If they wanted to really trigger the gammon they should have named the Romford to Upminster line "The Brexit line", because when you look at the map it's on the far right
The Windrush and Weaver lines are the best names. Lioness is a bit silly but fine, the route is a bit of an event carrier from Euston to Wembley so it's quite fun to have that as the focus. Mildmay is too niche for such a long line and is a bit too much of a nod to East London for a line that only has 5 stops in East. The Suffragette line is a mouthful and a pretty loose connection seeing as the movement had its HQ on the Strand and Kingsway - would change that one but only for relevance.Weaver line is the best name out of the lot IMO. Think the Lioness line is a bit silly, and the suffragette line.
Idolising white males has got us into a bit of a mess: time of change I guess?It is all depressingly “woke”. What is it with this country that now wants to idolise women , minority groups and perverts ?
Where will it end?GB News will talk about absolutely nothing else today
But really it's all a storm in a teacup - why name them like tube lines when they aren't tube lines? Line A, B, C and colour differentiation would do the job well enough.
TfL’s London Overground network has grown considerably over recent years, and to reflect this I’ll launch a programme to name individual routes, giving each its own identity.
People are just going to refer to them as their colours anyway.
“Take Orange all the way to …” etc
But without the same frequency or reliability. I think in some areas they don't have their own dedicated tracks and instead share them with normal trains, but I may stand to be corrected on that.Because they are just like tube lines and you can interchange between them to get around.
Single operator, same rolling stock with limited seating to get as many cattle to work and home again.
The renaming makes particularly visitors think of them as the underground, use them and take pressure off the tube.
Getting to QPR for instance. Brighton > Clapham Junction > Shepherds Bush.
Chelsea: Brighton > Clapham Junction > Imperial Wharf.
Much easier than the tube.
Yeah. Where is Churchill, Thatcher, Coe, Moore (Tom and Bobby), and Johnson?They'll have to build a few more virtue signal boxes to cope with all of these.
But without the same frequency or reliability. I think in some areas they don't have their own dedicated tracks and instead share them with normal trains, but I may stand to be corrected on that.
It's improving for sure, but it's not the same as the tube service. Spending several years having to rely on the South London (Windrush) Line to get anywhere taught me that.
Equally the Elizabeth Line is not a tube service in the traditional sense.
Which Paris Metro station is named after an Italian electronic music band?I've just returned from Paris, and having used the Metro quite a bit I've been struck by how many station names and place names are named after foreigners, battles or Former French and US Presidents. By comparison, we typically name after places, landmarks, royalty.
If we did things the French way we'd have stations named after Crecy, Agincourt, Trafalgar, Blenheim, El Alamein, JFK, Obama, Thatcher, Blair and Churchill.
No Steve Wright In the Afternoon Line, ffs?
f***ing shambles.