The Kill Cancer Death Rally


Party time, excellent
September 12, 2006, 1:07 pm
Filed under: Cancer, Cancer Research, Charity

There’s going to be a party. After much toing and froing (and I hope some of you read those words to rhyme with boing) the The Kill Cancer Death Party is sorted out.

Venue : The Leonard Street Gallery

Address : 73A Leonard St, EC2A 4QS (Old St. Tube).

Time : Friday 22nd Sept, 7pm – midnight

Theme : addicted icons, death ralliers and 1980s colour-blind psychiatric outpatients.

We’ll ask for a donation on the door and then money from food and drink at the event will go to Cancer Research UK. I hope a load of you can make it to see off the Kill Cancer Death Ralliers in style.

That means we need some serious Whitney-Houston-strung-out-on-crystal-meth outfits. Or raid the ski-suits from your parent’s cupboards, then combine it with a large hunting knife and pictures of your boss’s front garden. On the Death Rallier front, well, anything goes. Please theme out to the max, and if none of those ideas grab you, just look fabulous.

Before I sign off I’d like to thank all the wonderful folks at the Leonard Street Gallery who are giving us this thing for very little. You’ve been really generous and I hope the night goes with a swang.



Live by the code, die of cancer?
August 12, 2006, 9:41 am
Filed under: Cancer, Cancer Research, Donate, Uncategorized

Ghost Dog – tagline “Live by the code. Die by the code” – is a funny old movie. When I say funny, I mean a little bit boring. It’s a flick that people who I would let go to the video shop unaccompanied like, and yet I fell asleep in it. Pretentious, action packed with a wicked Wu Tang Clan soundtrack (and whilst we’re on the subject of the Clan, check out Ol Dirty Bastard life story) – it’s my type of film. Hmmm, a puzzler.

The reason I mention it is that during the movie the pigeon fancying wannabe samurai, played by Forrest Whitaker, occasionally reads from the Hagakure, the code of the Samurai, and one bit stuck with me :

“Each day a samurai should contemplate his own death and consider various ways of dying, from being torn apart in the jaws of a wild beast, to falling from thousand foot cliffs, and during some part of the day, the samurai should consider himself dead.”

The reason that stuck is because I think contemplating mortality is good for the soul. However, now we’re so over-protected you can’t even teach kindergarten classes to juggle with flaming hedge strimmers, without the ‘elf and bloody safety busy-bodies breathing their nanny state fumes down your free decent English yeoman neck, I’d advise you get real, and start thinking about cancer.

A good place to start is the cheery sounding Cancer Stats webpage. It’s like YouTube for hypochondriacs. Did you know there are 24 types of cancer, and yet four types, breast, lung, bowel and prostate – account for over half of all new cases? Good to see that cancer, like any good business, roughly follows the 20/80 rule of getting 80% of your business (read deaths) from 20% of your service providers (read cancers).

For your viewing pleasure, here are the 24 types of cancer. And if we’re contemplating our impending dooms, allow me to paraphrase the Wu Tang Clan : 24 ways to die, chose one.

Bladder cancer Bone cancer Bowel cancer Brain and CNS cancer

Breast cancer Cervical cancer Hodgkin’s lymphoma Kidney cancer

Laryngeal cancer Leukaemia Liver cancer Lung cancer

Malignant melanoma Multiple myeloma  Non-Hodgkin lymphoma Oesophageal cancer  

Oral cancer Ovarian cancer Pancreatic cancer Prostate cancer 

Stomach cancer Testicular cancer Thyroid cancer Uterine cancer

Which one do you want least? And really try to imagine it. To my mind they all look totally rubbish. Except, that is, Multiple Myeloma. I just can’t stop saying it to the tune of My Sharona. Whenever I said I had cancer I’d be able to say “I’ve got a Multiple Myeloma, ma-ma-ma-ma-My-yi-yi-yi-yi-eloma”.

Obviously Cancer Research UK are doing all they can to stop anyone having to sing which terminal disease they have to tunes by The Knack. And the Kill Cancer Death Rally is doing all it can to raise money for those bad ass cancer killing research doctors. Go on then, give us some money.

tumour.jpg

GSOT : I’ll have it with a side order of fries, please



More bloody do-gooders
August 1, 2006, 11:36 pm
Filed under: Cancer, Cancer Research, Donate, Uncategorized

Wouldn’t it be rubbish if you did the Kill Cancer Death Rally, then realised that no one else gave a shit. There you were, in Barcelona, you’d rallied, you’d tried. You’d raised money, and your game. But all around a bloated, complacent, sick world carried on in degeneracy.

 Luckily, life isn’t like that. Instead, all around there are good folk who are trying to do their best to raise money to beat cancer. So from now on I’ll highlight some of the people who are doing good as we speak (except we’re not speaking). It might be that someone who can’t make it on the rally will be able to, for example, go on a hill walk like James Wallis. And you can follow his progress here

Whilst stuck on the hillside James might come across (pun intended) The Breast of Canada Calendar girls. Using their chest puppies as weapons against cancer, these Canuck beauties are walking the walk with their waps waggling in the wind. Those of you set on using your anatomy to raise money could also visit FlipCancerTheBird.Com (link via The Mad Admin – if you feel IT workers are undervalued agree with him here).  

However, all these normal people doing charity are more than a little dull when you compare them to Look To The Stars, the blog that records celebrity giving. As I worship celebrity then it would be a dream to appear on that site. Oh, to enjoy basking in the reflected glow. To get on their I’m going to need a celebrity. I’m going to need the Hof. Please, can someone get David Hasselhof on the Kill Cancer Death Rally. In full Night Rider gear.

hasselhof2.jpg                  hasselhof.jpg

The Hoffmeister with puppies. Twice.

ps. if you’ve come here after I said I’d popped you on my blogroll, then I’m sorry to disappoint. I’ll link to you soon as I can, but sourcing photos of Hasselhof with puppies takes time and it’s already late.



And God said “Let there be big party”
August 1, 2006, 11:26 pm
Filed under: Cancer, Cancer Research, Charity, Donate, Uncategorized

Back from the Ibiza. Relaxed as you could possibly be after landing at four in the morning and catching cattle class flu. However, that’s no longer a worry as we make the big party! Yes, you heard it right. Not only will there be a Kill Cancer Death Rally, there will now be a Kill Cancer Death Party.

Shit, a death party. Sounds like it should be in a Brasseye sketch. Chris Morris turns to the camera looking serious next to an adolescent boy with an organ on his head and a young girl looking intensely at a ballcock. ”Welcome to a modern day death party. He’s flipping a porpoise in a death lid, whilst she’s waiting for her ball spasm to backflachate.”

You know the sort of thing.

Death lids aside, this party is, in fact, being organised by the wonderful Yunes of Static London (please send me a link to your site) and Alex Sheridan. Alex will be putting the might of Protest Recordings  behind it. Or at least some of the might.

It’ll be shake your coconuts time in mid-September and all the money will go to - you’ve guessed it – buying Kalashnikovs for the Lord’s Resistance Army Cancer Research. Whomsoever would like to have an invitation to le knees up send in your proper home address to me. If you have any other friends who’d be interested ask them, get their addresses and we will send them, like, an actual invitation in, like, the post.

ak74su.jpgcancer.jpg    

 doctor.jpg    lords_resistance_army.jpg

          Kalashnikov.          Cancer.       

Dr. Death.   Innocence massacred.

(Due to some strange blog malfunction I wasn’t able to get the photos in the right order for this line ‘We’re helping him, kill this. Not buying these, for them’ under the photos. It is rather weirder now.)



The Story so Far…
July 3, 2006, 12:52 pm
Filed under: Cancer, Cancer Research, My Mum

Right, Barcelona or Bust: The Kill Cancer Rally is starting to come together. After talking it up in pubs, clubs and to disinterested shrubs for two months or so, I’m doing something about it. For those of you haven’t heard the pitch, here it is :

“This September you can join a four day sponsored car rally from London to Barcelona.

All – and I mean all – the money raised will go to a collection of cancer charities because cancer killed my mother. This rally is my revenge.”

The cars have to cost less than a £100, fancy dress is encouraged and car customisation even more so. It’ll be a lot of fun and if everyone raises just £250 we’ll get one step closer to killing cancer.

However, nothing will happen unless you come along. So please, please come. But before you do tell your friends about it and force them to tell their friends about it. Write pithy articles in your syndicated newspaper columns and donate large prizes for the prize draw. And anyone wants to help then I’ll be very grateful.

I look forward to hearing from you guys and I thank you all in advance.

Thanks a lot

herbie.jpg

Sentient vehicles welcome



How much is enough?
June 21, 2006, 8:29 pm
Filed under: Cancer, Cancer Research, Donate, Uncategorized

When Jesus was swaddled in the manger, thinking whatever a divinity would think having been expectorated in human form down some sort of insanely slow-moving painfully constricting water-slide, he was attended by kings from the east and shepherds from the west.

Luckily that was in the days before the Eastside/Westside beef had kicked in. Otherwise Melchior would have pulled his nine from his side and said “Any bitch with a sheep is gonna get wet. I’m frank-incensed by your disrespect, wool boy, now you ready to eat clip”.

one-wise-king.jpg

He came from the East

“Yeah, well I think you look like the three wise queens with that funky get up. And anyway I’m the only star in the east bitch” and so on and so forth ad infinitum. Bitchus.

It transpired that, though the kings were high net-worth individuals, and the lowly shepherds came from a very different socio-economic background, with the consequence that the gifts they brought were very different in cost-price, this mattered little to Jesus. What mattered was that each had brought what they could.

That story has little relevance to raising money for Barcelona or Bust because everyone should raise £250 each.

Because if each car has four people in it. That’s £1000 a car minimum.

If 20 people come on the tour, we raise £5000.

If 10 cars come on tour we raise £10000.

You too can play the “how much we can raise game?” with the help of an Excel spreadsheet and a university degree. Clearly, there is no maximum. That would be stupid. But, and this is the point, but if everyone does raise £250, we can make a difference.