Author: She Loves London

  • What Londoners Can Learn from Metro’s Rush Hour Crush

    What Londoners Can Learn from Metro’s Rush Hour Crush

    Londoners, today we will be considering three little words:

    Rush Hour Crush.

    Not so much the actual crush experienced on the tube, but that hallowed section of the Metro everyone reads while grasping one teeny, tiny, miniscule little thought:

    WILL IT BE ME TODAY?”

    Rush Hour Crush is the jingle of hope in every commuter’s morning routine. Spanning just one single column in the Metro newspaper, this is the home of bus stop romances, cross-platform glances, brief Underground encounters and an unholy amount of regret.

    Rush Hour Crush Metro Newspaper London

    In fact, put your ear to the paper and you’ll probably be able to hear it: the faint sound of smitten Londoners repeatedly kicking themselves, mourning that moment the doors closed and their last tube home lust-object disappeared down the tunnel to Hainult via Bank.

    But if this small but perfectly formed newspaper column has taught us anything over the years, it’s the following:

    No distinguishing feature is a bad distinguishing feature

    IMG_1764


    Even ailments, contagious illnesses and coughing fits are just a calling card for love

    rush hour crush flu


    Phone numbers are best given on plain sheets of normal, white paper

    IMG_1763


    A dab of perfume in the morning can go a long way

    IMG_1767

     …as can spending a little bit longer doing your hair.

    rush hour crush samosa


    It’s the million pound payoff for every time someone’s said “You know who you look like?” and then named a character from Harry Potter.

    rush hour crush harry potter

     

    But ultimately, it gives every commuter (alright, the single ones) that little bit of hope that their next journey might become the best “how we met” story ever.

    rush hour crush proposal accepted

    So thanks, Rush Hour Crush: without you, we’d probably all forget to get up, washed and dressed in the morning.

    Ever been tempted to send one in?

    Images: frontshat, Metro UK

  • 7 Ways You Can Tell it’s Definitely Summer in London

    7 Ways You Can Tell it’s Definitely Summer in London

    Ladies and gentlemen of London, allow me to introduce you to a brief blip of time commonly known as “proper summer”.

    It doesn’t happen very often, but when this rare occurrence does appear for two weeks of the year (and not a day more, them’s the rules), things tend to go down a little bit like this…

    1. The “Indoor Guilt” epidemic sets in

    After the first day of sustained sunshine, anyone thinking they might just head straight home after work is instead compelled to stand outside the nearest pub with a pint in their hand. This happens even if you don’t really want a pint, and even if the pavement outside that pub is in the shade, and even if the streets around Soho create a sort of wind-tunnel making everyone outside the pub feel a little bit nippy and like they might like to go inside now. No matter. The sun is out, and therefore Londoners must congregate on pavements.

    Drinking on Tysoe Street

     

    2. Famous literary characters “pop up” in the Serpentine

    If you think about it (and we all have at some point), just when is the right time to put a 12 foot fibreglass statue of Mr Darcy in the middle of a lake in London, and have him emerge from the water like a damp, handsome, 20th Century Godzilla?

    Summer, that’s when. darcy_serpentine

     

    3. Locals make use of any outdoor space they have access to

    Here in the urban jungle, where gardens and terraces and patios are but a pipe dream and the windows in our flats don’t open fully in case you fall out, the next best thing is to climb outside and dangle in whatever open space you can reach. Simply swing freely on your windowsill and feel that breeze, and later, the burn in your arm as you cling to the side of your house shouting “heeeelllpppp”.

    dalston house hanging out(…or at least, go to Dalston House -above – and pretend to)

    4. Every blog, website and magazine in the world city releases a list of “top 10 amazing epic brilliant rooftop bars in London”.

    While editors, journalists and writers might think this is the best idea ever, most Londoners know that the implied casual breeziness of “rocking up” to one of these rooftop bars is a little bit ambitious in reality. And by “reality”, I mean when you’re trying to get your booze on at 7pm on a Tuesday. Because we are in London, and that is how we roll.

    dalston roof gardens queue

     

    5. Buses get really really really hot

    “This bus is very hot!” the Londoners cried.

    “How hot?” wondered the rest of the world.

    “Well, according to the thermometer on my knee, the number 38 bus has reached exactly 30 degrees centigrade.”

    “But that is the maximum temperature for transporting cattle and other farm animals across Europe!” said the world.

    “We know” the Londoners mooed, solemnly shaking their heads and jingling their cowbells. “And with hooves for feet, we cannot even open a window.”

    “That’s because there are no windows on this bus.”

    “Oh. That explains it.”

    Dave Hill knee

    (the actual reason for Dave Hill’s themo-knee-shot is here)

    6. Big, massive, blue (and largely pointless) fans begin blowing hot air along Underground platforms

    Don’t get me wrong, they look impressive:

    fans undergroundBut as to the effectiveness of these largely pointless hot air fans, London remains undecided.
    windy tunnel

    7. But the real reason you know it’s summer is that for two weeks of the year, no one has to eat lunch from a tupperware box

    Sayonara tupperware! Begone microwavable leftovers! Praise be to Pret, hour long lunch breaks and free ping pong tables in Embankment Gardens. Summer: from 12-2pm Monday to Friday,  the workers of London are officially away from their desks and in you, secretly wishing they all worked in the media where it’s ok to wear shorts.

    Embankment Gardens at lunch

    In conclusion, bring on the weekend.

    If you know somewhere good to burn to a crisp this weekend without a queue to get in, share the wealth. I won’t tell anyone*.

    *this is just a small lie. Follow me on Twitter or Facebook if you want to know more *wink*

  • More London Blogs to Read While I Sort Myself Out After Glastonbury

    More London Blogs to Read While I Sort Myself Out After Glastonbury

    Last week I didn’t blog because I went to Glastonbury.

    And even more annoying than bloggers who apologise for not blogging because they were at Glastonbury are:

    a) people who call it “Glasto”

    and

    b) people who then come back and proceed to tell you how er-maz-ing “Glasto” is.

    I know this because up until last weekend I was one of the non-festival-goers who wrote passive aggressive “Ermagad SHAT AP” tweets and angrily clicked “hide updates” on album after album of grinning Facebook photos, and stuck my fingers in my ears and went “Sounds amazing. LAH, LAH, LAH” whenever someone tried to tell me how great it was.

    So I won’t tell you about how amazing Glastonbury was. And I won’t apologise for not blogging.

    I’ll just vindicate whatever viewpoint you have about it with the following quote, overheard at 3 o’clock in the afternoon as my friend and I walked past a security guard relaying information into a walkie-talkie, and then we can get back to blogging about London.

    overheard at glastonbury

    So while I sort my next post out, here are some more London blogs to keep you occupied. They’re unusual and different and concerned with documenting the little bits of London life we walk past every day (and not a sponsored post in sight).

    Enjoy.

    Doorditch – http://www.doorditch.co.uk/

    Let’s kick off with a blog that photographs all the doors in Shoreditch, and tells the stories behind them.

    From the Upper Deck – http://www.ftud.net/

    Photos of the city’s inhabitants going about their daily business, all taken from the upper deck of London’s buses.

    Empty Underground – http://emptyunderground.com/

    James Whatley’s blog snaps the London Underground at those moments when it’s just you and your camera on the platform.

    Fresh Eyes on London – http://aglimpseoflondon.blogspot.com/

    Daily snapshots of London – taken all over, all the time.

    Today’s Londoner – http://todayslondoner.com/

    This blogger is taking one photo of a born and bred Londoner every day for a year.

    i bike london – http://ibikelondon.blogspot.co.uk/

    If you’re an advocate for getting about on two wheels, you will bloody love Mark Ames’ bike blog.

    London On the Inside – http://londontheinside.com/

    Alright, so I said no events listings – but this site does it best in my humble opinion. They know what’s going on, and sometimes that’s all you need to know.

    Dogs on Trains – http://www.dogsontrains.com/

    What’s that? I like dogs? Yeah. I do. And I like them even more when they’re on trains.

    Phoneboxing – http://phoneboxing.com/

    Another slightly unusual blog – this time documenting the things you find inside of London’s phone boxes.

     

    You can see more of my London blog picks here. Got one to add?