Illinois Entertainer April 2017 | Page 8

wearing that night was probably some- thing I got on an airplane, on the duty free. I did have a Movado, but I don’t know where it went – it’s something my missus bought me years ago. And I really like their thin designs, and the fact that they came out with scratch-proof glass a long time before cellphones did. John IE: Any other analog devices you prefer? JL: Pens. Paper. I’m not one to have learned typing. I’ve tried, it’s hopeless. As hopeless as trying to remember where to put your fingers on a piano. So I prefer the accuracy of a pen on paper. But cursive writing is a vanishing art these days. They don’t even teach what an actual paragraph ILLINOIS ENTERTAINER: When you toured last time, it was interesting to note that you wore a wristwatch onstage. How many rock stars wear those? JOHN LYDON: Well, One, I am not a rock star, and I’ve never viewed myself as such. 04•2017 is for, or anything like that, like how to set up the premise for your conversational piece. It’s sorely missing. Not that it’s totally essential, but it does fucking help if you want any continuity. And Two, I do like to know the time occa- sionally. And rather than taking a watch off when I go onstage, I just leave it on until it rots off. I just love watches. I don’t want to call it ‘old school’ – I call it ‘sensi- ble school.’ It’s an immediate recovery from lost time. I just need to look at my wrist and there it is – I know what time it is. But I’m practical, and I have been all my life. I’m not one to get bogged down in modern technology that’s proven itself to be inefficient. And it’s also my eyesight, so I require watches that have very clear dials and very big numbers. So that watch I w