Product Description
Now, that we have arrived in the future, and we're not wearing silver space suits to work or eating pills instead of food, we can look back with some amusement on Tomorrow's World. Illustrated throughout and structured by theme, this book will recall the best of TW's occasional successes and frequent failures. Kieran Prenderville was demonstrating cds as early as 1981, but more true to TW form was 'Hissing Sid', a snooker-playing robotic arm which, when challenged by Prenderville on the baize, combined the temperament of Rod Hull's emu with the ineptitude of Clouseau.We were promised miracle chopping boards, but they never made it to retail, and giant, Prisoner-like bubbles inside which commuters could traipse across the Thames haven't arrived to solve inner-city congestion. We're still waiting for holographic videophones, cybernautic sheep-shearing devices and flying cars, too. With profiles of the main presenters dropped in throughout, critiquing their presenting skills, sartorial statements and science credentials, this trip back to the future has the irresistible pull of nostalgia, but is also a glorious celebration of a very British tradition in Heath Robinson-esque solutions to life's little problems.
About the Author
David Stubbs has been writing about music, TV, film and sport for 20 years. He started working life as first freelance, then staff writer for Melody Maker. Since then, he has contributed to the Guardian (where he is TV reviewer and regular contributor to the 'Hard Sell' column in The Guide), The Times, Arena, NME, Uncut, When Saturday Comes, The Wire, Spin, among others. He is the author of a biography of Charlie Nicholas, as well as volumes on Jimi Hendrix and Eminem in the 'Stories Behind Every Song' series published by Carlton Books. He has just completed a volume profiling the record label Ace. He lives in Blackheath, London.