Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Pete Docherty on Jonathon Ross
23 Answers
What is the general opinion. I could have cried. I think Mr Ross was touched too
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Ric.ror. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I didn't see it, but whatever else you say I just think there is no WAY you can say he is talentless. Listen to the Libertines - read the lyrics. He and Carl were a heart breakingly brilliant team.
I just feel sorry for him that he's gone and thrown it all away -just cos you're daft enough to get addicted to something though doesn't make you an awful person.
I just feel sorry for him that he's gone and thrown it all away -just cos you're daft enough to get addicted to something though doesn't make you an awful person.
I'm not very savvy, and that was the first time I had seen or heard Pete Docherty (heard of him of course). I can't be the only forty-something female who just wanted to give him a great big hug.
Drug addiction is a terrible thing. Getting hooked isn't something that people do voluntarily. It's like a black hole that they don't see, for various reasons, and by the time they start to get sucked in, it's too late.
It can (and has) destroyed some of the finest creative and theatrical talents around. We shouldn't criticise or dismiss this lad for being an (ex)addict. Instead we should support him and others like him for having the gumption to do something about the situation.
Drug addiction is a terrible thing. Getting hooked isn't something that people do voluntarily. It's like a black hole that they don't see, for various reasons, and by the time they start to get sucked in, it's too late.
It can (and has) destroyed some of the finest creative and theatrical talents around. We shouldn't criticise or dismiss this lad for being an (ex)addict. Instead we should support him and others like him for having the gumption to do something about the situation.
saxyjagg yes all addicts need support but as I've learned through trying to help addicts they can only have so many chances and surely the amount of times he's said he's getting off it then the following weeks he's arrested for drug offences lets us make our own minds up. He needs to be able to help himself before anyone else can
I'm sorry, 4getmenot, but this is part of drug addiction, and it's a part many people fail to understand. Getting clean and then falling again many times over is part and parcel of the addiction. The mind becomes so crazy and mixed up, even when it's supposedly clean, that half the time they just don't understand what they're doing. Most of the time those who could make a difference just lose patience - usually just before the addict loses his or life.
Even when addicts do manage to stay clean, the stigma that remains can be oppressive to the point of suicide. Only then do the impatient weep.
Even when addicts do manage to stay clean, the stigma that remains can be oppressive to the point of suicide. Only then do the impatient weep.
I've worked with drug addicts for a long time now and I think a few of you could do with volunteering in a hostel or drop-in centre and find out what really goes on before you sound off in such a judgemental manner. I've had friends who were drug and alcohol users too and most of them are doing so well, you wouldn't credit it. It doesn't matter how many tries they have, you have to be consistent and keep supporting them. I've worked with people who were referred to me as hopeless cases and we've had limitless success together. You can never tell and an open mind is essential. Its also worth telling you that 99% of drug users have had pasts I wouldn't wish on anyone and that is not just excusing them. I'm talking about true horrors; to be truthful, I'm surprised that some of them are still alive-I know i wouldn't be. Just try a little empathy.
I didn't see the programme, but I hate it when people dismiss him as being a useless junkie; the Libertines' two albums are both superb, a fact acknowledged by most music critics. Hundreds of famous pop stars have had drug/alcohol problems at one time or another but have managed to get over them and forge succesful careers for themselves. Just look at the Rolling Stones, the Who, the Beach Boys, Billy Joel, Eric Clapton, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and plenty more. He needs people's support, not criticism.
Thank you Robbo82! And 4getmenot - one performance isn't enough to make a judgement on. I'm not even a massive libertines fan, I just feel there is a line you draw when you're criticising people - and calling someone talentless when they have written modern classics is crossing that line. By the time you saw Live8, Pete had long passed his best - even he has admitted it, and accepts that the drugs made his performances terrible. Doesn't mean Up the Bracket wasn't amazing.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.