The magazine
Private Eye made regular use of the
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells pseudonym to satirise the stereotypical conservative
Middle Englander, and it became a
running joke for several years. In 1978,
BBC Radio 4 called its new listener feedback programme
Disgusted, Tunbridge Wells, though it was renamed
Feedback in 1979. This was following Radio 4 broadcasting the
Take It From Here radio series in 1954 where "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" was prominently featured. In politics, the people behind "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" letters have strong conservative views and are commonly viewed to support the
Conservative Party. However, most
UK Independence Party (UKIP) members in the party's early days were viewed by commentators as being "'Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells' pensioners", of whom the UKIP leader
Nigel Farage stated in 2013 "... the people in it [UKIP] and who voted for it were in the main 'Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells'. I mean, you look down the membership list in 1994, anyone below a half colonel was a nobody..." In 1980, the
BBC Radio 2 broadcaster
Terry Wogan chaired an "It's Your BBC" meeting at Royal Tunbridge Wells'
Assembly Hall Theatre. A report in
The Times suggested the BBC had staged the meeting in the town in the hope that "Disgusted" would reveal himself. In 2006, the author and magistrate
Connie St Louis singled out the "disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" stereotype as a powerful British middle-class movement, saying "they are part of the group with the same concerns, so they have a sense of belonging". In 2013,
Nigel Cawthorne published
Outraged of Tunbridge Wells, a compilation of letters to the
Tunbridge Wells Advertiser that were viewed as being in the style of "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" from the
British Library archives. Critical review of the book has stated that the "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" style displayed an art of letter writing that has continued despite other things in the world changing. Residents of Royal Tunbridge Wells have also expressed displeasure in a manner similar to the "Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells" stereotype in relation to the
Waitrose supermarket chain refusing to open a store in the town while neighbouring "downmarket" towns of
Tonbridge and
Crowborough both did have one. In 2016, during the
United Kingdom referendum on the British membership in the European Union,
The New York Times used Royal Tunbridge Wells as its base for reporting on the referendum. The town was chosen because it was seen as the "quintessentially English town" due to the
Disgusted of Tunbridge Wells phrase. Although most Americans would not fully understand the reference, the town was nonetheless considered a symbol of middle England. The town was a Conservative stronghold and was the only council area in
Kent to vote by a majority for Remain during
Brexit. ==Criticism==