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West Ender 21-05-2009 20:30

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
In my lifetime I've known quite a few people who subsequently were exposed as, or became, villains. I worked with 2 people, at different times, who went to prison for fraud and a chap who lived near me in Coventry in the 60s, a very respectable sort, was convicted for bigamy. I don't think I've met any well known baddies though.

garinda 21-05-2009 22:31

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
There's been quite a few, but one I remember thinking at the time was odd was chatting to a very unassuming charity worker at a dinner party. He happened to be John Profumo, the man who brought down the government, which subsequently changed the landscape of the decade that I was born into.

Some of the others were sitting directly opposite and chatting to Margaret Thatcher, upstairs in a private dining room at the Carlton Club.

Deciding I wasn't going to attend a lunch party my housemate was giving to try and flog his new paintings, because I was too hungover, only to be woken by Lord Montagu of Beaulieu and the actor Alan Bates, who decided to sit on the bed chatting to me, once they'd roused me from my groggy slumber.

Getting drunk in Kensington Palace, because someone forgot to tell me that the person I was supposed to be seeing had gone to inspect the fire damage at Windsor Castle instead, leaving me sat there with a constantly refreshed gin and tonic.

Getting picked up in the Armani shop in Milan by one of the world's most famous living artists.

Meeting two people, Mike Tyson and Enoch Powell, both of whom I expected to dislike, and finding them thoroughly charming.

Chatting to Kylie Minogue at an aftershow party at Teatro, and tapping her too hard, resulting in her falling off the sofa we were sat on.

Getting locked in an attic bathroom at a houseparty in Battersea for over an hour, because of a dodgy lock, with one of the Queen's children.

Spending a weird evening with Naomi Campbell, when she modelled for my friend Julien, some of which it would be unwise to say what really happened, which ended with us sharing a cab back to London from Greenwich, after she'd pushed us to the front of the queue and caused a big fight.

There are other more, err, intimate encounters with the infamous/famous, but I'm not about to publish them on a local forum. They can be revealed after all the people involved are long dead.

:D

garinda 21-05-2009 22:39

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Just rereading my post some aren't really encounters with people of infamy, but I could justify them all if I brought in the Belgrano, or being arrested for immoral purposes in the 1950's, or hitting your maid with a hairdryer and being made to sweep the streets on New York.

I could infact defame all those I listed.:D

Mancie 21-05-2009 22:57

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by garinda (Post 715655)
There's been quite a few, but one I remember thinking at the time was odd was chatting to a very unassuming charity worker at a dinner party. He happened to be John Profumo, the man who brought down the government, which subsequently changed the landscape of the decade that I was born into.

Some of the others were sitting directly opposite and chatting to Margaret Thatcher, upstairs in a private dining room at the Carlton Club.

Deciding I wasn't going to attend a lunch party my housemate was giving to try and flog his new paintings, because I was too hungover, only to be woken by Lord Montagu of Beaulieu and the actor Alan Bates, who decided to sit on the bed chatting to me, once they'd roused me from my groggy slumber.

Getting drunk in Kensington Palace, because someone forgot to tell me that the person I was supposed to be seeing had gone to inspect the fire damage at Windsor Castle instead, leaving me sat there with a constantly refreshed gin and tonic.

Getting picked up in the Armani shop in Milan by one of the world's most famous living artists.

Meeting two people, Mike Tyson and Enoch Powell, both of whom I expected to dislike, and finding them thoroughly charming.

Chatting to Kylie Minogue at an aftershow party at Teatro, and tapping her too hard, resulting in her falling off the sofa we were sat on.

Getting locked in an attic bathroom at a houseparty in Battersea for over an hour, because of a dodgy lock, with one of the Queen's children.

Spending a weird evening with Naomi Campbell, when she modelled for my friend Julien, some of which it would be unwise to say what really happened, which ended with us sharing a cab back to London from Greenwich, after she'd pushed us to the front of the queue and caused a big fight.

There are other more, err, intimate encounters with the infamous/famous, but I'm not about to publish them on a local forum. They can be revealed after all the people involved are long dead.

:D

:eek:...bye eck! ..I can't wait for the book! :D

MargaretR 21-05-2009 23:00

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
That is exactly what I inferred when I said -
"Most of us have met people who have infamy potential - they just haven't been exposed - YET"

We are living in an era where greed and corruption is the norm.
The whistleblowers are gaining courage - there are more shocks to come and it will eventually end when good people find out - it is happening :)

garinda 21-05-2009 23:03

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MargaretR (Post 715664)
That is exactly what I inferred when I said -
"Most of us have met people who have infamy potential - they just haven't been exposed - YET"

Don't forget that the very best fraudsters, abusers, charlatans, whatevers, don't ever get caught.

No public outcry, no shaming, no infamy.

MargaretR 21-05-2009 23:07

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by garinda (Post 715665)
Don't forget that the very best fraudsters, abusers, charlatans, whatevers, don't ever get caught.

No public outcry, no shaming, no infamy.

These corrupt times are rapidly coming to an end.
There has been a raising of public awareness beyond their control.

accyman 21-05-2009 23:07

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
i once saw a photographer drop a high powered flash in a tunnel in france and passed it back to him

moments later there was a big car accident of some sort involving somone famous :confused:

garinda 21-05-2009 23:18

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MargaretR (Post 715668)
These corrupt times are rapidly coming to an end.


Yes Cassandra, but have you any concrete evidence of this forthcoming new Utopia, for those Doubting Thomases that may be amongst us?

:D

MargaretR 21-05-2009 23:22

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by garinda (Post 715673)
Yes Cassandra, but have you any concrete evidence of this forthcoming new Utopia, for those Doubting Thomases that may be amongst us?

:D

If you take the trouble to search you can find evidence of corruption on a large scale.
Most people don't want to know - and only believe it when they accidentally are slapped in the face with it.

Do you own muck searching. I am having a rest from it at the mo

garinda 21-05-2009 23:29

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MargaretR (Post 715675)
If you take the trouble to search you can find evidence of corruption on a large scale.
Most people don't want to know - and only believe it when they accidentally are slapped in the face with it.

Do you own muck searching. I am having a rest from it at the mo

I wasn't having a go actually, but hey ho. I was one of the few people who posted in your defence when some members recently, and unfairly in my opinion, were on your case.

I do a lot of research, or muck searching as you put it, but we both come to differing opinions. My own being the opinions of a realist, and I suppose someone who sees the glass of life and humankind being definitely half full, rather than half empty.

Hey ho.

:)

MargaretR 21-05-2009 23:33

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by garinda (Post 715678)
I wasn't having a go actually, but hey ho. I was one of the few people who posted in your defence when some members recently, and unfairly in my opinion, were on your case.

I do a lot of research, or muck searching as you put it, but we both come to differing opinions. My own being the opinions of a realist, and I suppose someone who sees the glass of life and humankind being definitely half full, rather than half empty.

Hey ho.

:)

The fact that you have said that you are well aware of lots of corruption and prefer to stay silent, demonstrates to me that you have lost your integrity.
Whistleblowing is the new black - or are you no longer au fait with the new trends?:D

PS I appreciate that you thought that you were fighting my corner - but I am not in one

garinda 21-05-2009 23:36

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MargaretR (Post 715680)
The fact that you have said that you are well aware of lots of corruption and prefer to stay silent, demonstrates to me that you have lost your integrity.


Did I use invisible ink to post that?

I'd be very interested to see a quote showing that I did.

I wait with bated breath.

MargaretR 21-05-2009 23:41

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
"I could infact defame all those I listed"

garinda 21-05-2009 23:41

Re: brushes with Infamy
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by MargaretR (Post 715680)
PS I appreciate that you thought that you were fighting my corner - but I am not in one

I never said you were in a corner.

You were obviously affected, because you posted you were leaving the forum.

It was nothing personal, I'd have defended anyone against what I saw as unfair bullying.

I've never been one to be silent, be it the fashionable thing to do at the present time, or not.;)


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