Confusion reigns this week as bitter rivals swap names, an unsuspecting receptionist gets caught up in international politics, and a local paper scoops its biggest non-story of all time

I鈥檓 sorry, have we met?
Peter Rees, planning officer for the City of London, took city tribalism to new heights last Friday when he used the stage at the Movers and Shakers breakfast, in Mayfair鈥檚 Dorchester Hotel, to pour scorn on the rest of the UK. When asked what the biggest challenge facing the capital was, he quipped: 鈥淏eing attached to an unsuccessful country鈥. Rees was not the only speaker to draw gasps and suppressed chuckles from the gathered crowd of developers and contractors. David Jennings, chairman of the event, dropped a clanger when addressing former mayor and Labour candidate Ken Livingstone by saying: 鈥淲hat will you do when you get in in a couple of years, Boris?鈥

Don鈥檛 quit the day job
Last week鈥檚 celebration of five worthy years of research by the National House 好色先生TV Council鈥檚 NHBC Foundation hosted a provocative debate between communities minister Andrew Stunell and Barratt chief exec Mark Clare. Stunell described how his daughter decided to move out of a new-build home into a slightly chilly Victorian property. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just possible that people may prefer an old cold house in which their kids have space to run around in to a cramped new home that is always stuffy,鈥 Stunell remarked. A rather mortified Clare replied, to laughter: 鈥淚 perhaps don鈥檛 think we鈥檒l ask you to do our marketing for us, minister.鈥

PROPHET OF DOOM

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鈥淭he end of The World: Dubai island development sinks back into sea after being scuppered by financial crisis.鈥 So went the Daily Mail鈥檚 headline for the erosion of the almost uninhabited artificial islands created by Nakheel, the debt-laden Dubai developer. As a metaphor for the gauche follies of the Middle Eastern nouveau riche, it is second to none. However, it all sounds rather familiar, perhaps because almost exactly the same thing was reported in December 2009. Clearly The World isn鈥檛 sinking very fast. Maybe because it doesn鈥檛 have any buildings on it.

Going anywhere nice for your holidays?
It seems that the Foreign Office has taken private sector outsourcing to an extreme. One of the telephone numbers given
out to British nationals for advice on travel - for example to those enquiring into the currently tumultuous situation in Tunisia - in fact accidentally goes through to a beleaguered receptionist at property management giant CBRE, who is bombarded by calls from worried holidaymakers.

Quentin鈥檚 at it again
Stop press! A local Hertfordshire hack
phoned 好色先生TV Towers last week all in a tiz. Desperate to speak to our very own Quentin Shears, he wanted to find out exactly what was going on at Buntingford Bowls Club after Quentin鈥檚 last column about plans for a 10,000-seat croquet arena to be built in Bishop鈥檚 Stortford for the Croquet Olympic Games. The journo was, understandably, concerned he may have missed the biggest story to hit the region in, well - ever. I dutifully reassured the young chap that he hadn鈥檛 missed a trick. Hertfordshire will not play host to the Games, as, alas, Quentin is not quite real. I am sure he felt very relieved and not at all silly.

Normality is relative
Financial PR, Finsbury, was none too happy with our headlines over Mouchel and its increasingly desperate bids to fend off a buyer, or at least to secure the highest price possible. Finsbury was incredibly keen to stress that the troubled consultant is simply doing 鈥渂usiness as normal鈥. If this 鈥渘ormal鈥 business means fending off a bid, pitched at just half the level of one turned down a year ago, and desperately rushing through a refinancing of debt to drum up some extra interest, Mouchel鈥檚 boardroom must be a very interesting place.