In what is a real turn up for the books, no Greater Manchester towns have been named in this year’s worst places to live in England list.
And it’s the first time in quite a while that the region gets to boast this.
If you’re unfamiliar with the controversial rankings, every year, more than 100,000 people head on over to iLiveHere UK to dish the dirt on what it’s like to be a resident in their towns and communities, which the online platform then uses to create an annual list of the top 50 worst places to live in England – and it’s fair to say it’s usually pretty grim reading for the North West.
Greater Manchester is sadly known for fairing quite badly on the rankings every year, with three of the region’s towns – Bolton, Rochdale, and Oldham – finding themselves in the top 20 last year.
Wigan has also found itself on the rankings a couple of times in recent years too.
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But the region is clearly in its glow-up era if the 2023 list is anything to go by, as not only is this year’s top 10 absent of Greater Manchester towns, but none appear in the top 20 either, and you’ll have to go as far up the list as 34th place to find our first mention.
Top 10 Worst Places to Live in England 2023
Luton
Peterborough
Portsmouth
Slough
Aylesbury
Aldershot
Andover
Swindon
Bournemouth
Bradford
No Greater Manchester towns named in top 20 ‘worst places to live’ in England 2023 / Credit: John S Turner (via Geograph)
Bolton is the first Greater Manchester town to grab a place on the 2023 rankings, coming in at what can only be described as a respectable 34th place, given the fact it was number six on last year’s list.
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The region’s next inclusion on this year’s list is Manchester at 43.
Wigan is the only other Greater Manchester town in the top 50, ranking one place above Manchester at number 44.
Looking elsewhere across the 2023 rankings, a new town has been crowned the worst as Luton takes top spot on the list, followed by Peterborough, Portsmouth, Slough, and Ayelsbury rounding out the rest of the top five, and Aldershot, Swindon, and Bournemouth being just a few of the other places securing a place in the top 10.
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Bradford is the only northern representative in the top 10, and Liverpool is the first North West town on the rankings at 16, with Blackpool the next at 23.
You can read the 2023 list of Top 50 Worst Places to Live in England here.
Featured Image – TEP
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8 million Brits are predicted to write their Christmas cards using AI this year, new research finds
Emily Sergeant
Millions of Brits are predicted to use AI to help them write their Christmas cards this year.
According to some new Royal Mail research, AI is most likely to be used for researching gifts (19%), festive party ideas (13%), and decoration inspiration (13%) throughout this festive season, but in what is a revelation many will find surprising – and even alarming – it’ll even be used for the timeless tradition of sending Christmas cards.
2,000 UK adults who celebrate Christmas were surveyed by the postal service early last month on how they plan to make use of technology this festive season.
The new research found that 11% of respondents will be using AI to help write the messages for their Christmas cards, which works out to be around eight million people.
It’s the under-55s who are driving the trend, as you can probably imagine – with 57% of this age group planning to lean on AI for guidance, compared to just 14% of those over 55.
Oh, and you’ll want to keep an extra eye on the Christmas cards that come from the men in your life too, as men are 67% more likely than women to use AI to help them.
Eight million Brits are predicted to write their Christmas cards using AI this year / Credit: KoolShooters
Although it may be largely frowned upon, it’s fairly easy to see why people are turning to tech to find the right words, as the Royal Mail’s research found that nearly one in five (19%) Brits say they don’t know what to write in cards, and this figure rises even further to 31% when it comes to 18-24-year-olds.
Despite the use of AI as a helping hand, three quarters of Brits (74%) do still think it’s important to keep the tradition of sending handwritten Christmas cards alive.
“AI is becoming part of everyday life for many people,” says technology journalist and broadcaster, Georgie Barrat. “So it’s natural we’ll see it used during the festive season. When it comes to writing cards, it can help you go beyond a simple ‘Merry Christmas’ and choose words that feel more unique.
“Often, people know what they want to say – they just need a little help expressing it.”
Richard Travers, who is the Managing Director of Letters at Royal Mail, concluded: “No matter what you include in your card, or how you choose to write your message, cards are truly a way of spreading festive cheer.”
Featured Image – Richard Bell (via Unsplash)
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Manchester’s 2025 Christmas Parade in pictures as tens of thousands turn out for festive event
Emily Sergeant
Tens of thousands of residents flocked to the city centre this past weekend for Manchester’s annual Christmas Parade.
Over the past few years since it first took place in 2022, Manchester Christmas Parade has become a festive favourite with both locals and visitors alike, and with more than 400 participants and performers gracing the city’s main shopping streets this year, it’s really not hard to see why it’s a much-loved fixture in the city’s countdown to Christmas.
Seen by many as the heartwarming event of the festive season, Manchester Christmas Parade was even ‘bigger and better’ than last year’s fantastic crowdpleaser.
Even a drop of the classic Manchester rain didn’t stop play on the day, as the fabulous festive Parade made its way through the packed city streets to the smiles and cheers of all those watching.
Despite the Manchester weather, tens of thousands of you turned out to make Sunday’s Christmas Parade truly magical. 🎅 👼 🥁
A huge thank you to everyone who joined us for the heart-warming event of the season.
“I remember thinking at the end of our fabulous Manchester Christmas Parade last year that we would never be able to top it,” commented Cllr Pat Karney, Manchester City Council’s Christmas spokesperson. “But this year’s parade has been off-the-scale brilliant – it was so much fun and you could see how much all the children loved it.
“The city centre was heaving, it felt like millions of Mancs had turned out for the parade, and what a performance we put on for them.”
The streets were filled with music and laughter this year, as well as the return of Manchester’s very-own Elf Express, complete with VIP passenger Santa hitching a ride on his way to the North Pole, together with his trusty team of elves.
Tens of thousands of people turned out for Manchester Christmas Parade 2025 this past weekend / Credit: Manchester City Council
Not only that, but Nutcracker-inspired toy soldiers also sweept their way through the Parade on segways, alongside a roaming Christmas tree, a pair of gentle giant-sized reindeer, a stunning arctic fox, and Jack Frost himself.
Brand-new for this year will be the fantastic Festive Fantasy Candyland Castle, which stood over three-meters tall and truly was the stuff of fairytales.
“Manchester once again helped make the magic and the memories for a whole generation of families from across the city and beyond,” Cllr Karney concluded.