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  • Restaurant waiters share a joke on a smartphone in Naschmarkt, Vienna, Austria, EU.
    vienna_staff-01-27-06-2016.jpg
  • Two businessmen of Asian descent have stopped at a bar in the City of London  and are seated by the window in Cannon Street, near St Paul's Cathedral, England. They both have a similar skin tones and are equally smart in dark suits and ties. The male on the left cradles a pint of beer while other's drink is a half-pint of either lager or perhaps apple juice. They both look successful and confident about their friendship or business dealings as they share a joke or swap stories about their lives. They wear sun glasses against the late, strong sunshine but the background has gone dark because the sun has illuminated only their faces and chests. It is a picture of confidence, success and humour.
    city_london02-15-12-2007 .jpg
  • An Anglican vicar shares a joke with a patient whose leg is in plaster, in a ward of the London Hospital, Whitechapel, on 23rd June 1993, in London, England.
    nhs_hospital-23-06-1993_4.jpg
  • Outside Britain's Palace of Westminster parliament, a Charlie Chaplin character making a Donald trump joke, on the day of Trump's inauguration as the 45th US president, on 20th January, in Parliament Square, London borough of Westminster, England.
    trump_inauguration-28-20-01-2017.jpg
  • Outside Britain's Palace of Westminster parliament, a young black boy looks a passing woman as a Charlie Chaplin character making a Donald trump joke, on the day of Trump's inauguration as the 45th US president, on 20th January, in Parliament Square, London borough of Westminster, England.
    trump_inauguration-27-20-01-2017.jpg
  • Outside Britain's Palace of Westminster parliament, a young black boy looks sideways at a Charlie Chaplin character making a Donald trump joke, on the day of Trump's inauguration as the 45th US president, on 20th January, in Parliament Square, London borough of Westminster, England.
    trump_inauguration-26-20-01-2017.jpg
  • Outside Britain's Palace of Westminster parliament, a young black boy looks sideways at a Charlie Chaplin character making a Donald trump joke, on the day of Trump's inauguration as the 45th US president, on 20th January, in Parliament Square, London borough of Westminster, England.
    trump_inauguration-22-20-01-2017.jpg
  • Outside Britain's Palace of Westminster parliament, a black mother walks past a Charlie Chaplin character making a Donald trump joke, on the day of Trump's inauguration as the 45th US president, on 20th January, in Parliament Square, London borough of Westminster, England.
    trump_inauguration-17-20-01-2017.jpg
  • An American expatriate living in Monaco laughs at a joke from an unseen person while standing near her apartment  in front of a beach mural on the Avenue Princess Grace. The cartoon character is a puny bather in an old fashioned bathing costume and flippers, showing off a scrawny arm and non-existant bicep. Seen from a low angle, the blonde-haired widow wears sunglasses, a black coat and speckled scarf around her neck, has been living in Monaco for many years and speaks fluent French. We see a smart lady in her middle-age enjoying her retirement in the warm Mediterranean climate.
    RB-0076.jpg
  • A theatrical joke about bureaucracy between French and British comedians at an event to mark the opening of the Channel Tunnel produces this quirky scene where each country's officials are seated at a long table, dressed in British flags, to symbolise the controls on human traffic that will soon pass through the tunnel beneath the sea between England and France, the first physical link between these two land masses since the Ice Age. Wearing smart uniforms, French immigration police and Gendarmes sit among British customs and immigration officials who, rather comically wear yellow hard hats because Health and Safety laws make the wearing of protective headgear compulsory on construction sites. A frontier control point notice stands for the benefit of viewers who might otherwise be guessing what is going on.
    eurotunnel12-01-1990.jpg
  • We see three friends close-up enjoying a festive party at Hamiltons pub in the City of London only a week before Christmas. It is a busy evening in the public house which is located near Liverpool Street mainline Station and they are in a humerous spirit just having fired off party streamers that have stuck to their clothes and faces. Two are wearing red and white santa claus hats but are stil in their work clothes. One is about to drink some of his pint of beer from a long, straight glass. The three look comical because of the streamers draped over their bodies and they are laughing and giggling at a joke that one has cracked. In the background a man is looking quizzically at the decorations.  The City of London has a resident population of under 10,000 but a daily working population of 311,000. The City of London is a geographically-small City within Greater London, England. The City as it is known, is the historic core of London from which, along with Westminster, the modern conurbation grew. The City's boundaries have remained constant since the Middle Ages but  it is now only a tiny part of Greater London. The City of London is a major financial centre, often referred to as just the City or as the Square Mile, as it is approximately one square mile (2.6 km) in area. London Bridge's history stretches back to the first crossing over Roman Londinium, close to this site and subsequent wooden and stone bridges have helped modern London become a financial success.
    RB-0134.jpg
  • Outside Britain's Palace of Westminster parliament, a young black boy and a Charlie Chaplin character making a Donald trump joke, on the day of Trump's inauguration as the 45th US president, on 20th January, in Parliament Square, London borough of Westminster, England.
    trump_inauguration-29-20-01-2017.jpg
  • A rack of quintessentially English 'saucy postcards' are on display in Scarborough, the northern seaside town. Telling jokes to send back to friends and family, they using cartoon characters of buxom women, hen-pecked husbands or sexually-frustrated young men, the humour is bawdy and cheeky - the epitome of seaside holiday kitsch. The best-known saucy seaside postcards were created by Bamforths (founded 1870) and despite the decline in popularity of postcards that are overtly tacky, postcards continue to be a significant economic and cultural aspect of British seaside tourism. In the 1950s, Bamforth postcards were among the most popular of the 18 million items purchased at British resorts.
    scarborough_saucy_postcards-19-07-19...jpg
  • After the controversy of TV personality and paedophile Jimmy Savile, a play on words of his famous catchphrase 'Jim'll Fix it' on a truck/lorry.
    jimll_fixit01-23-10-2012.jpg
  • Football supporter mates mess around in a London street before going on to watch their team's match elsewhere in the capital. But this man in the green stripes of his team is NOT a pickpocket as might be suggested on first look. He reaches into the unbuttoned pocket of the older-looking man in shorts. But recaptioning this picture to suggest he is a street criminal might be thought libelous, giving this brief moment a misinterpretation and misrepresentation.
    pocket_men1-29-09-2011.jpg
  • Two ladies are seen gossiping about someone else in the caseta (marquee) during the Spring Feria in Seville, Spain. Holding on to their small aperitif glasses the two beautiful ladies are close together comparing notes and mischievously swapping opinions during the later afternoon before a whole evening's entertainment when they will party till dawn. They are both dressed in traditional red and white flamenco dresses with red and yellow scarves around their necks. It is a lively event that Seville holds annually in the vast fairground area on the far bank of the Guadalquivir River. Rows of temporary marquee casetas, host families, corporations and friends into the late hours during the April Fair which begins begins two weeks after the Semana Santa, or Easter Holy Week in the Andalusian capital.
    seville_girls01.jpg
  • Makeshift cardboard signs warn of a freshly painted white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-12-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-06-02-02-2023.jpg
  • A quirky airport landscape of an Embraer E2 jet airliner and headless exhibition marketing figures during the Farnborough Airshow, on 20th July 2022, at Farnborough, England. The Embraer E-Jet E2 family are medium-range jet airliners developed by Brazilian manufacturer, Embraer. The Farnborough International Airshow (FIA) is an aerospace and defence industry trade fair which, due to Covid, is being held for the first time in four years. The pandemic has had a major impact on commercial aviation, while the war in Ukraine has changed the mindset for defence industries. There are 1,200 exhibitors from 42 countries here with organisers hoping to attract more than 80,000 visitors over the week.
    farnborough_airshow-72-20-07-2022.jpg
  • A quirky airport landscape of an Embraer E2 jet airliner and headless exhibition marketing figures during the Farnborough Airshow, on 20th July 2022, at Farnborough, England. The Embraer E-Jet E2 family are medium-range jet airliners developed by Brazilian manufacturer, Embraer. The Farnborough International Airshow (FIA) is an aerospace and defence industry trade fair which, due to Covid, is being held for the first time in four years. The pandemic has had a major impact on commercial aviation, while the war in Ukraine has changed the mindset for defence industries. There are 1,200 exhibitors from 42 countries here with organisers hoping to attract more than 80,000 visitors over the week.
    farnborough_airshow-71-20-07-2022.jpg
  • On the day that Prime Minister Boris Johnson apologised to parliament about the fixed-penalty fine for being present at a party during his own Covid pandemic restrictions, protester Steve Bray holds his placards opposite parliament, on 19th April 2022, in London, England. The Met police continue to investigate Johnson and his staff as news of more lockdown party fines are expected to be revealed by police.
    boris_protest-01-19-04-2022.jpg
  • A man wearing red trousers walks past construction hoardings near double red Red Route 'No Parking' lines, on 9th March 2022, in London, England.
    red_trousers-01-09-03-2022.jpg
  • An ad for a greeting and special occasions cards business, is displayed on St Martin's Lane in the capital's West End, showing a clueless Prime Minister Boris Johnson seemingly still remembering a birthday, on 9th February 2022, in London, England.
    boris_ad-01-09-02-2022.jpg
  • An ad for a greeting and special occasions cards business, is displayed on St Martin's Lane in the capital's West End, showing a clueless Prime Minister Boris Johnson seemingly still remembering a birthday, on 9th February 2022, in London, England.
    boris_ad-02-09-02-2022.jpg
  • As the controversial Police and Crime bill reaches its final stage in parliament, a protester wearing a Boris Johnson the Omen parody, stands outside the House of Lords where the proposed law is being considered, on 17th January 2022, in Westminster, London, England. Sections of the bill have been condemned by human rights activists as an attack on the right to protest, with campaigners arguing that, without changes, the right to peaceful protest could be curbed by legislation.
    Bill_protest-04-17-01-2022.jpg
  • As the controversial Police and Crime bill reaches its final stage in parliament, a protester wearing a Boris Johnson the Omen parody, stands outside the House of Lords where the proposed law is being considered, on 17th January 2022, in Westminster, London, England. Sections of the bill have been condemned by human rights activists as an attack on the right to protest, with campaigners arguing that, without changes, the right to peaceful protest could be curbed by legislation.
    Bill_protest-03-17-01-2022.jpg
  • On the day that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears in parliament for the weekly Prime Minister's Questions (PMQs), a London tour bus passes a Brexit protest banner on Whitehall, on 12th January 2022, in London, England. Johnson apologised to parliament for office parties held in Downing Street during the Covid pandemic but insisted that he was unaware that these were gatherings social that broke pandemic restrictions.
    PM_protest-07-12-01-2022.jpg
  • On the day that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears in parliament for the weekly Prime Minister's Questions (PMQs), protesters make their feelings known with banners about Johnson's style of leadership, on 12th January 2022, in London, England. Johnson apologised to parliament for office parties held in Downing Street during the Covid pandemic but insisted that he was unaware that these were gatherings social that broke pandemic restrictions.
    PM_protest-08-12-01-2022.jpg
  • On the day that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears in parliament for the weekly Prime Minister's Questions (PMQs), protesters make their feelings known with banners about Johnson's style of leadership, on 12th January 2022, in London, England. Johnson apologised to parliament for office parties held in Downing Street during the Covid pandemic but insisted that he was unaware that these were gatherings social that broke pandemic restrictions.
    PM_protest-09-12-01-2022.jpg
  • A giant inflatable ruby player is seen during the Lord Mayor's Show in the City of London, the capital's financial and historic district, on 13th November 2021, in London, England. Alderman Vincent Keaveny has been elected as the 693rd Lord Mayor of the City of London. The Show dates back to the 13th century, when King John allowed the ancient City of London to appoint its own Mayor and each newly-elected mayor has been making the same annual journey through the streets for over 800 years.
    lord_mayors_show-48-13-11-2021.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-10-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-09-02-02-2023.jpg
  • Makeshift cardboard signs warn of a freshly painted white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-11-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-07-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-08-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-05-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-04-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-01-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-02-02-02-2023.jpg
  • An employee smartens up and repaints the white line along a step outside MacConnal-Mason, an art gallery on Duke Street in St James's, on 2nd January 2023, in London, England. MacConnal-Mason is a fourth generation, family owned business operating from two freehold galleries in the heart of St. James’s.
    gallery_paintings-03-02-02-2023.jpg
  • A quirky airport landscape of an Embraer E2 jet airliner and headless exhibition marketing figures during the Farnborough Airshow, on 20th July 2022, at Farnborough, England. The Embraer E-Jet E2 family are medium-range jet airliners developed by Brazilian manufacturer, Embraer. The Farnborough International Airshow (FIA) is an aerospace and defence industry trade fair which, due to Covid, is being held for the first time in four years. The pandemic has had a major impact on commercial aviation, while the war in Ukraine has changed the mindset for defence industries. There are 1,200 exhibitors from 42 countries here with organisers hoping to attract more than 80,000 visitors over the week.
    farnborough_airshow-70-20-07-2022.jpg
  • A quirky airport landscape of an Embraer E2 jet airliner and headless exhibition marketing figures during the Farnborough Airshow, on 20th July 2022, at Farnborough, England. The Embraer E-Jet E2 family are medium-range jet airliners developed by Brazilian manufacturer, Embraer. The Farnborough International Airshow (FIA) is an aerospace and defence industry trade fair which, due to Covid, is being held for the first time in four years. The pandemic has had a major impact on commercial aviation, while the war in Ukraine has changed the mindset for defence industries. There are 1,200 exhibitors from 42 countries here with organisers hoping to attract more than 80,000 visitors over the week.
    farnborough_airshow-69-20-07-2022.jpg
  • Two residents wear identical face masks and scarves to resemble the queen during a South London street party organised by the community, helping to celebrate the queen's Platinum Jubilee, on 5th June 2022, in London, England. Queen Elizabeth II has been on the UK throne for 70 years, the longest-serving monarch in English history and throughout the Jubilee weekend, the public have been organising street parties and community gatherings.
    fernedne_street_party-04-05-06-2022.jpg
  • A man wearing red trousers pauses to read a construction hoarding, near double red Red Route 'No Parking' lines, on 9th March 2022, in London, England.
    red_trousers-03-09-03-2022.jpg
  • A man wearing red trousers pauses to read a construction hoarding, near double red Red Route 'No Parking' lines, on 9th March 2022, in London, England.
    red_trousers-02-09-03-2022.jpg
  • A group of dogs have been left tied up outside the womens toilets in a south London park, on 21st February 2022, in London, England.
    toilet_dogs-01-21-02-2022.jpg
  • As the controversial Police and Crime bill reaches its final stage in parliament, a protester wearing a Boris Johnson the Omen parody, stands outside the House of Lords where the proposed law is being considered, on 17th January 2022, in Westminster, London, England. Sections of the bill have been condemned by human rights activists as an attack on the right to protest, with campaigners arguing that, without changes, the right to peaceful protest could be curbed by legislation.
    Bill_protest-06-17-01-2022.jpg
  • As the controversial Police and Crime bill reaches its final stage in parliament, a protester wearing a Boris Johnson the Omen parody, stands outside the House of Lords where the proposed law is being considered, on 17th January 2022, in Westminster, London, England. Sections of the bill have been condemned by human rights activists as an attack on the right to protest, with campaigners arguing that, without changes, the right to peaceful protest could be curbed by legislation.
    Bill_protest-05-17-01-2022.jpg
  • As the controversial Police and Crime bill reaches its final stage in parliament, a protester wearing a Boris Johnson the Omen parody, stands outside the House of Lords where the proposed law is being considered, on 17th January 2022, in Westminster, London, England. Sections of the bill have been condemned by human rights activists as an attack on the right to protest, with campaigners arguing that, without changes, the right to peaceful protest could be curbed by legislation.
    Bill_protest-02-17-01-2022.jpg
  • As the controversial Police and Crime bill reaches its final stage in parliament, a protester wearing a Boris Johnson the Omen parody, stands outside the House of Lords where the proposed law is being considered, on 17th January 2022, in Westminster, London, England. Sections of the bill have been condemned by human rights activists as an attack on the right to protest, with campaigners arguing that, without changes, the right to peaceful protest could be curbed by legislation.
    Bill_protest-01-17-01-2022.jpg
  • On the day that British Prime Minister Boris Johnson appears in parliament for the weekly Prime Minister's Questions (PMQs), protesters make their feelings known with banners about Johnson's style of leadership, on 12th January 2022, in London, England. Johnson apologised to parliament for office parties held in Downing Street during the Covid pandemic but insisted that he was unaware that these were gatherings social that broke pandemic restrictions.
    PM_protest-10-12-01-2022.jpg
  • A landscape of anachronism with modern-era chairs and a sign for a nearby antiques business in a rural English town, on 30th June 2021, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    norfolk_chairs05-30-06-2021.jpg
  • A landscape of anachronism with modern-era chairs and a sign for a nearby antiques business in a rural English town, on 30th June 2021, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    norfolk_chairs03-30-06-2021.jpg
  • A landscape of anachronism with modern-era chairs and a sign for a nearby antiques business in a rural English town, on 30th June 2021, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    norfolk_chairs02-30-06-2021.jpg
  • A landscape of anachronism with modern-era chairs and a sign for a nearby antiques business in a rural English town, on 30th June 2021, in Aylsham, Norfolk, England.
    norfolk_chairs01-30-06-2021.jpg
  • An urban landscape of cycle lane, pavement and the security docks of Santander rental bikes on the Farringdon Road in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 24th June 2021, in London, England. The vertical line of a lamp post has merged with the trunk of a street tree. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images) CREDIT RICHARD BAKER.
    holborn_viaduct04-24-06-2021.jpg
  • An urban landscape of cycle lane, pavement and the security docks of Santander rental bikes on the Farringdon Road in the City of London, the capital's financial district, on 24th June 2021, in London, England. The vertical line of a lamp post has merged with the trunk of a street tree. (Photo by Richard Baker / In Pictures via Getty Images) CREDIT RICHARD BAKER.
    holborn_viaduct05-24-06-2021.jpg
  • Waiting for a green light to cross the road, an adult man guides a young boy on his bike, alongsiode a construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign18-08-03-2021.jpg
  • Waiting for a green light to cross the road, an adult man guides a young boy on his bike, alongsiode a construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign17-08-03-2021.jpg
  • Waiting for a green light to cross the road, an adult man guides a young boy on his bike, alongsiode a construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign14-08-03-2021.jpg
  • A runner passes a construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign07-08-03-2021.jpg
  • A dog walker passes a construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign04-08-03-2021.jpg
  • A construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign01-08-03-2021.jpg
  • A passer-by walks near a construction industry warning sign, erected to warn pedestrians, but damaged so that it is seemingly bending over at the waist, on 8th March 2021, in London, England.
    construction_sign02-08-03-2021.jpg
  • Faces and bodies are distorted by shaped mirrors on Southwold Pier, on 14th August 2020, in Southwold, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh06-14-08-2020.jpg
  • Faces and bodies are distorted by shaped mirrors on Southwold Pier, on 14th August 2020, in Southwold, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh07-14-08-2020.jpg
  • Pro-EU Remainers celebrate EU membership with 'A party like there's no tomorrow' for one last time outside parliament, one day before Brexit Day (the date of 31st January 2020, when the UK legally exits the European Union), in Parliament Square, Westminster, on 30th January 2020, in London, England.
    brexit_protest-14-30-01-2020.jpg
  • One day before Brexit Day (the date of 31st January 2020, when the UK legally exits the European Union), a pro-EU Remainer stands outside parliament alongside a Latin pun referring to Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the Queen's 'annus horribilis' (her 1992, a year of disaster fire at Windsor Castle and royal scandal). Remainers chose to celebrate the UK's membership with the EU for one last time for 'A party like there's no tomorrow' outside parliament, in Parliament Square, Westminster, on 30th January 2020, in London, England.
    brexit_protest-11-30-01-2020.jpg
  • One day before Brexit Day (the date of 31st January 2020, when the UK legally exits the European Union), a pro-EU Remainer stands outside parliament alongside a Latin pun referring to Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the Queen's 'annus horribilis' (her 1992, a year of disaster fire at Windsor Castle and royal scandal). Remainers chose to celebrate the UK's membership with the EU for one last time for 'A party like there's no tomorrow' outside parliament, in Parliament Square, Westminster, on 30th January 2020, in London, England.
    brexit_protest-09-30-01-2020.jpg
  • One day before Brexit Day (the date of 31st January 2020, when the UK legally exits the European Union), a pro-EU Remainer stands outside parliament alongside a Latin pun referring to Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the Queen's 'annus horribilis' (her 1992, a year of disaster fire at Windsor Castle and royal scandal). Remainers chose to celebrate the UK's membership with the EU for one last time for 'A party like there's no tomorrow' outside parliament, in Parliament Square, Westminster, on 30th January 2020, in London, England.
    brexit_protest-08-30-01-2020.jpg
  • One day before Brexit Day (the date of 31st January 2020, when the UK legally exits the European Union), a pro-EU Remainer stands outside parliament alongside a Latin pun referring to Prime Minister Boris Johnson and the Queen's 'annus horribilis' (her 1992, a year of disaster fire at Windsor Castle and royal scandal). Remainers chose to celebrate the UK's membership with the EU for one last time for 'A party like there's no tomorrow' outside parliament, in Parliament Square, Westminster, on 30th January 2020, in London, England.
    brexit_protest-07-30-01-2020.jpg
  • Ex-British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher smiles at delegates during the 1991 Tory party conference, on 11th October 1991, in Blackpool, England. Two years after her colleagues deposed her, forcing her to resign from her 11 year premiership she is still in favour by Conservatives who are proud to display her in public, before eventually shunning her policies and profile for their campaigns. Thatcher has been lending her support to her replacement, the former Chancellor and Foreign Secretary, but the otherwise unknown John Major who governed until 1997.
    thatcher_head06-11-10-1991.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-42-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-19-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-17-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-15-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-11-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-10-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-09-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-07-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-06-19-10-2019.jpg
  • On the day that Members of Parliament sat on a Saturday (the first time in 37 years and dubbed 'Super Saturday') in order to vote for Prime Minister Boris Johnson's Brexit deal with the EU in Brussels, a Johnson and Dominic Cummings parody were wheeled through streets alongside a million Remainers (according to organisers) marched through the capital to voice their opposition to a Brexit and calling for a peoples' Vote, on 19th October 2019, in London, England.
    peoples_march-05-19-10-2019.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman wipes his spectacles clean with a cloth, as a lady raises hers to see oncoming buses, on Denmark Hill in Southwark, on 28th March 2019, in London, England
    bus_views-19-28-03-2019.jpg
  • An elderly gentleman wipes his spectacles clean with a cloth, as a lady raises hers to see oncoming buses, on Denmark Hill in Southwark, on 28th March 2019, in London, England
    bus_views-17-28-03-2019.jpg
  • Protestors demonstrate their distaste for the UK government's handling of Brexit negotiations - and specifically, the failed business deal to contract the Seabourne Ferry contract from Ramsgate - during a pro-EU brexit protest opposite Parliament, on 11th March 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    brexit_protest-09-11-03-2019.jpg
  • An E balloon (representing the concept of remaining in Europe) blows in the wind on railings during a pro-EU brexit protest opposite Parliament, on 11th March 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    brexit_protest-07-11-03-2019.jpg
  • An E balloon (representing the concept of remaining in Europe) blows in the wind on railings during a pro-EU brexit protest opposite Parliament, on 11th March 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    brexit_protest-06-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A woman protestor holds an altered British passport parody during a pro-EU brexit protest opposite Parliament, on 11th March 2019, in Westminster, London, England.
    brexit_protest-01-11-03-2019.jpg
  • A Gelato kiosk and a stool at the southern Southwark end of London Bridge, on 30th May 2018, in London, England.
    gelato_cone-01-30-05-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump is carried to the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-38-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-35-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-32-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-26-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-24-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-23-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-22-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump stands outside the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-20-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump is carried to the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-19-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump is carried to the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-17-12-01-2018.jpg
  • The waxwork of Donald Trump is carried to the US Embassy at Nine Elms in south London on the day when the President announced on Twitter, his refusal to visit London and open the new state premises after its historic move from Grosvenor Square, on 12th January 2018, in London, England. The waxwork is the property of Madame Tussauds and took a team of 20 artists 4 months to create, going on display on the day of his inauguration in 2017. It is valued at £150,000.
    US_embassy-16-12-01-2018.jpg
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