Nights Out Gone Wrong
In celebration of the woman who went out for a quiet drink with friends after work, and ended up half naked, kicking a copper in the nads and threatening to smear her own shit over hospital staff, how have your best-laid plans ended in woe?
( , Thu 24 Mar 2011, 16:02)
In celebration of the woman who went out for a quiet drink with friends after work, and ended up half naked, kicking a copper in the nads and threatening to smear her own shit over hospital staff, how have your best-laid plans ended in woe?
( , Thu 24 Mar 2011, 16:02)
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A messy night in Manchester, 1997
One of my first nights out in Manchester whilst I was at Uni was to the infamous "The Venue" club on a Wednesday night. £4.50 to get in, and 50p a drink all night. Bargain.
As a new little fresher from down south, I heard the words of my dad ringing in my ears not to spend all of my student loan on going out, so sensibly popped £20 in to my wallet, took out my cash card and left it at home. A quick bus into town, a night of lots of cheap beers with shot chasers and a few hours later a cab back with everyone else. Spirits were high, as I staggered up to the door and looked for my keys.
That I'd left in my coat pocket, in the club, in the centre of town. Arse.
I jump back into a cab, get to town, pay the cab, get my coat, check my keys are there and head back out on to the street. Root around in my pocket to find some money for a cab back home and only find a single gleaming nugget. Double Arse! By this point it was raining, about 2:30am and the combined effects of the shots and the beers in my stomach had fully taken hold.
Being fairly new in Manchester, I didn't know where I was, or how to get home. Thankfully the council had decided to put up several large maps around the city, with helpful "You are here" dots on them. The only problem was I was now so inebriated I could barely read them, let alone try and work out the way home. Eventually I ended up heading in approximately the right direction and staggered back home to Salford. Yes, Salford. Not somewhere for a posh southerner to be walking to in the middle of the night, very obviously the worse for wear.
After what seemed like ages, I finally found my way to the Uni, swayed through it, out the other side and on the final leg back to the student residences. Knowing where I was, meant that the beer taxi was now in full flow, I was striding along at a fair pace. Fate, however, decided to put a lamp post in my way, and *CLANG* I walked straight into it. This hurts lots. Even when drunk. It also sprung my glasses off my face, and into the gutter.
I'm glad no one saw me, writhing in pain, virtually blind, trying to find my glasses in the gutter, soaked to the skin that night, but they would have had a darn good laugh at my expense. I think I finally got in at about 4:30am.
Still - a number of useful life lessons learnt - keep your cards, keys and wallet on you at all times, and lamp posts are immoveable objects.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 12:50, 8 replies)
One of my first nights out in Manchester whilst I was at Uni was to the infamous "The Venue" club on a Wednesday night. £4.50 to get in, and 50p a drink all night. Bargain.
As a new little fresher from down south, I heard the words of my dad ringing in my ears not to spend all of my student loan on going out, so sensibly popped £20 in to my wallet, took out my cash card and left it at home. A quick bus into town, a night of lots of cheap beers with shot chasers and a few hours later a cab back with everyone else. Spirits were high, as I staggered up to the door and looked for my keys.
That I'd left in my coat pocket, in the club, in the centre of town. Arse.
I jump back into a cab, get to town, pay the cab, get my coat, check my keys are there and head back out on to the street. Root around in my pocket to find some money for a cab back home and only find a single gleaming nugget. Double Arse! By this point it was raining, about 2:30am and the combined effects of the shots and the beers in my stomach had fully taken hold.
Being fairly new in Manchester, I didn't know where I was, or how to get home. Thankfully the council had decided to put up several large maps around the city, with helpful "You are here" dots on them. The only problem was I was now so inebriated I could barely read them, let alone try and work out the way home. Eventually I ended up heading in approximately the right direction and staggered back home to Salford. Yes, Salford. Not somewhere for a posh southerner to be walking to in the middle of the night, very obviously the worse for wear.
After what seemed like ages, I finally found my way to the Uni, swayed through it, out the other side and on the final leg back to the student residences. Knowing where I was, meant that the beer taxi was now in full flow, I was striding along at a fair pace. Fate, however, decided to put a lamp post in my way, and *CLANG* I walked straight into it. This hurts lots. Even when drunk. It also sprung my glasses off my face, and into the gutter.
I'm glad no one saw me, writhing in pain, virtually blind, trying to find my glasses in the gutter, soaked to the skin that night, but they would have had a darn good laugh at my expense. I think I finally got in at about 4:30am.
Still - a number of useful life lessons learnt - keep your cards, keys and wallet on you at all times, and lamp posts are immoveable objects.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 12:50, 8 replies)
You are me AICMFP
I did a very similar thing - as I was at Salford uni and too tight to pay for a cab back from town I decided to walk back to my student halls in Salford at Castle Irwell. Not very bright of me and how I lived to tell the tale I'll never know.
I can only presume I looked so pathetic staggering along even the local neds felt sorry for me.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 13:12, closed)
I did a very similar thing - as I was at Salford uni and too tight to pay for a cab back from town I decided to walk back to my student halls in Salford at Castle Irwell. Not very bright of me and how I lived to tell the tale I'll never know.
I can only presume I looked so pathetic staggering along even the local neds felt sorry for me.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 13:12, closed)
Yep - the joy of Castle Greyskull. Back then they hadn't knocked all the houses down on Seaford Road, so at least there was the occasional old dear on the look out, I'd hate to walk down there now.
The lamp post was outside the Wallness Tavern....
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 16:26, closed)
I had the joy of living there too.
The second year we moved to a tower block near Salford Shopping Shitty -- it was much better as you got to watch the scallies race around in stolen cars and listen to them fighting in the street, followed by police turning up two hours later.
I must admit I was sad when I found out, via Google Earth, that the houses on Seaford Road had gone. It used to feel like walking through a lowry to Uni...
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 17:38, closed)
The second year we moved to a tower block near Salford Shopping Shitty -- it was much better as you got to watch the scallies race around in stolen cars and listen to them fighting in the street, followed by police turning up two hours later.
I must admit I was sad when I found out, via Google Earth, that the houses on Seaford Road had gone. It used to feel like walking through a lowry to Uni...
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 17:38, closed)
I once had a knife pulled on me on Seaford Rd
Was fucking delighted to hear it got demolished.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 17:54, closed)
Was fucking delighted to hear it got demolished.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 17:54, closed)
I remember one night we were in there, and the place flooded. About the same time that the blokes toilets were shut. So, instead of closing for the night, they kept it open, blokes were sent upstairs to the backup toilet (outside against a wall), and everything carried on as normal.... Eeeegghhhh.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 16:28, closed)
Fond freshers memories of that place in '97, I once (being a posh southerner myself) faked a manc accent when two blokes approached me and said they were looking for southerners to beat up, cue best Liam Gallagher impression "sound", it was enough to save me a beating.
( , Tue 29 Mar 2011, 19:25, closed)
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