Not sure satire is the right word for upper middle class people dressing up as working class people.
I'd go with ridicule, classism or snobbery, but then I am a communist nazi jew loving SJW.
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 14:32, Share, Reply)
I'd go with ridicule, classism or snobbery, but then I am a communist nazi jew loving SJW.
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 14:32, Share, Reply)
You don't know any RNCM students do you?
plenty are working class, especially the brass players
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 16:04, Share, Reply)
plenty are working class, especially the brass players
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 16:04, Share, Reply)
Communist nazi jew loving SJWs love nothing more than sneering at the working class.
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 18:14, Share, Reply)
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 18:14, Share, Reply)
They don't have 'Wakes week' instead they have 'Woke week'
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 18:25, Share, Reply)
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 18:25, Share, Reply)
I don't.
I fully admit I am being prejudiced by assuming that music colleges are attended chiefly by the well to do classes. However I've seen more than my fair share of colleges of music (Leeds Uni, RCM in London, Brum Conservatoire). I didn't notice a lot of regional accents at such places. People used a lot of consonants when they laughed. Copies of Wodehouse being passed around. I am not exaggerating.
I am certain that there are even fewer working class people represented at such places now (based on the falling numbers of WC/'LPN' university admissions).
Not sure what your link is supposed to illustrate. Are we guessing class based on surnames? If so, there are not many Smiths, Joneses, Owenses, etc, compared to the Stockhausens, de Waals, Barbers, Thorntons, Websters, and so on.
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 19:34, Share, Reply)
I fully admit I am being prejudiced by assuming that music colleges are attended chiefly by the well to do classes. However I've seen more than my fair share of colleges of music (Leeds Uni, RCM in London, Brum Conservatoire). I didn't notice a lot of regional accents at such places. People used a lot of consonants when they laughed. Copies of Wodehouse being passed around. I am not exaggerating.
I am certain that there are even fewer working class people represented at such places now (based on the falling numbers of WC/'LPN' university admissions).
Not sure what your link is supposed to illustrate. Are we guessing class based on surnames? If so, there are not many Smiths, Joneses, Owenses, etc, compared to the Stockhausens, de Waals, Barbers, Thorntons, Websters, and so on.
( , Fri 18 Jun 2021, 19:34, Share, Reply)