Philip Norman: Forty things that really irritate me
The sight of zealous traffic wardens swarming on streets where no police officer is ever seen
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Pooh-Bah in The Mikado famously kept a "little list of Society offenders... who never would be missed". Here is a selection from my own ongoing league table of today's biggest petty irritations. "No, they'd none of 'em be missed."
1. People who unexpectedly jump out of cars and cut in front of you when you're just feet away from an unoccupied cash dispenser.
2. Signs and robot voices that welcome you to places where you have no wish to be and thank you for something you had no choice but to do. "Welcome to the Grottville Multi-Storey Car Park." "Thank you for paying the congestion charge."
3. Middle-class people (especially politicians and media folk) who try to talk in "street" accents but can't keep it up.
4. Checking the overnight emails to find only 10 identical spam messages from Viagra suppliers offering to "make your meat compass point north again".
5. Asking for something in a shop and being told they don't have it because "no one ever asks for it". (Also, complaining about something in a restaurant and being told that "we've never had any complaints before".)
6. The crusty unhelpfulness of most staff in pseudo-French bread shops where "Have a nice day" really means "Sod off".
7. The sight of zealous traffic wardens swarming on streets where no police officer is ever seen.
8. The gooey look that female TV news presenters fix on their male co-presenters while the latter are speaking, as if to say, "Have I ever told you you're my hero?"
9. People who stand in queues but don't seem to be in the queue – and then get annoyed when you don't realise they are.
10. Experts on TV antiques shows who don't bother to cut or clean their nails before showing you an interesting item in close-up.
11. People who mistake Jeremy Clarkson's crude blokeishness and philistinism ("Shakespeare? I'd rather stick pencils in my eyes") for wit, and lavatorial humour (ie Jonathan Ross film review: "I laughed so much, it made a bit of wee come out").
12. "Celebrity" chefs who invent perversely inedible dishes like snail trifle and haddock-flavoured ice cream – and then charge gullible customers an additional fortune for having their plates dotted with spots of foam.
13. Sycophantic questions from TV and radio interviewers which produce the smug response "Oh, very much so". Q. "Would you call yourself a show-business legend?" A. "Oh very much so."
14. Prices in odd pence (Large cappuccino – £2.87 please) which indicate they're always edging higher and higher.
15. The endlessly recurring headline "Is Michael Palin too nice?"
16. Shop assistants who no longer say "Can I help you?" but "You all right there?" and who, after you have made several large, unwieldy purchases, ask "Do you need a bag?".
17. Houses with paranoid security lights that switch themselves on accusingly as you pass their front gates.
18. The inability of 99 per cent of British restaurants, cafés and pubs to serve decent wine by the glass.
19. The archaic charge of "wasting police time", when they waste so much on their own account.
20. The silly Children's Hour-presenter tone in which Fiona Bruce reads BBC1 news bulletins, making the most terrible events sound no worse than the burning of a milk pudding.
21. Newspaper columnists who talk about "my postbag".
22. TV schedulers who decide that people who enjoy watching an old movie in the afternoon will welcome nine continuous hours of snooker instead.
23. The Archbishop of Canterbury's voice, hair, beard and name.
24. Bottle openers that are suited to torturing 16th-century heretics than drawing corks.
25. People who tell you that something or other has been "a learning curve".
26. Young women who continually rake long, wild, ringletty hair with their fingers in a gesture meant to imply "I am a free spirit".
27. Loudspeaker announcements about late train arrivals that apologise for any inconvenience this "may" have caused.
28. The fashion among TV news journalists of gesturing pointlessly with their hands, as if the spoken word alone no longer has any power.
29. The Hollywood conference skit by Orange phones reminding cinema audiences to switch off their mobiles – so unfunny and pleased with itself that ringing phones would be preferable.
30. "Boutique" hotels whose staff resemble surly rock stars and whose bathrooms contain a tin wash basin and an orchid.
31. Noisy, drunken crowds overflowing from pubs to obstruct the pavement, once a feature of summer but now reminding us of the nation's drink problem all year round.
32. People behind official counters who say "sign this for me", as if some intimate, caring transaction is taking place.
33. Parking-ticket machines that announce they don't give change. Could, should, but don't.
34. People who talk in Friends-speak. ("Can I get a large latte and hold the cinnamon?")
35. The infantilisation of television commercials, where everything now has to be given a cartoon face and silly voice.
36. The wasting of vast sums of our money on logos and slogans for public bodies that simply state the bleeding obvious – "Metropolitan Police. Working for a safer London".
37. Continued use of the term "Royal" Mail. Why should the poor Queen have to carry the can for that appalling mess?
38. Cars that thud with the mindless music being played by their ditto drivers.
39. People at the theatre and cinema who sit hunched forward, thoughtlessly blocking the view of those behind them.
40. Check-out staff who give you your change with a note spread out and the coins on top of it.
Howard Jacobson returns next week
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- 4 Deborah Ross: Join now to find that someone who isn't the least bit special
- 5 Rhodri Marsden: What we like and what we don't like are often closer than you'd think
- 6 Vladimir Putin: My goal is to make Russia a more just society
- 7 Leading: Now stand by for Act II of this Greek drama
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- 3 Kate Allen: It's time for America to put an end to this shameful scandal
- 4 Lightning kills an entire football team
- 5 Now The Sun tries to call in its favours from Downing Street
- 6 I was born to be a killer. Every night I see the Devil in my dreams
- 7 BBC to issue global apology for documentaries that broke rules
- 8 Mona Lisa's 'twin sister' is discovered – 500 years late
- 9 Rhodri Marsden: What we like and what we don't like are often closer than you'd think
- 10 Modern lovers: The 'sexual body warriors' and pioneers transforming 21st-century relationships
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