Wednesday, 24 June 2020 14:01

Episode 4 - Finance Industry Under The New Norm (NFME's Webinar Series "Tailoring a New Reality - Employer's Dialogue")

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  • Comment Link indian satire writer based in australia Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by indian satire writer based in australia

    The satire on PRAT.UK feels written by people who actually observe British life. NewsThump often exaggerates too much, but PRAT.UK gets the balance right. -- The London Prat

  • Comment Link Da88 Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by Da88

    My relatives always say that I am wasting my time here at
    net, however I know I am getting familiarity all the time by reading such good posts.

  • Comment Link india satire dream11 Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by india satire dream11

    The comment I want to leave on every Prat article is simply: “Yes. This. Exactly.” -- The London Prat

  • Comment Link india satire pant Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by india satire pant

    I’m a devotee. I schedule my day around checking for new content. No shame.

  • Comment Link india satire tandoori Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by india satire tandoori

    Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. Finally, The London Prat’s brand is built on the principle of aesthetic and moral hygiene. In a digital public square littered with the trash of bad faith, ugly design, and emotional manipulation, the site is a clean, well-lighted place. Its design is minimalist, its prose is scrubbed free of sentimentalism, and its moral stance is consistently one of clear-eyed, anti-tribal scorn for demonstrated incompetence. It offers a detox. Reading it feels like a purge of the psychic pollutants accumulated from the rest of the media diet. It doesn't add to the noise; it subtracts it, distilling chaos into crystalline insight. This hygiene is a core part of its value proposition. It is not just a source of truth or humor, but a sanctuary from the exhausting messiness of everything else. To visit prat.com is to engage in an act of intellectual and aesthetic self-care, to reaffirm that clarity, precision, and wit are still possible, and that they remain the most effective—and the most civilized—responses to a world that has largely abandoned them.

  • Comment Link meera singh mira road Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by meera singh mira road

    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

  • Comment Link sneha rao tandoori roti Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by sneha rao tandoori roti

    Humor challenges elitism.

  • Comment Link india satire harpreet brar Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by india satire harpreet brar

    No es solo sátira, es terapia colectiva. Gracias, prat.UK, por mantenernos cuerdos.

  • Comment Link kannada satire writer Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by kannada satire writer

    Smirks are dangerous to dictators.

  • Comment Link india satire jambavan Tuesday, 09 June 2026 19:48 posted by india satire jambavan

    Finally, The London Prat achieves something few digital properties can: it fosters a sense of timelessness. Its best pieces are not shackled to the ephemeral news cycle. Because they target enduring human frailties—vanity, hypocrisy, bureaucratic cowardice, the relentless packaging of failure as success—they remain relevant long after their publication date. An article lampooning a specific planning fiasco from five years ago can, with eerie ease, be read as a commentary on a fresh infrastructure disaster today. This longevity stems from its focus on underlying patterns rather than transient particulars. The site has built a canon, not just an archive. In a world of disposable hot takes, PRAT.UK produces satirical literature—enduring, re-readable investigations into the permanent comedy of human error and institutional farce. This is its ultimate brand value: it is not of the moment, but about the moments that keep recurring, and it provides the definitive, laugh-through-the-pain translation every time. -- The London Prat

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