4 weeks agoNew York StateComments Off on Parents’ fury as Three Little Pigs kids show is slapped with a ‘patronising’ trigger warning
A THREE Little Pigs show has been given a trigger warning that the dad gets eaten by the Big Bad Wolf.
Parents buying £10 tickets for three-to-seven-year-olds blasted the “patronising” message.
The alert was put on Chichester Festival Theatre’s website under “content and themes” and warns the 172-year-old story “has a passing reference to Father Pig being gobbled by the Big Bad Wolf.”
Tim Scott, of The Freedom Association, said: “This nonsense is all too typical of taking life far too seriously.
“I say hands off. This is a well-known children’s story that adults should leave alone.”
Dad Vaz Sayed, 52, added: “I have two daughters and find it incredibly patronising that theatres feel the need to warn parents about something so trivial.
“It’s laughable, and less of the Big Bad Wolf and more the Big Bad Woke!”
Acting great Sir Ian McKellen has previously slammed “ludicrous” trigger warnings in productions.
Actor Simon Callow has said theatre is “not a pulpit, but a gymnasium of the imagination”.
Chichester Festival Theatre previously came under fire for a Sound of Music trigger warning over Nazi Germany.
It has since taken down the Wolf alert from “content and themes” ahead of the December production after we approached for comment.
A spokeswoman told us: “Because that line is in the main description as a basic plot point, it was unnecessary to flag it again. So the latter instance was removed.”
InstagramA theatre production of Three Little Pigs for kids was slapped with a ‘patronising’ trigger warning[/caption]
4 weeks agoNew York StateComments Off on Corrie reveals who pushed Rob Donovan down the stairs after sister Carla is held at gunpoint and Lisa Swain is attacked
CORONATION Street unmasked Rob Donovan’s attacker as Carla Connor faced gunpoint terror and Lisa Swain was brutally ambushed.
Rob Donovan’s (Marc Baylis) great escape took a deadly twist in the Monday’s gripping episode of Coronation Street.
ITVMandy seized Carla at gunpoint, dragging her out of bed before forcing her to an abandoned office block[/caption]
ITVRob coldly declared that he cared about no one but himself and his freedom[/caption]
The cold-blooded killer had struck a secret deal – offering up a kidney to save his sister Carla Connor (Alison King), while her copper partner DS Lisa Swain (Vicky Myers) vowed to pull strings to get his conviction overturned.
However, Lisa had no intention of sticking to the deal.
So, as soon as the operation was over, Rob launched his daring escape.
Rob then turned to his prison guard lover, Mandy (Rebecca Atkinson), for a last-ditch escape plan.
She wasted no time, seizing Carla at gunpoint and dragging her out of bed before forcing her to an abandoned office block – setting the stage for a deadly showdown.
Carla desperately tried to make Mandy see sense, warning her that Rob was only using her.
Meanwhile, Rob hijacked Lisa’s car, demanding a hefty cash transfer and warning that Carla would suffer if she didn’t comply.
But when Lisa attempted to call for backup, Rob snapped – viciously attacking her and leaving her for dead.
Back at the office block, Mandy revealed she was pregnant with his child, but Rob’s reaction was far from what she expected.
Instead of joy, he lashed out, knocking her to the ground, finally exposing his true colours.
Realising the monster he really was, Mandy walked away, while Rob coldly declared that he cared about no one but himself and his freedom.
With chilling composure, he then admitted to Carla that he may have just murdered Lisa – leaving her horrified.
But Carla wasn’t about to let him win.
Summoning every ounce of strength, she charged at him, shoving him hard.
Most devastating soap deaths
SOAP viewers are frequently left heartbroken after watching some of their favourite characters bite the dust.
Here is a list of the most devastating deaths that have taken place in soapland over the years.
EASTENDERS
Barry Evans – Evil Janine (Charlie Brooks) lured her trusting fiance to Scotland for a quickie marriage after learning he was dying.
Her plan to inherit Barry’s fortune was thwarted when Barry told her that the doctors had mixed up his medical files.
Furious that she was no longer set for a windfall, she pushed Barry off a cliff after telling him their love was “fake”.
Bradley Branning – Bradley was accused of killing Stacey Slater’s rapist Archie Mitchell (Larry Lamb) after he punched him twice on the night he died.
He was spotted in the Square by a police woman who chased him up a fire escape.
Bradley lost his balance and tragically plunged to his death.
CORONATION STREET
Tina McIntyre – Tina was getting it on with Peter Barlow – despite him being married to Carla Connor.
When she threatened to reveal the truth, Carla’s brother Rob got into a physical altercation with her.
Tina lost her footing and fell off a balcony – then warned Rob she was going to tell the cops he pushed her.
In a panic, Rob brutally clobbered her over the head with a metal pipe.
Molly Dobbs – Molly was one of the victims in Corrie’s 2010 tram crash, alongside Ashley Peacock (Steven Arnold).
Sarah Sugden – After the family got into financial problems, Sarah’s son Andy (Kelvin Fletcher) decided to make some quick cash from an insurance company by setting fire to the Sugden barn.
He didn’t realise his mum was inside the building, and she got trapped in the blaze.
Nine villagers – The shocking 1993 plane crash episode brought in 18 million viewers for Emmerdale.
Mark Hughes was killed by a falling wall, Archie Brooks was burned by jet fuel, Elizabeth Pollard was killed by debris and newcomer Leonard Kempinski died in a car crash caused by the crash.
Five other non-recurring characters from the village also died.
HOLLYOAKS
Carmel McQueen – The talented singer died in shocking scenes when a train crashed into a her family’s car.
Carmel managed to free her cousin Theresa from the rubble – but got stuck in it herself.
Moments later the train exploded and Carmel died in the arms of her family members, promising to be their guardian angel.
He teetered for a moment before tumbling over the stairwell, landing with a sickening thud below.
Rob was left motionless on the floor as a horrified Carla looked on.
A battered but very much alive Lisa then staggered onto the scene.
But is Rob dead?
And if he is… has Carla just crossed the line into murder?
Coronation Street airs Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 8pm on ITV1 or stream from 7am on ITVX.
ITVRob went tumbling over the stairwell after he was pushed by his sister Carla[/caption]
ITVA battered Lisa then staggered onto the scene. But is Rob dead?[/caption]
4 weeks agoNew York StateComments Off on Major fashion chain with 105 stores closes MORE shops as 12 locations face chop
A MAJOR fashion chain with 105 stores will close more sites as 12 locations already face the chop.
Select Fashion will shutter a further three stores across Bristol and Nottinghamshire this year, marking the latest in a string of closures by the brand.
Alamy Live NewsThe fashion brand will close three more stores across the UK.[/caption]
The British fashion chain – owned by Turkish entrepreneur Cafer Mahiroğlu – fell into administration in 2019.
At the time, the retailer blamed tough conditions on the high street and was later bought out of administration by Genus UK Limited.
Recent filings on Companies House – the UK’s register of businesses – show Select Fashion entered into a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) last summer.
A CVA is a way of restructuring that means a business can continue trading by negotiating its debts, such as cutting rent costs with landlords.
It is a common way for struggling businesses to try and stay afloat, with chains such as Caffe Nero and Body Shop having previously entered into one.
Now, a further two sites in Bristol city centre and a third in Worksop are braced for closure.
Bristol World detailed how branches in Broadmead and within Broadwalk Shopping Centre in Knowle have launched an “Everything Must Go” sale to help shift stock before both departures.
Elsewhere, a statement by Select Worksop was issued on social media stating that store would likely close on March 5.
The store has also launched a sale, knocking 25% off both sale and full price items.
One local shared their devastation over the news, writing under the announcement: “Feel so sorry for your shop. Its the only decent clothes shop left.”
The Sun has approached Select for comment.
It comes just weeks after The Sun revealed the affordable clothing and accessory retailer had plans to shutter a dozen stores across the UK.
Documents, previously seen by The Sun, detail how personnel were told a total of 12 stores would shutter across February and March.
But that left around 74 branches at risk of closure if no buyers could be found to take them on.
Teneo has confirmed 13 branches closed last month, including in London, Coventry and Bradford.
Now, the 33 shutting this month will take the full list of branches closing to 52, after six shut before the end of 2024.
Of the 74 sites put up for sale by Teneo, Sainsbury’s is expected to buy three more stores, after securing 10 earlier in 2024.
Last month, B&Q agreed to buy five branches. This suggests around four stores out of the list of 74 are at risk of closure still.
RETAIL PAIN IN 2025
The British Retail Consortium has predicted that the Treasury's hike to employer NICs will cost the retail sector £2.3billion.
Research by the British Chambers of Commerce shows that more than half of companies plan to raise prices by early April.
A survey of more than 4,800 firms found that 55% expect prices to increase in the next three months, up from 39% in a similar poll conducted in the latter half of 2024.
Three-quarters of companies cited the cost of employing people as their primary financial pressure.
The Centre for Retail Research (CRR) has also warned that around 17,350 retail sites are expected to shut down this year.
It comes on the back of a tough 2024 when 13,000 shops closed their doors for good, already a 28% increase on the previous year.
Professor Joshua Bamfield, director of the CRR said: “The results for 2024 show that although the outcomes for store closures overall were not as poor as in either 2020 or 2022, they are still disconcerting, with worse set to come in 2025.”
Professor Bamfield has also warned of a bleak outlook for 2025, predicting that as many as 202,000 jobs could be lost in the sector.
“By increasing both the costs of running stores and the costs on each consumer’s household it is highly likely that we will see retail job losses eclipse the height of the pandemic in 2020.”
Manchester City are set to go after Bayer Leverkusen star Florian WirtzCity see Wirtz as the ideal long-term replacement for club legend Kevin De Bruyne
Bayer Leverkusen’s star man, 21, is believed to be keen on a switch to the Spanish giants when he does leave his homeland.
The youngster has formed a promising partnership with Jamal Musiala for the national team and the German league leaders would love to pair them together at club level too.
Meanwhile City are due to welcome new £12.5 million signing Claudio Echeverri to the Etihad this week after he completed his international duty with Argentina Under 20s.
The 19-year-old has been dubbed the ‘new Messi’ back in his homeland and arrives with a glowing reputation.
He will link up with the first team squad so Guardiola can decide whether he is ready to challenge for a place – or if he should go out on loan next season.
But they did win at the Bernabeu five years ago – and still have hope they save themselves.
Guardiola will make a check on stand-in skipper Erling Haaland who limped off late in the 4-0 win over Newcastle with a knee injury.
However, the Norway international was snapped during a warm down session at the City Football Academy on Sunday and is expected to be named in the travelling party.
This is the fifth time the two clubs have been drawn together in the competition in the last six seasons.
Jude Bellingham scored a last-gasp winner at the Etihad last week
4 weeks agoNew York StateComments Off on Major car brand discontinues supermini in UK after 10 YEARS – with replacement that ‘meets consumer demand’ lined up
A MAJOR car brand has discontinued its supermini in the UK after 10 years but has its replacement already lined up.
Mazda confirmed its Mazda 2 petrol supermini can no longer be ordered brand new, with just a “few hundred” examples left in showrooms across the UK.
Mazda has discontinued its petrol supermini Mazda 2 but said it will be naturally replaced by the Mazda 2 Hybrid (pictured)Matt Vosper
The motor landed on our roads in April 2015 and quickly earned praise for being fun to drive, and for its smart cabin and pace.
Despite two face-lifts in 2019 and 2013, which both added extra tech to the compact car, the car’s near ten-year run in UK sales has finally come to an end.
But, not all hope is lost as the Japanese carmaker confirmed the 2’s successor, the Mazda 2 Hybrid, would be naturally taking its place.
Mazda did not explain why the vehicle was cancelled, but a spokesperson told Autocar: “As we move towards increased electrification of our cars, the Mazda 2 Hybrid meets consumer demand in the B-segment and is a step in our journey to ensure all our cars have some form of electrification by 2030.”
The Mazda 2 Hybrid is almost identical to the ToyotaYaris, and is a nimble and agile compact motor.
It comes with a 1.5L, three-cylinder petrol engine as well as an electric motor and battery.
Its engine produces 116bhp and can go from 0-62mph in 9.7 seconds, with a top speed of 109mph.
The front-wheel drive motor emits just 92g/km of CO2 and received a five star Euro NCAP safety rating in 2020.
This scheme aims to pressure car makers to gradually increase their sales of electric vehicles (EVs) from 80 per cent in 2030 up to 100 per cent by 2035.
At present, mainstream manufacturers across the UK are each assigned a total carbon “credit” allowance annually.
These levels are based on a carmakers total sales in the previous year as well as the average CO2 emissions of the petrol, diesel and hybrid cars it sold in 2021.
However, if a company cuts its CO2 emissions to below this allowance level, it can convert its “credits” into sales that count towards its ZEV targets.
The ZEV scheme requires car makers to have 28 per cent of their sales come from electric vehicles by the end of this year and have phased out petrol cars by 2030 or face hefty fines.
Mazda will likely be feeling some pressure to achieve these targets, as it will only offer one EV in the UK – the MX-30 crossover – until the arrival of the 6e saloon next year.
The MX-30 comprised just 5 per cent of the carmaker’s UK sales in 2024, far short of the ZEV mandate target of 22 per cent last year, according to Autocar.
Top boss Alain Favey said he has been thinking about reviving the hot hatch.
He said bringing back the GTi version was “a question I’ve been asking myself very much”, Autocar reports.
When asked if there would ever be an electrified version of 208GTi, Favey said: “I am very eager to connect the Peugeot brand with what it stands for to its past, to its heritage in every sense.
“So we will look back at what the heritage of the brand is and we will see to what extent this can be adapted to the modern world – and there is nothing excluded in our review of this and certainly not the GTi badge, for sure.”
4 weeks agoNew York StateComments Off on Mark Selby feared career was over but is now eyeing fifth world title
Mark Selby won the Welsh Open for a second time on Sunday night (Picture: Getty Images)
Mark Selby genuinely felt his career could be at an end just months ago, but after landing his third title of the season things are looking very rosy again for the Jester from Leicester.
Selby’s triumph in Llandudno comes after a brilliant win at the British Open in September and a defence of his Championship League Invitational title just earlier this month.
It is quite the turnaround from April last year when Selby was beaten in the first round of the World Championship by debutant Joe O’Connor and said retirement was a possibility.
Speaking after his Welsh Open glory on Sunday, Selby said: ‘If you had asked me then, after that game, would I be carry on playing? I would have probably said no.
‘If you had put me on the spot, to let me make a decision there and then, I would have probably never played again.
Selby was beaten by Joe O’Connor in the opening round at the Crucible in April (Picture: Getty Images)
‘But you know, I had a bit of summer away, I spoke to friends and family. I said, I am not really enjoying it, I cannot keep putting myself through it if I am going to be feeling like that. Because it’s just making me even more ill.
‘They were saying, why don’t you have a bit of time out. You have the summer anyway. Don’t even go anywhere near the table. I spoke to the doctor a couple of times and he said to me, look, whenever you feel like that, just pick and choose. I know you want to play in everything but you need to start putting yourself first.
‘That is what I thought I would do. After the summer, I felt a little bit better, I was practising a little bit, speaking with the doctor, changed a few things, and seemed to be in a better place.
‘That is not to say that from now until the end of the season, I might play in everything. That could easily turn. If I am in that position again like I was a couple of weeks before the Worlds, whether it’s the World Championship or Players Championships, Hong Kong, I definitely won’t compete. It’s not healthy.’
Selby had serious doubts over his playing future after Crucible defeat (Picture: Getty Images)
The world number three may be ready to sit out any event if he feels he has to, he is also feeling very good about his game after two titles this month.
Attention is going to swiftly turn to the World Championship again, with the highlight of every season now just a couple of months away and the four-time champ set to head to Sheffield as one of the favourites.
‘I’ll go there confident, I can’t not,’ Selby said of his upcoming trip to the iconic South Yorkshire theatre.
‘This season so far, even when I’ve not done well in some of the tournaments and I’ve gone out early doors in the last 32 or last 16, I still feel like I’ve played okay.
Selby celebrated in Llandudno with his wife and daughter (Picture: Getty Images)
‘There haven’t been many matches where I can single out a really poor performance. Against [Jack] Lisowski in the UK I felt like I played good and he played great. Xiao Guodong in the Champions of Champions in the semis, I felt like I played good and he played great.
‘I knew it was there. It was just about getting that momentum and stringing some wins together. I hadn’t been doing that since September in the British Open. This week it all sort of came together.
‘I feel like my back up game is sort of somewhere near where I want it to be. I feel like in the last couple of seasons it’s not been as good as it was in past years.
‘That might have been because of how I was mentally and I possibly wasn’t up for the fight because of how I was feeling.
‘At the moment I feel in a bit of a better place and I’m enjoying the challenge out there hence why I’m probably playing a bit better.’
Selby is still a fierce competitor and undoubtedly one of the greatest players ever to pick up a snooker cue, but his priorities have changed since facing down his mental health struggles and trophies have slipped down the pecking order.
‘From where I was, I’m just happy to be in a half decent place mentally,’ he said. ‘Health is wealth. It doesn’t matter how much money you’ve got in the bank, you could have all the money in the world, but if you’re not enjoying life and not in a good place it means nothing.
‘I feel like I’m in a bit better place and that’s all that matters to me. I’m happy with that. If I win tournaments along the way then great, if I don’t as long as I can stay how I am at the moment and slowly improve I’ll always be happy with that.’