Top tosh: The Diplomat reviewed
Though it’s set in the world of diplomacy and politics, it shows about as much interest in either of the above as, say, High School Musical does
Though it’s set in the world of diplomacy and politics, it shows about as much interest in either of the above as, say, High School Musical does
It’s no secret that people are fascinated by crime. Nor is this a new phenomenon: writing in 1946, Orwell noted that murder gave a ‘great amount of pleasure to the public’, and proceeded to identify the common features of the gruesome and grisly crimes that gave the British most satisfaction. Psychologists, meanwhile, say that murder in particular is not only ‘a most fundamental taboo’ but ‘also, perhaps, a most fundamental human impulse’. This seems plausible. We all know those people who, stuck in a queue or sat in an interminable meeting, seem moments away from indulging that impulse. At any rate, lovers of the lurid and the macabre are spoiled