CRUMBRIA: 8.03.2026
WITH hundreds of thousands of Brits caught up in the latest Middle East fireworks display, it was red alert time in the stale newsrooms of Crumbria.
Imagine a scene of headless chickens chasing the all-important “local angle” to the big global story of the week.
You know the kind of thing: LOCAL MAN TRAPPED IN WAR ZONE! BARROW COUPLE’S AIRPORT NIGHTMARE!
What the local media really wanted, of course, was a heavily traumatised Cumbrian voice describing terror from the skies, explosions on the ground and the nightmare of trying to get a flight home.
Instead, our hardy Cumbrians “trapped” abroad refused to indulge the narrative.
That’s why we ended up with a woman from Carlisle calmly recalling the puzzlement of “alarms going off,” all from the comfort of her hotel room.
And in what must have come as a crushing blow to BBC Radio Dumbria, stranded Carlisle gadgie, Lee Johnson, failed to provide anywhere near the required level of hysteria.
“It’s quite weird to say this, but you kind of get used to it,” an unflustered Lee mused on its leading news bulletin yesterday.
“You kind of get used to the emergency, you know, a jet going past and rockets being intercepted and that.
“It becomes kind of normal. Most people are just going round with their day-to-day business, really.”
How thoroughly inconsiderate to the top story of the hour!
Meanwhile, down in Barrovia, the dying, if not dead, local rag, the Evening Snail may also have been wincing at one of its recent pieces of travel guidance for readers.
Three weeks ago, The Snail ran a clickbait piece about where to go to escape the county’s “rain and grey skies” under the headline: “Where Cumbrians are going on holiday this February.”
Among the destinations boldly recommended were: “Dubai and other parts of the Arabian Gulf” for what The Snail described as a “reliable winter sun” break for those wanting a much-needed “blast of warmth.”
Nothing says stress-free February like a fortnight in a geopolitical tinderbox!
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