John Peel Wiki

Changes to the look of John Peel Wiki will take place in the near future due to a new skin being rolled out over Oct/Nov across Wikia. Please see the Wikia Staff Blog for further details. On this site, the changes will affect the navigation from the left menu, as well as introduce a fixed page width with narrower content space. Please be patient while adjustments are made for the switch to the new system.

UPDATE: As the change is now in force for some users, I have switched the navigation to the simplified one for the new system. Please check Navigation in the Help section if you can't find things. I also initially made small adjustments to the front page layout, but have now reverted to the old look until all users are on the new system.

COUNTDOWN: Just a reminder for people still using Monaco that the final switch to the new skin is due on Nov. 3. After that, it will no longer be offered as an option. Sorry. Nothing to do with me.

Steve W

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John Peel Wiki
(For the electronic music project of former Napalm Death member Mick Harris, see Scorn (2).)

Scorn (full title: Scorn: A Bucketful of Discourtesy, Disparagement, Invective, Ridicule, Impudence, Contumely, Derision, Hate, Affront, Disdain, Bile, Taunts, Curses And Jibes) is a compendium published by Hamish Hamilton in 1994, and the nature of the contents can be deduced from the title. It was compiled by David Prosser and Simon Christmas and edited by former MP, political writer and broadcaster Matthew Parris (1949- ) and has spawned sequels such as Scorn With Added Vitriol (1995) and Scorn With Extra Bile (1998). Its iconoclastic style attracted Peel, who owned a copy and declared:

"I think I have mentioned before that Scorn...never leaves our bedside. It is a compendium of the sorts of things you wish you had both the courage and the wit to say to or about people. On the back cover there is a portrait of the compiler, smiling. The smile looks a little unnatural, even slightly sinister. It is the smile of a man who would like you to believe that he is more confident than he actually is. It reminds me of early Radio One publicity shots of Tony Blackburn." [1]

The book was updated in 2018, and the latter edition was praised as a "classic of literary invective, which has never gone out of print, (and) now reflects both current and vintage retorts, ranging from politics to the arts, law, royalty and showbiz." [1]

Footnotes
  1. Kerguelen, Radio Times 16-22 December 2000, reprinted in The Olivetti Chronicles, Bantam Press 2008, p.127.