ChatterBank0 min ago
"Angry of Tunbridge Wells"
An ABer used this phrase to describe a group of people as having an "angry of tunbridge wells" mentality.
What does that mean and why?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."Tunbridge Wells is traditionally associated with the prim middle classes, especially in the locution "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells". This phrase was apocryphally used to sign a letter to The Times and/or Daily Telegraph some time in the 1920s, and has remained in circulation because of its perceived aptness in describing the inhabitants of the town. Tunbridge Wells is often assumed to be a bastion of the middle classes and comfortably bourgeois."
Think of Daily Mail / Express readers & you wont go far wrong. Anyone with a small outlook on life.
Anti: gay, women, black, jew, single mothers, immigrants, people on benefits, trendy lefties, working class people, access to university education for plebs, loud music, video games, regional accents, etc etc.
Pro: Tory rule for ever, send em back, village greens, band stands, national service, short hair cuts, good healthy outdoor fun & games for children, capital punishment, bullying in schools/army, reduction in benefits, leaving the EU, etc etc
I agree with the previous replies but would add that I think Steve Wright on his Radio One show back in the early eighties, did much to popularise the term by featuring a daily character, apparently calling in to complain about something or other in a comically angry voice.
I believe he was named "Mr Angry" and represented all those faceless correspondents who appear to have nothing better to do than call radio shows and write to newspapers complaining about everything under the sun.
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