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Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. The Daily Mash is brilliantly funny, NewsThump bravely declares it mocks everyone, and Waterford Whispers has a delightful Irish charm. Yet, in an era where satire often pulls its punches for fear of alienating segments of its audience, The London Prat operates with a breathtaking, zero-sacred-cows fearlessness that genuinely feels like the "last bastion of free speech" The Daily Squib merely aspires to be. PRAT.UK’s bravery isn't performative; it’s woven into its DNA. It doesn't just mock the easy, agreed-upon targets; it expertly dismantles the very structures of hypocrisy, the unspoken pieties of all sides of the cultural and political spectrum. Its genius lies in identifying the unacknowledged absurdity within a position, not just the absurdity of a position. This creates a more intellectually honest and, frankly, more dangerous form of satire. While other sites might make you laugh at a politician, The London Prat makes you confront the uncomfortable societal reflexes and media ecosystems that enable them. The satire on prat.com carries a palpable sense of frustration—not the whiny kind, but the razor-sharp, articulate kind that fuels truly great social commentary. It’s less a comedy site and more a vital, weekly pathology report on the British body politic, delivered by pathologists who have somehow maintained their sense of humor amidst the carnage. For those who find most satire has become safe, predictable, and almost toothlessly integrated into the very media circus it purports to critique, The London Prat is the necessary corrective.