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  1. Politics
11 July 2011

Laurie Penny trials Question Time drinking game … and gets a political hangover

A new drinking game based on the ubiquitous programme gives much away about the robustness of political debate in Westminster.

By Laurie Penny

Like the late, great Douglas Adams’s towel-clutching anti-hero Arthur Dent, I never could get the hang of Thursdays. Somehow, most of them end up with me sitting by myself with a ready deadline and a drink of something horrible, shouting at the television. By myself but not, it seems, alone — because thanks to the magic of the internet, the vicissitudes of modern politics and the boundless capacity of the British to creatively enable one another’s alcohol consumption, we now have the cultural phenomenon that is the Question Time drinking game.

It happened like this: the tweeting classes realised that we were all drinking miserably in our living rooms in front of the same long-running political debate show at the same time and it would be much more fun if someone came up with some rules — so someone did. You can imagine that by the time the show is broadcast — it’s recorded earlier in the evening — most of the panellists and production team could already be sloshing their way to frantic oblivion, so it’s all in good fun.

Dimble Dance

Enough with the preamble: here’s how you play. You sit around in front of the telly with epic quantities of corner shop booze and a bunch of friends or, if you’re a dynamic young gunslinger like me, by yourself with a bottle of Jameson’s and your Twitter feed, and you watch Question Time and imbibe until the staid predictability of mainstream political debate is at all bearable. The rules are subject to amendment, but the principles of the game are sound. While the stirring theme music plays, you down your drink and attempt to do the Dimble Dance, which looks like a cabinet minister having a spasm in an Eighties disco, setting the tone nicely.

You then proceed to drink on the following occasions: every time the veteran chairman, David Dimblebly, attempts to crack a joke. Every time David Dimbleby confuses the gender of a questioner from the audience. Every time David Dimbleby says: “I’m afraid that’s all we’ve got time for”. Every time a contributor uses the phrase “political correctness gone mad”. Every time a government panellist informs the audience that they “don’t really understand what we’re trying to do”.

You drink again every time a minister blames anything on “the mess Labour left us in”, and if the vanishing credibility of this sound bite as an excuse for imposed austerity elicits boos from the audience, which it usually does, you drink twice. This should leave you nicely battered by the time there’s a break in questions for Dimbleby to say, with all the confident self-mastery of an Englishman attempting to buy condoms in a Croatian chemist’s, “if you’d like to follow us on Twitter, here’s our hashtag”.

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You get to down your drink whenever anyone echoes the sentiment “we’re all in this together”, or its less cheesy variant “we all have to tighten our belts”. This is the most tiresomely enormous lie of our times — the notion that we’ve all been living merrily beyond our means and deserve to suffer the consequences together. We may have all been to the same pre-crash party, but some were enjoying the free champagne while the rest of us stood serving drinks and smiling as our money was gambled away.

Now that the inevitable hangover has arrived, it’s the rest of us who have to suffer. Meanwhile, our representatives shuffle and equivocate. Unfortunately, the fact that we can have a drinking game based on a few stock platitudes and still be proto-paralytic by the time the credits roll on Question Time says a great deal about the robustness of political debate in Westminster.

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