Great party....pity about the hangover
After I'd watched Top Gear's Jeremy Clarkson trying to destroy a Toyota bakkie for the fourth time I decided to review my DSTV contract. It's not that I don't enjoy Top Gear because I do. Well mostly. But when the presenters sit down and review "new" cars that came onto the market a decade ago then you get the feeling that, for around R600 a month, you're being ripped off.
I've even tuned into another programme on cars presented by a much younger Clarkson with a full head of hair. That must be at least twenty years old. For obvious reasons motoring programmes don't have a very long shelf life but that doesn't seem to have stopped the BBC from re-running them.
What we do in the Bullard household is to downgrade to the cheap bouquet for most of the year and only upgrade during the Tour de France in July. That means we miss programmes like Masterchef Haiti, Big Brother North Korea, Come Dine with Me and the surfeit of appallingly dull food programmes and reality shows.
This is not a major inconvenience because most of the people we socialize with don't even have DSTV and even if they did wouldn't watch such dross. Unfortunately our cheap bouquet means we don't get e-News so I was relieved to tune in during July to find that my old friend Jeremy Maggs is not wasting away with anorexia.
This year we extended our upgrade to include the Olympics and if anybody had told me two weeks ago that I would be glued to the TV watching the finalists in the women's synchronised swimming I would have strongly denied it. It really is an absurd sport for the Olympics but it clearly requires enormous skill which is why it makes good TV. So, like most people I suspect, we are exhausted after two weeks of Olympic coverage and can't wait to get back to our restricted bouquet. At least we'll be able to afford to buy meat again.