I am, with difficulty, stopping myself from using the
Internet.
It’s not that I am addicted to the damn thing, or that I
have to keep accessing it to reassert my essential character or that I need the
anonymous accreditation that plugging myself into the world wide web gives,
no it’s because it’s all too easy.
It all started with a jingle:
“You’ll wonder where the yellow
went
When you brush your teeth with
Pepsodent!”
The
sort of jingle that has lain supressed for god alone knows how many years and
then, apropos of nothing, suddenly
springs into the forefront of your brain and then will not let go. The inane “tune” established itself in my
mind and got stuck on repeat. In a
desperate attempt to get rid of it I began to think of other toothpaste
commercials from the past. “Gibbs SR”
came and went because there was no tune to it in my memory, though as the first
commercial on British TV, with toothpaste and brush embedded in a plastic block
of ice, it did provide Media Teachers with a powerful metaphor for the concept
of truth in advertising! The Colgate “Ring
of Confidence” briefly surfaced in my memory and then sank back drowned by the
repetition of the Peposdent tune.
In desperation I turned to sweets. I know from excited experience that, apart
from physical injuries, there is nothing that people like to talk about with more
enthusiasm than “Sweets from the Past”.
And, although I personally might be referencing sweets from sixty-odd
years ago, remembering chews, black jacks and sherbet fountains (Barratt's sherbet
fountains to be precise, the ones with the liquorish sucking tube) my own wistfulness
can easily be matched by eleven or twelve-year-olds reminiscing about the times
“When I was in Primary School” as if those were twenty years ago rather than
the same number of months!
So, my flittering remembrance lighted on Opal Fruits. A sweet I never really liked, too chewy and
sickly-sticky for my taste, but the advertising jingle still lives on in my musical
memory:
Opal fruits!
Made to
make your mouth water!
Cool as a
mountain stream,
Four
refreshing fruit flavours!
And this is where it gets a bit jumbled. I think that the “Cool as a mountain stream”
is actually a lying line from a menthol cigarette advert, and after the fourth
line the individual flavours were lovingly articulated.
The point is, I cannot remember what they were. They must have been citrus, so lemon and
orange should be two of them. I thought
that it might be banana as the third, but that is hardly refreshing. Lime? hardly.
Strawberry is always popular, or black current or black berry or some
woody fruit.
I know that I can type in Opal Fruits and all will be
revealed. I will probably be able to
hear again the original adverts on You Tube.
There will be original packets for sale on eBay and Amazon will probably
deliver them to my door.
But I refuse to take the easy way out. I lived through the introduction of these
sweets, I am sure that I had my favourites and spurned the “unfashionable”
ones. But, what were they?
And if I look them up will what I find out be a refreshing
of my memory or the creation of a false one?
Will I truly remember, or will I convince myself that I do?
If you study with the Open University you are encouraged to
be a wide ranging as possible with your range of electronic references, but the
Powers That Be in the institution caution you against Wikipedia, like God
Almighty warning Adam and Eve about the Serpent. We are told that we Cannot Trust It, beware,
we are told, of the Blandishments of Easy Knowledge from something that
seems so guilelessly and gratuitously munificent.
The end result of course, is that we all (ALL) use it, but
then look around for something more academically reputable to back up what it
told us.
So much of the Internet is not really trustworthy. My own experience of using a range of totally
authoritative websites gave contradictory factual
information, and don’t even get me started on my Sisyphean task of finding out
the ‘correct’ punctuation in a line of Clare’s poem ‘I am’. I rapidly came to the conclusion that the
only way in which I could be truly satisfied was to see the original manuscript
and I discovered that it hadn’t been digitalized and wasn’t on line. I had various books of poetry in which the
poem occurred, but there was not consistency about the way in which it had been
written and, to this day, I remain unsatisfied.
It reminds me of the time when I was studying for ‘O’ Level Art
in which there was, thank god, a whole History of Art Paper (On Which I Could
Get Marks) and which partially compensated for my lack of artistic ability on the other
two practical papers. I had begun to buy
Art Books and I realized that I had various copies of Turner’s “Snow Storm –
Steam-Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth”. I
laid all these books on my bed, open at the painting and marvelled at just how
different they all were. It was not just
the colours, though those were spectacularly different - it was how the
publishers chose to size the painting, how they cropped it. Few of the books actually gave the dimensions
of the painting, and fewer still gave you the materials used. Mostly, it doesn’t matter too much, but in
the academic world it matters a lot.
Let me wrench you back to Opal Fruits – which may well still
exist as far as I know. My memory fails
to bring too much back. How can I be
sure that anything that I gain about them from electronic media might be
absolutely true or absolutely false. How
will I know?
Perhaps TIAT (Take It As True) is now a state of mind for us
all. The musty old libraries full of
authoritative books have been superseded and we have instant, overwhelming
information flows of truly questionable authority that we perhaps question too
little.
Do you remember the flavours?
And, no, I still have not gone to the Internet. At least not for that.