Ted Danson
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Aug 14, 2009
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I checked. He did vote Labour.
Eee...it makes me proud![]()
At least thats what he told you

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I checked. He did vote Labour.
Eee...it makes me proud![]()
At least thats what he told you![]()
I checked. He did vote Labour.
Eee...it makes me proud![]()
So that means by a process of elimination and non-disclosure that your daughter.........
....told you to "mind it Dad. Jeeez"
Strangely enough, she doesn't talk like she lives in Beverley Hills.
She voted Labour as well. No indoctrination going on in my family....
- I'm sure she speaks with impeccable tone and none of that colloquialism that Ollie spouts.
Don't shoot me down, but I asked my two (similar ages to yours but the lad is the elder) last night if they wanted their poll card and they both stated they were not going to vote. They have til 10PM to do so though.
They don't believe it will make a blind bit of difference - and that is the same with a lot of people their age today - they feel disenfranchised and irrelevant. I probably see that as well but I am so used to trying to make it count that I will take a trip over there later on.
True, but my kids grew up with unusually politicised parents.
In other words, it's your fault they have no interest
As it happens, having knocked around with poshos for 3 years at Oxford, Jessica speaks in a very precise tone. I speak with a modified Sheffield accent and mum has a rather whiny London accent, so she is very much ashamed of how we talk...
A thing I always say to my kids is that you should never ever do anything just to please your parents and it's shitty parenting to compensate for your own failures by insisting your kids do something that you never managed to do.
My daughter is some kind of academic superstar - A's and A* stars at A Level, Oxford degree and now doing a fully funded Ph.D. That's her thing - she loves adademia and never wants to leave it.
That puts immense pressure on her younger brother and I think his mum expects him to replicate his sister's success. I tell him that he does not have to be like her; he has to choose his own path in life and do what he is happy with
she is very much ashamed of how we talk...
Dangerous ground this, but one so intelligent should understand how wrong that is.
I've never had much of an accent but my university was full of wealthy Surrey types, and I picked up a few odd inflections while there. It's a subconscious sign of trying to fit in. These days I tend to slip in some Sheffieldisms while speaking otherwise neutrally. I once greeted the waitress at a restaurant in Manchester with a friendly 'ey oop, and she thought it was utterly hilarious. Weird.
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