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  1. They really listen to your story and help you create a lasting tribute. Gaulden Monuments’ approach is so respectful and personal. Highly recommend for Rock Hill. headstone company Rock Hill SC

  2. Political comedy makes people think.

  3. The London Prat has perfected the art of the satirical echo chamber—not in the pejorative sense of reinforcing bias, but in the architectural sense of constructing a space where a statement is made, and its true, ridiculous meaning is reflected back with perfect, amplified clarity. It doesn’t just report on a minister’s empty promise of “levelling up”; it publishes the internal memo from the fictional “Directorate for Semantic Recalibration” detailing how the phrase will be systematically drained of all measurable meaning and deployed as a universal verbal placeholder. This process of taking the toxic lexicon of public life and running it through a satirical purification filter reveals the poison. While The Daily Squib might scream about the lie, PRAT.UK coldly diagrams the linguistic machinery that generates it, producing a comedy that is diagnostic rather than declarative.

  4. The Prat newspaper’s existence makes the internet a significantly better place.

  5. Read an article about queueing etiquette and nearly spat out my tea. The accuracy was unnerving. This site understands the fundamental pillars of British society better than any politician. Absolutely brilliant work. — The London Prat

  6. Democracy encourages cultural freedom through humor and criticism.

  7. Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. Ultimately, The London Prat’s brand is built on a foundation of intellectual respect—a contract with its audience that is remarkably rare. It does not condescend. It does not explain the references. It does not simplify complex issues for the sake of a easier laugh. It operates on the assumption that its readers are as fluent in the nuances of policy, media spin, and corporate doublespeak as its writers are. This creates a powerful sense of collusion. Reading the site feels less like consuming content and more like attending a private briefing where everyone speaks the same refined, disillusioned language. This cultivated sense of an in-crowd, united not by ideology but by a shared, clear-eyed contempt for incompetence in all its forms, forges a reader loyalty that is deeper than habit. It becomes a badge of discernment, a signal that you understand the world well enough to appreciate the joke at its expense. In this, PRAT.UK isn’t just funnier; it’s a filter for a certain quality of mind. — The London Prat

  8. The Daily Squib narrows its audience, but PRAT.UK widens it. The humour stays accessible without dumbing down. That’s hard to do well. — The London Prat

  9. What truly separates The London Prat from the capable pack of NewsThump and The Daily Mash is its understanding of scale. Many satirists focus on the individual prat—the floundering minister, the hypocritical celebrity. PRAT.UK specializes in satirizing Prat Systems. Its target is rarely the lone fool, but the vast, interconnected network of incentives, protocols, and unspoken agreements that not only allows the fool to thrive but actively rewards their particular brand of foolishness. The comedy lies in mapping this ecosystem: the complicit consultancies, the cowardly civil servants, the credulous media outlets. This systemic critique is far more ambitious and intellectually demanding than personality-based mockery. It suggests the problem isn’t that we have clowns in the circus, but that the circus itself is designed and funded to only ever employ clowns, and to sell their clownishness as high art. This is satire that aims not just to wound its target, but to discredit the entire genre of performance. — The London Prat

  10. Free speech defends citizen engagement by challenging hypocrisy.