omnishambles

{{short description|Neologism from BBC political satire The Thick of It}}

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{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2022}}

{{Use British English|date=January 2013}}

File:Peter Capaldi (48636861851).jpg uses the phrase “omnishambles” in the political satire The Thick of It]]

Omnishambles is a neologism first used in the BBC political satire The Thick of It in 2009. The word is derived from the noun shambles, a term for a situation of total disorder, with the addition of the Latin prefix omni-, meaning "all". Originally a "shambles" denoted the designated stock-felling and butchery zone of a medieval street market, from the butchers' benches (Latin scamillus "low stool, a little bench"). The word refers to a situation that is seen as shambolic from all possible perspectives. It gained popularity in 2012 after sustained usage in the political sphere led to its being named Oxford English Dictionary Word of the Year, and it was formally added to the online editions of the Oxford Dictionary of English in August 2013.{{cite news | first = Maev | last = Kennedy | title = Omnishambles among new words added to Oxford Dictionaries online | date = 28 August 2013 | url = https://www.theguardian.com/science/2013/aug/28/omnishambles-new-words-oxford-dictionaries | work = The Guardian | access-date = 28 August 2013}}

Background

The term, coined by writer Tony Roche, was first used at the end of the first episode of the third series of BBC political satire The Thick of It, broadcast in 2009, during which Nicola Murray (Rebecca Front) is drafted in as a cabinet minister for the fictional Department of Social Affairs and Citizenship at the behest of the government's director of communications Malcolm Tucker (Peter Capaldi). Murray's first day as a cabinet minister is fraught with press inquiries about her husband's involvement in a private finance initiative contract, her appropriation of an expensive office chair from a staff member, and her intention to send her daughter to a private school. Tucker sends Murray to launch a by-election campaign, but a communications error results in her standing in front of candidate Liam Bentley's poster and blocking most of the letters so the sign appears to read "I am bent" (British slang that in this context means corrupt) as she is filmed and photographed. Tucker believes Murray to be a potential cause of political controversy, and his patience expires when it is revealed the minister is claustrophobic and she refuses to enter a lift. Tucker then delivers an angry rebuke to her:{{cite web| url=https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2012/oct/25/thick-of-it-bbc-political-satire-ends| title=The Thick of It: good news, minister, the show is over| author=John Plunkett| work=The Guardian| date=25 October 2012| access-date=28 October 2012}}

{{blockquote|Not only have you got a fucking bent husband and a fucking daughter that gets taken to school in a fucking sedan chair, you're also fucking mental. Jesus Christ, see you, you are a fucking omnishambles, that's what you are. You're like that coffee machine, you know: from bean to cup, you fuck up.|Malcolm Tucker to Nicola Murray, "Series 3, Episode 1", The Thick of It.{{Cite episode | title = Series 3, Episode 1 | url = http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00npkc9 | series = The Thick of It | series-link = The Thick of It | credits = Writer: Simon Blackwell|display-authors=etal| station = BBC Two | date = 24 October 2009 | series-no = 3 | number = 1 | time = c. 26 minutes|quote=“Jesus Christ, see you, you are a f*cking omnishambles, that's what you are”}}}}

References

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