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  • OPINION

    A soggy serving of mush to start the day

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 23/04/2017

    » Most important news of the week is that the Chinese have given the thumbs down to a revered English breakfast staple ... Weetabix. The Chinese owner of Weetabix has sold the cereal company to an American firm after four years of failing to convince the domestic market of its virtues. It seems Chinese consumers still prefer the traditional dim sum (steamed buns) and rice porridge for their morning repast rather than the cereal The Guardian newspaper splendidly called "a gloriously bland, comforting, soggy serving of mush".

  • OPINION

    Wish you were here, wherever it might be

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 02/11/2014

    » I enjoyed the tale in the Post this week of the young Japanese tourist who for years had set his heart on visiting Myawaddy, the Myanmar border town opposite Mae Sot in Tak province.

  • OPINION

    All you need is love ... and a sense of the absurd

    Roger Crutchley, Published on 16/02/2014

    » In Amazing Thailand the silly season is never far away and it tends to get particularly silly at this time of the year, courtesy of Valentine's Day. We've had the usual underwater weddings in Trang, tying the knot aboard elephants in Chiang Mai and, no doubt, couples getting married while dangling upside down on a bungee jump.

  • OPINION

    I see a white plane and I want to paint it black

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 22/09/2013

    » Last December this column carried an item featuring ''omnishambles'', named by the Oxford English Dictionary as the 2012 ''word of the year''. The word is defined as: ''A situation that has been comprehensively mismanaged, characterised by a string of blunders and miscalculations.''

  • OPINION

    'Ginger Pride' marchers paint the town red

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 18/08/2013

    » Growing up with a mop of ginger hair, I was intrigued to see that Edinburgh last week hosted an inaugural "Ginger Pride" parade, a protest against ''gingerism'', the perceived prejudice or discrimination against people with natural red, or more likely, ginger hair.

  • OPINION

    Well, it all began with a lady in a bikini

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 07/10/2012

    » It's not often I can recall my movements of five days ago, let alone five decades, but I do know that 50 years ago this week, I was standing in a long queue on a miserable wet night in my home town of Reading. The reason for this odd behaviour was the opening of the very first Bond film, Dr No, which was showing at the less than glamorous Reading Odeon.

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