Sunday, June 29, 2014

Shirley Queen of Scrotes Week:- 23.05-27.06.2014

Apologies for another weekly summary. The weather's still nice, the World Cup is still on (some of us have teams who are still in the competition), and the son is home beginning a year-long internship in the UK, so blogs have taken a backseat for awhile.

Anyway, for the second week running, we've had a gaggle of good episodes. Whereas last week featured Sharon, or rather DTC's muse of scrotes, Shirley acting out, this week featured her even more, and she should be having an epiphany about Phil, but her wrinkled, old booze-flattened, cigarette-stinking skin is too thick and her entitlement is too great for her to even fathom that.

Secrets and Lies: The Ice Queen Goeth.



For the record, pregnant or not, I still think Ronnie killed Lucy. I still think Not-Charlie Cotton had something to do with it as well. 

Let me also say, as well, that, since the Carters figured heavily in this week's episodes, I've never seen a more immature lot of adults in my life. The Mitchells are certainly dysfunctional, as are the Beales and the Brannings; but the Carters occupy an unusual situation, wherein the children of the family are, at times, more mature than their adult counterparts. There's a reason for this.

Shirley is certainly exemplary of such puerility. Her reaction to Phil's engagement to Sharon is to get stonking drunk, spend a night on a bench and then whine pathetically to - of all people - Roxy and Ronnie, the Retcon Sisters.

In fact, Ronnie ...

... goes so far to comfort Shirley by remarking that she'd always thought Shirley and Phil would end up together.

Really, Roswell?

Of course, Ronnie would think that Shirley was "the one" for Phil, for obvious reasons, and that remark and it's non-history (for lack of a better term) was the only niggle of this episode. Why? Because Ronnie Retcon would only have known Phil in a relationship with Shirley, but then before anyone starts jumping up and down about the use of the word retcon, the Mitchell sisters are. For years, prior to 2007, it was an established fact that Eric, Phil's father, had one brother, Clive. There was no mention ever of another brother or any cousins, other than Billy, whose father was Eric's first cousin. Billy bears the same relation to Phil that Michael Moon bore to Alfie.

Then, suddenly, we're presented with two Mitchell sisters, daughters of a Mitchell uncle, Archie, of whom we'd never heard, arrive at a non-wedding where they're not immediately recognised at all. They made, from time to time, vague references to incidences that happened when they were small children and the Bruvs were ages older, but they don't seem to be familiar any of the Mitchell lore that would have been common knowledge in a family like that -such as Sharongate. That was and certainly would have been big potatoes amongst the Mitchells.

Ronnie thought Shirley suited Phil the best? She may not have approved of Sharon because of the Sharongate saga, but surely she knows about Kathy? Kate?

Besides, how can she surmise that Shirley and Phil were the ultimate couple when Shirley encouraged and brought out the absolute worst in Phil? But then, Ronnie, at this point, is beyond redemption, herself.


However, in the course of this grand whine of poor pitiful Shirley's, she accidentally on purpose lets drop to Ronnie that Phil doesn't love Sharon. No, he doesn't, reckons Shirley. Shirley is absolutely certain that Phil doesn't love Sharon. In fact, he's only marrying her because he feels sorry for her ... because Phil organised the thugs to go into The Albert and beat Sharon up.

Well, no, actually, he didn't. But what's the truth to a scrote like Shirley? What Phil did was what the Mitchells always do. They organise a bit of terror tactic, with someone on hand to save the day, and then it goes wrong. The thugs were meant to scare Sharon and she was meant to be rescued by the bouncers she'd sent home. Phil never intended for Sharon to be physically hurt; things just got out of hand. It goes without saying, however, that what he meant to do originally, is just as despicable and psychologically intimidating.

Kudos to Ronnie for later pointing that out to Phil, that his male ego, his Mitchell ego was so much that he had to reduce an independent woman to a blubbing, gibbering wreck. Phil has known Sharon for twenty years. He should know her better, and for all scrote-faced Shirley boasts about knowing Phil better than anyone after a mere seven years of skulking around in his shadow, encouraging him to do bad, she should know better as well.

So now the headcount of who knows Phil's secret stands at Phil, Shirley and Ronnie. I'll bet, after she banged on his door, with Sharon upstairs, shoutiing the odds, that Phil regrets ever confiding in her.

Of couse, all this action in Monday's episode was played out against the revelation that Ronnie Retcon is pregnant. Again.

The fanbois are creaming their briefs over this one, jumping up and down agog and insisting that Ronnie is going to get a happy ending, with the baby she wants and with Charlie Cotton.

Guys, grow up. And get some balls. Seriously.

Ronnie is a psychopath. She's killed a man. She's probably killed Lucy. With the gun she so conveniently left at Phil's. Of course, she didn't shoot Lucy. There's more than one way you can kill with a gun. And Charlie Cotton isn't Charlie Cotton. In fact, we don't know who he is. But she is not going to get a happy ending, not by a long shot. In fact, I've revised my opinion that Ronnie might die. Having her die in childbirth would be one massive cop-out. She's killed a man, and if she killed Lucy, she'll be locked up for life - not five years or five months. This will be the storyline to illustrate the current law that's in force for murderers where life does actually mean life. So Ronnie probably will have a baby, but won't be able to be with that child because she'll be in prison.

And by the way, fanbois, it is possible to have sex, conceive a child and kill a person all in a night's work. I never knew there were so many virgins, especially male fanboi virgins, in the whole of the UK who now reckon that just because Ronnie and Charlie copulated on Good Friday, releases her as a suspect in Lucy's death. It doesn't. Her lack of presence enhances the suspicion.

Now stop wanking and go find a boy or girl to help you pop that cherry.

There were certainly a plethora of home truths tonight, none the least being that neither Phil nor Ronnie know what love is. I've no doubt that Phil loves Sharon, but he knows that Sharon not only knows his history, she's a part of it. She was the one he blamed, conveniently, for Sharongate. He stood by whilst his brother called her a whore, offered her about to his friends; he would be aware that Sharon knows the Mitchell form for proving a point and for insisting that they be the centre of the universe for every woman with whom they have a relationship. Sooner or later, Sharon's going to suss what Phil did, and it may not take Shirley to tell her. He also knows, deep down, that whilst he may love her, Sharon isn't in love with him. She's fond of him, but just let Grant pay a visit to Walford, and we'll see whom Sharon really loves.

The Mitchells really are toxic, especially so, without Peggy about to anchor them, and I was glad Phil refused to let Ronnie take the moral high ground, because she's done far worse, in cold-blooded murder, than Phil. Really, both of them need a comeuppance.


And please don't delude yourself about Ronnie's departure. She's not gone for good - in fact, she'll be back at the end of the summer, when the actress has finished filming Pleasant Valley. Ronnie just can't keep away from her control fetish and sexual obsession - Roxy - so she'll come back. What you saw on Monday was a psychopath losing her all-important control and retreating in order to regain it.

As for Shirley, how self-obsessed and pathetic! Who is she to know whom Phil loves and whom he doesn't? She's basing a lot of her assumptions on kindness and concern that he showed her after her declaration of love. She thinks that no one would put someone they love in harm's way the way Phil did Sharon? Then she doesn't know the Mitchells. No one loved Sharon more than Grant, yet he almost had her burned alive. Shirley loves the power Phil gives her by validating her as an important person in Walford. Without Phil, Shirley's just a drunk on a bench. Dean certainly knows. The best scene by far tonight was when Phil turned the tables on the old scrote and gave her a taste of her own blackmailing methods. She's got the secret about Phil and the Albert, but Phil knows that Mick is her son. And Sharon knows about Phil's and Shirley's involvement in covering Ronnie's murderous tracks.

Poor, self-pitying Shirl! Hits the bottle when things don't go her way. What a vile and disgusting character.


So Phil turns tricks on Shirley and demands her repayment of his loan of 10K or else, he'll tell her perfect Mick the truth about himself. Good to know that Shirl can dish it out, but she can't take it.

As for Sharon finding the gun, the woman is thinking.

Mr Pleasant, AKA Mick Carter.


Notice the coldness that now exists between Mick and Linda, as well as Mick's ill-concealed jealousy of Dean? Johnny's failed some of his exams. Are we surprised? Linda is quick to blame his tutors and everything else, but in the end, Johnny's right. He's only got himself to blame. He seemed to be spending a lot of hours working at the Vic, socialising with the local youngsters, having illegal parties at the Albert etc, and we rarely saw him studying or even referencing uni. This is pretty realistic, I would think. I hope he does re-sits and carries on, because further education doesn't sit high on EastEnders' scale of things. At least, not since Michelle Fowler got her degree.

It seems that everyone is taking an emotional punch at Linda, who can do nothing right - whether it's pampering her children or masking her disappointment that her child failed his exams. Mick is treating her now like a bastard at a family reunion, but Dean is very subtle in being nice to her.


Johnny, himself, annoyed me to no end in this episode, because as much as he might bleat on about wanting to grow up, when it suits him, he wants to be babied and mollycoddled by his mother. After all, Johnny readily admitted that he didn't go into halls his first year, because he wanted to live with his parents. In fact, for a university student, he spends curiously little time at uni. He doesn't participate in any fora or activities there, he has no friends. All his studying is done in the upstairs kitchen or at the bar or in the pub, itself. Are we suprised that he failed? Does he miss his parents so much he couldn't avail himself of the university library?

One final comment before I move to Tuesday's episode: Without a shadow of a doubt, Phil refused to take the gun Ronnie had. There's an ongoing discussion about this, wherein one participant refuses to yield to the obvious and admit a proven fact: Phil Mitchell does not want that gun in his house.

Phil refused the gun. Ronnie wanted him to throw it in the canal,and he refused. He told her to take the cash, and indicated that she should "take that with you", meaning the gun. Then Dennis came in and Phil took him upstairs to see Sharon, at which point Ronnie left the gun in the bag on the chair at the table.

There is no way Phil would have left the house, knowing a gun was left where it was, in a bag at the kitchen table. A child was in the house. Had Phil agreed to keep that gun, he'd have taken it from Ronnie, concealed it from Dennis and put it in the wall safe he has in the house. What if, instead of Sharon, Dennis had come to the kitchen and found that?

Ronnie's reckoning behind having the gun was as protection against the Whites. But Ronnie's as big a liar as Phil. If the Whites are her major concern, then Phil would doubly want nothing to do with a gun that's obviously illegal. Ronnie left that gun at Phil's, unbeknownst to Phil, for the same reason she left Carl White's phone there. Interesting that Sharon should find them both. 


That gun is the weapon with which Ronnie killed Lucy Beale.

Robbing Peter to Pay Paul.


Once again, a Shirley-centric episode, with her at her worst, achieving the nadir by actually stealing from her son. That's right, she stole from Dean - or attempted to do so - in order to protect her perfect Mick.

Shirl could blackmail with the best of them, especially when it comes to blackmailing Phil.

I wonder if she regrets not shopping him to the police for perverting the course of justice when he was harbouring Ben, in the wake of that reveal. It's interesting to see Shirley get a taste of her medicine, for all she reckoned Phil loved her and wouldn't put her through the same trauma as Sharon. Guess again. Don't ever forget, Shirley, that this is the man who said he could never be faithful to you.

Shirley is such a self-pitying coward. It's foolish to think of her now as a strong or even a brave woman. She's a bully (and most of them are cowards) and she's a drunk. It's actually got to the point now where her Court Jester of a sister is imploring her not to be drunk.

Once again, she betrays Dean. Dean was the only one of her children seven years ago, who actually attempted to bond with her, to call her "mum" and want to love her as a son loves a mother, and time and again, she binned him off - for a Polish builder, for Heather, for whatever. The scene at the Salon where Shirley told Dean how proud she was of him was poignant and honest, and both Linda Henry and Matt di Angelo played blinders there. This was a chance for them to bond again, but the moment she clocked the dosh he put into the cashbox, you knew what she was going to do.

Shirley has a miniscule share in the pub, but she must take a wage, and I'll bet Mick doesn't pay her minimum wage as her name's above the door. She pays no rent, and doesn't contribute to the upkeep of housekeeping, she isn't responsible for overheads at the pub, she has no car. I can only assume that the bulk of her earnings goes on fags and booze. A grand isn't small change, but it's not impossible to get. Still, it's good to know that Shirley now realises that Phil treats every woman he's with or been with equally - like shit.


And now Dean knows that the only way his business got off the ground was via a loan fronted by Phil Mitchell.

Every Good Boy Deserves Favour.


Lies, lies and more lies. Tina is one of the most feckless and irresponsible people I've seen in the show. The way she shirks responsibility is alarming. Run, Tosh! It's no surprise when Tina says her daughter despises her. I'd despise her too. She lies to Ian about doing a shift at the cafe because it's more fun "helping" Dean serve drinks at his opening. Then she lies to her partner about having asked Ian for a rise, right when Ian walks into the pub and sees her there. Yes, run, Tosh. Surely, Tosh must know now that Tina is dishonest and will lie at the drop of a hat. After all, if you don't have honesty in a marriage, says Linda Carter ....

Speaking of whom, Linda went too far, and so did Johnny. Actually, you actually hear of parents approaching their children's tutors after bad exam results. Johnny admitted yesterday that his failures were down to himself. Actually, how anyone can revise or do academic work in that environment is beyond me - sitting in the kitchen with all the distracting hubbub and his mother gazing intently over him. Then he moves to the bar and the actual body of the pub, itself. He must have amazing levels of concentration to blank out all the distraction around him, but obviously, he didn't because he failed a couple of modules. But Linda's ethos is based on ignorance and fear; she summed herself and her type up precisely when she told the tutor that I might not be educated but I ain't stupid. That's belligerance in the face of knowledge and knowledge is power. Maybe that, coupled with the fact that Johnny was a premature baby, is the reason Linda wants to keep her youngest in a puerile and childish mode, when it's really she who sometimes acts the child.

Linda was a child when she married and a child when she had all three of her children. She's never known a real adolescence. She's gone from child to wife with nothing inbetween. Her children are now more mature, in many ways, than she. I was pleased that Mick stopped Johnny when he went too far by referring to his mother to her face as "that stupid bitch." Out of order. Well out of order. Yet, even after coming out, Johnny told people like Whitney and Nancy that he liked living with his parents and was close to his mum. Ironic that, when Nancy ordered him two drinks at Dean's opening, he tagged her an enabler, when it's been convenient for him to enable his mother's behaviour.

Still, this has established Linda's insecurities even moreso.


And speaking of insecurities, the penny's dropping with Sharon too now. She's clocked Phil in a lie about that gun, after Phil having promised honesty to her months ago. If he lied to her about this gun, I'll bet her memory's kicking in and she's beginning to wonder if the attack on The Albert was really coincidental. Whatever is running through her mind in that final scene, it wasn't about using the gun for protection. The gun will get used. It will get fired, but not in the way any of us thinks.

She Dreamed a Dream (That's about to Become a Nightmare)


Sharon Marshall always gives her best. In Friday's episode, we further learned that Stan wasn't the ogre Shirley Queen of Scrotes and her Crown Prince of Moobs, Mick, depicted him. We also learned that Danny Dyer, an actor thought of as a sex symbol, is hairy, simian, fat and has man boobs.

Linda is absolutely one of the best characters to be introduced since Kat Slater - certainly, since Max Branning. Sharon Marshall writes a good episode, but sometimes I felt that her dialogue was beginning to get a bit maudlin in places, and as poignant as it was, the story around why Linda was refusing to "let go" of Johnny and the name she gave him, was a bit contrived.

But I suppose that makes better drama than the obvious truth - that Johnny was a premature baby and the youngest child, and mothers often cling the hardest and the longest to the baby. It's the Empty Nest Syndrome.

So Mick and Linda have been parents since they were fifteen, had three kids before they were twenty - they went from childhood to parenthood with no thought of adolescence inbetween. Yes, I can understand that Mick would have wanted a family, but since they managed to live with Linda's mother for the better part of their married life, it's as though they were children in a family situation deferring to an adult. We've heard so much about Elaine, Linda's mother, and how she rolls her eyes every time Elaine would phone to offer advice, isn't this a direct parallel between Linda and Elaine and Johnny and Linda?


And even though Linda was at pains to say that she didn't trap Mick into marriage, that he wanted a family at fifteen, when he was still a child, I'm wondering that if their alliance is borne out of something mistaken for love, but what is, in reality, a fear of anything different or comfort with the familiar. A lot of Linda's ignorance is based on fear; a lot of Mick's is based on resignation.

You know, we see the same sort of set-up with Bianca and Carol, where Carol assumes the ultimate role of overall parent, and Bianca becomes one of the children. The Vic was Mick's and Linda's chance to stand on their own two feet, and now they get the added "bonus" of the presence of Shirley, his sister who's really his mother and who - if the writers and the retconning are to be believed - found sufficient time between seriously courting and getting pregnant by Kevin and marrying him to be the sort of maternal figure Mick adores. And it's Shirley who calls the shots. I really wanted Linda, or at least, Nancy, to smack her silly tonight when she made that bitterly cruel remark about Linda giving parental advice when, according to Shirley, her kids all hate her. Because Shirley is such a f*cking perfect parent. Not. 

Linda may be over-protective and controlling, but she loves her children, and she's a better parent by miles than Shirley would ever be. At least, Linda doesn't lose her rag and try to kill her kids. That's how brutally simplistic Shirley is - because there's a difference of opinion between Linda and her children, Shirley gleefully snatches this as hatred. No, Shirley, Linda's children don't hate her, but yours hate you. Because Dean didn't repay that money to Phil to get you off the hook; he did it because he knew that Phil's money was a debt ultimately down to his profits, because that's the only way that would get paid.


Shirley "celebrates" Dean breaking into the house of a man, whose fiancée had just gone through an horrific attack by intruders, which left her seriously injured, by stealing champagne from her brother's pub - Mick won't miss one bottle of champagne - and invites Dean to stop by the pub later and she'd filch some more drinks. Tell me, does she steal her cigarettes too? This woman gets free room and board out of the goodness of her brother's (son's) heart, a job, a stake in the business, and she's still stealing from him. As is her feckless court jester of a sister. (Aside: I laughed out loud at the name of Linda's parents' pub - the Jester. Do you think that influenced the insipid Tina's subsequent behaviour?)

It's quite amusing and deserving to see Shirley literally piss herself in fright when Phil merely mentions whispering a word in Mick's shell-like. Loved the scene where he turned around and shouted Miiiick!!!!. Shirley can dish out the hardarse attitude and blackmail threats, but she can't take it. And, thus, Phil goes from getting a grand a month from Alfie to getting a grand a week from Dean.

It goes without saying that the scene of the night was that between Timothy West and Kellie Bright, but I thought it was wrong of the family to push the blame of this entire situation on Linda and expect her to apologise. Yes, she was certainly wrong; and, yes, Johnny has to grow up and wants to grow up - but Johnny's growing up on his own terms. He's quite happy to act the baby, with Linda running after him on early morning breakfast runs, when it suits him, but this sort of behaviour enables her own reactions. She apologised and ultimately wished her son well on the pull, hoping he found someone nice; but I didn't hear Johnny apologise for calling Linda a bitch - sorry, a stupid bitch anymore than to acknowledge that it was wrong.

As much as Linda knows her son, so he should know and be a bit more understanding of her. Because of her background and lifestyle choices, Linda is ignorant, fears change, conservative in outlook and afraid of knowledge and anyone with knowledge. Johnny's getting an education, which is knowledge and with knowledge, comes power. Maybe she's afraid of the shift in dynamic. Linda's been a wife and mother since she was fifteen years old. She's known nothing else. She's probably very disapproving and, at the same time, very envious of women who've forged a career or got an education and moved forward. She's never been with anyone but Mick and she believes she never wanted to be otherwise. 


People are uneasy with the final scene - the hug between Dean and Linda - entirely maternal on her part, but something more on his. Rightly so. This is a redux, with a variation, on Sean and Tanya. (No greatest hits except your own, eh, Dom?) For everyone thinking and praying that Mick and Linda aren't torn apart by an affair, consider the previous landlords of the Vic:

  • Den and Angie - ripped apart by alcoholism and infidelity
  • Grant and Sharon - ripped apart by domestic violence and infidelity
  • Peggy and Frank - ripped apart by financial fraud and infidelity
  • Alfie and Kat - ripped apart by emotional abuse and infidelity
Spot the common thread. Why should the Carters be any different?

A final thought: When Sharon is properly awake, she's going to wonder why Dean Wicks broke into her bedroom and threw money at Phil.

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Sharon-Not-Sharon Week - Review 16-20.06.2014

Before I get down to what we saw go down this week, let me say that we had a brilliant week of programmes this week, after suffering two weeks of what can only be decided as shit; and that shit featured the abysmally bad character of Tina Carter.

DTC might not like to think of this, but I remember the days of Matt Robinson's tenure. He always gave a character one year to gel and be accepted by the audience. If, after that year, the character still didn't resonate with the audience, they were axed. I seriously think he needs to do this with Tina and also with Sonia, whose return, I think, was a big mistake. Not only is Natalie Cassidy a poor actress, her character is unlikeable as well. Sonia was never as unpopular as she was in her lesbian phase, and Tina is just an annoyingly feckless fortysomething who thinks she can enxtend her entitlement issues by acting like a retarded child.

She can't.

Now axe her.

No Way to Treat a Lady.



The Sharon we all know and love returned this week only to be brained by an illegal lug hired by Phil to "scare" her.

Sharon Week, and Sharon's big storyline, is just as the long-term viewer suspected. The story is all about poor pitiful Shirl, her secret and her unrequited love for Phil.

First of all, what happened to Sharon this week will be no surprise to anyone who's watched the show since the 1990s.  Anytime the Mitchells plan a big kerfuffle for whatever purpose, it usually goes tits up. Grant burned the Vic for insurance reasons and didn't know Sharon, his wife, was still inside. Phil torched the car lot for Frank and killed a vagrant. Now, Phil's pissed off because Sharon's paying attention to the business he financed for her, so he does what he always does - acts like a spoiled brat.

Sharon's interaction with Johnny, in Monday's episode, is the most honest depiction of Sharon since her return in 2012. She admitted that she's happiest when working in The Albert. It's more important to her than being someone's mum or someone's trophy girlfriend.Twas ever thus with her. Give her a business to run, and she'll make a proper go of it. Once again, this was Sharon from the get-go - she was never meant to be someone's mum, The Vic was always going to be her baby. Put Grant in the frame, rather than Phil at the moment, and that would be her idea of happiness. She doesn't work as a mother, and she obviously mistrusts Phil, and with reason, but she shines as landlady of a proper functioning pub. 

In order to understand this more fully, you have to look at Phil's relationship history, and you'll see a pattern. Whenever whoever is Phil's partner - either romantic or familial (and Peggy does come into the frame) - and whenever that woman develops an interest in something to the exclusion of Phil, as he perceives it, his behaviour is predictable. When Phil's pushed aside, he reaches for the bottle with one hand and a bit of rough with the other.

When Kathy was involved with an infant Ben recovering from meningitis, Phil got drunk and ended up with Lorna Cartwright, a 1990s version of Shirley.


When Peggy started telling him a few home truths in the wake of Ben being sentenced and Louise returning to her mother, Phil cracked open the crack and reached for Rainie (more of Rainie imminently). And now that Sharon's spending most of her time making The Albert pay dividends (something Phil, for all his canniness, can't see), Phil starts hanging around that wrinkly old shit-bitch, Shirley Queen of Scrotes.

That's where he is the night Sharon is attacked. Phil needs to get over himself and remember the smell of Shirley's breath in the morning. She looked a properly bitter and sour on Monday night in an empty pub, and "with no big game on," it's not surprising that the punters chose not to watch what wasn't a big game, rather than feasting their eyes on her miserable mug.

All the time Phil's hired thugs are baseball batting their way around the pub, while Sharon's beaten to a frazzle and Johnny's hiding upstairs, Phil is leaning on the bar of the Vic and squeezing the tale of Shirley's teenaged pregnancy from Shirley's vinegar lips, and thus we learn the truth about Mick's father and how Mick came to be Shirley's brother.

We learned a lot of things that night - things which stuffed a lot of assumption down the throats of various fanbois and things that didn't show Shirley in a positive light. Things like:-

  • Mick's father was named Andy. He was a few years older than Shirley, who was about thirteen when she cuddled up with Andy and got pregnant by him. Andy was one of only three men Shirley has ever loved in her life, the other two being Phil and Kevin, so why did she cheat on Kevin? And does this mean we're in for a treat when a fiftysomething stranger named Andy shows up?
  • Sylvie and the odious Babe took Shirley away for the last few months of the pregnancy, with the lame excuse that Sylvie needed some time away from the perpetually drunk Stan. When the baby was born, Sylvie returned with the lie on her lips that the bairn was Stan's. Somehow, even though he was drunk, I don't think Stan was stupid, do you? Harken back to when Stan told Mick how he saved the boy from drowning, and when Mick asked who was trying to drown him, Stan looked straight at Shirley and replied, "Your mother."
  • There was no PND in Shirley's actions at all. Mick got covered with paint, she tried to bathe him and he put up a fuss. She lost her rag and tried to drown him. The way any parent loses their rag and shakes the baby, smacks the baby, throws the baby. Nice one, Shirl.
  • Stan didn't put anyone in care. The hospital where Mick was taken, alerted Social Services, who took one look at the Carter set-up, and promptly took Mick and the budding Court Jester.
  • Shirley's been drinking since she was fourteen. Her insides must be pickled.
Sharon's story is also heavily inundated with Carters as well, thus proving to the more cynical viewer that the Carters are, indeed, the new Brannings. DTC has a bad reputation for shoe-horning his favourites into every storyline imaginable. The Carters rescued Sharon, and Mick took Phil to hospital and remained with him for Sharon's vigil.

When news of this reached poor pitiful Shirl's ears, she lit out for the hospital - not for any concern about Sharon, mind you. Her first thought was Phil being with Mick on his own and the possibility of Phil letting drop Shirl's secret to Mick.

This is how self-obsessed and entitled Shirley Queen of Scrotes is. Phil's lover is lying critically ill in surgery, and the first thing Shirley wants to be reassured of is that Phil hasn't broken her confidence. For once in his miserable life, Phil hands her her scrawny, wrinkly arse. This isn't about her; this is all about Sharon ... and then he proceeds to tell her that he'd set the attack up in order to scare Sharon, but didn't have any idea that she'd sent his bouncers home.

To Shirley's credit, she's initially appalled that Phil would do something of this calibre, and to someone he loved as well. This would have been the time for Shirley to have had an epiphany about Phil - one she should have had two years ago when Phil couldn't, wouldn't promise her fidelity. Shirley needs to stop and think - Phil's been unfaithful to literally every woman with whom he's been involved romantically, except Sharon and Kate. He cheated on Kathy with Lorna, on Lisa with Mel and on Shirley twice - with Rainie and with Glenda. If Phil would do this to a woman he loved, and if Shirley thinks he loves her, what makes her think he wouldn't do the same to her?

As much as she thinks that she and Phil are cut from the same cloth, she doesn't understand that the Mitchell men are all about control.

God help the woman who stands up to you! Shirley exclaims when Phil confesses what he did. Well, Sharon's stood up to Phil many a time and lived to tell the tale of how the Mitchell men treat and react to their women.

The Mitchell men have all been about control. That's why Eric smacked Peggy about. Grant sulked massively when Sharon didn't go along with his plans. He smashed up the Vic, himself, when he found she was still on The Pill when he wanted to start a family. Archie was the ultimate control freak. Whenever something or someone else diverts a Mitchell wife from what should be the centre of their universe, then they react the way Phil and Grant do and did. Both Kathy and Sharon ended up leaving the country after standing the brothers down. Their immediate successors - Tiffany and Lisa -were treated appallingly, and both of them were mothers of Mitchell children. Tiffany died pursuing Grant, who'd snatched Courtney. Lisa was left a psychological wreck by Phil.

Shirley would only stand up to Phil in order to egg him on.

I remember when Bryan Kirkwood made Phil and Shirley King and Queen of the Square, with Jay as the self-appointed Crown Prince and Ben as the sinister Clown Prince. That's when I really began to hate Shirley - and dislike Jay to a great degree. Faux Mitchells trading off Phil's name with their "Do You Know Who I Am?" entitlement. At that time, someone remarked that Shirley had become OldPhil and Phil had become OldGrant. It was the same in Tuesday's episode.

"We'll" get them. "We'll" make sure Sharon never finds out ... because, if Sharon dies, then Phil has to look her son in the eye and acknowledge that, although he might have played a significant but peripheral part in the boy's father's death, he's 100% responsible for his mother's. But then Shirley would step in and whisk him off into care, most probably. Anything to appease King Phil's guilt.

And if you believe Sharon won't find out, then there's a bridge in New York that's for sale with your name on it. Because if TPTB are true to Sharon's character, then as soon as she wakes up, she'll recognise from the get-go that this had "Mitchell Cock-Up" written all over it. Somehow a burning pub just might come to mind. And if she doesn't, then I'm sure Queen Shirley will be only too happy to apprise her of the situation and even to tell her that she'd declared her love for Phil and he was about to do the same for her, until Sharon so inconveniently took a turn for the worse. Damn that Sharon!

Phil on Tuesday exhibited brilliantly the very big problem the show has with male characterisation. If Phil Mitchell doesn't like a woman standing up to him, which is what Sharon has always, always, always done with the Mitchells and for which they accorded her respect, then why is he happy for Shirley to step in, take control and bark orders? Because she ironed a shirt?

And if you think Shirley couldn't sink any lower, hold your breath. Friday's episode proved that she could and she did. We learn that Phil has spent the entire night at the hospital whilst Sharon was in surgery. Throughout all of that time, Shirley has been bombarding him with texts and phonecalls, demanding to know what he thinks of her. (Any decent man would have told her to get stuffed).

Friday's episode was all about Shirl's angst and anguish at not knowing what Phil would have said to her, had Sharon not so inconveniently relapsed. To be fair, Phil's body language - the touching of her face and hair - gave her reason to believe that Phil might harbour some romantic feelings for her, that he, indeed, might love her.


Not content enough and not compassionate enough to appreciate that Phil's first concern might be for Sharon during this time, she immediately pounces on him for an answer when he returns from the hospital, only to find out what?

That Phil cares for her, but that he cares for her in a way someone might care for a down-trodden friend. Or  a pet. Or a doormat.

We know Phil is worried about Sharon, we know Phil also has a conscience and is feeling guilt beyond belief about what happened to Sharon, and we know he's scared for himself, and with reason; but is she that selfish that she thinks that Phil can just push Sharon aside like that and resume what Shirley thinks is "normal service?" She's mightily inconvenienced that Sharon's turn for the worse meant Phil had to dash off to hospital, so put out is she that she continues to text and try to phone Phil throughout the entire time he's there. And then, when she finds out Sharon's no longer in critical condition, she expects Phil to express his love for her. In her opinion, he's "leaving her hanging."

Many people say that Phil and Shirley should be together because they are so much alike. She certainly brings out the absolute worst in him. but he's chosen to live with Sharon. Yes, it's true that he did what he did in organising the attack, and that's inexcusable, and to any other normal person, Shirley's assertion that you wouldn't do that to someone you loved would ring true; but for all she reckons she's like the dark side of Phil, she doesn't know him all that well.

This is what Mitchell men do to the women they love. Eric smacked Peggy about. Grant set a pub alight with Sharon inside (although he didn't know it). He also hit Sharon, called her a whore and offered her services out to his mates, in the wake of Sharongate. Grant cheated on Tiffany twice and treated her abysmally. Both bruvs have smacked Peggy with such force that she was knocked off her feet. Phil has cheated on practically every woman he's been with - he cheated on Kathy with Lorna, on Lisa with Mel. He cheated on Shirley twice - with Rainie and with Glenda. He couldn't even promise Shirley fidelity, and yet there she is, after his having betrayed her and lied to her those months after Heather's death, she's proven her obsession with him definitely tonight.

She had the opportunity to revenge Heather's death, but she chose to give Phil a false alibi. She had a chance of a new life with her daughter and grandchild, but she returned to Walford to obsess over Phil. Heather is forgotten and so is Ben's part in her death. Tonight, rather than joining her family to celebrate her son's success, she chose to chase after crumbs from Phil's table, literally begging him to say he loved her.

We can easily say now that Dean doesn't matter to Shirley at all. She only cares about Mick, and she wants Phil.

Shirley perceives that Phil has "left her dangling" by what she reckons was an undeclared avowal of love, and she doesn't want to stand in someone else's shadow anymore. This is what this entire malarkey has been about - Shirley really realises now what she's felt all along with Phil - that if Sharon ever returned, Shirley would be toast.

Phil put Shirley firmly in the picture when he turfed her out so he could have a few winks and get back to Sharon's side, but he didn't reckon on Shirley being egged on again by her slag of a sister.

The Carter sisters are two of the most amoral characters ever seen on the show. I loathe Tina. I've never seen a more entitled and puerile character on the show in my life. Her philosophy is that if you want something, you just reach out and take it - never mind if that "something" is a person who's married to someone else or involved with someone else - even if the object of your desire has a partner who's desperately ill, you want the person in question, you go, girl! I'm still wondering if she's genuinely what the Italians would call a deficiente. She's certainly unlikeable and aggressively stupid. She could have caused a nasty accident the way she was playing with those shears.

Shirley's lowest point came when she followed Phil to the hospital, stopping short at the door of Sharon's room to hear Phil's proposal and Sharon's acceptance. So she was actually going to barge into the hospital room of a seriously ill and injured woman and demand Phil tell her he loved her, and probably tell Sharon of Phil's involvement as well.

Does Phil love Sharon? He loves the idea of Sharon, and now he's got that idea back, when she admitted that she was wrong to put the bar ahead of Phil and Denny, but earlier in the week, Sharon was visited by Ian and by Dot, who remarked fatefully, that it would take more than this to keep Sharon Watts down.

The trio of Sharon, Phil and Shirley have a lot of secrets, especially concerning Ronnie, so if Sharon gets her mojo back, they'd all better watch out.

Carters, Carters Everywhere.

They are. Literally. And that's frightening. Even though I like the majority of the family - Mick (who's gone down considerably in my estimation for his Absent-Mommy Issues and his passive aggressive bullying of  his devoted wife), Linda, Johnny, Stan and Nancy - I don't like to see them shoe-horned into every story. Their remit is the Vic, but with Johnny working for Sharon, they now have a presence in The Albert.

Through Johnny, they're now involved with Sharon's dilemma. Not that that's bad, in fact some of it is very good. For example, Sharon's poignant scene at the hospital in Friday's episode with Linda. TPTB missed a golden opportunity to give Sharon the sort of friend she hasn't had since Michelle. Sharon and Linda both grew up in pubs, with similar backgrounds. Instead, we've seen months of bitchy remarks and sniping, but Linda saw through Sharon's brave front at hospital last night and they bonded over a good cry.

My question is: why, exactly, was Sharon crying? Was it, indeed, because it was a release of tension after maintaining a brave face for Phil? Or, coming on the heels, of Linda's comment about Sharon feeling safe with Phil around, did Sharon give vent to tears because she recognised Phil's hand in what happened at the pub?

Either way, Linda's about to face a crisis of her own. She and Dean are an affair waiting to happen. 


Mick's subtle change in the treatment of his wife since his Sugly Blister baybees have come mooching on the scene hasn't gone unnoticed. He's colder and more frustrated with whatever Linda does or says. As she, herself, remarked, she can't do right for doing wrong.

Her latest faux pas came when she inadvertantly revealed to all and sundry that Johnny didn't help defend Sharon when the thugs muscled their way into the pub; instead, he cowered, frightened, upstairs. He did, however, raise the alarm about what happened. Johnny wanted to tell the truth, himself, but Linda, ever the over-protective mother, stepped in.

Never mind, Johnny, I got this.

Not only is Mick shooting disapproving glances Linda's way, Johnny's not above moaning about her to all and sundry, only to be told by his cousin (uncle) Dean that he's lucky to have Linda and to have Sharon, whom he respects, reveal how proud Linda was of Johnny.

Yet when Johnny asked Mick why he defended Linda, we got none of the usual and expected answers - that she was his wife, that he loved her, that she was the mother of his children whom they should respect - instead, we got Somebody has to.

A pithy excuse, especially when his nephew (brother) has been clocked making Linda laugh and being nice to her. Everyone's glad that Dean's around, but not Mick.

Shit, Dean's not even glad to be around, himself. Early in the week, he was quick to remind Stan that he wasn't a Carter. He was a Wicks, thank you very much; and in Friday's episode, his reason for not wanting to stay in Walford came down to the fact that he didn't want to associate with that woman

I think Stan knows the nature of Shirley's relation to Mick. He's street-suss enough to do so, and I think his encouragement of Dean staying isn't out of the goodness of his heart, but a manipulative venture to have this secret revealed and have it revealed to Dean that his scrote of a mother thinks more of Mr Perfect Mick than she does her other son.

This is Stan's payback. And Dean is Shirley's Nick, only darker and meaner and with justification. Dean is set to blow the Carter dynamic sky high.

Ian's Little Secret.


Rainie's back in town! A bloody interesting character played by a brilliant actress. Make no mistake - Rainie should only ever always be a recurrent character. Spring up, cause some serious bother, tell a few home truths, shake up some dynamics and then disappear.

Taming Rainie would lose her edge. 

Well, she's rocked up again, and this time, she's involved with Ian. We all know - well, those of us who have watched since the 90s - that Ian has a propensity for kerb-crawling and that he isn't averse to paying for sex, when things on the home front aren't going according to plan.

Around about the time of Good Friday, Ian was getting fed up with being in a loveless relationship with Denise, and equally frustrated that Jane was with Masood. So Ian does what Ian does - goes hunting a prozzie. And of all the street corners in all of London, he happens upon Rainie Cross. Well, Ian always did like to pay for sex with someone he knows. 

So on the night of Lucy's death, when CindyBoy went to find Ian at the restaurant and found nothing, Ian was off someplace bonking Rainie. Not only bonking her, but giving her his mobile number. So now Rainie's come looking for Ian with ... shock, horror ... blackmail on her mind.

Ian Beale being blackmailed by a prostitute - whoda thunk it? Yes, it's a clichéd scenario that's been played out before, but Janine's not around (and anyway, she's rich now), so Rainie works a treat.

Not only has Lucy's death now become even more all about Ian trying to keep his reputation clean and cling onto the newly-returned Denise in order to appease his Mommy Issues, but we need to remember that Rainie also has a history with Phil Mitchell, and of course, her mother is still in Walford.

Rainie's off the wagon, but what she's on is anyone's guess. One thing for certain is that she's turning tricks to finance booze, crack or heroin, and she's got Ian by the short and curlies - so much so that Ian can't manage to pay for Lucy's funeral. (I'm not surprised he's got a cashflow problem, the way he runs his businesses).

A brilliant week, after two weeks of torture. This trend needs to continue.