The heyday for the soaps was the 1970s (from which era this fabulous Time magazine cover comes, featuring the "super couple" Bill Hayes and Susan Seaforth Hayes from Days of Our Lives) and the 1980s, but a combination of factors including massively diminished daytime audiences due to increased workforce participation by women, rising production expenses, declining advertising revenues and not least of all changing viewing preferences combined with the fact that so many other programs such as talk shows, "reality" programs and more off-beat and risky cable television programs all "stole" that peculiar domain of racy voyeurism once the sole province of daytime soaps have contributed to the decline of the genre.
All about me
20 May 2009
The slow death of soap
The heyday for the soaps was the 1970s (from which era this fabulous Time magazine cover comes, featuring the "super couple" Bill Hayes and Susan Seaforth Hayes from Days of Our Lives) and the 1980s, but a combination of factors including massively diminished daytime audiences due to increased workforce participation by women, rising production expenses, declining advertising revenues and not least of all changing viewing preferences combined with the fact that so many other programs such as talk shows, "reality" programs and more off-beat and risky cable television programs all "stole" that peculiar domain of racy voyeurism once the sole province of daytime soaps have contributed to the decline of the genre.
18 May 2009
Beyond economic growth
16 May 2009
Bookshops
Secondly, I like a good atmosphere. Generally, smaller is better. Hidden lofts and cellars crammed with books waiting to be discovered is good.
Thirdly, I think it is important that the staff and customers treat the books well. This is my issue with Borders - sure, it has a good range, but the books are so often dogeared and damaged. The shelves there are too narrow so books are often falling off the shelves, the customers treat them far too brutally (consistent with the "McDonalds of bookstores", put your feet up and relax sort of environment I suppose), and you get the feeling the staff could care less about the books. I think the books need to be treated like precious jewels of insight and wisdom and wonder, not as units of stock.
Melbourne:
2. Hill of Content - this Bourke Street institution (in the interesting part of Bourke Street, towards Parliament House) is a beautiful shop filled with books selected for the discerning reader. Seems to always be full of browsers.
6. The Bookstore - Sydney's venerable gay and lesbian bookstore.
Canberra
Canberrans are the most highly educated people in Australia and it takes some good bookstores to satiate that need for knowledge. My favourites are Electric Shadows, known particularly for its books on cinema and its arthouse DVD collection, Smith's Alternative Bookstore, which lives up to its name, Paperchain in Manuka, and Academic Remainders, which is not easy to find but where you will always stumble across a find.
I just have to include some overseas bookstores too:
In Köln, the Taschen bookstore is one of the most beautiful I have ever been inside, and the perfect platform for peddling their beautiful books.
In San Francisco, I loved Modern Times in the Mission District (there are a number of good independent bookstores in that part of Valencia Street - you could easily spend an afternoon there), the famous City Lights which lives up to its reputation, especially the cellar which is filled with high brown intellectual books, and Green Apple in Clement Street, which expands over two floors and is totally packed to its stripped wood rafters with books. I could easily have spent a day there. A San Francisco local wrote about this store as one of his favourite places in the newspaper while I was there, and he said that he grew up thinking all bookstores were like that and never realised just how special it was. I only wish all bookstores were like that!
05 May 2009
Is afternoon tea becoming common? And does it need a "modern twist"?
My partner Tom once observed, I think quite astutely, as we were sipping on tea and nibbling cucumber sandwiches in the lobby of some five star or other somewhere, that putting on afternoon tea is almost mandatory for any hotel that wants to classify itself as being a bit posh. That is, if a hotel has illusions to grandeur (and accompanying prices), they'd better be able to put on a decent tea.
Of course it's not all about credibility. In her book "Hotel Babylon", Imogen Edwards-Jones wrote that hotels make a huge profit on afternoon teas by using what is otherwise a dead space (usually a lobby or bar that is otherwise empty in the daytime) and for a minimal outlay of some sandwiches and pastries they charge a massive mark-up and make a tidy sum in return. And why not, so long as the product they are delivering is up to the mark and everyone is happy (this is NOT the case with the Sofitel Melbourne and their very poor afternoon tea at Sofi's Lounge, which I highly do not recommend).
What I find interesting now is that many people claim to do afternoon tea with a "modern twist". Does this mean that guests are seated on Le Corbusier chairs, one wonders? It seems not. It seems to relate to funky chinaware and "non-traditional" foods, such as lobster blinis instead of cucumber sandwiches. How intriguing it all sounds.
The modern twist on teas has been spearheaded, appropriately enough, in England, as outlined in this article. I must say that I was pretty interested in the "men's afternoon tea" and the "afternoon beats" tea with a DJ at the Mandeveille and Swissotel Howard Hotels respectively. Mental note for my next visit to London there. The photo I have used here is from the Swissotel's website and I must say, much as I like wicker furniture and potted palms, I do find this rather cool room pretty funky indeed. Maybe tea with a modern twist is a good idea?
04 May 2009
Debbie Harry
The poster was advertising a Warhol exhibition at the very cool De Young Museum in SF, which is all about his work inspired and influenced by musicians and music from Elvis Presley to Liza Minnelli and, of course, the Velvet Underground and that banana. I bought a tote bag at the museum shop with this huge picture of Debbie Harry on it.
I was lucky enough to see Blondie in concert in Sydney in 1998. They were truly fantastic live (of course). I have all of Blondie's albums as well as Debbie Harry's solo albums. I'm listening to 'Die Young, Stay Pretty' as I type this :)
03 May 2009
The pleasures and perils of taking tea
Oh yes, I know the difference between afternoon and high tea. I know the correct ordering of a three tier platter (sandwiches, scones, petit fours). I have thrown many delightful and intimate champagne teas in my own gracious drawing room over the years. As for advice on how you too can create a lovely afternoon tea experience, here are my tips: (a) get some good leaf tea and learn how to make it well, (b) make yourself a good selection of sandwiches, (c) scones are hard to make well and require practice - I make mine by using cream and lemonade rather than milk or butter, (d) if in doubt, open some champagne and this will help you and thus your guests relax. This book and this book have some good tea sandwich ideas.
But I digress. Even more importantly than my own tea triumphs, I have studied extensively the presentation and delivery of afternoon teas at venues all over the world and I think I know what does and does not make a good afternoon tea. So much so that I am toying with the idea of writing a book on the subject, to expose all of those over-priced stuffy hotels that are ripping off ignorant people that know no better by charging them through the nose for inadequate afternoon tea ceremonies (Sofitel Melbourne is the major culprit in this category - my recent afternoon tea experience there was a dreadfully over-priced affair with uppity service by snobby and self-congratulatory staff who assumed all of their customers knew no better).
For now, I shall share with you a few of my more positive afternoon tea experiences and give them a rating out of 10 on the Scott Scale of Overall Afternoon Tea Experience, with 10 being equivalent to the sort of tea you could expect if you were invited to one of my little drawing room teas and 1 being something like the Sofitel Melbourne. There are three major criteria: 1, the venue must be charming and attractive (it can be a modern or old-fashioned decor, a library or a conservatory, that detail matters not as much as does the fact that whatever it is, you feel inclined to linger there); 2, there must be a good selection of leaf teas available - tea bags are NEVER acceptable - and ideally a little pot of hot water ought to be served alongside the china tea pot so individuals can lighten the tea to their own taste as required; 3, the chairs and tables must be comfortable but above all they must be conducive to elegant eating. This means upright chairs and high tables, not absurdly deep sofas and ridiculously low coffee tables. Oh yes, of course there is a fourth criterion: the food must be up to par, and all must be presented in little dainty bite sizes, not stupidly oversized chunks.
So, number one on my list with 9 out of 10 is the Peninsula in Hong Kong - the world's most perfect scones, a lively yet elegant room, comfortable chairs and delicious sandwiches. Not to mention perfect service. It only misses a 10 because it is always so busy and the queues of hoi polloi waiting for a table is rather off putting. So here is my tip: don't look for a table until about 5.30pm and make an early dinner of it. It was 2004 when I stayed at the Pen and enjoyed this lovely afternoon tea, but it is still seared into my memory as an almost perfect tea experience.
Number two on my list, with an impressive 8 out of 10, is Lovejoy's in the Noe Valley district of San Francisco, which was a total surprise find during my recent California trip. This tiny little venue has friendly service, a cutesy antiquey sort of interior and really very good sandwiches. It was one of only two decent pots of tea I had in America (the other was at the famed Fairmont Hotel, sort of San Francisco's answer to the Peninsula; I found its Laurel Court tea room pleasant, service attentive and food quite good, but it lost some points for a total lack of natural light and far too many loud children on the afternoon I was there; I did also consider taking tea at the Palace Hotel, which has a beautiful winter garden, but chose to go to Lovejoy's instead and really enjoyed the friendly, cosy intimacy of Lovejoy's so it was a good choice I think).
Number three is a tie between the Ritz-Carlton in Singapore, which gets 7 out of 10 for a cavernous conservatory sort of room, attentive service and creative petit fours, and the Langham Place in Hong Kong which also gets 7 out of 10 for its creative choice between an English or Asian style afternoon tea and pleasant balcony room overlooking the hotel foyer.
Number five is the Sheridan on the Park in Sydney which gets 6 and a half out of 10 for its small little gallery/library sort of room and a menu which includes an interesting selection of savouries that you can mix and match to make your own tea menu from at a reasonable price.
Number six on the list is a bit of a sentimental favourite: the Park Hyatt in Canberra. It's not really a formal sort of tea; in fact, it's a self-serve buffet, and the sandwiches are really nothing great to be honest. But the room is totally delightful: it is in the centre of this historic hotel building which is based on Frank Lloyd Wright's now destroyed Imperial Hotel in Japan, and is bathed in natural light and has restful garden views on both sides from its terraces. It really is a relaxing venue, even though it's right in the middle of the hotel's hustle and bustle. It gets 6 out of 10.
Number seven is a tie. The Four Seasons Hong Kong has a nice room, attentive staff, good food, good choice of tea. But why oh why the view onto a freeway? There is a desperate need for some landscaping to improve the outlook of this otherwise charming room in this very impressive, modern hotel. They get a 5 and a half out of 10, which would have been higher if someone had thought about the view a bit more. The Mandarin Oriental in Hong Kong is as good as the Four Seasons, but it's a just bit too pricey and stuck on its own reputation, in my opinion.
Number nine is the Langham in Melbourne, which has a nightclub-feeling room and a good three tier platter with friendly staff but could enhance their tea selection. They get 4 out of 10, which is a bit harsh really but they have good scope to improve (unlike the Sofitel Melbourne, which sucks and is not even rated).
Rounding out the top ten is the Inter-Continental in Hong Kong. Average service, bland food, poor choice of tea - but truly an amazing view which does tend to compensate for a lot. They get 2 out of 10 for the view. Also, their chairs are not so comfortable.
This list not exhaustive of course - I have not been to any of the famous London hotels renowned for their afternoon teas, and I still have quite a few venues across Asia to visit yet. And of course, there are many teas here in Australia I have yet to sample and judge (the Windsor in Melbourne, the Observatory and Victoria Room in Sydney, and Palazzo Versace on the Gold Coast are notable ones I need to try out), but you can rest assured that not only will I visit these venues over time, but that I will critically and honestly assess them on the Scott Scale and duly report my findings right here. Henry James was quite correct in observing that few hours in the day are as civilised and agreeable as the one devoted to the ritual of afternoon tea, but life is far too short for poor teas.