Wednesday, 25 March 2026

A GLASS AND A HALF OF REGRET

In the grand British tradition of lamenting lost glories—much like mourning the Empire while queuing for a lukewarm cup of something that passes for tea—one finds oneself contemplating the melancholy fate of Cadbury. Once a beacon of cocoa-scented benevolence, now reduced to a discounted 'celebration' egg (woe betide we use such a controversial word such as "Easter" of course) lingering on supermarket shelves like an unwanted relative at a wedding, its foil wrapper peeling back in silent accusation. The viral photographs of forlorn, half-price confections, stacked in mute reproach amid the fluorescent purgatory of Tesco, serves as our age’s perfect emblem: Britain, that once-proud workshop of the world, unable even to safeguard its own chocolate. It is not merely palm oil insinuating itself where cocoa butter once held court; it is a symptom of a deeper national malaise, wherein heritage is flogged off to the highest bidder, quality is quietly euthanised in the name of shareholder value, and the public is left muttering into its shrinking bar of Dairy Milk that, yes, things used to be better.

Let us begin, as all proper laments must, at the beginning—before the accountants arrived with their spreadsheets and their dreams of 'synergies. In 1824, a Quaker named John Cadbury opened a modest grocer’s shop in Birmingham’s Bull Street, peddling tea, coffee, and drinking chocolate ground by hand with a pestle and mortar. Quakers, those stern opponents of frivolity and fun, had a curious knack for confectionery; perhaps the absence of ale in their lives left an embarrassing vacuum that only sugar could fill. John’s sons, Richard and George, inherited a business teetering on bankruptcy in 1861. Far from despairing, they invested in a Dutch cocoa press and launched Cocoa Essence in 1866—advertised, with admirable Quaker bluntness, as “Absolutely Pure, Therefore Best.” No adulteration, no nonsense, no palm oil pretending to be anything but what it was: a cheap lubricant for the global supply chain. 

By 1879 they had decamped to Bournville, a purpose-built factory in green fields south of the city. Here was no smoky satanic mill but a model village: houses with gardens, recreational facilities, schools, cricket pitches and—most revolutionary of all—a conspicuous absence of public houses. The Cadburys, true to their faith, believed workers deserved fresh air, education, and moral upliftment alongside their wages. George donated land for the Bournville Village Trust, ensuring affordable homes for generations. By the early twentieth century the firm employed thousands, dispatched milk to the needy during wartime, and even repurposed its factories for Spitfire parts and gas masks when the nation called. This was philanthropy not as a tax-deductible Instagram filter but as lived conviction—a chocolate empire built on the quaint notion that commerce could ennoble rather than exploit. One pictures the scene with a certain dry fondness: rows of earnest employees cycling to work through Bournville’s leafy avenues, the air thick with the honest scent of real milk and cocoa, while George Cadbury himself pondered how best to improve the lot of the labouring classes without descending into anything so vulgar as socialism.

The company rolled out icons that became woven into the national fabric—Dairy Milk in 1905 with its famous 'glass and a half' of full-cream milk, Milk Tray, Flake, Crunchie, Curly-Wurly, Wispa, Crème Eggs. These were not mere sweets; they were rituals. Christmas without a Cadbury's selection box was like Christmas without a tree: conceivable, perhaps, but faintly un-British, the sort of lapse that marked you down as the kind of person who holidayed in Benidorm. The firm merged with Fry’s in 1919 and later Schweppes in 1969, yet somehow retained its soul. Even into the late twentieth century, Cadbury stood as proof that British industry could combine profit with principle, producing something genuinely superior while treating people decently. Even it's advertisements, notably it's 2007 effort starring a gorilla drumming along with gusto to Phil Collins's "In The Air Tonight", showed it could keep up with the times, whilst still being timeless. It was, in short, the sort of success story that made one almost proud to be from a nation that had once invented the Industrial Revolution and then, with characteristic modesty, civilised it with cocoa.

Then came 2010, and the great betrayal—delivered not with a bang but with the polite cough of a FTSE 100 board meeting. Kraft Foods, that sprawling American conglomerate with all the cultural sensitivity of a bulldozer in a rose garden, launched a hostile takeover. Cadbury, still a proud British stalwart, fought valiantly; the City’s short-termists, ever eager to demonstrate their sophisticated grasp of globalisation, promptly folded like a cheap deckchair. The deal was sealed for around £11.5 billion. Kraft’s executives issued soothing promises: jobs would be safe, the Somerdale factory near Bristol would remain open, British heritage would be cherished like a favourite aunt. A week after the acquisition they announced Somerdale’s closure anyway, shipping production to Poland and shedding hundreds of jobs with the breezy efficiency of men who had never tasted Dairy Milk in their lives. Parliament tut-tutted; a select committee later branded Kraft’s conduct “irresponsible.” One almost admires the cheek: it was less a takeover than a masterclass in how to promise the earth, deliver a parking fine, and still walk away with the family silver. Soon enough Kraft spun off its snacks business into Mondelez International—a name that sounds like a pharmaceutical side-effect—and Cadbury found itself another cog in a global machine optimised for efficiency over everything else, including taste, dignity, or the quaint British habit of not treating one’s cultural inheritance as a distressed asset.

Here the satire writes itself, and with a particularly acid nib. Britain, ever eager to demonstrate its sophisticated grasp of globalisation, had flogged one of its most beloved cultural assets to foreigners who promptly treated it like an underperforming subsidiary in need of a good downsizing. It was not the first such surrender—Rowntree to Nestlé, various football clubs to oligarchs—but Cadbury stung particularly because it embodied something deeper: a Quaker-inspired vision of ethical capitalism that felt quintessentially, if imperfectly, British. To sell it off was to admit that we no longer trusted ourselves to steward our own inheritance. The boardroom capitulation spoke volumes about a nation that had grown accustomed to viewing its past as a marketing opportunity rather than a responsibility. We lecture the world on soft power and heritage, yet when the cheque arrives we fold faster than a cheap umbrella in a gale. The Americans, for their part, did what conglomerates do: pursued synergies, cut costs, and introduced the sort of recipe 'optimisations' that would have left old George Cadbury reaching for his temperance tracts in disbelief—or possibly for the nearest blunt instrument.

And what optimisations they were. Post-acquisition, the chocolate that once prided itself on purity began its slow, inexorable slide toward mediocrity, like a once-proud dowager reduced to selling off the family silver for supermarket own-brand gin. Cocoa content crept downward in certain lines; vegetable fats, including palm oil, insinuated themselves where cocoa butter had reigned supreme, bringing with them the faint whiff of ecological compromise and culinary surrender. The once-creamy Dairy Milk acquired an oily sheen and a peculiar aftertaste, as if someone had decided that “glass and a half” could be stretched with the contents of a motorway service-station dispenser. Crème Eggs lost their distinctive Dairy Milk shell for a more generic chocolate coating that tasted, in the immortal words of one disgruntled consumer, “like soap left out in the rain.” Shrinkflation became an art form: bars subtly smaller, Easter eggs lighter, boxes of Roses got smaller and smaller, yet prices sneaking higher. By 2026 consumer groups were documenting hollow eggs reduced by dozens of grams year on year, with prices per gram soaring by as much as 73 percent in some markets—while shelves groaned under unsold stock offered at desperate discounts, the chocolate equivalent of a clearance sale at a failing marriage-guidance centre. 

The public noticed. Boycotts were mooted. Complaints flooded in: it tasted “not even chocolate anymore,” or worse, like the sort of confectionery one might expect from a budget airline’s duty-free trolley. Mondelez insisted quality remained uncompromised, blaming cocoa prices and energy costs. One is reminded of the Roman emperors assuring the plebs that the bread was as wholesome as ever, even as the circuses grew threadbare and the lions began to look suspiciously vegan. The disgust one feels is not mere nostalgia for childhood treats, though that plays its part like a sentimental uncle at a wake. It is the spectacle of a once-proud British institution hollowed out—much like those unfortunate Easter eggs—from within. Palm oil may be cheaper and more stable for mass production, but it carries the faint whiff of a civilisation that has decided excellence is for losers. To replace the honest labour of cocoa beans and fresh milk with industrial fats is to confess that heritage is now subordinate to the spreadsheet, and that the Bournville of the mind—those leafy avenues of decency and cocoa-scented principle—has been rezoned for a distribution centre.

This decline is no isolated misfortune. It mirrors a broader pattern in which Britain, having misplaced its manufacturing confidence somewhere between the Suez Crisis and the rise of Uber Eats, treats its cultural totems as disposable assets. We export our football clubs, our stately homes become luxury hotels for Gulf investors, and our chocolate—symbol of modest domestic pleasure—becomes just another vector for global cost arbitrage. There is a dry comedy in it: the nation that gave the world the chocolate bar now imports inferior versions of its own invention, grumbling all the while into its shrinking bar. Yet the laughter catches in the throat. When a company like Cadbury is diminished, something intangible erodes alongside the cocoa solids—a sense that continuity matters, that excellence is worth preserving for its own sake, that not everything need be optimised into oblivion by people who think “heritage” is something you put on a PowerPoint slide.

In the end, one returns to that supermarket photograph: piles of unwanted Easter eggs, reduced to clear, bearing silent witness like the last survivors of a once-mighty empire. They are not merely chocolate; they are the residue of a failed stewardship. Britain failed to respect its own heritage when it allowed Cadbury to slip away for a quick payday and a pat on the back from the City. The recipe changes are not technical footnotes but moral ones—evidence of a civilisation that has forgotten how to value the pure over the profitable, the local over the leveraged, the honest Quaker bar over the palm-oil-coated compromise. If we cannot even keep our chocolate honest, what hope for the rest? 

Perhaps the final irony is this: in an age of endless choice, the one thing we seem incapable of choosing is to keep what was once best, simply because it was ours. The Bournville of the mind grows ever more distant, its gardens overgrown, its factory silent save for the distant hum of distant accountants. And all that remains is the bitter, oily aftertaste.

Sunday, 22 March 2026

NICHOLAS BRENDON (1971 - 2026): AN OBITUARY

Nicholas Brendon, the affable everyman who spent seven seasons as Xander Harris on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, slipped away in his sleep on March 20, 2026, in San Francisco, at the age of 54. His family announced the news with quiet dignity, citing natural causes, though one might gently observe that even the heartiest sidekick eventually finds the credits rolling without fanfare.

Born Nicholas Brendon Schultz in Los Angeles in 1971, three minutes ahead of his identical twin Kelly Donovan, he once dreamed of pitching for the Dodgers until an arm injury redirected him toward acting. He overcame a childhood stutter through performance, landed bit parts, and then, at 25, stepped into the role that defined him: Xander, the wisecracking, loyal, perpetually underpowered friend who somehow survived vampires, demons, and apocalyptic prophecies by sheer force of sarcasm and heart.

From 1997 to 2003, Brendon appeared in nearly every episode of Joss Whedon’s ground-breaking series, earning Saturn Award nominations for his portrayal of the ordinary mortal who grounded the supernatural with jokes, heartbreak, and unshakeable decency. Xander was no chosen one, no brooding vampire slayer—just a guy with a toolkit and a quip, proving that courage often arrives in sneakers rather than capes. The show’s cult following ensured Brendon remained a fixture at conventions, where fans greeted him like an old friend who’d once saved the world (again).

Later credits included recurring work as Kevin Lynch on Criminal Minds, guest spots, indie films like Coherence (with his brother), and voice roles. In recent years he turned to painting and writing, channelling sensitivity into canvases shared generously with family, friends, and admirers. He spoke openly about struggles with alcohol, depression, and health issues—a congenital heart condition among them—yet maintained an optimistic streak that endeared him further. Brendon leaves behind a legacy of warmth amid chaos: the comic relief who reminded viewers that normalcy, flawed and funny, can be heroic. At 54, he exited quietly, as if reluctant to steal the spotlight even in farewell. The Scooby Gang feels one fewer now, but the jokes—and the loyalty—linger.

Saturday, 21 March 2026

CHUCK NORRIS (1940 - 2026): AN OBITUARY

Carlos Ray Norris, universally known as Chuck Norris, departed this life on March 19, 2026, in Kauai, Hawaii, at the age of 86, mere days after marking another birthday with what his family tactfully called 'light training.' The cause was listed as natural, though one suspects the grim reaper finally summoned up the courage to ask if he'd kindly like to book an appointment with the pearly gates - at his own convenience, of course. Born in 1940 in Ryan, Oklahoma, Norris grew up in circumstances that would have broken lesser men into quiet compliance. Instead, he enlisted in the Air Force, discovered martial arts in Korea, and returned to claim the world professional middleweight karate title for half a decade or so, depending on the promotional calendar. He built dojos, trained celebrities, and generally treated physical frailty as an optional lifestyle choice.

Hollywood summoned him. He squared off against Bruce Lee in The Way of the Dragon (1972), managing the neat trick of losing convincingly while radiating the sort of invincibility that made audiences wonder if Lee had merely borrowed a temporary advantage. The 1980s delivered a parade of vehicles—Missing in Action, The Delta Force, Lone Wolf McQuade—in which he liberated hostages, dismantled cartels, and proved that a bare chest was the ultimate body armour in tropical combat zones. These were films where nuance went missing in action long before the plot did. Television sealed the icon status. Walker, Texas Ranger (1993–2001) ran for eight seasons on the simple premise that evil existed only until Walker showed up, at which point it apologised profusely and accepted its fate. The show offered moral lectures delivered with the same economy as his roundhouse kicks: direct, effective, and leaving no room for debate.

In an era when intersectional feminism politely requested that men check their privilege and perhaps lower the volume on traditional masculinity, Norris remained cheerfully unamended. He embodied a manliness so unapologetic it felt almost retro—broad-shouldered, stoic, protective—yet he deployed it not for domination but for quiet service. Through Kickstart Kids, the non-profit he founded in 1990 (originally Kick Drugs Out of America), he brought martial arts and character training to tens of thousands of at-risk youth in Texas schools, teaching discipline, respect, and self-worth to children who might otherwise have lacked both role models and hope. He supported veterans, the United Way, Make-A-Wish, and hospitalised troops, visiting and fundraising with the same understated commitment he brought to everything else. His philanthropy was never flashy; it was simply there, like gravity.

The internet, ever eager to mythologise, birthed Chuck Norris Facts around 2005: Chuck Norris doesn’t do push-ups, he pushes the Earth down; death once had a near-Chuck Norris experience, underneath his beard was another fist, he counted to infinity - twice. The hyperbole turned his toughness into cosmic comedy. Norris, far from bristling, embraced the absurdity with warm amusement. He read the jokes aloud in videos, chuckled at fan conventions, came up with some of his own, and treated the meme as a gentle tribute rather than an affront—proof that even icons can laugh at their own legend.

He leaves Gena, his wife since 1998, five children, and a body of work that blended action, instruction, and genuine good. At 86, the man who once seemed beyond mortality finally permitted it. The universe, perhaps relieved, let him go gently.