please empty your brain below

I've been to all three, and personally I think the Tate Modern is the most interesting and inventive, so is therefore my favourite.

Unsurprising that they're all in London - however, it's also rather unfortunate - if we exclude London, what would the list look like?

dg writes: see link in title
Yep, I only noticed the link after commenting!
Curious how so many are museums, shouldn't be surprising. Brighton Pier is interesting, though, as accessing the pier is free I think, but otherwise the attractions cost money, don't they?

dg writes: see word in title
Brighton Pier is now £2.
Been to 18 of those. Slightly confused by the criteria that makes something an attraction, with something like Bury's Abbey Gardens - what makes it different from any other park or park with some ruins?

I've never been there, but do they count people walking in?
Any plans to visit the museums bottom of the list? The Inns of Court and City Yeomanry Museum in London only had 50 visitors in 2024.
Enjoyed your remembrance of the London Olympics announcement win yesterday.
See you are pointedly ignoring another anniversary of a major London event today, though it is being widely covered in the media.
You say "are pointedly ignoring".
I say "wrote about something else".
Thanks for writing about something else.
I don’t understand why Tate Modern is so popular, though it’s numbers have recently dropped while the BM and NH museum have increased. It must be the appeal of the building and its convenient location, and maybe it’s in lots of foreign tourist guide books, as the works of art there are far more ‘difficult’ than those upriver at Tate Britain, which has around a quarter the number of visitors. Tate Modern is also a difficult building to get around, with its two separate blocks and different levels, not helped by lifts with ludicrously long waiting times.










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