VERSION|0.5.1|NAME|Matt Westwood|DATE|1372585217|CONTENT|&quot;... a picture of he and Michael [Eavis] takes pride of place on his wall - by going to Glastonbury for many years, Michael has shaped the way I see the world more than anyone else.&quot;

With that sort of egregious attention to grammatical details it&#039;s impossible to take anything this half-wit says seriously.

a) It&#039;s &quot;a picture of *him* and Michael&quot; for reasons that are too tedious to elaborate.

b) Dangling participle. It wasn&#039;t Michael who was going to Glastonbury every year, it was the cabbie - but because the subject of the participle &quot;going&quot; has not been stated, it attaches itself to the nearest available noun.

And the next person who uses that utterly-worn-out clich of a metaphor &quot;your cup of tea&quot; in my presence is going to be sighed at irritatedly.|EMAIL|prime.mover@proofwiki.org|IP-ADDRESS|90.208.123.231|MODERATIONFLAG|