Crap Towns and Caffs (not Cafes) ft. Isaac Rangaswami

Book cover with the image of a smashed up car and the title "The Idler Book of Crap Towns: The 50 Worst Places to Lie in the UK"

The early 2000s were a fever dream: why was pop culture so mean? Specifically, why was it acceptable to write off entire cities - and the people within them - as crap? This is the question posed by our special guest Isaac Rangaswami, journalist, writer and brains behind Instagram sensation Caffs not Cafes. Isaac’s object is the wildly popular 2003 book Crap Towns, something about half of Britain received that year as a Christmas stocking filler. 

How did something so cursed - so unpleasant - end up as a national publishing sensation? Were our brains all fried by lads mags, New Labour and tabloid journalism? And how did the miserably classist, sexist pop culture of the 90s and early 2000s shape a new generation of writers and social media users, to reject negative stereotypes and embrace the beauty of everyday spaces... even when they are a bit rubbish?

 

Follow Isaac's excellent new Substack Wooden City, and his Instagram account Caffs not cafes (if you haven't already).

For first news and first dibs on tickets for the next live event – as well as the full-length episode! –  please join our Patreon!! ** ONLY £4 A MONTH TO SUPPORT YOUR FAVOURITE CULTURAL HISTORIANS **

Previous
Previous

Kill the Boss in Your Head

Next
Next

Airbnb: Prints of Thieves