Thursday 8 December 2011

Professor Brian Cox: thinking woman's crumpet



I think it’s a fairly commonly held view that Professor Brian Cox is every thinking-woman’s DILF.  (Dad I'd Like to...you get the drift)  He has hair.  Lustrous brown hair like a nice pony or a wig.  It’s thick and stuck to his head, unlike most men of 40+, where the hair has migrated downwards and reappears in the nostrils, ears and foothills of their burgeoning bellies.  And he has teeth.  What teeth!  Truly a Wonder of the Molar System, like glistening giant windows on the world.  And he has legs.  Well, you know, I could go on but the main thing about Brian Cox is that he talks like an ordinary bloke and he saunters around like a bit of a dick and he comes out with bonkersly clever stuff in a really accessible way.  We love him in my house.  My 9 year old daughter, in particular, puts him on a pedestal and announced when Wonders of the Solar System first shone out of our telly that she was going to be an astro-physicist and go to Cambridge University.  Ahhhh, what a child!  

I think her aspirations are brilliaaaant, as Brian Cox would say.  Why?  Well, because her parents are a pair of over educated duffers who chose utterly useless subjects to study at university and consequently ended up in the most random and boring careers known to humanity.  Who the fuck needs to be fluent in medieval Dutch epic poetry and slightly conversant in Kafka?  Anyone?

If ONLY I’d paid attention in maths.  If ONLY I hadn’t sat through physics trying to sniff the Bunsen burners when I should have been listening.  If I’d scored more than 2/40 in maths, I could be generating the Higgs boson now by chasing very fat people on their mobility scooters round and round the crisps aisle in Lidl and forcing them to smash into each other underneath the rack of “Imperial Spirit” and eggnog-flavoured drink.  I could have been in Cern, creating quantum Black Forest Hole gateaux that bends time and is only 14 calories per slice.  

Sadly this was not a requirement for GCSE algebra
But I didn’t.  At school I had a physics teacher who gave the term “fart-faced old wassock” new meaning.  You had only to say the word “God” by accident and she would expel you from the lab for blasphemy.  She was one boring bastard.  I should have tried jumpstarting her during the classes on circuits and electricity.  Then the chemistry teacher had no chin.  Say no more.  Add to this the fact that I am fundamentally stupid and my only grasp of maths involves spelling rude words upside down on the calculator, and you’ve got...well, you’ve got an arts student, haven’t you?  On a career path to nowhere.

So feeling like I wanted to encourage my brainiac daughter all the way to Cambridge, I queued in Waterstones in Manchester to get my daughter’s copy of Wonders of the Solar System (the book) signed by Professor Bri.  I fancied a good gawp at the Sublime Overlord of all Dorks – yes, that includes me.  I’m a dork too - and even put my lipstick on to give the impression that there is more to me than my anorak.  But then I had to buy his new bloody book on quantum physics which, no doubt, I’ll end up wedging the bathroom door open with because it has hardly any pictures in and the words are in small print.  

When I got to the front of the queue, Lord Bri was charming and obliging.  But you know what?  I felt like Borat trying to put the marriage sack on Pamela Anderson in a book shop.  Click on the link if you don’t know what I’m talking about.  I couldn’t stop grinning and gabbling.  What a complete tit!  Really, I shouldn’t be allowed near celebrities.  So now I’m waiting for the restraining order to come through the post.  Waterstones are surely going to ban me from book signings, unless they’re my own.

But the point of this is not that I went to letch at old Bri (well, I sort of did).  I went because I want to encourage my daughter to do science because I don’t want her to fritter away the first twenty years of her working life, as I have, hating her bullshit accidental career and waiting for a vocation to happen to her.  If Brain and his soporific Oldham twang can chivvy her down the path to her own scientific discovery, then it’s worth feeling like Borat.  Wa wa wee wa.

13 comments:

  1. Oh My God - your posts are hilarious! You say all the things I want to say but daren't! Yes, Brian, he really is isn't he? And he smiles when he talks - have you noticed that? If I do that I look like Wallace (as in 'Wallace and Gromit!) - he looks plain yummy! But what an inspiring man, and if he can give your daughter that interest and encouragement now, who knows where it may end.

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  2. Very well said. However he does make my ears bleed. I prefer John Culshaw's 'Brian Cox' http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W2tUXuRHdFQ

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  3. Oh yes, Alison. That's a good one. Just watched it now! He speaks the same in the flesh as he does on the telly. I just caught a snippet of him telling the security guard to, "get rid of that bloody pillock woman with the badly dyed loofah hair" before they carried me out of Waterstones manually. He sounded very calm and enthusiastic.
    (he didn't really say that but I bet he was thinking it)

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  4. another blog, another evening sat giggling like an idiot. priceless, thanks Marnie x

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  5. Glad you enjoyed it, Del! I aim to please.

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  6. But I thought you said his eyes were dead!

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  7. Oh no. His eyes are sparkly like the ice rings of Saturn or wet kidney beans. He didn't make a whole heap of eye contact but I did have him signing everything except my thermal vest. And there was a long long queue.

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  8. I remember working in Manchester Waterstone's in the 90's interesting place - I wasn't literary enough to be more than part time shelf stacker and event Chair putteroutter. Sparkly eyes - like wet kidney beans.... LMAO

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  9. Apparently the correct modus operandi for authors who want to act like real people instead of twats is to take chocolate bars for the bookshop staff, to keep their energy levels up. Wonder if Brian took a few bags of fun size Milky Way or Starbar?

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  10. Love it Marnie. And love the Big Bang Theory so I need say no more except: geeks are ace. Completely get the 'arts' thing. I hated that my best subjects were 'the arts' - I wanted to be 'sciences'. I studied languages too - complete waste of time and effort. Wish somebody had bothered to tell me. All it got me & my mate into was the weekly Friday foreign disco. You had to be foreign to get in. Suppose snogging Pepe and Miguel and Laurent made up for the lack of science brain cells. Science discos? Shudder.

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  11. I was surrounded by mathmoes, compscis, natscis and other sciency types on my corridor in my fourth year. There was no such things as science discos. They all just congregated in my neighbour's room and listened to Queen and Metallica til 4am, letching over pictures of Pamela Anderson (coincidentally) and playing air guitar. No women were involved. Apart from some daft airhead called Kirsty who had long hair and cried a lot. Everybody was in love with her. The arts students were off getting stoned and laid. Nuff said.

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  12. This is becoming one of my favourite blogs. Self-deprecation is always attractive and perhaps even more so when the downplaying is rooted in reality. I speak as one vastly qualified to do very little of practical use. As for 'fart-faced old wassock,' that was reason enough to read this piece.
    Ten years from now when your daughter tells you to stop showing her up in front of her Cambridge friends, you'll dig out this post and say, 'I always knew this would end as it did. All because Brian Cox fancied me.' Okay, that may not be accurate, but ten years from now, who'll know?

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  13. Ha ha ha! Not sure my poor, long suffering husband would like what you're suggesting there, Jake but, you know, on these long winter nights, I can at least get the marriage sack embroidered.
    Given that I've just done my back in after taking my shoe off, I think in ten years time, I'll either be in Styal Ladies Prison or traction. Shall we take bets?

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