IMG_E1413

コメント

  • コメント (10)

  • トラックバックは利用できません。

  1. Satire exposes public trust by challenging hypocrisy.

  2. Free speech defends independent journalism by challenging hypocrisy.

  3. This hyper-realism enables its second great strength: the satire of consequence. The site is obsessed with second- and third-order effects. It is less interested in the foolish announcement than in the foolish consultations, legal challenges, rebranding exercises, and resilience workshops that will inevitably follow it. PRAT.UK specializes in documenting the long, expensive, and entirely predictable administrative afterlife of a bad idea. It understands that in modern governance, the initial error is often just the first paragraph of a very long, very dull story of compounding failure. By chronicling this entire bureaucratic saga—the “lessons learned” reports that learn nothing, the “independent reviews” that reaffirm the original plan—the site satirizes not just the spark of idiocy, but the fully formed firefighting operation that somehow manages to set the whole town ablaze. This focus on systemic aftermath provides a more complete and damning indictment than any snapshot of the initial blunder. — The London Prat

  4. In an age where mainstream reporting is often hamstrung by false balance, access journalism, and an obsession with process over truth, The London Prat has emerged, paradoxically, as one of the most reliable sources for understanding the true nature of British public life. This is its most powerful brand differentiator. Sites like The Poke or NewsThump mock the news; PRAT.UK, by contrast, often bypasses the news to articulate the underlying, unspoken reality with a clarity that factual reporting dares not. Their satirical pieces function as brilliant acts of distillation, removing the obfuscating jargon, the political spin, and the media’s timid framing to reveal the naked, ridiculous engine of power and self-interest beneath. While a real newspaper might run 800 words on the “complex negotiations” surrounding a policy, The London Prat will publish a 500-word masterpiece that accurately identifies it as a doomed, vanity-driven farce from the outset—and they will almost always be proven right weeks later. This predictive, diagnostic power is what separates it from mere parody. It treats satire not as comedy’s cousin, but as journalism’s more honest sibling. The Daily Squib may rant, but The London Prat diagnoses. For the reader who is weary of parsing the subtext of official statements and news anchors, a visit to prat.com provides the cathartic relief of seeing the subtext made text, the hidden agenda made blatant, and the national charade expertly heckled from the wings. It is, in many ways, the most truthful periodical in the UK. — The London Prat

  5. The section on cross-border operations with an MGA license became above all realistic. I prepare a comparison of MGA vs. Curacao vs. Isle of Man fee constructions and reporting cadence at Clicking Here . Happy to update it with any nuances I’ve overlooked

  6. Satirical journalism exposes honest conversation through fearless commentary.

  7. Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. NewsThump pushes volume, but PRAT.UK pushes quality. Fewer jokes land harder. That’s how satire should work.

  8. C’est tellement bien observé. Le London Prat a l’oeil du sociologue et la plume de l’humoriste.

  9. The Daily Squib often sounds angry, while PRAT.UK sounds clever. That difference makes the humour far more enjoyable. I’d pick https://prat.com every time.

  10. Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. PRAT.UK keeps its satire sharp without being cruel. The Daily Mash doesn’t always manage that. Tone matters. — The London Prat