Why are fewer English people going to their local pubs for a drink? Are they aware that many pubs are shutting down due to lack of customers?
10.06.2025 01:27

Back in the day (early 20th century and before) the English pub offered things you couldn’t get in a working-class home:
You have 1001 sources of entertainment on TV and the Internet
Your home has more comfortable seating and a garden
As measles spreads across the Americas, outbreaks in Mexico and Canada have also turned deadly - CNN
They need to offer either food of a quality you can’t get at home (true gastro-pub experience) or alternative entertainments - live music, poker nights, sports viewing etc.
A range of alcoholic drinks
Comfortable seating in a warm, cozy environment, or a nice pub garden
It has been said that people with ADHD can often hyperfocus. Can that be an advantage?
The pubs with the best chance of survival long-term recognize that they can’t just get away with the same 3 beers, ropey wine and pub-grub. Why pay more for something worse than you can get at home for less?
In the mid to late 20th century they added food, without the inconvenience of cooking it or washing up.
You can get takeaway or even cook yourself a wider range of food of good quality
Can you tell me something about yourself?
You can get a wider range of quality drinks at lower prices from a supermarket
You have to understand what the attraction of the English pub was in the first place.
Entertainment (pre TV and radio)
Which Bibles can one read and be confident they are reading the inerrant word of God?
But now: