#daily mail
LOGIC:“Nobody should be allowed to stifle free speech. Unless I don’t approve of what they’re saying, in which case they should be crushed.”
All we hear is Radio Blah-Blah
If I had to guess Margaret, I’d say they probably thought something along the lines of “Well, that’s getting fucked into the bin, then.”
Is it just me, or does this anecdote hit a bit of a bum note?
“Sadly, we never did find a farmer selling organic vegetables in that sauna.”
“Will she turn the weans against me?”
“We’re still laughing.”
QUESTION:Is there any subject, anything at all that could possibly be discussed in any way, that your average Mail or Express reader can’t somehow find a way to torturously use to refer back to World War 2?
ANSWER:Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha no.
“Friends are the family we choose for ourselves.”
- Edna Buchanan
(but sometimes - just sometimes - seating arrangements in school can help a bit )
Did ye, aye?
Even MORE top-class rambling. I’m spoiling you today, I really am.
Absolutely top class rambling.
“Oh no.” said a heartbroken representative for all millennial women everywhere, on hearing the news that Richard from Gillingham was withholding his approval.
New Joaquin Phoenix photos have emerged as Napoleon.
Joaquin Phoenix measures up as diminutive French emperor Napoleon
I honestly cannot tell if this is a real Daily Mail headline or satire at this point
Happy 200th birthday to the Manchester Guardian.
The Guardian newspaper has just turned 200 years old. The paper reports the classifieds which saved young lives at the time of the Third Reich.
Juxtapose this with the stance from another British newspaper, the Daily Mail:
If it’s woke/SJW/snowflake to appreciate the Guardian, in an era of increasing populism and ethno-nationalism, then I’m happy to be woke.
Run, Sidney, run!
This is from Sidney’s last episode of Grantchester. S4e2.
Various London bien pensants have been receiving wild letters from onetime Ukip backer Demetri Marchessini — the UK-based, Greek-born shipping tycoon even took out a newspaper advertisement the other day to attack radio presenter Libby Purves over her pro-gay sympathies.
Marchessini is author of the book Women In Trousers, in which he describes the practice of women wearing trousers as ‘behaviour that flies against common sense, and also flies against the normal human desire to please’.
One who has long been a recipient of Marchessini’s missives is outgoing National Theatre boss Sir Nicholas Hytner. He has only just realised they are genuine.
A friend tells me: ‘Until now, Nick was convinced they were comic spoofs sent to him by actor Rupert Everett.’