BEN HUR – how big? On 3 September we expressed our puzzlement over a landslip blocking a road in the Manawatu gorge in New Zealand. It was going to take a week to clear and was described in the New Zealand Herald as “bigger than Ben-Hur”.
Several readers from that part of the world wrote to inform us that, in Tom Sutton’s words, “the saying is part of our local language, a colloquialism, started when the ‘big production’ of the film occurred.” As Andrew Ross amplifies, “it was bigger than any movie since way back when, as I well recall (being old).”
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The metaphor is illuminated further by Paul Jefferson’s discovery of a sold in New Zealand called the “Ben Hur”. Large though this looks in the online photo, “a week still seems a long time,” as Paul notes, “to move a sofa and two armchairs.”
Our perhaps over-literal attempts to visualise a landslip as a heap of furniture is interrupted by a suggestion that the saying is the metaphorical equivalent of “bigger than mega” or “bigger than giga”: the film simply stands in for a multiplier. This comes from Malcolm Shute, who extends the multiplier theme by informing us that his office in Vaucluse, France, is about a megametre from ours in London, and wonders why more use is not made of the standard big multipliers. We, for our part, have already suggested that the UK budget deficit be reported in gigapounds, global trade in teraeuros, and so on (11 September 2010).
The promotional postcard Steve Wright received from Daisy Dry Cleaning promised “H2O Dry Cleaning”. “That would be ‘Wet Dry Cleaning’ then,” Steve observes
Harmonically restructured water
HERE’S a new one. Several Australian readers, including Sara Bowen, Michael Burgun and Mog Bremner, have come across a company that claims to “restructure water”.
Sara quotes a sample for us from an advert in an Australian magazine: “TC Energy Design products are masterpieces of form and harmony – beautiful mouth blown glassware uniquely shaped to revitalise and restructure water. Created from musical compositions converted into spatial dimensions and moulded into balanced, harmonic glassware, the shapely form of the glassware generates an energising resonance pattern that restores water with subtle waves of harmonic sound…” You can read more at .
Sara says: “I wonder what we’ve been doing to water all this time that it needs harmonic restructuring?” She goes on to say that the part of Australia she lives in seems to contain equal numbers of hard-line evangelical Christians and credulous New Agers – presumably the kind who would be interested in restructured water – with just a few rational people in between.
“I very much like the reaction I get when reading your magazine in public,” Sara says.
UNLIKELY product of the week is the “intelligent” shampoo and hair conditioner produced by Fuente and retailing at £275 a pop. Given lavish feature treatment in – where else? – the London , the Truffle hair care range contains “the skin of white truffle, pure diamond dust and meteorite extracts”, and, no, we’re not kidding.
These ingredients, we are told, react “intelligently” to the “specific needs of each individual hair type”, making Truffle a “revolutionary ‘self-thinking’ product”.
Some people, it seems – and in this case that’s some very rich people – will believe anything.
Beetle’s penis sets noise record
HOW did we miss this? A BBC Nature news report on 30 June this year carried the engaging headline “‘Singing penis’ sets noise record for water insect” (see ).
The report went on to explain that a tiny water boatman, Micronecta scholtzi, “is the loudest animal on Earth relative to its body size”. Researchers from France and Scotland made underwater recordings of it “singing” at up to 99.2 decibels, “the equivalent of listening to a loud orchestra play while sitting in the front row”.
The insect makes the sound by rubbing its penis against its abdomen in a process known as “stridulation”. The researchers say its song is a courtship display performed to attract a mate.
Freda Hennessey’s email alerting us to this fascinating report got lost somehow in our piling system and has only just resurfaced.
The queue you are in does not exist
FINALLY, yet another one we missed. Two readers, Paul Cornock and William Pedder, were listening to the BBC’s cricket commentary on the last day of the England versus India test match series three months ago. What they claim in separate emails to us is, we feel, of sufficient interest to merit a report even this long after the event.
Both Paul and William say that, according to the BBC, a policeman with a megaphone was shepherding the dense crowds outside Lords cricket ground who had come to watch the match. What he told them through the megaphone was: “Ladies and gentlemen, the queue you are in does not exist. THE QUEUE YOU ARE IN DOES NOT EXIST.”