
u/Ready_Split1335

Why RTD2 is the greatest doctor who era of all time
doctorwhotv.co.ukThese 2 were my favourite couple of the entire race. Be more Margo is what I live up to now.
There really is nowhere quite like the Yorkshire Dales on a bright day.
I swear Cornwall has completely ruined my sense of distance.
I was talking to a friend from Manchester who couldn't understand why I was complaining about a 35-minute drive. The more I thought about it, the more I realised living here has completely changed my idea of what's nearby. A journey that people elsewhere wouldn't think twice about somehow feels like a proper expedition down here. Has living in Cornwall changed your idea of distance too, or is that just me getting lazy?
The talent, the look, the icon.
Absolutely breathtaking photo of Amy.
How can beauty that is living be anything but true 😭😭💔💔💔
What's keeping you listening to radio in 2026?
Between Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube, podcasts and countless streaming services, we have more listening options than ever before. Yet millions of people still tune into radio every day. For me, it's the combination of live content, presenter personalities and the feeling that anything can happen. What keeps you listening to radio when there are so many alternatives available now?
An incredible shot of a classic Yorkshire view.
What's the most overrated enthusiast car you've ever driven?
Every enthusiast eventually drives something they've heard praised for years, only to come away wondering what all the fuss was about. Doesn't mean it's bad, just that it failed to live up to the hype. What car left you feeling that way and why?
What's the property investing lesson that nobody believes until they experience it themselves?
Property investing often looks straightforward from the outside. Buy a property, find a tenant and collect rent. The reality is usually far more complicated. Looking back, what's the lesson that sounded obvious when someone told you, but only truly made sense after you experienced it firsthand?
What's the most useful EE perk you've actually used?
Whenever people discuss mobile networks, the conversation usually focuses on price, signal and data allowances. But I'm intrested about the extras. Whether it's roaming, broadband discounts, device upgrades, customer service or anything else, what's an EE benefit you've genuinely got value from rather than something that just sounded good in marketing?
Young drivers are paying genuinely life changing amounts for car insurance and the conversation around it doesn't reflect how serious it actually is
I spoke to someone recently who is paying more annually for insurance on a small car than some people pay for rent. Not a sports car, not a modified vehicle, just a normal small hatchback. The numbers at the younger end of the market are extreme enough that they're genuinely shaping what people can and can't do with their lives and it barely gets mentioned outside of the people directly affected.
What’s the most aggressively middle class Amex experience you’ve had in the UK?
For me it was watching someone confidently put down an Amex Platinum in a tiny independent café, the machine rejecting it instantly, then both people doing the polite British ah no worries at all dance while pretending this exact interaction has not happened thousands of times before.
Amex ownership in the UK still feels like a strange combination of premium perks and occasional public embarrassment.
Yorkshire Coastline is the true remedy for all of life’s chaos 🌊🧘🌼
@ visitnorthyork
We have seen Chabuddy try everything from the Champagne Steam Rooms and the Brown Bandits to Kold FM and Kurupt FM merchandise. Realistically, which of his many entrepreneurial ventures or side hustles do you think could have actually succeeded if they had a bit more backing?