I’m not a parade person. Modern civic displays feel to me like the survivals of much more visceral rituals, probably ending with the spilling of at least animal blood, and not with a number from Ed Sheeran. And frankly they involve far too much standing up.
They are spectacles made to be televised, and so it proved with yesterday afternoon’s Platinum Jubilee pageant through the royal bits of central London.
Such occasions nowadays seem to go either of two ways — mad (or ‘eccentric’ as the commentary kept telling us) or reverential. A little pomp goes a very long way, and thankfully the pomp section was done and dusted pretty quickly. Yes, we heard ‘The British Grenadiers’ but ten minutes later it was Kool & The Gang’s ‘Celebration’ all the way.
But the trouble with the platinum pageant was that it was not sufficiently mad.
True, the concepts of service and duty were shrunk to the general debased currency of television — ‘it’s KER-AZZY’ AJ Odudu kept telling us, as if on the regional opt out in a telethon — and we were constantly having things that were right in front of us, and hardly subtle, explained to us. When this is something unfamiliar with faded connotations, all to the good. When it’s Joan Collins in an old banger, there’s not much more to be added than ‘There goes Joan Collins in an old banger’.
There were some deliciously strange moments. Twitter is very keen to tell us that these celebrations mean that the country is sliding into fascism, and equally keen to qualify that totalitarianism won’t, this time around, come marching in in shiny jackboots. That’s fair enough, but will it really come, I wonder, with Timmy Mallet standing on the top deck of an open-topped bus repeatedly mock-bonking himself on the head with a foam hammer?
Other highlights included Lulu in the commentary box using a fabulous new word for the occasion, telling us of ‘this sense of upliftment’. Intriguingly, homosexuality was rendered as a glittery float, equivalent to Mods or the Lambeth Walk. We saw Bonnie Langford, born 1964, on the bus representing the 1950s. There was, notably, no mention or depiction of the works or characters of JK Rowling, the most successful British author of the Queen’s reign. The selection of still-breathing vintage stars on the decades buses was pleasing, but obviously nobody worth the candle from the last twenty years could be inveigled to appear, leaving the 21st century to be represented by luminaries such as Rylan and Holly Willoughby.
“There are some serious political points being made,” said Clare Balding (whose commentary is the only thing in the world that can make you scream for the return of Huw Edwards) as a Mr Whippy van drove by.
Join the discussion
Join like minded readers that support our journalism by becoming a paid subscriber
To join the discussion in the comments, become a paid subscriber.
Join like minded readers that support our journalism, read unlimited articles and enjoy other subscriber-only benefits.
SubscribeMy thoughts exactly. If they wanted the event to go full marmalade sandwich, they should have upped the bonkers quota, but the only genuinely moving moment was the Queen’s brief appearance, which was laced with the bittersweet sadness of a valediction.
I did spend ten minutes deciding which float I’d most like to be on though, and decided the one with the supermodels; it looked like it had been jointly sponsored by Veuve Clicquot and your local drug dealer. Fun, fun, fun.
Same vein as the Platinum Jubilee Concert the night before. Sooooo diverse and inclusive – but not a Welsh male voice choir or Scottish bagpipe band to be heard from start to finish. Not included! And the grand finale was fronted by an American has-been (better than Rod Stewart admittedly!) – not a Brit, or even a Commonwealth citizen. Like the London 2012 Olympic opening ceremony, these events are organised by the woking-class elites to push their global worldview on the rest of us.
Predictable and tedious!
That deserves (and got) an uptick for the phrase “the woking classes” alone. By the way, the American has-been was miming. At first i thought “hasn’t her voice kept well!” but then the truth dawned, and seemed to encapsulate the entire spectacle. Oh, but i wish Rod Stewart had mimed too!!
Thanks, Steve! Loved your reference to Rod Stewart’s performance!
I only watched passing snippets. Saluted The Queen but then moved on. What little I saw supported my view that we are still governed by the followers of the Great Charlatan, Tony Blair. I guess I will have to wait for them to die off.
I felt the same, boring. As was the ‘party’ the night before, full of nobodies, flicked in and out, what a chance for real talent to have appeared. David Attenborough no thanks. Would like to see the Queen and Paddington again
I watched it – Mrs N insisted – so whiled away the hours working out when the BBC judged straight, white males to be surplus to requirements. Somewhere between Buses 1980 and 1990 I reckon.
Maybe Attenborough will adopt our cause before we become, in the BBC’s minds at least, extinct?
It’s a lost cause, incapable of reform and I am bored with the procession of Tories complaining and powerless. They have no interest in reaching out to the country so just take the Royal Charter off them and go from there.
Part of me wonders if Argentina could be persuaded to invade Rwanda ? Margaret Thatcher knew the value of such events and how to use them. Mr Johnson,sadly,appears lost in the midst of mass hysteria.
Her majesty deserved better. As did we.