It’s just famous. It might be symbolic. Or it might just
simply be readily recognised. We might
agree that double-decker buses or red telephone boxes are iconic. To tourists,
they signify London
The Tower
of Pisa or the London
Eye, though, don’t really signify anything but themselves. So let’s stop
calling them, and anything else well-known, easily-recognised or just
momentarily high-profile, iconic. Famous will do, and is probably more than
most of them deserve.
It’s not what you
expect. It’s surprising.
Except, nobody would say that. They’d say it’s
counter-intuitive. Over and over again. All the time. Nothing surprises me any
more. Just about everything is counter-intuitive.
Don’t think about it.
Do it.
While we’re at it, let’s stop re-imagining things. The
upstart film director has not re-imagined The Taming of the Shrew. He just
directed it a different way. The twittish architect has not re-imagined the
public space. He just designed the market square a different way.
Indeed, these overblown creative diddlers may have used
their imaginations to find a different way to present the same old thing. But
imagining things is just a way of thinking about things. Personal thought
processes, no more. What we then do, as a result of our imaginings, is what counts.
If we change things, revise them, renew or refresh them, we’ve turned ideas
into action. That’s the bit that
matters.
I don’t much care if Milord Rogers has re-imagined the
built environment. I’d be more interested to know that he’s created a very
different kind of office building. I’m un-moved by the news that Baz
Filmdirector has re-imagined Casablanca.
Tell me he’s directed a new version of the famous (not iconic) movie, and I
might like to know more.
After this moment in
time
Last for today, let’s not go forward. ‘ Our strategy, going forward.’ ‘Going
forward, we’ll be changing things.’ And ‘What are your plans, going forward?’
In every single case, ‘going forward’ is unnecessary.
Superfluous. Redundant. Another piece of
meaningless filler, now in heavy use amongst managers and politicians who
think wordiness means value. It doesn’t.
If you want to be understood, if you want to be believed,
plain words work best. And if you want to impress, especially in these days of counter-intuitive strategies going forward at
this moment in time, use plain words.
Walter Annenberg was appointed US
Ambassador to the UK.
Queen Elizabeth II asked him how he found his new quarters in the embassy
residence. He said he was ‘suffering some discomfiture as a result of a need
for, uh, elements of refurbishment and rehabilitation’.
That was in 1969. They’re still smirking, today.