
Annoncering
Annoncering
Annoncering
For instance, does anybody really want Morrissey to be a man who complains about the quality of the taco he has recently purchased in a Taco Bell, holding said taco up to ridicule by taking a picture of it and posting, to his hundreds of thousands of followers: "Drowned in sauce… but probably never alive to begin with. What further humiliation for this innocent flatbread, @tacobell?” The thought of it's just dispiriting.Don’t think it won’t happen. This is a man who devoted 120 pages of his recent autobiography to laboriously recounting a libel trial with the unblinking gaze of a court stenographer. Perhaps Morrissey is no longer best placed to understand what it is the public wants from him. I mean, he spent as much time addressing just why Mike Joyce had no right to a proportionate share of the royalties on some 80s indie records as he did on his childhood. Ultimately, the medium is the message and Morrissey will be as constrained by the culture he swims in as anyone else. Expect The Chinese, but also expect tacos, expect articles from Business Insider on "visualising the global debt" and inspiring nature photography you won’t believe wasn’t photoshopped.A Morrissey in your pocket is a tamagotchi you’ll wish you'd never fed or watered. It will lie there in so-many kilobytes. Being quotidian. Then being obstreperous. Then just being a bit uncomfortable, dull or crudely wide-of-the-mark, like a re-release bonus track from Maladjusted. Then being pushed by the irresistible 140-character-per-hour force of Twitter into exactly the same cartoon shape as Cher, Emma Bunton, Russell Brand and Lewis Hamilton. No longer leonine or otherworldly, simply another schtick puppet jiggling through his own schtick in the schtick zoo for the amusement of people on trains who are too afraid of their own thoughts to look out the window.Hello. Testing, 1, 2, 3. Planet Earth, are you there? One can only hope…
— Morrissey (@itsmorrissey) May 14, 2014
Annoncering
