Astonishing that Johnson, a backbencher with a failed period as Foreign Secretary his only notable achievement - if that is the right word - since becoming an MP again, should be at the top of this list.
Astonishing that Johnson, a backbencher with a failed period as Foreign Secretary his only notable achievement - if that is the right word - since becoming an MP again, should be at the top of this list.
Oh - and am I first?
Like Jeremy Thorpe, he is a man of unblemished reputation.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
The Tories should be favourites to win Peterborough after the Newport result.
In current circumstances, I'm amazed the Conservative vote share was down only 1% on 2015.
I do wonder how much was a personal vote for May for buggering on regardless. She is short of fans on here, but out there, maybe there are people who are quietly cheering her on? As such, it is not part of the Tory vote - but could still be a factor if we get a by-election in Peterborough and she is still in Number 10.
For some reason, Jacob Rees-Mogg is far shorter to be next Prime Minister than to be next leader of the Conservative party. I'm trying and failing to imagine the circumstances in which an odds differential that way round might be justified.
Astonishing that Johnson, a backbencher with a failed period as Foreign Secretary his only notable achievement - if that is the right word - since becoming an MP again, should be at the top of this list.
Oh - and am I first?
Like Jeremy Thorpe, he is a man of unblemished reputation.
Jeremy T was, I believe entirely faithful to his wives, so far as affairs with ladies were concerned.
For some reason, Jacob Rees-Mogg is far shorter to be next Prime Minister than to be next leader of the Conservative party. I'm trying and failing to imagine the circumstances in which an odds differential that way round might be justified.
So, you don't see him as the obvious leader of a government of national unity?
Astonishing that Johnson, a backbencher with a failed period as Foreign Secretary his only notable achievement - if that is the right word - since becoming an MP again, should be at the top of this list.
Oh - and am I first?
Like Jeremy Thorpe, he is a man of unblemished reputation.
Jeremy T was, I believe entirely faithful to his wives, so far as affairs with ladies were concerned.
For some reason, Jacob Rees-Mogg is far shorter to be next Prime Minister than to be next leader of the Conservative party. I'm trying and failing to imagine the circumstances in which an odds differential that way round might be justified.
So, you don't see him as the obvious leader of a government of national unity?
The Tories should be favourites to win Peterborough after the Newport result.
In current circumstances, I'm amazed the Conservative vote share was down only 1% on 2015.
I do wonder how much was a personal vote for May for buggering on regardless. She is short of fans on here, but out there, maybe there are people who are quietly cheering her on? As such, it is not part of the Tory vote - but could still be a factor if we get a by-election in Peterborough and she is still in Number 10.
I think that's a good point - quite a few people, Leave and Remain, respect her perseverance imo.
For some reason, Jacob Rees-Mogg is far shorter to be next Prime Minister than to be next leader of the Conservative party. I'm trying and failing to imagine the circumstances in which an odds differential that way round might be justified.
So, you don't see him as the obvious leader of a government of national unity?
I'm afraid I would send this particular would-be Cincinnatus back to his plough.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
The Tories should be favourites to win Peterborough after the Newport result.
In current circumstances, I'm amazed the Conservative vote share was down only 1% on 2015.
I do wonder how much was a personal vote for May for buggering on regardless. She is short of fans on here, but out there, maybe there are people who are quietly cheering her on? As such, it is not part of the Tory vote - but could still be a factor if we get a by-election in Peterborough and she is still in Number 10.
Yes I think a lot of people, women particularly, think she is trying her best and it's all those stupid MPs who are putting a spoke in things. There's quite a lot of sympathy, which she doesn't really deserve IMO but it's there all the same. And it could well be lost by a new Tory leader.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
St.Helens is the boundary. Some (Johnny Vegas) have distinctly Lancashire accents. Others obviously Scouse.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Now that Manchester United are managed by a boyhood Liverpool fan perhaps we can see some reconciliation between the two cities.
Although given Manchester United’s overwhelmingly Southern England fan base I’m not that optimistic.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
I always assumed that the unique Scouse accent was due to it being virtually an Irish colony. It even returned an Irish Nationalist MP until (I think) 1919. Manchester has a strong Irish influence too of course but you can still hear the underlying Lancashire.
I grew up in Reading before moving aged 10 to a village between Canterbury and Whitstable. Trying to iron out my Berkshire infused East Kent estuary into RP at Oxford has left me with a horrible bastard hybrid that means I get mistaken for Australian far more often than I’d like.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
20 miles from Carlisle to Lockerbie. Accents are poles apart. 'Course it's only 5 miles to Gretna, but the accents there are a weird mash up of flat northern and lilting scottish.
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
I always assumed that the unique Scouse accent was due to it being virtually an Irish colony. It even returned an Irish Nationalist MP until (I think) 1919. Manchester has a strong Irish influence too of course but you can still hear the underlying Lancashire.
I grew up in Reading before moving aged 10 to a village between Canterbury and Whitstable. Trying to iron out my Berkshire infused East Kent estuary into RP at Oxford has left me with a horrible bastard hybrid that means I get mistaken for Australian far more often than I’d like.
When I first spoke to Mike Smithson he thought I was a Manc.
I’ve never been more offended.
I have a hybrid accent. When I spend a lot of time in Sheffield I turn into a proper Tyke and drop the c bomb every time I say the word can’t.
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
Have fun and good luck everyone. Bye for now.
Shame - will miss your forthright views, even though I agree with pretty much none of them.
I suspect you could take a long break and still come back to "nothing has changed" - but don't stay away too long!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
I always assumed that the unique Scouse accent was due to it being virtually an Irish colony. It even returned an Irish Nationalist MP until (I think) 1919. Manchester has a strong Irish influence too of course but you can still hear the underlying Lancashire.
I grew up in Reading before moving aged 10 to a village between Canterbury and Whitstable. Trying to iron out my Berkshire infused East Kent estuary into RP at Oxford has left me with a horrible bastard hybrid that means I get mistaken for Australian far more often than I’d like.
When I first spoke to Mike Smithson he thought I was a Manc.
I’ve never been more offended.
I have a hybrid accent. When I spend a lot of time in Sheffield I turn into a proper Tyke and drop the c bomb every time I say the word can’t.
Anyone west of the Wash and south of the waveney sounds like a right weirdo. The west country guys get it almost right, but they hint loik the bors round hairabouts
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
The big issue with betting on this market, is that there are rumours that a plan may be hatched to put FOUR candidates to the membership.
That changes the betting dynamics considerably I think.
Surely Boris would be one of the four and then would win a landslide with members?
that worked so well for labour when Jezza was one of the four...
It's dangerous. Pandering to the small membership doesn't make for broad support in the country,
Also, if the Tories retain the approach where MPs can no-confidence the leader who then cannot re-stand it might be a short-lived victory for Boris.
Pretty sure Boris will have thought that one through.
Boris is probably the most hated man in Europe at the moment. He would be an even more divisive leader than Jeremy Corbyn.
What, more than Piers Morgan? A man hated by all and sundry in all corners of the world. A man adorning dart boards from Vladivostok to Johannesburg.
You have something in common with Sarah Palin - as Piers recent interview with her was a little awkward. He isn’t really though as he says things many people agree with but are too afraid to say.
Worth remembering though with Piers is that the more you get offended by him, the more ratings he gets and the more GMB pays him! He thrives professionally and monetarily on controversy.
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
20 miles from Carlisle to Lockerbie. Accents are poles apart. 'Course it's only 5 miles to Gretna, but the accents there are a weird mash up of flat northern and lilting scottish.
The big issue with betting on this market, is that there are rumours that a plan may be hatched to put FOUR candidates to the membership.
That changes the betting dynamics considerably I think.
Surely Boris would be one of the four and then would win a landslide with members?
that worked so well for labour when Jezza was one of the four...
It's dangerous. Pandering to the small membership doesn't make for broad support in the country,
Also, if the Tories retain the approach where MPs can no-confidence the leader who then cannot re-stand it might be a short-lived victory for Boris.
Pretty sure Boris will have thought that one through.
Boris is probably the most hated man in Europe at the moment. He would be an even more divisive leader than Jeremy Corbyn.
What, more than Piers Morgan? A man hated by all and sundry in all corners of the world. A man adorning dart boards from Vladivostok to Johannesburg.
You have something in common with Sarah Palin - as Piers recent interview with her was a little awkward. He isn’t really though as he says things many people agree with but are too afraid to say.
Worth remembering though with Piers is that the more you get offended by him, the more ratings he gets and the more GMB pays him! He thrives professionally and monetarily on controversy.
A professional contrarian. A bit like Jeremy Corbyn, but with brains.
The big issue with betting on this market, is that there are rumours that a plan may be hatched to put FOUR candidates to the membership.
That changes the betting dynamics considerably I think.
Surely Boris would be one of the four and then would win a landslide with members?
that worked so well for labour when Jezza was one of the four...
It's dangerous. Pandering to the small membership doesn't make for broad support in the country,
Also, if the Tories retain the approach where MPs can no-confidence the leader who then cannot re-stand it might be a short-lived victory for Boris.
Pretty sure Boris will have thought that one through.
Boris is probably the most hated man in Europe at the moment. He would be an even more divisive leader than Jeremy Corbyn.
What, more than Piers Morgan? A man hated by all and sundry in all corners of the world. A man adorning dart boards from Vladivostok to Johannesburg.
You have something in common with Sarah Palin - as Piers recent interview with her was a little awkward. He isn’t really though as he says things many people agree with but are too afraid to say.
Worth remembering though with Piers is that the more you get offended by him, the more ratings he gets and the more GMB pays him! He thrives professionally and monetarily on controversy.
I'm puzzled by his appeal, either positive or negative. From the little I've read about him, he's simply tedious.
The big issue with betting on this market, is that there are rumours that a plan may be hatched to put FOUR candidates to the membership.
That changes the betting dynamics considerably I think.
Surely Boris would be one of the four and then would win a landslide with members?
that worked so well for labour when Jezza was one of the four...
It's dangerous. Pandering to the small membership doesn't make for broad support in the country,
Also, if the Tories retain the approach where MPs can no-confidence the leader who then cannot re-stand it might be a short-lived victory for Boris.
Pretty sure Boris will have thought that one through.
Boris is probably the most hated man in Europe at the moment. He would be an even more divisive leader than Jeremy Corbyn.
What, more than Piers Morgan? A man hated by all and sundry in all corners of the world. A man adorning dart boards from Vladivostok to Johannesburg.
You have something in common with Sarah Palin - as Piers recent interview with her was a little awkward. He isn’t really though as he says things many people agree with but are too afraid to say.
Worth remembering though with Piers is that the more you get offended by him, the more ratings he gets and the more GMB pays him! He thrives professionally and monetarily on controversy.
Hence the Piers Morgan game. Every time you think of Piers Morgan, you lose.
@Pulpstar - Coventry/Warwickshire accents - absolutely. There are a few.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
It's interesting how much accents change over relatively short distances in that general area.
Manchester vs Liverpool I always find quite incredible. 20-30 miles in lots of areas results in only slight differences, which usually only locals can really pick upon, between those two cities it is so distinct even those not from the UK can easily spot them.
Yes, that's always puzzled me too.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
I always assumed that the unique Scouse accent was due to it being virtually an Irish colony. It even returned an Irish Nationalist MP until (I think) 1919. Manchester has a strong Irish influence too of course but you can still hear the underlying Lancashire.
I grew up in Reading before moving aged 10 to a village between Canterbury and Whitstable. Trying to iron out my Berkshire infused East Kent estuary into RP at Oxford has left me with a horrible bastard hybrid that means I get mistaken for Australian far more often than I’d like.
The Scouse of Stevie Gerrard is a relatively recent phenomenon. Even in the sixties it was far more similar to other Lancashire accents. Listen to the young Beatles. Apart from John, they were very working class, but they don't have the d sound for th, nor the k sound pronounced as in "loch". My only explanation is that the decline of port traffic and heavy emigration and unemployment led to isolation. Which often breeds stronger accents.
The big issue with betting on this market, is that there are rumours that a plan may be hatched to put FOUR candidates to the membership.
That changes the betting dynamics considerably I think.
Surely Boris would be one of the four and then would win a landslide with members?
that worked so well for labour when Jezza was one of the four...
It's dangerous. Pandering to the small membership doesn't make for broad support in the country,
Also, if the Tories retain the approach where MPs can no-confidence the leader who then cannot re-stand it might be a short-lived victory for Boris.
Pretty sure Boris will have thought that one through.
Boris is probably the most hated man in Europe at the moment. He would be an even more divisive leader than Jeremy Corbyn.
What, more than Piers Morgan? A man hated by all and sundry in all corners of the world. A man adorning dart boards from Vladivostok to Johannesburg.
OK I give you Piers Morgan. A truly ghastly individual. Perhaps I should have said Boris is the most hated politician in Europe. Which I think is unquestionably true.
I just wanted to write to say see you later to everyone. Spending too much time addicted to this site and not enough time getting my work done so requested TSE to temporarily ban me. Will request the ban to be lifted once I've got my work completed. Hopefully it will be before Brexit but that may not be saying much!
Comments
Oh - and am I first?
Never mind: Gardeners' Question Time on soon.
Mordaunt's clearly the best option*.
*For my wallet.
I am available for bookings.
Where I used to live in Southam the accent was very flat, much more east Midlands than west. Coventry definitely has its own accent. My wife was born in Princethorpe, a tiny village halfway between Leamington and Roog-be (Rugby). She has no accent as such but her pronunciations of words (pub, grass, etc) are much more northern than southern. And there are specific words you never hear in London.
Don't they teach any grammar at Eton?
That changes the betting dynamics considerably I think.
Surely Boris would be one of the four and then would win a landslide with members?
https://twitter.com/foxinsoxuk/status/1114064902694559744?s=19
https://twitter.com/tseofpb/status/1113734260870012929?s=21
It's dangerous. Pandering to the small membership doesn't make for broad support in the country,
At present, I expect the Tory vote to splinter sufficiently to "send a message" that results in a Labour win.
It must be one of the most pronounced (sorry!) differences across a short distance. All the more baffling given the long history of trade and transport between the two cities.
The end result is the sort of language up with which we will not put.
Although given Manchester United’s overwhelmingly Southern England fan base I’m not that optimistic.
I grew up in Reading before moving aged 10 to a village between Canterbury and Whitstable. Trying to iron out my Berkshire infused East Kent estuary into RP at Oxford has left me with a horrible bastard hybrid that means I get mistaken for Australian far more often than I’d like.
Have fun and good luck everyone. Bye for now.
I’ve never been more offended.
I have a hybrid accent. When I spend a lot of time in Sheffield I turn into a proper Tyke and drop the c bomb every time I say the word can’t.
I suspect you could take a long break and still come back to "nothing has changed" - but don't stay away too long!
https://twitter.com/skydavidblevins/status/1114164042006978560?s=21
Worth remembering though with Piers is that the more you get offended by him, the more ratings he gets and the more GMB pays him! He thrives professionally and monetarily on controversy.
My only explanation is that the decline of port traffic and heavy emigration and unemployment led to isolation. Which often breeds stronger accents.