Guernsey Press

A year of lockdowns: The things that made life at home bearable

From a takeaway treat to award-winning TV, this is how we kept ourselves amused through 12 difficult months.

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With the public stuck at home through most of the year, people have had to find their amusement where they can.

As we reach a year of lockdown, here are some of the things that kept life bearable.

– Must-see TV

I May Destroy You creator Michaela Coel
Michaela Coel’s I May Destroy You was one of the hit shows of lockdown (Yui Mok/PA)

With nowhere to go for large parts of the year cultural events were largely limited to the TV or laptop screen, and that meant a resurgence of the appointment to view, with terrestrial shows like I May Destroy You on BBC, ITV’s The Quiz and Channel 4’s It’s A Sin uniting the nation around the virtual water cooler.

Elsewhere, streaming shows like The Crown, The Queen’s Gambit and The Last Dance became big hits for Netflix, while the serendipitously-timed launch of Disney+ last March brought with it Star Wars spin-off The Mandalorian and, later, Marvel oddity WandaVision.

– Gaming

– Baking

Perhaps chief among them was baking – indeed, there was a period in 2020 when it was impossible to turn on Facebook or Instagram without seeing a picture of a friend or relative’s attempts at banana bread or sourdough.

Such was the uptick in home baking that it caused a shortage of flour last spring.

Relatively plentiful supplies on supermarket shelves during the latest lockdown may suggest the trend has run its course for many.

– Meal kits and takeaways

As the year progressed, more and more food outlets began to produce meal kits to allow their customers to continue to experience restaurant-quality food at home.

From pizzas to burgers to fine dining, it turns out there is nothing you cannot produce in your own kitchen with a little nudge from the professionals.

– Sea shanties

The close-harmony nautical folk songs proved to be the perfect genre for a TikTok trend which saw users repeatedly layer their own vocals on top of others’ videos.

And this was one social media trend to break through into the mainstream, making a star of Nathan Evans – the Scottish postal worker whose version of Wellerman started it all.

He has now made multiple TV appearances and reached number two in the UK singles chart.

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