I did not have to wait long to get
the final big phone call. I was at work,
having finished teaching for the day, trying to get my ridiculous pile of
marking down to something merely the size of a wardrobe, rather than the
house-sized mess I had in front of me.
The producer was very nice, informing me of possible dates, the rules,
asking me about my specialisms, and confirming the order I would want to do
them in. I came off the phone feeling
very happy, looking forward to telling my friends and family. It was only later (about twenty minutes or so
later) that I realised that this all meant that my frankly half-assed idea of
getting on the telly for a giggle had now actually come to pass, and that the
chances of making a royal moron of myself in front of several million people
were fairly high.
Not wishing to waste time computing
how long the odds were against me, I decided to set about constructing a
revision timetable, to fill the 4 months or so I had to prepare. Happily, I had the summer holidays in the
middle of it – some quality time to get stuck into some reading without the
spectre of 10E breathing down my neck like an angry fart. However, no Arnold Rimmer am I. My timetable was sketchy at best, and
basically consisted of a list of dates, with a general topic next to it:
This photo was in the local paper - honest to God. The shame. From www.gazetteandherald.co.uk |
11th July – British prime
ministers
Etc etc ad nauseum
So, I spent my summer holiday
reading reams and reams of mostly net-based documents (mostly Wikipedia, if I’m
going to be dangerously honest), trying to absorb the knowledge of millennia. I learned loads about the prime ministers and
British history circa 1800 – I can
still remember that Castlereigh committed suicide over some failed diplomacy in
Vienna, and that Lord Liverpool was in charge during the Peterloo massacre of
1819 (but wasn’t actually there, of
course). But revising general knowledge
is like trying to fill a small pot with millions of bees – no matter how hard
you try to cram them in, they won’t stick, and you’ll probably get badly hurt
too. Deciding I was essentially allergic
to bee stings, I changed tack, and focused nearly all of my attention on my
specialism – the Titanic.
I spent a small fortune completing
my library of Titanic books (and some of them were very large), and set about reading them. I learned that the toilets were manufactured
by Armitage, before Shanks ever got involved, and that the piano in the smoking
room was a Steinway. I learned that its
call sign was MGY, for some reason, and that cruelly the first news of the
disaster reported that the ship was limping to Halifax harbour. These were happy days – having an excuse to
totally immerse yourself in a topic you love is a wonderful thing, and I even
built myself a scale model of the damn thing, so I could visualise all the
locations. In short, I over-prepped like
a maniac, and all but neglected the general knowledge. This was to be my downfall.
To be continued…
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