Cosy crimes and gritty sagas by Corrie Blog editor Glenda, published by Headline. Click pic below!

Saturday, 19 September 2020

Five Things We Learned In Corrie This Week


The pandemic isn't all bad. 
Look at that picture.  Drink it in.  Covid-19 may have utterly destroyed the lives and livelihoods of millions of people across the globe but on the other hand, it brought us Sally and Debbie looking like that in Dev's shop.  Let's have a closer look at Debbie's Bedouin chic, shall we?


Incredible.  It's lucky Sally seems to have abandoned her Gwen-from-Eldorado Marigolds because if they'd been added to the mix the sheer levels of campery would've passed the La Rue Stage and reached full Clary and the entire set would've had to be shut down to be deglittered.  I'm happy to report the pandemic has also put paid to one of my bĂȘte noires, the ticket office in the tram stop:


I've been to every single Metrolink station and they don't have ticket offices.  Half the railway stations in Manchester haven't even got a ticket office.  (Before some nerd in the comments pops up, yes, in some places the tram shares its facilities with a proper station and so there's a ticket office there, e.g. Altrincham).  It's irritated me ever since the set extension opened and I'm thrilled that the coronavirus has closed it, hopefully never to return.  Turn it into a little butty bar or something.  (And then get rid of the platform flag on top of the viaduct because that's a load of nonsense as well).


Maurice Jones is dead.  Those of us who've been watching Classic Corrie on ITV3 will have been thrilled to hear a mention of the man who built the posh side of the Street back in the late 80s.  Maurice Jones bought the factory from Mike Baldwin, knocked it down, and constructed the parade of shops and houses we're still familiar with today.  He was a regular character for a while, organising a football tournament against the Rovers and sacking Alan Bradley for being a murdery weirdo, but his most notable contribution to the show was being the father of the legendary Steph Barnes (although weirdly, he vanished from the show once she moved into number six, and never came back to visit).  So it was a little sad to hear that he went bust during the recession and then died.


Mind you, it might not be true, given that David heard this info from that dodgy bloke in the hard hat.  Maurice might be in happy retirement in Hale Barns with his glamorous third wife and his reported death is just part of EVIL RAY's convoluted and confusing plan.  He continued to try to get his hands on David's house this week, giving him free beers and offering him the contact details of various contractors he knew.  You know which builder Ray used for the Bistro refurb, David?  Ed Bailey.  You don't need a letter of introduction to get in with him, you can just toddle over the road.  (Incidentally, was Aggie ever released from lockdown?  We saw her on a Skype call six weeks ago disappearing into self-isolation and we've not had a single update.  Perhaps she's died and they've had the funeral and haven't bothered telling us, like with Robert).


Everyone continued to be incredibly un-bothered about the portal to Hades that had opened up in the Platt's back garden.  Not just David, who shrugged when told the home he has lived in for almost his entire life was damaged beyond all repair and would have to be sold or demolished.  But also the wider community, as the supposedly close-knit Coronation Street family gave a grand total of zero monkeys about this long-term resident's misfortunes.  I'm pretty sure when number 7 collapsed in the Sixties Valerie Barlow next door didn't just lean out the upstairs window and ask if anyone had a damp cloth so she could wipe the dust away.  I know he has a lot on his mind, but wouldn't Geoff have at least popped his head over the fence to enquire about the hellmouth three feet from his chicken coop?  Wouldn't people other than EVIL RAY step up to offer assistance - Fiz and Tyrone taking in Lily as a playmate with Hope and Ruby, Jenny turning over the vacant B&B rooms at the Rovers, something like that?  And given Maurice Jones built the whole of the right-hand side of the Street at the same time, wouldn't the likes of Sally, Brian and Rita be concerned that their homes and businesses were about to be swallowed up by the earth?  Nobody else in the Street seems to have even noticed - you'd have thought it would've been a vaguely interesting topic of discussion that you could take a journey to the centre of the Earth via number eight's back yard.  At least David doesn't seem to be selling up now, having found Shona's ability to act like a four year old (begging for flapjacks with ice cream) and Pepe le Pew (begging for something rather more adult) so appealing he was willing to drop the contract in the bin.  Another man letting his trousers do the talking.


There's a thin line between love and hate.  Wonderful, adorable Mary was thoroughly riled up this week by a snarky funeral director who accused her of having droopy gerberas.  Filthy animal.  Of course, she wasn't really annoyed, as this was George Shuttleworth, and her irritation covered for the lust which always dwells beneath the surface of Ms Taylor.  Even as she listed his bad points she was all aquiver.  To be fair, he does have extremely lovely eyes.


I expect poor Mary is headed for heartbreak again, because when isn't she?  At least we know she has a type, and that type is a chunky middle-aged gentleman with a faint whiff of lavender about him.  There was Norris, there was Huw from EastEnders as the drama teacher, and even Ted Robbins was a little bit flowery.  The heart wants what it wants I suppose but you could at least try to avoid the fall.  


On the plus side she seems to be forming a comedy power couple with Emma, and I am very much pro anything that puts these two actresses together on our screens.  Now we're back up to six episodes a week, I'd be happy if they simply devoted the second Wednesday episode to these two chatting over the bar at the Rovers.  None of that pesky plot nonsense, just the two of them drinking sambuca and putting the world to rights.


There's a lot of rubbish in the waterways.  We got confirmation this week that the man fished out of the Bridgewater Canal wearing a security guard uniform was, in fact, Kel, and not just an unfortunate actor on his way to an amdram performance of The Full Monty.  Paul took this news surprisingly badly.  Personally I'd have thought that if his abuser received the ultimate in rough justice Paul would've broken out the Prosecco but he's a far more complex individual so instead he got drunk on Stallion lager in the community garden.  Billy was filled with despair and tried to help Paul by sharing how he wasn't perfect and once punched Peter Barlow.  I note he didn't confess that he was also responsible for Susan Barlow's death; maybe he's saving that for Christmas Day.


On the plus side the "who said he was murdered?" subplot only lasted a couple of episodes, as Craig turned up and informed them that they had CCTV footage of Kel slipping and cracking his head and falling in the water.  Of course you do Craig; we all know that Kel is really the latest victim of notorious urban legend the Manchester Pusher, the serial killer who lurks the towpaths sending late night revellers to their watery graves, and you're covering it up.  Craig's been a qualified policeman only a few months and he's already been sucked into the murky underworld of corruption.  What a loss.  


Oliver's Arm is here to stay.  That up there was the only time was saw actual evidence of Leanne and Oliver being in the same room together: an arm poking into the edge of frame.  No, actually, there was another shot where Jane Danson emoted at a pillow with a wig poking over the top.  I can't get over how much fun all these missing children are, though the most enjoyable one this week was Jack, who seems to have acquired a cloak of invisibility: other characters talked about him, to him, called into the house for him, but Jack never once appeared onscreen.


You have to take what pleasure you can from the Oliver storyline because most of the time it's just Leanne and Steve in a corridor getting upset and it's not fun at all.  Grace Dent, the Guardian columnist who used to write the wonderful World of Lather soap rundown, once described the Ryan/Ali baby swap plot as "something ripped from a copy of Pick Me Up magazine and read to me laboriously over 22 weeks", and I feel much the same about this one.  I'm sure it's raised a lot of awareness and so on but it's incredibly boring and it doesn't look like it's going to end anytime soon.  Tracy Barlow being nice is weird but pleasing, and Doctor Gaddas's "oops!" face when Leanne laid into her was hilarious:


...but otherwise it's thin stuff, endlessly repeated.  And I'm extremely anxious that they're going to go with the hospital arguing for Oliver's right to die, taking inspiration from some recent news stories, and I really don't want to see the NHS monstered, thanks very much.  If he could either (a) just quietly slip away or (b) be miraculously cured next week we could all move on.

I'm happy to announce that Nicky doesn't really enjoy al-fresco lager with boring old Daniel; she's simply using him to expand her client list, and will be dropping her card in the top pockets of all the male characters over the next few episodes.  Rates and availability can be obtained via Twitter @merseytart.





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16 comments:

Humpty Dumpty said...

We also learned: Health workers on the Street can't be trusted to keep their gobs shut. First, I can't imagine the local GP would go into the same pub as her patients, although it's happened in Corrie before. But the ridiculous conversation between Dr Gaddas and Tracy was just so contrived and clumsy. Er, professional ethics, anyone? Discussing the child of one patient with another adult even if she is the step-mother. Not just 'how's Oliver?' but discussing his prognosis. And then relaying this dodgy conversation to the distraught mother in the hospital.

Jo said...

Another hilarious blog post, thank you! Oliver's Arm, indeed!! So sick of this particular storyline. My daughter and I regularly mutter, 'I'd wish he'd hurry up and die' just to get it all over it (cruel, I know). It's not as if we've bonded with the Oliver character. Leanne is a pain. Would love to see more of the Mary and Emma double act. And yes, where's Geoff suddenly disappeared to? I'm sure he'd have had something to say about the sink hole. Corrie writers need to get a better balance between the mundane, the humorous and the shocking. As for the Manchester Pusher... this crossed my mind re: Kal. I've followed this Pusher story for a while now. Very interesting. Very sinister. A gay friend of mine who lived in Manchester at one time had a friend who mysteriously disappeared and was found dead in the canal after a night out at a gay club....

Kosmo said...

Humpty Dumpty. The family went to the local chinese once and had to a full to busting banquet with the doctor in the same restaurant watching every mouthful, calculating each calorie and knowing that the good lady wife myself were both supposed to be on very careful diets.

I do understand the need for story blocks as being the only way to manage producing the six episodes a week - and obviously everyone at the moment has to stick with their own storyline and character group - but the painful absence of anyone discussing the sinkhole at all is as you remark beyond the pale. It feels like the Platts are living in another town. I assume it is being driven by re-writes from original scripts and not knowing what might or might not happen in another storyline - but for such a close knit Street where nearly everyone works, lives and plays on the one strip of land it is getting slightly silly. Weatherfield - the town where no-one knows anyone else's business and where the curtain twitchers are extinct!

Louby said...

The drama of Leanne at Oliver's bedside lost it's effectiveness by them not giving the wig a pretend body.

I will also be glad when this storyline is over. I agree with the comments that we never really saw Oliver before so it's hard to care now.

Chris h said...

Quite a comprehensive blog. Yeah the baileys seem to have disappeared again, mind that does not bother me, awful family. As for little oliver as hes in a major storyline he needs to appear on screen, same as davids kids who are also invisible

Anonymous said...

It's been repeatedly said in this blog that kids and the older residents of the street can't appear on set for obvious reasons.

Sharon Boothroyd said...

I agree about the Oliver story - it's getting tedious and depressing.
We've only had very brief glimpses of Oliver, so despite fantastic acting from the actors who play Leeanne, Steve and Nick, viewers are unable to invest in it. I only wish the Corrie team are able to fully grasp this.
There's more lockdown, virus cases are rising and all we seem to have on Corrie to cheer us up is a dying tot and Abi's struggle with drug addiction. I don't mean to sound harsh, but these scenes seemed to drag and on.
It wouldn't surprise me to discover the researchers/ writers go through women's mags for soap storylines.
I agree - it's crazy that no - on- one is interested in The Platt's sinkhole.
I wonder which actor voiced the part of the mysterious Dr Schmitt? My guess is, new cast member, Kenneth from Benidorm!

Anonymous said...

I’m really not bothered about not seeing Oliver as much because the storyline is clearly about his parents, it’s clearly about a mother losing her son. How is that so hard to understand? Like others have said, the acting from the main players has been fantastic. Jane Danson is showing us why she is one of the best actresses on the show and needs to have as much storylines as Carla, Abi, etc. Simon Gregson has stepped up and is doing well. Ben Price has been incredible. He blew my expectations out of the water. I have been very impressed with his acting.

Anonymous said...

Well said. I totally agree with everything you said!

Anonymous said...


Another brilliant post, Scott.

I’ve been trying to stay positive with Corrie but it’s getting increasingly difficult to do so when giant sinkholes appear and nobody bats an eyelid. So many things about this storyline don’t make sense:

1. Why was nobody bothered? A sinkhole would be the talk of the town! David seemed more bothered by Shona eating his kids fish fingers than he did about this gaping pit in his back garden, nor was he all that concerned when he thought Shona had fallen into it - and with how insufferably annoying Shona’s become (she’s right up there with Gemma as most annoying character ever), I was hoping she had fallen to her death and was disappointed when she appeared unscathed eating a banana. If you’re going to introduce something as surreal as a sinkhole then your characters' reactions have to be realistic in order to ground the story and make it believable to the viewer. But the fact nobody has even acknowledged how strange it is that this sinkhole’s appeared, and the fact that no neighbours or nearby businesses have shown any kind of concern, really takes any credibility out of the storyline for me.
2. How does someone go about creating a sinkhole? Are we ever going to get an explanation or are we just meant to believe Ray’s crony snuck into the Platt’s backyard in the dead of night with a shovel and started digging?
3. I take it Ray’s interest in David’s house is so he can monopolize a load of properties on the street and extend his chain of hotels by building one on the cobbles, but this raises the obvious question of why the hell anybody would want to build a luxury hotel on a small residential street? It makes no sense.
4. If Ray’s plan was to get David out of the house, surely there were far less convoluted ways of doing that than hiring a bloke to cause a sinkhole in the back garden?

It’s so stupid…

What makes it worse is that this is clearly meant to be the start of Ray’s villainy and yet so far it’s been played as a comedy (not a very funny one, mind you). If this is going to be centre stage for the 6oth anniversary, then God help us.

I agree 100% about Oliver’s storyline. Yes it raises awareness and we’re getting some strong performances, but at the end of the day this is a soap not an educational documentary and I’d rather be entertained than fed a load of information about an incurable illness. Corrie need to give medical storylines a wide birth after this because having this so soon after Sinead’s is just too much and it’s not entertainment.

My favourite line of the week was when Kevin said something like, “When I thought Abi just neglected her kids, I was fine, but now I know she let them get hold of drugs, I’m concerned…” So child neglect is okay is it, Kev? It’s just the drugs you have an issue with? Whaaaat?!

All in all, another subpar week. There’s so many individual ‘issue’ based storylines going on that characters rarely get the chance to interact anymore and that’s what the show is missing most of all - these human interactions, the friendships, the love stories, those heart-warming moments that balance out the tragic stuff…

I’m just hoping things improve for the 60th.

Anonymous said...

I’m sorry but the current producer needs replacing asap. Here’s a list of some of the ‘great’ things he’s achieved since taking over from Oates.
1. Given Gemma and Chesney way too much screen time.
2. Gave them quads and brought in Gemma’s annoying mum and brother.
3. The Baileys (worst family ever).
4. Gangster Gary (worst villain ever).
5. Ruined iconic sets like the factory with hideous refurbs.
6. Underused lots of great characters (Carla) while overusing the bad ones (Gemma).
7. Too many issue-based plots.
8. No continuity in storytelling: A storyline is introduced then gets forgotten for weeks before being mentioned again, by which time we’ve stopped caring about it - stories feel disjointed and isolated.
9. Everything’s too plot-heavy, no room for character development.
Seriously, get rid of this Macleod guy, it all went downhill since he took over.

Anonymous said...

It might be photoshopped, but that picture of Nick, Leanne and Oliver is gorgeous!

Anonymous said...

After reading all the comments about the sinkhole and how no one really cares,I remembered when Adam and Eva had the factory roof taken off during Johnny and Jenny's wedding and no one on the Street noticed it was gone as well!

Bobby Dazzler said...

I liked the Elvis Costello reference...lately the stories are just too much...Gone from a grubby backstreet with the likes of Hila Ogden and Vera to the heights of society with the Bistro et al...sigh Reference was the highlight, I'm not hard to please..heehee

Louby said...

Thank you for your perfect summary of the sink hole nonsense!

Susan said...

I agree with all these comments. We have yet to see the sinkhole drama in Australia. But I agree you would think the neighbours would be concerned about their properties. And who is going to buy a house that’s had/got a sinkhole in it. The clips I’ve seen of this when Shona asked it was going to be a hot tub or finding more bodies while eating a banana was quite funny. I also think the quads storyline for the future hasn’t been thought though are the family with Bernie still going to be living in that house when the quads are teenagers, mind you the quads will a gang in themselves so there will be no need for other kids on the street. And why hasn’t Abi been going to narcotics meetings before seeing as she’s a recovering drug addict. Too many storylines going on can’t keep track of them. I get the Oliver story has i think it’s going to more about Steve losing a second child & Leanne’s grief while coping with Nick suddenly having a child. I also get the importance of telling of a disease that no one has heard of until now but I think it would more realistic if Oliver had a heart problem. Also if Imran & Toyah foster where is this child going to sleep in that pokey little flat.

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