Mr Udagawa will only track us down, shame us into marriage, then set us on fire. If he does, you’ll be the first to know.