Showing posts with label Harold Wilson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harold Wilson. Show all posts

28 January 2007

Good Morning, Sunshine!


This has nothing whatsoever to do with the sun, but with the way my usual bowl of Shredded Wheat makes me feel in the morning! As a child in Rhodesia, we used to be able to get shredded wheat ... until Harold Wilson got the UN to impose sanctions on the country in 1965. Around thee time that most car bumpers began sporting I HATE HAROLD stickers, shredded wheat vanished from the shelves, and for the remainder of my childhood and a lot of my adult life had to live with Willards Foods' RICE POPPINS and HONEY KRUNCHEES and their valiant attempt at corn flakes which always seemed one or two ingredients short of perfection.

Overseas visits were my only connection to shredded wheat, until 2002 when we moved to Johannesburg. Sadly, the shredded wheat there was available in every Pick'n'Pay but too expensive - I even got some once as a birthday present! Now the move to England has brought me in reach of that glorious, sunshine inducing, body satisfying, muscle building cereal called Shredded Wheat.

Bite sized or normal size, it was first produced in the UK in 1926, but had been around in the USA much longer. In fact a fellow named Henry Perky invented it in 1893. Kellogg tried to trademark the name in 1938, but the patent failed when a judge ruled the term had been in common usage since 1894, telling Kellogg to shove off and do something useful for mankind like invent loads of sugar laden cereals to bless school teachers every morning. Wikipedia has more about the best cereal if you are interested.

2 January 2007

New Paradise Lost show ... finally!

Show #15 Who Remembers Harold Wilson?
This photo taken aboard HMS Fearless

Happy New Year to Paradise Lost listeners. This show features two short interviews: Rita Gibb, who has been living in the UK for nearly two years, and my brother Rogan, who only left Zimbabwe a month ago.

Also included is a clip from the BBCs Radio 4 programme, UK Confidentialwhich was dealing with hitherto secret papers from 1976. Something about the way the Labour government dealt with ‘the Rhodesia problem’, I found interesting.

You also get a little bit of nostalgia with music some may remember from the RBC days of Radio Jacaranda.

You may listen to the show online using the player below, or go to the podcast's Odeo page, or look up PARADISE LOST in iTunes and subscribe from there.




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