Blackpool is stag hotspot by JONATHAN PRYNN, Evening Standard
Dublin and Amsterdam have already barred them, and Prague may soon follow suit.
Now
the country's notorious stag night revellers are set to make Blackpool
- the brashest, wildest and most vulgar destination of them all - the
unlikely choice for that last blast of freedom.
Until now, it has been regarded as just too tacky, too rain-lashed and absurdly difficult to get to.
The £180
standard rail journey takes four hours on the West Coast Main Line,
with an obligatory change at Preston. By car the 248-mile journey can
take just as long, even if the M6 is clear of traffic jams. Which is
hardly ever.
But,
from May, a new twice-daily flight - with a one-way fare of £29.99 -
will bring the legendary Lancashire resort within 40 minutes of
Stansted airport.
With
its thriving lap-dancing industry, its near limitless accommodation and
future role as the "Las Vegas of Britain", Blackpool is being seen as
the perfect stag weekend territory.
Jane
Seddon, head of Blackpool's tourism department, said: "It's fun, it's
unpretentious and it was built for having a good time."
Matt
Mavir, managing director of the specialist stag and hen night organiser
lastnightoffreedom.co.uk, said the resort will have to work on its
cheap and cheerful image in order to attract large numbers of
revellers.
"If
you just want to get lagered in a major drink-athon, then it's great,"
he said. "But it also has the potential to be fashionable in a sort of
retro-chic way. However, I don't think you could explain to the locals
that you are just being ironic."
At
the moment Blackpool ranks 19th among the 39 destinations offered by
the firm, languishing between Southampton and the Brecon Beacons.
It was the surprise choice among seven new destinations announced yesterday by Ryanair's chief executive Michael O'Leary.
The
others were Bergerac and Rodez in south-west France, historic Palermo
in Sicily, the Belgian city of Bruges, Groningen in Holland and Leipzig
in eastern Germany.
Mr
O'Leary hopes flights to the windswept Lancashire town, where high
culture is an evening with Keith Harris and Orville on the north pier,
will be a success. He believes it could open up the Lake District, only
an hour away, for revellers baulking at the prospect of a long slog up
the M6.