The name’s Bond. James Bond. After our annual Christmas Bond-a-thon I pondered who the next James Bond could be but this time, instead of a smooth-talking Londoner with a taste for martinis, our next 007 should be a Yorkshire lad with no time for airs and graces.
This Bond swaps Aston Martins for a turbo-charged Reliant Robin, martinis for pints of bitter, and tuxedos for a sturdy flat cap. And when it comes to the cold, there’s one thing Yorkshire Bond won’t tolerate: coats—or the “southern softies” who wear them.
Yorkshire Bond wouldn’t bat an eye at snow, sleet, or sub-zero temperatures. To him, cold is just “a bit of fresh air,” and anyone bundling up in scarves and gloves is promptly dismissed as “nesh.” When sent to London for an MI6 briefing, he’d spend half the meeting rolling his eyes at the room full of southerners in cashmere overcoats.
“Coats? It’s barely brisk out there,” he’d mutter, taking a long sip from his flask of Yorkshire Tea. “Southern softies, the lot of yer.”
Yorkshire Bond’s disdain for coats would extend to every situation. Whether he’s infiltrating a snowy mountaintop lair or chasing villains through icy backstreets, he’d stick to his trusty tweed jacket and flat cap. In a climactic showdown on a frozen lake, the villain would arrive in a thermal suit, shivering despite its high-tech insulation. Bond, unfazed, would shrug off the cold with a smirk.
“Tha’s got all that fancy gear, and tha still can’t handle a bit o’ frost? Proper nesh, that.”
His attitude wouldn’t just be bravado—it’d be a deeply ingrained part of his Yorkshire identity. Cold weather isn’t something to fear; it’s something to endure with a bit of grit and a lot of sarcasm. Southerners bundling up in multiple layers would get no sympathy. Instead, they’d get a healthy dose of mockery.
“Ey up, tha’s wrapped up like a sausage roll. What’s next, heated slippers?”
Even Q’s attempts to outfit him with cold-weather gadgets would be met with skepticism. A high-tech parka with built-in thermal regulation? Bond would scoff, “A parka? Aye, give us a proper gadget—like a flask that keeps me tea warm.”
Despite his anti-coat stance, Bond’s ingenuity in cold climates would shine. His gadgets would include essentials like a heated flat cap, wool-lined boots that still look rugged, and, of course, the aforementioned tea flask that doubles as a hand-warmer. He’d use these tools with casual efficiency, all while making everyone else feel soft for needing them in the first place.
At the heart of this Bond’s character is a deep-rooted pride in his Yorkshire toughness. When confronted by a room full of shivering southerners, he wouldn’t just hold his ground—he’d make it a point to remind them of their southern softness. And if anyone dared call him out for his bluntness, he’d shrug it off with a simple: “Truth hurts, doesn’t it?”
In the end, Yorkshire Bond wouldn’t just save the world. He’d do it while making sure everyone knows that northerners are tougher, southerners are soft, and coats are for people who don’t know what real cold feels like. If MI6 ever needs a spy with grit, wit, and an unshakable ability to survive any weather, Yorkshire’s finest is ready to roll. And he’s bringing a flask of tea—not a coat.
Dwight Warner is the quintessential oddball Brit, with a weirdly American-sounding name, who has a knack for turning the mundane into the extraordinary. Hailing originally from London, now living in the sleepy depths of Lincolnshire but claiming an allegiance to the absurd, Dwight has perfected the art of finding the surreal in real life. Whether it’s a spirited rant about the philosophical implications of queueing or a deep dive into why tea tastes better in a mug older than you, his blogs blur the line between the abstract and the everyday.
With an irreverent wit and a penchant for tangents that somehow come full circle, Dwight Warner doesn’t just write; he performs on the page. His humour is both sharp and delightfully nonsensical, like Monty Python met your nosiest neighbour and they decided to co-write a diary.
Known for being gregarious, Dwight is the life of any (real or metaphorical) party, whether he’s deconstructing the existential crisis of mismatched socks or sharing his inexplicable theories about why pigeons are secretly running the economy.
A larger-than-life personality with a laugh as loud as his opinions, Dwight Warner invites readers to step into a world where everything’s slightly askew—and that’s exactly how he likes it.
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