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Home » Text » Books Out of Print » "The Crystal Bucket"

Supermind, Superbody

Jesus, what a fortnight. I mention Him first only because He didn't get much of a look-in among the other festive-­schedule superstars. Exposure-wise, He rated somewhere just below the runner-up in the final of Mastermind (BBC1) and just above David Steel in the Liberal Party Political Broadcast (all channels).

The Mastermind final was a nailbiter. Held in the Cam­bridge Union debating chamber, which Magnus Magnusson wrongly called ‘the setting for many a stirring debate', it featured three men versus the Post Office lady whose weird head-bands had been fascinating the nation for months.

Does the wild head-gear help her think? That had been the question on everybody's lips as the winsome lass blasted her way to victory after victory. Is that thing on her head wired for sound? Has she got an accomplice outside with an Encyclopedia Britannica and a walkie-talkie? Whatever the truth of the matter, on the big night she appeared with nothing up there except hair. It was probably just co­incidence that she crashed to defeat, licked hollow by the bloke with the big ears. Goodbye baby and amen. So for once it was a chap who walked off with the glass trophy, dubbed, by Magnus 'a glittering prize indeed'.

Thus it was that Mastermind was laid to rest, only to rise again a few days later with a new title. After Mastermind, Supermind! Once again on BBC1, once again staged in the Cambridge Union, this contest was described, once again by Magnus Magnusson, as 'a new-fangled battle of wits ... a searching examination of erudition ...' and a lot of other stuff I didn't catch, overpowered as I was by the mere sight of the assembled mental giants.

Reading from left to right, these were Radio Brain of Britain, a Former Radio Brain of Britain, the 1976 Brain of Mensa (presumably another planet), and Mastermind him­self, none other than our friend with the ears. There were half a dozen different kinds of test but it was clear from square one that the Earthlings didn't stand a chance against the creature from Mensa. His antennae were taped flat against his head and covered with plastic make-up but that third nostril was a dead giveaway.

What use is a Supermind without a Superbody? That was the message of The Superstars (BBC1), an international con­test for sporting all-rounders hosted by David Vine and Ron Pickering. The scene of the action was France, where the pluie was pissant down. David explained that the stuff falling out of the sky was rain. Ron backed him up with an on-the­-spot report delivered from beneath an umbrella. 'As David Vine was saying, weather conditions are absolutely appalling.'

Ron interviewed a drowned rat who answered to the name of Gareth Edwards. 'I'm not looking forward to this at all,' said the Welsh rugby-player, eyeing Ron's umbrella with understandable envy. Edwards complained of a ‘suspect hamstring' — the in injury of 1976 — but he, you, me and everybody except David and Ron were well aware that the only thing suspect was his head, for having allowed him to participate in the first place.

Empty grandstands glistening all around, Edwards ran an impressively slow 100 metres with only the top half of his body showing above water. Before the next event he had to go back and be interviewed again by Ron. 'How do you feel this time?' 'Not too enthralled.' By this stage the water was running out of my television set and all over the floor.

The John Curry Spectacular (LWT) was sport too, but of a kind tending towards art. Or at least art is what it tried to tend towards. Not for the first time in the world of silver blades, the art-thrill which sometimes emerges in the rigour of competition turned to kitsch in conditions of creative free­dom. The production was brilliantly smooth but things kept not coming to fruition. An orchestra sat on the ice (well, the chairs it sat on were on the ice) while Curry skated amongst them, but he would have skated better if they hadn't been cluttering up the rink and you couldn't help noticing the stretch of goose-pimpled shin between the cuffs of the oboeist's trousers and the top of his socks.

Peggy Fleming, who in competition was the finest artist yet to have appeared on skates, came out of retirement to join Curry in a wispy pas de deux. She has put on a couple of pounds around the stern but was otherwise as lovely as ever. Curry pretended to chase her through the woods. The ques­tion of what might have happened had he caught her remained academic.

The first part of a two-part This Week (LWT) grippingly plunged us into London's Underworld. Here was Soho Vice laid bare. It seems that back in 1956 a villain called Tommy Smithson got killed. The two characters who bumped him off are now out and ready, even eager, to talk. Catching Smithson alone without his bodyguards, they had no hesita­tion in going for him, even though the odds — a mere two to one — were far from favourable. Their gun jammed, but be­tween them they got it working again, and eventually were in a position to shoot Smithson through the neck at a range of three inches.

2 January, 1977

 

 

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