For the better part of a century, Ella Wooley wrote letters and more on this Remington typewriter.
Tasmanian-based journalist Charles Wooley (born Launceston, 1948), a reporter for Channel Nine's 60
Minutes, wrote this piece about his mother Ella and her red Remington Model 3 portable typewriter for the Hobart Mercury just before Christmas (also see Wooley's wonderful article about his mother here):
Charles Wooley
KIDS seem to have such an easy grasp on technology, I worry I’m being left
behind. I’m not going to talk jargon here beyond noting that I needed to take
along the two little boys to help me buy an antenna for the dongle so my iPhone
6s plus can (maybe) access wifi at the fishing shack. When I was their age,
about the only words I would have recognised in that last phrase were “fishing
shack”. Telstra had earlier sold me the dongle but it turns out it needs an
aerial, which oddly they don’t stock. They would order one and call me back,
they said.
That was more than two weeks ago and they haven’t called, so in a rapidly
changing world, at least some things stay the same. I am so displaced these days
I actually find a modicum of human incompetence almost comforting.
But the most technologically displaced person I know is my 98-year-old mum
Ella. For the better part of a century she hammered out correspondence, memoirs
and missives on a beautiful, shiny, red-enamelled Remington typewriter circa
1930. This fine machine in a solid wood and leather [sic] black case was her pride and
joy and she kept it in mint condition. Even now it sits in my living room on
display as a lovely industrial artefact from an age when function and design
could also encompass the artistry of sheer beauty. I romance it despite the fact
you can no longer get typewriter ribbons [Ed: WRONG!] (kiddies, ask your parents to explain)
and there is also something wrong with its carriage. Indeed, it’s a lot like my
mum Ella, in a state of disrepair, but still worth a look.
Ella Wooley with baby Charles in 1948
Ella was a world traveller who is now sometimes philosophical, but always a
little grumpy about being “marooned” in a nursing home. “I know I am lucky to be
here, it’s a lovely caring place and the staff are kind, but sometimes I just
feel I want to be back in the world,” she says.
Decades ago, when she was younger but just as stubborn, I was managing my
own journalistic transition from typewriter to word processor to computer. I
tried to bring her with me on that voyage into uncharted waters. I understood
her frustration. I rarely lost any work on the typewriter but frequently by the
late ’80s a mere finger fault on the computer could consign a whole day’s labour
to limbo. In the end, Ella lacked the patience to make that transition and so
now with a sharp intellect but no computer, tablet or mobile phone, she has
indeed retreated from the world and it has little to do with being in a nursing
home. I struggle to keep up but at least I try. In the television studio,
sometimes I look into the camera, through the auto-cue, and casually ask viewers
for their feedback via a “hashtag” and to “tweet” at a certain “handle”. I know
about Twitter and Facebook but obviously not enough. What on Earth are hashtags
and handles and do I really need to know? Am I retreating like Ella? If I am
then I am not alone.
There are major industries out there in complete denial of the rapid
changes being wrought by the Internet and the new interconnectedness of the
individuals they call customers. Look how the taxi industry is fighting a
rearguard action against the popular new service Uber, which puts the passenger
in personal contact with the driver. Or how the retail industry fights for its
long-held main street dominance by arguing (successfully it seems) for a bigger
tax hit on overseas online purchases.
Then there’s the futile opposition by the traditional hotel industry
against the new direct person-to-person accommodation service Airbnb. Each is a
case of entrenched collective self-interest trying to protect an increasingly
outmoded generic monopoly. You might even be generally sympathetic, though at
the same time, I bet, buying stuff online with no parking hassles and at a lower
price.
Remember how Kodak, the world’s biggest photographic supplier, famously
failed to see the threat from a cheeky little start up IT company called
Instagram?
“The times they are a-changin’,” Bob Dylan warned the world back in the
1960s. Aren’t they always, and don’t most of us hate it, or refuse to see it
coming?
Charlie Drake with his Imperial portable typewriter in 1957, five years before he had his worldwide hit with My Boomerang Won't Come Back.
A quite different ’60s song, My Boomerang Won’t Come Back, has been all
over the Internet in the past fortnight after an act of foolishness right here
in River City. Banning Charlie Drake’s 54-year-old comic song about an Aboriginal kid who can’t properly throw his boomerang is one of the sillier
things the national broadcaster has done recently. It was played as a request on
ABC Hobart and one unnamed listener complained that it was “offensive”. It
wasn’t offensive back in 1962 when it topped the charts in Australia as well as
in Britain. But as is my theme this week, how things change!
Being only up to a point hi-tech savvy, I fulminated about this on
Facebook. Hundreds agreed. Not so much about missing the ditty but about losing
the right to hear it. OK, my FB is a small sample but it’s my experience as a
broadcaster that almost everything offends someone. Personally, I’ve always
found Barry Manilow offensive (kiddies, once again, ask your parents) and if it
takes just one complaint about every song right back to 1962, eventually there
will be a very short playlist.
Barry Manilow: Please, NEVER come back!
So back on theme now, I wanted to test the reaction of my two early-teen
boys to Drake’s novelty song from half a century ago, back when Ella was still
happily pounding away on the old red Remington. I couldn’t ring the ABC and I
didn’t want to drive to a music store so I hopped on to YouTube (which had a
quite different meaning when I was a kid) and flushed out the original rendition
of My Boomerang Won’t Come Back complete with a video.
The verdict? Jim and Fred chorused, “It’s a terrible song. It might offend
some people but it probably shouldn’t be banned. But please, Charlie, we never
want to hear it again.” Once more, out of the mouths of babes. I was about their
age when that song was catchy and funny, and now although a vast reach of time
and technology separates me from the boys we all agree completely on the right
to play it and on the right not to listen.
Note to anonymous middle management ABC bureaucrat. Listen to the kids.
Lift the ban and then never play that song again.
1 comment:
True, that Charlie Drake song is awful, but far far less offensive than the unnamed listener who might seek to prevent me from listening to it. I actually quite like Barry Manilow!
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