Issue 38 // Friday October 7 2011
The independent student newspaper of the University of Sheffield. est 1946 // www.forgetoday.com
ARTS
Dan Evans on bringing Othello to The Crucible Fuse p.5
PR stunt by stripping boss
WIN PLUG TICKETS We have two pairs of tickets to all gigs at Plug for the rest of the academic year. Fuse p.2
Tom Geddes Comment
COMMENT Is sexism a feminist’s nightmare or just a bit of a laugh? Hannah Frost talks chocolate cake and sanitary towels in response to Corp’s latest ad campaign. p.9
SPORT
The Sheffield Steelers wipe the floor with their opponents the Hull Stringrays and the Fife Flyers. Full report p.28
MUSIC We caught up with hiphop sensation Wretch 32. Find out why he’ll never be on The Jeremy Kyle Show. Fuse, p.4
Charity warned over ‘Q-jump’ card
Martial arts charity continues to sell tickets despite some club deals not being finalised. them on the concourse as they did not have the Nicholas Carding required permit. A martial arts charity selling queue jump tickets A representative for the charity said: “We to Sheffield nightclubs has misled students after approached some of the city centre nightclubs and venues said the deal was yet to be confirmed. they agreed to the ‘Q-jump’ tickets. Shimeijurasan Martial Arts Club, operating “We stopped selling them when the Union said under the name Fight 4 Life, who claim to be we needed a special licence to sell on the concourse. “closely associated” with the University of Sheffield, Perhaps we did things too quickly.” emailed societies to advertise £5 ‘Q-jump’ tickets for The tickets were supposed to be valid between Embrace, Viper Rooms, Basement, FWD, DQ, and September 26 and October 9, but after contacting Vodka Revolution. several of the nightclubs, Forge Press found that However, the Union warned students not to buy some clubs had not yet agreed to the deal. the tickets, and the group was asked to stop selling Continued on p.5
News: Film Unit: best in country p.2 Corp’s sex flyer controversy
p.3
Students are increasingly in need of more money. Becoming a stripper gets you more money. The revelations made to BBC Radio Sheffield this week by the vicepresident of a leading UK stripjoint are hardly groundbreaking. “With rising student fees, they know they can come in and earn the money they need to survive”. As they can with Bar One or Tesco. Students can get a job, and yes, stripping is a job. Remarkable. Yet the national press are all over this story like the dancers they show such concern for, gifting said gentleman the attention, reaction and publicity this move was intended to create. Articles are plastered with the company’s name, pictures of its ‘clubs’ and exactly what to expect when entering one of these ‘institutions’. The hype makes quite an appealing case for the work; Jilly from Sheffield really values her job. If my pair were pert enough for such work, I’d probably join her. But if there’s one industry that needs no further enticement, it’s probably the sex industry. Anyone who desires it knows exactly where to find it; and those who do not probably don’t require its services anyway. Why are the media drowning it in attention? This is not news. These clubs have been running for decades; the values they represent are now embedded in society. Love them or hate them, they’re not going anywhere. While advising students to take up employment in these joints is not ideal by any stretch of the imagination, Mr. Vice-President is merely putting one and one together. He knows the debates that will arise, he knows the disgust most commentators will show him but he also knows he’ll get more student ‘dancers’ as a result. A dirty trick, but that is his business after all. Slagging off these ‘centres of entertainment’ may fill writers with an inner sense of moral superiority, but it plays right into the hands of said clubs. If the media is truly disgusted by these ‘new’ comments, ignore them. Don’t aid their plight through mindless publicity.
ACS reveal deposits taken p.5