Super Steve Earle
Well-known member
So why does CH say Annie instead of any?
I've always thought his post match interviews was well (sans-good).
So why does CH say Annie instead of any?
I thought this was going to be a startling revelation about CH being involved with an 80's one-hit wonder.
Open the door, get on the floor
Everybody walk the dinosaur
So who has noticed his strange use of 'no'.
Eg ' Chris, a great result today?' .....CH... 'No, I thought we played very well and it was a hard fought game.'
Just watch a few of his interviews. He just needs to think of the opposite of 'no' and slot it into his sentences. Maybe he doesn't want to come across as a 'yes' man?
Adam Virgo was a great one for starting sentences with "Yeah, no, we're pleased with the performance...etc". And finishing them with "You know". I don't know if he still does it. Lots of footballers do that in interview.
On this note, has anyone heard Harry Kane being interviewed? I heard him speak for the first time at the weekend. Erm...he's not the most eloquent, is he? Safe to say he probably didn't put "Astrophysicist" on the school careers form when they asked him what he wanted to do when he grew up
Just a little bit of topic, why do Australians start a lot of sentences with " Look"
One hit wonder?
Share the OP's view, though. Such things always jar with me. Split infinitives really get my goat.
But I can cope with it. What CH says always seems to make perfect sense, even if the grammar might occasionally fall short.
Annie what? er.........any what? Is this some reference to just any Annie?
The rant - I don't understand how an articulate, hardly stupid man like Chris Hughton can persist in using 'was' in place of 'were' in his interviews. I can understand it with less articulate guilty parties such as Palace thicko Pardew and Villa thicko Sherwood, but CH, really?
The advance apology - Advance apologies for the rant, and it is a trivial thing in the grand scheme of things, but CH will arguably be a role model for a lot of youngsters and it just seems like sheer laziness.
Hopes for this thread - a debate on lazy speak in general.
So who has noticed his strange use of 'no'.
Eg ' Chris, a great result today?' .....CH... 'No, I thought we played very well and it was a hard fought game.'
Just watch a few of his interviews. He just needs to think of the opposite of 'no' and slot it into his sentences. Maybe he doesn't want to come across as a 'yes' man?
Adam Virgo was a great one for starting sentences with "Yeah, no, we're pleased with the performance...etc". And finishing them with "You know". I don't know if he still does it. Lots of footballers do that in interview.
On this note, has anyone heard Harry Kane being interviewed? I heard him speak for the first time at the weekend. Erm...he's not the most eloquent, is he? Safe to say he probably didn't put "Astrophysicist" on the school careers form when they asked him what he wanted to do when he grew up
I had a feeling my reference would prove to be a bit obscure...
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Was (Not Was).
In hindsight, I shouldn't have bothered.
It’s a South London thing.
But I was trying to say they were MORE than a one hit wonder, which is an expression that to me would indicate they had one big hit and then faded in to total obscurity. Haven't they produced or worked with just about everyone worth producing?