The side of Cornwall, UK that tourists don’t see - 8 Worst Places

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
734 044 Рет қаралды

We visited Cornwall next on our mission to dig out the worst Turdtowns in the UK. This trip was a bit of an eye opener to say the least. Who would have thought such places existed in the tourist capital of England! Cornwall is known for its pristine beaches and lovely countryside. St Ives is in the news a lot for being the ultimate place to say. It in the middle of this big old county there’s some former mining towns that are suffering and worthy of being called the Cornish Turdtowns!

Пікірлер
  • So, Cornwall is the second poorest region in Europe (I pretty much knew that, living in Dorset and it having been on the local news a few years back) but has the lowest crime rate in the country. Doesn't that give lie to the claim that poverty is the cause of crime?

    @shirleyswaine4701@shirleyswaine4701 Жыл бұрын
    • It is very strange. It doesn’t make sense when you think about it.

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • The same is true of West Virginia.

      @johnkeane1419@johnkeane1419 Жыл бұрын
    • It's also among the least diverse of the counties.

      @goodlookinouthomie1757@goodlookinouthomie1757 Жыл бұрын
    • You haven't taken into account of population and other demographics in the comparison. Greetings from Cyprus.

      @henryjohnfacey8213@henryjohnfacey8213 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Turdtowns If you find a contradiction, then you have used a false premise. Aristotle said that are are no contradictions, there are only false premises.

      @EdMcF1@EdMcF1 Жыл бұрын
  • As someone from Rotherham I thought all those towns looked quite nice. They were all clean with no fly tipping waste, litter or dog sh*t laying in the street and nothing was on fire😂

    @lightfootpathfinder8218@lightfootpathfinder8218 Жыл бұрын
    • It is pretty good , this guy has done drive through comments on each place he knows absolutely nothing about . If you want a shit hole town .. Londistan..it has the very list of excreta he's listed in huge volumes 😂

      @jasonhartley1305@jasonhartley1305 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jasonhartley1305 I agree lol I think our glorious capital beats everywhere else in the country when it comes to that but sadly a lot of places are not far behind

      @lightfootpathfinder8218@lightfootpathfinder8218 Жыл бұрын
    • In my city ,it's human shit that's a problem due to the druggies,

      @romystumpy1197@romystumpy1197 Жыл бұрын
    • Every UK city has plenty of dogshit everywhere, its a given

      @kevwalker5714@kevwalker5714 Жыл бұрын
    • @MiGrant Soul everyone can have an opinion on a place. Also if someone said to me you can live in poverty in Cornwall or live in poverty in south Yorkshire I'd pick Cornwall purely because it looks "nice on the eye". Better to be penny less in the fresh air than in the concrete jungle

      @lightfootpathfinder8218@lightfootpathfinder8218 Жыл бұрын
  • This series is exposing that at least 20% of the UK is in terminal decline.

    @danchanner7887@danchanner7887 Жыл бұрын
    • When was the incline? Before ww1?

      @TheCrackbinge@TheCrackbinge Жыл бұрын
    • Sad thing is, I don't think you're wrong. I don't think the people with their hands on the purse strings really care though.

      @StuBobsGhost@StuBobsGhost Жыл бұрын
    • Lived in the North early 80s,would sadly see towns on their knees then,we are now seeing this on a national scale.This channel is properly one of the best I have seen to show this.

      @amandabrown3946@amandabrown3946 Жыл бұрын
    • Turdtowns is going places… for sure.

      @markcompton6750@markcompton6750 Жыл бұрын
    • Only 20%......more like 80%

      @onge1981@onge1981 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for all your hard work in putting this series together. Well as a 55 year old working class man, it looks to me that we’ve had approximately 45 years of deliberate government underinvestment in our country, that have decimated these working class towns from north to south of this land.

    @bradleyscott49@bradleyscott49 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree and would go even further. I genuinely believe that the decimation of which you speak is being done by design. It's like a controlled demolition of the country.

      @CelticSaint@CelticSaint Жыл бұрын
    • wanna know why ? because cornwall council decides where to send our taxes each year mostly it's kept within Truro and spent on Truro and that's about it.

      @catcruickshank5042@catcruickshank5042 Жыл бұрын
    • Thatcher's legacy. Along with Reagan in the States. Low skilled, low wage economy breeds poverty but keeps rich cronies happy. Look at the behaviour of our politicians for example giving billions to their mates for fake PPE.

      @spencergregory8049@spencergregory804911 ай бұрын
    • All that funding lost when we left the EU won't help.

      @pip1723@pip17238 ай бұрын
    • Yep! 🌼

      @kettleions@kettleions7 ай бұрын
  • I've lived in Redruth all my life. I remember going into town and seeing it when it was busy, with lots of different shops and friendly people. Now there are only hairdressers, cafes, charity shops and random art shops that bring nothing to the community. People are angry now, not only because we are spending more money to live there than other nicer places, but because the people in charge of the town have no idea what they are doing, and you have to travel all the way to Truro if you want to buy a new pair of underwear, socks or shoes. We have a ton of homeless and druggies who get shipped off down here, and then they are left to do whatever they want with no repercussion. Every year there is a new "gang" of kids, who think they can do what they want (probably because the cops do nothing except laugh with them) who throw stuff at the windows of the town shops and peoples flats (mine included) breaking them, which then sit there for years looking like crap. They don't make any building inhabitable, in Town, because they're "Listed Buildings" and then charge people the same, or more, as it is to live in Truro; leaving us to live in a single pane windowed, black mould infested building.

    @XxLittleALBxX@XxLittleALBxX Жыл бұрын
    • The side of Cornwall, UK that tourists don’t see - 8 Worst Places 0730am 14.6.23 from margate to redruth - all the streets look the same.

      @JJONNYREPP@JJONNYREPP11 ай бұрын
    • This is happening across the country sadly.

      @stellayates4227@stellayates422710 ай бұрын
    • @@stellayates4227 Comments on ‘The side of Cornwall, UK that tourists don’t see - 8 Worst Places’ 0934am 8.7.23 sorry?

      @JJONNYREPP@JJONNYREPP10 ай бұрын
    • I was born and live in Penzance word for word agree with you

      @WELLBRAN@WELLBRAN9 ай бұрын
    • @@WELLBRAN Comments on ‘The side of Cornwall, UK that tourists don’t see - 8 Worst Places’ 20.7.23 2116pmmm enjoyed Cornwall as a child -as i did most of the south cost - on hols... as for living there... probably as drab as the rest of the nation. it'd be cool during summer season... but i surmise just as grim as anywhere else... though nowhere is as bad as where you actually are at the time of hating. that's for sure...

      @JJONNYREPP@JJONNYREPP9 ай бұрын
  • I don't live in Cornwall but I've been to plenty of Cornish towns. I've also been to Leicester, Sheffield, Bradford, Dewsbury, Halifax, Boston, Doncaster, London and many more and I can tell you where I'd rather live. It's a sad truth that this country is in decline but that's not limited to Cornwall - it's EVERYWHERE. And it's largely government sponsored damage to the economy coupled with a pathological need to kill all town centres.

    @ripvanwinkle3509@ripvanwinkle3509 Жыл бұрын
    • Forty years of being governed by self-serving spivs. What you say is true: I fear this country is on a death spiral.

      @russellbishop5995@russellbishop5995 Жыл бұрын
    • I was born near Bradford. And worked there. Now live in SE Cornwall. I know where I will stay whatever anyone says. The influx of tourists is the worse thing mainly because you cannot get anywhere or park; doctors, shops, vets etc. All very difficult.

      @cynthiastogden7000@cynthiastogden7000 Жыл бұрын
    • You can thank the world economic forum for the global decline

      @sophiawoods6748@sophiawoods67487 ай бұрын
    • The killing of town centres began in the 1970's with the pedestrianisation of high streets and the growth of out of town supermarkets.

      @cornishhh@cornishhh4 ай бұрын
    • The killing of town centres is due to less demands for shops being open due to more people shopping online which is more convenient and less time consuming, hence why more shops and businesses are closing down now !!!

      @jonpark5203@jonpark52033 ай бұрын
  • The worst thing about Camborne is that not every train stops there on Wednesdays.

    @mikebrown3772@mikebrown3772 Жыл бұрын
    • Classic Jethro quote there 👍

      @dannyhtheretrogamingmaster9548@dannyhtheretrogamingmaster95483 ай бұрын
    • True 😂😂😂😂

      @russcooke5671@russcooke5671Ай бұрын
    • Yeh that's a real pain 😤

      @MaggieTD@MaggieTDАй бұрын
  • Fun fact about Camborne, in the 18th/19th century the Camborne and Redruth district was the richest mining area in the world. I live in Camborne and I actually got called a "rich Cornish tory" the other day when I was debating with someone online 😂 So many people north of the Tamar bridge assume everyone in Cornwall has 3 houses and spends 12 hours a day on the beach. If only they knew most of us can't even afford to live here, with some of the highest house prices and lowest wages in the country

    @Tom1k9@Tom1k9 Жыл бұрын
    • Mate so true, I’m from St Austell and I go university in Portsmouth. When I say how poor Cornwall is. I get privileged Londoners tell me how I’m wrong. So infuriating!

      @niallblackbeard5436@niallblackbeard54365 ай бұрын
    • I used to live in Plymouth and visited Cornwall a few times for the day, mostly though occasionally for a night or two. There were a lot of people, even in the 80s, who were only employed in the late spring spring and summer tourist season when they worked long hours and were unemployed all winter. These people can't afford to get on the housing ladder and now couldn't find anywhere to rent because of all the retired incomers and second homeowners.

      @lemsip207@lemsip2073 ай бұрын
    • ​@@niallblackbeard5436 As a fellow st Austell boy. I'm from a village called Bugle, I live in Plymouth now. You would be surprised how much the local Plymouth people despise us Cornish folk. I thought Cornwall & Devon were really good friends until I lived here for the past 10 years.

      @172louis@172louisАй бұрын
    • Camborne here too and I couldn't agree more

      @jennyandrews1159@jennyandrews11595 күн бұрын
  • I live in Cornwall and every town you mentioned has a very high, excuse the pun, drug problem. My best mate of 25 years moved to Penzanze and it definitely contributed to his decline in mental health and drug addiction then death!!. Something needs to be done for the whole of Cornwall because the drug problem is in EVERY place!! RIP JOE 🙏

    @astrozombie548@astrozombie548 Жыл бұрын
    • Penzance is well known for this. The theory is at some time they get on a train and don't get off until thrown off, which happens at the end of the line. It's not actually a dangerous place but there are a lot of people with a lot of issues.

      @fatbelly27@fatbelly27 Жыл бұрын
    • Big drug problem here in rural France. I briefly went out with a French journalist who had spent years researching the problem and it's link to sui***e. The tragedy is, she remains prohibited from publishing her findings.... Presumably because 'The French countryside is great?' Best wishes to you. 🌞

      @nigelcarren@nigelcarren Жыл бұрын
    • A lot of my family grew up in bodmin and I have only heard terrible things about the drug problem there. Its no wonder there are so many flat earthers and other conspiracy theorists there as well.

      @TristanBanks@TristanBanks Жыл бұрын
    • it is a severe problem here. someone very close to us died as a result not so long ago. Even the rural villages around the towns are rife with the problem.

      @KernowFishy@KernowFishy Жыл бұрын
    • Bude is FULL of rehomed drug addicts and paedophiles!!

      @Amber-ch6fu@Amber-ch6fu Жыл бұрын
  • Former mining towns are always grim. Single employer monocultures, where everyone who can gets out. Those left behind duke it out on Saturday nights or get wasted. In their hey day most of them would have been thriving communities, with social activities that go along with employment and money.

    @borderlands6606@borderlands6606 Жыл бұрын
    • I know, I sometimes have to go to Redruth, I look round at the buildings and house’s they are very grand looking, it must have been really affluent once.

      @jetlagsenior8491@jetlagsenior8491 Жыл бұрын
  • Redruth a town so bad they built a bypass to avoid it, then they built a new bypass to bypass the bypass. True story I live here.

    @stevewaite6461@stevewaite6461 Жыл бұрын
  • I have lived my life near to St Austell and whilst there are some bad parts in Cornwall I really wouldn't want to live anywhere else. The UK seems to be in a death spiral and over the next decade or so I can imagine a huge influx of people trying to escape from the cities.

    @CelticSaint@CelticSaint Жыл бұрын
    • Dead right mate. The bigger cities are a ticking time bomb. We're moving to Cornwall next year, and don't care about the 'awful' areas there. If you put Cornish folk in Manchester for a month, they'd realise what real, crime, racial issues and dumps are.

      @lee4171@lee4171 Жыл бұрын
    • Not just a death rattle - but the sphincter has gone too.

      @domino5392@domino5392 Жыл бұрын
    • i agree i live north from brum and its rough stabbing and shootings on a daily, going on holiday to cornwall in 9 days

      @avoidoneu4061@avoidoneu406110 ай бұрын
    • @@avoidoneu4061good luck

      @swp5411@swp54119 ай бұрын
    • That death spiral has built up speed since brexit means brexit.

      @briancohenthepfjmassive.4769@briancohenthepfjmassive.47699 ай бұрын
  • Lived near Truro my entire life. The list is accurate. Redruth is known as Red-rough for example. But compared to many places around the UK it really isn't that bad unless you decide to go on nights out on Friday / Saturday nights, particularly St Austell. The biggest issue with Cornwall is people don't like change which stops any form of plans being approved. There has been planning for a new stadium near Truro for over 13 years, we still don't have one. Then the Hall for Cornwall, which caters for a small age group of people, was given £18m to refurbish the building. The wrong type of people making these decisions at the Council, only catering for themselves and close allies, much like most of the UK!

    @nunonuno01@nunonuno017 ай бұрын
    • Re: About the Hall for Cornwall and the council only catering for themselves and close allies: It's pretty similar here in Australia and from what I've heard NZ and Canada aren't much different either. What's with that?

      @TheDemocrab@TheDemocrab3 ай бұрын
    • I am Cornish and most of the planning approvals are stopped by the people who are not Cornish ,thats a fact, its also a fact that Cornwall doesn't get the funding it was promised, and now the government is using Cornwall as its dumping ground for immigrants, also has anyone really looked at the amount of building postage stamp boxes for so called housing which are a complete eyesore, these shitholes are springing up everywhere ,WHY? they most certainly are not affordable housing, and certainly not for the Cornish people.

      @mydogky@mydogky2 ай бұрын
    • Completely agree

      @thomasmatthews80@thomasmatthews80Ай бұрын
  • The irony is it's a lot worse during the holidays when the people from real turdtowns show up with their turdtown ways.

    @antman5474@antman5474 Жыл бұрын
    • Totally agree

      @bloodmoon1956@bloodmoon1956 Жыл бұрын
    • The reasons these towns are on here is that they don't become mutton dressed as lamb for the tourists every year, they are unapologetically authentic. I am happy to live on Liskeard, it remains largely untouched by tourists (thankfully!)

      @gemmaadams1270@gemmaadams1270 Жыл бұрын
    • @@gemmaadams1270 we love liskeard and been many times everyone has always welcomed us - Daniel West Midlands

      @danielrussell446@danielrussell446 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you very true very true

      @jamessearle2339@jamessearle2339 Жыл бұрын
    • Newquay is the worst - i dont think ive ever heard a cornish accent in Newquay

      @carlyonbay45@carlyonbay45 Жыл бұрын
  • Ironically, St Austell town centre was knocked down about 10ish years ago for the new White River Place development, which caused the beginning of the decline as people got used to going elsewhere if they could (usually Truro), and the town council put the rents up to claw money back which then pushed a lot of the independent businesses out. Add to it the two homeless shelters with the residents' incumbent problems and you've got yourself a winning TurdTown. I used to work outside of the town centre and my lift would frequently see drug deals going on in the car park, also someone once drove into the carpark of our building, in full view of all the windows, pulled down his trousers and injected something into his groin area. Also had a car left there which was later set on fire as an insurance job. Classy. People used to leave the building in twos, especially in the winter. Also the saying about Bodmin is because of St Lawrence's Hospital, which was a mental asylum. The old building has been demolished but the current hospital still houses all our mental health wards. Hope the chap in the fountain is doing OK.

    @creepykylie1017@creepykylie1017 Жыл бұрын
    • The "lovely" White River Place, which began sinking just a couple of years after it was built and STILL leaks like fuckery. I use the gym there andeach timeut rains the poor staff have to place bins everywhere in the gym to catch the rainwater. The cowardly little cider-swilling cockroaches in the churchyard are another example of the pride in this town. Real credit to society, they are. Then you have the Baptist nutjobs encouraging the junkies from up-country and making things worse. The wonderful Thin Endhas gone, as has the best oubs. The Scorps kept the local rat population under control and you could actually have a night out back then without being sexually harassed or someone starting a fight.

      @domino5392@domino5392 Жыл бұрын
    • I did a stint living in Snozzle. The signs were there for the decay back then in 2004/2005. But it was much nicer then. Also it is by the sea. Charles town is part of St Austell and that has a beach etc. There were some great people back then living in Snozzle so it's kinda sad to see it decline. Ironically, I live in Plymouth now (which was on the Devon list) and despite it having some grotty parts, Plym has sunk a lot of money into regeneration. The city centre and the Barbican is better for nights out. Not many cities that you can walk from the centre to the seafront down some steps of the Hoe sea front and sunbathe on little beaches. It seems to be a big hit with University students. So yep, St Austell looks really awful but sad to see it decline. Plymouth is up and coming - glad I moved ftom Snozzle 17 years ago.

      @Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK@Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK Жыл бұрын
    • @@Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK Charlestown looks like a shanty town now with all the popup toursty shit. Ruined. We used to slide down the clay chutes as kids and came out looking like ghosts and then the guys working there would swear and chase us off. We were little shits, tbh.

      @domino5392@domino539211 ай бұрын
    • @@domino5392 oh that's a shame. I used to enjoy Charlestown on my days off from being a local pub worker. Used to jog up along the cliffs around there too. Are you St Austell born and bred? We probably knew similar people depending on our age. I've got good memories of St Austell living, St Austell people and exploring all the pretty areas near by. Fingers crossed that Snozzle town gets a face-lift and becomes up and coming 🙂

      @Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK@Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK11 ай бұрын
    • I went to college and lived in the town for a little while. Bloody horrible place...

      @Abaddonscodpiece785@Abaddonscodpiece78510 ай бұрын
  • You got that spot on, just subscribed. Loved the comment from Rotherham saying it all looks nice as there was no fly tipping and nothing was on fire 😂

    @sidweazel2883@sidweazel2883 Жыл бұрын
  • Really enjoying in these videos. I think you guys a doing a great service highlighting these much forgotten areas.

    @MATTY110981@MATTY110981 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks my friend

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
  • Being from Kernow, I can concur with the conclusions here. It's very funny, but depressingly accurate. Cornwall has suffered for hundreds of years.

    @jonathanbailey1597@jonathanbailey1597 Жыл бұрын
    • Mostly caused by people who think its Kernow ,its england ,simples

      @martinjeffery3590@martinjeffery3590 Жыл бұрын
    • @@martinjeffery3590 Oh god. One of those idiots ('Trolls' I believe the term is). Funnily enough, the evidence actually stacks up against you. Without equivocation.

      @jonathanbailey1597@jonathanbailey1597 Жыл бұрын
  • Ive been to Cornwall many many times over the last forty years. In the summer it’s beautiful. But very quite in winter. You have to call a cab to get run over. But all In I love it there. Beautiful roads to drive around on. Fantastic beaches. Great food.

    @russcooke5671@russcooke5671Ай бұрын
  • Your descriptions of each place you mention are very accurate. I met my wife (a Cornish girl) in Newquay in 1967. Then it was a great place with lots of nightlife, fabulous beaches and surfing. We went back in 2017 to find the place where we met. Newquay is now a shit-hole. We lived in London when we married but we then moved to St Austell in 1974. Easily the worst years of my life. Not much work and not much pay - a complete struggle. What was worse, though, was the fact that 75% of people would not speak to me once they found out I came from London. I managed to last three years down there but could not stand it anymore. We came back to London and civilisation.

    @derekkearey3171@derekkearey3171 Жыл бұрын
    • Your obvously not working class because Newquay is a very nice town, lots of restaurants, bars, live music, beaches walks etc. You clearly are stuck in the past where everyone says how beautiful it was, i agree with this also as i started in Newquay in 1976, yes it is different but so is every town in the country if not every bloody where.

      @SILVERFOXSOCIETY@SILVERFOXSOCIETY Жыл бұрын
    • Civilisation 😂

      @MonstaTrapz@MonstaTrapz10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@SILVERFOXSOCIETY I think he's just old enough to remember how beautiful it was. That's not being stuck in the past. I saw an old VHS tape of Newquay back in the 80s. And the place just looked so much better and cleaner. And that was the 80s. The general consensus is that it was even better in the 60s and 70s. Plus the stuff that made Newquay great has gone. The Blue Lagoon was a great swimming venue, that looks like it needs tearing down now (well Last time I seen it anyway), I remember the Harbour looking so much better with way more things to do for kids like swings and crazy golf, and kids were allowed to jump in the water. Run to the Sun used to be filled with kids in the town shooting water pistols at each other, and the street market at Lusty Glaze was great. And the nightlife was Newquay was SOO much better than it is now. The Irish pub and bikers bar long gone.

      @Guttlegob@Guttlegob9 ай бұрын
    • My parents moved to Cornwall in 1973 and I ended up going to School there . The Cornish kids wouldn't speak to anyone who wasn't from Cornwall so I ended up mixing with the kids who weren't Cornish for the first few months but eventually they accepted us . There really didn't like anyone from "up country" in the early 1970s . After leaving Cornwall about 20 years ago now I wish I had grown up somewhere else .When I left I realized how insular it is down there .

      @tenfootgoatman2285@tenfootgoatman22858 ай бұрын
  • I'm from Hampshire but lived in Cornwall for 2 years. Having lived in other parts of the country too, the wages in Cornwall were by far the worst I'd encountered. You were lucky to get £10 an hour in a skilled position. The next thing I encountered was the phenomenonally high rent and property price in general, in 2017 the pokey 2 bedroom flat I rented was 750 a month. Throw 500 in for bills on top of that . A simple maths equation left me with only pocket change at the end of each month. Your mortgage eligibility in the UK is 4 times your annual salary, so if you earn £10 an hour that's £17000 a year which is a mortgage eligibility of £71000. There are no houses in Cornwall at that price. So essentially you could work your arse off and never be able to buy your own place. I don't blame cornish people for getting on the drugs, they're fighting a losing battle

    @ap5194@ap5194 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks AP. It is really good to get a breakdown like that. Here in a seaside town in Australia as a carpenter you will earn the equivalent of 25 pounds an hour but the average house is around 500,000 pounds.

      @CplusO2@CplusO2 Жыл бұрын
    • @I Began good luck finding that 👍🏻

      @ap5194@ap5194 Жыл бұрын
    • @I Began I think the real measure is how many years does it take to pay off a home. Seems like it is easier in Europe and the UK than in Australia, Canada or New Zealand. Still, I love my life in au.

      @CplusO2@CplusO2 Жыл бұрын
    • @I Began 80000 is 9k more than 71k. Again, good luck finding a house in Cornwall for 71k

      @ap5194@ap5194 Жыл бұрын
    • @I Began What a life to live spending your entire wage on a mortgage to live in a tiny 1 bedroom flat. That's if the estate agent gives you the time of day when you explain your wage just covers the mortgage and not bills too, any estate agent worth their salt would know you're high risk. Plus an apartment will have a maintenance charge as its a leasehold, that'll cost upwards of 100 a month. You're talking out your arse unfortunately

      @ap5194@ap5194 Жыл бұрын
  • 12 7:02 years ago I went to Port Talbot, Wales for a work meeting. I was really shaken by what I saw, the place looked like the aftermath of a war, everything shuttered down and closed with no signs of life. People drinking aimlessly in pubs at 10am and so many just aimlessly wondering the streets lime zoombies (drunk or on drugs). The more places I visited the more I visited over the decade the more I realised that MOST towns in the UK now have this affliction, completely bordered up, shut down and lifeless.

    @pt17171@pt17171 Жыл бұрын
    • 'Bordered' up?

      @itsinthetreesitscoming7431@itsinthetreesitscoming7431 Жыл бұрын
    • Most town centres are identikit aswell, same chain pubs, shops and fast food joints

      @MonstaTrapz@MonstaTrapz Жыл бұрын
    • ​@itsinthetreesitscoming7431 he meant boarded up.

      @thehammer3340@thehammer33408 ай бұрын
  • Having lived in Cornwall all my life, and not in the touristy coastal areas, i can concur that most of the stuff talked about here is true. Cornwall is a deprived, depressing place where the sun only shines on TV. Wages are poor, house prices are high and opportunities are low. And i can't see it getting better.

    @MarcP666@MarcP666 Жыл бұрын
    • We have all that in Manchester, at least your county is beautiful. Lancashire is foreign dump these days.

      @lee4171@lee4171 Жыл бұрын
    • Manchester is buoyant by comparison.

      @neilhilton35@neilhilton3511 ай бұрын
    • @@neilhilton35 It would depend on what you mean by buoyant.

      @lee4171@lee417111 ай бұрын
    • @@lee4171 A bouyant economy with salaries to match. Sadly house prices to match too 😂

      @neilhilton35@neilhilton3511 ай бұрын
  • I was born in Cornwall and moved when I was 18 for uni. Haven’t gone back since (apart from going down to visit family ). There is not much hope or opportunities for me or others my age (I am 27 now). People say to me “oh wow you are from Cornwall!! How lucky!) Feel like they need to see this video. Cornwall is amazing but isn’t all sunshine and roses! This is the accurate real Cornwall.

    @TheIzizu@TheIzizu Жыл бұрын
    • Can I ask where are you move to?

      @craigberesford726@craigberesford726 Жыл бұрын
    • Exactly what people say to me when I tell them I'm from Cornwall.. then I have to explain.

      @danielcharlesfilms2897@danielcharlesfilms289711 ай бұрын
    • This isn't the accurate Cornwall for everybody at all. I moved to Cornwall from London over a decade ago and I never want to leave. It all depends on where you are. Sure the towns listed in this video are probably the worst in Cornwall, but even those are a million times better than many other places in the UK. Every county has its crap areas, the worst down here isn't that bad. It's not great either, but there are far worse places you could live in this country. You are right about career opportunities though. There is very little work down here, not a great place for young people setting out in life, but I would imagine it's an incredible place to grow up.

      @davespicer2143@davespicer214311 ай бұрын
    • Students who study in Falmouth seem to like it. Plenty stay in the area after they graduate.

      @cornishhh@cornishhh4 ай бұрын
  • One suggestion : Instead of using average house prices where outliers can throw the results, how about using the median which would give a more accurate account of what most people living there pays?

    @andymcevoy4553@andymcevoy4553 Жыл бұрын
    • Will do

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • Damn right, St Austell's average is high because of all the million pound houses and manors. Not to mention all the mansions in higher Gover, Porthpean and Carlyon. Before the pandemic you could get a 3 or 4 bed house for under £200,000 (seen them for 160-180k too), some with a sea view! The video only shows an old council estate and some run down Sanctuary houses, and makes out these houses (which obviously aren't for sale) aren't worth the money 😂

      @JoshsFish@JoshsFish Жыл бұрын
    • @@JoshsFish exactly these emmets haven't a clue of the area , best keep it that way . We don't want them ! .

      @desendean6488@desendean6488 Жыл бұрын
  • Hello! I am from Redruth! My house was actually in your video... Listen... you were wrong.... Cornwall is FAR worse than you thought xD

    @sunnyleatham@sunnyleatham Жыл бұрын
    • Agreed. If I was to describe how delicate the situation in Cornwall is, well there is nothing so delicate to describe it.

      @balls9420@balls9420 Жыл бұрын
    • i am moving to redruth in a few months! what is park bottom like? is there many burglarys? i wont be in a lot of the time.

      @darknightofthescarecrow3551@darknightofthescarecrow35519 ай бұрын
    • @@darknightofthescarecrow3551 in that respects it’s fine. Redruth used to be worse whereas now it’s mostly a town for old people

      @sunnyleatham@sunnyleatham9 ай бұрын
    • @@darknightofthescarecrow3551 although Park Bottom might technically be Redruth, in reality it isn’t and nobody there would say they live in Redruth. It’s Illogan, but you could probably get away with telling people you live in Tehidy 😂

      @Joshthepurple@Joshthepurple8 ай бұрын
  • I get these places are quite deprived but it feels pretty horrible to judge the people that live in these places for being poor and uneducated. Especially when the judgy, condescending jokes are delivered in a well-spoken accent by someone that sounds like they were lucky enough to benefit from growing up in a more affluent environment with better education and more opportunity.

    @james263@james2638 ай бұрын
  • Abslutely loving the channel. I need more content. I'm hooked!

    @matlockmeat@matlockmeat Жыл бұрын
  • Well that’s been an eye opener ! I’m from the north and have never been to Cornwall but have often thought that it must be gorgeous and very affluent, never did I think that certain places would as run down as some of the towns featured, especially people doing skag in a church yard with human shite laying about. It’s quite shocking really.

    @andycrusader7326@andycrusader7326 Жыл бұрын
    • I'm from the north but live in Cornwall. He definitely got the list right but nowhere in Cornwall is like say Grimsby or Hull. There's nothing like that down here . Most places are very pretty and it's very safe . Lowest crime rate of any county. But the entire economy does consists of selling ice cream and pasties. Cleaning hotels , care work and building Holliday homes . Your either a owner so and very very wealthy. Or worker and very poor.

      @avancalledrupert5130@avancalledrupert5130 Жыл бұрын
    • It’s the shite which feeds those pretty spring flowers among the abandoned gravestones - so we’re very grateful, really.

      @martinross5521@martinross5521 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah I'm from Wigan, but grew up in Penzance, most places are run down and boring, especially as everything is too expensive for people living here, and most things are closed during the winter and don't get repaired or vandalism fixed until just before the Easter holidays, but the difference is it doesn't feel as "scary" as being on estates up North, but I do miss being able to afford pies 😅

      @therookerybookery@therookerybookery Жыл бұрын
    • The guy is ill informed as there are only 15 towns in Cornwall, it's the way you word it

      @elguapo6225@elguapo6225 Жыл бұрын
    • Dont bother using this Channel as a guide. All counties have poor areas, and Cornwall is no different. Wages are low in Cornwall, but generally that is not apparent, especially in the tourist areas. Cornwall has some beautiful places, and is well with a visit. Dont listen to the click baiter who runs this channel. He slagged off my home town on here, singling out the few negatives while ignoring the overwhelming positives. Oh, and I don't live in Cornwall, but I wish I did. They are so laid back they even have a word like the Spanish manjana. It's "Dereckly" as in "I'll do it Directly " which translated means "ill get around to it sometime ".

      @Bob-kb5pv@Bob-kb5pv Жыл бұрын
  • I'm in awe of your descriptions. This sort of thing's worth knowing if you're thinking of going somewhere.

    @peterbrown6224@peterbrown6224 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks my friend that’s always our aim means a lot that you think that.

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
  • when you see Poundland boarded up you know theres a problem...great eye opener video..me thinking its all affluent down there..

    @davidstewart4825@davidstewart4825 Жыл бұрын
  • A very good video to be totally honest and factually correct. We live in Cornwall and have done for almost 20 years. We are fortunate to live out in the sticks and in a remote village where people are friendly and the crime rate is minimal/non-existent. Houses are higher priced but it does reflect the area we live in. Cornwall does have issues - drugs, unemployment, low salaries and a Local Authority that screws us for council tax and wastes it paying their dead wood employees offering little in return, a police force that are only around when there is "an incident" because there are not enough of them to go round, poor public transport links, some teenagers who will never work and who have multiple children under the age of 5 , little chance of a decent paid job unless you are already in one, an overall apathetic attitude because residents cannot get money so alot turn to to drugs and ultimately crime. A lot of areas do need massive cash injections to make them presentable and often viable but dont see that anytime soon. So that is the bad side however there is a good side. The good side is that it welcomes several million tourists each year, it used to be between April and October but now pretty much all year and Xmas/New Year is just as busy as the summer. It has stunning beaches, scenery, lovely people, tourist hotspots along the north coast, a reasonably good road network and brings visitors back year on year - some of whom decide to move here. We are not Cornish but have adapted to the slower pace of life, clean air, friendly and helpful people and a place that we call home. We have lived in big cities and towns, worked in the rat race, had dirty streets, overpopulated places and high crime but do not in any way have that now. I dont worry when I leave my house, I dont revert to crime to make ends meet, have worked all my life (yes I have the ability and intelligence to hold a decent job down) and close my door when I come home and think how lucky I am to live in a nice place, where neighbours talk, a community is there to be part of and crime is low bordering on non-existent. If you are pleasant to people they will be pleasant to you (manners cost nothing), integrate with society and embrace the county for what it is and look for the positives. I live within 4 miles of one of the towns mentioned and it is very accurately portrayed but go a few miles away from those town centres and it opens up a whole new world and one that I am more than happy to live in. The town centres are run down due mainly to rising (greedy shop owners) rents, main street shops trimming resource so getting closed due to online shopping and supermarkets vying for your business so being involved in price wars when they can. Food is food wherever you go but we all need to eat. The overriding factor though is quality of life and Cornwall has this in abundance.

    @cidermonkey5616@cidermonkey5616 Жыл бұрын
  • Couple of those towns, like St Austell, are 15 minute bus rides or an hours walk from huge empty beaches and private coves. Not all grim and certainly not like their equivalents up north.

    @Mounhas@Mounhas Жыл бұрын
    • The town itself is though.

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • @@TurdtownsMany from St Austell are scornful of the ignored unpleasantness that exists, can’t comment on the town myself as haven’t been there for probably 40 years.

      @Mounhas@Mounhas Жыл бұрын
    • @@Turdtowns So? So are towns everywhere that do not have the other places Cornwall has. Your articel was unbalanced and wrong.

      @islanddweller3674@islanddweller3674 Жыл бұрын
    • Try doing Middlesborough, parts of Scarborough, and many many other N.towns( I was born in the North). They make all of Cornwall paradise and the proximity of the sea all around is terrific. Shame you see so much to run down.

      @cynthiastogden7000@cynthiastogden7000 Жыл бұрын
    • @@cynthiastogden7000 No sea around Scarborough and Middlesborough?

      @cornishhh@cornishhh4 ай бұрын
  • It’s nice to see Penzance on the list, my ex wife went to live there when we divorced. She’s probably the one taking it down the shitter.

    @christopheripad477@christopheripad477 Жыл бұрын
    • Penzance is the end of the train line and many councils from up north send their folk down here on a one way ticket to get rid of their problem….

      @MatthewChapmanYT@MatthewChapmanYT Жыл бұрын
    • ​​@@MatthewChapmanYT why doesn't Penzance send their soap dodgers and unruly, back up North, supplied with train tickets and bit of dosh. Get their own back on Northern councils? 😉

      @Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK@Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK Жыл бұрын
  • We always hear about the north south divide but the south west is very often ignored in that conversation

    @adamtrembath7076@adamtrembath7076 Жыл бұрын
    • Very true, St Austell used to be a lovely market town, busy and thriving, with lots of character then the eighties arrived and it started to go downhill with the loss of so much industry like China Clay, fishing and mining and all the smaller industries that serviced the bigger industries, then the planners tried to modernise it and ripped it’s heart out, so all it’s character went. We once had one of the best venues in the country Cornwall Coliseum on Crinnis Beach where we saw all the best bands of the Sixties and Seventies, where there were bars and roller skating and a huge swimming pool and discos and dancing, all closed then demolished to build a Cornish Benidorm development, that never got built! So sad to see it now so run down and taken over by druggies, believe it or not it was once a busy alive town.

      @marywebber593@marywebber5933 ай бұрын
    • @@marywebber593 I remember when the Eden Project was built people were sold the idea it would totally revive the town. It didn't

      @adamtrembath7076@adamtrembath70763 ай бұрын
    • I live in the north but I’m from Cornwall. The north south divide is real. But as you say the s west is divided off from everything and forgotten. One good source of support from Europe wasn’t valued and many made the awful decision to vote for brexit too

      @thomasmatthews80@thomasmatthews80Ай бұрын
  • That's shocking. I visited Cornwall in the mid 90s camping & it was absolutely fantastic. I went to Newquay, St Ives, St Austell, Lands End. I had such a lovely time. So sad to see a place in decline.

    @twosheepsoapery@twosheepsoapery Жыл бұрын
    • Been in plateau of decline for decades lol

      @thomasmatthews80@thomasmatthews80Ай бұрын
  • I live in Newquay, it's definately got the best nightlife in Cornwall. There's always a band or DJ in the pubs and some place are open until 4am. We have a zoo aquarium, airport that flys to Europe. Every type of restaurant from fine dining to Pizza Indian Chinese and Mexican plus many others..

    @Yolo-kb6hu@Yolo-kb6hu Жыл бұрын
    • I'm in bed by 10, 4am night clubs are no use to me any more 😂

      @johnross2924@johnross2924 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Peterbrendanalbert I had a nightmare experience with a very expensive Pukka pie in Newquay....benchmark

      @-doggy-6670@-doggy-6670 Жыл бұрын
    • Had a indian in nesquay was vommingting it up soon after lamb passanda nice beach views in restaraunt pacjed but food poisoning

      @jamesjones3371@jamesjones3371 Жыл бұрын
  • Awww, I like Penzance. Theres some great pubs! Very friendly and down to earth people too!

    @AlisonBryen@AlisonBryen Жыл бұрын
    • I don’t mind it either but it’s got some bad stats

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • @Turdtowns True, I get that. I just wanted to put it out there that despite what the stats say, it's definitely worth a visit 👍.

      @AlisonBryen@AlisonBryen Жыл бұрын
  • If I could add a positive note? Obviously there is a huge difference between living in Cornwall and visiting and I’m just back from my first ever holiday in Cornwall. We picked April to avoid the summertime congestion I’d heard so much about and got lucky with the weather - one really warm day, otherwise cold but dry and generally sunny. Stayed in Newquay (lewinnick Lodge) which has beautiful views across the bay. Night skies were spectacular- full of stars which we never see in London. We love our seafood and by and large Cornwall did not disappoint. Admittedly if I had to return to the tired high street on a regular basis, it might get me down but there’s a lovely harbour and beautiful beaches to distract the eye. Most definitely one of the better seaside towns I’ve been to.

    @mikefriend1514@mikefriend1514 Жыл бұрын
    • There are lots of nice places to visit, and some of the scenery is beautiful. However just as this vid shows - so many places have been left to rot after a decline in industry. Also it's hard to live here with house prices being expensive due to popular second home demand, sort of driving people to move out to cities for work and joy.

      @thehearingaid@thehearingaid Жыл бұрын
    • Tourism in Cornwall also contributes less than folks think and the constant footfallis destroying our land and our culture here. 😢

      @domino5392@domino5392 Жыл бұрын
    • Try St Ives next very beautifull town, sandy beaches, interesting acheteture, and plenty of decent restarants.

      @D413373R@D413373R11 ай бұрын
    • ​@D413373R but avoid St Ives in August at all costs...

      @AlisonBryen@AlisonBryen10 ай бұрын
    • @@AlisonBryen agreed, although i think when i went with my partner it was is late august and it was very busy indeed although as it was our first time there we still managed to enjoy ourselfes. 11hours and 6 changes for the train to get there was a nightmare though 😩

      @D413373R@D413373R10 ай бұрын
  • I’ve lived in Cornwall my whole life, this was a very accurate list. I especially agree with launceston- it’s basically the most boring town I’ve ever been to. The only part I disagree with as a local is Newquay- it’s changed so much recently, it’s becoming a really nice area. The tourists are the biggest problem as a lot of them are really stupid, but the town itself has a very good surfing culture and atmosphere. It’s still probably the best place in the uk for summer atmosphere and watersports. Especially the crantock/pentire area of Newquay, it’s really beautiful.

    @YummoWickersham@YummoWickersham Жыл бұрын
    • Typical Cornish attitude - blame the tourists. If it wasn't for tourists the whole of Cornwall would look like St. Austell. I have relatives who live in Padstow and while the town is 'ok', the surrounding countryside is beautiful. The problem is the 'locals' of Cornwall - on the whole a belligerent, mean spirited lot. The "local shop for local people" attitude is spot on.

      @gillie-monger3394@gillie-monger3394 Жыл бұрын
    • Restormel council ruined the Newquay of the 70's & 80's, by pulling down stunning buildings and erecting monstrosities in their place. I'm glad, that since 2009, Konsel Kernow is cleaning up and making good the Newquay that I know and love. It's nice to get Newquay back after all the Emmets have gone back home. Newquay really is a lovely place.

      @Matityahu755@Matityahu755 Жыл бұрын
    • I lived in Cornwall for 20 years and still have family there. The most notable aspect of Newquay to me was that virtually the whole town was shut in winter because so any shops were owned by people who only lived there in the summer but took all the tourist money home.

      @watchesfromedges@watchesfromedges Жыл бұрын
    • Aah, Newquay is so bleddy wonderful that the Duchy and other big developers are ploughing up every field as far as Quintrell Downs to increase the town's size by a third. No need to tidy up the town centre though; the incomers will all be working from home on upcountry salaries and do all their shopping online.

      @ChangesOneTim@ChangesOneTim Жыл бұрын
    • @@ChangesOneTim tiz true that shag

      @funkeybikemonkey@funkeybikemonkey Жыл бұрын
  • I live in Cornwall, and despair at its TV portrayal of an idyllic place to live work and play. Most of it is grim, and even if you live in one of the more pleasant places, a Cornish winter of unremitting wind rain and "Cornish clag"will be sure to get you asking, "what have I done"

    @michaelholmes3331@michaelholmes3331 Жыл бұрын
    • We got to know many people who relocated to Cornwall, expecting year round summer We found if they coped through two winters they usually stayed!

      @Paul-ok6sn@Paul-ok6sn Жыл бұрын
  • I stayed in St Austell for 3 nights about 5-6 years ago for a wedding. While the town centre is nothing to write home about I didn't find it to be too bad. It was a bit run down, but there were at least a few OK chain restaurants, pubs, and quirky shops. It may have helped that I was there in the height of summer which tends to bring out the best in people and places. Once you stray from the high street though, that's where you see the characters you mentioned - surly looking addicts with beady eyes. I didn't experience any trouble, but I definitely didn't feel too safe either. More than anything there was just an atmosphere that was hard to out into words (which you mentioned), I've only felt that same feeling before in the Welsh valleys and certain parts of London. It's really sad actually, many places in Cornwall just feel totally neglected by the government. It's a shame because it is a beautiful county with some great people

    @rorz999@rorz999 Жыл бұрын
  • Loved the video 👍🏽 very interesting thank you 😊

    @dinagreaves6686@dinagreaves668611 ай бұрын
  • I've just come across this channel and would like to commend you on such a great channel and videos. I absolutely love the channel but it's sad to see the reality of the UK. There are so many bad and rough sh1t holes. I've been aware of this for all my adult life so it's nice to see you making videos highlighting the truth.

    @matlockmeat@matlockmeat Жыл бұрын
  • went to Launceston once decided we never needed to go there again. also would regularly drive through Redruth and watch it getting a little more derelict each time

    @graybeard101@graybeard101 Жыл бұрын
    • And Bodmin not much better, I think in this day and age we expect more from a town, we can’t go on blaming Covid forever

      @Skaterbun@Skaterbun Жыл бұрын
  • The moment I saw the first turd towns video I knew Cornwall is coming up soon in the future and I bloody well knew that my home town liskeard was going to show up. A not so proud podium indeed. All the money is going towards a library no one entered even before the restoration and the opening of a Wetherspoons right next door only made the high street a less safe place past 9pm than before. I’m happy with how the video turned out though. Good job mate. 🎉

    @paulpawelek@paulpawelek Жыл бұрын
    • At least you have Trago's :)

      @MissMedi@MissMedi Жыл бұрын
    • We didn’t get to go in Trago’s it looked really cool from the outside though!

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
  • This is brilliant! Keep putting the emmits off an hopefully we'll have our county back , top work ! Also it's that bad that 90% of the houses down in Cornwall are all owned from people out of Cornwall

    @kieranabraham646@kieranabraham646 Жыл бұрын
    • You can keep it. I'll even wall the county in. Just make sure I'm on the Devon side.

      @dannycarter1966@dannycarter1966 Жыл бұрын
    • You moan about "emmets" and yet call Cornwall a "county". Sit tf down and educate yourself. It is a Duchy.

      @domino5392@domino5392 Жыл бұрын
    • The trouble is, the Cornish sold their houses to the emmets in the first place.

      @nectafarious8842@nectafarious884210 ай бұрын
    • @@nectafarious8842 Locals were driven out due to the closure of the clay pits, along with most of our factory work being transferred to places like China and South America, where they can get kids to work for a pittance. Hence, so many selling and leaving. Feel free to attempt being a smartass again.

      @domino5392@domino539210 ай бұрын
    • It’s rich people regardless of where they are from

      @sevenman9672@sevenman96725 ай бұрын
  • Great video thank you, I live in Cornwall (in one of the mentioned towns). I was born here moved away and came back, sometimes I wish I hadn’t, it is a lovely place to visit, in places, but very hard to live. I totally agree with some of the areas you mentioned and would not go there in the nighttime. It’s very sad as some places are so beautiful. Once my grandchildren have grown up I have every intention of moving, finances permitting.

    @victorialangdon5645@victorialangdon5645 Жыл бұрын
  • Penzance definitely has several beaches, they’re just not all golden sandy and more stoney than the north coast. It’s also turned a corner and has lots of fantastic independent shops in the town. Every town is going to get it’s anti social problems and yes, there’s no getting away from the poverty in Cornwall, but I wouldn’t want to live anywhere else. You have a variety of shops and can walk 3 miles in any direction and literally be in a completely different landscape each time. It’s awesome.

    @StarliteXS@StarliteXS Жыл бұрын
    • Even st Austell?

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • I'm talking about Penzance…

      @StarliteXS@StarliteXS Жыл бұрын
    • Yes this got has got Penzance all wrong. It does indeed have beaches. Not one empty shop in town. And the only boarded up building shown was the old ritz which isn’t abandoned and awaiting restoration. Unfair judgment made here.

      @georginamartin1682@georginamartin1682 Жыл бұрын
    • @@georginamartin1682 I said several times I didn’t hate Penzance and it wasn’t that bad. I also took the effort to visit Treneere to see if the media was lying and I spoke to locals. I think it’s a town on the up.

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • Penzance is great until 8pm..

      @Trylobyte@Trylobyte Жыл бұрын
  • I live in st Austell and yes it had bad places but u did not mention the great beaches , great inde cinema ,Eden, heligan, meva, Charlestown, yes a 24 hr supermarket , people who live in st Austell don’t use the town centre we live around it and go elsewhere

    @rugby1971@rugby1971 Жыл бұрын
    • That’s helping to run the town down though because nobody shopping in the town centre makes the local economy worse as your forcing once successful small busines into poverty

      @MatthewChapmanYT@MatthewChapmanYT Жыл бұрын
    • All the places you mentioned are outside of there apart from the 24hr supermarket. Is that the only positive of it?

      @MatthewChapmanYT@MatthewChapmanYT Жыл бұрын
    • I live about three miles from St Austell and I can't remember the last time I went into the town centre.

      @cornishhh@cornishhh Жыл бұрын
    • exactly, this video seems to just look at town centre and not surroundings

      @Stevgogo77@Stevgogo77 Жыл бұрын
  • I agree about most of these - was really surprised to see Penzance on here, though - not sure where you went, there, but it’s a lovely town! Excellent food destinations, lots of independent shops, plenty to do, an Art Deco salt water Lido and a lovely beach, lovely parks like Morrab and Penlee and several galleries. There are some housing estates, but the centre of town is primarily made up of rather fine Georgian townhouses and terraces.

    @geemo4284@geemo4284 Жыл бұрын
    • From the video it looks like he walked up Queen Street (with the boarded-up Ritz cinema and the discount furniture store), up Causewayhead (which he mistakenly calls the main street), then up St Clare Street past the block of flats and the housing estates towards the hospital and the A30. Not exactly a highlight tour of Penzance.

      @VoyagesDuSpectateur@VoyagesDuSpectateur Жыл бұрын
    • I agree. I live near Penzance and I think it’s a lovely town with a lot going for it. Sure, there are some run down areas, but I used to live in Manchester - a great city in many ways - and if you really want to know what depressed looks like, some of its outlying districts make Penzance look like Monaco!

      @chrislethbridge1759@chrislethbridge1759 Жыл бұрын
    • @@VoyagesDuSpectateur yes agree. you can find crappy areas in every town. Penzance has Mounts Bay, and a beautiful coast line, elegant houses (Chapel Street) where the Bronte's mother Maria lived. Lots of history and a great vibe to the town. Am also very surprised to see PZ on here.

      @nykola1234@nykola1234 Жыл бұрын
    • Penzance is great, apart from the house prices, and the drug problems, and the violence and the general crime, and nothing to do, and low wages, etc. etc.

      @bongsound@bongsound Жыл бұрын
    • Penzance is lovely. To be fair he didn't mention the art Deco lido in Plymouth or the historic busy Barbican and the Hoe sea front in Plymouth when he stuck it on Devon's list. I'm not sure how much he actually checks out these places properly 🤔

      @Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK@Mardi-Shorts-DevonGirlUK Жыл бұрын
  • Cornwalls fkn awesome doesn’t matter where your from in Cornwall you can be at any one of 100 beaches within an hour 💚

    @bongojason@bongojason Жыл бұрын
  • My uncle’s funeral was in a massive chapel in Bodmin which then became a Wetherspoons but even that has closed I think. Went on a fantastic bike ride on the Camel trail which starts there and goes to Padstein via Wadebridge which are far more touristy. Still means getting out of Bodmin was better than staying.

    @SLJ2776@SLJ2776 Жыл бұрын
    • All roads which lead away from Bodmin are worth using, even the cycling trail…

      @martinross5521@martinross5521 Жыл бұрын
    • It was a wetherspoons until not long back and now I believe it's under the punch tavern umbrella

      @kernow24@kernow24 Жыл бұрын
  • I came to Cornwall in 1970 and it was a great place to be . It has declined over the years due to the influx of second home owners , tourists and students . So keep these vids coming and hopefully they will all go back from whence they came . It will never be what it once was but i it can only improve !!!

    @jamesstewart5473@jamesstewart5473 Жыл бұрын
    • Unfortunately, it’s only us “tourists” that will keep places going. I live in East Devon but holiday in Cornwall. We are the same here, places like Lyme Regis thrive but my hometown ,Axminster, is dying on its feet. X

      @terryjameswebb@terryjameswebb Жыл бұрын
    • What a hypocrite....

      @jakekent874@jakekent874 Жыл бұрын
    • We need jobs the area has been stripped of are proud history of not long ago. Holmans the biggest mining college in Europe shows this are former late and great former MP David Penhaligon said in a speech. Wages here are at least 15% lower, unemployment in towns 15% up to 20% you cannot base an economy stacking deck chairs and selling ice cream!

      @stephenholmes1036@stephenholmes1036 Жыл бұрын
    • Hey James. Take your head out of the sand. You can also blame the tourist industry and the main council for running these towns to the ground. High rent, and the landlords just do whatever they want, plus Cornwall Council putting up car park charges to deter car usage. What better way to destroy towns and cities.

      @dr.impossibleofcounterpunc1984@dr.impossibleofcounterpunc1984 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@stephenholmes1036 councils and politicians banging on about equality but there's no equality of wages!

      @lordbezzington8435@lordbezzington8435 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm enjoying your videos so far! Thank you. For future instalments, I would like to suggest less focus on the headline crime stats and house prices, and I'd also be interested to hear about the streets, arts venues, restaurants etc. in slightly more detail :). I think a lot of the towns get described as 'run down', with 'not much to buy', and sadly that feels true of... so, so many British towns! My suggestions for these details would be things like food hygiene (often reported in local papers), TripAdvisor nightmares, towns with music venues that exclusively put on 70s covers bands, etc. It'd also be cool to hear about parks, cause I think they can make a town feel relaxing... or like noone cares about it at all. And maybe more about clubs and pubs, which you do mention a bit - though I think there is a distinction between really unfriendly pubs, and pubs with history, where you might enjoy going for reasons other than getting totally wasted! Anyway sorry for the long comment, looking forward to seeing future episodes!

    @hotcoales@hotcoales Жыл бұрын
    • Yes I agree with the majority of what you suggest. No need to list house prices if a place is run down as we can guess the prices will be low. Crime rates and the number of arrests due to drunkedness are also important things to know about.

      @somattalistenta@somattalistenta4 ай бұрын
  • I'm dissapointed Truro wasn't on here, but Truro is the city of Cornwall so it makes sense. Awesome video!

    @fr4ctl_@fr4ctl_ Жыл бұрын
  • We live in Looe and have for the last 10 years for retirement, love it, haven’t regretted it one little bit. There are a few non desirable places but most of it is very beautiful! It’s lovely in the winter, if the weather is good, when the tourists have gone home and the beaches are empty to walk and have a paddle! We live in a lovely community and the people of Looe are very friendly. ❤❤Looe

    @janbrian7307@janbrian7307 Жыл бұрын
    • It sure is a nice place

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
  • A little way outside most of these run down towns is glorious countryside and nice villages. Even within some of these towns are very upmarket areas. All the government money in Cornwall appears to spent in the Truro area by the county council. It’s like Panem in The Hunger Games. Truro is the jewel of Cornwall. Truro has everything, just like Panem!

    @philipmear8680@philipmear8680 Жыл бұрын
    • Heard that a few times now Truro did look noce

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely. St Austell the number One Turdtown, but take a walk down the 'Private' 'Sea Road on the towns seaward outskirts and look at the £4million + Mansions along the Cliffs there! Empty most of the year of course!

      @SteveChiverton@SteveChiverton Жыл бұрын
    • Sadly Truro had become so over-devloped it is in sharp decline and will be on this list in a year or two.

      @mycroftsanchez901@mycroftsanchez901 Жыл бұрын
    • I volunteer as tribute!

      @LondonCrusader@LondonCrusader Жыл бұрын
    • @@mycroftsanchez901 Trura is still being developed! Langarth Garden Village is adding thousands of bunny-hutches, yet next to bugger all by way of supporting public infrastructure let alone adding any cultural value.

      @ChangesOneTim@ChangesOneTim11 ай бұрын
  • This is typical of a lot of places around the UK away from London, Birmingham and Manchester where these areas suffer from extreme deprivation and poverty and Cornwall is no exception to this especially since the A30 has been almost completely upgraded to unbroken dual carriageway allthe way from the M5 at Exeter down near St. Ives. However, I did stay in Jaywick near Clacton a few weeks ago and despite Essex adjoining the Greater London area, even there was a huge difference between the rich areas of Frinton and Walton on the Naze to the East and Jaywick to the West of Clacton.

    @chrisbeaven6521@chrisbeaven6521 Жыл бұрын
  • I moved to Bodmin 14 years ago, and it is a bit of a rollercoaster in prosperity, it's currently quite low, the positives are three bed houses are as low as 140k and there very affordable larger houses on the outskirts. It's 20 minutes to the coast either way, has plenty of amenities, good secondary schools and a new college.

    @fattmatt200@fattmatt200 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video, well done. The disparity is quite unnerving, I know most of Cornwall reasonably well and once stayed in Padstow for around 6 weeks out of season, quaint but even then (1993.) it was changing and monied Londoners lapping up the fayre of Rick Stein whilst local people continued with their normal lives. Maybe not the best example but I understand why the Cornish can be a little unfriendly at times.

    @Mattriver7@Mattriver7 Жыл бұрын
    • It’s absolutely sickening when Londoners buy Locals out taking there homes, buying Business fronts

      @makeshift1012@makeshift1012 Жыл бұрын
    • In the late 1970's a friend of mine bought his first house in Padstow because he couldn't afford anything in Newquay.

      @cornishhh@cornishhh4 ай бұрын
  • Some years ago I browsed the small Woolworth’s in Penzance and found it to be a most depressing experience. Less than half an hour after my visit some poor fellow entered the shop and cut his own throat in front of the shop assistants. I’ve often wondered if he had planned it that way or had just found it to be the last straw. RIP

    @smfvmd@smfvmd Жыл бұрын
    • Sounds like it was planned to be in front of one of those assistants, woolworths was the god of shops when i was young👍

      @noeyes6151@noeyes6151 Жыл бұрын
    • @@noeyes6151 I’ve just googled ‘penzance woolworths suicide’ and read several newspaper reports. A tragic waste of a good looking young lad’s life.

      @smfvmd@smfvmd Жыл бұрын
    • LOL

      @sirierieott5882@sirierieott5882 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sirierieott5882 Really?

      @JC-gm3zs@JC-gm3zs Жыл бұрын
    • Bill, I like your name. I am visualizing you wearing a Top Hat! 🎩🤔 Best wishes from a French forest.

      @nigelcarren@nigelcarren Жыл бұрын
  • As a suggestion, you ought to do a count of charity shops in each town. It's a good yardstick to demonstrate the health of the local economy. Councils would rather throw proper businesses out due to high leases and rent them to charities, than see them shut altogether.

    @TryptychUK@TryptychUK11 ай бұрын
    • Charity shops blight the High Street. They only pay 20% of business rates when that should be raised to 50%. They also pay less rent and get their staff for free without even expenses. Shop managers are paid the minimum wage for 6 days a week. There are alternatives such as clothes swaps, bring and take book shelves in cafes and community centres and people putting out books etc out on their front garden walls for passers-by to take. There are also sharing websites and apps such as Freecycle, Freehle and Olio. Use them instead.

      @lemsip207@lemsip2073 ай бұрын
    • @@lemsip207 Agreed. Most are a total eyesore.

      @TryptychUK@TryptychUK3 ай бұрын
    • @TryptychUK I preferred the old run-down charity shops to the new pretentious ones. Because they were always pop ups and in return for reduced rent and rates they had to move out if a business wanted to move in. Plus you knew you could buy cheap in there.

      @lemsip207@lemsip2073 ай бұрын
    • @@lemsip207 Very true. I can accept that, but a lot of these are now permanent fixtures. They should pay the same as everybody else.

      @TryptychUK@TryptychUK3 ай бұрын
    • @@TryptychUK Or 50% of business rates.

      @lemsip207@lemsip2073 ай бұрын
  • Born and brought in in the poor part of Cornwall. Sad, really sad to see what it has become. I moved away about 17 years ago and now dread to come back - and come only to see elderly relatives. So much has been wasted by naff schemes perpetuated by useless councils. Who remembers this daubed on Crofty's wall 'Cornish lads are fishermen, and Cornish lads are miners too. But when the fish and tin are gone what are the Cornish boys to do?' A really depressing video but true in an its rawness. By the way Turdtowns, the reason folk say 'going to Bodmin' refers to the now closed St Lawrence's Hospital in Bodmin (that was the workhouse). St Lawrence's was the main hospital in Cornwall for the mentally ill.

    @paulreed4850@paulreed4850 Жыл бұрын
  • As someone who lives in a village half an hour from St Austell I can honestly say I never go there. You scratched the surface of the amount of visible drug and alcohol use in the town and It's intimidating. When you only visit tourist attractions on holiday you don't see the reality of anywhere.

    @clare9637@clare9637 Жыл бұрын
    • But almost all those undesirables have been given one way tickets from their local councils to come to Cornwall. Most the druggies in Cornwall are from northern towns

      @MatthewChapmanYT@MatthewChapmanYT Жыл бұрын
    • youre talking about Cosgarne hall - rehab that opened - the council got a huge amount of funding for it and suspect MONEY is the only reason they allowed it - that said - the service users are transfrerred to cosgarne from other areas - they are not technically 'locals' ......i think things started going wrong in 2008 when WOOLWORTHS shut down and many private retailers retired ....also home shopping on the internet has stopped people visiting the towns .....my opinion though is Newquay is worse - its chav central - you wont hear a cornish accent in newquay !

      @carlyonbay45@carlyonbay45 Жыл бұрын
    • Clare:Are u in Fowey?I hope that dear place hasn't changed too much.Kernow Kensa.

      @susanmccormick6022@susanmccormick6022 Жыл бұрын
    • @@susanmccormick6022 I'm not Susan. I live about three quarters of an hour from there but I can tell you it is still a very pretty place although we tend to avoid it in the summer.

      @clare9637@clare9637 Жыл бұрын
    • I virtually never go into St Austell either. Have you ever been down Minorca Lane in Bugle? That's third world poverty.

      @cornishhh@cornishhh Жыл бұрын
  • There might well be something in the water in Cornwall. Back in July 1988, 20 tonnes of aluminium sulphate was accidentally released to the water supply for the town of Camelford.

    @russellhunter8378@russellhunter8378 Жыл бұрын
    • Annual figures released by Defra say that raw sewage was dumped into rivers and coastal areas by private water companies 301,091 times in 2022. This amounts to a shocking 1.75 million hours, or over 800 spills every single day.

      @aceofspades5786@aceofspades5786 Жыл бұрын
    • I recall it turned people’s hair green.

      @funkydozer@funkydozer Жыл бұрын
    • Your post is spot on...Visited Penzance and " St Austerity " in 2014....People there look like Death Warmed up....and WHY are most of the girls FAT and covered with Tattoos??? HORRIBLE 😞😔

      @markpallister9882@markpallister9882 Жыл бұрын
    • @@oldfascist38.evil. Maybe the davos mob had something to do with it

      @sophiawoods6748@sophiawoods67487 ай бұрын
  • Sad decline like Most of the UK holiday resorts ...Cornwall was thee place in my era 60s 70s 80s..i had family that lived 10 miles or so outside St Austell ,quaint villages ,to die for beaches,great country pubs ,a feeling of tranquility and safety,fantastic memories that all my family still share at get togethers ....how sad to see such a decline,...having not visited since my grandmother past away 20 years ago ,and the remaining residents..moved out of the area to North Devon...i do hope Cornwall can return to the good times ,but sadly i fear the rot has set in for good...

    @russelljones1549@russelljones1549 Жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely love the comedic commentary, made my morning 😂

    @ellechantel3822@ellechantel3822 Жыл бұрын
  • Been to Cornwall numerous times and it has some beautiful places and I really like it there (I am from East Sussex). Been to nearly all these towns and got to say I agree with you. However we stayed last year at the Bodmin Jail Hotel and it is absolutely fantastic.

    @Jctkd1@Jctkd1 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey........ I live in Launceston 😂.... fun fact, during ww2, some American troops were based here, one evening there was a shoot out between the Black's and White's, you see Launceston locals were OK with black soldiers in the pubs but the white Americans just couldn't hack it, so over a bit of time tension started to grow and there was a gun fight, some of the buildings and the war memorial in the town square still have bullet marks on them 👍

    @stevemarshall3481@stevemarshall3481 Жыл бұрын
  • What a sad video this turned out to be. I am heartbroken to see the state the Cornwall has got itself in to. When I was a kid I lived for a short time in Bodmin and coming from London I was enthralled with it and never wanted to leave. All the other places you mentioned have good memories for me but now I am close to tears. So so sad.

    @user-tb7dt5uk1x@user-tb7dt5uk1x6 ай бұрын
    • Because when you go on holiday to Cornwall or visit for the day from Devon it's easy to bypass Redruth, Camborne, St Austell and Bodmin as the by passes take you around them. You can get to the Eden Project without going through St Austell. They are only places you pass through on the train to Penzance, Land's End, St Ives and Falmouth. We once hired bicycles at Padstow to cycle on the trail to Bodmin but got as far as the vineyard passing through Wadebridge on the way.

      @lemsip207@lemsip2073 ай бұрын
  • Ive noticed that all the shopping centres where i live Cosham, Portsmouth, Waterlooville, are mainly Charity, Betting and Poundshops, along with boarded up shop fronts. This has been a continuous trend over the last few years, the lockdowns just added to the situation.

    @JohnnyRocker2162@JohnnyRocker2162 Жыл бұрын
    • Amazon!

      @spencergregory8049@spencergregory804911 ай бұрын
    • I'm in fratton what a shithole now!!

      @alchapman4621@alchapman46214 ай бұрын
  • I live in Carbis Bay, and there's undesirable parts of Carbis Bay and St Ives that tourists don't get to see. However, Helston and Truro would've been the other two towns (if it were top 10, instead of 8). As for Camborne, locals say "the seagulls fly upside down over Camborne", "because there's nothing worth sh!++ing on" 😂

    @GRANMotherH3N@GRANMotherH3N Жыл бұрын
    • I’ve heard the same seagull joke about Truro too 😂

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • I’ve heard that joke made about ‘Druth

      @thoughtfulprofessor4198@thoughtfulprofessor4198 Жыл бұрын
  • So glad you did Cornwall as it's my home county i totally agree with most of what you said especially about st awful luckily I live in hayle which has some really turdy bits but still a nice place overall 😊

    @tobyoutterside5763@tobyoutterside5763 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, carry on agreeing. At least it will keep the emmets away and those we dont need here. Cornwall has suffered enough from social engineering and being loaded with undesirable incomers. Its been used as a dumping ground.

      @aprilshowers6752@aprilshowers6752 Жыл бұрын
    • Where are the turdy bits in Hayle?

      @MonkoK14@MonkoK14 Жыл бұрын
    • Hayle has improved a lot since the 1970s

      @stephenbedworth3404@stephenbedworth3404 Жыл бұрын
    • I was in Hayle last September, love it there!

      @Nickpaintbrush@Nickpaintbrush Жыл бұрын
    • @@Nickpaintbrush used to use the pubs years ago Saturday night in the penmare at the disco pint of Newquay steam in the copperhouse

      @stephenbedworth3404@stephenbedworth3404 Жыл бұрын
  • Your videos are great mate and funny, when are you going to do Wiltshire, Swindon’s town centre is a salubrious place to frequent 👌🏻

    @WHUTOM88@WHUTOM88 Жыл бұрын
  • Lived in Camborne in the early 1990s and it was the same then as it is now, I still go back from time to time with work and to see friends, I also fell in love with Cornwalll back themn and need to go back regularly :). Despite the poverty they were three happy years with the locals being friendly and welcoming. I think I agree with your ranking having visited all of the towns in the last few years. However, there is hope as you point out with the high probability of mining restarting in the county, it would be fantastic to see Cornwall enjoy the prosperity it once had again.

    @mikebrennan6165@mikebrennan6165 Жыл бұрын
  • Really sad - I remember St Austell from the days of The General Wolfe, Saffron Records, and the Cornwall Coliseum. Seems like the proximity of the Eden Project isn't benefitting Snozzle very much.

    @richardgale4827@richardgale4827 Жыл бұрын
    • No like all large business owners they just horde their money instead of helping the local community

      @MatthewChapmanYT@MatthewChapmanYT Жыл бұрын
  • Love how you say these towns aren't as bad as the Welsh Valleys, as a former resident of the valleys, i found myself thinking these places looked quite up market!

    @AA-hg5fk@AA-hg5fk Жыл бұрын
    • Apart from St Awful

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • I currently in the valleys it’s the most depressing place I have ever lived particularly in the winters but have little choice at moment, but it’s degradation on another level 😂😂

      @ronnieharford3326@ronnieharford33268 ай бұрын
    • @@TurdtownsI moved from the formerly posh Orpington in south-east London to St Austell in 2018. I'm quite pleased with the swap I made. Orpington is turning into a UN refugee camp. Your views of St Austell showed only the town centre which is having a hard time because of all the shipped in drug addicts (St Austell was said to have the best rehab centre in the country, and we got these people for a cash swap). Before that, I heard it was tranquil and nice. But outside of that small town-centre enclave, the surrounding estates are not that bad. One or two are a bit council house-ish, but a lot is like the Orpington I remember from the 70's and 80's. Do a walk around Croydon and Orpington then the St Austell outer suburbs, and you will see what I mean.

      @Martin958@Martin9584 ай бұрын
  • Very sad to see the state of St. Austell now, it was a little slice of heaven when I grew up there in the 70's, back when the white pyramids had pointy tops. The lovely people and beautiful countryside repeatedly let down by p1ss poor local and state government. Glad my parents cant see it now, they'd be heartbroken.

    @martianmuppet@martianmuppet Жыл бұрын
    • I agree. I grew up there in the 1970's too. Remember Saffron Records?

      @cornishhh@cornishhh4 ай бұрын
    • Yup, spent a fair chunk of my teenage years in there! @@cornishhh

      @martianmuppet@martianmuppet4 ай бұрын
    • @@martianmuppet I spent a fair chunk of my teenage money in there! Kevin the manager knew the type of music that his customers liked and would recommend new artists based on that knowledge.

      @cornishhh@cornishhh4 ай бұрын
  • Love the commentary, keeps me coming back for more. 😂😂

    @VanDerKhan@VanDerKhan6 ай бұрын
  • As someone who has lived in Cornwall for all my life, a lot of the things you've said were really accurate and you've answered a question on what caused the downfall of many Cornish towns. Initially, I quite liked Cornwall growing up but to my surprise, September 2018 was when things went horribly wrong as I kept on facing a lot of issues as a lot of people started to treat me like I didn't matter or my problems were not a priority but luckily I had a support group that made sure things didn't escalate, this is still happening to this day but not as much as it used to back then. Things got so bad that I nearly lost all of my respect for Cornwall and I started to make plans to move out when I'm ready. I really did find it really hard to have something nice to say about Cornwall after 2018 as every time I do find the good in Cornwall, another bad thing happens (welcome to the real world) but back in December 2022, I started to feel like that the bad things that had happened in Cornwall between 2018 - 2021/22 actually did benefit me as I used the hard times to make videos about overcoming problems and hope for a brighter future, although I haven't made any videos like that at the moment, the first set of videos are in the development stage and hoping to release them soon. I would like to thank you for making this video as after 5 years of figuring out what went wrong, I finally have an explanation for what caused the downfall of many Cornish towns as whenever I explain the issues with living in Cornwall, they say that "It's normal for people like me to want to move up-country (Cornish slang for outside of Cornwall) because there isn't much to do down here." which they were right but that was by far not the only reason why I wanted to leave and I think it's safe to say that the decline of the mining industry in Cornwall had a massive impact on modern day Cornwall and why things are the way they are. I do genuinely wish that things don't get any worse in Cornwall and I have learnt that I shouldn't blame the entirety of Cornwall for the problems I've faced growing up there as I have a lot of nice memories and made a lot of supportive friends on the way but instead, condemn the people that made Cornwall look bad as it had affected me a lot. One thing I can say is that you've earned a sub for raising awareness about the dark side of the county and hopefully, the dark side will be a bit more brighter. UPDATE (September 20, 2023): I would like to announce that the 5-year anniversary of me having these terrible experiences whilst being in Cornwall is coming next week and earlier today, I had a talk with one of the people involved in this 5-year long issue I’ve been trying to sort out since the very beginning and turns out that the problems I’ve had these past 5 years was actually caused by a misunderstanding rather than the mines closing down. It really is quite mad how 1 misunderstanding can cause a series of problems for half a decade but what’s important is that it is finally resolved and I feel I now realise what has caused my time in Cornwall to be ruined for the past 5 years. Of course, some of the bad things might still happen and there’s still more steps I need to take for some other problem I faced growing up in Cornwall, I’m still fighting and I’ll always be fighting for a better Cornwall for all (the county’s motto is in fact “one and all” after all) even when I relocate to Bournemouth or Exeter in 2024. I would also like to mention that I still believe the mines closing down did put a huge financial strain on the county especially the former mining towns that are like some sort of wasteland and it’s getting clear now that the decline of the mining industry did have a part in Cornwall’s decline but they was indeed more factors that lead to the county’s decline that has been happing since 2018. You know what they say, 5th year’s the charm.

    @TheVlogger110@TheVlogger110 Жыл бұрын
    • Great to hear it from someone who grew up in Cornwall. Appreciate it - thanks.

      @aussiewatchman8112@aussiewatchman8112 Жыл бұрын
    • Life's what you make it , so it's everyone's fault you had issues.. Cornwall is better off without you buddy . Funny the community I live in seems quite happy.

      @jasonhartley1305@jasonhartley1305 Жыл бұрын
  • And id happily move there tomorrow! Its stunning! There places i expect even before watching the video are the Redruth Camborne area... And tbh its still not as rough as most places... Id love to live down there as the climate is fantastic compared to where i live on the edge of the dales in county Durham... Its cloud city here!

    @allenjohnson7686@allenjohnson7686 Жыл бұрын
  • I lived in St. Austell for 25 years and it was once pretty decent to live there but now everyone’s on edge and it’s depressing af! I’m so glad I moved out and now living abroad!

    @llamazarecool@llamazarecool2 ай бұрын
  • If you think Cornwall's bad, you could always try: Bloxwich, Rugeley, West Bromwich, Skipton, Stockton, Blyth

    @malcolmlugg9843@malcolmlugg9843 Жыл бұрын
  • I visited St Austell 50 years ago wow how can a place deteriorate so much 😢same with the other places you featured 😮

    @FredWilbury@FredWilbury Жыл бұрын
    • Happening all over the world. No work. Anybody with any get up and go, gets up and goes.

      @cuebj@cuebj Жыл бұрын
  • The media seems to con people about Cornish weather. Met office records show that rainfall is higher than anything on the eastern side of the country.

    @michallowther4160@michallowther4160 Жыл бұрын
  • My friend lives in Redruth. I have visited there many, many times and you're pretty much bang on. It's not the worst place in the world but it's very depressing. It is surrounded by lots of beautiful areas though so you have to travel to lift your spirits.....

    @MrMallum@MrMallum8 ай бұрын
  • Welp, didn't expect to see my town on this list actually! I grew up in Launceston, my family all still live there but I moved away for uni (seeing as there's fuck all choices for unis in Cornwall). Honestly, I get annoyed at everyone's misconception of Cornwall as somewhere full of rich people - whenever I tell someone I'm from Cornwall, everyone thinks I grew up rich with a horse or something, and that couldn't be further from the truth. As you said in the beginning of the video, Cornwall is one of the poorest areas of Europe. However, I'm proud of being Cornish, and of growing up there, we have our own culture and language, music, traditions (although all are sadly dying out), and it truly is beautiful. I live in Birmingham now and I miss being able to go to the coast and the beach in a 20 minutes drive, or go to Bodmin or Dartmoor for walks on the moor, it truly is beautiful.

    @bree4262@bree426211 ай бұрын
  • I was born and brought up in St Austell but moved away years ago, and sad to say, you got this spot on. There really are high levels of deprivation and a sense of hopelessness, typified by the drug use. It’s v sad to see, and there are still some delightful surrounding areas, but I don’t see it recovering.

    @davidsmeath4556@davidsmeath4556 Жыл бұрын
    • Someone I know who lives in Cornwall calls st. Austell st. Awful. Sad really.

      @amayastrata4629@amayastrata4629 Жыл бұрын
    • If you moved away years ago - How do you know what it’s like 🤷🏻‍♂️

      @carlyonbay45@carlyonbay45 Жыл бұрын
    • I feel like I'm missing something. I thought these town to be ok. They looked really clean

      @lightfootpathfinder8218@lightfootpathfinder8218 Жыл бұрын
    • @@lightfootpathfinder8218 That's because there is so much crime there is no shortage of litter pickers on Community Service!

      @SteveChiverton@SteveChiverton Жыл бұрын
    • @@SteveChiverton as someone from Rotherham I don't buy that as we have plenty of crime lmao 😂

      @lightfootpathfinder8218@lightfootpathfinder8218 Жыл бұрын
  • I’m amazed that Callington didn’t get a mention!😵‍💫

    @jimmyjam4371@jimmyjam4371 Жыл бұрын
    • They didn’t wanna diss the home of Ginsters 😂

      @porkerthepig@porkerthepig Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@porkerthepig The Cornish wouldn't mind. Ginsters is emmet food.

      @antman5474@antman5474 Жыл бұрын
    • Callingrad was once a rotten borough in the 1800s. Not changed much, then! I lived in Gunny.

      @dollythrimpton4915@dollythrimpton4915 Жыл бұрын
    • @@dollythrimpton4915 Gunny isnt any better. But lets face it, the high street shut down in Callington and never opened up again after 2019. Not that there was much there before. Its been declining for years along with most other places across the country. I had to go to my old ( from when I was a kid) town in the Midlands. It too was boarded up and pretty awful. Nothing made it through house arrest unscathed. Most of it was dying before that. Besides, people dont live in Cornwall for the towns do we?

      @aprilshowers6752@aprilshowers6752 Жыл бұрын
    • All the councils have been amalgamated into one at Truro, where they make awful decisions about the rest of the county that makes life difficult for the locals. Pity people keep retiring here driving up property prices. A tourist told me that a week in Spain is cheaper than two weeks parking in the summer.

      @geoffreyroberts2000@geoffreyroberts2000 Жыл бұрын
  • Excited to see you come to North Wales at some point. Rhyl, Holywell, Denbigh and Bethesda would all feel at home on these lists...

    @rantingwrench@rantingwrench11 ай бұрын
  • Just subscribed. Can't wait for you to visit and report on more English counties. Nobody else seems to be making these types of honest videos they all regurgitate The Times, or some magazine's top 10 list. I am thinking of moving when i retire so its interesting to get a view of the good and the bad towns. So far Cirencester is top of my list. Lots more travelling and research to do for me though.

    @geoffpeirce406@geoffpeirce4068 ай бұрын
  • Yo've really got a way with words :P I agree with your assesments, they are all grim places and it's hard to say which is worse becasue they are all vile for different reasons. I lasted less than 3 months in St Awful, I moved there by mistake! Couple of miles away are nice beaches thougha nd some lovely countryside spots, essentially towns are the problem. I lived in Hayle for years too and had to go to most of the places mentioned for various reasons, my partner at the time was studying to be a maths teacher, all was well for him until they put him in a placement at a school in Camborne...he quit within weeks saying it was the roughest and worst school he'd been in, and he was from N.Ireland, where his own school was so deprived they were made to draw a keyboard onto paper for music lessons! Cornwall really shouldn't be deprived but there is a huge disparity with all the second home owners pushing out locals and so much being geared up for the tourists that the less wealthy locals are always overlooked

    @primordialpouch565@primordialpouch565 Жыл бұрын
  • 'Your water bill is not the one to fear' Trust me, you do if you live in the South West Water region, it's hundreds of pounds higher than it is in the rest of the country, when i lived in Devon, it was around £400 more than in Wiltshire at the time (not sure what it's like nowadays but i'm sure not a lot has changed). Regarding St Austell also, it's actually Carlyon Bay nearby which is quite nice, as is Charlestown.

    @VermilionStudios@VermilionStudios Жыл бұрын
    • They still can’t shut your water off. They are terrified of customer complaints too.

      @Turdtowns@Turdtowns Жыл бұрын
    • @@Turdtowns Wait & see,if we don't get enough rain this year there will be more drought restriction measures & if that fails the water will get turned off.

      @jonathanlake6053@jonathanlake6053 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@jonathanlake6053 they've extended the hose pipe ban, but at least we got £30 off our bill...

      @lordbezzington8435@lordbezzington8435 Жыл бұрын
  • I recently visited Penzance two years ago and I had a good time for two days. The people were so friendly as to drive me around to find a place for me to stay for the night. Even offered to put me up for the night. We found a good bed and breakfast while driving about. Great people there and about. The high street was nice too. Some areas were a bit rundown but kind of charming in a way. So I was surprised to see Penzanze on your list. Keep up the great videos.

    @markfarrell3818@markfarrell38184 ай бұрын
  • STATUES of "grotesque" dogs cast from old Wellington boots have cost an estimated £30,000 as part of town centre improvements in Redruth. The Tinners Hounds, which the statues have been labelled, were designed by artist David Kemp but have been described by many as a waste of public money. The town centre improvements - costing a total of £5 million - are being carried out by Kerrier district council working with Cormac, a county council contractor. The statues have been cast from old pairs of miners Wellington boots and have been placed on a small stage area half way down Fore Street, Redruth.

    @kumachan9311@kumachan9311 Жыл бұрын
  • I had the good fortune to live in Cornwall for about 12 years (St Ives and Porthleven mostly). I also had the misfortune to live in Newquay for a summer and Penzance for a year. You would only spend time there to a)watch the rugby. b) get drunk and c) bet your mates on who would be next to get thrown out of the pub. (sometimes the thrower would open the door first). Hi to all my friends in Cornwall!

    @simonwaters2332@simonwaters2332 Жыл бұрын
  • Really nicely made video. Top job 👍

    @stevecarmo548@stevecarmo54810 ай бұрын
  • I love this guy narrating these videos, absolutely hilarious. 🤣🤣

    @andrewsaunders1796@andrewsaunders1796 Жыл бұрын
  • For everyone stating their shock, this is happening all over the world at a much larger and potent rate, this isn’t a British issue. Someone estimated around 20% is like that? That numbers higher in Japan (several ghost towns, weak infrastructure etc) same with US, France (thousands of tents scattered around full of immigrants that looks like something out of Last of Us, also same in the US, I could go on. The UK without a doubt has to fix areas but this is happening everywhere, I haven’t seen a ghost town in Britain, they exist in most other countries particularly so called developed countries like Japan where their population is plummeting and town after town is slowly disconnecting from society.

    @herv7539@herv7539 Жыл бұрын
    • Don't worry about those people in tents in France - they are all waiting for their number to come up to hop onto a boat to the UK in designer clothes, holding an iPhone and heading to a 4* hotel. Then a s..t leftie lawyer will get legal aid to ensure they say here.

      @tobyrugby@tobyrugby Жыл бұрын
    • World economic forum. I rest my case

      @sophiawoods6748@sophiawoods67487 ай бұрын
    • In a small way it's also happening in Australia, a so called "Lucky Country" with lots of minerals for sale. Homelessness has been a huge problem for at least 5 years and it's on the increase. Thankfully Labor is now in government after almost 10 years of massive neglect by the conservatives, the Liberal National Coalition Party (LNP) who talked lots and did nothing for anyone but their wealthy mates plus massive corruption and sex scandals I won't bother to go into details. Labor has recently launched a housing policy amongst many other fantastic policies and has promised thousands of new house's to be built for the homeless over many years.

      @somattalistenta@somattalistenta4 ай бұрын
    • @@somattalistenta all by design WEF own nothing be happy 2030

      @sophiawoods6748@sophiawoods67484 ай бұрын
    • Yep, it's a scary future for sure.

      @somattalistenta@somattalistenta4 ай бұрын
KZhead