Paul Fitzpatrick: April 2021 London.

According to the Harvard professor and cognitive psychologist Steven Pinker, mankindโs never had it so good.
He reasons that by almost every metric of human wellbeing, the world is getting better โeverything from war, violence, and poverty (all declining) to health, wealth, happiness, and equality (all improving).
Iโm not about to argue against the Prof or his logic but despite the obvious progress there are still a few things from the 70s that I’m sure we all miss.
I donโt mean major things, like – loved ones or youth or waistlines, theyโre a given of course, however, Iโm not talking about superfluous things either, like Golden Cups or Sea Monkeys.
I readily admit that my choices are all minor in the grand scheme of things but theyโre particular to me….
1) Jukeboxes:
I know we can stream music from a grain of sand nowadays and Spotify can provide us with 70 million downloadable songs at the touch of a button, and really, Iโm grateful for that, itโs progress, it really is.

But I do miss a great jukebox in a pub, because itโs the way it should be, itโs democracy at its finest, everyone has a choice and if the proprietors are smart and curate the best of each genre then it doesnโt matter if youโre a Rock fan and the jukebox is playing Dock of the Bay by Otis Redding or Wichita Lineman by Glen Campbell, the chances are youโll still appreciate best in class.
The alternative is generally hit or miss and usually in the hands of a disinterested staff member who’s happy to put on anything for a bit of background noise.
Iโve left pubs before because the music was so banal.
In my local they have an online jukebox system called Secret DJ where you can log-in using the pubs Wi-Fi and make your own choices (everyone that logs in has 3 free choices before you have to pay), thereโs not a great selection to choose from to be honest but there’s a bit of Steely Dan & The Doobie Brothers & Al Green and of course Wichita Lineman & Dock of the Bay…
Itโs not as good as a finely curated jukebox of course but itโs better than listening to Adele on a loop.

2) Robert Halpern:
In the late 70s one of the best nights out for me was a visit to The Pavilion in Glasgow to see a stage hypnotist called Robert Halpern.
I must have seen the guy 20 times at least, and over the course of a few years I dragged along everyone I knew to see his act… mainly for the show but also to witness their reactions, which were usually hysterical.
The premise of the show was pretty simple and never really changed.
He would hypnotise about 40 people every night.
Most of them hypnotised within the first 10 minutes of the show, unknowingly put under, whilst sitting in their seats.
He’d then home-in on about 12 principal characters (usually the mouthy ones) who would become the stars of the show.
I took a friend who on attending the show for the first time got hypnotised, and I watched it all unfold.
One minute he was sat beside me saying it was all claptrap the next he was trudging up to the stage like a zombie with his fingers clasped so tightly that his hands and arms were shaking.
At the end of the show my mate vehemently denied that he had been hypnotised and insisted that heโd been fully aware of everything that had gone on.
I so wished I had a camera phone back then to show him his โawarenessโ at work.
He didnโt think it was strange at all, that…
He was up on stage in front of 1,500 people… Or that he was eating raw onions that supposedly tasted like sweet apples…. Or that he would start taking all his clothes off when he heard a certain song… Or that he was stuck to a chair that he couldnโt get out of for 10 minutes…. Or that he was trying to feed a carrot to a wooden horse…. Or that he believed the number 3 didnโt exist so when he counted his fingers, he had 11 digits… despite him working for a bank!
He said he was just performing for the benefit of the show, which I guess on some level is how โresponse to suggestionโ works… which is at the core of hypnotism.
Anyway, as you can probably guess, the star of the show every night as always, was the great Glasgow public.
There was always a gallus wee punter telling the hypnotist to โf*ck off ya clown!โ or a schemie laying into him with โdo ya think I’m buttoned up the back, ya dobber!โ.
At the height of his popularity this dobber was earning ยฃ25,000 per week, had added a Bengal tiger a set of gallows and a spaceship to his act and was swanning about in a Rolls Royce.

Things didnโt end well for Halpern though.
A girl hypnotised by him marched off the front of the stage into the orchestra pit, when as part of the act he’d convinced her she needed a pee and was desperate for the bathroom.
She broke her leg, damaged her back and sued.
Halpern, a regular at the casinos, was by now allegedly bankrupt.
Even though I knew the drill I miss those shows, they were funny, chaotic, very live and obviously spontaneous.
One of my favourite parts was the wooden horse routine โ
โwhen you wake up you will see a beautiful stallion, a Grand National winner, you love that horse and no one else is allowed to go near it, if anyone touches your horse you will be livid…. 1-2-3 Wake Up!โ
Cue wee Glasgow punter when he wakes up and sees another wee Glasgow punter sitting on the wooden horse – โhey you, ya thieving b*stard, get aff my f*cking horse!!!โ
3) Laugh out loud movies:
I never laughed so much in the cinema as I did in the 70s โ Blazing Saddles, Life of Brian, Kentucky Fried Movie, Young Frankenstein, The Jerk, *Caddyshack, *Airplane, etc…




(*the last two were actually released early in 1980 but were devised & written in the 70s and filmed in 79, so Iโm claiming them for the 70s)
Donโt get me wrong there have been some great comedies in subsequent decades โ Borat, Step Brothers, In Bruges, In the Loop, etc, but nothing quite as hilarious as Mel Brooks and The Pythons at their best.
The depressing thing about a lot of those 70s movies however is that none of them would get made in todays โcancel cultureโ.
Donโt get me wrong, if something is genuinely offensive then it shouldnโt see the light of day, but nowadays a big section of society gets offended by everything and being outraged seems to give some people the right to take the moral high ground and say โIโm offended therefore Iโm principledโ…. permitting them to jump on whatever bandwagon is rolling through social media that week.
Creatively, this leads to a culture of fear and reduces risk taking, which in turn stymies talent and imagination.
Take Blazing Saddles as an example.. as brilliant as it is, that screenplay would never be pitched to studio execs today.
Itโs mistakenly referred to as a racist movie by some, when in fact itโs actually one of the greatest anti-racist movies of all time…
Co-written by Richard Pryor, who also advised on the language, the films original title was Tex X: it was planned to be an homage to Malcolm X, and was conceived from the outset as an unflinching attack on racism
True, it requires a modicum of critical thinking to work out who the butt of the satire, sarcasm and absurdity is aimed at, but surely we can trust the general public to work that out for themselves without the need for a ‘3-minute racism warning message’ recently added to the start of Blazing Saddles (and Gone With the Wind) on HBO in America.
Likewise, was The Life of Brian really blasphemous or was Brian just โA very naughty boyโ who happened to be born next door and on the same day as Jesus?
On reflection, maybe Iโm using Movies as a means of bitching about todays โwoke cultureโ, so I best stop there before I get cancelled!
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๐ Spot on, Paul! Blazing Saddles and Life of Brian were pieces of comedic genius. And even without giving it any great thought as a 19 year old or whatever, I never considered the former to be anything other than showing the absurdity of racism.
I think I may have mentioned before, but if I won the lottery, my first major purchase would be a juke box. Or maybe two. One for original Rock n Roll singles and the other for original ska and reggae 7″.
๐
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