Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

Denzil_DC

(8,071 posts)
Wed Oct 4, 2017, 04:37 PM Oct 2017

'Burning inside me'? The five worst moments of Theresa May's speech

There are many accounts of what's immediately entered legend as "Theresa May's car crash speech" to the Tory Conference - and much resulting ribaldry on social media - but here's one I've plucked at random:


...



Set the stage

“Building a country that works for everyone” announced her backdrop. Except it turns out the Conservatives couldn’t even build a sign for everyone, as the letter F dropped from the wall. (Leading many to joke about telling the Tories to “eff off”). Shortly afterwards, the E disappeared – but this is Manchester, the city of rave: Es are dropped a lot. At the end of the speech, one journalist tweeted a picture of what remained of the sign, a few sad letters, like the dregs of Scrabble tiles in the bag. It’s difficult to take the Conservatives’ message seriously when it’s literally disintegrating in real time.

...

Don’t be sick

In fairness, it isn’t May’s fault she was ill. She had better hope she perks up, though, because soon we won’t have a publicly funded NHS to speak of, and good luck with getting sickness benefit or, you know, a GP appointment. It might have made more sense after the first splattering of lung pushed its way up the oesophagus to abort the speech or skip straight to the meat of policy. As someone in an already weakened position, the optics were … how should one put this? Not good.

It did, however, mean we got to witness the hilarious moment when May was given a standing ovation for receiving a glass of water from a runner. Because, honestly, that is the level of competence we are operating at at the moment.

...

Don’t get pranked

It’s sort of incredible how, just weeks after the country’s terror threat was at critical, a prankster – who turned out to be comedian Simon Brodkin – was able to get this close to the prime minister. Handing her a P45 was a neat trick, but the most absurd thing here was that May TOOK IT. Don’t take it!


The other two are here: https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/oct/04/worst-moments-theresa-may-speech-p45-prime-minister

There are plenty more, e.g.:

Theresa May's speech was such a nightmare she must have been disappointed to discover she wasn't naked

It was when the set started falling apart that the Prime Minister realised everything was going to be all right. Phew, she thought. Thank goodness for that. I’ll just glance down at myself now, see that I’m fully naked, then all my teeth will fall out and I’ll wake up and start getting ready for that speech that I’ve got to give to save my career.

But, much to her disappointment, the Prime Minister found that she was not naked. The cameras were rolling. The hall was packed. At her feet was a P45 form she’d just willingly taken from a serial prankster. There were still ten pages of a seventeen-page speech to go, and she was entirely unable to speak.

It was a nightmare so richly layered it was almost as if it had been directed by Christopher Nolan. Time passed, seconds warped into hours, and as Theresa May moved deeper and deeper down through the levels of her own never-ending anxiety dream it became impossible to see how she might ever find her way out.

http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/theresa-may-conference-speech-nightmare-simon-brodkin-lee-nelson-prankster-p45-a7982876.html


May - given the alleged fragility exposed in recent revelations - is coming dangerously close to being a figure to be pitied, and it's hard kicking somebody when they're down.

Then you remember "There's no magic money tree" and her incompetence and wholehearted embrace of the Cruella DeVil stereotype as an immigrant-bashing Home Secretary, and her attempted bullying of Corbyn at their earlier PMQs while safely backed by her braying backbenchers, the disabled dead or miserable because of her policies, etc. etc. etc. - and any sympathy instantly dissipates.

Just go. Go now. Even if it's Boris, we'll cope somehow.
6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
'Burning inside me'? The five worst moments of Theresa May's speech (Original Post) Denzil_DC Oct 2017 OP
"There's a cream for that!" Adsos Letter Oct 2017 #1
Ha, ha, ha - Newsnight TubbersUK Oct 2017 #2
Laughed my ass off on Twitter at this in the morning shenmue Oct 2017 #3
Oh, people were having a field day ... Denzil_DC Oct 2017 #4
ROFL shenmue Oct 2017 #5
oh dear. JHan Oct 2017 #6

Denzil_DC

(8,071 posts)
4. Oh, people were having a field day ...
Wed Oct 4, 2017, 07:00 PM
Oct 2017

Some samples:

End of the speech, no Photoshop:



With Photoshop:







My vote for Tweet of the Day:




Philip Sim ✔ @BBCPhilipSim

The F has fallen off the wall. What else could possibly go wrong? pic.twitter.com/kXNhXMvM4S

Philip Sim ✔ @BBCPhilipSim

We've also dropped an E now, which actually starts to explain some of the things that have happened in the last hour



Even the Sun couldn't resist joining in:



That P45 (which May left lying around after her speech, so a journo picked it up):






Guardian politics ✔ @GdnPolitics


Here's the senior members of the cabinet watching the conclusion of Theresa May's speech at #CPC17





HannahJane Parkinson ✔ @ladyhaja


Can I just point out that Theresa May is wearing a bracelet of Frida Kahlo, a member of the Communist party who LITERALLY DATED TROTSKY





Dawn Foster ✔ @DawnHFoster

Me at the start of the speech: WTF is the British dream
Me at the end in tears of laughter: THIS, this is the British dream
Latest Discussions»Region Forums»United Kingdom»'Burning inside me'? The ...