Recent article written for The National Student (a shortened version of the 100 point list I did last year):
50 things to do instead of watching The Great British Bake Off
Recent article written for The National Student (a shortened version of the 100 point list I did last year):
50 things to do instead of watching The Great British Bake Off
Unless you’re a Mexican flamingo whose had its head stuck in a pile of sand for the past few weeks, you’ll be very much aware that The Great British Bake Off (alias GBBO, hereafter ‘Bake Off’) has triumphantly returned to television screens up and down the land.
This delightful cookery-based competition has been gracing UK television sets for seven years now but in truth it feels like judges Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood have always been part of our lives.
In fact a few weeks ago I came to the conclusion that Mary and Paul were born as they are now. Mary was never an infant, moody teenager or rebellious 20-something, she has always been the endearing grandmother partial to a gin and tonic (or two).
Paul has always been the uncle who you know loves you, yet at the same time you feel you have to earn that right to be loved. He’s also the uncle who is banned from Tesco’s bakery aisle due to excessive poking of goods.
Now those of you of a nervous disposition may want to leave the room when I say this, but there are those out there who (and I say this with a deep calming breath), there are those who do not like Bake Off.
Deep breaths, deep breaths. 1..2…3…4…5. Ok, I think I’m good.
I don’t know whether to feel angry or sorry for these persons. This is a minority group who has never experienced the elevation of a Paul Hollywood handshake or the despair of watching a baker’s gingerbread house fall apart at the very last second. Bake Off can make you experience every single emotion in the space of 58 minutes and all through the medium of cake. On paper it sounds like this is impossible to achieve, like I’m over inflating this show’s abilities like a puffed up pastry. But I’m not. Until you watch this show and give it your full attention you’re never really going to get it.
Something I am prepared to accept is that due to the Bake Off effect there is very little else on TV between 8 and 9pm on Wednesday night if you’re not tuning into the show. This is something I can help out with. Like a trusted and highly professional councillor I will leave people to discover the joys of Bake Off for themselves. In the meantime, here is a list of things you can do to pass away the hour whilst Bake Off is on. Just pick a number between 1 and 100 and hey presto! You have something to do instead of watching soggy bottoms and plump buns. (To be honest if that sentence doesn’t convince you to watch Bake Off nothing will. Moving on…)
1. Watch Bake Off
2. Ok, ok, watching Bake Off isn’t an option. Other things to do…
3. Draw a picture
4. Look up the weather for the next few days
5. Read up on the news because lets be painfully honest, the world has bigger problems then the rise on their sour bread dough
6. Watch cat videos on YouTube
7. End up in ‘that part’ of YouTube
8. Look out the window and people watch (judge them for not being as productive as oneself)
9. (Realise these people are actually being productive in taking exercise.) Go for a walk
10. Go onto a buying channel and make a reckless impulse buy (buy that rotisserie cleaner, it’s what life is missing)
11. Do an IQ test
12. Go food shopping
13. Get back and discover an essential item has been forgotten, go back to the shop again
14. Watch catch up TV
15. Call Mum
16. Buy an intellectual book. (War and Peace? Pfft, easy!)
17. Read the online synopsis and reviews of said book (e.g. War and Peace) and realise it’s actually a hard read. Buy the TV adaptation
18. Read a magazine instead
19. Binge on wine and chocolate
20. Cry that a) Bake off is leaving the BBC and b) that Mel and Sue are not going to present it
21. Text an old friend and arrange to meet up
22. Tinder
23. Convince yourself you’ll be single forever
24. Download a cool new app to replace time spent on Tinder
25. Learn a new dance, because you’re Beyoncé
26. Join a local club
27. Learn a language
28. Enrol on an evening course
29. Blog
30. (If above is not possible, start a blog)
31. Go through photos online and clear out anything that you wouldn’t want an employer to see
32. Create a LinkedIn profile
33. Update the CV
34. Write a book
35. Job hunt
36. Work on that essay/dissertation/homework/report
37. Buy a new music album
38. Paint nails
39. Watch make up tutorials online
40. Have a shower
41. Research summer holidays
42. One word: Christmas
43. Make a proper dinner for once
44. Call up the landlord to chase him over the broken freezer, again
45. Book tickets to the music gig/festival/event you’ve been forgetting about
46. Call British Gas to discuss recent energy bill
47. Be put on hold
48. Still on hold
49. Seriously?
50. Complain to British Gas about being on hold and end up forgetting what the call was about in the first place
51. Have an existential crisis
52. Scream into a pillow
53. Hit the gym
54. Do the washing
55. Iron the clothes that live in ‘the pile’
56. Start budgeting finances
57. Watch a film
58. Watch a David Attenborough documentary and convince yourself you know everything about nature
59. Look up deadly animals around the world
60. Shave and/or wax
61. Wrap and write Birthday presents and cards to those distant relatives you don’t really care that much about
62. Read up on local events/exhibitions happening in the area
63. Go onto meetup.com and join a social group
64. Watch Homes Under the Hammer
65. Look up local house prices and tell yourself you’ll be renting forever
66. Look up the cost of raising a family and kid yourself you want to be childless forever
67. Check online banking
68. Acknowledge spending money on petty items has to stop
69. Buy a samurai sword
70. Eat pie
71. Make plans for the weekend
72. Look up what films are out at the moment
73. Play FIFA/Call of Duty
74. Go for a run
75. Tidy the house
76. Clean the bathroom
77. Watch another program on a different channel
78. Play Bake Off drinking games (with/without friends, depending what sort of day it is)
79. After a few shots, find oneself uncomfortably attracted to Paul and/or Mary
80. Stalk Facebook friends
81. Do a Facebook ‘cull’ clearing out all the friends that haven’t been seen in decades
82. Send a well-crafted Tweet to a favourite celebrity
83. Log onto work emails. After all, what could possibly have come in since 5pm?
84. Spend entire evening dealing with work emails
85. Plan a big event
86. Go to the pub
87. Walk and wash the dog
88. Wash the car
89. Create an awesome music playlist
90. Sleep
91. Look up ways to volunteer locally
92. Rescan the Freeview
93. Learn ‘the offside rule’
94. Learn the difference between eyeliner (liquid and pencil), eye shadow and mascara
95. Have a cup of tea
96. Do that thing that has been ignored/put off for too long
97. Make a paper plane
98. Learn the periodic table
99. Actually bake something
100. Count down the minutes until it’s all over
And before you ask, no, of course I didn’t put this definitive list together whilst watching Bake Off. Thanks to the WordPress Gods I was able to write this days ago and get it scheduled in to be published during Bake Off. This post goes live at a time slot when I knew anti-Bake Off sentiment would be at it’s peak and therefore a good time for you to read it.
Did you think I was crazy or something?