The arena is 'in community use' I am part of the community and I use it, as are every other person who uses it. It is run by a the Tigers Trust, who are a charity and who do a tremendous amount of good work in the community. I don't see what the problem is that Angus Young and the HDM are trying to dig up? Best wishes to everyone for 2023 by the way.
Wishing you all a fantastic new year. Peace, happiness and tranquility, love and three points every game we play. Have a bloody good un. Peace above all
For what it's worth I disagreed with what the Allams did when they kicked out other clubs. It was fairly clear that wasn't the intention when it was set up, regardless of poor / vague contract wording. However it's long done, and Acun bought the club with the current arrangements in place, so I've no idea why he/City should be expected to change back to something he's never even known. And presumably if it was done then the cost should be shared by both clubs that use the stadium?... Tigers Trust are doing a cracking job as far as I can see. There's always knock on consequences too. Presumably the clubs now pay rent at their new homes. That's hardly fair on those owners if it's switched back on a whim. The fact the library closed and Hull College moved out are interesting (I used the gym in the College section, but always thought it was odd having a gym so close to the Airco) Presumably just economic / business decisions which probably reduced access to facilities for a far more diverse group of people in the community? Odd position from Angus, unless he knows something already...
Fun for all the family here. https://www.gazettelive.co.uk/whats...0Dh9WjarM6I1WaNOv1xXfJAGr4GvQkAqR5LnxkbJoGftU
it's sad how utter ****e modern journalism is gone are the days of fantastic indepth articles and in are the clickbait utter ****e for the declining iq of society
I was watching something the other day about AI being used for articles, you just type in a topic and how many words you want and the computer searches the internet for details and writes the article for you. Apparently it's quite common for articles to be put together with no human involvement.
John Fieldhouse was doing that decades ago. The views expressed in my posts are not necessarily mine.
Depends where you look. For football, there's plenty of absolute rubbish but then there's The Athletic which does really good in-depth stuff. I think it's a bit unfair to talk about journalism as a whole on the basis of clickbait local paper website stories.
I wasn’t paying that much attention, but glanced at a post from a teacher talking about using it for lesson plans as well!
Appearing on Good Morning Britain today alongside hots Susanna Reid and Ben Shepherd ,not a very professional way to describe a couple of journalists.
You stay classy Ffs West Hull versus East Hull: Is one side really more 'rough' than the other? Hullensians have strong opinions about which side of the river you're from but in reality, it's more complicated than that please log in to view this image A generic view of Southcoates Lane in east Hull The divide between west Hull and east Hull is perhaps one of the most baffling things for newcomers to understand when they arrive in our city. It's mostly good-natured, from slightly-drunk strangers in nightclubs demanding, "East Hull or West Hull?" in a madcap way of greeting, or banter from others saying west Hull is "stuck up" or east Hull is "rough". This rivalry might be rooted in rugby but some of the stereotypes have lingered. One of these is that east Hull is somehow "not as safe". I'm completely disloyal and, after spending a year in north Hull, and then a period of renting in west Hull, I finally decided to buy my first house in the Southcoates area of east Hull and was surprised at how many raised eyebrows the news received.
The cheeky feckers have hiked the price yet again, God knows why daft gits keep buying it. Oh, nearly forgot, it now costs me £1.35 a day. The views expressed in my posts are not necessarily mine.