This is a test of GDPR / Cookie Acceptance [about our cookies]
Really irritating test - cookie expires in 24 hour!
Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
As at 24th November 2024 03:41 GMT
 
Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 14:50, 18th November 2024
 
Grahame, not for a second did I think that your posting the image was any form of endorsement, rather that you did it only because it was a nice illustration - and one I found evocative. I only made my own post because of the coincidence of the company (of which I hadn't heard before) having just  featured in another forum which I frequent.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 08:36, 18th November 2024
 
Reference the idyllic "poster" for Fisher Investments: there are half-a-dozen websites I visit daily, including a financial one where , coincidentally, someone asked about this company three days ago. The replies, one referencing comments elsewhere on the Web, advised caution about becoming a customer.

I should (will go back) and make it very clear indeed that was not any form of endorsement from me.  Personally, being retired we have a provision that has been built up which adds to my basic pension but I would not presume to recommend or suggest other than to recommend that you don't listen to any advice I might give.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 08:14, 18th November 2024
 
Reference the idyllic "poster" for Fisher Investments: there are half-a-dozen websites I visit daily, including a financial one where , coincidentally, someone asked about this company three days ago. The replies, one referencing comments elsewhere on the Web, advised caution about becoming a customer.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 22:32, 17th November 2024
 
Thanks for that, from an ex-Waitrose partner - now retired.


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 21:48, 17th November 2024
 
That's a mock-up - no Date/time stamp on the screenshot

sponsored posts don't have a date stamp

Edit to add - I am in no way endorsing the product offered by either sponsored post shared below

Fares have to go up on the Jacobite to pay for central door locking:




If you want to get someone to believe you who's been a Waitrose Partner, show a Waitrose example


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by ChrisB at 21:33, 17th November 2024
 
That's a mock-up - no Date/time stamp on the screenshot

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 21:28, 17th November 2024
 


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by CyclingSid at 16:05, 13th November 2024
 
Do the BBC get brownie points for a more relevant photo for the rapid-charging trial. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cpqd1vr1xzro

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 21:04, 12th November 2024
 
Actually, I do agree, ChrisB. 

It's generally their photo editor who is at fault - just lazily finding 'a picture of a train' and stuffing it into their news item. 

It reflects badly on the news publisher, though - hence this whole topic. 

I publish ... a Melksham blog. 555 articles to date, and each of them has at least one illustrative picture. Sometimes they're darned hard to source and make relevant.  Any masochists who want to read the blog can do so at https://grahamellis.uk/blog.html

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 20:57, 12th November 2024
 
Actually, I do agree, ChrisB. 

It's generally their photo editor who is at fault - just lazily finding 'a picture of a train' and stuffing it into their news item. 

It reflects badly on the news publisher, though - hence this whole topic. 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by ChrisB at 20:45, 12th November 2024
 
Nah.....there'd be a photo editor that would assign the photo to the article unless supplied by the journalist (ie they toook the shot, rather than a file pic. like this one)

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 15:24, 12th November 2024
 
Thanks, Marlburian. 

Interestingly, that Reading Chronicle news item is accredited to "(name redacted) Trainee News Reporter".

That perhaps says it all. 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 15:15, 12th November 2024

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 18:59, 6th November 2024
 
Funnily enough, it's the same picture the BBC used to illustrate a previous news item about Bristol Temple Meads, at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cly7ygdx3ldo 


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by CyclingSid at 08:53, 6th November 2024
 
When did somebody bend Reading's platforms? https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c774vn2m244o

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 16:29, 23rd October 2024
 
From Barry and District News



Interest choice of illustrative ticket - It appears to have been sold at 14:34 in the afternoon of validity, Anytime, and not on a railcard!   To me, that is not just annoying or amusing, but bad advice ...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 17:53, 22nd October 2024
 
Yes, I think it is.

Quality journalism. 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by JayMac at 17:46, 22nd October 2024
 
Which depot is this?

Lovers Walk, Brighton.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by CyclingSid at 15:52, 22nd October 2024
 
Which depot is this?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TonyK at 14:24, 22nd October 2024
 

I passed through Crediton on Sunday, over Salmonhutch crossing as well as the station crossing, and I saw no Electrostars...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 21:01, 21st October 2024

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 05:16, 20th October 2024
 
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cx243k4xep4o

Some rail services were cancelled in Cornwall on Saturday morning due to flooding from a river.

Great Western Railway (GWR) said the disruption between Liskeard and Looe lasted until about 09:15 GMT.

The operator apologised for the disruption and said replacement road transport had been put in place between the stations.

The disruption followed heavy rain overnight on Friday into Saturday.

Illustrated with an Intercity Express Train that (yes) would call at Liskeard but would have some issues getting cleared to run even one stop down the branch.

The reasons for the cancellations are appreciated and not of GWR's doing but rather weather / geographic origin, and it's good to see that there's been an alternative in place for customers.  There is similar understanding here in Wiltshire on my local line when it floods ... and there is also understanding when alternatives are advertised and provided.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by ChrisB at 16:30, 8th October 2024
 
The Cowley service will run to/from Hanborough, not on EWR - those will go to Didcot/Reading & Swindon

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Richard Fairhurst at 12:52, 8th October 2024
 
From a report on a new bridge proposed over the Cowley Branch Line:

https://twitter.com/OxfordClarion/status/1843584339927544118

Quite a swish artists' impression, but I hadn't realised that the Milton Keynes-Oxford-Cowley service was going to be operated by Class 170s in original Midland Mainline "prancing stag" livery...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by CyclingSid at 06:14, 22nd September 2024
 
Something for everyone?
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cq8xx44l021o
Except DMUs or EMUs.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by eightonedee at 09:18, 17th September 2024
 
Devon now achieves a standard of rail travel equal to Nigeria and Mexico!

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by PhilWakely at 08:38, 17th September 2024

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 16:02, 11th September 2024
 
As I have posted previously here on this topic:

Perhaps best not to post any picture, then.   

 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TaplowGreen at 08:10, 11th September 2024
 

It looks just like Great Malvern station and I can see only two rails. Has someone done an update?

Yes, a rather sheepish edit has been done. It looks a lot less like Clapham Yard than it did.

I have a great deal of sympathy with journalists who have to rush out a story with an illustration they don't have in their image library.   

................and it's probably fair to say that 99% of their readers wouldn't know/couldn't care less whether the illustration is a little off, it's just there to serve the article?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 17:48, 10th September 2024
 

It looks just like Great Malvern station and I can see only two rails. Has someone done an update?

Yes, a rather sheepish edit has been done. It looks a lot less like Clapham Yard than it did.

I have a great deal of sympathy with journalists who have to rush out a story with an illustration they don't have in their image library.   Have the same problem finding an apprpproriate image for my blog - https://grahamellis.uk/perm.html to see a series of pictures where I have done my best. Sometimes I note "stock image" in the caption ...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 17:22, 10th September 2024
 

It looks just like Great Malvern station and I can see only two rails. Has someone done an update?

Yes, a rather sheepish edit has been done. It looks a lot less like Clapham Yard than it did.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TonyK at 16:45, 10th September 2024
 

It looks just like Great Malvern station and I can see only two rails. Has someone done an update?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 15:50, 10th September 2024
 
The reporter, Kieran Williams, looks like yet another of the very young people working on local news websites. When wr.iting a book during Lockdown I came across several more up and down England. Those working on the Reading Chronicle receive critical "comments" every day. It's wondered what sort of initial and on-the-job training they get

Won't they  have done a Media Studies degree, and thus arrive knowing everything already?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 13:24, 10th September 2024
 
The reporter, Kieran Williams, looks like yet another of the very young people working on local news websites. When wr.iting a book during Lockdown I came across several more up and down England. Those working on the Reading Chronicle receive critical "comments" every day. It's wondered what sort of initial and on-the-job training they get

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Worcester_Passenger at 11:00, 10th September 2024

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by CyclingSid at 06:56, 25th July 2024
 
When you are in a hole, stop digging?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by the void at 08:44, 24th July 2024
 
https://www.southwalesargus.co.uk/news/24471528.trains-newport-chepstow-caldicot-cancelled/

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 19:30, 23rd May 2024
 
Perhaps best not to post any picture, then.   


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 07:25, 23rd May 2024
 
Does the title of this thread and the evidence within it suggest that there is very little usage of public transport by people working in the media?

It does and there is an element of truth in that suggestion.    BUT I know from personal experience that there are plenty of times I'm posting a story online, where time is of the essence to get the news out but I don't have a picture to hand, where the relevance of even the best picture I have  is questionable to say the least.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by CyclingSid at 06:54, 23rd May 2024
 
Does the title of this thread and the evidence within it suggest that there is very little usage of public transport by people working in the media?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by PhilWakely at 18:54, 22nd May 2024

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 17:03, 13th March 2024
 

I know Cotswold Line punctuality hasn't been great recently, but "closed" is taking it a bit far.


 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by johnneyw at 10:57, 13th March 2024
 
IET services on the Severn Beach Line?  The Beeb appear to think so.

https://www-bbc-co-uk.cdn.ampproject.org/v/s/www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-68551905.amp?amp_gsa=1&amp_js_v=a9&usqp=mq331AQGsAEggAID#amp_tf=From%20%251%24s&aoh=17103254713751&csi=0&referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by bobm at 13:34, 26th February 2024
 
From GWR itself....  Five coaches to Gatwick would probably be welcomed in place of a turbo.


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Mark A at 21:24, 6th February 2024
 
*Snorts*

Mark

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 21:18, 6th February 2024
 
From Rail Advent

Wiltshire trains set to be disrupted this week



Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by JayMac at 17:44, 30th January 2024
 
BBC news at 07:05am Tuesday 30 January 2024

LIVE from London Waterloo.with a location described as WESTMINSTER.

Did they use a stock photo that was irrelevant to the news item? That's what this thread is for.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by infoman at 07:11, 30th January 2024
 
BBC news at 07:05am Tuesday 30 January 2024

LIVE from London Waterloo.with a location described as WESTMINSTER.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Worcester_Passenger at 17:54, 29th January 2024
 
And for today's bridge strike on the Cotswold line, the Worcester News has used a predictably-accurate photo.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Richard Fairhurst at 09:29, 19th January 2024
 
Not a stock photo, but worth noting as a rather spectacular goof by a well-known writer.

Here's Giles Coren in the Times reviewing Charlbury's gastropub, the Bull. He spends quite a lot of time talking about Adlestrop:

And now, when we finally did get there, it was cold and wet and grey with not a cloudlet or a haycock to be seen. But it was beautiful, just the same. Though the station is long gone, the branch line closed since before I was born, and all that remains is the station sign, mounted now on a bus stop as you drive into the village.

I know Cotswold Line punctuality hasn't been great recently, but "closed" is taking it a bit far.

(Later in the same article, he finally gets round to writing about the Bull. "Without restaurants in pubs, there would be no pubs at all in the countryside now. Just like there are no goddam railway stations." Charlbury, of course, has both a railway station and two pubs-which-aren't-restaurants. One of them, the Rose & Crown, is literally over the road from the Bull. Coren probably parked his Land Rover on the double yellows outside it.)

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by the void at 08:19, 18th January 2024
 
https://www.somersetlive.co.uk/news/somerset-news/somersets-newest-railway-station-not-9040446

Who knew that Penzance was in Somerset...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 17:15, 9th January 2024

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 06:21, 26th December 2023
 
HS2 - Cancelled north of Birmingham, but to serve Maidenhead?

From The Business Magazine



Last week Network Rail apologised to passengers for the train disruption faced in the past month and said the ‘industry response wasn’t good enough’.

This statement comes following the company meeting with Maidenhead MP Theresa May. According to sources, 'the meeting was successful, problems were outlined and solutions put forward'.

Following the meeting, she said: "Most of the problems are down to Network Rail. I have been clear with them about how bad the service has been in recent weeks and the need for action.

"They need to get on with the job of making sure we don’t see the sort of delays and cancellations people have experienced recently.

"I impressed upon Network Rail the need to restore a reliable service for Maidenhead, Twyford and the branch lines. These recent delays risk undermining consumer trust in rail travel at a time when we should be encouraging travel by rail."

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by RichardB at 20:54, 21st December 2023
 
230001 is lined up for the Greenford Branch trial, evidently.  Anything long term will depend on how that trial goes.....

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by eightonedee at 18:15, 21st December 2023
 
Are you absolutely certain that those three ex-Vivarail units currently gathering graffiti at the Reading depot are not going to end up replacing 150s in Cornwall 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by RichardB at 13:49, 21st December 2023
 
Bit of a classic in today's West Briton (the local paper for Truro, Falmouth, Redruth etc)

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Richard Fairhurst at 11:52, 8th December 2023
 
I'm delighted to see that electric trains are finally running between Oxford and London, according to this picture in the Oxford Mail. Slightly surprised that they're Merseyrail third-rail units, but maybe this is a way of saving money on the electrification?



https://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/news/23976658.gwr-rail-updates-services-oxford-london/

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 07:44, 4th December 2023
 
Or "I visited the new pizza restaurant in the main street and it was seriously good." The intrepid newshounds working on the Berkshire version had curious ideas (that is, lack of knowledge) about local geography, describing the M4 as being in Newbury and giving as "the most expensive streets in Reading" those in outlying villages. Once an incident on the M4 was describe as being "near Chieveley,Newbury, Reading". Theale's new fire station was also placed in Reading.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Surrey 455 at 00:41, 4th December 2023
 
I visit(ed) the site most days -including this morning - and wondered why the news didn't look fresh!

The various MyLondon pages for the towns in the London Borough of Hillingdon don't get updated very often and many stories are for completely different non-local towns.

The same is true of the SurreyLive pages. Plus many of the new stories there are along the lines of "I visited XXX restauarant / bar / village and you won't believe..."

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 12:48, 3rd December 2023
 
I visit(ed) the site most days -including this morning - and wondered why the news didn't look fresh!

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by eightonedee at 10:30, 3rd December 2023
 
Last Thursday was a good (or bad depending on whether you enjoy it) day for this thread. Reach (formerly Trinity, and before that Mirror Group) closed 13 local news websites, including Berkshire Live and those for Hampshire, Oxfordshire, Dorset and Wiltshire.

The website for the Reading Chronicle (another Reach product that has been a good source of material) remains.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Phantom at 11:34, 30th November 2023
 
As usual for this publication, another random picture used
https://www.thewestonmercury.co.uk/news/23956929.orr-investigates-poor-wales-west-train-performance/

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TonyK at 19:52, 26th November 2023
 
GWR news item about upcoming Old Oak Common work uses a somewhat familiar image of the Glasgow station approaches, described as “Signalls Pad”.  I wonder what the letter G stands for… 

https://news.gwr.com/news/plan-ahead-warns-gwr-as-engineering-work-will-affect-christmas-trains-preparatory-works-to-start-this-weekend

Paul

It would seem to be "not an accident", given the offered option of a download of Signalls Pad.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by paul7575 at 23:38, 21st November 2023
 
GWR news item about upcoming Old Oak Common work uses a somewhat familiar image of the Glasgow station approaches, described as “Signalls Pad”.  I wonder what the letter G stands for… 

https://news.gwr.com/news/plan-ahead-warns-gwr-as-engineering-work-will-affect-christmas-trains-preparatory-works-to-start-this-weekend

Paul

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 19:56, 16th November 2023
 
The BBC have replaced that picture with another iStock one called "Young handsome businessman with smart phone in subway". I'm not sure it is a subway, but is out of focus and hard to tell. The set of images (Credit: Halfpoint) including the same YHBWS includes one with an HST with a dynamic lines livery, so they are not new but at least the geography is better.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 16:59, 16th November 2023
 
I did a Google reverse image search (just checking this isn't a traditional quiz!), it appears to be Aspernstraße, Austria.

I found it (from its reference number) on iStock, not branded as Getty Images. So I think it should have been credited by the BBC as iStock/bojanstory or just bojanstory.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Fourbee at 15:27, 16th November 2023
 
I did a Google reverse image search (just checking this isn't a traditional quiz!), it appears to be Aspernstraße, Austria.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 13:15, 16th November 2023
 
Not coping the image as it has a Getty copyright - but is it my imagination or have the BBC chosen to use an image that isn't from the National Rail network when write about national rail driver strikes?  I can't place the location ...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TonyN at 17:21, 3rd November 2023
 
According to the Daily Mirror South West Railway have taken over the St Ives branch.

The St Ives to St Erth South West Trains route is one of the most beautiful in the country, trundling past a number of sandy beaches and rideable for the low price of just £3

https://www.mirror.co.uk/travel/uk-ireland/uks-most-scenic-train-journey-31354898

And the photo seems to claim Long Rock Depot is on the Branch.



The magnificent train line (Image: Getty Images/Collection Mix: Subjects RF)

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 15:11, 1st September 2023
 
Just had a look at Zwickau - looks big enough (what led you to it?) but I can't work out all the ironmongery in the background. Is it OHLE, or a gasworks?

The infrastructure labels you can read have IDs starting "DZW", and that's the DS100 (DB station/location) code for Zwickau. Mind you, I have no idea whether these codes are used that way.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Red Squirrel at 13:13, 1st September 2023
 
Just had a look at Zwickau - looks big enough (what led you to it?) but I can't work out all the ironmongery in the background. Is it OHLE, or a gasworks?

 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 12:34, 1st September 2023
 
Can anyone identify where it was really taken?

Ignoring Google, which of course insists it was Ashley Down, logically it should be Zwickau - but I can't see where.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Red Squirrel at 11:04, 1st September 2023
 
Bit slow to spot this, but it's a good 'un:



Ashley Down Station: Works to begin on new rail route
12 January 2023

A new railway station just half-a-mile from the Seat Unique Stadium will connect Ashley Down to Bristol’s Temple Meads Station, Filton and Henbury.

The Ashley Down Station, which will be located on the site of the previous Ashley Hill Station, between Muller Road and Ashley Down Road, is due for construction between February 2023 and 2024.

The proposed new station at Ashley Down is part of a wider ‘MetroWest 2’ project, which will re-open the Henbury Line between Bristol Temple Meads and Henbury to passengers. The project is a partnership between West of England Combined Authority, Bristol City Council, Network Rail and Great Western Railways, and the new railway route is estimated to provide transport for up to 1.3 million people each year.

The Henbury Line will operate a half-hourly service and will provide a brand new form of transport for Gloucestershire Cricket supporters and Members on busy matchdays for the duration of the cricket season.

Will Brown, Chief Executive at Gloucestershire Cricket, said: “The Ashley Down Station will provide a much-needed additional mode of transport for people travelling to and from the Seat Unique Stadium in 2024 and beyond.

“It’s fantastic to see investment in the local infrastructure and we hope the new station will encourage visitors to use more sustainable methods of transport when coming to watch Gloucestershire.”

A completion date is yet to be confirmed, but the Ashley Down Station is expected to open to the public in 2024.
Source: Gloucestershire County Cricket Club

Can anyone identify where it was really taken?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Bob_Blakey at 09:26, 1st September 2023
 
More good work from 'Devon Live'; to illustrate their story concerning today's rail strike their 'journalists' thought it appropriate to use an image of a Scotrail Class 385 EMU.


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 18:00, 31st July 2023
 
Either this AI's not all it's cracked up to be, or they use some very dodgy tape measures over there in the Fahrenheit Zone.

I think the former Tony. Who else has spotted the new variety of class 150 (single-car?) it refers to?

I loved that carriage being 650 metres long ...

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by eightonedee at 16:44, 31st July 2023
 
Either this AI's not all it's cracked up to be, or they use some very dodgy tape measures over there in the Fahrenheit Zone.

I think the former Tony. Who else has spotted the new variety of class 150 (single-car?) it refers to?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TonyK at 11:03, 31st July 2023
 
ChrisB's question led me to check the longest train that can be accommodated on the Severn Beach line (it's 5 cars, but I wanted to be sure). So I asked Google's AI tool Bard. It said:

The longest train that can be used on the Severn Beach Line is 650 meters (2,133 feet). This is the length of a Class 150 single-car diesel multiple unit (DMU), which is the type of train that is most commonly used on the line. The Severn Beach Line has a number of short platforms, so trains longer than 650 meters cannot be used.

In the past, there have been longer trains used on the Severn Beach Line. For example, in the 1960s, Class 117 DMUs were used on the line, and these trains are 750 meters (2,461 feet) long. However, these trains were too long for the platforms, so they had to be split in two at Severn Beach station.

I'm really sad that I missed the spectacle of a Class 117 being split in two at Severn Beach. I'm surprised no-one thought to take a photo of this.

Either this AI's not all it's cracked up to be, or they use some very dodgy tape measures over there in the Fahrenheit Zone. It's more than a little out of date too. Using the less advanced Google maps suggests a usable platform length of about 79 metres. I trust that less than I trust Red Squirrel - a 5-car Turbo train would measure 117 metres.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Bmblbzzz at 20:46, 27th July 2023
 
ChrisB's question led me to check the longest train that can be accommodated on the Severn Beach line (it's 5 cars, but I wanted to be sure). So I asked Google's AI tool Bard. It said:

The longest train that can be used on the Severn Beach Line is 650 meters (2,133 feet). This is the length of a Class 150 single-car diesel multiple unit (DMU), which is the type of train that is most commonly used on the line. The Severn Beach Line has a number of short platforms, so trains longer than 650 meters cannot be used.

In the past, there have been longer trains used on the Severn Beach Line. For example, in the 1960s, Class 117 DMUs were used on the line, and these trains are 750 meters (2,461 feet) long. However, these trains were too long for the platforms, so they had to be split in two at Severn Beach station.

I'm really sad that I missed the spectacle of a Class 117 being split in two at Severn Beach. I'm surprised no-one thought to take a photo of this.


But... if you asked about the line, not the stations, 650m might be a reasonable figure. How long is the "Binliner" for instance?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by infoman at 20:20, 27th July 2023
 
BBC local news on Thursday evening announcing that the new portway would be opening on the 1st August,

shame it started with the disused rail line heading for portishead.

The turbo at Portway report came without the reporter being named,just shows how our public broadcaster is unaccountable.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Red Squirrel at 17:58, 27th July 2023
 
ChrisB's question led me to check the longest train that can be accommodated on the Severn Beach line (it's 5 cars, but I wanted to be sure). So I asked Google's AI tool Bard. It said:

The longest train that can be used on the Severn Beach Line is 650 meters (2,133 feet). This is the length of a Class 150 single-car diesel multiple unit (DMU), which is the type of train that is most commonly used on the line. The Severn Beach Line has a number of short platforms, so trains longer than 650 meters cannot be used.

In the past, there have been longer trains used on the Severn Beach Line. For example, in the 1960s, Class 117 DMUs were used on the line, and these trains are 750 meters (2,461 feet) long. However, these trains were too long for the platforms, so they had to be split in two at Severn Beach station.

I'm really sad that I missed the spectacle of a Class 117 being split in two at Severn Beach. I'm surprised no-one thought to take a photo of this.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by ChrisB at 17:55, 27th July 2023
 
The picture has now been changed to a turbo

Only after the question was asked & I posted my response to it. I checked before answering & it was still an IET then.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Red Squirrel at 17:52, 27th July 2023
 
Picture is of an IET - no chance on the SEvern Beach is there?

Er no. But then again... I've been down it on a Class 220. About 20 years ago Filton Abbey Wood was being remodelled and hourly trains were diverted via Henbury and the Severn Beach line.


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by rogerw at 16:48, 27th July 2023
 
The picture has now been changed to a turbo

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by ChrisB at 16:19, 27th July 2023
 
Picture is of an IET - no chance on the SEvern Beach is there?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by infoman at 15:51, 27th July 2023
 
I am trying to see where the incorrect information is,could you explain,thanks.

ITV West lunctime news on thursday 27 july saying about the opening of Portway station showed the location of the four track line at Ashley down.

Ah well some pictures are better than nothing.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by rogerw at 11:37, 27th July 2023
 
Nice new trains for the Severn Beach line
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-bristol-66322294

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 15:46, 8th July 2023

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 16:41, 17th May 2023

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by eightonedee at 18:52, 3rd May 2023
 
Perhaps not amusing or irrelevant, but hardly inspired:

https://www.readingchronicle.co.uk/news/23495276.reading-train-driver-warns-danger-kids-caught-tracks/

Sadly, as a long-time Chronicle reader, these days most of the photos in the print edition are such library "stock" photos or screen captures of Google Street View. They do though usually get the place right!

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 11:32, 3rd May 2023

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Bmblbzzz at 12:11, 4th January 2023
 
Wherever he is, it looks like the poor chap has been ‘sent to Coventry’ so perhaps it is  an appropriate image? 
He might have been sent to Coventry, but not with a ticket for the Fun Boy Three!

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Marlburian at 14:53, 22nd December 2022
 
It's odd that Alamy thought it relevant to label at least vaguely the geographic origin of the passenger, who could of course be on a platform anywhere in the world, but not that of the train, which is unlikely to stray far from its home country and is clearly not UK-based! ...

It seems that the wintry image of Goathland posted above on December 13 also comes from Alamy. At first glance I thought it showed a rather good model railway "decorated" for Christmas.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by TonyK at 14:15, 22nd December 2022
 
I would hazard a guess at Thailand, which is at least on the same planet as Coventry.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by Ralph Ayres at 22:40, 21st December 2022
 
It's odd that Alamy thought it relevant to label at least vaguely the geographic origin of the passenger, who could of course be on a platform anywhere in the world, but not that of the train, which is unlikely to stray far from its home country and is clearly not UK-based!  The apparent lack of clear tagging is presumably a contributory factor in many irrelevant photo, but subeditors could I'm sure use a bit more common sense.  There's probably not much hope though for anyone who lets through the phrase "train station busyness".  Aaaarghh!!

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by stuving at 13:33, 21st December 2022
 
Despite the credit in that article, Alamy are selling this one royalty free (crediting the same photographer). They label it as "Asian depressed traveler waiting at train station after mistakes a train Stock Photo". I'm not sure they meant it to read quite like that.

Several uses of it come up, mostly linked to depression or other travel modes.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by IndustryInsider at 13:17, 21st December 2022
 
Wherever he is, it looks like the poor chap has been ‘sent to Coventry’ so perhaps it is  an appropriate image? 

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by JayMac at 13:04, 21st December 2022
 

https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/coventry-warwickshires-quietest-train-station-25786534

I know Coventry can be depressing but I'm pretty sure the chap pictured isn't anywhere near the West Midlands.

Question is, where is this despondent looking fella?

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by brooklea at 09:12, 13th December 2022
 
Goathland on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway by the looks of it.

No Whitby trains or Santa Specials there today.

Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by grahame at 08:18, 13th December 2022
 
From The BBC

Err - this looks like a heritage railway.  Not sure if any of them are unionised, and it's highly unlikely even if they were that there would be strikes looking to the government to better their remuneration packages or terms and conditions.


Re: Annoying / amusing use of completely irrelevant stock photos to illustrate press articles
Posted by PrestburyRoad at 19:22, 2nd October 2022
 
From BBC News pages "Northern: Yorkshire trains trial leaves on the line solution" https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-leeds-63109000.  The story is fine and the illustration does show a train with some leaves ... but third rail electrification in Yorkshire?

 
The Coffee Shop forum is provided by customers of Great Western Railway (formerly First Great Western). The views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit https://www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that the content provided by one of our posters contravenes our posting rules ( graham AT sn12.net ).

Although we are planning ahead, we don't know what the future will bring here in the Coffee Shop. We have domains "firstgreatwestern.info" for w-a-y back and also "greatwesternrailway.info"; we can also answer to "greatbritishrailways.info" too. For the future, information about Great Brisish Railways, by customers and for customers.
 
Current Running
GWR trains from JourneyCheck
 
 
Code Updated 13th September 2024
From https://greatbritishrailways.info/t11558.html?topic=11558.msg352971 - go insecure