Saturday, 10 September 2011

GOOD GIRLS GO TO HEAVEN, BAD GIRLS GO TO BENIDORM!

The other year my friend Debbie thought about asking me, to work with her on a TV programme called Benidorm. She quickly retracted the offer with her saying; "Carly, you single, abroad, in the sun, in hotel with all the crew, is just going to be a complete nightmare!" I was very offended at first, but then I thought about it for a minute and knew she was completely right!

That said, she seemed to forget these factors very quickly this year, when she was desperate for someone to cover her supervising while she was on another job, as she asked me! Her reasoning was that I was doing most of the job prepping in London and only actually got 2 weeks in Spain, so I couldn't get up to much trouble in that time, could I? Hello! How long has she known me!

For my international followers, if you do not know what Benidorm is, it is a tourist destination for lots of British people in Spain, and they are usually the worst kind of Brits. Yes they are Brits a broad! Now let me put down in words the criteria for being a Brit aboard:
1. They are usually chav's (this is English slang for common people, that don't pronounce words right & have no class)!

2. They are mostly fat and overweight.

3. They usually have really bad sun burn. This is because they still haven't learnt that getting burnt doesn't actually give you a tan but skin cancer!

4. Owning to the above they are also thick or of little intelligence.

5. They usually have lots of bad tattoos or tramp stamps, as my sister likes to call them.

6. Their diet usually consists mainly of alcohol and fry ups, or anything they eat back in England, as foreign food is classed as something alien to them and maybe a little scary.

7. They spend 99% of the time drunk or hungover.

This is the criteria of Brits aboard, and it is actually this type of people that the show I'm working on is about. It's quite funny, as the Brits aboard love the show, even though it's taking the complete piss out of them. Everywhere the cast go, they get swamped with people wanting their photos and autographs. It's all very crazy.

After getting off the plane, checking into my hotel quickly it was straight to work. Our costume room and where we film is situated at another hotel down the road. Now I have a confession to make here. Me and my family had a family holiday years ago at the very hotel where Benidorm is filmed. I know, I can't believe a lady would admit to that. To be fair though, I have nothing but good memories of that holiday, but I was young and saw things with different eyes back then. A rosey tinted vision. I don't have those eyes anymore though. I now have the eyes of a 31 year old woman who has seen a lot and travelled the world. So I always knew that Benidorm was going to be a bit of a shock and it didn't disappoint in that aspect. As I walked to the entrance of the hotel of my childhood past, I was greeted by a fat chain smoking woman, covered in tatoos, with sunburn, sat in a mobility scooter. Now mobility scooters are all the rage in Benidorm, they even have tandem ones. This is not because there are loads of disabled people there, in fact there are probably none. No! It's because they are all too God dam lazy to walk, which I think was the case with this woman. Also with her was an equally over weight man, also smoking and covered in tattoo's. There was also a child playing with a ball beside them. The next thing the fat woman shouts at the child:
"Stacey stop playing with that f**cking ball and f**cking get back here"!
She then turns to the fat guy, who I presume to be her husband.
"Where are the rest of the f**cking kids"?
The fat guy replies, "I don't f**cking know! Probably in the f**cking pool where we left them you stupid bitch"!
The fat woman retorts, "Well you can go and f**cking find them, I'm off to get a drink. F**cking come on Stacey"! And with that she scooters off, dragging the child behind her; the man still sits there smoking and I'm just left standing there thinking I've arrived in my version of HELL!

During our 2 days of none stop work, unpacking costumes me and Delphine would sit and take our breaks on the balcony and watch the world go by. Delphine who is my designer is a amazing woman. She is intelligent, cultured, lived a life most full, has pink hair and is one of the nicest people ever. So you would think with all that I have said about her she would hate Benidorm. Not at all in fact she loves it! She has been filming Benidorm for 4 years and loves returning everytime. "Look " she said as we sat there on the balcony, "Where can you get people watching like this, anywhere else in the world. It's amazing"! I guess she is right, and after my initial shock of Benidorm, I decided to give it a chance. So it wasn't anywhere I would chose to go on holiday but there were many good things about this job, I thought:

1. I can walk to work in 5 minutes, something that I've never been able to do it the 10 years I have done this job.

2. I can go to work in a summer dress and flip flops.

3. I do the ironing on a balcony in the sun, instead of a freezing truck with no windows.

4. I can go for a swim in the outdoor pool after work and have a piña colada after a couple of lengths ( I know it kind of defeats the object of doing lengths)!

5. I can sit and have a drink after work, by the beach and watch the sun go down (There seems to be a lot of drinking involved in these pros if the job).

6. In the old town there is some amazing Spanish food.

7. The crew are lovely.

8. My hotel is nice.

9. Actually people a really friendly here, even when drunk!

10. I get to practice my bad Spanish.


As a lot of the crew and extras are Spanish, the little Spanish that I do know has come in useful. Though sometimes this becomes lost in translation and vice versa with the Spanish talking English. Take for example one of my conversations with one of the Spanish drivers. Rueben the driver, was having one of his flirty but nice chats with me again when he suddenly said,
"I love your breasts"!
I stood there speechless. It got worse as he then said:
"Each day they get lovelier and lovelier".
How rude I thought. Maybe this is how you talk to women in Spain but not me! I was just about to give him a piece of my mind, when I saw him touching my hem and realised he said dress in a heavy Spanish accent, not breasts. Oophs!

Another good thing is your days off. How many days do you get off and go to the beach. On my last day off me and the girls decided to spend the whole day on the beach. Instead of going to the main beach and being squashed like sardines in a tin, we decided to head to a little cove round the bay.

It was quiet, beautiful and away from the masses. It also appeared to be a nudist beach! Now I don't have a problem with the naked body, but It is a bit weird when your sat there reading and all you can see is a burnt bare bum or a penis flopping around as someone runs out the water. It is even stranger when a little old naked man who is old enough to be your grandad, is there, trying to help you put up your umbrella, while your trying very hard not to look at his wrinkly old penis, which is impossible as he just sits there talking to you with his legs spread wide apart. Not pleasant! Well if you can't beat them join them. So me and Nat decided to go topless which I'd forgotten how liberating it was. Don't worry I didn't go the full monty, imagine burning down there! All was going well until the camera boys decided to join us! You have never seen two girls but their tops on so fast. I believed we had got away with it and didn't have to go to work the next day with the whole camera department looking at us, thinking I've seen your breasts. That was until one of the camera guys told Make up he had a great zoom lens camera and got some great shots at the beach that day! Oh my God!

My time in Benidorm went quick. Too quick. In fact I had a great time there and I will go as far to say I will miss it. Benidorm may not be my heaven but you can always find the good in the bad.

Sunday, 14 August 2011

I LOVE LONDON

I think I was seven, maybe eight when I first came to London.  My dad took me and the twins on a long weekend, to the big city I had heard so much about for so long; our capital.  Instead of being daunted by this great metropolis, like a small child should, I soaked it in and savoured every minute.  I guess it was love a first sight.  When I left I remember feeling so sad to leave the place and having to go back to the dullness of Warrington, but I told myself I would come back, and that one day I would live here.  Fourteen years later I did.  I'm not going to lie to you, it was hard at first.  The pace of life, the hardness to get even simple things done, and the coldness of people after being brought up with the warmness of the people of the north. It didn't last long though, I soon came to love the pace of life and the energy of the city.  The thing that I came to cherish the most was the acceptance.  I never fitted in, in Warrington.  I watched, read and liked the wrong things, to ever be like everyone else.  Sometimes I was called weird, sometimes I was frustrated when I wanted to speak about things that people just didn't get and all I would recieve back was a blank expression; and sometimes I felt completely trapped by it all.  London lets you be who ever you want to be.  It's OK to be different, to wear what you want, to be as free as you want.  This is why I love London, because it excepts you for who you are. It excepts me.  For a long time I always use to say home was back in Warrington, but over the last couple of years I have started to say London is my home, because it truly is now.
I guess this was why I was so sad this last week, with what I saw happening to this city that I love.  It was like the place lost it mind or the should I say some of the people did.  I got caught up in riots in La Paz in Bolivia, running from water cannons and dynamite.  I don't agree really with any form of rioting, but in La Paz there was a different feel to the riots. It felt like people were fighting for a reason, united in a strong cause.  What I saw this week in London, was just mindless violence, that had no cause other than to wreck the lives and communities of the people they lived with.  It made me a shamed to be British.  There is something within this nation that feels the need to fight and be aggressive and this is the side of the British I hate.  Luckily this is a small minority, but unfortunately this is what reflects of us on the rest of the world.  When I travel I get very frustrated with the awful stereotypes that people have of the British.  
"You don't seem very British!" people will say to me.  
"Why what is a British person meant to be like?" is my response.  
"Well you don't get drunk all the time (I know some readers might find this hard to believe), you don't start fights, you don't burn in the sun, your not a slag and you don't drink tea!"
Its ashame that people don't know about the good sides of the British; We are polite, we are hard workers, we can laugh at ourselves and the most important thing, you can knocks us down but we will always pick ourselves up again.  This why I know that this country and this city I love will overcome this terrible week.  London I still love you and always will.

All the photos in this post are by my old photographer housemate Guilherme Zauith from brazil, who actually got threatened and a bottle put to his throat by youths, while taking them.  Check all the photos out at Demotix.http://www.demotix.com/photo/786826/riots








Monday, 25 July 2011

THE WINEHOUSE


Say what you like about like about the Winehouse, but one thing that can't be denied is the fact that she had the most amazing voice and lyrics with meaning.  This is probably not her most famous song, but its my favourite.  RIP Amy.

BAG LADY

Hello! Welcome to my life; the life I have had for over 7 months now. Yes! My life of living out of a bag! Just call me bag lady! It never bothers me living out of bag when I'm on the road; it's seems like a small sacrifice in exchange for having the time of your life. It's different though when your back in your own country. Due to the fact I got a job in Birmingham as soon as I hit home soil, I decided to keep renting my room out. This has meant I have continued my nomadic existence, but I was use to it I told myself. Last week though it happened. I finally snapped! I couldn't take it anymore; this routing around in bags trying to find your basic things; the packing; the unpacking. I had a tantrum (or a Kevin) and threw all my clothes out of my bag and started shouting, "I can't take this ANYMORE!" Frank and Linda (my Brummie landlords) must of thought they had rented their room to a complete nutter!
Luckily I've finished my job now, I'm back in London and I get my room back this week. Thank the lord! Otherwise I think I was going to have some sort of breakdown (well more tantrums of throwing clothes around a room)! I think it's time to put some roots down again now

Sunday, 10 July 2011

5 SONGS I CAN'T STOP LISTENING TO AT THE MOMENT.

The Libertines: Music when the lights go out


Yellow Hammer: You and I



Belleruche: Northern Girls



Fela Kuti: Alu Jon Jonki Jon



Gonjasufi: Sheep

I DO?

"Don't you want to get married Carly?" is a question I get asked a lot these days.  You see at the age of 31, most people are expecting me to be married off by now or a least have something on the horizon.  I can see peoples brains go into over drive.  Whats wrong with her, there must be something wrong with her, they think.  Maybe she has no personality; maybe she is weird or maybe!  Maybe she is a lesbian!  Well most people tell me I have too bigger personality; we are all slightly weird in our own way; and I did kiss a girl at Uni in the bar, because this guy said he would buy us pizza if we did, if that counts as being a lesbian (God the things you do at university)!  There is also could be the reason that maybe I'm just not that bothered about getting married.  I don't feel that a piece of paper and a change of your name should change the way you feel about someone. I would never say never.  Maybe if I fell deeply in love with someone, I could feel differently about it, but right now its not high on my list of priorities.  All that said I do love going to other peoples weddings: food, drink and one big party.  You also get a good excuse to buy a new outfit.





Its the start of the wedding season again and first up this year, was the wedding of my cousin, Ryan to the beautiful Hannah.  They have been together 9 years, are totally in love, and cried a lot throughtout the day along with most members of the family (With happiness of course).  Don't worry I didn't.  I don't cry at weddings! It was a great chance to catch up with all my family, many who I haven't seen since before I went traveling.  I was sat at the most noisy table again, which got a bit riotous during the sing a long with the piano player; I spilt red wine all over the ushers white shirt (embarassing!); everyone had a good old dance and I did my usual trick of walking round bare foot (I hate heels) and then had my mother on my back back to put them back on as there could be glass on the floor.  Of course I never put them back on, as I never do as I'm told, and finished the night with black feet.  Always the sign of a good wedding for me.

THE HOUR



Please check out this trailer for a drama called The Hour.  It was the last job I worked on before I went traveling.  Lets just say it wasn't the easiest job I have ever worked on.  In fact at times I felt like it was going to kill me (OK; maybe a bit dramatic), but it was knackering and very full on.  All that said it had an amazing crew, the best written scripts I have ever read (Abbie Morgan is a genuis), a extremely talented cast (Ben Whishaw, Romala Garai and Dominic West; boy they can act!) and of course some beautiful costumes.  It should be good. Watch it on BBC2  Tuesday 19th July 9pm or else!