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Posts Tagged ‘Stockholm’

Reefer Madness

Friday, February 10th, 2012

The war on drugs has come to Linköping.

Cannabis use is on the increase which means that local tutting and hand-wringing has gone into overdrive. The chief of police has taken action. Serious action. Serious action in the form of a big article in the local paper to inform us about cannabis. Östgötacorrespondenten, a newspaper, generally not read by teenagers, but pawed over by their over anxious parents and teachers, has joined the top cop at the forefront of this war on drugs.

There’s a photo of this hardened law enforcer, looking concerned as he surveys a cupboard full of drug paraphernalia. He stares into the abyss of the cupboard, ready to slam the doors shut again and lock away this hell – but it’s all there, the evils of cannabis, for us to see – I know that while many of the good burghers of Linköping will find the sight terrifying, anyone who been even close to a university halls of residence will immediately recognise the contents of a first year engineering student’s room. It’s all there: The bongs in Rasta colours, a T-shirt with a big marijauna leaf on it and of course,  the ubiquitous picture of an alien with a spliff saying ‘Take me to your dealer’

Corren have helpfully give the reader a guide to the warning signs as to whether you own child is using cannabis and I am going to share these tips for the readers of The Local and particularly the readers of The Local who were not around 85 years ago, in 1936, to get swept up in the hysteria of Reefer Madness.

Here’s what to look out for if you are worried about your kids:

Has their taste in music changed?
Remember how they used to dance around the room to The Gummy Bears and Astid Lindgren? And now, since they started gymnasium, they listen to guitar or electronic music, or reggae, or hip hop, or Sean Banan?? That’s not proper music! They are clearly junkies!

Are they tired or moody? This symptom is also know as ‘being a teenager’

Do they like skateboarding?
This is the telltale signs of drug abuse. If your child enjoys a sport that gets them out of the house, keeps them fit and creates a social circle of like minded people, stop them now! As my friend James pointed out, skateboarding is a gateway sport.

What worries me most is that I have felt very tired recently, and not only that, I have started listening to totally new genres of music – I was rather moved by a baroque piece I heard on the car radio last week. Luckily, I can’t skateboard, but I did buy a woolly hat from the local skate shop.Will people start seeing me as ‘one of them’?

I haven’t been exposed to any drugs here in Linköping, but I’m worried that suspicious fingers will start to point. … so I’m tempted to start smoking hash, just to deal with the stress of all this suspicion.

Meanwhile, the other main news in the paper was that Linköping plans to build an enormous greenhouse. What will be grown there is being kept a tight secret, but it doesn’t take much to add two and two together and see that the kommun is planing to cash in on the latest teenage cash cow.

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Back in my drug free reality, The Tuesday Chinwag had it’s premiere on Tuesday in Stockholm. You can read more about me and it here in this article on The Local. Come along next time! The last one was a hoot!

You can also follow me on Twitter @BenKersley

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Sun, sea and the Stockholm Riviera

Wednesday, January 25th, 2012

Last week I went on holiday to Stockholm by mistake.

We had a week off and after spending a few hours trawling Ving, Apollo and Fritidsresor we decided to do something reckless, something unconventional and in terms of finding a break in the sun at least, something slightly crazy. We dismissed Tenerife, Abu Dhabi and Cape Verde and opted to spend some time in Stockholm instead.

The kids didn’t get to have a splash in a pool and we came home just as pale as when we left, but in terms of a holiday it was fun. Or as school newsletters used to say: “A good time was had by all”.

We visited the Natural History Museum, The Vasa and the Rum för Barn at Kulturhuset. We went to see Winnie The Pooh at the cinema, took the Djurgården Ferry and treated ourselves to frequent fika.

So listen up people! Abroad is overrated! Stockholm has the lot!
(This is what we told the kids, anyway…. we will definitely go somewhere warm next year, with a pool)

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Back in Stockholm soon with a regular night at Kafé Klavér … and don’t forget to follow me on Twitter @BenKersley

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Weird Shit at STOFF

Thursday, August 25th, 2011

I’ve just got back from watching some weird shit at the VIP opening of STOFF, The Stockholm Fringe Festival. Just to clarify, by ‘weird shit’ I mean a naked Mexican opera singer with a beard but no penis. Incidentally, I feel I am qualified to describe this as weird shit as I have  a degree in drama – I know how to academically analyse theatre, from Grotowski to Boal… and, trust me, the opera performance definitely comes under the category ‘weird shit’.

But how cool it was to be in the thick of it. Surrounded by theatre types doing weird and wonderful performances that the audience may or may not have understood. Having spent so long in small town Linköping recently, where mainstream is the order of the day, it was such a pleasure to hang out with performers for whom profound and pretentious were words that could be found tattooed on their inner lip.

The festival goes on at Kulturhuset for the next few days and there are performers from all over the world. Go along and maybe you can check out some equally weird shit. I spoke to a group from the UK called ‘Fools Play‘ who had just graduated from E15 drama school. I don’t think their shit is the weirdest at the festival, but it sounded like a pretty good option to go and watch. Their show is called ‘Go Solo’ and they are playing at Kulturhuset’s Hörsalen at 12.30 on 26/8 and Dramalabbet at 4pm on 27/8.

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Tour blog#9: Morning after the night before

Thursday, March 31st, 2011

Well. Stockholm is done. Avklarad. Disappointing turnout in terms of numbers which suggest that the concept of the show hasn’t grabbed the minds of people in Stockholm. It’s a shame because it is a very very funny show with lots of energy. But still. Onwards and upwards. The audience that were there had a really fantastic time and Danny was given an encore. So it can’t have been all that bad!

Met some nice people from Your Living City after the show, who have a website for stuff going on in English in Stockholm and also went for a beer with some other audience members. This probably hasn’t helped the cold that is sort of lingering in my tired and aching body. So I’ll see how I get on in the next few days. Still it was nice not to have to drive immediately after the gig.

It’s Linköping tonight. A gig on home turf, so there should be a decent crowd. If you are in the Linköping area, come on down to Bastiljen (opposite the library).

Right, now for a quick snooze before driving back down to Linköping

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Tour blog#8: Stockholm here we come

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011

Tonight’s the night. Stockholm. The bright lights and big city are a short (by this tour’s standards) car ride away. We have to be at the theatre for 2pm to sound check, then the plan is to take it easy for a few hours before the show.

At the moment, ticket sales have been slower than expected, so if you have nothing to do tonight, please come down to Boulevard Teatern in Södermalm and bring a couple of friends! You can get tickets via ticnet or buy them on the door at the theatre.

The days off haven’t really been days off at all. I’ve been working for the sound production company Widevox and Danny has been interviewing people for the BBC Radio 4 documentary he’s making. Among others, he’s interviewed Magnus Betnér and the dogfather himself Dogge Doggelito.

Right. time to get my bag together for tonight’s stay in the big city! See you tonight Stockholmers!

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Tour blog#7: Small but perfectly formed

Monday, March 28th, 2011

I realise I am a day late with this blog post. I blame the hostel in Gothenburg, the size of Sweden and the need for sleep.

Firstly, the hostel – In this day and age, a youth hostel that didn’t have wireless. Can you believe it?! Also the hostel was full of members of CUF which is the Center party’s youth wing. This isn’t an excuse for not blogging, but it did mean that there wasn’t any quiet place to sit and type without being disturbed by some politically active youths away from home. The Center party is traditionally the party of farmers, so they were probably amazed by the electric lights and you know what they say – There ain’t no party like a Center party.

Secondly, as I have already realised (with no small amount of horror) Sweden is a bloody enormous country. So the majority of my touring day is spent sitting behind the wheel of the car. Something I did for roughly 6 hours on Saturday and 4 hours on Sunday.

Thirdly, the need for sleep. Imagine the cumulative effects of staying in the same hostel as partying young farmers with driving for hours and hours… So that’s what I’ve been catching up on.

Anyway – Gothenburg! Sinnet was the venue for our third stop on the DJ Danny tour. It’s a beautiful venue, small, intimate, well run… all we needed was an audience. It’s not that nobody came, but it wasn’t exactly what you might describe as ‘busy’. I got the audience to fill up the front few rows and sit next to each other – Something that is usually very difficult to do. But the few people who were there were really up for it and once we ignored the fact that financially it was a disaster, we actually all had a really good time. I improvised loads as did the second support act Kurt Lightner. Danny did his set and got a great response.He even got a Finn to hold hands with a Swede (neither of whom were drunk)

We left the venue happy and tired… and ready to take a few days off before our Stockholm gig on Wednesday. If you are in Stockholm on the 30th, don’t miss out on the chance to see this genuinely feel good show. I said I wouldn’t do the hard sell on this blog… but here’s a link to buy tickets! http://www.ticnet.se/event/DjDannybiljetter/BOU0330D

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Tour blog#5: Competition Time!

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Me and Danny have just arrived at the hostel in Falun and it’s a great looking hostel so far. My memory of youth hostelling in the Lake District was that they always smelled of damp socks and banana sandwiches. Here in Falun the hostel is all tastefully decorated without a German backpacker in sight.

Anyway… The Local has been kind enough to announce that we are giving away a couple of tickets to the show at the Boulevard Teater in Stockholm this Wednesday. For a chance to win, just answer the following question:

DJ Danny wants to be a superstar DJ. Which island is famous for its DJ scene?

a. Gotland

b. Ibiza

c. Fantasy Island
Email your answer to ben@lkpghaha.se. The winner will be randomly selected and contacted on Tuesday. Otherwise you can buy your tickets for the Stockholm gig via Ticnet

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Twenty Eleven is GO!

Sunday, January 9th, 2011

After New Years Eve’s resolution fest and blind optimism, the reality of the year’s first week can be a bit of an anti-climax. At least it has been that way for me in the past. This year, I’ve played it a bit different – No resolutions, no inflated expectations or declarations of forthcoming success as the bells struck twelve. And for a change, I’ve hit the first week of the new year running.

I started the week working the newsdesk of this esteemed organ and found myself in conversation with the head of media relations at Volvo – Not how I had predicted my year would start. I’ll be working a bit more for The Local over the coming months, so my name may pop up here and there under (hopefully typo free) copy.

The rest of the week continued apace with a voice over  – I’m now the voice of the soon to be launched Windows 7 user guide. I also had an inspiring gig for a fascinating collection of people who were like a cross between a secret society and a club for aesthetes. It was an invitation only dinner where select guests who were all accomplished performers, singers, dancers and musicians, performed a turn on the theme of satire.   Typically, someone would sing brilliantly, then be congratulated on having just got the lead in the latest production at Stockholm’s Folkopera. The acts ranged from Tango to Baroque dance, from Shostakovich to Chopin, from Hasse and Tage to Monty Python. I performed a routine about Swedish politics which went down well, although coming onstage following a virtuoso cellist who performed Shostakovitch with tears in her eyes was a hard act to follow. The evening ended with an ‘Allsong’ of Auld Lang Syne, topped off with a bagpipe accompaniment.

Otherwise, I’ve been working hard on promoting Linköping’s new venue, Bastiljen, which opens on the 3rd of February with my stand up club, LKPG HA HA! The headliner is Marika Carlsson who caused controversy earlier in the year with her show ‘En Negers Uppväxt’. I’m really looking forward to it.

I’ve also got a few English language acts coming over later in the season, including the Scottish Comedian of the Year, Ro Campbell and Maureen Younger who runs Laughing Cows in London, Birmingham and Berlin. PLUS, I’m organsing a national tour of Sweden in March with Danny Robins’ brilliant persona DJ Danny who hilariously attempts to make it as a superstar DJ. So far, I’ve got dates confirmed in Malmö, Gothenburg, Falun, Linköping and at Boulevard Teater in Stockholm with a couple more dates hopefully to be confirmed next week.

Twenty Eleven is GO!

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Planning ahead

Monday, November 1st, 2010

I’ve got a quiet week this week. So quiet, I’m even toying with the idea of going to a networking lunch tomorrow, where bland local businesspeople meet, eat a bland lunch and make bland conversation about the photocopying industry. Not really my kind of thing, but worth turning up at these things occasionally.

It’s also time to start planning ahead and do some groundwork for future gigs: In the new year, I’m going to be involved in a very exciting project in Linköping, opening up a new venue with a couple of stages, which also means bigger budgets and bigger names. I’ve got a few Swedish names in mind, who I’d definitely like to get along and also a couple of names from the UK.

One name who I hope will come down is the Kiwi comedian Al Pitcher, who is now based in Sweden (spending about half his time here and half his time on the UK, Irish, Australian and NZ circuits). I put him on last year at the Sagateatern in Linköping and he left the audience exhausted with laughter. He is brilliant and if you are Stockholm based, there’s a chance to see him at the Boulevard Teater  this week and next (2nd, 3rd, 6th and 9th Nov). I guarantee you will laugh your socks off.

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Tack så mycket, Baby.

Friday, October 29th, 2010

So Paul Foot’s mini tour of Sweden drew to an end last Sunday and he left audiences either in hysterics or totally confused or both. He’s the kind of comedian that you either love or hate and I definitely fall into the love side. Watching him was an education for me, as he stretched the boundaries of the genre and also of the imagination. I was nothing but impressed by his ability to draw 20 minutes on subjects as benign as Shire horses and vans. He also made me laugh a lot.

I’m not sure what the highlight of his tour was. I am split between the experience of wiping tears from my eyes at Big Ben and looking at the audience, who had not come specifically to see Paul, and their reaction which ranged from one or two giggling uncontrollably, to many laughing without quite knowing why, to confusion, to looks of outright contempt. (Give me a comedian that splits the crowd, anytime.)  Alternatively, my other highlight was watching him do a short guest spot at RAW on Saturday where he finished his set off with the immortal words ‘Tack så mycket, baby.’

Got  a nice little write up too in The Velvet Onion, the place on the Internet where all Boosh related things can be found.

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Highlights from Follow Sweden

20 things to know before moving to Sweden

As diverse as Sweden is, there are a few societal norms that are distinctly Swedish. Understanding a handful of them will hopefully prepare you culturally before you relocate. When you're invited home to a Swede, you better be on time and take your shoes off, writes expat Lola Akinmade-Åkerström. Read more »

How far can English take you in Sweden?

Sweden is a country where almost everyone can speak English. So why bother to learn Swedish? Edina Varnagy from Hungary managed with English for a whole year but then found that Swedish could open doors – to a job, a social life and greater understanding. Read more »

Blog Update: Julie's Nordic Island

12 February 21:30

The consciousness of one »

"The ice dripped in the winter sun. It was the first day when the light had been intense enough to cause dripping in the sunlight. To hear it was an extraordinary wakeup call. The cycle was happening again as it always does, always will (or so we think). I imagined that on my summer island, the bees..." READ »

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A truly international education at the heart of Berlin
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