Last
week: Nadia Essex liked my tweet correcting her grammar.
I
finished reading Striptease by Carl Hiaasen last week. I picked it up in
Oxfam years ago, and dived into it recently mainly because it was the
smallest book in my to-read pile. I remember the movie being
terrible, but the studios must have had some faith in it originally,
so I gave it a shot.
Erin
Grant, fired from her legal secretarial job, is working as a stripper
to make ends meet, all the while locked in a bitter custody battle
with her daughter's wheelchair-stealing hick father (her connection
to him the reason for her firing). During a particularly violent
night at her workplace (charmingly called The Eager Beaver), local
congressman and drunken liability David Dilbeck rolls in and makes an
embarrassment out of himself. Infatuated with Erin, he seeks her out,
but as he knows the judge in her case, she strings him along.
It's
a well written book with convincing characters, although the cliché
of the antagonist being a drug addict and the implausibility of the
judge granting him custody didn't sit right with me. A lot of what
kept my attention was the author's observations of the characters,
their little nuances and backstories that made characters likeable
and three-dimensional- pretty much of which couldn't be transferred
to the screen.
I
bought the 1996 Demi Moore adaptation
while I was in 5th form (garnering somewhat of a
reputation having spent 15 bastard quid on it, which was a lot back
then). I returned to it having finished the book, to see what went
wrong- every cliché was slapped over the screen, every joke fell
flat, and the clunkiness of the source story stood out like a
bikini-clad mother in a courtroom. What a waste of fine actors like
Ving Rhames, Armand Assante and the late Burt Reynolds.
This
coming weekend has two events.
Manchester Depression and Bipolar Group
meet for drinks and talking on Friday night in Albert Square Chop
House. This is looking like being a weekly event for the group, where
we can meet like-minded people, swap advice and get something to eat.
Saturday
night is a treat that I've organised. Manchester Cool Bars
are heading to Toybox, one of the newest
clubs in the city centre. Made to rival the likes of
Panacea and LIV,
Toybox is already popular with the Love Island
crowd and the like. We're starting in
Australasia.
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