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1[[quoteright:350:[[Film/{{Control}} https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/control_2007.jpeg]]]]
2[[caption-width-right:350:Cheer up, [[Music/JoyDivision Ian]], at least you don't live in [[UsefulNotes/OtherBritishTownsAndCities Luton]]...]]
3
4->''"Up North,''
5-->''Where the beer is best!''
6->''Up North,''
7-->''Where you don't wear a vest!''
8->''Up North,''
9-->''Where men are men!''
10->''Up North,''
11-->''Ah, I'll say it again,''
12->''Up North!"''
13-->-- '''Fivepenny Piece''': '''''Up North'''''
14
15%% One quote is sufficient. Please place additional entries on the quotes tab.
16
17Northern England. To those of the metropolitan southeast in particular, it's a strange and alien place full of salt-of-the-earth [[UsefulNotes/ATouchOfClassEthnicityAndReligion lower-class]] types who [[UsefulNotes/BritishAccents talk foonae]], notable only for [[UsefulNotes/FootballPopMusicAndFlatCaps football, pop music, and flat caps]]. To some Londoners, this is more or less anywhere north of the M25, the motorway surrounding Greater London, forgetting about UsefulNotes/TheMidlands.[[note]]Another popular informal boundary between the North and South (with UsefulNotes/TheMidlands again being lumped in with the North) is an imaginary line drawn from the Wash to the Bristol channel. Northerners, however, draw it from the Humber Estuary to the Dee Estuary, excluding the unloved Midlands which are lumped in with the South. Some slightly kinder Northerners use the "Mansfield/Hucknall" - both of these places are in Nottinghamshire - rule which says that Mansfield is in the North, Hucknall is in the South, and the border is somewhere vaguely between the two [[/note]] Geographically, the North is usually classed as comprising the counties of Yorkshire, Lancashire, Merseyside (including [[UsefulNotes/{{Liverpool}} Liverpool]]), [[UsefulNotes/NorthEastEngland Durham, Northumberland, Tyne & Wear]], Cumbria, and parts of Lincolnshire and Derbyshire, [[UsefulNotes/FootballPopMusicAndFlatCaps Greater Manchester]] and some parts of Cheshire. The Creator/{{ITV}} regions Oop North are Granada, Border, Tyne Tees, and Yorkshire.
18
19It's less crowded than southern England, though not half as rich or full of TV bosses.[[note]]Though thanks to a concerted effort by Creator/{{the BBC}} (and other media organizations such as ITV) to relocate a large chunk of its resources to Salford and Manchester, this is beginning to change.[[/note]] The media sometimes portray it as a stereotypical place of urban deprivation, coal mines, and men in flat caps. Expect stories about working-class struggle, unemployment, crime, alcoholism, wife beating, and [[Series/LastOfTheSummerWine old men having humorous adventures]]. There may well be [[Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus trouble at t'mill]]. The setting of many a KitchenSinkDrama.
20
21Northerners are sometimes held in the same low regard as Australians and Texans for being too loud, proud, and generally insufferable, like in ''Series/AtLastThe1948Show'''s [[WhenIWasYourAge Four Yorkshiremen sketch]]. But surveys have shown that Northern accents (particularly Yorkshire) are thought to be the most "trustworthy", thanks to the no-nonsense stereotype. Just as in the South, urban regions -- and especially factory or mining towns -- of the North of England often vocally support the Labour Party, especially concerning trade unions (think of all those coal mines, steel mills, and so on). Express praise for UsefulNotes/MargaretThatcher [[BerserkButton at your own risk]].[[note]]However, Labour's support is less prominent than it used to be, many of the same mining areas whose jobs she took away have started voting for the Conservatives, especially after Brexit which somewhat changed England's political geography, due to a lot of traditionally Labour areas being very supportive of Brexit, even though ironically economic assessments have shown they'll be among [[DidntThinkThisThrough the people worst-hit by Brexit]]. As noted above, British TV creators largely don't live in the north, but many grew up there and remember the north-south divide in those days, which is likely why the trope persists on British TV.[[/note]] It's important to remember, however, that this only applies to urban and industrial areas: rural areas of the North in counties like Yorkshire have always been some of the safest Conservative constituencies in the country (eg Harrogate).
22
23The trope name reflects a [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_language_in_Northern_England northern pronunciation]] of "up North" in the phrase is "Ee, it's [[GrimUpNorth grim oop North]]".[[note]]Incidentally, "ee" sounds like a cross between "aye" and "hey" and "oop" rhymes internally with "foot" not "soup"[[/note]] While living Oop North certainly isn't fun, it should not be confused with GrimUpNorth.
24
25[[JustForFun/IThoughtItMeant Not to be confused with]] the American counterpart, [[UsefulNotes/TwinCities Ap Nort']]. (Not least because, in the US, many of the stereotypes associated with Northern England are instead spread out between UsefulNotes/{{Appalachia}} and a different part of the Midwest, known as the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rust_Belt "Rust Belt"]].)
26
27----
28!!Examples:
29
30[[foldercontrol]]
31
32[[folder:Advertising]]
33* The Creator/{{ESPN}} commercial [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ms_b_NH3P4 "Born Into It"]], where two blokes from Manchester--a [[UsefulNotes/BritishFootyTeams United fan and a City fan]]--describe how horrible their lives would be if they were born on the other side, even though they have more in common than they think.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Audio Plays]]
37* AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho: The Eighth Doctor's companion Lucie is from Blackpool.
38[[/folder]]
39
40[[folder:Comic Books]]
41* Several of the stories in ''ComicBook/{{Viz}}'', as the comic originated in Newcastle; most notably the character of Sid The Sexist.
42* [[ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}} John Constantine]] is originally from Liverpool. Furthermore, a large number of issues are about John making attempts to come to terms with what happened in Newcastle.
43* Mokera from ''Manga/HeliosEclipse''.
44* ComicStrip/DanDare's batman Digby hails from Wigan. Dan himself is from Manchester.
45* ''ComicBook/JackStaff'' is set in Castleford, Yorkshire.
46* In ''ComicBook/{{Witchblade}},'' a former wielder of the Witchblade Katarina Godliffe was from a farm near York in North Yorkshire.
47[[/folder]]
48
49[[folder:Comic Strips]]
50* ''ComicStrip/AndyCapp'' -- and his granddaughter Mandy Capp -- are from the North-East. Andy has evolved since the 1950s as the archetypical Geordie ne'er-do-well. His son Buster Capp was for a time the lead feature in [[Comicbook/{{Buster}} a children's comic]] (Buster was created for the eponymous comic; Andy and Flo did occasional cameo parts). It is implied that Buster grew up and married, as the third generation of the Capp family is attitudinal single mother Mandy, whose exploits are now a Daily Mirror comic strip. Mandy has children...
51* Hardcastle Industries, one of Alex's clients in the ''ComicStrip/{{Alex}}'' comic strip, is based in the fictional Nothern town of Grimley. Alex had to move there for a time, leading to a lot of 'fish out of water' jokes about a London banker trying to adjust to life in the industrial north.
52* The very funny comics of Bill Tidy, most notably ''ComicStrip/TheFosdykeSaga'' (which used to appear in the ''Daily Mirror'') and ''The Cloggies'' (in ''Private Eye'') were firmly based Up North. The Cloggies obviously was a team of clog-dancers, while ''The Fosdyke Saga'' told the story of the Fosdykes, a Lancashire family who by a stroke of luck inherited Salford's biggest tripeworks and took place between the turn of the century and the 1930s; usually Sir Jos Fosdyke's three sons were busy travelling around the world on various tripe-related quests and stunts.
53** A successor strip ''The Last Chip Shop in England'' documented the Resistance movement against [[UsefulNotes/McDonalds fast food]] which, in a dystopic Britain, was trying to drive all the competition out of existence. the fast-food Corporation was a double ShoutOut against both Americanised fast-food chains, and a Southern government colluding with them to drive Northern tradition into extinction.
54[[/folder]]
55
56[[folder:Fan Works]]
57* Fanfic/RoanapurConnection: Where part of the first chapter takes place. Specifically, Newcastle and where Nathan is all but stated to consider as his home. Which also forms a heavy part of his motivations we have been told thus far of getting support for. Ganabati also notes Nathan's favourite sweets coming from one particular town in Northern England called Wigan. Which he also notes Nathan never took him there on his tour of Northern England. Which he suspects has some meaning to Nathan.
58* ''Fanfic/DoingItRightThisTime'': Mari Makinami (who's a bit of an OCStandIn) turns out to be from Liverpool.
59[[/folder]]
60
61[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
62* ''WesternAnimation/WallaceAndGromit''. Its precise setting was [[WhereTheHellIsSpringfield kept mysterious]] for a while, but was eventually revealed to be Wigan in Lancashire -- the Yorkshire-Lancashire rivalry was referenced in ''WesternAnimation/AMatterOfLoafAndDeath'' when Gromit makes a solid attempt at throwing an about-to-explode bomb across the Yorkshire border. Though in truth, it was shown in ''WesternAnimation/AGrandDayOut'' that the setting was Wigan, just had to keep an eye out for it.
63* Aardman's other famous work, ''WesternAnimation/ChickenRun,'' is set in Yorkshire. However, not all of the characters have Yorkshire accents (Mr. and Mrs. Tweedy do, though the chickens' accents are from all over the UK).
64* ''WesternAnimation/{{Wolfwalkers}}'' is set in Ireland, but Robyn and her father Bill are from England and they both have Northern accents (Creator/SeanBean uses his native Sheffield accent as Bill). It fits with their portrayal as working-class citizens trying to get by under [[UsefulNotes/OliverCromwell the Lord Protector's]] strict rule, and their Northern accents also set them apart from the Lord Protector's Received Pronunciation.
65[[/folder]]
66
67[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
68* ''Film/{{Threads}}'', the ultimate horror show of nuclear war takes place entirely in Sheffield and the surrounding towns. All the actors are pretty much native to the area, and the programme needs captions just so the rest of the country can make out what the hell everyone is saying. A joke at the time (probably started by a Southerner) held that the film had been set in Sheffield so they didn't have to spend any money building sets to depict it after the nuclear attack.
69* ''Film/TheFullMonty'', in which a bunch of sacked steelworkers have to turn to stripping to survive. By the way, that's a comedy (albeit [[BlackComedy a frequently dark one]]) and a pretty good one as well.
70* ''Film/WhistleDownTheWind'' depicts both the rural and urban North.
71** Both are rather depressing.
72* ''Film/BillyElliot'', a story about a young Northern boy who takes up ballet and tries to hide it from his gruff father. [[spoiler: It turns out that, although other men in the town have a problem with men doing ballet, ''his'' father is just glad his son has found a way to avoid spending his life working in a coal mine like he did.]]
73* ''Film/{{Get Carter|1971}}'' is set in Newcastle, which is portrayed as a grim, crime-ridden city.
74** Also, the famous car park scene is set in Gateshead, just across the Tyne from Newcastle.
75* The moors where the werewolf appears in ''Film/AnAmericanWerewolfInLondon''.
76** And apparently, [[ArtisticLicenseGeography no hospitals until you go hundreds of miles down south to London.]]
77*** Oh there were plenty, the hard part was finding pretty nurses with a deep interest in strange, hairy men.
78* ''Film/BillyLiar'', filmed in and around Bradford and Leeds, just as they were in the process of pulling down all the depressing Victorian slums and replacing them with... er... depressing modern tower blocks.
79* ''Film/BrassedOff'' concerns the (fictional) Grimley Colliery Band, from a (fictional) area of The North. The plot deals with a brass band (very Northern) made up of miners (also quite Northern) being made redundant (again, Northern) by the managers (''definitely'' Southern, from the one example seen on screen).
80* ''Film/TwentyFourHourPartyPeople'', the semi-fictional account of Manchester's Factory Records and that city's regeneration.
81** Also ''Film/{{Control}}'', the Ian Curtis biopic, which was naturally filmed in a lot of the same places.
82* ''Film/{{Kes}}'', written by a man from Barnsley, South Yorkshire, is set there. True to form, everyone speaks Tyke, wears a flat cap and the place is crapsack.
83** With the possible exception of flat caps... Truth in T.V.
84* ''Film/KinkyBoots'' is set in Northampton, played as the boring, bankrupt small town representing the endangered values of Charlie's father, and which the fashionable fiancée desperately tries to leave or convert to flats. While the people are very nice, they're a bit small-minded about their new co-worker, a drag queen from London.
85** Strange really, as Northampton is about as midland as you can get. It's actually less than a hundred miles from London.
86** There's even an argument about it.
87--->'''Lola:''' Lola doesn't do North.
88--->'''Charlie:''' Northampton's UsefulNotes/TheMidlands.
89--->'''Lola:''' No, Charlie. [[BritainIsOnlyLondon Tottenham Court Road]] is the Midlands.
90* Mercer, Cutler Beckett's right-hand man from ''Franchise/PiratesOfTheCaribbean'', has a heavy Mancunian accent.
91* ''Film/TheDamnedUnited'', based as it is on the true story of Brian Clough's management of Leeds United in TheSeventies.
92* Countess Lisl von Schlaf, in ''Film/ForYourEyesOnly'' passes herself off as a German noblewoman, until she and Film/JamesBond get alone together; as her nightie starts slipping, so does her Germanic accent. Bond guesses she's from Manchester. She answers, "Close, Liverpool." This scene is the TropeNamer for OohMeAccentsSlipping via paraphrased dialogue.
93* In ''Film/AHardDaysNight'', Ringo skips out of the studio to roam London on his own - when a policeman shouts at him for hurling a brick in the river he shouts back "Southerner!". Meanwhile, the band's manager frets on Ringo's potential misdeeds, what with his being "released on the unsuspecting South".
94* Speaking of Music/TheBeatles, there's also the film ''Film/AcrossTheUniverse2007'' by Julie Taymor. The protagonist, Jude, is from Liverpool, and as such, is poor, wears a flat cap, and works at the shipyard. Also, his heavy accent is what brings Max's attention to him, as he asks him "Where is that accent from?" when they first meet.
95* In ''Film/MontyPythonsTheMeaningOfLife'' the second Miracle of Birth sketch is set in the Third World, i.e. Yorkshire. Right after the baby is born via a stork dropping it down the chimney, the father comes home and announces that the mill is closed.
96** In ''Film/MontyPythonAndTheHolyGrail'', the same Python, Yorkshire native Creator/MichaelPalin, deliberately plays the King of Swamp Castle as a grasping, avaricious Northern stereotype, complete with broad accent.
97* ''Theatre/EducatingRita'', set in Liverpool, filmed in Dublin. The film (and play it's adapted from) examine how education is not seen as a working-class thing, and Rita attempting to change herself to fit in with her classmates doesn't necessarily improve her life when she can no longer relate to her usual Liverpool peers.
98* The French film ''Welcome To The Sticks'' is all about a Southern Frenchman forced to move to the Northern part of France, nicknamed "The Sticks", and learning about how it isn't as bad as the rumours made it out to be.
99** Italy has a similar trope, where the largely agricultural south of the country views itself as the poor-but-virtuous real Italy set against those flash-rich soft bastards in the industrial North. The MAFIA is viewed as Southern Italy's embodied sense of resentment and anger against the rich North (vide the Godfather series)
100* ''Film/RobinHood2010'' has Creator/RussellCrowe attempt a Northern accent, although the fact that he often wandered into Irish was mocked in the UK (Cate Blanchett's Northern accent was much better). Also, the Northern Lords speak with strong Northern accents (unrealistic for the time as they would all have been Norman French, but never mind).
101* ''Formula 51'', filmed and set in Liverpool.
102* ''Liam'' is set in 1930s Liverpool, showing the titular character preparing for his First Communion when his father loses his job, his sister becomes a maid to a wealthy Jewish family, and his father and brother turn to disparate ideologies (fascism and socialism) in response to the family's economic decline.
103* ''Film/DistantVoicesStillLives'' follows a working-class Liverpool family with an abusive, rage-filled father throughout the 1940s and 1950s. It's not entirely clear what the father does for a living, although in one scene he's washing a horse, and his children are nearly killed in a 1940 German bombing raid when they're out selling bundles of kindling.
104* The documentary ''Made in Sheffield'' is all about the many {{post punk}} and NewWaveMusic artists that came from the northern city of Sheffield, including Music/TheHumanLeague, Heaven 17, and Pulp.
105* ''Film/FourLions'' is set and filmed mostly in Sheffield. Omar works as a security guard at Meadowhall. The hospital scene is the main entrance of the Northern General Hospital.
106* ''Film/LockStockAndTwoSmokingBarrels'' features [[StupidCrooks Gary and Dean]], two petty criminals from Liverpool with thick Scouse accents. The exchange they have with the [[UsefulNotes/{{London}} cockney]] LoanShark Barry the Baptist pretty much sums up the whole North/South divide.
107-->'''Barry the Baptist:''' Fucking Northern monkeys!\
108'''Dean:''' I hate these fucking Southern fairies!
109** Two of Creator/GuyRitchie's other films also include Northern characters in minor roles. In ''Film/{{Snatch}}'', we have Gorgeous George, an unlicensed Yorkshire boxer (played by Yorkshire native Adam Fogerty), who gets knocked unconscious for picking a fight with the leader of a clan of UsefulNotes/IrishTravellers. Don't feel too sorry for him, though, he's unapologetically rude to the Travellers beforehand. In ''Film/RockNRolla'', we have Liverpudlian native Pete, best friend of drug-addicted London rock star Johnny Quid, and something of a CloudcuckoolandersMinder.
110* ''Film/GodsOwnCountry'' is set in rural Yorkshire and features some thick Northern accents. Life is generally portrayed as harsh, and the people stoic.
111* ''Film/MySummerOfLove'' was filmed and set in West Yorkshire, following a working-class teenage girl having a lesbian affair with a posh RP-speaking girl.
112* ''Film/FairyTaleATrueStory'' is based on the Cottingley Fairies case, which naturally means the majority of it takes place in Yorkshire.
113* ''Film/IDanielBlake'' is set and filmed in Newcastle-upon-Tyne (though the Jobcentre scenes are not actually filmed at the jobcentre in the middle of Newcastle), Daniel himself is portrayed by local actor and comedian Dave John's using his local (Wallsend to be specific) accent. The relocation of downtrodden Londoner Katie (played by genuine working-class Londoner Hayley Squires) and her children to a city she's not familiar with due to housing shortages, and her having to rebuild a new support network forms a large part of the plot.
114[[/folder]]
115
116[[folder:Literature]]
117* ''Literature/JonathanStrangeAndMrNorrell'' references the North-South rivalry by having the North ruled by a king of the LandOfFaerie and only conditionally united with the South until his return.
118* Sgt. Shadwell of ''Literature/GoodOmens'' is in some ways a very sour Northerner, resentful of Southern England. Unfortunately, his accent makes him completely impossible to place, and he has accused Scots of being Southerners.
119** He's referred to in the book as hating all Southerners, and by inference to be standing on the North Pole.
120** Additionally, the demon Crowley asserts early on in the book that Manchester was his greatest work.
121** Neither he nor his angelic counterpart Aziraphale took responsibility for Milton Keynes, but they both reported it as a win for their side.
122* Although ''Literature/WutheringHeights'' is set in the North and most of the characters were born and lived their lives there, the character of Joseph is significant in that he's written with a thick and an almost impenetrable Yorkshire accent (that contains several words and turns of language that today no longer exist) that ''no other character in the novel'' shares.
123* Catherine Cookson's novels (and thus the telefilm adaptations thereof) are almost exclusively set deep in the heart of this trope, specifically Northumberland.
124* ''Literature/ThePlagueDogs'', a DarkerAndGrittier sequel ([[AnimatedAdaptation book and film]]) to Creator/RichardAdams' ''Literature/WatershipDown'', is set in England's Lake District.
125* In Joan Aiken's ''Wolves of Willoughby Chase'' and successive sequels, as well as ''Midnight Is a Place'', Blastburn is a northern 'satanic' mill-town apparently sited in Yorkshire. At one point in the cycle, it has broken off from the south and is ruled by a succession of sinister relatives of Dido and Is Twite. Although the series is set in an alternate timeline where the Stuarts maintained their succession and the Hanoverians exist as rebels trying to blow King James III up, most of the early Victorian tropes are there in spades.
126* Mrs. Whitlow, the indefatigable housekeeper of the Unseen University in ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' is implied to have this accent.
127** Though she usually puts on what she thinks is a "posh" accent when talking to the wizards.
128** Lancre is partly based on rural Lancashire (with added geography[[note]]whereas Lancashire is rugged and hilly by the standards of England, [[ExaggeratedTrope Lancre is set in the Discworld equivalent of the Himalayas]][[/note]]), a county known for its witches. Terry Pratchett used some names from historic witch trials for some of the Lancre witches.
129** Aspects of Lancre appear to be {{Homage}} to the rural Cheshire of Creator/AlanGarner: ''Literature/TheWeirdstoneOfBrisingamen'' and its sequels are set in the north-east of the county, where the Cheshire Plain (The Chalk) becomes the remote foothills of the Pennines (Lancre) and deal with the magical and mystical lore of the area.
130** Sheepridge, birthplace of Dick Simnel in ''Literature/RaisingSteam'': he and his mother speak in Northern dialect.
131* In the book of ''Film/LayerCake'', a chapter is actually entitled "Oop North" and recounts the drug dealing protagonist and his associates (all Londoners) going to a meeting with their Northern associates. He frequently refers slightingly to "scousers" and portrays the residents of the region as a bunch of savages.
132** "Scouser" is a common nickname for people from Liverpool though, and "scouse" for their accent and dialect.
133* Yet another Creator/TerryPratchett example is Blackbury, the CityOfAdventure in the ''Literature/JohnnyMaxwellTrilogy'', heavily implied to be Oop North and explicitly so in the TV adaptation of ''Johnny and the Bomb''. The name, as well as being a PunnyName, is a portmanteau of Blackburn and Bury which are two large towns in Lancashire.
134* Frances Hodgson Burnett's classic ''Literature/TheSecretGarden'' is very specifically set on the Yorkshire moors, complete with characters speaking in the distinctive dialect of the region.
135* Creator/JamesHerriot's eponymous novels, set in the fictional town of "Darrowby" (in actuality Thirsk and surrounding areas), deal nearly exclusively with farmers from the Yorkshire Dales. Expect many strong Yorkshire accents, along with the appropriate phonetic spelling, thick enough to cut with a knife. That part of England is now so closely associated with Herriot that the local tourist authorities named it "Herriot Country".
136** Author Creator/BillBryson, who lived in the area for many years, points out that the pre-WWII Yorkshire accent, as found in the Herriot books, is a very different thing from the current incarnation. To his American ears, the older dialect sounded almost like a different language altogether.
137*** Herriot himself states as much, complaining that radio and TV all but destroyed the native dialect, and he only knows a few old men speaking it. The chapter about his arrival into Darrowby doesn't depict him having much difficulty with pronunciation... but the local terminology, on the other hand... Would you understand a farmer saying he "has a cow wot wants borin' out. She's nobbut going on three cylinders. if we don't do summat she'll go wrang in 'er ewer, won't she? Don't want felon, do we?"[[labelnote:Translation]]I got a cow with a blocked teat, need it cleared out. If we don't do something, she'll have problems with the udder. We don't want mastitis, right?[[/labelnote]]
138* The Sarah Caudwell novel ''[[Literature/HilaryTamar The Sibyl in her Grave]]'' features a bank director with a very pronounced Lancashire accent, which is commented on numerous times by various people. Most of them talk about how remarkable it is he's risen to his prominent position what with the disadvantages he must have had. [[spoiler:The gentleman is actually very well educated with a First from Oxford and quite capable of speaking with a Southern accent, but found that other Englishmen were more inclined to trust him with the Northern accent. Then he kept it and started exaggerating it - and the "provincial Northerner" persona - to make fun of a snobbish coworker he particularly disliked, but no one ever realised it was a joke.]]
139* ''Franchise/HarryPotter'':
140** In [[Literature/HarryPotterAndTheHalfBloodPrince the sixth book]], Spinner's End is in the north, around 200 miles from London; the descriptions are evocative of old textile towns like Rochdale, Stockport, Brighouse, and Halifax. Which side of the Pennines it's on is a matter of debate, with equally convincing arguments. [[http://www.hp-lexicon.org/essays/essay-spinners-end.html An essay]] on the Harry Potter Lexicon by Claire M. Jordan states: "Of these locations, the Manchester/Salford area is probably the most likely." In the [[FilmOfTheBook movies]], Snape speaks with a West London accent - because Alan Rickman was originally from Hammersmith, so that can't be used to prove or disprove this theory.
141** [[http://www.hplex.info/essays/essay-where-longbottoms-from.html Another Lexicon essay]] asserts that based on the details given in the books, Neville Longbottom and his relatives appear to be from Lancashire.
142** In the UK audiobooks, Creator/StephenFry gives Nymphadora Tonks a strong Yorkshire accent, probably drawing from her use of "wotcher".
143** All of which leads to a certain FridgeLogic: if all wizards spend their early adolescence at the same boarding school, they should all have the same accent. This was part of the ''point'' of boarding school for the British well-to-do in the nineteenth century. (Yes, even if they're originally from Ireland, Scotland, or Yorkshire.)
144* ''Literature/HardTimes'' is set up north. This being Creator/CharlesDickens of course, an author who was about as Northern as Music/MickJagger, it's believed he had to ''look up the dialect in a book'' to make sure he got the [[FunetikAksent Lancashire accent and slang right]]. Only the poor, uneducated people spoke this way though.
145* Elizabeth Gaskell's 1855 novel ''Literature/NorthAndSouth'' is one of the earliest modern examples to contrast the differences between the (newly) industrializing North and wealthier South.
146* Learoyd, one of Creator/RudyardKipling's ''Soldiers Three'', is a Yorkshireman.
147* Peter Tinniswood's series of books about the very Northern Brandon family are classics of Northern humour. ''A Touch of Daniel'' and its three successor novels are deliberately vague about whether the Brandons and their world are in Yorkshire or Lancashire - although one main character is a match-attending [[UsefulNotes/AssociationFootball Manchester United]] fan, suggesting the latter - and combine the idea of the taciturn grim North with mordant observational humour. [[note]]Although the TV adaptation ''I Didn't Know You Cared'' very definitely places them in Yorkshire.[[/note]] The first three books are set in the late 1960s and 1970s; the fourth, ''Call It A Canary'', catches up with Carter Brandon in his forties in the entirely different world of the 1980s. Here he is unemployed due to Thatcher's destruction of the north and its heavy industries, a theme Tinniswood uses with real anger and satirical fire. Carter Brandon's descent into despair after the heavy engineering trade - all he knows - vanishes, is a microcosm of the death of heavy manufacturing industry in the North at the hands of a remote government serving only its electorate in the south. To those who remember the optimistic young introvert of the early books, this comes as a shocking postscript.
148* Creator/GeorgeEliot's novel ''Literature/TheMillOnTheFloss'' is set in a fictional Lincolnshire community.
149* ''Literature/UnnaturalIssue'' begins on a Yorkshire manor, complete with servants speaking in "broad Yorkshire" accents.
150* Creator/FredDibnah (below for TV work) is immortalized in Creator/TerryPratchett's ''Literature/RaisingSteam'' as railway engineer Dick Simnel.
151* "The Northlands" (north of Mossflower) in Brian Jacques' ''Literature/{{Redwall}}'' series.
152* Where the Blake sisters in ''Literature/APearlForMyMistress'' hail from. Neither is overjoyed by it.
153* ''Literature/LuckyJim'': Jim hails from Northern England, and sometimes affects a Northern accent when he's trying to make people like him, playing on the stereotype that the accent is trustworthy.
154* ''Literature/TonyHillAndCarolJordan'': All the novels are set in a fictional Northern city, Bradfield.
155* ''Literature/TheStrangerTimes'' takes place in Manchester. The industrial history of the city is a recurring feature of the narration.
156[[/folder]]
157
158[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
159* Many {{Soap Opera}}s have northern settings:
160** ''Series/CoronationStreet'', a [[LongRunners very long-running]] SoapOpera about working-class people set and filmed in (Greater) Manchester...
161** ''Series/{{Hollyoaks}}'', a SoapOpera about young people set in Chester (but filmed in Liverpool)...
162** ''Series/{{Brookside}}'', a SoapOpera about a housing estate in Liverpool (filmed in a purpose-built housing estate, in Liverpool)
163** ''Series/{{Emmerdale}}'', a SoapOpera about people in rural Yorkshire (and filmed in Yorkshire!)...
164----
165* Caroline Aherne's character of Mrs. Merton, elderly Northern lady given a chat show, was very firmly based in the North Cheshire town of Stockport. Stockport is right in the top-right-hand corner of the county and is bisected by the Lancashire- Cheshire border which runs right through the town.[[note]]NOBODY in Stockport writes their address as "Stockport, Greater Manchester". But that's a [[UsefulNotes/OtherBritishTownsAndCities different grievance]].[[/note]] Opening credits to the short-lived spin-off show ''Mrs Merton and Malcolm'' (Malcolm, played by Craig Cash, is her adult son) were conclusively identified as being in the Heaton Norris district of Stockport, claimed as Mrs Merton's home patch, and the yardstick for everything good and Northern[[note]]People with local knowledge can confidently pin Mrs. Merton down to one particular ''street'', based on the opening credits to her shows[[/note]]. A subsequent Aherne/Cash comedy, ''Series/EarlyDoors'', about a grim, grim, pub called the Grapes and its clientele, is also very clearly set in Heaton Norris. (local references...). This is so marked that by about episode two, a Heaton Norris pub called The Hope, a truly grim place, closed down for a major refit and refurbishment, as the brewery company seemed to believe this was the pub being featured in the show. Caroline Aherne has been thought of in some circles as the spiritual successor to Peter Tinniswood.
166* Creator/FredDibnah dealt with steam engines, steeplejacking, and heavy machinery. He reinforced the cloth-cap and northern accent image Southerners have of the industrial North.
167* Harry Enfield's character Buggerallmoney, a Geordie SelfParody of his Cockney character Loadsamoney. When Enfield did a live show in which he was required to play the character in front of an audience of actual Geordies, he called up one of the editors of the aforementioned Viz comic for coaching on getting the accent right. According to Enfield, the show went well, but at the end of the night he asked the audience how his accent had been, and every one of them shouted back "SHITE!"
168* Creator/PeterKay himself is from Bolton and his comedy routines often revolve around life Oop North.
169** ''Series/PhoenixNights'' is set in Bolton and was filmed in Farnworth, Lancashire.
170** ''Series/CarShare'' is very vaguely set in and around Manchester. People recognising the streets and roads travelled by two people going to and from work have said it looks like one Hell of a commute.
171** His observational comedy (as seen in ''Series/PhoenixNights'' and ''Series/MaxAndPaddysRoadToNowhere'', as well as his stand-up routines) draws heavily on the culture of the North-West of England.
172* A lot of Creator/VictoriaWood's television work was based in the North, as Wood herself was from the Manchester suburb of Prestwich (her frequent collaborator Creator/JulieWalters is originally from Birmingham, though).
173----
174* ''Series/{{All Creatures Great And Small|1978}}'' and its [[Series/AllCreaturesGreatAndSmall2020 remake]], plus any other versions of James Herriot's books. NB this is the rural north so there are some differences.
175* Four of the core characters from ''Series/AufWiedersehenPet''; Oz, Dennis, and Neville (from Newcastle) and Moxey (from Liverpool).[[note]] The three Geordies were played by genuine Geordies (Creator/JimmyNail, Creator/TimHealy, and Creator/KevinWhately), but Moxey was played by Hertfordshire native Creator/ChristopherFairbank.[[/note]]
176* ''Series/{{Badger}}'' was set in Northumberland (about as far Oop North as you can get).
177* Father Peter Clifford from ''Series/{{Ballykissangel}}'' is a Manchester native transplanted to Ireland.
178* ''Series/TheBeiderbeckeAffair'' was set in Leeds, Yorkshire, although one of the protagonists was a Geordie.
179-->'''Big Al:''' I've got nothing against Geordies, except that they're not from Yorkshire. It's not as though I was letting a Londoner in.
180* ''Series/TheBisexual'': Sadie is from Burnley, in Lancashire, with a strong accent.
181* Parodied on ''Series/ABitOfFryAndLaurie'', with a Northerner (Creator/HughLaurie) who is determined to prove to a Londoner (Creator/StephenFry) that the North is actually quite civilized, thank you very much. This prompts the Londoner to mess with him by claiming that Londoners have developed eternal life by drinking petrol.
182* The miniseries ''Series/{{Blackpool}}'' and its sequel, ''Viva Blackpool'' (both were shown under the name ''Viva Blackpool'' in the US).
183* [[BoisterousBruiser Gunn-Sar]] from the ''Series/BlakesSeven'' episode "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS4E2Power Power]]" is a barbarian leader with a Yorkshire accent despite being from another planet in the far future. Still, it made a change from the usual cavemen speaking with [[UsefulNotes/BritishAccents posh accents]].
184* ''Series/{{Brass}}''. Parodies the trope to within an inch of its life sending up a number of northern stereotypes and genres. Including Creator/AgathaChristie, D.H. Lawrence, ''Brideshead Revisited'', working class vs ruling class, and so on.
185* ''Series/TheBrittasEmpire'': Whilst the show takes in the fictional Southern town of Whitbury, Colin has a strong Geordie accent and Julie is stated to be from the North. Julie's Northerner status actually comes back to bite her when she falls in love with a Conservative Southerner called Alex and encounters a cultural clash, to the point that she eventually throws him out for attempting to give her elocution lessons.
186* The children's series ''Series/BykerGrove'' is set around a Newcastle youth club. Byker is a real area of Newcastle.
187* On ''Series/Chef1993'', Cyril was an uncultured Northerner. His finishing school-educated daughter Renee, however, spoke with a really posh accent. Creator/LennyHenry's character mocked both Cyril for having a Northern accent and Renee for ''not'' having one.
188* The ''Series/{{Columbo}}'' episode "Etude in Black" features a Northern English car mechanic living in Hollywood and specialising in foreign and classic cars. Creator/JohnCassavetes plays the murderer of the week and invokes stereotypes by patronisingly addressing the mechanic in the "What ho, old chap! Don't you know?"-type drawl characteristic of an American actor having trouble with a British accent.
189* Most of the comics featured on ''The Comedians'' hailed from the North of England, which is understandable given that it was recorded at Granada Studios in Manchester. Among the featured comics were:
190** Creator/BernardManning, Colin Crompton, Ken Goodwin (Manchester).
191** Mike Burton, Steve Faye, Eddie Flanagan, Jackie Hamilton, George Roper, Josh White (Liverpool).
192** Jim Bowen, Paul Melba (Lancashire).
193** Duggie Brown, Bobby Knutt, Jimmy Marshall, Charlie Williams (Yorkshire).
194* ''Series/{{Coupling}}''. Though Jeffery is supposedly Welsh, Richard Coyle is from Sheffield, and his Northern accent becomes more noticeable in later series.
195* Mister Winterbottom in ''Theatre/DinnerForOne'' is a stereotypical Northerner (with a stereotypically Northern name).
196* ''Series/DoctorWho'':
197** First Doctor companion Dodo Chaplet had a Northern accent.
198** The Ninth Doctor speaks in Creator/ChristopherEccleston's natural Manchester accent, despite him being an alien because, as he puts it: "Lots of planets have a North."
199*** Parodied ruthlessly in ''Series/DeadRingers''.
200---->'''Christopher Eccleston:''' Because I am from the north! Not that I like to go on about it. But I'm part of the north, my heart is in the north, and when I bleed, I bleed northern blood! I am the north made flesh! [[HypocriticalHumour But you know, like I said, I don' like to go on 'bout it.]]
201** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS28E10LoveAndMonsters "Love & Monsters"]]: Victor Kennedy/The Abzorbaloff is played by Creator/PeterKay, and sports the actor's natural Lancashire accent when unmasked.
202** In the alternate universe of [[Recap/DoctorWhoS30E11TurnLeft "Turn Left"]], [[spoiler:Donna and many other residents of the South of England are forced to move to the North of England after fallout from an attack on London leaves much of the south irradiated. [[FromBadToWorse It gets worse]].]]
203--->'''Some woman in Leeds:''' Used to be a nice family in number 29! They missed one mortgage payment, just one, and they got booted out, all for you lot!\
204'''Donna:''' Don't get all chippy with me, Vera Duckworth! Pop your clogs on and go and feed t'whippets!
205** In [[Recap/DoctorWhoS32E5TheRebelFlesh "The Rebel Flesh"]], the Eleventh Doctor [[BriefAccentImitation attempts]] a Northern accent when speaking to a bunch of Northerners; they have no response so he quickly gives up. Later, [[Recap/DoctorWhoS33E11TheCrimsonHorror "The Crimson Horror"]] takes place in Victorian Yorkshire, the Doctor has to pretend to be a local, and much to his joy there ''is'', in fact, trouble at t'mill.
206** Eleventh and Twelfth Doctor companion Clara Oswald speaks with Creator/JennaColeman's Lancashire accent.
207** [[Recap/DoctorWhoS33E11TheCrimsonHorror "The Crimson Horror"]] is set in a (fake) mill in Yorkshire. A flashback shows the Eleventh Doctor and Clara [[BriefAccentImitation adopting fake accents]] to investigate the [[Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus trouble at t'mill]].
208--->'''Strax:''' I strongly recommend the issuing of scissor grenades, limbo vapour, and triple blast brain splitters.\
209'''Vastra:''' What for?\
210'''Strax:''' Just generally. Remember, we are going ''to the North''.
211** Thirteenth Doctor Creator/JodieWhittaker hails from near Huddersfield, Yorkshire, and keeps her accent for the role. Her first line after regeneration in the 2017 Christmas Special, "[[Recap/DoctorWho2017CSTwiceUponATime Twice Upon a Time]]", indicates it may ''surpass'' Eccleston, as many fans who had been unfamiliar with her accent have said that they could barely understand what the line was.[[note]] It was "Oh, brilliant!" by the way.[[/note]]
212** Thirteenth Doctor companion Dan Lewis ([[ActorSharedBackground and his actor]] Creator/JohnBishop) hails from Liverpool, and is so full of PatrioticFervour for his hometown, he gives museum tours for free.
213--->'''Yaz''': Hey, Dan, are you from Liverpool? Why have you never mentioned it?
214* ''Series/DowntonAbbey'' is set around an Earl, his family, and his servants, who live on an estate in North Yorkshire. Rightfully, most of the upper-class and middle-class characters speak with RP accents, with servants being locals with Yorkshire accents.
215** The series creators went to great lengths to ensure that the actors playing the servants had proper local accents; most are Northerners and a plurality are from Yorkshire. Siobhan Finneran even matches her character's history: like O'Brien, she's of Irish descent but born in Northern England.
216* ''Series/{{Frasier}}''. Daphne Moon's from Manchester.[[note]] Actress Creator/JaneLeeves, by contrast, is from the Sussex town of East Grinstead.[[/note]] Her accent is not easily identified as Manchester by anybody familiar with the area and Daphne's siblings speak with accents ranging from RP to Scottish.[[note]]Creator/JohnMahoney ''is'' from Manchester, but he lost his accent a long time ago while serving in the military. Interestingly, Mahoney is also a lover of fine arts and food and has taught Creator/DavidHydePierce and Creator/KelseyGrammer about them, so he's a ''complete'' anti-stereotype of Oop North![[/note]]
217* ''Series/GameOfThrones'' has to have more Northern English accents in it than any American production of anything, ever. Justified, since Westeros is more or less a FantasyCounterpartCulture of Medieval England, northern Westeros ''is'' Oop North. Appropriately enough, it's (mostly) the characters from the northern part of Westeros that have northern (usually Yorkshire) accents, such as textbook Yorkshireman Sean Bean. Bean's contract specified that he be allowed to use his native accent for the role. The only major Northman general [[SmartPeopleSpeakTheQueensEnglish who speaks in RP]] is the TokenEvilTeammate Roose Bolton. The farther up north the series goes, the thicker the accent, so wildlings from north of the wall have a much thicker Northern accent than the Starks and the other Northmen. Theon Greyjoy, the Starks' ward, also has a Northern accent despite being an Ironborn, to indicate his GoingNative. Conversely, those associated with the Lannisters and/or the South tend to speak with RP (BBC English). The Northerners' general opinion of the South is broadly similar to cultural stereotypes between the South of England and the North.
218** Ironically, Creator/LenaHeadey, who plays Cersei Lannister, is actually from Yorkshire, and considers herself a "Northern girl". She doesn't use her original speaking voice to play the character. As for her son Joffrey, his actor’s actually from Ireland - Creator/JackGleeson has a strong Irish accent in real life (which is utterly impossible to detect in the sneering RP accent he affects for his performance as Joffrey).
219* ''Series/GentlemanJack'' is set in Regency-era Halifax and the surrounding country.
220* Bill Oddie of ''Series/TheGoodies'', born in Rochdale (a satellite town of Manchester), would often play up his Northernness, for instance in the episode where he introduced the world to Ecky Thump, the Lancashire art of self-defence (consisting of hitting people over the head with a black pudding). There's also this bit from the ''Radio/ImSorryIllReadThatAgain'' version of ''Othello'':
221-->'''Bill Oddie:''' 'Ow do, ah am Oh-thello.\
222'''David Hatch:''' What kind of a Moor is that?\
223'''Bill Oddie:''' [[{{Pun}} A Yorkshire Moor]]!
224** Tim Brooke-Taylor, the personification of an upper-class soft southern Nellie in the Goodies, is also (just about) from Oop North: his family still run the Brooke-Taylor legal practice in Buxton, Derbyshire (a place which is pretty much at the otherwise ill-defined southern border of "the North". Shading into the Midlands places like Glossop and Buxton just about squeak in. But Leek and Derby, just down the road, are unanimously considered as being in the Midlands).
225* ''Great Night Out'' is set in Edgeley, near the [[UsefulNotes/AssociationFootball Stockport County]] ground and a BrickJoke is the despairing loyalty of its fans for a crap team. The brick finally drops in the last episode, where the underachieving Stockport County play a cup-tie, at home, against mighty neighbours Manchester United. And despite the fans' hope of a miracle, are [[CurbStomp slaughtered]] seven-nil.
226* Jamie from ''Series/TheHauntingOfBlyManor'' is from somewhere around Yorkshire, her father was a coal miner, and she is a rough-around-the-edges gardener working on the grounds of [[BigFancyHouse the titular manor]]. The identity of [[spoiler:the unnamed narrator]] as Jamie herself are given away by both characters' ([[OohMeAccentsSlipping approximately, in the case of]] [[spoiler:Creator/CarlaGugino]]'s half of the character) Northern accents.
227* Claude Rains from ''Series/{{Heroes}}'' is from Blackpool, according to the show's [=PrimaTech=] Files website, but he has Creator/ChristopherEccleston's Salford accent. Eccleston is like the poster boy for this trope.
228* The TV adaptation of Peter Tinniswood's Brandon family trilogy, ''I Didn't Know You Cared'', very definitely places the Brandon family's world as being in Yorkshire. (as above, the source novels were deliberately vague about the location being Lancashire or Yorkshire.) Sheffield was used extensively for filming and local nuances were introduced, for eg the Sheffield Green final sports paper.
229* Michael from ''Series/ImAlanPartridge'' is Geordie. The actor playing him is not but nails the very, ''very'' specific accent.
230* ''Series/InspectorGeorgeGently'' is in North East England, centring on Newcastle upon Tyne, Northumberland and County Durham. Gently himself is a transplanted Londoner, but most of the rest of cast sport Northern accents.
231* ''Series/InTheFlesh'' is set in the fictional town of Roarton, Lancashire.
232* ''Series/TheLakes'' is really set Oop North - the Lake District of Cumbria is about as far Oop North as you can get in England before you start seeing people in kilts. This drama-mystery revolved around sexual and violent goings-on under the surface of a rural lakeside community.
233* ''Series/LastOfTheSummerWine'', the longest-running sitcom in the world, is about a group of pensioners living in Yorkshire.
234* ''Series/LastTangoInHalifax'' is set in and around Halifax and Harrogate in Yorkshire.
235* ''Series/TheLeagueOfGentlemen'' is set in the fictitious Northern English town of Royston Vasey[[note]]The birth name of Northern comedian [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_%27Chubby%27_Brown Roy "Chubby" Brown]][[/note]]. They play up all the stereotypes of podunk rurality, although it's worth noting that the creators themselves are Northerners.
236* The 2006/7 BBC series ''Series/{{Life on Mars|2006}}'' is set in a 1973 Manchester that may or may not be entirely imaginary. Its SequelSeries ''Series/AshesToAshes2008'' is set in London, but three of the Mancunian characters from the parent show, most notably Gene Hunt, appear.
237* ''Series/TheLikelyLads'', a pair of Geordies.[[note]] Though they were played by two northerners, neither were Geordies - Rodney Bewes was a Yorkshire native, while James Bolam grew up in Sunderland.[[/note]] Also the sequel, ''Whatever Happened To The Likely Lads?''
238* ''Series/TheMightyBoosh'': Despite his attempts to appear more exotic, Howard Moon is "clearly from Leeds". He's occasionally described as Northern in an insulting tone, or it's said that it's the origin of his unsophisticated behaviour, despite the fact that Howard is an upright, mild-mannered kind of guy. When he gets drunk, he apparently throws ladies in his 'wheelbarra-- come on, ye dirty vixen, ye know ye want it.' Julian Barratt, the actor who plays Howard, is also from Leeds.
239* Parodied by Creator/MontyPython (apart from their reuse of "Four Yorkshiremen" from ''Series/AtLastThe1948Show'') in the "Northern Playwright" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YPSzPGrazPo sketch]] on ''[[Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus Flying Circus]]'', with the oft-seen trope of [[IHaveNoSon the father rejecting his son for betraying his background and pursuing a different life]]... only the father's profession is writing plays for the London theatre, and the son's betrayal consisted of moving to Yorkshire to become a coal miner. Even funnier in that the entire sketch is an inverse GenderNormativeParentPlot, with the father wearing shirtsleeves and braces and speaking with a Yorkshire accent, while his son wears a suit and tie ("It's the only thing I own besides the coveralls!")
240-->'''Creator/GrahamChapman:''' Hampstead wasn't good enough for you, was it? You had to go poncin' off to Barnsley! You and your coal-mining friends!
241* In the 1989 TV {{mockumentary}} ''Norbert Smith: A Life'', the actor being profiled, Norbert Smith (played by Harry Enfield) appears in a kitchen-sink drama entitled ''It's Grim Up North'', which runs through just about every cliché of the council-estate/Angry Young Man dramas of the period, including out-of-wedlock pregnancy, bitter family rowing, women in headscarves, and ugly flowered wallpaper.
242* ''Series/OnlyFoolsAndHorses'': For part of one episode, set in Hull in, whatisname:
243-->'''Del Boy:''' Just get me back to Peckham or I'll be saying "Eh-up!" and breeding whippets before I'm much older!
244* ''Series/OpenAllHours'', about a miserly shopkeeper, also set in Yorkshire (although Ronnie Barker, from Bedfordshire, and David Jason from London provide very unconvincing Yorkshire accents).
245* The miniseries ''Series/OurFriendsInTheNorth'' was about four friends from Newcastle, including Creator/ChristopherEccleston (again, though playing a northerner from a different region) and Gina [=McKee=] (who is actually from there). Newcastle is portrayed in the series as grim, but to be fair London is portrayed as being, if not quite as grim, one hell of a lot sleazier and more dangerous.
246* The short-lived sitcom ''Series/APrinceAmongMen'' took place in Sheffield and features Gary Prince, who has a Scouser accent (Said accent is very similar to the one Creator/ChrisBarrie used for Lister [[note]] who is also a Scouser [[/note]] in the Red Dwarf audiobooks).
247* ''Series/QueerAsFolkUK'' was set in Manchester, around the Canal St area.
248* David Lister from ''Series/RedDwarf'' is from Liverpool (as is the actor who portrays him, Creator/CraigCharles).
249* The three ''Series/RedRiding'' films, which deal with murder and police corruption in Ripper-haunted Seventies Yorkshire.
250* The ''Series/RippingYarns'' episode "The Testing of Eric Olthwaite" is a parody ComingOfAgeStory about a boy in Yorkshire who's so boring (obsessed with rainfall and shovels) that his family leaves him.
251* ''Series/TheRoyleFamily'', set in the sprawling wastes of Wythenshawe, the largest council estate in Britain.
252* The bleak provincial city of Grimble, where ''Series/RumpoleOfTheBailey'' defended a couple of cases.
253** Judge Oliphant is a transplanted Northerner living and working in London.
254* The original UK version of ''Series/ShamelessUK'' is set in the fictional council estate Chatsworth in Stretford, Greater Manchester.
255* Both Martha Costello, the main character of ''Series/{{Silk}}'', and her trainee, Nick Slade, are from the north, although it's never specified where. They're frequently pitted against Martha's rival, who comes from Cambridge, and his trainee, the daughter of a London judge.
256* ''Series/{{Spender}}'', about a Northern detective played by proud Geordie Jimmy Nail.
257* Several of the comedians from ''Series/{{Taskmaster}}'' have been from the North and have endured mild teasing about their accents, including Chris Ramsey, Sarah Millican (who are actually from the same town), Jon Richardson, and Lee Mack. Chris Ramsey intentionally turned this to advantage in a prize task to bring in the item that sounds the funniest when you say it over and over, by contributing a "coukbouk."
258* Jamie Tartt from ''Series/TedLasso'' has a strong Northern accent and grew up in Manchester, fitting the abrasive, confrontational stereotype. Keeley Jones is implied to be from up north as well since her mother is mentioned to have moved back up there, but her accent doesn’t reflect her background, it’s much more Londoner.
259* Jeremy Clarkson of ''Series/TopGearUK'' is from Doncaster, but went native as a southerner and rarely brings out his original accent. The phenomenon of "more northern than thi" (as in ''Literature/GoodOmens'' above) was also referenced in the Polar Special, as they approached the magnetic north pole:
260-->'''Clarkson:''' We are now the most northern people in the world!...well apart from Michael Parkinson, obviously.
261** Whether he had any 'original' accent at all. More upper-middle-class people tend to have quite neutral accents fairly similar to what Clarkson has now. For example, Creator/MichaelPalin is from Sheffield but doesn't have any kind of stereotype "northern" accent (although, like Clarkson, he does a good impression of that accent). Or think of Jessica Jane Clement from ''Series/TheRealHustle''...(ok, [[MsFanservice you can stop thinking now]]), who has a ''bit'' of a Yorkshire accent at times.
262** Then Creator/ChristopherEccleston shows up as a Star in a Reasonably-Priced Car, and the two have a brief discussion about who's more Northern.
263** From series 27, the presenting lineup contains Paddy [=McGuinness=], who is from Bolton, and Andrew "Freddie" Flintoff from Preston. Both have heavy northern accents, which can sometimes make them difficult to understand for viewers not familiar with their accents.
264* The Pilgrimage of Grace in Season 3 of ''Series/TheTudors''...the differences in accents between the rebels and the Powers That Be down south were striking. Also helps illustrate how old this trope is too.
265* ''Series/TwoPintsOfLagerAndAPacketOfCrisps'' is set in Runcorn in Cheshire.
266* ''Series/{{Vera}}'' is set in Northumberland, and central character Vera Stanhope has a strong northern accent and the VerbalTic of referring to everyone as 'pet'.
267* ''Series/WaterlooRoad'' is set in Rochdale, a town that is part of Greater Manchester. Or Lancashire if you ask the locals.
268* ''Series/WhenTheBoatComesIn'', with a lot of Geordies.
269* ''Series/WildBill'': The series takes place in Boston, Lincolnshire, so many characters have a strong local Northern English accent. It's noted to be a struggling region, with much resentment toward foreign workers coming in and farms in debt trying to stay afloat.
270* ''Series/YearsAndYears'' is set in Manchester, with filming having taken place there. A subplot also involves some of the characters visiting Liverpool.
271* Pioneering 1960s and 1970s police drama ''Series/ZCars'' is set in a fictional division of the Lancashire Constabulary.
272[[/folder]]
273
274[[folder:Music]]
275* The Lancashire Hotpots ''are'' this trope.
276* Comedy ukelele [[CoverVersion covers band]] The Everly Pregnant Brothers are also this trope.
277* Music/GirlsAloud have [[Music/CherylCole Cheryl]] (Newcastle), Kimberley Walsh (Bradford), and Nicola Roberts (Runcorn). (Sarah Harding was born in Ascot but grew up in Stockport and identifies as a Northerner.) Her accent infamously lost Cheryl a lucrative presenting contract in the USA, as in the country her Geordie accent had needed subtitles to be understood by an American audience.
278* Former Music/SpiceGirls member Mel C is from a suburb of Cheshire near Liverpool. Mel B is from Yorkshire.
279* Music/LittleMix has Perrie Edwards and Jade Thirlwall, both from South Shields.
280* Musical comedian Creator/MikeHarding, from Crumpsall, Manchester.
281* Musical comedian Jake Thackeray.
282* Music/TheBeatles, obviously, from Liverpool.
283* Legendary post-punk group Music/{{The Fall|Band}} were founded in Prestwich, Greater Manchester and are a favourite of the influential Creator/JohnPeel. The North, particularly Manchester, is mentioned in their lyrics, most notably with "Hit the North".
284* Music/TakeThatBand were formed in Manchester, their southernmost member being Music/RobbieWilliams.
285* Music/JethroTull is from Blackpool, inspiring their song "Up The Pool". The band that later was known as Jethro Tull was formed in Blackpool but when Ian Anderson decided to relocate to London, where the action was, only bassist Glenn Cornick went with him. So the first lineup who called themselves "Jethro Tull" was 2 guys from Blackpool and 2 guys from Luton. However, after Martin Barre replaced Mick Abrahams on guitar, all subsequent personnel changes were accomplished by Ian calling one for one his former bandmates, so much that the classic lineup that recorded Thick as a Brick, A Passion Play, War Child and Minstrel In The Gallery was essentially Ian Anderson's Blackpool band with Martin Barre on guitar (and despite that description seemingly making Barre the odd man out, he's actually the only other member ever, besides Ian Anderson, to have been in Tull from when he joined till the present day. Go figure.)
286* Music/SamFender from North Shields (near Newcastle) sings in his native Geordie accent, and writes from the perspective of growing up in a working-class Northern neighbourhood.
287* Indie singer & songwriter Nadine Shah is also from the North East, from the seaside village of Whitburn, Tyne & Wear.
288* Both of the Music/PetShopBoys (Newcastle and Blackpool respectively). The song "Sexy Northerner" is about dispelling the negative stereotypes of Northerners as being all about "football and fags".
289* Music/{{Sting}} is from Wallsend, Northumberland. His musical and subsequent album "The Last Ship" (which are unrelated to the novel and TV series of the same name) are inspired by his childhood and the decline of the shipbuilding industry in Wallsend.
290* Music/LouisTomlinson of Music/OneDirection hails from Doncaster, while former member [[Music/{{Zayn}} Zayn Malik]] comes from Bradford. Music/HarryStyles grew up in Cheshire.
291* Music/TheHollies are from Manchester.
292* Music/{{Ingested}} is from Manchester, though Lyn Jeffs currently lives in Wales.
293* Music/TheKLF (under their previous guise, The Justified Ancients of Mu Mu) recorded the song "It's Grim Up North", namechecking 70 towns and cities in Northern England plus the motorway cutting across it.
294* The Hacienda Club in Manchester was largely responsible for "Madchester" era groups such as Music/TheStoneRoses, Music/HappyMondays, and New Order. Also had a huge hand in the Acid House movement. Sadly, in its later years, the club was plagued with [[CrapsaccharineWorld rampant drug use and gang-related violence]].
295* Music/{{Oasis}}, causing a great deal of non-English-speaking fans to try and learn English with a Northern twang.
296* Music/{{Pulp}}'s Jarvis Cocker and Music/JoeCocker are both from Sheffield - but neither are they related nor, according to rumour, do they like each other much.
297* Music/TheSmiths, formed in Manchester and famously sardonic in their lyrics.
298* Little Boots is from Blackpool.
299* The Music/KaiserChiefs are from Leeds.
300* Mick Hucknall and Simply Red, from Manchester.
301* Bryan Ferry, from Washington, County Durham.
302* Ewan [=MacColl=]. Best known for "Dirty Old Town", about his hometown of Salford.
303* Prefab Sprout, from Durham.
304* Annie Haslam, the long-time lead singer of the progressive rock band {{Music/Renaissance}}, is from Blackpool. For extra Northern cred, the band wrote and performed the theme song for Tyne Tees TV's ''The Paper Lads''.
305* Music/ArcticMonkeys. Especially notable is how pronounced singer Alex Turner's Sheffield accent is, although technically the Arctic Monkeys are from High Green, which is a northern suburb of Sheffield and about as far as you can get without being in Barnsley.
306** While their earlier albums such as ''Music/WhateverPeopleSayIAmThatsWhatImNot'' and ''Favourite Worst Nightmare'' especially feature Turner's Sheffield accent, their newer albums such as ''AM'' have Alex Turner singing more clearly in an American accent (influenced by his decision to move from Sheffield to Los Angeles).
307* {{Deathcore}}[=-=]turned-{{Metalcore}}[=-=]turned-"AlternativeRock [[GenreRoulette mixed with whatever else they feel like]]" band Music/BringMeTheHorizon are also from Sheffield.
308* Music/TheHumanLeague and Heaven 17: Also from Sheffield.
309* Music/JoyDivision and Music/NewOrder, usually thought of as being from Manchester, technically from Macclesfield and Salford - which, admittedly, is a borough of Greater Manchester but is a separate city.
310* Music/MyDyingBride, Music/ParadiseLost, and Music/{{Anathema|Band}}, the so-called 'Peaceville Three,' are from Halifax, West Yorkshire (first two), and Liverpool.
311* Before and during World War 2, there were Gracie Fields and George Formby. The latter was the subject of a hilarious Peter Sellers sketch, the All-England George Formby Championship.
312* Music/{{ACDC}}'s vocalist, Brian Johnson, is from Gateshead on Tyneside. Before AC-DC, he was in a band called Geordie.
313* Music/{{Space}}, from Liverpool.
314* Music/DefLeppard, Originally all from Sheffield, Drummer Rick Allen is from just outside Sheffield, Phil Collen is from London, and Vivian Campbell is from Dublin. Sheffield is their "Home Town Gig" though.
315** The NewRomantic[=/=]NewWaveMusic band Music/{{ABC}} (best known for "The Look of Love", "Poison Arrow", "Be Near Me", and "When Smokey Sings") were also from Sheffield. Connected with Def Leppard in that ABC saxophonist Stephen Singleton and Def Leppard lead vocalist Joe Elliott were early childhood friends.
316* Barclay James Harvest, from Oldham, Manchester. The song "North" (from their latest album, "North") is all about this trope.
317* Post-punk band The Futureheads hail from Sunderland.
318* Music/TheCult, from Bradford, West Yorkshire.
319* Music/UtahSaints, [[NonIndicativeName from Leeds]].
320* Music/DeadOrAlive, from Liverpool.
321* Music/FrankieGoesToHollywood, also from Liverpool.
322* Music/{{Ladytron}}, [[RuleOfThree again, from Liverpool]].
323* Though he's lived in London for quite a while now, Music/RickAstley, who comes from Newton-le-Willows, Lancashire, remains proud of his northern roots.
324* Låpsley, born in York, Yorkshire but raised in Southport, Merseyside. (She now lives in London, following degree study there.)
325* Jamie "Irrepressible" [=McDermott=], from Scarborough, North Yorkshire.
326* Music/EdSheeran, born in Halifax, West Yorkshire, but raised further south in [[UsefulNotes/EastAnglia Framlingham, Suffolk]].
327* Music/SoftCell formed in Leeds in the late 1970s when Marc Almond and David Ball were students at what was then the local polytechnic. [[note]]Now renamed Leeds Metropolitan University.[[/note]]
328* Robert Smith of Music/{{The Cure|Band}} was born in Blackpool, Lancashire, but transplanted south to Horley, [[UsefulNotes/HomeCounties Surrey]] at age 3, followed by Crawley, West Sussex, where the band was founded, and presently resides in Bognor Regis.
329* '80s {{Synthpop}} duo Vicious Pink (Phenomena), from Leeds.
330* Music/{{YUNGBLUD}}, from Doncaster, South Yorkshire.
331* Christopher "Limahl" Hamill of Kajagoogoo, from Wigan.
332* Music/CabaretVoltaire, from Sheffield.
333* Music/{{Yes}} members Jon Anderson (Lancashire), Alan White (Durham), Music/TrevorHorn (Durham), and Geoff Downes (Cheshire), the latter two also of Music/TheBuggles.
334[[/folder]]
335
336[[folder:Mythology and History]]
337* The North-Midlands-South divide in England goes back a ''long'' way. The Romans, gradually expanding into Britain from their foothold in the South, discovered the whole of what is now Northern England was the domain of one tribe, the Brigantii. Rome elected to buy rather than militarily defeat the Brigantians: their queen accepted client status, and the north was gradually and bloodlessly assimilated. The patron Goddess of the north, ''Brigantia'', was absorbed by the Romans, who conflated her name with the proto-Welsh word for the land, ''Prydein'', into ''Britannia''. Brigantia/Britannia was also conflated with the Roman goddess Athena, who wore a military helmet and toted a trident. Therefore the North not only gave the name to the whole island, Britannia, the patron goddess of Britain who among other things appeared on the currency for nearly two thousand years, is a Northern lass.
338** Britain was divided into two regions for administrative convenience: the southern region governed from Londinium was ''Britannia Superior'' whilst the northern half, governed from Eboracum (York), became ''Britannia Inferior''. Whilst the Latin names translate as Upper and Lower Britain, the "inferior-superior" distinction allows ample room for snark, two millennia further on.
339* The Anglo-Saxons discovered much the same. Rivers marked the borders of the contending kingdoms. The Kingdom of the Midlands, ''Mercia'', shares its name with the dividing river in the west - the River Mersey. Which places Cheshire, by this analysis, in the Midlands. North of the Mersey was ''Northumbria''. this takes its name from the other river in the east that divided North and South - the Humber. Northumbria occupied pretty much the same space as the Celtic ''Brigantia''.
340[[/folder]]
341
342[[folder:Radio]]
343* Peter Tinniswood's Brandon family (see Literature and TV above) made it to radio. The mordant black wit of Uncle Mort became a long-running radio comedy, ''Uncle Mort's North Country'', where he and nephew Carter Brandon went on a road trip around notable parts of The North. Uncle Mort also attended and commented on, real-life cricket matches involving Lancashire and Yorkshire.
344* A less stellar radio comedy series, relying on stereotypes and cloying sentimental humour, was ''Castle's On The Air'', featuring all-round entertainer [[Literature/GuinnessWorldRecords Roy Castle]] and Northern comics such as Colin Crompton and Charlie Williams (see ''The Comedians'', above in Live TV) in the music-hall tradition, inhabiting an idealised and sentimentalised Oop North.
345* A popular radio sitcom in the 1950s and 1960s was ''The Clitheroe Kid'', featuring child actor Jimmy Clitheroe [[note]]Though Jimmy was actually 35 when the show began, and 50 years old by the time it ended. His thyroid gland was damaged at birth, and he never grew taller than 4ft 2in.[[/note]], a scamp in the Dennis The Menace tradition, who of course lived in Clitheroe, Lancashire. [[MeaningfulName Naturally]]. This series later moved to TV.
346* Musical comedian Jake Thackeray also contributed several series of music and musical documentary to the BBC.
347* A presenting team who held the prestigious Radio One Breakfast Show slot, Mark Radcliffe and sidekick "Lard", courted controversy by refusing to present the show from London. Instead, they broadcast to the nation from what was then the BBC's Manchester studios on Oxford Road, often making a pointed comment on the London-centred nature of most BBC broadcasting. [[note]] They were fifteen years ahead of their time: dropped for being uncompromisingly northern, they would have been an ideal fit, in the current move North to Salford by much of the BBC's production teams[[/note]]
348* A comedy/drama serial on BBC Radio Four was called ''Stockport: So Good They Named It Once''.
349[[/folder]]
350
351[[folder:Sport]]
352* Buxton, Derbyshire, has a unique distinction in professional sport. Here, in June 1975, a first-class county cricket match between Lancashire and Derbyshire was called off. Not for the usual British summer reason of "Rain Stopped Play." oh, no. Here, in June, in the English summer sport, ''snow'' [[http://www.buxtonadvertiser.co.uk/news/local/dickie-bird-recalls-when-snow-stopped-play-in-buxton-1-3493083 stopped play.]] This tells you all you need to know about a northern English summer in the Pennines.
353* Lancashire and Yorkshire are fierce rivals in county cricket. Both areas have produced many England greats including
354** Sir Len Hutton, former captain of England
355** Fred Trueman
356** Sir Geoffrey Boycott, former captain of England
357** Harold Larwood the infamous Series/{{Bodyline}} bowler
358** Michael Atherton, former captain of England
359** Michael Vaughan, former captain of England
360** Darren Gough
361** James Anderson
362** Andrew "[[DoNotCallMePaul Freddie]]" Flintoff, now a presenter of ''Series/{{Top Gear|UK}}''
363** David Lloyd, former England coach turned commentator
364** Ray Illingworth
365** Joe Root, current (as of 2020) England test captain
366* The old division between the two codes of Rugby Football followed a North-South split so that practically all the big-name UsefulNotes/RugbyLeague teams are based in the North.[[note]]League did not travel very far into Scotland or Wales, either[[/note]]. This has not stopped the north from playing UsefulNotes/RugbyUnion as well, and to a high level; teams such as Sale [[note]]south Manchester[[/note]] have been contenders at the highest club levels, and one of England's greatest Rugby Union captains, Bill Beaumont (Fylde RC and Lancashire), was a Northerner who played for a Northern club.
367[[/folder]]
368
369[[folder:Video Games]]
370* In ''VideoGame/BeneathASteelSky'', the mechanic that the player meets at the start of the game originally had a Yorkshire accent, but this was changed for the final release as US playtesters couldn't understand what he was saying. The factory owner Lamb, though, still has a Yorkshire accent that's happily very apparent even in the text version.
371* From ''VideoGame/BloodBorne'', we have Eileen the Crow, who speaks in this accent in the English audio. She's from outside Yharnam, originating from an unspecified region called "the hinterlands". Given that all native Yharnamites have southern English accents (even though the architecture, names, and so on [[WordOfGod are based on Czech and Austrian cities]]), it conveys that she's from a close but distinct area with more of a rural flavour.
372* The ''VideoGame/{{Worms}}'' franchise, made by Wakefield-based Team 17, has a variety of regional accents for the teams' soundbanks, including Yorkshireman, Geordie, and Scouse.
373* Many characters in ''VideoGame/ConkersBadFurDay'', like Mr. Cog who when turned upside down becomes southern. And camp.
374* In ''VideoGame/DragonAgeOrigins'' (or at least its expansion, ''[[VideoGame/DragonAgeOriginsAwakening Awakening]]''), Amaranthine seems to be home to more northern characters than the rest of Ferelden and is fittingly located in the North of that country. Like Yorkshire (known occasionally to its locals as God's County) it's seen hard times but is also valued as a jewel of northern Ferelden.
375* In ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsVSkyrim'', the [[OurElvesAreDifferent Dunmer (Dark Elves)]] tend towards Northern English accents, presumably due to the connotations of cynicism and general working-class-ness, although there are a few Cockney voice actors in there for the same reason. Taken to a surreal extreme with Raven Rock's Lancastrian guard captain in the ''Dragonborn'' DLC.
376* In the ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' series (or ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyTacticsA2'' at least), the written dialogue for the Bangaa race makes one think they have accents like this (or else classic Lowland Scots).
377--> '''Kyrra:''' Spear and helm are part and parcel of the dragoon - a prouder group of warriors ye'll nae find! Yammer on about me as ye like, but I'll not have ye drag the name of Dragoon through yer filth!
378* In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'', Ala Mhigan characters are given Northern accents to distinguish them from TheQueensLatin found elsewhere in Eorzea. Ala Mhigo is also the focus of much of Garlean tyranny, which has decimated their culture and economy. Additionally, Ala Mhigo's main industries (which have been devastated by Garlean rule) are mining and quarrying.
379* The protagonist Keith T Maxwell of the IOS game ''VideoGame/GalaxyOnFire'' speaks with a noticeable Liverpudlian accent.
380* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoSanAndreas'' features Shaun Ryder of the Music/HappyMondays voicing Maccer, a Salfordian musician who is the embodiment of the Madchester music scene[[note]]the game was set in 1992, by which time the Madchester genre had peaked[[/note]] and mentions Manchester and Salford at every other opportunity upon his first encounter.
381* Lucy Baker from ''VideoGame/LaytonBrothersMysteryRoom'' seems to be from Yorkshire.
382* ''VideoGame/{{Sonny}} 2'' has Roald, whose accent comes from ''somewhere'' in the U.K. and where his group was forced is GrimUpNorth to boot. WordOfGod says he's Irish.
383* The two humans in ''VideoGame/{{Poacher}}'' are Englishmen with incredibly thick Yorkshire accents. The protagonist, Derek Badger, is a laid-back UnfazedEveryman who even answers the question of "Where are you from?" with a simple "Oop north."
384-->"Well. Sutton-Upon-Derwent."
385** Due to language drift, the [[HiddenElfVillage Blemineg]] also speak in thick Yorkshire accents. This confounds Derek's spirit ally Rebecca to the point where she has to use his brain as a translator.
386* ''Yorkshire Gubbins'' is set in the definitively real town of Gubbins, Yorkshire, complete with all the northern staples like run-down working-class homes, meat pie contests, wanton cruelty to Londoners, slug monster invasions, and sentient robots. Being made by natives all the characters speak in Yorkshire accents, and the game contains an achievement for playing through the first chapter without subtitles.
387* ''VideoGame/PaydayTheHeist'' and [[VideoGame/Payday2 its sequel]] give us James [[NonIndicativeName "Hoxton"]] Hoxworth, a crude lewd, [[AxeCrazy violent,]] [[SirSwearsALot foul-mouthed]] thug with an extra-thick Yorkshire accent and a [[LowerClassLout lower-class upbringing]] in Sheffield.
388* In ''VideoGame/PokemonSwordAndShield'', it's implied that characters from Spikemuth (like the members of Team Yell, Piers [[spoiler:and Marnie]]) have a Northern accent. Spikemuth appears to be a DyingTown, complete with shuttered-up buildings, trash-filled streets, and populated almost entirely by the games' villain team.
389* ''VideoGame/ResistanceFallOfMan'' caused controversy for prominently featuring Manchester Cathedral in one of its levels.
390* ''VideoGame/RyseSonOfRome'' at one point moves the story to Britannia- specifically, to York. The majority of Britons who Marius Titus goes up against have northern accents, in contrast to TheQueensLatin used by Romans.
391* Conrad Roth, the captain of the ''Endurance'' in ''VideoGame/TombRaider2013'', is from Sheffield. Lara even calls him a "Northern bastard" when [[HowDareYouDieOnMe she thinks he's died]].
392* Ubisoft Reflections, creators of the ''VideoGame/{{Driver}}'' series and co-producers of ''VideoGame/TheCrew2014'' and ''VideoGame/TheCrew2'', are from Newcastle-upon-Tyne, which is shown during the credits of ''Driver 1''.
393* In the English dub of ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'', people from the Leftherian Archipelago speak with Northern Englander accents, including main protagonist Rex. Leftheria is shown to have a slightly more humble and rural culture than other nations.
394[[/folder]]
395
396[[folder:Webcomics]]
397* ''Webcomic/FanDanGo'' is set in Lonchester, which -- aside from the general weirdness of the ''Fan Dan Go'' universe--is a rather larger city than RealLife Lancaster.
398* ''Webcomic/ScaryGoRound'' is set in the fictional town of Tackleford in West Yorkshire. That it has a seafront despite West Yorkshire being landlocked can be put down to RuleOfFunny.
399* In ''Webcomic/GunnerkriggCourt'', Annie's mother Surma is from Yorkshire.
400* ''Webcomic/FreakAngels'' has the Mancunian Alice who definitely qualifies for loud and proud and is a sister of gunrunners.
401* Wendy in Webcomic/LadiesInWaiting comes from Durham, wears a flat cap, and speaks in such a thick North East accent that other characters can have trouble [[http://www.ladiesinwaitingcomic.co.uk/comic/8216a/ understanding]] [[http://www.ladiesinwaitingcomic.co.uk/comic/11216a/ her]].
402[[/folder]]
403
404[[folder:Web Original]]
405* Phil Lester (WebVideo/AmazingPhil) hails from Lancashire just north of Manchester and has a rather broad and endearing accent, although it's dialled down since he moved to London. He often jokes that it comes back in full force whenever he goes to visit his family.
406* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_1YzU1DN1zk Yorkshire Yoga.]] Gerrit in ya.
407* ''Literature/EnterTheFarside'' is [[AliensInCardiff set in Manchester]] and the main character, Shaun, comes from Staffordshire. It's assumed he has a Stoke accent, though it's never been mentioned explicitly.
408* [[LetsPlay/InTheLittleWood Martyn]] of the ''LetsPlay/{{Yogscast}}'' is from the North and has the accent. Other members of the Yogscast, particularly Hannah, Sjin, and all three members of Hat Films, will occasionally [[BriefAccentImitation slip into an exaggerated faux-Northern accent while talking]], to Martyn's occasional chagrin.
409* One variation of the Wojak imageboard memes is [[https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/norf-fc Norf FC]], which incorporates many of the stereotypes associated with the region (eg [[FootballHooligans their fanaticism for football]], morbid obesity, working-class nature, etc.).
410* Creator/TomSka's "I Don't Know" has Johnny Knives' quite Northern Accent (he's played by Elliot Gough, who's from Yorkshire, using his natural voice)
411* Jeff from ''WebVideo/WarlockGames'' is an extreme stereotype of this: as well as his accent, his computer wallpaper is Jimmy Savile, and he prays to Creator/AntAndDec.
412* ''WebVideo/WatchRoss'' - given that Creator/RossGrant is a Manchester native and the episodes follow him going about his day in the city. As he's an actor and voiceover artist, the vlogs show a lot of the film and television industry there - including guests from ''{{Series/Hollyoaks}}'', ''{{Series/Emmerdale}}'' and ''Series/CoronationStreet''.
413* The ''Podcast/ActorsLifePodcast'' has several guests from the north, given that the host (Bobby Calloway) is a part of the above-mentioned Ross Grant's community.
414** Ross himself is a guest on the twentieth interview.
415** Sarah Elisabeth Flinton hails from Sheffield and talks about often having to do roles [[IAmVeryBritish in an RP dialect]] because her natural accent is harder to understand to non-Brits.
416** Dawn Wolfe is from Newcastle and talks about how the industry there is often overlooked.
417* John Bain, aka critic and journalist [[Creator/TheCynicalBrit TotalBiscuit]] was born in Newcastle in the North-East, though his family moved around a lot and he eventually ended up in the US. His accent was therefore much softer than it should have been, but on occasion, he would break up in a full-on Geordie brogue to the bewilderment of his wife and co-presenters.
418* Greg Holgate, a.k.a. Music/TheStupendium, is a Londoner themselves, but in their VideoGame/AnimalCrossingNewHorizons music videos, they voice Tom Nook with a Northern accent. At the end of "Nook, Line, & Sinker" they lampshade this by saying, "Tom Nook here; yes, yes, I'm from Yorkshire, [[MST3KMantra don't question it]]."
419* Online entertainment news website/magazine [=WhatCulture=] was founded in Newcastle before relocating to Gateshead, and journalist Josh Brown is a native of Coundon, County Durham, hence his heavy Northeastern accent.
420* Webvideo/{{Zerolenny}} is from the Northwest, and as such sports a thick accent. He’s not afraid to lean into it at times and start shouting “LET’S GO FOOKING MENTAL” like a [[FootballHooligans Football Hooligan]].
421* Abigail Thorn of WebVideo/PhilosophyTube is from Newcasle upon Tyne.
422[[/folder]]
423
424[[folder:Real Life]]
425* This stereotype is centuries old. Observe [[http://www.susanhigginbotham.com/blog/posts/the-first-battle-of-st-albans-from-whethamstedes-register/ the account]] of an eyewitness to the Battle of St. Albans in 1455, in which an army from Yorkshire serving the House of York crushed an army of southerners loyal to King Henry VI, then proceeded to sack the town. To be fair, the northerners did outnumber the southerners at least two to one.
426-->"Meantime, while the Duke of York was (as has been told) consoling the King, and comforting him, the victors were left idle, and being too eager and avaricious, passed their time with pillage, plunder, and rapine, incapable of restraining their hands either at home among their neighbours or outside among enemies. They were all, for the most part, of the northerly parts of the kingdom; and therefore, although stronger in arms and more ready to war, also to the spilling of blood...He who is born with the Northern hoarfrost in his veins...''[Read ‘is’]'' Indomitable in war, and Death’s lover.
427* Creator/JohnSimm grew up in the North and often chooses to play gritty, angsty, and Northern characters.
428* Creator/MalcolmMcDowell is from Leeds, Yorkshire. Apparently, his accent used to be ''a lot'' more pronounced.
429* Creator/PatrickStewart is also from Yorkshire, but has no discernible trace of the accent, apart from occasionally truncated vowels. He briefly brought out his very strong childhood accent for an appearance on ''Friday Night with Jonathan Ross'':
430-->'''Patrick Stewart:''' ''Atha lairkin' ahht?'' (Translation: "Are you larking out", i.e., "can you come out to play?")
431-->'''Jonathan Ross''' ''(bewildered)'': Is that Japanese?
432** Much to the awed confusion of the panelists and the delight of the audience, he also brought out the accent to read poetry on Radio/WaitWaitDontTellMe. [[https://www.npr.org/2014/12/13/370331835/not-my-job-actor-patrick-stewart-gets-quizzed-on-g-i-joe You can hear it here.]]
433** He has also done adverts on [=TV=] for Yorkshire Tea, in which he gleefully switches from Shakespearian flourish to broadest Yorkshire, so as to extol the virtues of something which is definitively not Earl Grey.
434* Creator/IanMcKellen is from Lancashire (spent most of his early childhood in Wigan) but never uses the accent. He says that he is probably the last Northern actor who felt that he had to erase his own accent and adopt RP.
435* Creator/MichaelPalin is from Sheffield, although he has lived in London for many decades, but can still put on a seamless Yorkshire accent, still [[http://www.wsc.co.uk/the-archive/100-Fan-culture/3967-call-yourself-a-football-fan--michael-palin supports Sheffield United]] and will usually drop in a mention of Sheffield in his foreign travelogues.
436* Conversely Creator/SeanBean has a rather pronounced Sheffield accent and which is very distinct in much of his work. It was so prominent that after Bean was cast in the ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'' series of TV movies, author Bernard Cornwell was so impressed with his performance that he [[RetCon changed his character's upbringing from London to Sheffield]] in novels that were written after the broadcast of the series.
437* This is very much averted today, at least aesthetically. For example, Sheffield, which is often stereotyped as a grimy industrial steel city stuck in the 1940s (most recently thanks to ''Film/TheFullMonty''), has the most greenspace compared to urbanspace in Britain (mainly because the city's boundary includes a large unpopulated part of the Peak District). The steel industry shut down back in the seventies and eighties and most of the old, dirty factories have been knocked down and replaced with shops and apartments. Manchester and Leeds have done similar things themselves.
438** Not only that, modern Sheffield apparently has more trees per person than ''any other city in Europe''.
439** And since all the ''old'' steel factories were demolished, more steel is made in Sheffield than at any other time in its history - it just happens to only need three men and a dog to do it.
440** This has happened with Manchester largely because the IRA set off a bomb in the city centre in 1996. Although a terrible event at the time, it resulted in a huge amount of revitalisation for the city since there was suddenly a large amount of open space that could be replanned, and of course, lots of construction jobs suddenly available. Comedian Jason Manford probably puts it best in his gag about doing a gig in Belfast, where he mentioned he was from Manchester.
441--->'''Jason Manford:''' All of a sudden, this voice rings out of the crowd, thick Northern Irish accent, and goes, "Did you like the bomb?" And I paused for a second and said, "Well, yeah, I did as it happens. Nobody died, and we got a new Next ''(clothes store - the largest one in Britain was built in Manchester after the bomb)''."
442** Salford, a sort-of-sister-city, sort-of-district of Manchester[[note]] long story short it was a completely different place until Manchester started expanding and eventually wound up absorbing it, amoeba-style, and now nobody's really sure what the hell's going on or which county it's meant to be in[[/note]], is currently halfway through its own renovation due to an influx of students and the sudden relocation of the BBC to the quays. Which basically means everything's nice and shiny as long as you're within spitting distance of the university or Media City, but tends to turn back to urban decay the moment you get more than about ten metres away from the splendor. Very nice pubs, though.
443* Although the old, grimy, stereotype of the North is becoming less and less true, the North remains the poorest region of Britain, due to a variety of factors: mainly breakdown of community employment due to Thatcherite economic policies, the re-alignment of the British economy towards London and the Square Mile, growing London narcissism, and the fact that most governments have ignored it so as to look for success stories elsewhere. Old mining towns, such as Orgreave (a hero city to many on the Left), are especially bad.
444* Creator/GeorgeMacDonaldFraser wrote the history book ''Literature/TheSteelBonnets'' about the late medieval version of this. The area is described as being in tension between the {{Obstructive Bureaucrat}}s of [[TheGovernment England and Scotland]] when it is not actually being [[RapePillageAndBurn fought over]]. The region is full of outlaws and FeudingFamilies all seeking {{plunder}} from each other, according to the GoodOldWays of the border. The law in the region was at [[AsskickingLeadsToLeadership its most basic]], and it was generally not a nice place to live.
445** P.F. Chisholm's series of historical mysteries concerning Sir Robin Carey, an illegitimate grandson of King Henry VIII who is sent to be Warden of the Marches and keep the peace on the border, deal with the same place and period. They're also rather good.
446* Creator/BrianBlessed, Creator/DianaRigg, and [[Series/TopGearUK Jeremy Clarkson]] all come from Doncaster. It's now home to a large college for the deaf. That's just a coincidence. Maybe. Possibly.
447* Comedian and comic actor Creator/LeeMack is from Lancashire and occasionally milks his Northernness (or irritation at the Southern view of the North) for comic effect.
448* [[https://www.youtube.com/all_comments?v=sB3ieNhEsDY This little girl]] who's become something of a Youtube hit.
449* Comedian, comic actor and author Bob Mortimer is from Middlesborough and has used Northern (particularly North Eastern & Geordie) accents up to good effect in his work, including the audiobook of his novel The Satsuma Complex (to be released as The Clementine Complex in the US) and in British football/soccer humour podcast Athletico Mince (with fellow Northeastern comedian Andy Dawson, from Sunderland).
450* Creator/KarlPilkington is also famously from Manchester. Many of his anecdotes featured on ''Radio/TheRickyGervaisShow'' include the many eccentric folks there.
451* Hollywood actress Joanne Whalley-Kilmer is originally from Stockport.
452* Comedienne Diane Morgan from ''Series/MockTheWeek'' and talking head "Series/PhilomenaCunk" on ''Series/{{Screenwipe}}'' is from Bolton and has [[http://vimeo.com/3620814 quite a thick Bolton accent]].
453* A Blackpool native, Creator/JennaColeman has a mild Lancashire accent.
454* Creator/AntAndDec are both from Newcastle and were on ''Series/BykerGrove''. When they had fellow Geordie Cheryl Fernandez-Versini on as a guest for one of their sketches, Ant jokes that the three of them understood each other perfectly and if anyone else couldn't, that was too bad.
455* Famous graphic design studio [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Designers_Republic The Designers Republic]], known as the designers of the VideoGame/{{Wipeout}} series is from Sheffield. Their works sometimes have references of their northern origin (such as using the term '[=SoYo=]' for South Yorkshire or 'North of Nowhere'). Curiously, their founder is a Londoner, who moved to Sheffield.
456* Radio presenter and writer Stuart Maconie (born in Wigan) wrote a travelogue ''Pies and Prejudice: In Search of the North'' as an attempt to define the essence of Northern Englishness. He asserts that despite claims to the contrary, Staffordshire is part of the Midlands despite some promising northern characteristics. Depending on the route your train out of London takes, the North only properly begins at Macclesfield, a town in northeast Cheshire near Stockport. Going by the alternative route, it ''definitely'' begins at Crewe, Cheshire. Anything in Cheshire south of Macclesfield or Crewe, by Maconie's analysis, is in the Midlands. The city of Chester counts as the North's last outpost against a different sort of alien: the [[UsefulNotes/{{Wales}} Welsh]].
457* Music/{{ACDC}} singer Brian Johnson grew up in the area around Newcastle. His dialect is often undecipherable, to the point where T.V. shows will sometimes give him [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pEt__MDNPJk subtitles during interviews.]]
458* Stand-up comic Roy "Chubby" Brown is from Yorkshire and speaks with his natural accent.
459* Sir Geoffrey Boycott is from Leeds [[note]] Actually Fitzwilliam, which is a large village (and, sadly a WretchedHive) that is halfway between Leeds and Doncaster [[/note]] and his thick Yorkshire accent along with his blunt speak as a UsefulNotes/{{Cricket}} commentator is legendary.
460* Creator/JimmySavile spoke with a distinct Northern accent at a time when British broadcasters still spoke in a very posh way. This made him seem relatable to the British people and was a key element in his rise to fame.
461[[/folder]]

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