New York To New Orleans on a Train Weds 8th Thurs 9th of June

If we had known the train from New York to New Orleans was going to leave six hours late it might not have been so bad. Hell this is the most exciting city on the planet, within two blocks of Penn Station we could walk to half a dozen bars we love to spend six hours in. Straight up on 34th Street they are showing the new X-men film. Six hours in New York is long enough to start a band, write a short novel, form a cult and ride a flamingo up Madison Avenue singing like Speedy Gonzales. Dressed as Hitler. Should you feel the inclination.
But no, our train was delayed and we were instructed to wait for further announcements. Except all the announcements were telling us to report suspicious packages and not try to pet thek9 response teams responsible for sniffing out explosives. Oh and please don’t sit on the floor.
We sat on the floor, argued about eating the contents of a suspicious package somebody had left,(Mexican chicken wraps) and looked at the departures board in the forlorn hope that we would suddenly be given a platform to queue up for. After four hours we were summoned to a waiting room where they gave us bottled water, broken crackers and biscuits that failed the exams for Jammy Dodger school. We also got a packet of dried fruit and something pretending to be cheese spread.

An outbreak of Wifey’s swearing attracted the attention of Madeleine who was trying to charge her phone, “Waiting for the New Orleans train?” she asked with an understanding smile. “The train is usually an excellent way to see America.” That’s what we thought. So far it had been an excellent way to go mad like a caged cat in a fish farm. Madeleine, a New Yorker with a passion for history, can trace her family back through the pilgrim fathers, to Holland and onto Yorkshire. She had traced her blood to Plantation owners who supported the Union in the Civil War and “Copperheads”, people in the North who supported the Confederacy and had recently completed research into a Civil War sea battle that took place in European waters. She had also done trauma counselling for people involved in 9/11. She was travelling south to visit a civil rights museum in Birmingham Alabama. We had been on the train about an hour when she had politely demanded a free dinner for the whole train. Oh you have to admire the nerve we thought as we sat down to our free dinner. It was a horrible reconstituted chicken and rice gloop that you would cause you to throw it at the wall and kidnap the warden if they served it to you in prison but we ate it out of principle. Madeleine didn’t even want any but negotiated herself a breakfast.
It was dusk before we got to Philli and pitch dark before Washington so we didn’t see an inch of Baltimore (let alone Omar out of The Wire).

Right Song at the Right Moment: The Black Keys “So He Won’t Break”
Wrong Song: A Muzac version of “Misty” played over the Penn Station Tannoy

We woke up in North Carolina. Amtrak provide seats for the most ample of American rumps so sleep would be easy if the train didn’t occasionally bounce about like it was proceeding along a cobbled f***ing street. And people kept bashing through the doors. At least we were not near the toilets, one of which was already blocked. A free breakfast; a roll with seven slices of meat in it and a can of pop saw us as far as South Carolina.

We thought we would never get off.

We thought 30 hours on a train would provide ample time to write, except the train seemed to take umbridge at our production of the lap top and reacted with even more violent bouncing and shaking.
In the queue for the remaining nettie a man asked me if we had six hour train delays in the UK. I told him you can’t really do a six hour train journey in the UK, because the country isn’t long enough. The bog door opened and a dead-eyed psycho, 13 year old, exited and I discovered a mountain of paper in the bowl. “I’ll get the blame for this if it doesn’t flush away.” It did – but the boy, we’ll call him Charles after the head of The Manson family, would feature again in our journey.

Charles’ actual family seemed to consist of a jolly mother, an aunt and a younger brother. By Atlanta the little brother was sobbing uncontrollably and the mother was screaming, “I don’t want any more of your apologies or your crappy food, I want my six hours back.” I clocked Charles as I helped a fat elderly woman off the train with her bag and he was sitting amidst the maelstrom with utter disinterest. Wifey went to the toilet much later and he was again coming out leaving a paper mountain. Then he took to going through the bins.
In search of a, clearly fictional, lost toy he engaged the help of three separate Amtrak employees.

By this time we had added Becca to our own company. Becca was on the way to see her sick grandpa and had left her husband and two kids in Virginia. She composed a film scenario for our carriage and read it out whilst giggling infectiously. We thought it would be fun to buy her beer, so we did and she giggled some more then tried to buy us both a decent dinner from the dining car. Our hunger had already been killed by consuming a second portion of chickenesque rice n’ gloop (that seemed to be in inexhaustible supply) so we reluctantly declined.

Our train would stand motionless for long periods of time then crawl along. When we eventually picked up speed I asked the lady guard to tell the driver to slow down because I felt sick. She said “If you think you’re so funny, say that to these people who have been complaining to me” – I might have felt sheepish but Becca, waving a bottle of Heineken, was laughing too much.
One by one our companions got off as we drifted in and out of sleep. We got to New Orleans at 4.30am on Friday, 10 hours late and 40 since we got to the station in New York.

New York is 30 or 40 hours that way.

Right Song Right Moment – Silversun Pickups “Melatonin” on a hazy North Carolina morning with our train actually moving. There were no bad songs, just bad food.


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Tuesday 7th of June. Manhattan



Motherfukka” said a man at the subway as his card wouldn’t swipe . His wife seemed to agree.
Despite being unaccustomed to such heat we are much too chilled for such profanity; free of the mental and physical burden of luggage and be-shorted like nature intended we travel south on the subway. There is a mad man on the train: old and crooked of spine he has a wild and fearsome beard which matches his eyes and he is announcing something about dinosaurs and handing out flyers. Oh what cruel misfortune as he will surely rush towards me like a kindred soul. Don’t look at him. “Dinosaurs ruled the earth, where are they now? They are extinct. God is showing us how the mighty can fall. The rich and the mighty have corrupted the earth with their greed, they are the kingdom of Babylon and they will fall. Their greed and their theft has brought us to this recession and it is inevitable that a second recession will come and bring them down” then he goes onto how only poor people go to prison while the real criminals, the rich and powerful, escape man’s justice but they shall not escape God’s. I like him and wished I had taken a flyer, but reading over my neighbour’s shoulder I saw he was representing the Christian Revolutionary Brotherhood or the Brothers Christian Revolution or the People’s Front of Judea. He was polite and articulate, everything is better in New York, even the God botherers.
It is pavement scorching hot as we try not to fall into the trap of looking like bloody tourists when encountering Manhattan; gawping up at skyscrapers, taking photos of each other gurning at Ground Zero and squealing “this looks like the subway from “The Warriors”, “Crocodile Dundee”, or “Blade”” just because it really really does. Why we care what anybody thinks is beyond us, this is New York, Hitler could ride a flamingo down up Madison Avenue singing like Speedy Gonzales and the locals wouldn’t bat an eyelid.

The Fat Black Pussycat


The Fat Black Pussycat is in Greenwich Village and is tomb dark even on this fearsomely sunny day. Locals prop up the bar with magnificent accents and enormous balls. Without these voices and these balls the bars would fall over and New York would die. Probably. “You do whatcha gotta do”, “Hey Paulie is that your car they’re towing away?” etc
Saturday Night Fever is on the TV, thankfully with the mute on, unhelpfully somebody puts the Bee Gees “More Than a Woman” on the jukebox. John Travolta struts up to his mirror in his knickers, combing his preposterous hair. He later flexes his gigantic collar and walks his peacock walk like he needs a kick up the knackers. In the 1970’s a lot of people thought this was the coolest film ever made. A lot of people needed a kick up the knackers in the 1970s. As does anybody looking back on the decade fondly, a ghastly business where the only joy in life was whipping off your nylon y-fronts in the dark to see how many sparks you could cause. I know, enough with the testicle based humour, already.

Spiderman comics or beer?


If you get to New York when Newcastle United are playing and you want company then Legends is on 33rd Street, directly behind the Empire State Building. This makes it just about the easiest bar to find in the world. It is also next door to a fabulous comic shop. This is mid-town and it is a mass of humanity, including people looking to get their hand in your pocket. As veterans of this shit we should know better. “Yo where you guys from?” says the kid with a handful of CDs “UK” I reply intent on not breaking stride.
“Tell Tim Westwood he’s a wanker.”
What? Wanker? Americans don’t use the word wanker, it throws me – “I think it may have been mentioned to him before.”
“Yeah we played at the Manchester Apollo for him, supporting Dizzy Rascal and he di’ent pay us.”
Wanker, Westwood, Dizzy, Manchester Apollo? All very English. We ended up paying three bucks for a CD that has probably just got him saying “stooped white muthafucka” on it and laughing at me.
The person who suffered for this lapse in street smarts was the drummer on the subway at Bleeker St. After a pint in the Peculier Pub we were heading back to the Bronx and in the 5 minutes we were waiting for the train he never dropped a beat and he was playing real fast on some plastic tubs and a fire extinguisher. We would have dropped the three bucks on him but we had bust our sukka budget.
We scooped up a couple of six packs back near Barry’s, watched the NBA finals, Dallas tying the series 2-2 and Barry gave us his take on English soccer in the US.
“People think the Americans don’t get our football but the Premiership is massive here now. Here they thought our football was boring and full of people rolling around pretending to be injured. For the most part English football isn’t like that. It’s fast, exciting and unpredictable. And we should be grateful the Americans don’t really get into football, see if these guys in the NBA started playing football instead of basketball from an early age, you’d have these 6’ 7” fast, skilful athletes to play against. Fortunately in the US, NBA and American football is where the money is. But there is a huge and growing appetite for English football here and any English team not coming over here, especially one with an identity like Newcastle would be mad. I think we really missed a trick not coming out here as a club to support the “Goal” film.
“Most teams have got ex-pats out here but as far as Americans supporting English teams; Arsenal are massive with the trendy scenesters and Liverpool and Manchester United are big anywhere, but especially here with the Irish connections, Chelsea are nowhere because they have got no identity and I have never seen a Stoke shirt for example but Newcastle have got a real appeal. They know the Brown Ale, they love an underdog and when they meet us the drinking culture really suits a lot of them. Sport in America is a celebration, it’s about having a good time whatever the score and that’s what we do.”
I ask if it’s easy following the trials and tribulations of Newcastle over here, especially when we were in The Championship. “I saw nearly every game in The Championship, to tell the truth it was one of my favourite recent seasons. I think this season has been excellent as well considering we have just been promoted. “
Barry has been over here for 10 years but is in no hurry to return to Newcastle to live, despite having an obvious passion for his homeland (he has a brilliant framed photo of the Angel of the North that he took himself) and will knowledgeably talk at length about any player in our squad. I say knowledgeable because we pretty much agreed on everything from Joey Barton, to fans underestimating Danny Simpson to why we scored 6 against sunderland last season. I’ve had a season ticket for 10 years and he hasn’t. It seems my old argument about armchair supporters not knowing what the f*** they are looking at doesn’t stand up anymore. Or maybe Barry and his corner of the USA is a special case.
Wrong Song at any Moment = f***ing Bee Gees obviously “More Than a Woman” – what, like She-Hulk?
Right Song at the Right Moment –“ Leave Your Lights On” – Everlast; a gravel voiced song of hope and redemption from the underestimated ex House of Pain frontman with Carlos Santana twisting the soul out of his guitar at the same time. (on the Peculier Pub jukebox)

See, they do spell it like that.




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Monday 6th: “Geordies Here!” Manhattan and The Bronx


All our alarms went off: the hotel TV came on, my watch, Wifey’s phone then, like some little idiot  Corporal Jones, my simple minded phone stamped to attention after everybody else. Are we under attack, have we got to go to work? No, worse, we have to step out into driving rain to get the airport bus to Terminal 5 at Heathrow. Home, as it is, to some of the world’s most exclusive shops, selling designer label luxury goods to the… who? It’s like they collected all the stuff designed to aggravate my inverted snobbery in one place. We amuse ourselves in these situations by attempting to squirt overpriced chemicals onto our clothes while avoiding the attentions of the grinning professional snobs whose job it is to peddle them. They know I’m not going to give them £40 for a bottle of Davidoff’s Cool Water but will ask if they can help anyway as I  blast half litre of the stuff up my sleeve (to hopefully mask all future travel smells I may emit) while I announce, “I’ll see what it’s like when it settles down.”  Wifey does the same, but with more style at the Givenchy stand.

A Slovakian New York lady plonks herself down next to me in the departure lounge (perhaps I smell nice), she is in her late 50s and turns out to be a splendid old goose. She spent a year in her youth following an Indian yogi who died a year later, “my family thought I was mad.”

She didn’t introduce herself but did a good five minutes of material on how small her hotel room was in London. “I couldn’t even get my suitcase open, but I didn’t complain because I overindulged in Paris and thought I should be punished, I could barely get in the shower and I daren’t use the toilet at all.” She was full of advice and encouragement and stuck to us as we got on the bus and all the way to the aircraft. I was clearly being groomed to help her get her oversized hand luggage onto the plane and into the overhead lockers. Because as soon as I had done so she set about working on some other poor sap to swap for a seat with more leg room. He happily obliged despite the fact that she was about 4’8”.

We thought she might be quite mad and were prepared to ignore her advice about getting the Air Train to Manhattan – “yes dear, the train flies through the sky” –  but the queue for the cabs at 45 bucks a pop made us rethink. The line for immigration had already taken the fat end of an hour and  had only speeded up when all the US citizens, air crews and executives had cleared. This meant Wifey and I were actually immigrated through the Diplomatic desk. I forgot to ask if this entitled us to any sort of immunity, which is probably for the best as you are specifically warned against making jokes with the officials. Even desperately lame jokes that they have no doubt heard a thousand times before anyway.

The Air Train track rises out of JFK to Jamaica where you can get a ticket for the subway, so we did E train, 6 train, 5 train to the Bronx for $15, saving maybe $40 at the cost of two hours.

Barry of The New York Mags met us at Pelham Parkway; one of many acts of kindness shown by either himself or his charming wife Evis despite the fact that; 1 he had only met us once, five years ago when we were all very drunk and 2; that he and Evis and their 4 year old, constantly exploding energy bomb of a son, James are moving to Miami this week.

My understanding of The Bronx was based almost entirely on the hip hop poetry of KRS1 of Boogie Down Productions and this doesn’t look like that at all. Trees and grass and smart houses not riddled with Uzi shells from constant drive-by shootings. Barry says he has travelled all over the States and never felt as threatened as when he was a student in Leeds. We had beer while leaning on the bar at Gleason’s and brilliant Italian food at our next stop. Our guilt at barely being able to touch half of it, as the exhaustion of being awake for 20+ hours kicked in, was washed away by the waitress bagging up our leftovers. Penne alla vodka for breakfast. Get the f*** in!

James serenaded us with “When The Mags Go Marching In” through a plastic megaphone as we walked home. “Louder” said Barry and James gleefully obeyed – now that’s parenting.

Right Song at the Right Moment “B” by Snuff –  melodious machine gun paced punk rock with a smashing brassy bit right through the middle while blasting through the sky at 500mph.


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Sunday 5th of June :Hungover in London



“I’ve got a bastard behind the eyes” as the charming Mr Withnail says. I rarely have hangovers, a rare and dangerous gift which goes some way to balancing some of my family’s more troublesome inherited traits, so resent them when they set up shop in my head. Jon went out for a run, as did Lisa who had been late to meet us because she had been preparing a picnic for the Test Match at Lords. They left us to cut up strawberries while they jogged along the canal. Then they came back and made us all delicious scrambled eggs before discussing whether they should take a Rose or champagne to the cricket. “Who are these people?” and more importantly, “what are they doing fraternising with the likes of me?” Sobered up, Jon seemed less enthusiastic about being my agent. But I don’t intend letting him off; “never mind quaffing champers at the cricket, get to work you indolent f******”  – no kind of gratitude for providing us such a comfy bed but Jon is from Kenton in Newcastle and likes that sort of thing.

Never mind. Our heads hurt and our rucksacks were too heavy. Just because we managed to cram them to the very brim didn’t necessarily mean we have packed efficiently. Or maybe we have just got soft. I say “maybe”  like it’s open to debate, too much of me is squidgy. Am I too old to do anything about it? This is going to be a year long f***ing  moan if I am.

We spent so much time scurrying around underground on Sunday you would think we were in the Vietcong. The Olympic Games may seem like a catastrophically selfish vanity project by our country’s capital but living there these last two years has been a massive pain for the indigenous folk. The underground announcements have been long lists of cancelled services and entire line closures over the weekends. My mate Cathi says “it has been like being a prisoner in your own city” and is convinced as many terrorists will be attracted to the events as athletes.

We eventually hooked up with Shaun and his family in The Mason’s Arms in Kensal Green for a last Sunday dinner on English soil for  flip knows how long before struggling out towards Heathrow.  Shaun introduced Wifey and I to each other sometime around the middle of the last century – “I accept the gratitude and the blame” he stated before we wandered out into slate grey skies and driving rain.

£5 an hour for the wi-fi  connection at the hotel, which seemed a damn cheek given the price of the bloody drinks.

Right Song at the Right Moment – Tom Waits “Blue Valentine” on the ipod shuffle in the hotel: perfect Sunday evening music whatever you are doing.

Wrong song at the wrong moment – some shit Eastern European rap-disco rattling out of some drug dealer’s twat-wagon in West London.


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Newcastle and London: Saturday 4th of June 2011

Train to London. Newcastle was grey and our house was clean for our tenants a full 3 minutes before our mates Paul and Dee turned up to take us to the central station.
London was scorching. Hooked up with our mate Jon who plied us with tapas and Spanish lager. Ha – I had the last laugh cos he got pissed and agreed to be my literary agent – he is so enthusiastic about f***ing everything that he will make me sound like a cross between Charles Dickens and Bill Hicks when harrassing the poor fools at the quality press’ travel supplements.
Soho for beer in The Glasshouse Stores with Spurs mate Tim and his patient partner Karen. Cathi Unsworth (a genius crime writer and long time mate and constant source of inspiration) and her fella Mikey and my darling nephew.
As ever in good company, got excited and drunk. I’m sure it was brilliant and I was hilarious.

Ms Unsworth & Darling Nephew

Right song at the right moment: Frank Turner ” Fastest Way Back Home”
Wrong Song at the wrong moment Brenda Lee “I’m Sorry” on my ipod shuffle on the train “No I’m bloody not”

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The World Tour Begins 2.6.2011


Right that’s it, I’m off. I’m not renewing my season ticket and I’m leaving Newcastle altogether. Not my usual idle threat at this time of year brought on by the shit weather that this country calls a summer, or this year in particular by the shabby way our club is treating darling Joey Barton. The car is sold and our belongings are packed into boxes, flogged at knock down prices, given away or spread into our neighbours’ wheelie bins (in the dead of night) throughout a half mile radius.
I sit beneath a teetering cardboard mountain in the hope that the malicious f***ers who are digging up the bastard pavement right outside my house don’t cause enough seismic disruption for me to be buried alive. To die under an avalanche of my unsold books would be more appalling and ironic than to be struck dead by an errant golf ball. Turns out Joey Barton plays golf and I thought we would become such firm friends (“go on Joey mate have a pint, what’s the worst that could happen?”) – f***ing golf; we crawled out of the spawning pools for golf? I want my gills back dammit.
Leaving Newcastle is hard, there is much we will miss, the kindness of people for a start: folks have been falling over themselves to assist in our world tour and not just the mates who are looking after all the crap we leave behind either; strangers recommending destinations and drinking companions around the globe. Exactly how many of these “good mates” turn out to be “sadistic mackem cannibals” will at least make for interesting reading back at Mag HQ.

Some People I Know


I have been forced to go cold turkey on the Playstation just as LA Noire comes out, I’ll miss that, along with Springwatch and Dr Who. I’ll miss The Damned performing The Black Album in its entirety at the O2 and I’ll miss The Computers at the Cluny in July. I’ll miss my garden table – I do so like to stand in the house watching the rain bounce off it throughout June and July.

I won’t miss my job (despite my plummeting bank balance) damn thing tried to kill me, then send me mad, then they tried to sack me. It had reached the point where I was wary of punching a member of the general public in the face ever again. I won’t miss The Kings of Leon’s North East show either; we have seen KoL seven times across three continents in the last two years and along with The Jim Jones Review, The Silversun Pickups and Rise Against they form the bedrock of the World Tour playlist but we saw them in Sheffield in December and Jesus H Christ on a bicycle? Somewhere along the line they became the band of choice for inbred slack-jawed chav-scum. “Eeee me sex is on fire” – that would be the clamydia dear, try not to give it to the dog. Where is it they are playing again? Oh sunderland, perfect. So being away I won’t have to see another series of articles on the local news about how well sunderland is doing to be attracting the most popular of artists to their stadium. “People have travelled from all over the world…” yes to Newcastle, to stay in Newcastle and to eat and drink in Newcastle if they have got any sense, sunderland is little more than our scabby function room. (My mate Paul gave me that line – I promised to credit him.)

Kings of leon in Newcastle

Played in Newcastle 4 times you know?

Most of all I won’t miss being a Newcastle fan in Newcastle during the summer.
The summer used to bring little but thrills at Newcastle United; once we had come to terms with the fact that Robert Lee would not be leaving (the media ran with that story every year for 9 years), it was an excitable crescendo of team improvement, giddy delirium when the season ticket eventually dropped through the door and gleefully committing to memory an entire new fixture list.
In recent years, and long before the arrival of Mr Ashley, it has been a terrible decline into self-loathing. “Who would want to come here?” we all secretly think. We long ago learned not to expect any reliable reassurance about the quality of players arriving and now expect nothing but to be lying on the floor forlornly clutching for the departing coat tails of our better footballers.
For the last two summers it has been foretold that all our players would be gone by August, except for the crap ones nobody wants. Rather brilliantly (in hindsight) that didn’t happen, we got rid of a lot of expensive dead wood and kept a determined core. We can all see that adding to that determined core (you know who they are) would make us a pretty formidable football team but how many of us have got steel lined concrete where our belief should be? Who knows, perhaps Mr Pardew (seen drinking with Mr Ashley in Mayfair only last week) has got a sizeable budget and a plan but so far the players we are linked with are worryingly French.
If you are a supporter of Newcastle United the only way to stay sane at this time of year is to ignore Newcastle United altogether and the hardest place in the world to do that is Newcastle upon Tyne.
It is now officially too late to come with me so look after the place and don’t make a mess or do anything silly. I’ll be in touch.

Follow the Billy Furious World Tour at www.billyfurious.com or at billyfurious1st on Twitter. Contact me at billyfurious@googlemail.com if you or anyone you know is flying the black and white flag in Memphis, Nashville, Chicago, Denver, anywhere in Costa Rica, Santiago in Chile, Buenos Aires in Argentina, anywhere in New Zealand, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. And thank you very much to all of you who have done so already. Barry in New York – I’ll hopefully see you next week.


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Newcastle United Season 2010/11 Perspective 23.5.2011


Newcastle United 3 v West Brom 3

Perhaps time will throw some perspective at this game. Perhaps there will come a point where we can look at the final table for the 2010/11 season without thinking it tarnished and squawking “9th, we could have finished 9th” like we haven’t been able to stop doing in the 24 hours since this game ended. 3-0 up and cruising against a rotten West Bromwich Albion team Newcastle didn’t so much take their foot off the gas as get out the car, throw the keys in the sea and start contemplating the contents of their handkerchiefs. In a collective act of idiot wastefulness our season went from “bloody brilliant actually” to “pretty good I suppose” and a sour taste was left in the mouth.
But hasn’t that been Newcastle United this season; capable of sparkling vitality and heroic resilience but also prone to unfathomable ineptitude and chronic shitness? With cold hindsight we have never been in danger of the relegation so many predicted for us and we turned out to have been mathematically safe since beating Wolves on the 2nd of April. That’s six weeks before this match even kicked off but we have rarely felt comfortable because we have had to watch games like Blackpool, Stoke, Wigan, Blackburn, Fulham, Everton and Bolton at home and Stoke, Bolton, Villa, West Brom and Fulham away and we could see first hand how bad we could be. That’s 13 games, including this one, against mediocre opposition (which is over a third of the season) where we gathered 4 points. If we had made all those games draws and seen this game out to a win we would have been 6th, ahead of Liverpool. That’s if you also take away the goal we don’t want to talk about. The sickeningly ill-deserved one that bounced into our net off Asamoah Gyan’s stupid bloody face in injury time down in sunderland’s litter strewn pig-pen. A goal that we tried to tell ourselves didn’t matter because we still had that delicious 5-1 in our pocket. It did matter but fitting that scabby luck should earn our neighbours their third top flight, top half, finish in 55 years. And while we’re on the subject that’s the third top half finish in 55 years by the way. Massive club? Oh aye.
The first port of call in the quest to gain perspective came on seeing the poor suffering buggers’ faces on Match of the Day as the bare-knuckle bloodbath that was the relegation fight unfolded. The difference between 9th and 12th was of little concern to them and good to be well away from it. And we were well away from it because we can play like we did in the first half of this game; smart passing, intelligent movement and organised defending. I say organised defending, Jose Enrique Sanchez Diaz had a shocker in his eye-throbbing orange boots. But such was the quality of those around him that it didn’t seem to matter; Shane Ferguson despite only being 9 years old is tough, quick and clever, Coloccini imperious and Steven Taylor inspired and probably man of the match. Taylor cleared two West Brom shots off the line in the first half and put us 1-0 up, swivelling in the six yard box to smash home after the panic inspired in the home defence by a Ryan Taylor corner. Shola, clumsy and infuriating, had a shot cleared off the line and Guthrie had a shot tipped over before Lovenkrands made it 2-0. Carson may have looked mortified that the goal was given but after batting Lovenkrands’ shot up he clearly grabbed the ball back from well behind the line.
Jonas Olson should have been sent off up here last season, so nice that he should pop the ball into his own net at the start of the second half. 3-0 and on the way to the 6 goals we needed to overhaul Fulham in 8th place should they lose at home to Arsenal. (They didn’t).
But no, we switched off instead. Switched off to the point that the worst player on the pitch scored a hat-trick while our players dozed about and our manager dismantled our formation with baffling substitutions. Danny Simpson played Tchoyi onside for his first and was nowhere as Coloccini flinched out of the way for his second. Enrique capped off a wretched afternoon of carelessness by being entirely absent as Tchoyi headed in the equaliser in injury time.
There was booing at the end and many fans chose to leave rather than stay to applaud the lap of appreciation. While understandable it was something of a shame because with the slow onset of perspective we will appreciate the mental resolve of our players and we will recognise that 12th is bloody good for the first year after promotion. Some of our favourite ever games have been this season; 6-0 against Villa, 3-1 against Liverpool and 1-0 and 4-4 against Arsenal. Seeing our team earn creditable draws against Manchester United and Chelsea (twice) was something and we scored more goals than Spurs who finished 5th. But our firmest grasp of perspective came as the first gloating texts arrived from friendly mackems. All we had to do was send “5-1” back and we have all the perspective we need to last us until August.


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The Billy Furious World Tour (2.5.2011)



The season ticket deadline has passed and I didn’t buy one. I’ve been ignoring the nagging reminders like they were a wedding invitation from a distant relative, trying not to think about it and failing. “What do these grasping f****ers want from me now?”
How liberating to actually think, “No, I don’t think so,” and drop the invitation straight into the bin knowing the event won’t be the same without magnificent old me.
Except it will probably be better, no one will notice my absence and those that do will no doubt be grateful for it.

So we gave up work Wifey and I, in the midst of a recession, which probably means we are having a lovely breakdown and are too daft and too far gone to even notice. When I say we gave up work I mean we gave up proper work where someone gives you money for doing something. We are actually working longer hours than when we had jobs. Only now I don’t take a wilful pleasure on being late, obnoxious and lazy.
I am now a full time writer, this is what I do for a living, yes this old bollocks, you can get paid for it. In the last 8 weeks I have earned £3 which I think puts me under the radar of Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs which means that I didn’t pay anything towards that f***ing Royal Wedding which is a massive result, as I’m sure you will agree. And like I said, I didn’t want to go anyway. Irrelevant bollocks that it all was.

The bad news for you lot is that I am not going to stop waffling on here. We are off on a World Tour to try and get some perspective and to hopefully chase down other Newcastle fans who don’t go to St James’ Park anymore to see what they think about everything. I’m particularly interested to see how long it takes us to utterly lose all perspective. How long will it be before we sit defeated in ill-fitting and seriously out of date replica shirts, drinking Brown Ale and singing, “Coming Home Newcastle” at bewildered peasant children?

nufc book, billyfurious1st

New Furious Book (hopefully)


It has started already, this plot misplacement, we haven’t been to a game for two months and while watching the home draw with Man Utd on a television in the arse end of Norfolk I found myself thinking the booing of Michael Owen was a bit harsh. I rang the editor: “Don’t you think the booing of Michael Owen was a bit harsh?” I asked.
“No,” he snapped. See, I’ve lost the plot already.
Here’s the thing about Owen: do we really think he wasn’t trying when he played here, that if only he had got his finger out we wouldn’t have got relegated? Do we think that he was happier sitting on his sofa watching the horse racing than he would have been scoring goals and winning games for Newcastle United? Freddie Shepherd spent a frightful amount of our money on Owen, more than we could afford, but who at the time wasn’t delighted? When I used to have a job, a sunderland fan, in 2005, said, “you lot gonna buy a striker then, who do you fancy?”
“Owen.”
He laughed in my face in front of witnesses. I shrugged and walked away. The day Owen signed I didn’t even say anything to him, I just laughed right back and it felt f***ing brilliant.

We know now signing Owen was disastrous and catastrophically expensive but he got injured and is not the same player anymore. Shearer could adapt after his injury because he had more to his game than speed. Owen was brilliant because he could get to his own rotten first touch before anybody else, without his whiplash pace he hasn’t got much. If Owen was still the player we paid £16 million for Hernandez and Berbatov wouldn’t be getting a look in at Man U. He isn’t and I don’t think that’s his fault. On the other hand the booing obviously upset him and he didn’t score against us. So f*** him.
I would also like to take issue with the lad who slagged off Obafemi Martins in the last Mag, along the lines of “what, Alan Shearer is the only striker allowed the ‘shit service’ excuse is he? Look at Oba’s goals for us, go on look at them! Watching Newcastle failing to even look like scoring in our 1974 F.A. Cup Final Commemorative Scoreline at Anfield yesterday, wouldn’t it have been nice to have something resembling a striker in white?”
But following my own strict laws about not listening to the opinions of people who don’t actually go to see Newcastle play I have no credibility to back up my argument anymore. And I should f*** off (after all, I don’t even know why we played in white against Liverpool). Well I’m going to. For a year.

Recently we got a rabies injection and had our typhoid updated. Rabies is a course of three jabs which we will enjoy over the coming weeks and then there is hepatitis B. The nurse also had little pop up maps on her computer that showed us exactly what we can expect to die from at our various ports of call. (Ignoring any Al-Qaeda reprisals for the execution of Osama obviously) A ghastly business. And expensive. Well relatively expensive; compared to frothing out your last breath in a Costa Rican shed after being gnawed on by a wild eyed and rabid fruit bat, it’s obviously a bloody bargain at £282 for the two of us.

We have got dates with Mags in New York, Los Angeles and Sydney Australia but what I want from you dear reader is to give me a shout if you are or if you know somebody who lives under a black and white flag in any of the following: New Orleans, Memphis, Nashville, Chicago, Denver, anywhere in Costa Rica (it looks about the size of Northumberland), Santiago in Chile, Buenos Aires in Argentina, Melbourne in Oz, anywhere in New Zealand, Thailand, Vietnam and Cambodia. I’ll meet you/them for a pint, stick a tape recorder under your/their nose and tell people how great you are. In the meantime, if the rest of you will buy my new book when it comes out, I would be very grateful otherwise I might not make it back.
I’ll keep you all posted – toodle pip.

Never forget I love you all and good luck.

BF

Get me on Twitter at billyfurious1st or email billyfurious@googlemail.com
Follow the progress (or lack of it) on billyfurious.com


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Don’t Ask Any More Stupid Questions


Last month we discussed why one should spend money one has not got on things one does not need. I say “we discussed” when meaning I rambled on like a drunken old goat while you waited patiently for some swearing about sunderland and we were all left feeling slightly poorer for the experience.
Already this month I wonder what kind of tit uses the word “one” three times when opening a sentence and hope to God I’m being ironic. These days it is increasingly difficult for one to tell. (For those of you not watching on the red button I am pouting and opening my palm out over my shoulder like Oscar Wilde would if he were ever asked to drive a logging truck though Alaska – it’s not a good look so please can we all agree on ironic?)

This month’s stupid question was going to be: “Which player should Newcastle United have cashed in on sooner? Not rubbish players, but the briefly over-priced players who we kept until they were worth less?” It was a question in direct response to the colossal amount of cash we got for Andy Carroll, who lumbered around wondering when the crosses were going to start coming in when playing for Liverpool at sunderlandthe other week. I’m still pathetically trying to convince myself that he will be injured, jailed, riddled with the clap or shinning clear chances askew until his value plummets, thus proving that we did the right thing in flogging the lad.
And thanks to him scoring for England having very little success in doing so.
The only real example I could come up with was Kieron Dyer, who after one of his all too rare purple patches was reportedly interesting Chelsea and Leeds United with figures like £20 million being bandied about. A player we chose to hold onto and a decision that I applauded at the time, a player who, now 32 years old, has returned to Ipswich Town with most of his potential lying dead in a darkened basement somewhere. This idea was going to need very big print to fill the page, as well as a two pictures and a couple of sudukos.
So instead, in direct response to a recent treacherous and dangerous expedition into my own loft, I ask; what is the point of having something and not using it?
Like what is the point of having a great big goalkeeper who is exceptional on dealing with crosses like Tim Krul on the wage bill then playing teeny tiny Steve Harper at f***ing Stoke? Now we have got to live with that bullshit spouting Welsh reptile Tony Pulis having taken 6 points off us this season for no other reason than we have been too bloody stupid to stop him. And don’t talk to me about the benefit of hindsight because the relative size and differing abilities of our first choice goalkeepers wasn’t some impossible conundrum yet to be solved a fortnight ago. It was obvious – and consequently not a great big tick next to Mr Pardew’s name thank you very much.
My loft was full of stuff that I presumably thought I might want or need at some point in the future. Perhaps I expected to get some kind of debilitating illness that would mean I would have the time or inclination to watch Red Dwarf or The Smell of Reeves & Mortimer in their entirety, read the collective works of PJ O’Rourke or start wearing The Ramones sweatshirt I bought outside the Poly in 1994. Again.
Some years ago I got a Video to DVD recorder and began the task of painstakingly copying the videos that I never watched onto DVDs that I have also never watched. Fortunately the DVD part broke, possibly due to the futility of the entire operation, and the contraption was tossed into the loft the same day a miserable Teessider came round to wire up my Sky HD + box all wrong. (two months after flicking between normal TV and the HD version to see if we could find the slightest difference, except for a short time delay, a different man came round, not from Sky, and wired it up properly).

Black and white, season highlights

Exactly How Bored Are You? - I can help


Also up in my loft were 58 Newcastle United videos. Official ones and “classic” games that I thought too good to tape over. I actually bought club videos of entire games as well; the earliest is a home game against Nottingham Forest from December 1986, closely followed by a cracking game against Norwich (featuring one Mr. S Bruce) from April 87. sunderland from March 92 is in there somewhere along with a game at Norwich from January 94 that Keegan claimed was our best ever performance under him. The £10.99 price label is still on it and I think I watched it once and if memory serves (and it regularly doesn’t) featured only three fouls and five throw-ins in the 90 minutes such was the fluency of both teams passing. A lot of the tapes are season compilations scarred by the hideous vanity of Roger Tames adding his own painfully delivered and obviously rehearsed commentary. He’s been getting away with this deliberate vandalism for nearly twenty years by the way.
Anyway as a social experiment I am putting the lot, and a video player to play them on, on ebay. My belief is that not one single person is interested in buying them – even with the promise that my driver will deliver them for free to the door of the lucky buyer providing they live within twenty miles of Newcastle City centre. And will give half the money to Comic Relief.
Please bear this in mind before purchasing the DVD of our recent game against Arsenal – unless you are very ill or very bored, twenty years from now you will wonder why the hell you bothered.

Go to ebay and enter Newcastle United videos 1986 to 2003 (58 in total) – 270725757151 and the auction begins at 9 am on Monday April 4th.


Posted in General Waffle, Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Fashion (turn to the left) 28.2.2011


I was talking to my mate Graham over a pint in town. Unique your Graham, as all who know him will testify. He somehow manages to fuse together an intellectual insightfulness with Geordie docker’s vocabulary. For example I, rather pompously, said the Da Silva brothers at Manchester United look like models in a Caravaggio painting and he said, “You mean they both look like they are getting bummed off an auld painter?”
His latest gem was an observation of the likely participants in any Newcastle/ sunderland pre or post match fisticuffs. “Modern football hooliganism is a game of British Bulldog in thousand pound clobber.”

A Da Silva brother at Carrington yesterday.

I lay awake thinking about this, which made a change from trying to scratch my itchy foot with my brain, thinking about dragging a reluctant donkey across a desert and wondering how or why snooker was invented. Is that why I have never been in any bother before or after a match for such a long time? I’m not dressed for the part: in my lucky match gear: the fashion equivalent of; bike jacket, tutu, flippers and fez, I probably don’t look like I’m up for a bundle.

Surely in this age of austerity, fashion is the first thing that goes out of the window, given that it makes little sense when you have got any money. In a world full of CDs, downloads, beer, video games, untried food and exotic places to visit only a fool would spend more than a hundred pounds on a shirt. Especially in Newcastle where it’s the law that the first time you wear an expensive shirt, it will get ripped or permanently stained outside a kebab shop. But the evidence suggests people’s urge to buy into fads is, if anything, accelerating; take the depressing amount of our women-folk who have taken to wearing those awful old-lady boots. Those clumpy fabric and fluff things (that cost up to £240 a pair) that look like they are designed to keep a gal’s foot warm in the winter but actually let the wet in like a cheap slipper as soon as we have more than an inch of snow. Why anyone would aspire to resembling a 97 year old who smells of cats, despite not actually owning a cat, whose highlight of the week is putting her bins out because all her friends are dead, is lost on me. And don’t try and tell me they are warm and practical – half these people would strap live herrings to their knees and wear a dog-turd hat if some vacuous WAG-twat was pictured wearing the same get-up on the front of one of those magazines for dismal office drones.
Oh and ladies don’t have the market cornered in fashion-victim-ness – what the f*** is the point of paying hundreds or even thousands of pounds for a watch? Sweaty guinea-pigged-faced, knicker-picking grunter Rafael Nadal wears a million pound watch to play tennis in, are you going to beat that for “showy” and why the f*** would you want to? If you hear someone is wearing a million pound watch do you think “cool” or do we all think “cock”? Does an expensive watch make time better? Does quarter past two on a Monday afternoon have an extra resonance? Are the passing seconds until your inevitable painful death slightly less troublesome?
Phones! Mobile phones have got so loaded down with apps that you can now buy a device that can house all the apps but isn’t actually a phone anymore. So you have to carry what around with you as well if you want to call somebody? Handy then that our friendly retailers now supply gentlemen’s hand-bags to put all our things in, which brings us back to girls. Thin girls specifically with outsize sunglasses on their orange faces clutching thousand pound monstrosities that look like they have been stapled together out of Dame Edna Everage’s sleeping bag, which they simply “had to have” because it’s got the right logo dangling from the strap. Idiots.
“Oh you are getting old” – you say. And you might have a point, I’ve never knowingly quoted Bowie in the title before (I would go back to pretending to like Mumford & Sons but the depression would likely kill me). But I have always hated fashion and the great thing about hating fashion is you always win because as soon as the fashion Nazis move away from something the scales start fall from the eyes of the brainwashed (except in Stoke) and bell-bottoms, rah-rah skirts, Burberry caps and CB radios become laughable relics. What larks to spend life shouting, “I told you fashion was shit” at people, with only MP3 players, Gore-tex and Rastamouse contradicting my feeble smuggery.
So it was with a heavy heart that I approached the world of Twitter. Surely apart from (our unelected head of state) Mr Stephen Fry it was merely a forum for 14 year olds to talk about snogging. But I was so pissed off that some weasel was on calling themselves Billy Furious, who had followers who I know, that I had to do something. So encouraged by my friend Ken to expand billyfurious.com globally, (with the assured reasoning of “look it’s not as bad as f***ing facebook”) I tentatively put up some links and tweets. I assumed nobody would be interested, and for the most part I was right but now I’m addicted to the point that I might have to buy a poncy new phone to keep a more regular interest going. Ask a question and people will answer it, say something daft and someone will say something dafter and I have been in contact with people in Tokyo and Miami who I hadn’t spoken to in ages. You can follow link to link to link for example; Doug Stanhope (unelected King of the Planet) took me to Charlie Brooker who took me to Jimmy Carr who took me to somebody pretending to be The Real IRA which doesn’t sound like it is going to be funny, but it is. (“Nobody likes being followed by The Real IRA”).
Unfortunately The Big Sam site has been suspended so if you haven’t seen it you’ve missed it, allegedly the actual Mr Allardyce disapproved which is a shame because it was so irreverent, brilliantly observed, obscene and hilarious that the sight of the actual Mr Allardyce had started to make me smile instead of wanting to throw things at my telly….. no wait, the site’s back up – the printed media can’t be expected to keep up with this.
If you put the words “Billy” and “Furious” into Search you get “Miley Cyrus is furious with father Billy Ray”. So you have to go to Billyfurious1st if you want to be bored by my irregular musings but there is a link to my mate in Miami who has archived some classic Big Sam quotes. And there are Mags from “arl owwer,” as Graham would say.


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