As the title suggests, so forth.
Will you start the fans, please!
Challenge is rerunning The Crystal Maze. Which leads to an odd double memory. The odd one is of COVID time and Sky Replay airing Maze marathons on Sunday mornings. (Itself an odd reminder of decades previous weekend morning marathons on Sky One of animations like Jason and the Wheeled Warriors and Brave Starr) It was true comfort viewing to watch the redoubtable host Richard O’Brien lead six players thru the four familiar zones in those troubled times. Now, watching the show as all his four seasons are over thirty years old, there is both nostalgia and musings involved. To watch adventures in the Aztec zone is to remember Thunderbirds being rerun on BBC2. To watch players run around the Futuristic zone is to remember the hype surrounding the release of Alien³. To watch the six flail about in the Medieval zone is to remember Mr Blobby and slime on Noel Edmonds’ House Party. To watch players cranking machinery in the Industrial zone is to remember being driven to distraction by the bludgeoning repetition of 2 Unlimited’s ‘No Limits’. But with thirty-odd years distance it also become obvious that a level of mechanical dexterity and technical knowhow was expected, that, quite frankly I’m not sure a generation reared on the Apple principle of the beautiful sealed box could live up to. Which wires go where when fixing a circuit? How do pulleys work? Why would anyone know where to put the various length belts on wheels to make a mechanism work? This is a bygone age of the DIY craze and fixing bicycle punctures in your kitchen. An analogue relic in the digital age Trust a Trader.com and electric bikes. As for Richard O’Brien being horrified at contestants bungling a game because they didn’t make the right number association for The Four Just Men: one shudders to think what early 1990s classic a current crop would be completely oblivious to…
It hasn’t aged poorly, you’re in a poor age
I’ve been enjoying immensely the Legend reruns of the first season of Mission: Impossible. And one of the finest episodes involved a pair of astonishing conceits; breaking into a lab to sterilise a virus but in such a way as to make it seem you tried and failed to break in, and a huge replica Midwestern Smallville in the middle of Eastern Europe designed for immersive training of Communist agents prior to their deployment in America. On arrival the team were barely in their quarters before the goon squad burst in with accusations and insinuations. But it was a test. And Martin Landau’s Rollin Hand earned a commendation for having the presence of mind to demand to see a warrant. Perfectly in character! You see, said the instructor, you must remember that in America people are not afraid of the police. I instantly thought of the mental tripwire that line would snare in a Guardian writer, who would immediately say that the show had aged poorly. Well, no. This is the 1960s when the Warren court is formalising Miranda rights and putting a federal floor under too variable civil liberties in the various states. And having recently read some of Stasiland I can say with absolute certainty that living in East Germany was not as good as living in the East Village. Such an embarrassing contrast might lead to what I’m now going to dub the Social Pareto Equilibrium. Again, like Cultural Austerity, a bizarre mirror trick. If the Economic Pareto Equilibrium prevents moving from one scenario to another unless everyone benefits; an obvious formula for retaining the status quo forever – for instance the move to redistribute Elon Musk’s wealth among all Americans would obviously make one person unhappy. Then the Social Pareto Equilibrium is a way of discrediting the past; if one person was unhappy that means that entire status quo was awful. Even if everyone except that one person was obviously better off in that old scenario than the current scenario, it cannot be held to have been any good because it wasn’t perfect for everyone. One might see that this is easily a recipe for perpetual aggravated dissatisfaction, where the past is disavowed, and the present is reviled. Some good things actually happened in the past. Even if the Guardian finds that obvious truth to be deeply problematic.
Is Dee Forbes an invalid?
Her solicitor would certainly like everyone to believe so. Their letter to the Oireachtas Media Committee trying to get to the bottom of RTE’s murky shadow payments saga said Forbes is getting “active medical care” and that “further medical information” to confirm that she is “unfit to participate in any processes at this time can be provided with the requirement that it is kept confidential”. To quote Laurence Fishburne in Mission: Impossible 3, “You know what, I would really love to see that intel.” She was fit and well enough to earn 350,000e a year as Director General of RTE for seven years. But faced with scrutiny six months later over her possible role in serious financial chicanery at RTE she apparently can’t even appear on Zoom, with breaks, nor even rise to the challenge of submitting a written report. The picture her lawyers paint is that of a total invalid – someone incapable even of dictating, so stricken is she in mind and body. And the Oireachtas Media Committee have decided to accept this as the last word on the matter. Does this set a precedent? Are people now entitled to say, cough cough, they’re ill, cough, and refuse to cooperate with inquiries where they are quite reasonably thought to possess pertinent and undisclosed information? And what happens next? Forbes may have a progressive or chronic illness. But if she doesn’t, she will recover with time. Does she still get a free pass then?
Lightning in a bottle
And to think Richard O’Brien’s asides to the camera weren’t even planned. He was simply entertaining one cameraman outside while all the others were focused by the director on the game. Naturally enough. And it was only in the editing suite that they realised what gold they had, and encouraged him for all love to continue to improvise. And so they tapped into an inexhaustible fountain of whimsical fantasias. Living in the Medieval Zone with Mumsie. Finding an abandoned liner while cleaning the sewers and doing it up for the Ocean Zone. Hunting crocodiles on the treacherous river of the Aztec Zone. Getting into spats with the moody computer in space of the Futuristic Zone. An array of random accents, tangents, and hyperactivity. Harmonicas, real and imaginary! And that is what sets The Crystal Maze apart from The Krypton Factor.



















