Ryanair wrestling Wetherspoons in gutter over a couple of cans

RYANAIR and Wetherspoons are fighting each other while rolling in filth and shouting incoherently, all over a couple of cans of lager. 

The two lowest-common-denominator giants began arguing about who was allowed to have the lagers and are now throwing inaccurate punches at each other on the pavement.

Earlier Ryanair, represented by a red-faced Irishman who would charge you for taking a piss if he could, faced off against the scowl-faced pub chain Brexiter who treats bar staff like his f**king slaves.

Wetherspoons said: “F**k off with your two lager rule. Be having two and more on the plane, eh? Getting mortal then, won’t you? They’re mine.”

Ryanair replied: “Not… f**king coming on this f**king… plane that pissed mate. No pissing way. If there’s lagers I’m having them.”

Wetherspoons then answered ‘bollocks you are,’ shoved his rival, fell over, and they have since continued punching and slurring abuse in the wet dirt.

Witness Tom Booker said: “I expect they’ll soon decide they’re best mates.”

Man who got first round in will stay for five pints out of sheer pettiness

A MAN who grudgingly bought a round will stay out and drink more than he wanted to purely to make his money back, he has confirmed.

Stephen Malley felt obliged to buy drinks for all his friends in the pub after one of them said ‘Your round, Steve’ but now plans to recoup his initial outlay by forcing down alcohol he does not want.

Malley said: “I normally try to avoid buying rounds but there was no way to wriggle out of it this time without looking like the miserable, tightfisted bastard I actually am.

“So rather than buying drinks for my mates with good grace and going home when I felt ready, I’m staying out much later, getting steadily drunker but also steadily happier that I am making back the cash I was forced to spend at the beginning of the night.

“That will probably change when I get home really late, have a row with my wife, feel a bit queasy and end up having bread and cheese for dinner.

“I’m not sure that will be worth the £26.50 I was so reluctant to spend in the first place, but crucially my friends will have spent a more equitable amount than if I’d left when I wanted to.

“Pettiness has its own rewards.”