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50 things to
look forward to
this spring

Easter
holidays
on a budget

Escape the crowds with
these exciting getaways

weekend
P41

Number 3,843

P71

SATURDAY & SUNDAY
18 - 19 MARCH 2023

JOU R NA L I S M YOU C A N T RU S T + B R I TA I N ’ S FA S T E S T G ROW I N G R E A D E R S H I P

Putin arrest
warrant
issued over
war crime
allegations

Budget boost
for Sunak – but
Tories still
face defeat

P16

Queen’s
final
heroes
revealed

46%

P4

29%

Dan Walker

My kids know which
parent is more important!

» PM halves the gap with Starmer on their personal poll ratings
» Sunak on –11 (up from –20 last month) with Labour leader on zero
» Tories still 17 points behind Labour, which would mean landslide
» Every key measure in this week’s Budget is popular with voters,

i polling suggests, but the British public doesn’t like the overall
package and thinks that it will benefit the rich more than the poor
» The Government’s most popular new policies are fuel duty freeze,
energy bill help and ending prepay meter penalty for 4 million homes
» 53% believe Budget won’t help them while 15% say that it will

Susie Dent

Swearing is necessary
– and the British are
brilliant at it

PARTY RATINGS
SOURCE: BMG RESEARCH

P8

How to avoid a US-Russia war
by Patrick Cockburn

P30

Moral panic on laughing gas
is overblown by Ian Dunt
P20

Polar opposites 70% of penguin
marriages end in ‘divorce’
P37


weekend Why children’s teeth are as bad as they were in the 1940s King’s singer Williams joins chorus calling for U-turn on BBC Singers NEWS, P23 Perennial reminders GARDENING, P68 OPINION, P29 What I learned from having a baby in my fifties LIFE, P46 Reality TV’s return to the experimental CULTURE, P53 The bargain Easter breaks no one else is thinking of TRAVEL, P71 How to save for your child’s future MONEY, P80 Plaudits abound as ‘Special K’ returns to the Etihad SPORT, P98 index Opinion .................................... p25 7 Days ......................................... p39 Life ................................................. p41 Puzzles .................................... p47 Culture ..................................... p53 NEWS How long was the surf up for this record breaker? See p.35 The day at a glance FOCUS, P19 I was shocked to be mistaken for my sister’s mother! The News Matrix Matr x 2 TV & Radio guide .......... p54 Gardening ............................. p68 Money & Business ..... p79 Weather .................................. p89 Sport ........................................... p90 The recycled paper content of UK newspapers in 2018 was 68.2% POLICE EDUCATION LEGAL Officers ‘quitting to work as scaffolders’ College to examine slavery legacy Marriage may be off limits for prisoners A chief constable is pushing for a pay rise for officers to halt the “silent erosion of talent” in his force, as he described how some had already left for better paid work as scaffolders or to sell double-glazing. Essex Police chief Ben-Julian Harrington said people had left the force for financial reasons. Among them was an officer who resigned to earn £250 a day as a scaffolder. A Cambridge University college is to appoint an academic to a fouryear post to examine its legacies of slavery. Trinity College said its new Legacies of Slavery Research and Teaching Fellow will consider the ways in which the college might have gained from slavery. This could be through fees and bequests from students and alumni, or from investments by the college. Prisoners serving whole life sentences would be prevented from marrying under new Government plans. It comes amid anger over a bid by Levi Bellfield to challenge a decision blocking the serial killer from marrying in prison. Justice Secretary Dominic Raab has pledged to “change the law” to prevent those serving whole life sentences from getting married. LEISURE MARKETS Turkish baths’ ban on birthday suits Early FTSE 100 flurry fails to last Nude bathing has been banned at Harrogate’s historic Turkish baths after police received a report of inappropriate behaviour. Harrogate Borough Council, which runs the baths, had previously held single-sex swimming sessions where costumes were optional. North Yorkshire Police confirmed it was investigating an incident this month and enquiries are ongoing. A flurry of optimism in London markets yesterday morning after a $30bn (£25bn) cash injection into a struggling US bank, First Republic Bank, dissipated in the afternoon as global markets felt the fallout from failures in parts of the banking industry. The FTSE 100 had initially gained 100 points but when markets closed, it had shed nearly 75 points, or 1 per cent, to 7,335. PAGE 83 EDUCATION PORTUGAL University strikes to Easyjet cabin crew go ahead next week to hold April strike Strikes by university lecturers and other higher education workers will go ahead despite hopes of a breakthrough in a dispute over pay, contracts and pensions. Members of the University and College Union’s higher education committee yesterday voted to continue action and also not to put employer proposals to a vote. This means that strikes on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday will go ahead. EasyJet cabin staff in Portugal will go on a three-day strike in April to demand higher wages to compensate for the soaring cost of living, the SNPVAC union of civil aviation flight personnel said yesterday. Workers are planning to walk out between 1-3 April. “Due to the economic climate, easyJet workers have lost purchasing power over the last three years,” SNPVAC said in a statement. GERMANY SCIENCE Parliament reforms face court challenge Peanuts for babies could cut allergies Politicians in Germany have approved electoral reforms to reduce the size of the country’s bloated parliament – but two opposition parties are not in favour and the plan is expected to face a court challenge. The lower house, or Bundestag, has a record 736 members. The changes approved on a 400-261 vote with 23 abstentions would reduce that number to 630. Peanut allergy incidences could fall by 77 per cent if products containing the nut were part of babies’ diets at four to six months of age. Researchers in the UK said they had identified a “clear window of opportunity” where introducing an allergen into a baby’s diet at this age significantly reduced the risk. The study was published in The Journal Of Allergy And Clinical Immunology. iQuiz BY JOHN CLARKE 1. Handforth, where Jackie Weaver famously presided over a tumultuous Zoom parish council meeting in 2020, is in which English county? 2. Who was the last Catholic monarch of England? 3. How is the Welsh food speciality ‘picau ar y maen’ better known? 4. Which ITV police drama is sometimes dubbed “Broadchurch North”? 5. What is the name of the sandbank off the Kent coast at Deal which has been the cause of more than 2,000 shipwrecks? 6. What is the capital and largest city of the Central American state El Salvador? 7. The new Oleato coffee range launched by Starbucks includes what controversial ingredient? 8. The first human-to-human heart transplant took place in 1967 in which country? 9. Which musical term, often abbreviated to DC, means “from the beginning”? 10. What international delivery company was founded in San Francisco by Adrian Dalsey, Larry Hillblom and Robert Lynn? Answers on page 28 © Published by Harmsworth Media, 9 Derry Street, London, W8 5HY. Registered in England and Wales No. 00084121. Printed by Harmsworth Printing (Thurrock) Essex; Associated Print (Dinnington); Newsprinters (Broxbourne) Ltd; Newsprinters (Knowsley) Ltd; KP Services (Jersey) Ltd; Reach Printing Services Ltd, Cardonald Park, Glasgow; Associated Print (Carn), Ireland. Back issues available from Historic Newspapers, 0844 770 7684. Saturday 18 March 2023. Registered as a newspaper with the Post Office.
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 MUSIC UK Eurovision song enters charts at No 30 ThePage3Profile ALISON HAMMOND, LAUGHING ALL THE WAY TO THE ‘BAKE OFF’ TENT Mae Muller has kicked off her Eurovision campaign on a high note as her entry for the song contest entered the singles chart after it was announced she would represent the UK. “I Wrote A Song” has landed at No 30, making it the first UK Eurovision entry to debut in the top 40 in its first week since Blue’s “I Can” in 2011, the Official Charts Company said. MONARCHY Wales’s children may join King’s procession All three of the Prince and Princess of Wales’s children are expected to take part in the King’s coronation procession, it has been reported. Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis will join their grandfather and Camilla, the Queen Consort, as they leave Westminster Abbey after the ceremony and go back to Buckingham Palace on 6 May, The Times reported. QUOTE OF THE DAY A dream crumb true? Alison Hammond and her trademark laugh promise to be a recipe for success as she sashays into The Great British Bake Off tent to join Noel Fielding as its new co-host, replacing Matt Lucas. Announcing the news, the This Morning presenter posted a video on Instagram featuring mini models of herself, Fielding and judges Paul Hollywood and Dame Prue Leith, made entirely out of icing. She said that she was “absolutely thrilled” to be part of the team, adding: “It’s official!! It’s happening. The Great British Bake Off! Let’s have it – the cake that is. So excited.” Fielding responded with a sweet welcome on Instagram. He wrote: “I’m absolutely pumped we are working together. We are gonna spend the whole time giggling like naughty school kids. The bakers are gonna love you to bits.” Dame Prue added: “Huge congratulations Alison, you will be magnificent and I can’t wait for your infectious laugh to be ringing through the tent.” Hollywood reacted with an applause emoji and “see you on the tent”. Will the proof be in the pudding? This is not the first time Hammond has rolled up her sleeves in the tent – she previously took part in the celebrity version for Stand Up To Cancer in 2020, where Hollywood took the biscuit and compared her cake-decorating skills to those of a five-year-old. The show’s executive producer, Kieran Smith, announcing her appointment, described Hammond as “a natural on Bake Off, maybe not as a baker”, while Channel 4’s chief content officer, Ian Katz, said: “Alison is much loved, effortlessly funny and the owner of the best laugh in Britain. She was a huge hit when she appeared on Celebrity Bake Off and we’re thrilled to have her back in the tent.” A legend in the baking… Hammond has made a number of memorable appearances on reality TV: she made her name as contestant on Big Brother in 2002, was hired as a roving reporter for ITV, where she pushed a topless man into a river, appeared on I’m a Celebrity... and Strictly Come Dancing, and joined Hollywood A-listers in co-hosting the Bafta awards with Richard E Grant in February. The new series of The Great British Bake Off has yet to be announced, but the first episode of The Great Celebrity Bake Off, featuring Judi Love, Tom Daley and Rose Matafeo, will be broadcast at 7.45pm tomorrow on Channel 4. Ruth Comerford “If a thing isn’t worth saying, you sing it” Pierre Beaumarchais ANNIVERSARIES Thursday 18 March 1965 The groundbreaking Motortown Revue arrives at the Finsbury Park Astoria, north London, on the first night of a package tour that took Motown Records artists around the UK to visit 21 theatres for two shows a night, plus a live TV special. Topping the bill were Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, The Supremes, Martha & The Vandellas and the 14-year-old “Little” Stevie Wonder, all backed by the legendary Funk Brothers. BIRTHDAYS Bill Frisell, jazz guitarist, 72 Queen Latifah, rapper-actress, 53 Lily Collins, actress, 34 Peter Jones, entrepreneur, 57 Alex Jones, presenter, 46 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 3 Letter from the Editor Oliver Duff i@inews.co.uk Public’s verdict on a big week in politics Today’s opinion polling for i contains plenty of encouraging news for Rishi Sunak (cover story, page 8). More on that in a second. However, two of the most significant findings are stacked against him. A majority of voters feel that this week’s Budget will not help them – with just 15 per cent believing they will personally benefit. That is not what any government wants to hear, during an acute cost of living crunch. Crucially, Labour’s lead over the Tories remains 17 points (46 per cent vs 29 per cent), the sort of gap that would deliver a landslide in the next general election. Now for Sunak’s good news. It is rare that every key measure in a Budget is popular with voters. Yet our poll shows mass support for the childcare plan, the fuel duty freeze, energy help and tackling prepayment meters. There’s strong backing also for tougher benefits sanctions, extra defence spending and the corporation tax hike. So what’s the problem? For most voters, the Budget doesn’t do enough to protect them against economic headwinds. This is not a problem unique to Chancellor Jeremy Hunt. His Labour shadow, Rachel Reeves, would also have limited room for manoeuvre, as the Treasury tries to tame inflation, worker shortages, poor productivity, public sector debt and feeble economic growth. Where does this week in politics leave us, then? After the chaos of Truss and Johnson, Sunak and Hunt are succeeding in their early mission to project competence and calm. But when it comes to their Everest – persuading Britain that the Conservatives should govern the country for another five years – they are still in the foothills. @olyduff
4 NEWS PEOPLE HONOURS The late Queen’s final set of heroes are revealed in Civil Gallantry List Woman went into burning home to save frail neighbour By Cahal Milmo Ed Durante did not think twice about taking action when a car crashed and burst into flames in front of him as he was driving to work. With the fire rapidly engulfing the vehicle which had hit a bridge after aquaplaning during a downpour on the A38 near Exeter in June 2021, the off-duty firefighter and paramedic knew he had only moments to act to help the five occupants. Together with Craig Jones, an another off-duty fire officer who also happened to be passing, Mr Durante, 29, began dragging the driver and passengers – all members of the same family – to safety as flames started to spread. For the firefighter, it was a horrifying turn to what should have been a joyful day. He had been driving to his hometown of Ivybridge, near Plymouth, after going shopping – unsuccessfully – for an engagement ring for his then girlfriend. Instead of finalising his plans for a proposal, he found himself having to harness all his training as a paramedic and a retained firefighter with the Devon and Somerset Fire Service. The firefighter and Mr Jones are among 15 people honoured today in the Civilian Gallantry List – the last set of bravery awards to be decided in the name of the late Queen. Mr Durante (inset) told i: “As I approached the car I could see it was full, with a young girl in the middle of the back seat who was conscious. The four adults had been knocked unconscious. “I knew I didn’t have much time to spare – car fires escalate really quickly. Those in the front seats were in the most immediate danger.” After removing the driver, Mr Durante returned to the blazing car to retrieve the front passenger. In the meantime, Mr Jones, a fire officer with the Cornwall Fire Service, had brought the young girl to safety. Mr Durante returned to the vehicle four times. Within 30 seconds, it was engulfed in flames. By Cahal Milmo He was stabbed and bludgeoned with two wine bottles and a fire extinguisher by Radcliffe during the attack in Pen Y Graig, Rhondda, South Wales. In a statement, his family said: “John was the very definition of a good man, extremely respected and liked in the community. He was proud of his family, proud to be a Welshman and devoted to All Saints Church. We will all miss him terribly.” Lisa Way and Ayette Bounouri, who were in the shop at the time, have also been recognised for their roles in helping to confront Radcliffe. The 15 people honoured today in the Civilian Gallantry List have been receiving the last honours of Elizabeth II’s reign. The nominees were rewarded for feats of courage that both garnered national headlines, among them the response to the 2019 terrorist attack at Fishmonger’ Hall in central London in which four men – Steven Gallant, John Crilly (inset), Darryn Frost and Lukasz Koczocik – fended off and pursued Islamist extremist Usman Khan after he had fatally stabbed two people, and others which passed while attracting little or no public attention. An award also went to Bardha Kola who was returning from a day trip to Bath with her husband when they noticed fire leaping from the roof of the home of their 94-yearold neighbour Cynthia Shanks. Mrs Kola, 44, from Newtown, Wiltshire, who had been friends with Mrs Shanks for a long time, dashed home to retrieve a key to her neighbour’s house and then let herself into the smoke-filled property in January 2020. After finding Mrs Shanks in her upstairs bedroom, asleep and oblivious to the fire, Mrs Kola acted with remarkable calmness amid the spreading flames. She placed her friend on an electric stairlift and brought her to the ground floor as parts of the ceiling and roof structure collapsed around them. A citation for Mrs Kola, who has received the Queen’s Commendation for Bravery, said: “She then carried her neighbour through the narrow hallway to her wheelchair and exited the property. “The nature of the fire was so serious that it took a further three hours to bring it under control and fully extinguish it.” Joan Edwards, director of policy, told i: “The fact we’ve seen more mammals test positive in the last few days is very worrying. But when we’ve got the number of dead birds around the coast that we’ve had in the past 12 months, it’s not surprising.” The Wildlife Trusts covers the whole of the UK and Ms Edwards (inset) said members are being urged to ring in about sightings of dead animals. Rescue teams, many of them run by volun- teers, are now having to attend reports of dead animals in full PPE kit. “If anybody comes across a carcass, be it a dolphin or bird, the first thing to do is report it to Defra,” she added. “The second thing is to keep your distance and keep your dogs on a short lead because they could get contaminated.” The UK Health Security Agency says the threat to humans and other mammals from bird flu remains low but the situation is being closely monitored. Craig Jones, front right, with Saltash Community Fire Station colleagues Mr Durante said: “From start to finish it was over in probably no more than a minute. My training helped me make some clear decisions. So many things came together with the help of colleagues who arrived at the scene.” Mr Durante proposed to his now fiancée, Monica, two weeks later. Each of the awards is decided by a dedicated Whitehall panel after receiving nominations from members of the public for acts of courage in the face of extreme danger. Oliver Dowden, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said: “We all hope we’d react with courage in the face of danger. “These people have lived through that test, and responded in the most admirable way. Their selfless actions have saved lives.” TRIBUTE ‘Respected’ grandfather awarded for bravery By Cahal Milmo Among the recipients of the Queen’s Gallantry Medal is a posthumous award for a Welsh pensioner who was killed while trying to protect shoppers during a frenzied knife attack in a Co-op supermarket. John Rees, 88, from Trealaw, left his wife Eunice in the car while he queued to go into the village store for their weekly groceries on 5 May 2020. The grandfather stepped in to try to stop mentally ill Zara Radcliffe from attacking shoppers. WILDLIFE Dead seals found with bird flu spark warning for dog owners By Steve Robson Fears for the UK’s coastal wildlife are increasing after five more seals found dead on a Cornwall beach tested positive for bird flu. It has not been determined whether bird flu was the sole cause of death and it is possible other factors may have contributed. It is understood the Government has reported the findings to the World Organisation for Animal Health. There have been at least six confirmed cases of bird flu in non-avian wildlife in the UK in the first three months of 2023, says the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra). Victims include foxes, otters, porpoises and dolphins. Ex- perts believe they have come into contact with infected birds through scavenging. But there is increasing concern about whether the virus will spread within mammals. The Wildlife Trusts organisation has also warned people walking dogs to be vigilant and to make sure their pets do not come into contact with dead animals or birds.
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 5 WEATHER Wet and windy conditions for rest of March By Jake McKee The UK is set to be lashed by wet and windy conditions for the rest of the month after an Arctic blast of freezing and snowy weather just days before the start of spring. Although temperatures will become milder, it is also forecast to get wetter and windier – conditions the Met Office says will continue until the end of March. The weekend will start frostfree for most of the UK, Met Office meteorologist Aidan McGivern said, adding that it will be “classic spring weather”. Today, some areas will have “relatively mild” conditions, with some rainfall expected to hit western and the far north of Scotland until lunchtime. While most of England and Wales can expect sunny spells, Mr McGivern said scattered showers could be “fairly lively”, particularly in the Midlands and northern England. Winds are expected to pick up. Daytime temperatures are expected to be between 11°C and 15°C. Cyclists in Westminster, London, brave the rain yesterday VICTORIA JONES/PA Weather, page 89 MEDIA Murdoch fears fallout for his UK empire By David Parsley CHIEF NEWS CORRESPONDENT Rupert Murdoch is “determined to fight” defamation suits brought against Fox News in order to avoid an investigation into his status as a fit and proper media owner in the UK, i has learned. Fox is facing two lawsuits from voting machine operators Dominion and Smartmatic, with both companies claiming the channel broadcast false allegations that their machines were rigged to help hand Joe Biden the 2020 presidential election. It is also understood that Mr Murdoch, the Fox chairman, and his son Lachlan, who runs Fox’s day-to-day operations as chief executive, will defend the actions vigorously to keep their hopes of reuniting News Corp and Fox alive. The two companies were split in 2013, but despite scrapping the merger in January father and son are believed to still harbour hopes of uniting the companies. Legal papers from Dominion claim Rupert Murdoch knew the allegations Fox were broadcasting were false, but decided not to stop them. In his deposition to Dominion’s legal team, Mr Murdoch rejected the allegation that the network as an entity endorsed former President Donald Trump’s election lies. But he did concede that show hosts Sean Hannity, Jeanine Pirro, Maria Bartiromo, and former host Lou Dobbs promoted the falsehood about the presidential contest being stolen. “Some of our commentators were endorsing it,” Mr Murdoch said, according to the legal documents, when asked about the hosts’ on-air positions about the election. Fox chairman Rupert Murdoch admits hosts backed Trump’s lie “I would have liked us to be stronger in denouncing it, in hindsight,” he added. The papers also revealed that Mr Murdoch referred to some of Trump’s 2020 election lies as “bullshit and damaging”. News Corp owns the TalkTV news channel in the UK and a source suggested it could be put under pressure from the regulator, Ofcom, “if those in politics who have never liked Rupert choose to kick up a fuss around these libel actions”. The Dominion lawsuit has a potential price tag of $1.6bn (£1.3bn) and the Smartmatic suit could cost Fox $2.7bn. While both lawsuits could be settled out of court, Alice Enders, director of research at media analysis group Enders, suggests this would not be an ideal solution for the Murdochs as “they would not disprove the allegation that they knew the claims being made by Fox were false”. Fox denies all the claims made in both lawsuits. PEOPLE Safeguarding media business for future merger is key motive By David Parsley A News Corp executive said Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch are “determined” to fight the actions because settling or losing could cause issues for them in other parts of their media empire. “For one, they are still hopeful that the News Corp and Fox merger can be reignited at some point in the future, but paying out billions as a result of the libel actions is not going to make that merger seem very attractive to News Corp shareholders,” the executive said. “Second, there is a fear that Rupert or Lachlan, or both, cannot risk the allegation that they may have known the claims against the voting machine companies were false hanging around. “That could cause issues in other part of the business. For example, I wouldn’t be surprised if questions are asked in the UK about Rupert’s qualification as a fit and proper media owner.” Alice Enders, director of research at media analysis group Enders, said: “In the UK, you have the fit and proper test for television companies, and News Corp owns TalkTV. “Whether or not these suits succeed, I think there are implications for the Murdochs here.” Plaintiffs High legal bar The original split between Fox and News Corp in 2013 was made to shield Fox from the litigation that arose in the UK in relation to the phone-hacking scandal, an expert said. “Then last year’s mooted plan to re-unite the companies has the problem posed by Fox’s exposure to the voting machines litigation for News Corp shareholders,” said Alice Enders, director of research at media analysis group Enders. “Losing either of these lawsuits would likely end any hope of the merger being resurrected.” However, Ms Enders (inset) also said both Dominion and Smartmatic will have to overcome a high burden of proof in US law. “The US is the land of freedom of expression and as far as media is concerned, it has a very high bar for a libel suit with a claim for damages. “The plaintiff must demonstrate actual malice, with knowledge that the statement was false or with reckless disregard of whether it was false or not. “The fact that both suits against Fox News and its presenters have advanced is an indication that the plaintiffs have made a strong case.”
6 NEWS HEALTH Pay deal for nurses came with guarantee over NHS funding Exclusive By Jane Merrick and Hugo Gye Government negotiators have promised union representatives that funding for the pay rise and bonus for more than a million health workers would come from “additional investment” beyond existing NHS budgets. The written guarantee from the Government, as part of its pay offer on Thursday, made clear the deal would be “above the [health] department’s budget” for both the 2022-23 one-off lump sum and the pay rise for 2023-24. The disclosure came amid concerns that the Government has not yet fully explained publicly how it will fund the £4bn cost of the pay deal for nurses, ambulance workers and other NHS staff. Downing Street said the one-off payments for a million NHS workers for 2022-23 would be an “additional investment of around £2.7bn” while the pay rise for 2023-24 “is an additional investment of around £1.3bn”. In the final stages of the talks, health unions demanded assurances in writing that the pay offer would not come from existing NHS budgets, which are already tight. The Government’s letter says: “Funding arrangements have not been finalised, but there is additional investment in pay for both years above the department’s budget.” The national secretary of the GMB union, Rachel Harrison (inset), said: “Unions were given a written guarantee money for both years of the NHS pay offer would come from outside existing NHS budgets. “We proceeded in good faith on that basis. It’s up to the Treasury and Department of Health to explain themselves if that’s no longer the case, but GMB is clear the health service is already cut to the bone.” Teachers, civil servants and other public sector workers outside the NHS who are striking over pay may get a lesser deal than nurses and ambulance staff, Downing Street has suggested. The pay offer agreed between health unions and ministers this week involves a one-off payment for the current financial year which is split into two – a nonconsolidated lump sum of 2 per cent of this year’s salary and a more generous “NHS backlog bonus” of at least £1,250 per worker, or more than 4 per cent of pay. This is in addition to a 5 per cent pay rise for the next financial year. Union insiders are concerned that the “salami slicing” of the 202223 offer for NHS staff, with a ringfenced Covid backlog bonus, could allow the Government to negotiate a much-reduced package for teachers and civil servants during talks to avert strike action, as it could be argued that these workers do not face the same Covid pandemic pressures as nurses and ambulance staff. Asked why the one-off payment for 2022-23 was split into two for NHS staff, a Downing Street spokesman said: “One of them is a 2 per cent non-consolidated award based on an individual’s salary, whilst one is an NHS backlog bonus which is there to recognise the pressure that the NHS faced throughout the pandemic.” Asked whether that meant other unions involved in strike action would not be offered that package, the spokesman said: “I’m not going to get into details of negotiations”. The NHS pay deal Figures behind the headlines Ministers may be being deliberately Hunt warned there were still vague about how the £4bn NHS pay challenges for the public finances. deal is being funded because there The pay offer agreed between are likely to be weeks of negotiations health unions and ministers with other public sector unions. involves a one-off payment for The Health Secretary, Steve the current financial year Barclay, is due to hold talks that is split into two – a with Chancellor Jeremy non-consolidated lump Hunt over how exactly sum of 2 per cent of the offer for nurses, this year’s salary and a ambulance workers more generous “NHS The additional and other NHS staff backlog bonus” of at investment in will be funded. least £1,250 per worker, NHS pay increases Before the deal was or more than 4 per cent announced by the announced on Thursday, of pay. This is in addition Government Mr Hunt sounded to a 5 per cent pay rise for optimistic that there could be the next financial year. new funding for any such agreement, Downing Street said the one-off and Rishi Sunak said frontline NHS payments for a million NHS budgets would not be affected. workers for 2022-23 would be an But the Government still has to “additional investment of around hold talks with striking teachers, £2.7bn” while the pay rise for 2023-24 junior doctors and civil servants, “is an additional investment of who have their own pay demands. around £1.3bn”. During this week’s Budget, Mr Jane Merrick £1.3bn NHS ‘Long story short: no hope. I’m leaving the UK’ By Connie Dimsdale An experienced junior doctor who is leaving to practise medicine abroad said he has “no faith” that the NHS is going to be fixable for its employees during his working life. The 37-year-old cardiologist, who asked to remain anonymous, plans to leave despite being one year from consultancy level, having qualified more than a decade ago. He said it is a “stain on this country’s conscience” that doctors, nurses and paramedics have been driven to strike over poor pay and working conditions. “I think a serious Department of Health needs to take a look at how to stop this happening again,” he told i. He thinks nurses and paramedics “deserve more” than the Government’s new offer and called for salaries to be increased annually in line with inflation. “That’s the least we could offer healthcare workers,” he said. The Government has resisted above-inflation pay rises because one of its top priorities is to bring inflation down to ease the cost of living crisis. The cardiologist said a five per cent rise would not be fair on doctors either as it would put the UK “behind most comparable economies” But he added that he cannot see a resolution that would convince him to stay. “Long story short – I’m still pissed off. No hope. I’m leaving the UK. And I will recommend to colleagues to do so if they can too,” he said. The Waleses pay tribute to Irish Guards The Prince and Princess of Wales yesterday celebrated St Patrick’s Day alongside the Irish Guards at a parade at Mons Barracks in Aldershot, Hampshire. William said he was “incredibly EMPLOYMENT Junior doctors halt strike action for negotiations By Paul Gallagher and Jane Merrick The union representing striking junior doctors has accepted an offer of pay talks, the Department of Health and Social Care said last night. The British Medical Association (BMA) had requested formal pay talks on the same terms as unions representing nurses, ambulance workers and other NHS staff, a Government source said. The BMA is hoping to meet the Health Secretary early next week to discuss a pay rise. Dr Vivek Trivedi, co-chairman of the BMA’s junior doctors’ committee, said he hoped talks with Steve Barclay could begin soon. It comes after a breakthrough was reached between the Government and 14 health unions on a better pay deal for around a million NHS staff. Junior doctors staged a three-day walkout this week but the union will not announce further strikes while the talks are ongoing. Thursday’s offer for other NHS staff includes a one-off lump sum for 2022-23 which rises in value up the NHS pay bands, as well as a permanent 5 per cent rise on all pay points for 2023-24. Junior doctors went on a 72-hour strike without emergency cover this week. More than 175,000 patient appointments and procedures had to be cancelled in England.
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 ANDREW MATTHEWS/PA LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 7 EDUCATION Teachers’ unions and Government agree to hold ‘intensive talks’ By Richard Vaughan and Arj Singh sad” to be marking the end of his time as colonel of the regiment, while Kate, who has taken over the role, took the opportunity to hail the regiment’s “boundless, irreverent, glorious sense of humour”. Kate, in a turquoise coat matching the colour of the 1st Battalion’s blue plume, presented sprigs of shamrock to the officers and guardsmen as well as to the Irish wolfhound regimental mascot. TRAINS Consultants provided emergency care but many planned non-urgent ­treatments were rescheduled. NHS England medical director, Professor Sir Stephen Powis, said: “This strike was on an unprecedented scale and had a greater impact than all the other industrial action so far. Over 175,000 appointments and procedures were rescheduled to protect emergency, critical and urgent care for patients, which will inevitably impact on efforts to tackle the Covid backlog.” The BMA is demanding “pay restoration” for junior doctors, who make up about 45 per cent of the medical workforce. It says pay has fallen in real terms by 26.1 per cent since 2008 and reversing this would require a 35.3 per cent pay rise. A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “We deeply regret that over 175,000 appointments and procedures were cancelled this week despite our offer to start formal talks on the condition strikes were paused. However we are pleased the BMA has now accepted our offer to enter talks.” Passengers to face disruption in rail walkout By Alan Jones Train passengers will face fresh disruption today because of another strike by rail workers in the long-running dispute over jobs, pay and conditions. Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) at 14 train operators will walk out, crippling services across the country. Passengers were warned to check before they travel, with trains due to start later and finish much earlier than usual – typically between 7.30am and 6.30pm. It is expected that nationally between 40 per cent and 50 per cent of train services will run but there will be wide variations across the network, with no services in some areas. Services may also be disrupted tomorrow morning. Headteachers’ and teachers’ leaders will continue to hold “intensive” negotiations with the Government on teachers’ pay, conditions and workload over the weekend in a bid to end the strikes affecting schools. The Education Secretary, Gillian Keegan, and all unions – the Association of School and College Leaders, National Association of Head Teachers, NASUWT and National Education Union (NEU) – met yesterday to begin talks in the wake of a deal being struck by the health unions earlier this week. The NEU has agreed a “period of calm” of two weeks, during which no further strike dates will be announced “in order for the talks to begin and, we hope, reach a successful conclusion”, the unions said in a statement. It comes after health unions and the Government struck a breakthrough pay agreement under which NHS nurses and paramedics will suspend strike action after months of walkouts. Ministers hope the breakthrough will open the door for deals in other sectors where the Government is the employer. More than half of schools either closed or dramatically restricted at- Education Secretary Gillian Keegan held talks with members of various education unions MARY BOUSTED/PA tendance in England this week when NEU members took industrial action on Wednesday and Thursday. According to data released by the Department for Education, 47 per cent of all schools in England were open but restricting attendance, and 6 per cent were fully closed on both strike days this week. The Government will be eager to secure a breakthrough in the talks with the education unions in the twoweek hiatus, particularly as many unions will soon be heading off to hold their annual conferences. The NEU is demanding that teachers be given an above-inflation pay rise, funded by money that does not come from within existing school budgets. Most state school teachers in England received a 5 per cent pay rise last year, while the Government offered a 3 per cent uplift for 2023-24, which was rejected by the NEU. Inflation currently stands at around 10 per cent in the UK, but the Treasury and the Bank of England expect it to be dramatically reduced by the end of the year. The NEU, which was the only education union to secure enough support from its members to strike, is consulting its members in Wales on an improved pay offer. The Welsh Government made an increased offer of 8 per cent for 202223, made up of a 6.5 per cent rise in salaries, plus a one-off payment of 1.5 per cent, followed by a 5 per cent increase for next year. In Scotland, where the dispute has been settled, teachers agreed to a 7 per cent increase for 2022-23, backdated to April. This came with a 5 per cent rise in April 2023 and a 2 per cent increase in January 2024. TRAVEL UNIONS Summer sunseekers urged to apply for passports early Heathrow staff to strike over pay this Easter By Lucie Heath Britons who need to renew their passports before going on holiday this summer are being urged to get their applications in as soon as possible after Passport Office workers announced a five-week long strike. More than 1,000 members of the Public and Commercial Services union will strike from 3 April to 5 May. Jo Rhodes, deputy editor of Which? Travel, said the action will be of concern to “hundreds of thousands of travellers who need to renew”. The Passport Office warned it can take up to 10 weeks for new passports to be processed, but Ms Rhodes said that this could now rise. Downing Street said ministers would work to “mitigate” the impact of strikes but that there are no plans to change guidance on the 10-week waiting times for passports. Alex Scripps (inset), from London, said he rushed to submit his pass- port application form yesterday. He is booked to fly to Portugal in July. “I was a bit stressed this morning because it has been on my list of things to do for a while,” he said. Last year, hundreds of thousands of people were hit by delays in processing in the aftermath of the Covid pandemic, with the Passport Office unable to keep up with demand once travel restrictions were eased. A report in December by the National Audit Office found 360,000 people waited more than 10 weeks to receive their passport in the first nine months of 2022. Passport Office staff in Durham, Glasgow, Liverpool, London, Newport, Peterborough and Southport will walk out from 3 April to 5 May, while those in Belfast will strike from 7 April to 5 May. The workers want a 10 per cent pay rise as well as changes to pension and redundancy terms. Travel, page 73 By Alan Jones Security guards at Heathrow Airport are to strike over Easter in a dispute over pay. Unite said more than 1,400 of its members employed by Heathrow Airports Ltd would take 10 days of strike action from 31 March after voting in favour of walkouts. The strike action involves security guards employed at Terminal 5. The Unite general secretary, Sharon Graham, said: “Workers at Heathrow Airport are on poverty wages while the chief executive and senior managers enjoy huge salaries. “It is the airport’s workers who are fundamental to its success and they deserve a fair pay increase. “Our members are simply unable to make ends meet due to the low wages paid by Heathrow. They are being forced to take strike action due to need not greed.” A Heathrow spokesman said: “Passengers can be reassured that we have contingency plans which will keep the airport open.”
8 NEWS POLITICS PM’s ratings up but public believe Budget will only benefit rich Exclusive By Hugo Gye POLITICAL EDITOR The Budget won’t help with the cost of living and will benefit the rich more than the poor, the public believes, despite voters backing each individual measure. An exclusive poll for i by BMG Research found that Rishi Sunak is closing the popularity gap with Sir Keir Starmer, although the Conservatives still trail a long way behind Labour. The pollster said the Budget was a “qualified success”, but warned it “does very little to shift the dial”. Each of the measures contained in the Budget is supported by more people than oppose it, the BMG survey found, with the fuel duty freeze, extension of energy bills support and end of the penalty applied to people who use prepayment meters the most popular policies. It found 74 per cent supported continued energy bill help, with 5 per cent opposed; 71 per cent supported ending the prepayment penalty, with 6 per cent opposed. Another 67 per cent supported the fuel duty freeze, with 6 per cent against; 63 per cent supported childcare help, with 10 per cent against. Tougher benefits sanctions are supported by 53 per cent, with 19 per cent against, while 49 per cent supported the corporation tax hike, with 13 per cent opposed. The cut in beer duty is backed by 45 per cent, with 13 per cent against; while 45 per cent supported the defence increase, with 18 per cent Budget poll Poll of 1,546 eligible GB adults, 15 to 16 March 2023 Q How do people feel about the budget? Positive 25 Neither Negative 31 42 Q Who benefits most from the budget? Mainly people on higher incomes and/or with greater wealth 40% Both those with higher incomes/wealth and lower incomes/wealth 26% Mainly people on lower incomes and/ or with less wealth 12% Don't know 21% Q How satisfied are you with Rishi Sunak’s performance as PM and Keir Starmer’s performance as Labour leader? Dissatisfied Satisfied Rishi Sunak Feb 2023 25% 45% Mar 2023 29% 40% Keir Starmer Feb 2023 31% 28% Mar 2023 30% 30% SOURCE: BMG RESEARCH against. The most politically controversial policy, lifting the cap on taxfree pension savings for millionaires, is backed by 38 per cent of the public, with 20 per cent against. But asked their response to the Budget overall, 31 per cent were negative, 25 per cent were positive and 42 per cent had no view. Forty per cent said they thought it would mostly benefit people on higher incomes and with greater wealth, compared to 12 per cent who predicted it would help the poorest most. Voters tended to agree that the Budget would help grow the economy and encourage businesses to invest . Only 23 per cent thought it would help with the cost of living. And 53 per cent said they did not believe the Budget would help them, while only 15 per cent believed it would. BMG’s Adam King said: “The overall pitch that Jeremy Hunt and Rishi Sunak are attempting to make to the public is around competence and stability. There is a case to mark the Budget as a qualified success.” But he added: “The Budget does very little to shift the dial politically. It is still early days, but there are no obvious signs of any post-Budget bounce for the Conservatives.” Overall voting patterns appear unchanged since February, with the Tories on 29 per cent – the same as last month – and Labour on 46 per cent, putting it on course for a landslide general election victory. Mr Sunak’s ratings are improving: 29 per cent of voters approve of his performance with 40 per cent disapproving, for a net rating of -11. Sir Keir has slipped back to 30 per cent in favour and 30 per cent against, down from +3 previously. BMG Research interviewed a representative sample of 1,546 British adults between 15 and 16 March. Data are weighted. BMG is a member of the British Polling Council. Going good for day at the races The Cheltenham Festival reached its climax yesterday as crowds flocked to the track for the feature Gold Cup on the fourth and final day of racing at Cheltenham Racecourse in Gloucestershire. PAUL CHILDS/REUTERS ANALYSIS Comment Public support for every individual Budget measure Change is the norm, so focus on pension rules as they stand today By Hugo Gye There is undoubtedly good news for the Government in BMG’s latest poll for i, carried out in the two days after Jeremy Hunt’s Budget. Every single measure announced by the Chancellor is on balance popular with the public, including the corporation tax hike (hated by many Tory backbenchers) and pensions tax break for millionaires (fiercely opposed by Labour). And Rishi Sunak’s personal ratings are on the up after a couple of months where he has scored notable successes, including a Brexit deal with the EU and some high-profile diplomacy. But the Conservatives still have a very long way to go to restore their standing with the public after it tanked last year. The fact that the Budget is seen negatively overall, with its benefits thought to accrue primarily to the wealthy, shows the party simply is not trusted to act in the interests of ordinary people any more. Trust is a hard-won commodity in politics, and once lost it can take a long time to get it back. Racking up policy successes is the only way that Mr Sunak (inset) and Mr Hunt can have any hope of catching up with Labour – but there is a long road ahead, and only a short time to get it right. Jessie Hewitson I fully sympathise with those of you who find articles on pension saving less than straightforward and categorically not scintillating, but I would like to say: don’t blame me and my colleagues. We would love to explain, for example, that this is your annual allowance. A plain figure. Zero confusion. But instead all we can say is: this is likely to be your annual allowance, but it will depend on how much you earn and whether you’ve already started taking money out of your pot, and so on. Politicians tinker so relentlessly with pension rules that nothing stays fixed for long. After Jeremy Hunt announced his decision to scrap the lifetime allowance – currently if you have over £1.08m saved you will have to pay between 25 and 55 per cent tax on anything you take out above this limit – one of my first thoughts was: what happens when it’s reversed? Since 2010, the lifetime allowance for pensions and the annual allowance (the former is how much you can save tax-free into your pension in total, the latter every year) have seen a major change roughly every other year – sometimes both at the same time. And let’s not forget the pension freedoms George Osborne ushered in in 2014. Previously, you had to take out an annuity – these provide an income for life and, while predictable, have sometimes come with very low rates of return, making them unattractive. But after Osborne you could take out some money and keep the rest invested. Everything we understood about turning our retirement pots into income was ripped up, and a whole new array of options was introduced for us all to get our heads around. There is a real danger in changing the pension system so routinely, even when you do it for the right reasons. You
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 HEALTH POLITICS Speaker will not act over anti-vax MP’s false claims Benefits reforms could mean ‘fair number’ will lose payments By Arj Singh DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR A disgraced MP who was stripped of the Conservative whip for comparing the use of Covid vaccines to the Holocaust is free to raise “dangerous” anti-vax conspiracy theories in Parliament, according to the Commons Speaker. Andrew Bridgen, who lost the party whip in January, “has a right to express his views whether others agree with them or not”, said a spokeswoman for the Speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle. It came after Mr Bridgen once again used a Commons adjournment debate to make a string of claims about Covid vaccines, including that boosters are “state-sponsored self harm on a national level”. The claims were thoroughly debunked by the health minister Will Quince, who said vaccines have “saved tens of thousands of lives, reduced the pressure on the NHS and were instrumental in allowing our economy and society to reopen”. It is the second time Mr Bridgen has used a Commons adjournment debate, allocated by ballot, to spread misinformation about vaccines. But a spokeswoman for the Speaker said Sir Lindsay had “no plans” to stop him. Responding to Mr Bridgen’s claims, Mr Quince said vaccines were “the best line of defence” against Covid and had allowed the UK to “live with the virus”. “Countless studies” have shown vaccinated people are “less likely to die or become seriously ill”, he said, pointing out that 144 million vaccine doses have been administered in England alone, with 17 million in autumn’s booster campaign. WELFARE confuse people. Each change has a knock-on effect that adds to the sense that everything is constantly moving. Financial advisers are getting calls from people wondering what to do before Labour gets into power. These calls are made from people with sizeable pensions, but all the same it makes me anxious. No one should be making significant decisions about their future based on electoral guesswork and what a future government may or may not do. So how do you plan your pension when everything is changing? Focus on the rules as they are today. My dream scenario would be for cross-party agreement on leaving pensions well alone for at least the next decade. If the rules stay consistent, you can get on with saving and I can get on with writing pension articles that don’t bore you to tears. TRAVEL 71-75 Government unable to name payments date state when the first instalment, of £301, would be rolled out. Social welfare charities said vulnerable families needed “certainty” in order to budget properly. Laurence Guinness, chief executive of London-based childhood povBy Jake McKee erty charity The Childhood Trust, said it was “cruel” and “shocking” The Government has been urged to that dates had not been released. confirm a date for the release of its Save the Children UK’s head of spring cost of living payments child poverty, Becca Lyon, told i there were families the for some of the most vulnerable people in the UK. charity supported who Around eight million had expressed how difficult it was to budget households with people with “no concrete on low income benefits date” for payments. or tax credits are set to She added: “When receive a total of £900 The amount due to be paid to families are strugin three instalments vulnerable citizens gling to put food on the over the next 12 months. this spring table, they need to know The Government has in advance what money is said the three payments will coming in.” be handed out in the spring and The DWP said: “The first payment autumn of this year and in spring 2024. However, when approached by is due to be made in the spring – i, the Department for Work and Pen- specific dates will be confirmed sions (DWP) was unable to explicitly closer to the time.” £301 By Chloe Chaplain POLITICAL REPORTER The Government’s plans to streamline health and disability benefits are lacking crucial details with “fundamental questions” around how people will be protected, a senior MP has warned. Stephen Timms, chair of the Work and Pensions Select Committee, told i he was concerned at the lack of clarity around the proposed benefit changes, given that ministers intend to begin the legislative process within the coming year. And he said that the reforms could mean a “fair number of people” missing out on benefits who would otherwise have been eligible. Under the changes, the work capability assessment (WCA) for determining benefit payments will be replaced with the existing personal independence payment (PIP) system, which is used to decide what day-to-day help a disabled person might need. Labour MP Mr Timms (inset) said he was concerned about how people who are eligible for health-related benefits – but not PIP – will be identified without the usual assessments. These are the people that experts and charities fear could miss out on benefits, or even face a reduction in their out-of-work universal credit, because they are not properly identified as living with a health condition. Mr Timms said: “They are saying if you have PIP you will get the health element of universal credit, so that’s clear. “But there’s another group of people who are not on PIP who have 9 always been entitled to health support. The question is: how is the Government going to work out who these people are? ” He added: “The details just aren’t there. It’s a bit puzzling that they’re going to scrap the WCA but the [forecasting] indicates that the amount of money being spent on the benefit is going to be unchanged. So there won’t be any more or any fewer people receiving the benefit. “So there’ll have to be some sort of assessment, doing roughly the job that the WCA is doing at the moment.” i reported concerns that the benefit reforms, coupled with the Government’s plans to ramp up sanctions, could leave some people’s income reduced. Mr Timms said it was “certainly possible” that the Government “could end up denying benefits or additional benefit to a fair number of people who receive it at the moment”. But he said did not believe that was the intention. “The fact that the Budget scorecard shows zero change in benefit spending indicates they do expect to carry on paying this health premium to this group of people,” he said. A Government spokesperson said: “These are the biggest reforms in a decade. That’s why we will take time to carefully consider how best to implement the changes and give security and certainty to claimants. “We will put protections in place to ensure that no one experiences financial loss at the point at which the reform is enacted, while improving our offer of tailored support.” CONSERVATIVES Johnson re-selected for Uxbridge By Connie Dimsdale Boris Johnson has been re-selected as the Conservative candidate in his Uxbridge and South Ruislip constituency. The selection comes following speculation that the former prime minister might seek out a safer seat ahead of the next general election. “I can confirm Boris Johnson has been reselected as the Conservative candidate in Uxbridge and South Ruislip,” a spokesman said. While Mr Johnson won with a majority of 7,210 and 52.6 per cent or the vote in 2019, his seat is seen as a target for Labour. . Since leaving office in September, Mr Johnson has declared more than £1m in speaking fees. He has also made public interventions, criticising the deal with the EU agreed by Rishi Sunak to replace elements of the Northern Ireland Protocol. A statement by Uxbridge and South Ruislip Conservative Association said: “We look forward to continuing to work alongside him to deliver for the residents and communities within the constituency, where he has strong connections.” Mr Johnson is set to give televised evidence to the privileges committee over whether he misled Parliament about “Partygate”.
10 NEWS BUDGET Eager parents swamp nurseries unaware of delay in free childcare Exclusive By Ellen O’Dwyer Nurseries have been inundated with requests about free childcare hours from parents unaware that the Government’s new policy will not be fully rolled out until 2025. Earlier this week the Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, announced a £4.1bn expansion in free childcare hours in England for children aged between nine months and two years to be rolled out in stages over the next two years. This extends the current system of 30 hours of free childcare for three- and four-year-olds. From April 2024, eligible working parents of two-year-olds will re- ceive 15 hours of free childcare and from September 2024 this will be extended for children aged between nine months and two years. The full expansion of 30 hours of free childcare to all under-fives will not come into effect until 2025. Andrew Howarth, director of Paint Pots Nurseries, which has three sites – two in Manchester and one in Cheshire – said calls started coming in from parents wanting to take up the free hours on Wednesday night, shortly after the Budget announcement. By early Thursday morning, the CHARITY ‘Funding for breakfast clubs’ call By Chloe Chaplain POLITICAL REPORTER A charity that funds free breakfasts to deprived schoolchildren, is urging the Department for Education to ring-fence some of the new money for “wraparound care” to support hungry kids. The funding also risks being an “expensive token” unless a long-term sustainable model is established, according to the charity Magic Breakfast. It also warned that without a long-term funding plan, efforts to boost childcare through extending school hours could lead to increased pressure on teachers to be the “unspoken arm of the welfare state”. In the Budget, Jeremy Hunt unveiled £289m over three years to “test” whether schools could provide extra childcare between 8am and 6pm. Magic Breakfast boss Lindsey MacDonald (inset) welcomed the funding but said it was not addressing the “urgent” need to help deprived children now. “Where breakfast clubs can make an impact on children’s learning, attainment, nutrition, health and focus – then we need to make sure that is… set out in the guidelines by the DfE,” she told i. The Government has been contacted for comment. three centres had taken multiple phone calls and emails from parents – and these had only increased by the afternoon, Mr Howarth said. “People are thinking it’s starting right now, like Monday. You can understand the eagerness. A lot of people just read the headline or the tagline, without seeing the detail. “Basically, we are telling them we will keep them updated, but there’s nothing we can offer at the moment.” Mr Howarth said parents were “disappointed” when they found out the new policy would not begin to take effect for another year and not fully for another two years. He said the way the policy has been promoted by the Government has left many parents confused. “They have no idea this is a long way off and actually may never be implemented, depending on the result of the next general election.” Karen Simpkin, owner of Sunflower Children’s Centre in Sheffield, said she had to tell parents the help would not be available immediately. “All these parents that had babies in here already were getting rather excited and we had to tell them to have a cup of tea,” she said. “In the Budget they said they were trying to get people back into work but then they turn around and say ‘not for another year or 18 months’.” Ms Simpkin said she was concerned that by the time the policy comes into effect, more nurseries would have closed. “The costs we face are absolutely horrendous, so we are all putting our fees up.” WAUGH ON POLITICS Chancellor takes baby steps towards new deal for families Paul Waugh F or all the cheers and clinked glasses of congratulations on the day of a Budget, a hangover often follows. And although Jeremy Hunt’s plans for childcare were a welcome start, for many think-tanks and experts it’s clear there is still a long way to go to fix the UK’s broken system. Childcare providers have warned that the plan lacked the funding needed to make it work and the Institute for Fiscal Studies has suggested that just a sixth of the new childcare places would go to parents entering the workforce. Ministers seem to be assuming that an increase in the staff-to-child ratio from 1:4 to 1:5 for England will magically allow them to deliver the new places without much of an increase in staffing. Yet that may face obstacles from parents who worry it will dilute their child’s care. I vividly recall turning up to our first son’s ruinously expensive nursery one day to find there were suddenly lots more new staff giving every child plenty of attention. When a young staffer confessed that it was because Ofsted were there for an inspection, I realised the sleight of hand and swiftly placed him with a childminder. There are pros and cons to each type of childcare. For our kids, we found that childminders were better for the under-threes for that one-on-one focus, but once they got older nurseries provided better socialisation and early education. Mother forced to make career trade-off over costs pressure Last year, mother-of-two Louise Sharples, (above with daughters, Lola and Sunnie) turned down a new job she knew she would love because, when she added up the cost of fulltime childcare for her young daughters, it was more than she would have earned. After 12 years as a Other parents will have different experiences and views. And ultimately childcare policy ought to be about choice. The good news is that the children’s minister, Claire Coutinho, recognises this, telling i this week “this is about parental choice”. Yet in childcare – as in childbirth itself – choice is just a slogan unless it is adequately funded and properly informed. The crippling fees in the UK are so high that 76 per cent of mothers who pay for childcare say it no longer makes financial sense to work. An estimated 1.7 million women are prevented from taking on more hours of paid work due to childcare issues, with a loss of up to £28.2bn economic output annually. Yet, as Tory MP George Eustice was brave enough to point out this week, that’s not the whole story. A major survey of 5,057 parents conducted by the Department for Education in 2019 found that almost two thirds (65 per cent) of mothers with children aged four and under would rather work fewer hours so they could spend more time looking after their children. Around two million working mothers would reduce the number of hours they work, if “they could afford it”. For decades, there was a steady drop in the number of “stay-athome mums” who don’t work, but in recent years that’s gone into reverse. In 2022, 43,000 women dropped out of the workforce to look after family, a 3 per cent increase on the previous year. Some of that will be due to high childcare costs, but some of it is due to the pandemic making mothers It won’t be child’s play, but all the parties need to make parental choice a priority
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 EUROPE ‘I’m moving back to Madrid because the system is so expensive in UK’ UK nurseries by far the most costly in Europe. By Leo Cendrowicz S charity shop manager, Ms Sharples, 35, of Clitheroe, Lancashire, has now taken what she views as a step back in her career, moving to a part-time but slightly better-paid cleaning job until her children are older. A childcare bill of around £800 covering four days a week of nursery for 18-month-old Sunnie and wraparound school clubs for four-year-old Lola leaves her with about £100 at the end of the month. “I’d love to work more hours,” she said. “But there is no incentive to, because it all just goes to childcare. I think: why am I working?” REUTERS take stock. Like the over-50s who receiving more money in the first gave up work in big numbers, some few years of a child’s life and less concluded that their personal later on, to help ease the financial wellbeing and contact with loved pressures on the “stay-at-homes”. ones was more important than A missing piece of the jigsaw pounds and pence. is the lack of legislation to force That aligns with the growing employers to agree to flexible number of women who take working. Boris Johnson longer maternity leave promised this before these days than their ditching draft working mothers ever employment laws to did, with six months or enact it. The charity a year more popular Pregnant Then than three months. Screwed says 86 per The number of women that dropped out That’s due to better cent of mothers who of the workforce to statutory leave, shared try to work flexibly look after family parental leave, and face discrimination as in 2022 employers having to a result. meet demand. Although the Chancellor One of several flaws in Hunt’s got his photo-call with toddlers announcement was the lack of any on Budget day, we are still a long support for those parents who way from a coherent childcare simply prefer to look after their policy for those who want to go to young children than go to work. work and those who don’t. It won’t Some Tory MPs wanted to see a be child’s play getting there, but all radical policy of front-loaded child the parties need to make parental benefit payments, with parents choice a priority – and a reality. 43,000 ara Bustillo de Castro, a London-based consultant, is set to return to her native Spain this summer because childcare is so expensive. “We’re going to move back to Madrid in August because we can’t make it work with childcare being so expensive and unreliable,” she said. “I couldn’t understand why I was struggling to go back to work in the UK after having my second child when I hadn’t struggled in France after my first. Why it was so difficult for a woman to go back to work?” Ms de Castro, who previously spent a decade in France as an aerospace engineer, believes one reason is the lack of the government funding and public nurseries seen in countries like France. The UK’s “30 free hours a week” provision only kicks in at the age of three, and nurseries are forced to increase fees for one- and two-yearolds to cover the cost because of a funding shortfall, she pointed out. And many fear that Jeremy Hunt’s £4bn Budget cash injection won’t be enough to cover his promised extension of free hours to oneand two-year-olds, meaning that prices will rise for the remaining paid-for hours. Mrs De Castro, whose book on childcare entitled The Power of Where: International Careers and Modern Parenting will be published in September, says it is also hard to find staff for UK nurseries because of low pay, hard work and Brexit making it tougher for immigrants to come in. “It has become quite ingrained that mums stay at home and don’t work. But for many of them, it’s not by choice, it’s just because they can’t pay for childcare otherwise,” she added. But she notes that staff-to-child ratios are higher than in Spain. Ofsted mandates one adult for every three babies, while in Spain, it is 1:8. Nicola Brooks swapped Liverpool for the Costa Blanca to give her daughter Grace a better quality of life. Ms Brooks paid £60 per day for childcare when Grace was two – 10 years ago. “I also have I couldn’t understand why I was struggling to go back to work in the UK when I hadn’t struggled in France a two-year-old granddaughter and my daughter-in-law does a parttime job which just covers the cost of childcare. The cost of childcare in the UK is phenomenal,” she says. In Spain, working mothers receive €100 (£88) per month childcare benefits and are entitled to a €1,000 annual payment for kindergarten, as well as access to cheap state nurseries for children over 16 weeks. Figures show the UK is by far the most expensive country in Europe for childcare, with a survey carried out by the charity Pregnant then Screwed finding that it costs on average £14,000 a year, and can consume up to 75 per cent of parent incomes. In European Union countries, the cost is 14 per cent of a women’s median wage for a middleincome two-earner couple, according to OECD data. In Germany, the average cost of childcare for an entire year is only €1,310 (£1,149). In Berlin, besides €23 per month for lunch, childcare from 12 months is free for up to nine hours per day, depending on parents’ working hours. Liz Gray, a 40-year-old British mother of two who has been living in Berlin since 2009, said it was “fantastic” that childcare was free. But she was told to book a place as soon as possible. “Friends told us how to phrase emails. We were told to call at this time, but not another. It was almost like a casting. It was insane,” Ms Gray said. There are estimated to be around 383,000 too few nursery places across Germany, according to a study carried out by the German non-profit foundation the Bertelsmann Stiftung. Louise Osborne, a journalist living in Berlin, said that when she heard about the free hours, she was “amazed, particularly given the horror stories I’d heard about costs in the UK”. Natalie Hill, a British photographer based in Brussels, says she was “genuinely superhappy” with the childcare for her daughter, Elba, now five. Local creches give priority to lowerincome families, so Natalie and her wife Valeria used private childcare, at €700 (£614) a month. “It was a chunk, but compared to the UK, very manageable,” she said. SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 11 News in brief REVIEW Met Police ‘clearly has a problem’ The Metropolitan Police “clearly [has] got a problem” that needs to be tackled, according to the Justice Secretary, after reports that a review will criticise the force for being racist, sexist and homophobic. Baroness Casey has been reviewing the Met’s standards and internal culture in the aftermath of the murder of Sarah Everard by a serving officer. Dominic Raab said there were “clearly practices that have been far too prevalent” that needed tackling “head-on” and that it was clear that bad behaviour was not isolated. DIPLOMACY Biden and Irish PM discuss growing ties Sporting a green tie and fresh shamrocks for St Patrick’s Day, President Joe Biden yesterday voiced his support for a recent economic accord affecting Ireland as he hosted the republic’s prime minister, a longstanding meet-up scuttled by the Covid-19 pandemic. Mr Biden was presented with a bowl of shamrocks from taoiseach Leo Varadkar, a tradition that began in 1952. “It’s good to have you back in the Oval Office, especially on St Patrick’s Day,” Mr Biden said, as he and Mr Varadkar discussed their nations’ support of Ukraine and how to deepen their economic ties. AP TRAVEL Covid tests scrapped for China arrivals From 5 April, passengers flying to England from mainland China will no longer need proof of a negative coronavirus test, the Department of Health and Social Care said. In addition, voluntary Covid testing of travellers arriving at Heathrow from China was scrapped yesterday. The measures were introduced in January in a bid to strengthen the UK’s ability to detect potential new variants circulating in China. The DHSC said: “The removal of these measures comes as China has increased information sharing… providing greater transparency on their domestic disease levels.”
12 NEWS CONSERVATIVES Johnson allies plot to block ‘Partygate’ sanctions in ‘show of force’ against PM Storm ahead for Sunak after recent successes. By Richard Vaughan and Hugo Gye B oris Johnson’s supporters will vote against any sanction put forward by the Privileges Committee over the “Partygate” scandal, branding the inquiry a “witch-hunt”. Hardcore allies of the ex-Tory leader also believe that opposing any recommendations submitted by the committee will act as a “show of force” to Rishi Sunak of his predecessor’s support base. Johnsonites have described the planned stand as being akin to Spartacus, the 1960s film in which an enslaved outsider leads a band of fugitives to overthrow a corrupted Rome, with Mr Johnson returned as prime minister. One ally said: “I, for one, will support Boris. The committee is just an unnecessary witch-hunt.” Asked how many more would be willing to vote in support of Mr Johnson, the MP replied: “A lot. The problem is that the toadies will vote against him and with Labour the numbers will be challenging.” Mr Johnson is due to give evidence in a public hearing in front of the Privileges Committee on Wednesday, where he will seek to set out his defence. Should the committee of MPs find that he deliberately misled the Commons over what he knew about lockdown parties it could recommend a range of sanctions, including a suspension from Parliament of more than 10 days, which could trigger a by-election. Such a move would be opposed by Mr Johnson’s supporters, with the same ally insisting: “If there is a forced by-election he will be returned, which will be a real headache for the ones who voted against. “Remember he was voted in by the majority of the country. Labour stitched him up.” Boris Johnson supporters think the situation akin to ‘Spartacus’ REUTERS The veteran Tory said the situation was “exactly like” Spartacus, adding: “The Red Wallers who shafted Boris are already feeling the cold from the electorate for getting rid of him. Boris could legitimately claim upon a return he was voted in by the electorate. It was Tory inexperienced flakes in the Red Walls and disenfranchised ministers most from the 2015 era that went against him for ambitious purposes.” The comments come as another arch-Johnsonite, Priti Patel, warned this week that “there is a culture of collusion involved” in the Privileges Committee, as Mr Johnson’s supporters continue to seek to cast doubts over the entire Remember he was voted in by the majority of the country. Labour stitched him up process. Another backbencher said that the “reality is showing Labour has had a very dark hand in the background to this whole debate,” in reference to the Partygate report writer Sue Gray’s decision to seek to become Sir Keir Starmer’s chief of staff. For Mr Sunak the prospect of the Privileges Committee hearing threatens to create a dark, Boris Johnson-shaped cloud on his horizon, following several weeks of effective and crisis-free leadership. One supporter of the Prime Minister admitted there was an “undercurrent of anxiety about his [Mr Johnson] having a platform again”. Having secured a potential new Brexit deal for Northern Ireland, Mr Sunak has followed it up by displaying further adroit diplomatic skills during a trip to San Diego to press the flesh with the US President, Joe Biden, and Australian PM, Anthony Albanese, as part of the Aukus security pact. Ministers were relieved when the Budget landed without the sort of “unravelling” that has often been the fate of previous fiscal events. “There are things we knew would be contentious,” a government source said, highlighting the decision to abolish the cap on the total amount of money that pension savers can accrue tax-free. They were encouraged by the main doctors’ union coming out in support of the policy: “Having the BMA out there saying there are doctors who are planning to come back to work, that’s the desired effect of the policy,” the source added. But while the doctors may be happy, the Trussite wing on the Tory back benches are less enthused. Allies of Liz Truss gave this week’s Budget a lukewarm reception, with the former levelling up secretary, Simon Clarke, grading the package of announcements as a “B+” during the week, with particular ire aimed at the country’s record high tax burden. Sir John Redwood, who along with Mr Clarke, handed the Chancellor a dossier of demands to boost growth in the economy, warned that Mr Hunt’s Budget “did not do enough to stimulate the major investment we need in home production of more energy, more industry, more food, more tech”. “It failed to cut through the self-defeating money-go-round of higher taxes and more subsidies,” he warned. Despite the misgivings on the back benches, however, Mr Sunak will be feeling bullish. His week was capped off with the prospect of the strikes coming to an end. The PM had directly intervened in the nurses’ talks, using his authority to ensure more money in a bid to break the impasse. Optimism is now growing that a similar conclusion can be found with the teachers’ strikes, with “intensive talks” beginning yesterday. Despite the improved outlook, however, Mr Sunak is unlikely to let up. He will remain working from Downing Street over the weekend. “He rarely takes a break, sadly,” one of his senior advisers admitted. His dogged approach to detail and his furious work ethic is similar to that of another of his predecessors, Theresa May, who also presents a significant problem for the Prime Minister. Having finally tabled his legislation to try to stop the small boats crossing the Channel this week, his proposals were given a withering assessment by Mrs May, who attacked the plans for being unfair, unviable and damaging to the UK’s international reputation. But some of those who worked with her in Government accuse her of being blinkered about her own decisions in No 10. “She is revisionist on her own record,” an ex-cabinet minister said. “She complained about dropping the 0.7 per cent aid target – but if she’d gone to the country, one of her main promises would have been scrapping 0.7 per cent!” ASYLUM Braverman trip to reaffirm Rwanda plans By Arj Singh and Serina Sandhu Home Secretary Suella Braverman will visit asylum facilities in Rwanda Suella Braverman is heading to Rwanda to reaffirm the UK’s commitment to a controversial £140m plan to deport Channel asylum seekers to the east African nation. The Home Secretary will meet counterparts from the Rwandan government to discuss the controversial proposals, i understands. She will visit facilities, which could include the Hope Hostel asylum accommodation in Kigali, and tour programmes available for migrants. Ms Braverman is due to land in Rwanda this morning and will return to the UK on Monday morning. Nearly a year since the policy was announced by then prime minister Boris Johnson and home secretary Priti Patel, no one who has arrived in the UK after crossing the Channel in a small boat has been deported to Rwanda after the policy became mired in legal challenges. Next month, the Court of Appeal will hear the latest challenge over the adequacy of Rwanda’s asylum system and whether deportees face a “real risk” of being sent back to countries where they may face persecution or ill-treatment. It was revealed by i last month that the Government hopes to deport the first group of asylum seekers to Rwanda by the end of the year or spring 2024 at the latest. An opposition politician in Rwanda says the deal breaches legislation aimed at protecting asylum seekers. Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza, of the Development and Liberty for All party, told i: “Rwanda, as a poor and developing country, does not have sufficient capacity to support the wellbeing of migrants as the UK.”
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 13 POLITICS Lib Dems see pollution as Tory vote loser Exclusive By Hugo Gye POLITICAL REPORTER The Liberal Democrats will seek to use a crunch vote on water pollution to convince the public the Conservatives cannot be trusted to protect the environment, the party’s leader has warned ahead of the local elections. Sir Ed Davey told i he was confident the Lib Dems could win over disaffected Tories in wealthier areas despite Labour’s strong position. He insisted it helped his party that Labour was no longer “scary” – meaning centrist voters would not feel forced to back the Conservatives. Speaking ahead of the Lib Dem spring conference in York, which kicked off last night, Sir Ed highlighted a forthcoming vote in the Lords where peers will seek to block the Government repealing EU-derived legislation regulating the pollution of waterways without a replacement set of rules. Although ministers have prom- ENVIRONMENT Scottish Water failing to monitor river pollution ised not to diminish existing levels of protection, Sir Ed said: “I don’t trust them. “What they could have done is, if they have some proposals to replace these important regulations that have been in place for years now, they should have tabled them, and they should have voted on them so they can say they are now in place, we can get rid of these other regulations.” The Environment Agency has been “effectively defunded by the Conservatives”, he added, calling for tougher regulation to force water companies to pay for the costs of preventing sewage discharges and cleaning them up. “We have got to be tougher, some of our rivers are dying,” Sir Ed said. The House of Lords will vote on the Retained EU Law Bill, which sets a timeline for revoking all laws originating in Brussels, on 19 April – barely a fortnight before local elections where the Lib Dems are hoping to make gains in Tory areas. The Lib Dem leader said: “The Conservatives know there are a lot of lifelong supporters who are very angry with this – as with so many other things they are getting wrong. And they are going to vote for the Liberal Democrats and other parties until the Tories get the message.” In his conference speech tomorrow, Sir Ed will describe rivers pollution as “the biggest environmental crime in our country today”. The Government has said that “reviewing our retained EU law will not come at the expense of the UK’s already high standards and environmental protections will not be downgraded”. Case Study Exclusive By Chris Green SCOTLAND EDITOR Scotland’s publicly owned water company has yet to install a single new river sewage monitor more than a year after promising 1,000 would be fitted by the end of 2024. In December 2021, Scottish Water announced plans to dramatically increase the number of monitors on combined sewer overflows (CSOs) on the national sewage network. But in response to a Freedom of Information (FOI) request from i, the company admitted that as of 1 March this year, not a single new device had been installed. CSOs are designed to drain excess water during periods of heavy rainfall to avoid flooding people’s houses, but often lead to sewage being discharged directly into rivers. The most recent data shows that between 2017 and 2021, sewage has overflowed directly into Scottish rivers and other water courses 54,289 times – or almost 30 times per day. Campaigners fear the problem could be much worse due to a lack of monitoring. Of the 3,614 overflows in Scotland’s 31,000-mile sewer network, only 4 per cent (144) are monitored. This is in contrast to England, which has 14,470 overflows of which 89 per cent (12,700) are monitored, with 100 per cent coverage expected by the end of this year. Scottish Water announced in December 2021 that it would boost the number of monitors, but progress has been slow. In its FOI response, Scottish Water said it anticipated that the project would start “within the next few months” and that it had thus far been focusing on deciding which CSOs to prioritise. Conservationists said it was “vital” that the project went ahead as soon ‘What we want is monitoring here’ Flowing for about 24 miles from its source in the Pentland Hills south-west of Edinburgh, the Water of Leith winds through Scotland’s capital to the Firth of Forth. But local campaigners fear all is not well at the Leith end of the river, which barely flows in parts. Residents have launched a campaign called Save Our Shore, over fears that sewage is not flowing out to sea but settling in silt instead. The Water of Leith has 65 combined sewer overflows (CSOs), where sewage can be discharged directly into the river. “What we want is monitoring here and further upstream,” say Jim Jarvie and Ian Anderson (pictured) of Save Our Shore. “As you’re dithering, how much sewage and risk are we meant to put up with in the meantime?” Scottish environment minister Mairi McAllan said the Water of Leith’s CSOs were of “high priority” for monitoring by Scottish Water. as possible. Jonathan Louis, interim director of the Forth Rivers Trust, said: “It is disappointing that despite Scottish Water c­ ommitting to installing 1,000 new sensors on polluting outflows, they have not managed to install a single new sensor. “Scotland is in the midst of a biodiversity and wild salmon crisis and all users of the water environment need to do more to monitor the impact they have.” Simon Parsons, director of strategic customer service planning at Scottish Water, said: “We remain firmly on track to deliver on our commitment to install 1,000 new monitors and have three intelligent waste water network programmes in place by the end of 2024.” The Five-Clue Cryptic Crossword 1 Across 2 3 No 3843 3 4 Circuits in phone network pass (6) 5/6 Term tragedian reinvented for books, magazines, etc (7,6) 5 6 Solution, page 52 Down 1 Bit of Spanish bread once put in vegetable (6) 2 Delegate authority to chap on March 18, for example (7) 4 Dispatched railway guard (6)
14 NEWS SOCIETY At the age of 26 children agree mum knows best By Ruth Comerford Children finally admit that “mother knows best” when they turn 26 and more than a third wish they had heeded their mother’s advice, according to a survey. Almost half of Britons think that, in retrospect, maternal advice made sense, but only 15 per cent said they now shared the same political views, found a poll of 2,000 Britons conducted by the Post Office. The motherly advice that was most valued was to treat people as you would like to be treated, voted for by 43 per cent of those polled. Respondents said by the time they were 26, they were prepared to admit mums know best, while a fifth said by the time they reached their thirties, they had become a younger version of their mums. Seventy-five per cent said they would make the effort to see their mothers tomorrow on Mother’s Day, but of those who cannot, 50 per cent will post a present and two-thirds will send a card. Laura Joseph, a Post Office spokesperson, said: “It’s great to see how much our mums and the special women in our lives mean, even though we probably should have listened to them more.” IN DEPTH Cornwall’s electric gold rush Deposits of lithium – a key component for batteries – are sparking a second mining boom, reports David Parsley T he second great Cornish metals rush has begun. Two-anda-half decades after the closure of its last tin mine, the mineral-rich county could be on the verge of becoming a global player in the undersupplied metals market again. This time, it’s not just tin which will be mined. As well as copper and tungsten, Cornwall is hoping to become Europe’s major provider of lithium, the metal used in batteries that power technology products from phones to electric cars. By 2030, it is expected that Cornwall will be producing enough lithium to provide more than a third of the UK’s estimated requirement, just in time for the planned end of fossil-fuel vehicle production. Five companies are leading the charge on the peninsular. One of them is Cornish Lithium, which by 2026 hopes to begin extracting around 10,000 tons of the metal each year. “Back in the 19th century, miners started encountering very, very hot water coming into the mine,” says Cornish Lithium’s founder, Jeremy Wrathall. “It was salty and they didn’t know why because it was so far from the sea, right in the middle of Cornwall. “They had it analysed by Professor William Miller of King’s Industrial revolution Global demand soars Mining bosses have called on the Government to get behind the metals rush in Cornwall with a “solid plan” to ensure the entire UK benefits from the millions of tons of lithium and tin set to be produced in the county. The companies behind the raft of mining projects have claimed that they will be forced to export their output unless the Government invests in electric vehicle gigafactories and other technology production. Jeremy Wrathall, the chief executive and founder of Cornish Lithium, told i: “We have the lithium needed for electric vehicle batteries right here in Cornwall. We have the resources to supply gigafactories in the UK. We just need the gigafactories to supply it to.” US President Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act committed billions of dollars to the production and sourcing of critical metals to reduce the US’s reliance on imports from China. The European Union has a critical minerals strategy and Mr Biden met the European Commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, earlier this month to agree a deal to co-ordinate their supplies of vital metals. Mr Wrathall said: “We will still produce the lithium and sell it to Europe if we’re unable to sell it here, but we want to play a big role in helping the UK reduce its reliance on imports. We need the Government to invest and help the UK meet the challenge of climate change.” The chief executive of Cornish Tin, Sally Norcross-Webb (inset), said: “We need real government support. Actions, not words, to facilitate the setting up of battery storage, vehicle manufacture, all the supply chain businesses that are needed to make Cornwall a real force for the future and a county that can actively participate in and make successful the next industrial revolution.” A Government spokesman said last night: “Our Critical Minerals Strategy and Critical Minerals Refresh set out how the Government is boosting the security of supply of critical minerals for UK businesses. “From the tip of Cornwall to the Scottish Highlands, we are creating the right conditions for critical mineral businesses to grow by offering financial support, “With critical minerals used in everything from mobile phones to wind turbines, making sure UK industries can always access these materials is hugely important.” David Parsley
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 15 News in brief SCIENCE Researchers reverse blindness in mice The three blind mice have had their vision restored by scientists in a breakthrough that could reverse the condition in people. Hereditary retinitis pigmentosa, a common cause of blindness, affects one in 4,000 people. Researchers in China used a genome-editing technique to correct a mutation that leads to the condition in both mice and humans. Not only did the correction lead to the mice regaining their sight – but they were even shown to retain their vision well into old age. The study was published in the Journal of Experimental Medicine. MUSIC Posthumous Coolio LP to be released Tin mining is set to recommence at the South Crofty mine near Redruth in 2026 College, London, in 1864, and he was the first to discover lithium in Cornwall. So, it has been down there for a long time.” Mr Wrathall, who gained more than 30 years of experience in the mining finance industry before launching his own exploration company, is confident that Cornish Lithium’s two sites in the county will play a major role in helping to make the UK a critical metals powerhouse. “Every ton that we can produce in Cornwall is a ton less the UK has to import and a ton less associated carbon,” he said. “If [it’s coming] in from China, that lithium is made with fossil fuels and you’re shipping it all the way over the ocean with fossil fuels.” In total, the government forecasts that the UK will require around 80,000 tons of lithium a year by 2030, but almost 40 per cent of that could be coming up from up to 2,000m under Cornwall. British Lithium is hoping to be able to produce 21,000 tons a year using sustainable, chemical-free, mining to produce battery-grade lithium carbonate from the mica in Cornish granite. “We are delighted with the support we’re getting from local, national and international stakeholders and are feeling very positive about 2023 and all that lies ahead,” says British Lithium’s chief executive, Andrew Smith, who aims to begin production toward the end of 2025 at the company’s site at Stenalees, near St Austell. While lithium production may be hitting the headlines, Cornwall is, once again, also set to become a world player in tin. The existence of tin in Britain can be traced back to 2000BC, but mining for the metal in Cornwall did not begin until around 1800BC. The county soon became an important producer of tin, which forms bronze when mixed with copper. During the Industrial Revolution, the county established itself as a global player in the industry and remained so for much of the 20th century. It was not until 1998 that the final mine in Cornwall closed. Cornish Tin is bringing mining back to the Great Wheal Vor for the first time in 150 years. The project involves 26 former tin and copper producing mines in Breage. In 1929, the mining historian AK Hamilton Jenkin described the mines as “probably the richest tin mine which has ever been worked in the world”, and Cornish Tin’s chief executive, Sally Norcross-Webb, is planning to make the site globally significant once again. “This is very high-grade tin with historic production grades of over 5.5 per cent tin. Even assuming a current production grade of only 2 per cent tin, this would be one of the top three tin mines by grade in the world today,” she said, adding that the group was using “the best People can earn much more than the average salary. It will bring a boost to Cornwall available technologies” as part of a commitment to green mining. With tin used in the soldering of circuit boards in almost every tech product around, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US has predicted a fourfold increase in demand for the metal by 2040 as the electric vehicle and energy storage revolution really takes hold. “We will be producing clean tin and providing a domestic supply for UK industry of a critical mineral,” Ms Norcross-Webb said. “When we are in full production, we will employ between 150 and 200 people, and for every direct job The Cornish metal rush 1 2 DEVON Trebarwith Port Strand Daymer Isaac Beach 3 Bodmin Moor 6 Padstow 4 Newquay 4 5 Carnglaze Caverns CORNWALL 2 Penzance 0 8 Miles 1 Eden Project Liskeard Deerpark Polperro 3 Falmouth 5 6 in the mining sector, there are four indirect jobs created.” It is forecast that the mining industry will bring up to 10,000 new jobs into Cornwall, where salaries are lower than the UK average and a high proportion of people work in the seasonal tourism industry. Dennis Rowland, the project manager at Cornwall Resources, said: “People can earn very well, much higher than the average salary. You hire local, train local and mining will bring a boost to Cornwall.” Cornwall Resources operates the Redmoor tin-tungsten-copper project, based in Kelly Bray, near the Devon border. The firm is seeking funding for a feasibility study for the project, which will include further exploration drilling and studies, and culminate in an economic model justifying the establishment of a new, underground metal mine in Cornwall. “The scoping study that we produced in 2020 showed there are globally significant levels of metal,” said Mr Rowland. That last operating mine to close in Cornwall was in South Crofty near Redruth, but its abeyance may not last much longer. Canadianbased Cornish Metals, one of the largest mining companies operating in the county, is hoping it can return to full production in 2026 and that the fourth-largest tin deposit in the world could produce up to 5,000 tons of the metal a year. As well as a plentiful supply of tin, the site also offers potential for the mining of copper, lithium, tungsten, zinc and silver. While there has been some local opposition to the projects, the companies claim the overwhelming support of Cornish residents. The county is well known for its great views – but these businesses believe that what lies beneath its hills can provide a much-needed economic boost for locals too. The estate of the US rapper Coolio plans to release a studio album later this year that the Grammy-winning star was working on in the days before he died. Long Live Coolio will be the posthumous album and the first single, “TAG ‘You It,’” was released yesterday featuring Too $hort and DJ Wino. The raunchy single’s video, which begins with Coolio and Too $hort in a boxing ring as women gyrate, was the last piece of visual content Coolio (below) appeared in before his death from cardiac arrest on 28 September 2022 at the age of 59. SOCIAL MEDIA Trump’s YouTube restrictions lifted YouTube has lifted restrictions on Donald Trump’s channel, after suspending it for more than two years following the deadly riot at the US Capitol in 2021. He now has access to key vehicles for fundraising and can reach 146 million followers across three platforms as he runs for the presidency in 2024. “We carefully evaluated the continued risk of real-world violence, while balancing the chance for voters to hear equally from major national candidates,” YouTube said. Meta has reinstated Mr Trump’s Facebook and Instagram accounts. His Twitter account was restored in November.
V1 16 NEWS MOLDOVA Russia denies plot to destabilise Ukraine neighbour By Emma Reynolds Moldova’s President, Maia Sandu, said yesterday that Russia would continue trying to destabilise the country “from within” after a secret plan by Moscow to thwart Moldova’s tilt to the West was uncovered. The document by Russia’s security service, the FSB, detailed a 10-year plan to bolster pro-Russian groups, mobilise the Orthodox Church and cut off natural gas supplies. “As long as I am president, Moldova will hold out,” Ms Sandu (inset) said as she praised law enforcement agencies for blocking attempts to sow chaos. “There is no danger of war coming to Moldova while Ukraine is fighting.” Russia denied accusations it is trying to destabilise Moldova, a country of 2.6 million people wedged between Ukraine and Romania. Moscow has troops based in Moldova’s breakaway Transnistria region and Moldovan authorities have arrested alleged pro-Russian activists who they said were trying to enter the country. Child soldiers Military cadets in the Black Sea city of Yalta take part in a parade to mark the ninth anniversary of Moscow’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula with a banner showing Vladimir Putin and the slogan: “Russia doesn’t start wars, it ends them.” AP RUSSIA Arrest warrant issued for Putin over ‘war crimes’ against children By Victoria Craw DEPUTY FOREIGN EDITOR The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued an arrest warrant for Vladimir Putin yesterday, accusing the Russian President of carrying out war crimes through the deportation and unlawful transfer of children from Ukraine to Russia. It is the first time that the leader of a United Nations Security Council member has had an arrest warrant issued against them. Separately, the court issued a warrant for Maria Lvova-Belova (inset), Russia’s commissioner for children’s rights, on the same charges. The ICC said that the crimes were allegedly carried out in occupied Ukrainian territory and there were “reasonable grounds to believe that Mr Putin bears individual criminal responsibility” for either having committed them directly or through others, or failing to control those who committed the acts. Ms Lvova-Belova has previously featured in social media videos of children arriving in Russia and has herself adopted a 15-year-old Ukrainian boy from Mariupol. The ICC president, Piotr Hofmanski, said: “It is forbidden by international law to transfer civilians from the territory they live in to other territories. Children enjoy special protection under the Geneva Convention.” He said the contents of the warrants would remain secret in order to protect the victims. However, the judges decided to make the “existence of the warrants public in the interests of justice and to prevent the commission of future crimes”. But he also acknowledged the difficulties of enforcing the warrant, saying: “The execution depends on international co-operation.” The Kremlin has repeatedly denied accusations that its forces have committed atrocities in Ukraine. Yesterday, Mr Putin’s official spokes-
V1 NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 UKRAINE Russia parades new model city in occupied Mariupol Construction has been accompanied by broad ‘Russification’. By Kieron Monks A man, Dmitry Peskov, reiterated that Russia did not recognise the ICC and considered it to be “legally void”. In his nightly video address Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky hailed the move and blamed Mr Putin for the deportation of thousands of Ukrainian children. “This is an historic decision which will lead to historic accountability,” he said. The deportations constituted a policy of “state evil which starts precisely with the top official of this state”, he added. “It would have been impossible to enact such a criminal operation without the say-so of the man at the helm of the terrorist state.” The Ukrainian foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, said that the “wheels of justice are turning”, adding: “International criminals will be held accountable for stealing children and other international crimes.” Ukraine estimates that 744,000 children have been taken to Russian territory since the war broke out, according to Russian open source data. The ICC prosecutor Karim Khan opened an investigation into possible war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide in Ukraine a year ago, focusing on alleged crimes against children and the targeting of civilian infrastructure. Belarus cracks down on trivial dissent gestures Belarusian opposition activists have reported coming under increased scrutiny for activities such as liking social media posts, as the war in Ukraine stretches into a second year. Sergei Melyanets, who was arrested in a crackdown on protests in 2020 after President Alexander Lukashenko won the election, said he recently found plain-clothed officers from the state security committee (KGB) at his home. He said he received a fine for having red and white blinds in his bedroom – the colours of protests against the government. Human Rights Watch said that repressive measures in the country, which is the main ally of Moscow, have become “less visible” since 2020, with people being arrested and, in some cases, jailed for trivial acts such as following a Telegram channel or liking a post. A Belarusian human rights organisation Viasna said this had become worse since the war in Ukraine began more than a year ago. It claimed at least 1,575 Belarusians had been detained for their anti-war stance in the past year, and 56 have been convicted on various charges and sentenced to prison terms ranging from 12 months to 23 years. Taz Ali few weeks after the last Ukrainian soldiers left Mariupol last May, Russian construction crews moved in. “A wonderful Russian resort city will emerge here,” promised the newly-appointed mayor, Konstantin Ivaschenko, as work began. Mariupol, on Ukraine’s southern coast, has seen some of the most brutal fighting of the war. Tens of thousands of civilians were killed and 90 per cent of buildings were damaged as Russian forces laid siege to it last spring, says Ukraine. The city is now home to a new district featuring colourful, modern apartment blocks with playgrounds. New schools and hospitals have sprung up from the rubble. These additions, triumphantly paraded on Russian TV, are just a taste of the Kremlin’s vision for the city. A leaked masterplan from Russia’s state planning department revealed a target for 875 hectares of housing by 2035. Mariupol’s port is to be rebuilt. The Azovstal steel plant – scene of the Azov Battalion’s last stand – will become a technology park. The wave of construction has been accompanied by sweeping ‘“Russification”. Mariupol is now part of the Moscow time zone, uses Russian currency and receives Russian TV channels. Residents require Russian passports to receive their pensions. Signs of Ukrainian identity are being systematically erased. The blueprint for Mariupol is similar to that of a typical, modern Russian city, says Dr Oleg Golubchikov, a Moscow-educated urban planning specialist at Cardiff University. “There is a big programme of making cities in Russia ‘comfortable and liveable’ and I see principles of that here,” he says. “It’s about combining living conditions and social infrastructure – wherever you are building homes you need kindergartens, schools, shops.” Owen Hatherley, a journalist and author specialising in the history and architecture of ex-Soviet Union countries, suggests Mariupol’s reinvention is inspired by Catherine the Great. Rebuilding is focused on “city centre splendour”, he says, in line with the wider mission of “recreating great imperial Russia”. Much of this is done with an eye on domestic consumption, he believes, reinforcing the idea Russia is bringing civilisation to a backwater devoid of its own identity. Russia is maintaining a tradition of seeking to make examples of conquered cities. After the destruction of the second Chechen War, Moscow poured resources into the reconstruction of the capital city, Grozny, building skyscrapers on top of the ruins. The Chechen uprising was pacified. But Russia’s record in occupied Ukrainian cities suggests this will not be repeated. “Cities that have been part of the Donetsk pseudo-republics have been devastated over the past eight years in terms of wages and living standards,” says Mr Hatherley. “They have been disproportionately conscripted with huge numbers flung into the gunfire.” Russia has benefitted from the location of Mariupol, out of Himars rocket range and relatively removed from fighting, to implement its masterplan. But the city’s previous owners are preparing their own plans. Mariupol City Council – now based in Lviv – is preparing a scheme in partnership with other local authorities, business leaders and international supporters with a focus on humanitarian issues and public services. Vadym Boychenko, Mariupol’s mayor in exile, said earlier this month: “We believe in our armed forces and the inevitability of Ukraine’s victory.” For Russia to lose its model city would be a humiliation. Newly-built apartment blocks in Mariupol ALEXANDER ERMOCHENKO/REUTERS SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 17 News in brief CHINA Xi heads to Moscow in coup for Kremlin China’s President, Xi Jinping, will visit Russia next week, just as relations between Moscow and Washington hit a new low. It is a coup for Russian President, Vladimir Putin, whose country has been put under unprecedented international sanctions after it invaded Ukraine last year. Beijing and Moscow struck a “no limits” partnership before the invasion and US and European leaders fear Beijing may send arms to Russia. China has denied any such plan. Russia said Mr Xi and Mr Putin would discuss the conflict and “military-technical cooperation”. TURKEY Erdogan backs Finland’s Nato bid Turkey’s President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, said yesterday that his government would move forward with ratifying Finland’s Nato application, paving the way for the country to join the military bloc ahead of Sweden. The breakthrough came as he met his Finnish counterpart, Sauli Niinistö (above left) in Ankara. Both Finland and Sweden applied to join Nato in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, abandoning decades of nonalignment. Nato requires the unanimous approval of its 30 members to expand. REUTERS MILITARY Pilots rewarded for drone downing The Russian defence minister, General Sergei Shoigu, presented awards to the pilots of two Su-27 fighter planes that intercepted a US drone over Ukraine, his ministry said yesterday. The drone crashed into the Black Sea on Tuesday after being intercepted by Russian jets. Announcing the awards, the ministry said: “The MQ-9 unmanned aerial vehicle went into uncontrolled flight with a loss of altitude and collided with the water surface.” It said the drone had been flying with its transponders off and violating airspace restrictions that Russia had made public. REUTERS
18 NEWS RUSSIA Wagner mercenary prison recruits pay a bloody price for their freedom By Filipp Lebedev and Felix Light In October last year, a Russian news site published a short video of Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Group Russian mercenary army, sitting with four men on a rooftop ter- race in the resort town of Gelendzhik on Russia’s Black Sea coast. Two are missing parts of a leg. A third has lost an arm. They are identified as pardoned former convicts, returned from the front in Ukraine after joining Wagner from prison. “You were an offender, now you’re a war hero,” Prigozhin tells one man in the clip – the first video to depict the return of some of the thousands of convicts who joined Wagner in return for the promise of a pardon if they survived six months of war. Reuters used facial recognition software to examine more than a dozen videos and photographs of homecoming convict fighters, published between October 2022 and February 2023. Reporters identified more than 30 of the men by crosschecking the images with social media and Russian court documents. In their ranks are murderers, thieves and a self-declared “Satanist”. Several are in hospital recovering from war wounds. Four said they were personally recruited by Prigozhin as he toured Russia’s prison system to bolster his private army. Some were deployed to Ukraine’s eastern Bakhmut region, site of some of the most intense fighting, where one man described the “utter hell” of the battlefield. A former Wagner commander who fled to Norway in January It takes time to learn combat basics – a couple of weeks alone isn’t going to do that much for you has said he witnessed members of Wagner’s internal security administering brutal treatment to prisoner recruits, including executions for desertion. Combat training, some conducted by veterans of Russia’s special forces, was short but intensive, according to the men. Ukrainian and Western officials say Wagner is sending poorly prepared fighters to certain death. Mike Kofman, an expert in the Russian military at the CNA thinktank based in Virginia, said the two to three weeks of training received by the convict recruits would be unlikely to bring them up to speed, even if some had prior military experience. “It takes time to learn combat basics, receive individual training, and you also need some collective training as a unit on top of it – a couple of weeks alone isn’t going to do that Yevgeny Prigozhin toured prisons to bolster his army with recruits who include murderers and thieves much for you,” Mr Kofman said. A more rigorous training scheme would last several months. All five ex-prisoners expressed a fierce loyalty to Prigozhin for giving them a second chance at life. In a brief statement, Prigozhin dismissed Reuters’ questions as “crazy”. He has previously described Wagner as “probably the most experienced army that exists in the world today” and said its casualty rate is comparable to other Russian units. When Prigozhin began touring Russia’s sprawling penal system in summer 2022 offering pardons to those who agreed to fight in Ukraine, word quickly spread among prisoners. Rustam Borovkov, from the small town of Porkhov, near Russia’s border with Estonia, was one of the four men filmed on the rooftop. Court records show that the 31-year-old was six years into a 13year term for manslaughter and theft when Prigozhin reached his prison, Penal Colony No 6 in the western Pskov region. “I knew right away that I would go, even before he came to us,” he said. Borovkov said training was conducted by former members of Russia’s special forces. He added: “Everything was organised at the highest level. It wasn’t that they gave me a gun, showed me how to shoot and that’s it. No, they explained everything in great detail. Mining, demining, tactics, shooting, training. Everything.” REUTERS SOCIAL MEDIA New Zealand bans TikTok on parliamentary network By Lucy Craymer New Zealand said yesterday that it would ban TikTok on devices with access to the country’s parliamentary network because of security concerns, becoming the latest nation to limit the use of the video-sharing app on government-related devices. Concerns have mounted globally about the potential for the Chinese government to access users’ location and contact data through ByteDance, TikTok’s Chinese parent company. This week in the US the Joe Biden administration demanded TikTok’s Chinese owners divest their stakes or the app could face a US ban. In New Zealand, TikTok will be banned on all devices with access to parliament’s network by the end of March. Rafael Gonzalez-Montero, chief executive of the parliamentary service, said advice was taken from cybersecurity experts and discussions were held within government and with other countries. “Based on this information, the service has determined that the risks are not acceptable,” he said. Special arrangements can be made for those who require the app to do their jobs, he added. ByteDance did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 19 FOCUS Children’s teeth go back to 1940s Lack of access to NHS care is putting young patients at risk of tooth decay and loss. By Serina Sandhu Costly option Parents told to go private I t’s not unusual for Laura Marsham to see a child having 10 teeth extracted during her Saturday morning hospital shift. “It’s shocking really,” says the dental nurse. “Half of their teeth are coming out.” These are the early signs of a crisis in children’s dental health that experts are predicting will mean an unexpected comeback for dentures and is already leading to a cohort of pupils losing sleep and time in school because of the pain of tooth decay. Ms Marsham has noticed a rise in the problem since the pandemic. She says the solution is check-ups every six months, adding: “If you leave it until you’ve got a problem, nine times out of 10, the tooth’s gone. It needs to be taken out.” But children cannot easily get an NHS appointment, let alone see a dentist every six months unless, as i has learned, their parents pay for private treatment for themselves as a quid pro quo. In the 12 months to June 2022, 46.2 per cent of children in England saw a dentist, down from 52.7 per cent before the pandemic, according to NHS statistics. Part The tragedy is that the most vulnerable in our community will be most affected of the problem with booking dental appointments is the backlog created by the pandemic. But critics claim that the root of the issue is a deeply flawed, unworkable and inflexible NHS contract system, which dentists say does not adequately fund them for the work they do. They are voting with their feet and going private on a scale described to i as a “haemorrhage” of experienced staff. And patients who cannot afford to follow them then miss out. “We haven’t got picket lines of dentists around the country. What we have got is a workforce that is changing the way that they deliver services to the population,” says Eddie Crouch, the chairman of the principal executive committee at the British Dental Association. It recently revealed that half of dentists had cut back on NHS work. Mr Crouch says: “Perhaps the comparator would be the pre-NHS days. From 1948, the early years [were] dealing with large numbers of patients needing extractions and dentures. It was the reason dental charges were introduced to try to stifle demand.” Only 20 per cent of NHS dental practices are taking on new child patients, according to data from last August published by the BBC. Meanwhile, government figures show that tooth decay remains the most common reason for hospital admissions in children aged six to 10, with more than 25,000 children having decaying teeth removed in hospital last year. But the need for dental care is greater than ever. The pandemic meant that 38 million hours of dental appointments were missed. Meanwhile, the sudden explosion in home schooling also meant easy access to unhealthy diets, worsening children’s oral health. Children come to dentists with much more advanced dental problems than before the pandemic because the ability to deliver prevention and stop the tooth decaying has been lost, according to Mr Crouch. He adds: “Children are turning up with problems that are too advanced to do anything to change the teeth. There is a cohort of children out there who are losing time from school, they’re losing sleep [because of the pain].” The UK had been getting to the point where false teeth were often not needed in old age. But Mr Crouch says that progress could Jenny Harris says ‘urgent action’ on child dental care is needed GETTY be about to go into reverse, with a return to pre-NHS standards. “Many younger members of the population may end up going backwards in losing teeth and having to wear dentures like their grandparents decades ago,” he says. In January 2022, the Government announced £50m of funding for urgent dental appointments for the most vulnerable, including children. But the British Society of Paediatric Dentistry says that the “current NHS dental contract is not fit-for-purpose and needs urgent reform”. The society’s president, Jenny Harris, says: “It does not work for children or paediatric dentistry – nor support prevention. We are witnessing dentists handing back their NHS contracts in what appear to be record numbers. “Urgent action is needed to stem the haemorrhage of experienced teams who have the expertise to care for these children. “The tragedy is that the most vulnerable in our community will be most affected. We know that children from lower socioeconomic groups are more likely to experience dental decay and more likely to report difficulty in accessing care.” The Department of Health and Social Care says that the number of children seen by NHS dentists increased by 43.6 per cent in the past year and it is “investing more than £3bn a year in dentistry for all NHS patients”. The lack of access to NHS dental appointments is leaving parents with tough – and expensive – choices, research shows. According to recent evidence submitted to the Health and Social Care Committee’s ongoing inquiry into the NHS dentistry crisis, some children are only being offered appointments if their parents are prepared to pay for private treatment for themselves. Evidence from the patients’ group Healthwatch revealed some parents found their children cut off from NHS care. One parent said: “I have been trying to obtain an NHS dentist for my 10-year-old daughter, myself and my husband. One dentist said they could add us to a list that had a three-year wait for an appointment. “Another told me that the only way that my daughter could be seen would be if myself and my husband took a private place at a cost of £75 for an initial consultation. “This is disgraceful and holding people to ransom for their children to be able to access basic dental treatment.” Children under the age of 18 in England are entitled to free NHS dental care, while adults pay charges between £23.80 and £282.80 depending on their treatment. Private care can be substantially more expensive, with a new patient consultation costing anywhere from £20 to £120, compared to a flat fee of £23.80 on the NHS. Eddie Crouch, of the British Dental Association, described “manipulating parents into going private” as “unethical”. The NHS dental contract system, he said, needed to be ripped up to make way for vast reform. He warned that without action there might have to be “open and honest” conversations with the public about what they can expect in terms of dental care in future. Under-18s in England are entitled to free NHS dental care
20 NEWS Another View Ian Dunt Moral panic on laughing gas is about to blow up L et’s talk about laughing gas. It’s the latest drug scare. Day after day the stories roll in. “Hippy crack is ‘more dangerous than cocaine’, neurologist warns,” says the Daily Mail. “Laughing gas users risk spine damage, say doctors,” says the BBC. “Young people taking ‘150 nitrous oxide balloons a day’,” says Metro. This is the pattern which the war on drugs always follows: media scare stories, followed by a push for government action, followed by prohibition, followed by the retreat of the drug onto the black market, where people still use it, but in an unregulated context and with all of the profits flowing to criminal gangs. And that appeared to be the pattern which would play out here, with laughing gas, or nitrous oxide. The Home Secretary commissioned the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs to update its assessment of the substance in October 2021, then again last month to look at connections with antisocial behaviour, the environment and crime. It has never once worked before of course, but hey, the war on drugs is nothing if not optimistic. Despite more than a century of policy failure, its adherents always believe that a drug-free world is just around the corner, as long as they lock up enough young people. The trouble is, the advisory council didn’t play ball. It did not deliver the result the Home Secretary and the newspapers were clearly hoping for. It set up a dedicated working group involving experts from academia, clinical neurology, law enforcement and charities and approached the subject on an evidence-led basis. What it found was that laughing gas is a largely harmless and mild intoxicant. It makes people feel slightly euphoric and giggly for about a minute, probably due to inhibition of excitatory glutamatergic neurotransmission. It’s not completely harmless, not by a long shot. There are deaths, although the stats on these include the use of the substance in medical A recent assessment found nitrous oxide to be largely harmless settings, where it is used as an anaesthetic and analgesic. Even then though, the numbers remain tiny. The highest number of annual deaths was eight, in both 2016 and 2019. In 2020 there were three. These deaths are because of secondary effects rather than the gas itself – typically asphyxiation. Very heavy use of the gas can lead to neurological disorder by damaging the tracts of the spinal cord and peripheral nerves through the inactivation of vitamin B12. It is potentially serious, but can be treated if recognised early by stopping use of the gas and taking vitamin supplements. Case studies showed that some of those suffering from it were using 200 or more cartridges per day. What about societal harm? That is also low to non-existent. There is no evidence of people becoming more aggressive or violent. There is no evidence of criminal networks in the distribution of the drug – although the European Crime Prevention Network has warned that there could be if we ban it. There is no evidence of links between use of the drug and crime. There is no evidence of a link with antisocial behaviour. There is, of course, the litter. You will probably have seen the metallic canisters used to take the drug in any town park. The canisters are a wasteful nuisance, but even that is overblown. In terms of emissions, nitrous oxide use in medical or veterinary settings far exceeds that of drug users, by around 150 times. Taken together, that evidence led the advisory council to the only possible rational answer. “Current evidence suggests that the health and social harms are not commensurate with control under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971,” it concluded. Doing so would impose criminal prosecutions on young people which would be “disproportionate for the level of harm associated with nitrous oxide and could have significant unintended consequences”. It would also impose “significant burdens for legitimate medical, industrial, commercial and academic uses”. For more than 100 years, we have followed the same pattern of hysteria Instead, there should be restrictions on consumer sales, information campaigns to young people which avoid sensationalising or exaggerating the dangers and health information on packaging. So now the ball is back in the Home Secretary’s side of the court. Does she respond in an evidencedbased way, thinking about the lives of young people which would be pointlessly ruined by the criminal prosecutions imposed on them in the case of outright prohibition? Or does she follow the press scare campaign and launch a crackdown? Unfortunately, the Home Secretary is Suella Braverman, so we have little reason to be confident in her judgement. But then, even far superior home secretaries would have done the same. For more than 100 years, we have followed the same pattern of hysteria, legislation and unintended consequence, all while stuffing the pockets of criminal gangs with gold and reporting increases in drug use. The war on drugs was the original form of post-truth politics. And there’s little sign yet that the Government intends to prioritise evidence over dogma.
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 Welcome signs point Essex man in new direction Will you still need me? Anneka Rice takes on new ‘Challenge’ at 64 CHANNEL 5 HHHHH Not many celebrities are as famous viewed from the back as the front, but Anneka Rice was arguably one of them. First in Channel 4’s Treasure Hunt in the 80s and then in the BBC’s Challenge Anneka in the early 90s, a cameraman would pursue Rice as she leapt from helicopters, raced across fields and clambered up stairwells. Her jumpsuited posterior was even satirised by Spitting Image. That was then, this is now – and Channel 5’s resurrection of Challenge Anneka, in which the presenter is given three days to complete an ambitious challenge, is resorting to various Pavlovian triggers to remind us of former glories, from the gimmicky helicopter ride to the original signature music . Rice is 64 now and there is less 21 PEOPLE First Watch Challenge Anneka SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 of the frantic running about that characterised the original show. It’s hard to imagine the Rice of 30 years ago joking that, “I’m going to have a heart attack.” Her first project was a caninerescue centre sure to appeal to the same audience that adores Paul O’Grady: For the Love of Dogs. Rice’s challenge was to instal new kennels, a grooming room and agility playground. She also revamped its website and installed a hydrotherapy pool. “I’m sure we can do something to help,” said the wily owner of Hot Tub Barn. And if we know the name of this supplier, it is because we were afforded a no-doubt quid pro quo glimpse of his signage. Challenge Anneka itself had to face up to diminished brand recognition, however. Offering the programme title to one supplier who had never heard of it, Rice asked whether there was someone older she might speak to. That’s probably the By Izzy Hawksworth A man with autism is trying to have his photo taken with every “Welcome to Essex” sign on the county’s border in an effort to boost his confidence. Kireon Wicks, 20, has travelled hundreds of miles to find the signs and posed with 15 of them so far. He became fascinated with the signs after looking at a map and spends weekends hunting them with his mother, Emma Church, 36. They have visited Manningtree, Dedham, Long Melford, Haverhill, Cavendish, Maggotts End and Buckhurt Hill. Ms Church said her son (below) lost his confidence last year when someone at a local park told him he had “no right to be here”. She said: “This has got him talking to people again and trying to interact.” The gimmick of the helicopter ride to the challenge is still part of the furniture demographic this reboot will appeal to most. Every attempt was made to bother viewers’ tear-ducts, yet the episode still didn’t quite have the emotional clout of, say, DIY:SOS. Justifying the revival’s existence against such robust opposition might be Anneka’s biggest challenge yet. Gerard Gilbert

NEWS NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 23 CULTURE Coronation singer urges BBC to U-turn on cuts Exclusive By Adam Sherwin ARTS AND MEDIA CORRESPONDENT Roderick Williams, the renowned baritone who will star at the King’s coronation, has urged the decision to axe the BBC Singers be reversed. He said closing the UK’s only fulltime chamber choir and cutting BBC orchestra numbers undermined the “ethos” of the broadcaster. However, Williams (inset) said he did not support calls for musicians to boycott BBC events, including the Proms, because it would make it harder for bosses to backtrack. Politicians have condemned the move to axe the Singers, at a cost of 24 jobs, one year shy of the group’s centenary. More than 125,000 people have signed a petition to save the ensemble, citing its commit- ment to performing free concerts and introducing choral singing to children. Williams, one of three soloists who will perform at Westminster Abbey, and who was commissioned by the King to write a composition, said: “I would prefer [management] to come to an understanding that keeping the BBC Singers and finding other ways to re- duce the budget without drastic cuts to their prize orchestras is actually part of the ethos of the BBC.” The BBC said the move would allow it “to invest more widely in the future of choral singing” in the UK and launch a choral development programme. It is cutting 20 per cent of the BBC Philharmonic, Symphony and Concert orchestra staff. BBC Singers directors blamed a “culture of fear and paranoia” at a broadcaster still reeling from the Gary Lineker tweets row. Shadow arts minister Barbara Keeley called it “cultural vandalism”. Tory MP Anna Firth urged it to reconsider the “devastating decision”. The BBC is discussing its plans with the Musicians’ Union. It said: “Whilst some may disagree with the tough decisions we’ve had to make in financially challenging times, we have developed the classical strategy carefully and diligently. We need to modernise.” BUSINESS MONARCHY Ann Summers boss Jacqueline Gold dies aged 62 Harry ‘could not afford to pay for private security’ By Connie Dimsdale The family of Jacqueline Gold, the founder of the Ann Summers lingerie chain, paid tribute to her yesterday as “the most incredible woman” following her death from breast cancer at the age of 62. The businesswoman died on Thursday night surrounded by her relatives after “courageously battling stage four breast cancer for seven years”, her sister Vanessa said. Her family said they were “utterly heartbroken” and described her as “a trailblazer” and “a visionary”. Ms Gold passed away just two Chris Brook-Carter, the chief executive of the Retail Trust, described Ms Gold as a “pioneer, friend and beacon for the retail industry” who had driven the agenda for diversity and inclusion. months after the death of her father, David Gold, the joint chairman of West Ham United Football Club. The businessman was born into poverty but ended up on the Sunday Times Rich List, with a family fortune estimated at £460m in 2020. He died on 4 January after a short illness, aged 86. Ms Gold’s family announced her death with “unspeakable sadness”, saying she “passed away with her husband Dan, daughter Scarlett, sister Vanessa and brother-in-law Nick by her side”. Vanessa Gold said: “Jacqueline was an absolute warrior throughout her cancer journey. “In life she was a trailblazer, a visionary and the most incredible woman. As a family, we are utterly heartbroken at the loss of our wife, mum, sister and best friend.” A spokesman for West Ham United said everyone at the club was “deeply shocked and saddened” by her death. By Euan O’Byrne Mulligan Jacqueline Gold grew the business into a success KIRSTY WIGGLESWORTH/PA The business tycoon and Dragons’ Den judge Theo Paphitis wrote online: “So sorry to hear of the passing of Jacqueline Gold. She was a lovely lady and it was an honour to have known her.” Ms Gold was appointed CBE in 2016 for her services to entrepreneurship, women in business and social enterprise. The first Ann Summers store opened in 1970 as a sex shop before it was bought by brothers Ralph and David Gold. Ms Gold joined the business when she was 19 and remoulded it into a female-friendly, sex-positive chain specialising in sex toys and lingerie. She became its chief executive in 1987, transforming the firm into a multimillion-pound business which now has 81 shops in the UK, Ireland and the Channel Islands. The Duke of Sussex argued that he and his wife, Meghan, could not afford to pay for security until they were able to earn their own money, court documents have revealed. The message was disclosed as part of his libel claim against Associated Newspapers Limited – which owns the Mail on Sunday – after the paper alleged that he had made no offer to pay for his security before he issued legal proceedings against the Home Office. The Daily Telegraph reported that the Duke sent an email to the Queen’s private secretary, Sir Edward Young, in April 2020 in which he made it clear “we couldn’t afford private security until we were able to earn”.It claimed Harry had tried to keep secret details of his legal fight with the Government over his publicly funded protection – which was withdrawn in 2020. The Mail claimed his aides told journalists that he was being denied the right to pay for his bodyguards. The High Court ruled in July that the Mail report was defamatory.
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Charlene White on shock date with sister p29 l Patrick Cockburn on Ukraine-Iraq war parallels p30 opinion GUEST COLUMNIST – DAN WALKER There’s one treachery I can never forgive Mum for D “ ad, what will it be like sharing your birthday with Mother’s Day? Do we bring you breakfast in bed or mum?” This was one of the questions our kids were posing this week. I obviously made a dad joke about my birthday being the most important day of the year, but reminded them that it was essential that they made the day special for their mum. Mother’s Day, or Mothering Sunday as my Auntie Gillian used to call it, is a movable feast. Christmas Day, Halloween and Valentine’s Day are far more stubborn, but the day we choose to focus on the mums changes every year in the UK calendar. It tends to fall on the fourth Sunday of Lent, three Sundays before Easter. I did a little research and apparently it is rooted in the Middle Ages tradition of children who worked in domestic service being allowed to go back to their “mother” church for the weekend. As with many of these celebratory occasions, there is an American influence. A woman called Anna Jarvis (the daughter of an activist who organised treatment for wounded soldiers during the American Civil War), campaigned for a day to honour the role played by mothers. At the birth of the 20th century, she opted for the second Sunday in May and, by 1911, every state in the US had signed up. In 1914, President Woodrow Wilson declared it a national holiday. In some countries it is rooted in religion, others base the date around the seasons, while in Russia and among certain communities in Afghanistan, the maternal love is tied in to International Women’s Day on 8 March. The vast majority of countries follow the US example (so the day falls on 14 May this year) but here, we are celebrating it this weekend… on my birthday. In the Walker household growing up, my dad, who is lovely by the way, put Mother’s Day in very much the same bracket as Valentine’s Day. He would always say that we didn’t need a specific day to celebrate and appreciate mum… we did it every day! While my dad still steadfastly holds to that principle, our kids have been encouraged to embrace it a little more. I am one of four children and I do remember that we used to take mum a fairly average cup of tea and some limp toast on the morning of Mother’s Day. I have visions of our rather bouncy Labrador, Honey, trying to demolish the toast, dribbling profusely and jumping all over the bed like a lunatic. We have friends now who are very strict about how they observe Mother’s and Father’s Day. The person who is being celebrated is not allowed to lift a finger: no cooking, no cleaning – everything is done for them. That might be difficult to implement in our house this weekend as we have the birthday/ Mother’s Day clash. I won’t tell you what the kids and I have got for my wife, because I’m pretty sure she will read this article and that would ruin it. If you’re interested in what I might get for my birthday, I asked for some new shaving foam, anything to do I can still see the Millennium Falcon she inexplicably swapped for a Sindy car with golf and I’ve been dropping some enormous hints about a pair of Stormtrooper bookends that I have been admiring for months. In terms of my mum, thankfully I have two magnificently efficient sisters who love making lists. I have never seen so much devotion to the power of the list. My little sister has been known to ask me about potential Christmas presents in March and the older one will normally send out a full Excel spreadsheet months ahead of a family gathering. With organisational powers like that, they tend to take control of Mother’s Day present buying. So mum, if you’re sat reading this with a lovely bunch of flowers and some chocolates next to you, if I’m being honest, I do love you… but you have your daughters to thank for that. My mum has spent her life looking after other people. Being Welsh, she has always been amazing at making sacrifices and working her backside off. The only thing I have ever held against her is that she once gave away my prized possession. If I close my eyes, I can still see the mint-condition Millennium Falcon which, for some inexplicable reason, she swapped for a “Sindy car” for one of my sisters. It broke me. I got my own back by taking the bright yellow wagon into the garden and painting it in camouflage colours, but it was a deep burn. Despite that, the fact that it’s my birthday, and that I really would love the Star Wars bookends, I hope that my mother, my wife, and all the other mums out there, have a day to remember where they feel truly special. @mrdanwalker This week I have been... Cycling... Finally, I’m back on my bike! It’s been nearly a month since I was hit by a car on a roundabout in Sheffield. I have been asked a lot about whether or not I would return, but I never really considered not doing it. My face still aches, this week I had an injection in my swollen hip, I can’t feel part of my lip and I may have lost the blood supply to a tooth, but I can’t wait to get back out there. My old bike is still being fixed but I have an electric Gocycle (left) at the ready and I also have a helmet with snazzy lights on it to replace the one that protected my noggin from the tarmac. Hosting... It was a real pleasure to host the Ultimate News Quiz. It is a brilliant event which brings together some of the top newsrooms in the country to answer a devilishly difficult set of questions while raising money for charity. This year, we managed to give nearly £250,000 to Action for Children. I was hosting alongside my good friend, and former BBC Breakfast co-presenter, Sally Nugent (left). My colleagues from 5 News managed to win the whole thing! I was booed when we announced it. Here is one of the questions for you: prior to the Queen, when was the last time a British monarch was buried in the UK? (Answer at end.) Decorating... our home. We currently have our fridge and dining table wedged in our hall because we are having a new floor installed in the kitchen and changing the colour of the walls. We are going for a dark navy and a shade called “Matchstick”. There are dust sheets and brushes everywhere, so although I’m confident there will be some sort of cake to celebrate the dual occasion of my birthday and Mother’s Day this weekend, I’m not entirely sure where we will be eating it. Answer: 2015, when Richard III was reinterred in Leicester Cathedral after being found in a car park.
26 OPINION i@inews.co.uk @theipaper The i Paper Please include a contact address with all email correspondence The Opinion Matrix COMMENT FROM HOME AND ABROAD PENSION PERKS RENTAL CRISIS SAVE THE TREES HOLOCAUST COMPARISONS REPARATIONS INDUSTRY McGUINNESS BREAK UP Hunt reforms are a huge tax cut for the rich Renters may swallow poor conditions Why council axeman visits in the night Lineker’s real nuance lost in the hype How we relate to the past is misunderstood Ask yourself why you are sneering Daily Express The Guardian The Times The Conversation The Daily Telegraph The Independent You do have to ask: is this really going to help the Tories turn around their fortunes and win the next election? For once, I think Labour is right with its attack line. Mr Hunt’s pension reforms amount to a huge tax cut for the very wealthy - while ordinary people have been clobbered. Mr Hunt was not wrong to tackle the issue of the pension lifetime allowance. But he didn’t just raise it; he abolished it, Accountants were cocka-hoop, as pensions have suddenly become a highly effective way of avoiding inheritance tax. That would be all well and good if the Chancellor was not simultaneously hitting middle-earners with a huge tax rise through fiscal drag. (Ross Clarke) Renters’ advocacy groups report that individual rent increases of 20 per cent and even more are common. And no-fault evictions under section 21 are still not outlawed – although the Government has committed to doing so in this Parliament. At such a tense time – when market rates are increasingly unaffordable, and even responsible landlords might be led astray by greed – renters may count themselves lucky to have a roof over their head, no matter how leaky it is. Without security of tenure, even those fortunate enough to have landed a fair-minded landlord may think twice before calling attention to themselves. (Elle Hunt) Who are these people who sit in offices and give orders to chop down trees? They’re everywhere. Plymouth, where 129 horse chestnuts and hawthorns were removed in the dead of night for a regeneration project. Sheffield, where a street improvement scheme meant the sacrifice of 17,500 healthy specimens. London, with 50 centuries-old plane trees making way for Euston’s new ticket office. Wellingborough, and 40 lime trees due to be felled, to create access to a dual carriageway. The axeman came for Plymouth’s trees at midnight. That’s the clue. Anything the council has to get up to under the cover of darkness is never good news. (Martin Samuel) Gary Lineker had not mentioned the Holocaust, the systematic murder of six million European Jews. His tweet referred to the exclusion of German Jews from German society in the 1930s, and to the role that language plays in “othering” and demonising human beings – Jews then, refugees today. But that nuance got lost in the hype. The Holocaust was made possible by a hatred of the Jewish religion and culture that is deeply embedded in our culture, and that did not end in 1945. Only if we constantly challenge antisemitism in our own heritage and identity can we truly hope to learn lessons from the Holocaust – and make meaningful comparisons with the present. (Maiken Umbach) A whole reparations industry is coming into existence. The latest sign is that Laura Trevelyan has resigned her position as a news presenter to concentrate on being a “roving advocate” for reparations. But whether or not any money is ever paid out to the descendants of slaves, plenty is finding its way into studies and campaigns. In Shelby county in Tennessee, a scoping exercise to look into the feasibility of reparations is set to cost $5m. As this cottage industry takes hold, few ask whether reparations are appropriate in the first place. At the root of the reparations movement is a deep misunderstanding about how we relate to the past. (David Abulafia) Who cares if Paddy and Christine’s break-up doesn’t fit the mould of the classic “couple who hate each other’s guts” – isn’t the fact that they apparently remain loving and mindful of each other, even in the wake of something as painful as the end of a marriage, something to celebrate? So-called social boundaries, in my opinion, are entirely subjective – what works in terms of closeness for one person might be a suffocating nightmare to another, and vice versa. The only thing that matters is individual happiness, and the happiness of the children. If you’re tempted to sneer at Paddy and Christine’s amicable split, ask yourself why. (Victoria Richards) Life In Brief QUOTE OF THE DAY BOBBY CALDWELL SINGER There’s a politeness to Swedes. But deep down we’re animals Alexander Skarsgård The actor on his Swedish temperament Bobby Caldwell, a soulful R&B singer and songwriter who had a major hit in 1978 with “What You Won’t Do for Love” and a voice and musical style adored by generations of his fellow artists, has died, his wife said. Mary Caldwell said he died in her arms at their home in Great Meadows, New Jersey, on Tuesday, after a long illness. He was 71. The smooth soul jam “What You Won’t Do for Love” went to number nine on the Billboard Hot 100 and number six on what was then called the Hot Selling Soul Singles chart. It became a long-term standard and career-defining hit for Caldwell, who also wrote the song. The song was covered by artists, including Boyz II Men and Michael Bolton, and was sampled by Tupac Shakur on his posthumously-released song “Do For Love”. Other Caldwell songs were sampled by hip-hop artists including The Notorious B.I.G, Common, Lil Nas X and Chance the Rapper. Stories abound, many of them shared on social media after his death, of listeners being surprised to learn that Caldwell was white and not black. He appeared in silhouette on the self-titled debut solo album on which “What You Won’t Do for Love” appears. “Caldwell was the closing chapter in a generation in which record execs wanted to hide faces on album covers so perhaps maybe their artist could have a chance,” Questlove said on Instagram. “Thank you for your voice and gift #BobbyCaldwell.” Chance the Rapper shared a screenshot on Instagram of a direct message exchange he had with Caldwell last year, when he asked to use his music. “I’ll be honoured if you sample my song,” Caldwell wrote. Born in New York and raised in Miami, Caldwell was the son of singers who hosted a musical variety TV show called Suppertime. A multiinstrumentalist, he began performing professionally at 17, and got his break playing guitar in Little Richard’s band in the early 1970s. He then played in various bar bands in Los Angeles before landing a solo record deal. Caldwell would never have a hit that came close in prominence to “What You Won’t Do for Love”, but he released several respected albums, including 1980’s Cat in The Hat - and 1982’s Carry On, on which he was his own producer and played all the instruments. His song “Open Your Eyes” from Cat in The Hat was covered by John Legend and sampled by Common on his Grammy-nominated 2000 single “The Light”. In the 1990s, Caldwell shifted to recording and performing American standards, including songs made popular by Frank Sinatra and Nat King Cole, that he loved in his youth. In addition to Mary, his wife of 19 years, Caldwell is survived by daughters Lauren and Tessa and stepdaughter Katie. AP Born 15 August 1951 Died 14 March 2023
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 27 To purchase signed or unsigned Ben Jennings prints, visit benjennings.newsprints.co.uk GPT-4, tech’s new darling, resets AI’s horizon My View John Thornhill T echnology, they say, is about turning the magical into the mundane. A decade ago, digital assistants such as Siri, Alexa and Cortana seemed like astonishing inventions. Nowadays, Microsoft’s chief executive, Satya Nadella, dismisses them as “dumb as a rock”. How quickly will today’s much-hyped generative AI models become similarly humdrum? On Tuesday, San Francisco-based research firm OpenAI released its latest content-generation model GPT-4, demonstrating nifty new features such as helping to calculate a tax return. OpenAI’s launch of its uncannily plausible, if unnervingly flawed, ChatGPT chatbot in November caused a sensation. But in several significant ways, GPT-4 is even more impressive. The new model is more accurate and powerful, and has greater reasoning capabilities. ChatGPT struggles to answer the question: what’s the name of the daughter of Laura’s mother? But, as the philosopher Luciano Floridi found when experimenting, the new GPT-4 model gives the correct answer (Laura, in case you’re wondering) when told the question is a logic puzzle. Moreover, GPT-4 is a multimodal model, combining both text and images. At the launch event, Greg Brockman, OpenAI’s co-founder, quickly turned a photograph of a handwritten note into a functioning website containing some awful dad jokes. “Why don’t scientists trust atoms?” GPT-4 asked.“Because they make up everything.” The applications of these generative AI models are seemingly limitless, which explains why venture capital investors are pouring money into the sector. These models are also seeping into all kinds of existing digital services. Microsoft, a big investor in OpenAI, has embedded GPT-4 in its Bing search engine. The payments company Stripe is using it to help detect online fraud. Iceland is even employing GPT-4 to improve local language chatbots. That is surely worth it just to preserve the lovely Icelandic word for computer: tölva, meaning “number prophetess”. Big companies, such as Microsoft and Google, will be the first to deploy these systems at scale. But some start-ups see opportunities in arming the smaller battalions. Josh Browder, who runs the robolawyer company DoNotPay, which ChatGPT caused a sensation… GPT-4 is even more impressive contests parking tickets, says GPT-4 will be a powerful new tool to help users counter automated systems. His company is already working on embedding it into an app to issue oneclick lawsuits against nuisance robocallers. The technology could also be used to challenge medical bills or cancel subscriptions. “My goal is to give power back to the people,” Browder tells me. Alongside the positive uses of generative AI, however, there are many less visible abuses. Humans are susceptible to the so-called Eliza effect, or falsely attributing human thoughts and emotions to a computer system. This can be an effective way to manipulate people, warns Margaret Mitchell, researcher at the Hugging Face AI company. Machine learning systems, which can synthesise voices and generate false personalised emails, have already contributed to a surge in imposter scams in the US. Last year, the Federal Trade Commission recorded 36,000 reports of people being swindled by criminals pretending to be friends or family. They can also be used for generating disinformation. It is perhaps telling that China’s regulators have instructed their tech companies not to offer ChatGPT services, seemingly for fear of losing control over information flows. Much remains mysterious about OpenAI’s models. The company accepts that GPT-4 exhibits societal biases and hallucinates facts. But the company says it spent six months stress-testing GPT-4 for safety and has introduced guardrails through a process known as reinforcement learning from human feedback. “It’s not perfect,” Brockman said at the launch. “But neither are you.” Furious rows over the training of these models seem inevitable. One researcher has been periodically testing ChatGPT’s “bias” by prompting it to answer political-orientation questions. Initially, ChatGPT fell in the left-libertarian quadrant but has been moving towards the neutral centre as the model has been tweaked. But, in an online post, the AI researcher David Rozado argues it will be hard to eliminate pervasive societal biases and blind spots reflected on the internet. “Political biases in state of the art AI systems are not going away,” he concludes. Elon Musk, a founder of OpenAI who later quit the company, has repeatedly criticised “woke AI” and is exploring whether to launch a less restrictive model, according to The Information. “What we need is TruthGPT,” he tweeted. Such rows over bias are only a foretaste of far bigger fights to come. ARTICLE REPUBLISHED FROM THE FINANCIAL TIMES @johnthornhillft
28 OPINION i@inews.co.uk @ Your View Tweets, emails and letters to: The Editor, i, 9 Derry Street, London W8 5HY @theipaper The i Paper Please include a contact address with all email correspondence Great lessons in migrant history I just wanted to say how impressed I am with Yasmin Alibhai-Brown’s writing, and particularly her column on Friday (i, 17 March). She is able to draw on pertinent facts and historical information to show the current pervasive racism, endemic in this country, for what it really is: shameful prejudice and ignorance. She speaks of losing patience with it, but she is much more patient than I am now, in that she can still logically refute the fallacies and argue her case. I am in my seventies and encounter these poisonous attitudes daily. I can’t think quickly enough to challenge it all the time. Thank you Yasmin for showing us how to at least try to debunk these views. ELAINE DRAIN BY EMAIL Thank you, Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, for your migration history lesson. It makes me wonder how the original Celtic ancestors of these islands would view the notion that these are now “our” shores to be defended against imagined “invasion”. We are all migrants here. JOHN DENNISON BY EMAIL Fill potholes and level up If filling potholes is part of the levelling up package (i, 16 March), the sooner they are all levelled up the better. CYNTHIA HOLLAND GRANTHAM Afternoon ads now make sense Just a few lines to agree with the excellent letter from Lesley Skorupka (Your View, 17 March) regarding TV advertising in the afternoons. I’m retired and watch a lot of afternoon TV programmes. I hadn’t connected the range of ads mainly concerning mobility aids until Lesley’s excellent letter. FRANCIS FOX BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND What’s in a surname? Well done Al Tansley (i, 16 March) for adopting the surname of his wife. I was married to my wife for 40 years and we each kept our own surnames throughout without any problems whatsoever. Occasionally we might be asked for a copy of our marriage certificate for identification but that caused no problems. MALCOLM GELSTHORPE EDWINSTOWE, NOTTINGHAMSHIRE Our commitment A marriage doesn’t mean having to change names GETTY Years ago, one of our local councillors called herself by her first and middle names, thus avoiding use of the patronymic and discarding the names of her father and husband. We have a long way to go. VALERIE WEBB LONDON I’m an unmarried woman and have been with my partner 38 years. Our daughter has my name and our son my partner’s. It was a decision based on what we wanted, not on antiquated social patriarchal norms. FRAN GIDDINGS FALMOUTH Budget forgets those under 45 After the Budget, I realise I am going to have £21 extra in my pay packet. However, my rent ​ e take very seriously our responsibility to W maintain high editorial standards, and are grateful to readers for pointing out any errors. ​​i adheres to the Independent Press Standards Organisation (Ipso) code of practice. If you wish to complain about our editorial coverage, especially with relation to inaccuracy or intrusion, please write to The Editor, i, 9 Derry Street, London, W8 5HY, or email reader@inews.co.uk. You can contact Ipso directly at Gate House, 1 Farringdon Street, London, EC4M 7LG, telephone 0300 123 2220, or by email on inquiries@ipso.co.uk. is going up. So is my council tax. And my bills. The Conservatives have once again, remembered to forget about those under 45 who’ve seen every opportunity afforded to our parents taken away. But then again, as we’re less likely to vote Conservative, perhaps it isn’t forgetfulness that’s leading to us being sidelined in favour of the wealthy and retired. JO SELWOOD OXFORD Pundit-free zone is welcome I was pleased to watch Match of the Day in its changed format. No inane chatter, over-excited shouting and telling me what I could already see for myself. What a breath of fresh air. PAUL NUTTALL PINHOE, EXETER iQuiz answers (from p2) 1. Cheshire 2. James II 3. Welsh cakes 4. The Bay (right) 5. Goodwin Sands 6. San Salvador 7. Olive oil 8. South Africa 9. Da capo 10. DHL ARTS IN MONDAY’S George Ezra Review of the most positive man in pop’s latest gigs at London’s O2 Arena
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 SPORT 90-104 29 CHARLENE WHITE Being mistaken for your sister’s mother? Blame the children I t happened without warning. I was all glammed up for an International Women’s Day dinner as my sister’s date. I’d done my hair “just so”. I’d asked the make-up team at work to go a wee bit glam to save my tired eyes from kid-induced stolen sleep. I’d spent a week choosing an edgy outfit, and I’d finally found a cute pair of gold shoes that didn’t make my fat feet feel like they were being strangled. Let’s put it this way: as a woman in her forties who works full-time, has two children under five, and who had finished a long week at work, I looked in the mirror before I walked out of ITV News studios that evening and thought, “yep, this whole getup is banging”. My sister and I arrived at the private members’ club Annabel’s (hence the emphasis on glam). What happened next was completely without warning. We were stood at the bar for the pre-dinner drinks bit, with my sister discreetly whispering in my ear to let me know who each guest was (it was a room full of brilliantly talented and very glamorous women who were, yes, on the whole, slightly younger). We were sipping champagne; we were getting our picture taken. Dear reader, it really was a beautiful evening with every small detail thoughtfully arranged. And then the moment arrived. One of the guests turned to me and my sister and said: “Oh, you guys are mother and daughter! How lovely that you’ve come together!” I swear to God, all the blood rushed to my head. I thought I was having an out of body experience. I just could not comprehend WHAT ON EARTH WAS HAPPENING HERE. Thank goodness I was stood right next to the Charlene (left) and Carina at the International Women’s Day dinner GETTY Essentially me now resembling a woman nearing 70 is down to my kids bar. I grabbed it immediately to steady myself, taking deep breaths so as not to embarrass the guest, myself, and my sister. This was the first time in our entire lives that my sister and I had been mistaken for mother and daughter – you know, what with us only being FIVE YEARS APART. I’ll give you a moment to digest that. My younger sister, who popped out of my mother a cool five years after me, was just referred to as my daughter. When on earth did I suddenly age? I’ve spent a lifetime safe in the knowledge that my darker skin means I’ll age more slowly. My melanin popping meant that I was still getting ID’d at least a decade after I was legally allowed to buy booze. I mostly drink water and herbal tea. I have a pretty decent skincare routine, and I never fall asleep in my make-up. My aunt who is in her seventies looks anything but. If there’s one thing I’ve never, ever contemplated, it’s looking older than my years. And then I was mistaken as my sister’s mum. Let’s not forget, God rest her soul, my mum would be 68 years old if she were still alive. So should I feel grateful that the guest thought I was a very well-preserved 68-year-old? Honestly, my head was spinning. For the first time in I don’t know how long, I was lost for words. As I gripped on to that bar for dear life, my sister kindly interjected to say that, no, we were actually sisters, not mother and daughter. The guest, suitably embarrassed, wandered off to enjoy the rest of her evening. I, though, had it on my mind most of the night. It was such a weird thing to happen – I felt like I’d somehow turned into Sam Beckett in Quantum Leap and had jumped two decades. Where had I got it wrong with the outfit? How could this have happened? Well, the answer is simple, really. I’m writing this following seven nights of broken sleep because my daughter has decided that shouting for me when her quilt comes off in the night is the best course of action (FYI: it’s not). And what with having my children older and in quick succession, basically I haven’t had a run of unbroken sleep for at least six years. Essentially, me now resembling a woman nearing 70 is down to my kids. And I’ll be sure to remind them of that when they’re old enough to understand the consequences of their actions. But actually, the lighting in there was awful: all dimmed lights and dark walls. In fact, when I was reading the menu I had to do that ridiculous thing where you squint your eyes and hold the paper slightly away from you, so your eyes can focus on the teeny tiny words. Wait… that’s an age thing isn’t it? Oh for goodness sake. Charlene White is a presenter for ITV News and ‘Loose Women’ @CharleneWhite Reach for veg, nuts and seeds instead of ultra-processed food Tim Spector T he Mediterranean diet is the world’s most widely-researched, well-documented diet. There are slight variations on parts of it, such as the amount of dairy and alcohol consumption, but the overall pattern of the diet is consistent with its focus on whole plant foods and a lack of ultra-processed foods. Research has shown how easy the diet is. It is achievable and sustainable; it is affordable, seasonal and applicable across the globe, with the only truly exceptional ingredient being extra virgin olive oil, which appears to have unique beneficial impacts beyond that of the rest of the diet. The Mediterranean diet is unique in the way it highlights the importance of social factors and daily movement as well as food. The importance of how, where, when and why we eat as well as what we eat is all part of the latest understanding of the diet and is well supported by research in the areas where we see the world’s longest-living populations. These centenarians eat broadly in line with the Mediterranean diet and have strong social connections, purpose and daily movement . The diet has been shown to improve health from pregnancy to well into older age, reducing the risk of heart disease, high blood pressure, cognitive impairment, type 2 diabetes, cancer, obesity, depression and, most recently, dementia. Diseases related to ageing are all tightly linked with nutrition, making our food choices our most powerful tool to decrease our risk of Research has shown the Mediterranean diet is a clear winner in improving health developing them and live a longer, healthier life. As part of the ZOE health study, we analyse the diet of all our members and found those who are eating a range of different plant foods, including whole grains, nuts and seeds, alongside healthy animal foods such as fish (similar to the Mediterranean diet) are more likely to have a healthier gut microbiome score and metabolic response. One way most of us could have a more Mediterranean style diet is to add pulses, beans, lentils and whole grains to every meal. These foods offer a huge variety of benefits and are a Mediterranean diet staple. Research has shown one clear winner when it comes to improving overall health; the Mediterranean diet. The future of nutrition to promote better ageing and longevity is exciting and can be tasty. I’d love to see more of us ditching ultraprocessed and grab-and-go foods, which we know are bad for us. Instead, reach for vegetables, nuts and seeds, oily fish, and a glug of extra virgin olive oil, and make the time to enjoy food, sitting with friends and family around a table. These changes are scientifically proven to ward off these age-related diseases. I’ve been doing this for years and it’s much more enjoyable and effective than another hour in the gym! Tim Spector is co-founder of the ZOE study and professor of epidemiology at King’s College London
V1 i@inews.co.uk @theipaper The i Paper Please include a contact address with all email correspondence PATRICK COCKBURN The 2003 Iraq invasion has parallels with Ukraine I was in Erbil, the Kurdish capital of northern Iraq where Saddam Hussein had no control, when the US-led invasion began 20 years ago on 20 March 2003. The city had an empty feel to it as much of its population had fled into the countryside to escape a possible poison gas attack by the Iraqi army 30 miles away. Many of the houses had a bizarrely festive appearance as those who remained in the city had nailed plastic sheeting, often coloured a garish green, yellow, blue and red, over their windows and doors in a pathetic effort to keep out the deadly gas, supposing Saddam decided to use it. It was not only the Kurds in 2003 who feared that they would be the victims of Hussein’s weapons of mass destruction (WMD). By then, the then US president George W Bush and UK prime minister Tony Blair had largely convinced international opinion, on the dodgiest of evidence, that Iraq not only possessed WMD but might use them. In Ukraine today, the situation is quite the reverse in that the American and British governments, aided by sympathetic news outlets, have played down President Vladimir Putin’s undoubted nuclear and poison gas arsenal, suggesting that the Russian leader – despite his historic misjudgement in invading Ukraine – will coolly calculate that using WMD is not in his best interests. The fact that this wishful thinking has been so easily accepted is a sign that the Western public has lost its previous healthy scepticism – fostered by official mendacity during the Iraq war – about their governments’ motivation and competence in waging war. This enhanced credulity is not necessarily a positive development and it is worth keeping in mind that in war after war, and not just in Iraq and Afghanistan, Washington and London blundered in small things and large. There is no reason to suppose that their record will be any better in Ukraine than it was in the past. Opponents of the Iraq war are prone to write it off as a predictable catastrophe, an attitude which is highly convenient for those who supported the invasion. If failure was inevitable, then individual errors cannot have determined the final outcome. Apocalyptic denunciations of the war as a whole have had the unintended result of letting the perpetrators off the hook and preventing others from learning from their mistakes. The grim consequence of failing to learn from the Iraq invasion is to repeat many of its errors from Kabul to Benghazi. Current punditry about the war on its 20th anniversary of the Iraq invasion is repeating many of the old myths and misjudgements. The anti-Saddam Iraqi opposition A Kurdish family set up home in a tent with other refugees after fleeing from Erbil in Khalifan, Iraq, in 2003 GETTY The invasion of Iraq was welcomed; the occupation was not had a much better understanding of the Iraqi political landscape than their Western allies and were able to manipulate them for personal, party and communal interests. The Shia and Kurdish leaders, for example, were eager to destroy the Sunni-dominated state machine so they persuaded the Americans to dissolve the Iraqi armed forces and to purge anybody in the upper tiers of the Baath party. This was all part of a revolutionary change as the Shia and Kurds displaced the Sunni who were previously the dominant community. Demonisation of Saddam Hussein and his regime as the sole source of Iraq’s divisions, tended to blind the occupation authorities to the real mechanics of Iraqi politics and the intractability of the problems the country faced. The US and its allies are often accused of not having a post-war plan for Iraq, but the real difficulty was that they were chock-a-block with plans, most of them ill-conceived. The biggest strategic mistake was simple enough: the invasion and the occupation are frequently analysed as a single event. But the invasion and overthrow of the regime was welcomed, or was at least acceptable, to most Iraqis, while the permanent occupation of Iraq was not. The invasion had gone easier than expected: the Iraqi army did not fight because it knew it would lose and because, by 2003, very few Iraqis were willing to die defending a regime that had effectively destroyed their country by disastrously invading Iran in 1980 and Kuwait in 1990. Three-fifths of Iraqis are Shia Arabs, one-fifth are Kurds and one-fifth are Sunni Arabs. The Baathist regime had been largely dominated by the Sunni but by 2003 even they wanted a political change at the top. The US and its allies might have got away with the invasion and regime change had they immediately retreated after Saddam’s overthrow, possibly turning authority over to the United Nations. This would have created a power vacuum, but would still have been better than what swiftly became an old-style imperial conquest in which foreigners ruled the roost, invariably putting their own interests first. The Iraqis they favoured were the most servile and most corrupt. By 2004, the Americans and British only controlled islands of territory in Iraq. I remember a British military intelligence officer, who was stationed in Basra and spoke Arabic, telling me of his vain attempts to persuade his military superiors of the weakness of the British position because “in Malaya and Northern Ireland we had local allies, but here everybody hates us”. His negative verdict on the failing British military effort was confirmed in 2016 by the excellent Chilcot report on the British intervention, which acidly observed that “between 2003 and 2009, the UK’s most consistent strategic objective in relation to Iraq was to reduce the level of its deployed forces”. In other words, the government wanted to get out of Iraq without humiliation and without offending the Americans so they came up with the bright idea of redeploying the troops to Helmand province in Afghanistan. Iraqi domestic resistance was so lethal to the occupying armies because it could easily plug into support, including arms and ammunition supplies, from Iraq’s neighbours. Triumphant American neoconservatives had boasted in the days after the fall of Saddam Hussein about taking “Baghdad today, Tehran and Damascus tomorrow”. Inevitably, the Iranian and Syrian governments did everything to ensure that the Americans could barely cling on in Baghdad and the British in Basra. An Iraqi leader known for his pro-American sympathies told me that “the problem is that none of our neighbours without exception want a large American field army in their backyard”. I have a vivid memory of an incident in Baghdad in October 2003 when Iraqi guerrillas rigged up a mobile rocket battery that fired rockets at 6am into the al-Rashid Hotel where Paul Wolfowitz, the then US deputy secretary of defence and one of the architects of the invasion, was staying. He rushed down the stairs through the smoke in his pyjamas, saying that the attack demonstrated the desperation of the remnants of the old regime. I had climbed onto the flat roof of a house opposite the battered al-Rashid. Most of those living there were hotel staff and their families, but they were vigorously approving of the attack. Ibrahim Abdul Sattar, an articulate 11-year-old, told me that “the situation is worse than under Saddam. We want the Americans to leave”. Subscribe now to his exclusive newsletter Patrick Cockburn’s Dispatches Expert analysis on world news inews.co.uk/sign-up
NEWS NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 31 News in brief FOCUS Two fingers to decorum! HONG KONG Pair arrested over children’s books Two men have been arrested in Hong Kong for possessing picture books that authorities dislike. The men, aged 38 and 50, are believed to be the first to be arrested for simply owning the books – about sheep trying to fend off wolves. Publishers were jailed last year for the books after a court said they had “seditious intention”. Authorities interpreted them as being about China’s government and Hong Kong. Human Rights Watch said the arrests were “shameful”. The two men’s homes were raided and multiple copies seized. Both have been bailed. Swearing – and rude hand gestures – can be socially indispensible and even relieve stress, writes Susie Dent S wearing ain’t what it used to be, if we are to believe the news. In 2021, polls suggested that a third of us use stronger language today than we did five years ago. The uptick has been blamed variously on the impact of social media, gaming, movies, late-night comedy shows, and the pandemic. But whatever our reasons, we have, it seems, descended into a nation of potty mouths. Thankfully, it’s not just us. This week, a Canadian judge dismissed a harassment claim based on an aggrieved individual being shown the middle finger by his neighbour. “To be abundantly clear,” the judge wrote in his ruling, “it is not a crime to give someone the finger. Flipping the proverbial bird is a God-given, charter-enshrined right that belongs to every red-blooded Canadian.” Few of us would argue that the right to bare fingers is a lot less risky than bearing arms. But the case reignites the gnarly debate as to how much freedom of expression offers a safe space for “bad” language. Employment tribunals frequently centre around an employee’s use of profanity towards colleagues or bosses. Such discussions raise nothing new, but the question of bodily gestures ups the ante considerably. Yet this, too, is far from a modern phenomenon. Showing someone the middle finger has been a gesture of obscenity since ancient times. The Romans even called it the digitus impudicus, or “indecent finger”, for it was widely interpreted as a suggestion of an erect penis (another obscene hand gesture, the “V” sign, might then suggest a double penis). The historian Tacitus (inset right) wrote of a battle in which German tribesmen collectively gave advancing Roman soldiers the middle finger, the predecessors perhaps to the Ukrainian defenders of Snake Island, whose expletiveladen verbal response to Putin’s forces – “Russian warship, go f**k yourself” – quickly became an emblem of patriotic courage. The act of flipping the bird (so named in the 19th century because it was a silent way of delivering an aggressive, goose-like hiss) sits alongside another digital swear, “the fig”, in which the thumb is wedged between two fingers, this SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 HERITAGE Financial backers save fossil festival Ukrainians carry a picture honouring the defiant border guards from Snake Island during a march in Poland GETTY time representing female genitalia. This same gesture is even hiding within the word “sycophant”, Greek for “fig shower”, the implication being that a fawning flatterer may be saying and doing very different things behind the flatteree’s back. The repertoire of hand gestures goes on, shared across different nations as a powerful and universal language. In Elizabethan England, thumb-biting was a distinctly confrontational gesture, involving the placing of the tip of the thumb behind the front teeth and flicking it forward. In some cultures, the spreading of five fingers with the palm facing forward suggests that the recipient has “five fathers”, in other words they are a “bastard”. The age-old gesture for a “wanker”, meanwhile, is unmistakable to anyone who spends time on a British road. What is fascinating here is that much of this explicit body language has held sway since antiquity, An erect phallus was believed to divert the gaze of the evil eye with no or little reduction in their power to offend. Our verbal insults are different – many of today’s top taboos were once considerably less offensive than today. In the Middle Ages, kestrels were known as “windf**kers”, dandelions were “pissabeds”, and plants called “c**tehoare” and “bollocks grass” graced the countryside. The names Randulfus Bla de Scotebroc (roughly, Randall Shitboast) and Thomas Turd are both recorded in county court rolls in the 12th and 14th century, as is, rather improbably, a man with the surname Fuckbythenavele. At this time, it was religious profanity that attracted the deepest censure. But language has always been sweepingly circular. Walking around the Roman empire, you would have seen swathes of penis pictures – in graffiti, painted above doorways, and even drawn upon chariot wheels. An erect phallus was believed to divert the gaze of the evil eye, and talismans known as fascina were regularly hung around necks and above doorways – it was their bewitching power that gave us our word “fascinate”. But the language of penises was different, and the 10 most taboo words in Latin revolved around bodies and sex. It is no coincidence, therefore, that any body language representing them was equally powerful. Perhaps the bigger question is why humans have always needed to swear in the first place. It’s an area in which research is highly active. Scientists and medics are finding more and more evidence that swearing helps us physiologically by relieving stress, frustration, anxiety, and pain. It even has a name: “lalochezia” (literally, “mouth excrement” or, in modern terms, dumping your verbal shit). The truth is, we will never not have “bad language”. It is an innate need, whether or not we answer its call in public. Rather than stemming from a poverty of vocabulary, swearwords are, as the linguist Kate Burridge puts it, “socially and emotionally indispensable”. Hand gestures are, by this calculation, no different. As ever, though, context is everything. Red-blooded Canadians aside, it’s probably far wiser to flip your bird or show your fig in private. Indecent fingers aren’t for everyone. Susie Dent is a lexicographer and etymologist. She has appeared in ‘Dictionary Corner’ on Channel 4’s ‘Countdown’ since 1992, and co-hosts with Gyles Brandreth the podcast ‘Something Rhymes with Purple’ A festival celebrating Dorset’s Jurassic Coast will take place after all this year after being given a lifeline by new financial backers. Lyme Regis Development Trust said a “lack of response” from organisations who had previously backed it meant it had to cancel. But local groups including the parish council and Lyme Regis Museum have come to its rescue. The free event (below), which includes fossil-hunting walks, is now scheduled for 29 and 30 April. Councillor Cheryl Reynolds said: “The fossil festival has become an iconic event and the council is thrilled to give support and financial backing to ensure it continues.” TRAVEL Demand for foreign holidays recovers Demand for foreign holidays has recovered to pre-pandemic levels, a survey commissioned by the travel trade association Abta suggests. In the poll of 2,000 UK adults, conducted by research company Savanta in February, 62 per cent of respondents said they had been on a foreign holiday in the previous 12 months. That is up from 16 per cent when a similar survey was carried out in August 2021, when travel into the UK was restricted. Many tour operators and travel agents have reported record sales since the start of the year.
32 NEWS SPOTLIGHT Water wings: how hydrogen could fuel flights THINKING T HIINKING NKING N KING K ING O ON NA ANOTHER NOTHER P PLANE LANE Could we really see hydrogen-powered planes in our skies any time soon? This week the US company Universal Hydrogen showed a passenger plane, fuelled using “green hydrogen”, successfully taking off and landing at an airport in Washington state. But what might such planes look like in the skies of the future and how would they work? The same fuel that led to the ‘Hindenburg’ disaster is now being touted as an environmentally friendly way to power planes. Stuart Ritchie looks at its chances of taking off A century ago, in 1923, the eminent biologist John “JBS” Haldane wrote an essay called “Daedalus; or, Science and the Future”. Four hundred years in the future, he predicted, Britain would run on hydrogen. A network of windmills would produce energy which would split the oxygen from the hydrogen in water; the hydrogen would be liquefied and kept as fuel. That fuel could be used for industry, heating, lighting, and transportation. In particular, he mentioned “its use in aeroplanes”. Haldane did not foresee an event just 14 years later, in 1937, which dealt a near-fatal blow to the possibility of using hydrogen for aviation. The swastika-emblazoned German airship LZ 129 Hindenburg – the biggest-ever such vehicle, filled with 140,000 cubic metres of highly flammable hydrogen – dramatically exploded, killing 35 people, as it tried to dock at Lakehurst Naval Air Station in New Jersey at the end of the first North American transatlantic journey of its second season of service. Of course, the Hindenburg was using all that hydrogen – which is lighter than air – to help it float, not as jet fuel (its engines were powered by diesel). But the infamous photograph of the explosion had a chilling effect on the idea of stocking flying machines with the notoriously volatile gas. But are we finally looking at a new advent for hydrogen-powered flight? Earlier this month, the US company Universal Hydrogen released a video of its new passenger plane – a modified 40-seat De Havilland Canada Dash 8-300 fuelled using “green hydrogen” and nicknamed “Lightning McClean” – successfully taking off and landing at from Grant County airport in eastern Washington state. Other companies, including some in Britain, have also recently demonstrated their hydrogen planes – and in February, the UK Government announced £113m funding for “hydrogen and all-electric flight technologies”. Hydrogen is normally obtained from reactions such as the burning of coal or methane, which produces carbon dioxide and other pollution. But the “green” kind is so called because it Ah hydrogen ydrogen single aisle does not need d to be a radically new d i A d ti enough hh drogen ffor ttransatlantic tl ti design. Accommodating hydrogen range without sacrificing passenger capacity would add 9 meters to the length of a conventional A321 fuselage Airbus A321 Length 45 m Length 54 m Hydrogen Transatlantic concept Universal Hydrogen’s chief executive, Paul Eremenko, is bullish about the prospect of hydrogen planes comes from breaking apart water molecules in exactly the way Haldane suggested, with his vision of windmills back in 1923. Producing the hydrogen using renewable energy isn’t so damaging to the environment – nor is burning it in the plane’s engine: the main thing produced there is water, too. Universal Hydrogen’s chief executive, Paul Eremenko, is bullish about the prospect of hydrogen planes. In his firm’s video, he stated that “as early as 2025”, passengers will be able to take a “guilt-free”, environmentally friendly, “hydrogen regional flight”. And in his accompanying tweet, he added: “No, it’s not the Hindenburg.” Technically, these advances are not the first examples of hydrogen-powered
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 33 News in brief Even small amounts of liquid hydrogen can be explosive – and only a small amount of energy is needed to ignite it The V-shape wings are designed to provide greater lift A hydrogen aircraft would need a large fuselage to allow enough fuel to be stored safely in large quantities for long-distance air travel Hydrogen tanks Prepare for take-off Aviation fuel alternatives Three major candidates are: ■ Biofuels These can be produced from crops such as soybeans or oilseed rape, from waste cooking oils, even from sewage. They are less carbon-intensive than fossil fuels – but if they come from crops, they need lots of farmland and water. ■ Synthetic e-Fuels Hydrocarbons can come from a sustainable process that starts with reacting carbon dioxide with water. But it’s a difficult process: at the moment these e-fuels need more energy to produce than they make when burned. ■ Ammonia Ammonia can be made with renewable hydrogen. It is much less flammable than hydrogen itself but that means it contains a lot less energy. It also produces more pollution. Ammonia can be stored as a liquid at -33°C, so would need a lot less cooling than hydrogen. Sources: Royal Society, Irish Aviation Authority GRAPHIC: BRETT DIETRICH The hydrogen-filled German airship ‘Hindenburg’ exploded as it tried to dock after a transatlantic flight to New Jersey in 1937 GETTY flight: in the 80s, the USSR flew an experimental airliner – larger than that used by Universal Hydrogen or any other new company – the Tupolev Tu-155, which used hydrogen fuel. But it ran only a few test flights, to trial different types of fuel (it later flew using natural gas), and the collapse of the Soviet Union put paid to any further development. Could we really get to the point where planes use entirely clean fuel to take us on holiday? Probably not for a while. What wasn’t mentioned in Universal Hydrogen’s video was that its plane flew for just 15 minutes – time to do a couple of circles of the airport, but hardly enough to take you to Mallorca. The main reason for that is the physics of hydrogen. Compared with kerosene, the standard kind of jet fuel, hydrogen contains much more energy by mass. That is, for the same weight of hydrogen, you get a lot more energy than you do with kerosene. But it has much lower energy by volume – about a quarter of what you would get for the same volume of kerosene. That means that you have to have a very high volume of hydrogen on your plane to get anywhere – which, in turn, means you need a lot of space for fuel storage. To add another difficulty, hydrogen fuel must stored as a liquid, so it needs to be cooled to -253°C. All that refrigeration equipment is heavy, meaning that – as well the space taken up by the hydrogen – the plane can carry fewer passengers. Michael Liebreich, a clean energy expert and UK Government adviser, estimates that enough hydrogen for a long-haul flight would take up as much space as the entire fuselage of a passenger plane – so, taking up the space usually used for, say, crew, passengers and cargo. For short-haul flights, he reckons the hydrogen would take up about a third of the fuselage – since this means fewer passengers, he thinks we can expect “a doubling or tripling of prices”. That’s in sharp contrast to Eremenko’s description of hydrogen flights as “more affordable” – though he didn’t provide any reasoning. Getting enough hydrogen to the airport is also something of a logistical nightmare. There isn’t technology to keep pipelines cooled to the required temperature, Liebreich argues – which means we would have to rely on large numbers of tankers and trucks full of liquid hydrogen on our roads, increasing the likelihood of accidents. To quote an explainer from Nasa, “even small amounts of liquid hydrogen can be explosive when combined with air, and only a small amount of energy is required to ignite it”. We might not be talking about the Hindenburg, but the same questions about safety apply. “The bottom line”, Liebreich writes, “is that liquid hydrogen could perhaps end up powering a few executive jets… but not aviation as we know it.” Even “green hydrogen” loses its lustre upon closer inspection. The process of electrolysis used to produce hydrogen from water is currently expensive – which might explain why only 1 per cent of the world’s hydrogen supply is produced this way. The Financial Times reported in 2021 that when it comes to green hydrogen, there is “scepticism over its efficiency and whether enough can be made using renewable electricity at a commercially viable price”. Haldane did not think we would have useful hydrogen-powered planes until 2323. If companies like Universal Hydrogen are to be believed, we could beat his projection by about three centuries. But the arguments of the hydrogen sceptics are difficult to ignore: they are based on the basic science of how hydrogen works – and the inescapable fact that you need an awful lot of hydrogen to get your plane any appreciable distance. Maybe we won’t have to wait 300 years for a hydrogen holiday – but it could still be a lot longer yet. TRANSPORT Train company’s cancellations soar The train operator TransPennine Express (TPE) cancelled nearly a quarter of its services in a month. The Office of Rail and Road said the FirstGroup-owned company’s cancellation rate for the four weeks to 4 March fell from 7.2 per cent to 23.8 per cent when adjusted to include pre-cancellations stemming from a train crew shortages. TPE, which operates in northern England and Scotland, has been hit by drivers no longer volunteering for paid overtime. A recovery plan from TPE, whose contract ends in May, is being looked at by the Department for Transport. PEOPLE Irwin reveals frailty in cancer update The television presenter Jonnie Irwin said that he celebrated his 50th birthday early as he provided an update on his terminal cancer. Irwin, 49, who hosted Channel 4’s A Place In The Sun and the BBC’s Escape To The Country, said in November that he had lung cancer which had spread to his brain. He told The Sun: “I’m weak now, fragile, and my memory is terrible… but I’m still here.” Irwin (above), who has three children with his wife, Jessica, said: “I tried to play football the other day... I felt like a granddad. And that broke me a bit.” COURTS Speedboat accident skipper avoids jail The family of a 15-year-old girl fatally injured in a speedboat crash have tearfully described the moment her life support was turned off as the skipper and company owner avoided jail. Emily Lewis died after the boat collided with a buoy in Southampton Water in 2020. Skipper Michael Lawrence, 55, was found not guilty of manslaughter, but guilty of failing to maintain a proper lookout and failing to proceed at a safe speed. Owner Michael Howley, 52, was convicted of not operating safely. They were sentenced to 18 weeks in custody suspended for two years.
34 NEWS IRAQ Iraq unstable and corrupt 20 years after US invasion By Emma Reynolds Twenty years after the invasion of Iraq, the country is struggling with corruption, poverty and a lack of basic services that has seen waves of protesters flood the streets. President George Bush ordered the invasion of 20 March 2003 in what was touted as a bid to free Iraq’s people and locate weapons of mass destruction – but none were found. And the nation is still not free, according to analysis of political and civil rights by Freedom House, a non-profit organisation based in Washington, DC. Mohammed Zuad Khaman, 18, says war and poverty caused him to miss years of school. He earns about £8 a day waiting on tables at his family’s kebab café in Baghdad. “If only I could get to London, I would have a different life,” he said. A Gallup index ranks Iraq as the world’s third most unhappy country. The invasion brought a new class of politicians to power, many exiles who returned to vie for the top jobs, with corruption becoming endemic. Sunni-Shia sectarianism saw civil war plague Iraq from 2006 to 2007. In October Mohammed Shia alSudani became Iraq’s prime minister with the support of a coalition of pro-Iranian Shia parties. He has vowed to build trust in government and create tangible results in terms of job opportunities, services, and social justice, while restoring regional relations and mediating between Shias, Sunnis and Kurds. Jafar al-Hussaini, a spokesman for the pro-Iranian Shiite militia Ketaib Hezbollah, told AP that the US sold Iraq a promise of democracy but had failed to deliver infrastructure, electricity, housing, schools or security. “Twenty years after the war, we look towards building a new state,” he said. “Our project is ideological, and we are against America.” Mountain lake dries up in winter drought Pleasure boats sit marooned on the banks of Lake Montbel in south-western France yesterday. The tourist spot at the foot of the Pyrenees is famous for its turquoise waters, massive size and thriving aquatic life. But as spring nears, the landscape has largely turned into a muddy wasteland because France’s driest winter in 64 years has kept the lake from filling up. Like most of Europe, the country is in the grip of a winter drought that is prompting growing concerns about water security. REUTERS
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 35 SPAIN From a whisper to more cream: top pastry chef gets voice back By Graham Keeley IN MADRID He is one of the world’s foremost pastry chefs, but for the past seven years Jordi Roca has struggled to explain his creations because of a rare condition that meant his voice was reduced to little more than a whisper. He is one of the three Roca brothers who created El Celler de Can Roca, the Spanish restaurant in Girona with three Michelin stars, which was twice named best in the world. Now, after years of therapy, medication and family support, he has regained his voice– a result he largely attributes to “the love of his family”. “Last night I read five stories to my daughter,” the chef said in a post on his Instagram page. “You don’t know how happy it makes me to make this video. I did this through vocal re-education, breathing exercises, medication, a little of everything, everything has helped, but above all the love of my family.” Roca suffered from spasmodic dysphonia, a condition for which a cause is not known. It is thought to stem from psychological stress and can affect the voice. He realised something was wrong during a visit with his brothers Joan and Josep Roca to New York in 2016. “One day you realise that you have not got a voice and you become obsessed with getting it back,” he said. “During all this time, I have had ups and downs in my voice. When this happened, it cost me a lot to speak. I want to thank so many people for their help.” After seven years of treatment, medication and ‘love from his family, Jordi Roca has found his voice again In 2019, the Roca brothers sought to follow in the footsteps of Samuel Johnson and James Boswell, who travelled across Scotland more than 200 years ago and produced a classic travel book that revealed a country where tartan was banned and whisky was drunk before breakfast. Between them, they published the acclaimed Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland in 1775 and The Journal of a Tour of the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson in 1785 Johnson, the writer of the original Oxford English Dictionary, had never left London until he accompanied his friend over the border. The Roca brothers wanted to embark on a gastronomic version of the famous journey, devising recipes using traditional Scottish food and drink using their know-how picked up from living near the Mediterranean hundreds of miles away. The siblings met chefs, cheesemakers and fishermen, among others, sampling various foods including haggis, salmon and lobster – resulting in a cookbook based on the experience called Distilling Scotland. Blake Johnston set the world record on Cronulla beach in Sydney AFP/GETTY AUSTRALIA Forty-hour surf breaks world record By Victoria Craw An Australian surfer set a world record by surfing continuously for 40 hours to raise awareness of youth mental health initiatives. Blake Johnston said he was “pretty cooked” yesterday at Cronulla beach in Sydney. He beat the previous record by nearly 10 hours, braving potential jellyfish stings and shark attacks. Hundreds of people gathered on the beach to watch the father of two raise more than A$200,000 (£110,000) for the Chumpy Pullin Foundation. The charity was established to honour former Olympic champion snowboarder Alex “Chumpy” Pullin, who drowned on the Gold Coast in 2020. “Everyone deserves to feel awesome,” said the former pro surfer.
36 NEWS Panorama Around the world in 10 stories THAILAND UNITED STATES Judge takes over Trump papers investigation By Jacqueline Thomsen IN WASHINGTON A new judge was taking over leadership of the US trial court in Washington yesterday, inheriting oversight of secret proceedings involving criminal investigations into Enforced pensions reform leads to violence on streets By Noémie Olive and Ingrid Melander IN PARIS MONTENEGRO Opposition tries Pro-West leader to rally support faces ballot test Thailand’s main opposition party paraded parliamentary candidates yesterday and outlined its policy pledges in a show of confidence ahead of the approaching general election. Several thousand supporters clad in red cheered and waved banners as the 400 candidates of the Pheu Thai party marched behind flag-bearers into a stadium on the outskirts of Bangkok. Pheu Thai is closely linked to Thaksin Shinawatra, the former prime minister ousted by a military coup in 2006. AP FRANCE Montenegro is holding a presidential election tomorrow, a vote taking place amid a political stalemate that has stalled the small Nato member’s bid to join the European Union and questions about whether it will align more closely with Serbia and Russia. Analysts predict that the election will not produce a clear winner and that pro-Western incumbent Milo Djukanovic, 61, will face one of several challengers in a run-off two weeks later. An alliance dominated by parties seeking closer ties with Serbia and Russia ousted Mr Djukanovic’s party from power in 2020. AP former president Donald Trump’s retention of classified documents and efforts by him and his allies to undo his 2020 election loss. James Boasberg is the chief judge for the US District Court for the District of Columbia, taking over responsibility for issues that may arise in special counsel investigations involving Mr Trump. A US district judge, Casey Cooper, said that Mr Boasberg was “exactly the sort of independent thinker you would want in that position”. REUTERS The French President, Emmanuel Macron, faces the gravest challenge to his authority since the so-called “Yellow Vest” protests, after his decision to push through a contested pensions overhaul without a vote led to violent unrest on Thursday night. Cars were set on fire in Paris and other cities during otherwise peaceful demonstrations involving several thousand people. Trade unions urged workers to step up and briefly blocked the Paris ring road yesterday. “Something fundamental hap- Postcard From... Rome Romans hope that an alignment of the stars will halt a generations-long decay of the Eternal City that is as beautiful as it is disorganised. After years of declining investments, billions of euros of EU, state and private funds are pouring into Italy’s capital ahead of a series of events that could overwhelm the city without swift intervention. Rome generates more than 9 per cent of national output. The first big draw tees off in September when the Ryder Cup, pitting Europe’s best golfers against their US counterparts, is staged near Giselda Vagnoni pened ...immediately, spontaneous mobilisations took place throughout the country,” said Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the former leader of the hard- Protesting on foot Palestinians in Gaza City take part in an unofficial marathon yesterday to denounce killings of Palestinians by the Israeli army and to support Palestinians in Israeli jails. The event was held on the same day as the official Jerusalem Marathon attended by 30,000 runners from Israel and across the globe. HAZEM BADER/AFP/GETTY AFRICA Cyclone kills hundreds of people in trail of destruction By Wanjohi Kabukuru and Vitus-Gregory Gondwe Officials are still getting to grips with the scale of Cyclone Freddy’s destruction in Malawi and Mozambique, with more than 370 people killed, hundreds missing and tens of thousands displaced since last Saturday. Yesterday, authorities in Malawi said the storm killed at least 326 people, with 200 missing. Hundreds of evacuation centres have been set up for survivors, and President Lazarus Chakwera declared a 14-day mourning period on Thursday. In Mozambique, at least 53 people were killed and 50,000 displaced. The death toll in both nations is expected to continue to climb. Cyclone Freddy dissipated on Wednesday after it made second landfall in both countries. Both Malawi and Mozambique were facing a cholera outbreak before the cyclone and there are fears that flooding could worsen the spread of water-borne diseases. Cyclone Freddy has ravaged southern Africa since late February, when it pummelled Mozambique, Madagascar and Réunion. AP LEBANON VIETNAM GERMANY Bank governor on trial for graft Facebook user Education chief seized for posts to visit Taiwan Lebanon’s central bank governor arrived at court yesterday for a second hearing with investigators looking into whether he embezzled huge sums of public funds. Riad Salameh, 72, is being investigated alongside his brother Raja in Lebanon and in at least five European countries over accusations that they stole hundreds of millions of dollars from the nation’s coffers. They deny wrongdoing. REUTERS Police in Vietnam have arrested a Facebook user accused of “attempting to overthrow the state” by sharing content that defamed leaders of the ruling Communist Party. Phan Thi Thanh Nha, 39, was accused of sharing items seeking to “distort and defame leaders of the Communist Party and state,” the public security ministry said. Despite economic reform, the party retains tight censorship and tolerates little criticism. REUTERS IN BLANTYRE, MALAWI Rome, attracting well-heeled visitors. Their numbers will be dwarfed in 2025 when the city welcomes an anticipated 30 million tourists for a Holy Year, when Roman Catholics traditionally flock in to gain indulgences, which, they believe, may speed their passage to heaven. An extraordinary Holy Year is also scheduled for 2033 to mark the 2,000th anniversary of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Rome is praying that in the meantime its bid to stage the Expo world fair in 2030 proves successful. “Rome has all this pent-up energy that has been wasted for years but that can finally be released,” said Lorenzo Tagliavanti, the president of Rome’s chamber of commerce. REUTERS The French government is forcing dustmen in Paris back to work after a strike against the pension reforms left streets piled with stinking waste left France Unbowed party. “It goes without saying I encourage them,” Mr Mélenchon added. The pensions overhaul raises France’s retirement age by two years to 64, which the government says is essential to ensure the system does not go bust. However, citizens are deeply attached to keeping the retirement age at 62, which is among the lowest in Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development countries. More than eight out of 10 people are unhappy with the decision to skip a vote in parliament, and 65 per cent want strikes and protests to continue, a poll showed. REUTERS Germany’s education minister will visit Taiwan next week, a spokesman confirmed, as Berlin reviews its previously close ties with China. A visit to Taiwan in January by a delegation from the liberal Free Democrats, the smallest party in Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s coalition, led to protests from Beijing. But a source said Bettina StarkWatzinger would not be meeting President Tsai Ing-wen. REUTERS
V1 NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 37 News in brief WORLD FOCUS HONG KONG We don’t see eye to eye Boy band Mirror make English debut Hong Kong’s most popular boy band, Mirror, released their first English-language song yesterday. The 12-member group are part of a new wave of local singers being embraced by Hongkongers at a time when the city has been beset by the Covid pandemic and political challenges from mainland China. The new single “Rumours” is sexy and sensual, according to singer Ian Chan, and is in stark contrast to their earlier Cantonese hits which conveyed an image of “a bunch of kids”. Their energetic new track shows that they have become men, Chan added. Seventy per cent of penguin marriages end in divorce, according to Professor Dee Boersma, who has spent a lifetime studying the birds. By Daniel Bates P rofessor Dee Boersma is, by her own admission, “madly in love” with penguins. She has spent half a century travelling to the ends of the Earth to study, tag and monitor the flightless bird in the hope of preserving it. The academic recently returned from Punta Tombo in Argentina on her annual visit for a project she began in 1982 studying the Magellanic penguin. And this year she will visit the Galápagos islands to continue a programme encouraging the breeding of the Galápagos penguin which began when she was still a graduate student. Professor Boersma says her longterm research is also “essential” for a wider purpose – understanding the impact of climate change. In Punta Tombo, the Magellanic penguin population is 50 per cent less than in 1987 because of a scarcity of food. “You have to follow individual penguins over a long period of time,” she says. “People are not patient and our funding is not secure year to year, so it takes a crazy person like me to stick at it. Without this long-term tagging, we’d have no idea that penguins live for more than 30 years.” When Professor Boersma, a biologist at the University of Washington state in Seattle, started her Argentinian project she expected it to last three years. Her plan was to take a census of the 200,000 pairs of Magellanic penguins, a species which was – and continues to be – classified as near threatened. She and her small team of graduate students have put bands on many penguins during their annual threeweek-long visits. The result is an extraordinary treasure trove Dee Boersma began studying Magellanic penguins in 1982 They throw themselves in and are off to Uruguay, Argentina or Brazil. I wouldn’t do that MOZAMBIQUE Marches planned to honour rapper of data which shows that the population has shrunk to just 110,000 mating pairs. Climate change has forced the penguins to seek food in different parts of the continent: one chick Professor Boersma’s team banded 20m from its nest wasn’t seen for 17 years – until it was found breeding in San Lorenzo, more than 150 miles to the north. Professor Boersma said: “We think about global warming and [think], ‘If anything, shouldn’t the penguins be going south?’ But ours go north. “They’re following the anchovy or the hake. Food drives most of this planet – and penguins are no different.” Another threat to the population is that it is aging. Many of the penguins are 20 or 30 years old, which makes them senior citizens in penguin years. The project in the Galápagos has been just as remarkable. Professor Boersma was a graduate student studying on the islands when she noticed the Galápagos penguin, an endangered species which needs shade to nest, was being forced to lay eggs on the bare lava rock. It took another 28 years before she was able to follow through on an idea she had, with the help of Galápagos biologist Godfrey Merlen. Using crowbars and hammers, they chiselled out 124 nests from the rocks which the penguins began to use. Now, 12 years later, around 80 of the nests are still in operation and while Professor Boersma does not know the number of Galápagos penguins, there has been a clear increase from the 5,000 that marked a low point when a particularly strong El Niño weather event halved their population in 1982. Despite its beautiful location, the work on the Galápagos is far from glamorous and involves weeks on Mr Merlen’s boat, Ratty, which fits four – with one person sleeping on deck. They work solidly from sunrise until 6pm when the light goes, sometimes not even stopping for lunch. The work has at times been dramatic, such as when a cliff collapsed beneath Professor Boersma while she was holding two penguins. Everyone survived unscathed. Then there was the time she fell on the lava on Santa Cruz island and cut her knee. Professor Boersma needed a penicillin shot but doctors warned that she risked hepatitis because they reused the needles. Opting for pills instead, her knee had swelled to the size of a grapefruit by the time she got back to America – where she was diagnosed with a staphylococcus infection. “I was lucky I didn’t die,” she said. Professor Boersma is happy to use her status as a grand dame of penguins to tell people about dangers to the planet. “Are we hoovering up whole oceans? Yes we are. Can wildlife outcompete human fisheries given we have eight billion people in the world? No.” While she would happily continue her work indefinitely, she begrudgingly admits that, at 76, she “can’t do this for ever”. “But the thing about my work is I like teaching and I love penguins – and I find my research fascinating.” And the decades she has spent studying the birds brings insights that might otherwise be missed. “They have individual personalities, some are crotchety, they have bad days,” she said. “They have an incredible divorce rate and 71 per cent of their first marriages end in divorce. The females are much more likely to remarry.” Even now, watching penguin chicks that are just two months old walking to the sea for their first swim still gives her a thrill. “Some of them look around and hesitate,” she said. “Then they throw themselves in and they’re off to Uruguay, Northern Argentina or Brazil. “I wouldn’t do that. I don’t have that leap of faith. That’s what has captured me, penguins are so much like people.” Marches are planned across Mozambique today to honour Azagaia, a popular protest rapper and fierce government critic, who died last week at the age of 38 following an epileptic seizure. The nationwide demonstrations follow Azagaia’s funeral procession on Wednesday, in which thousands of people (below) marched through the capital, Maputo, chanting protest slogans such as “resistance” and “power to the people”. Police used tear gas to disperse crowds as they tried to carry his coffin past Ponta Vermelha, the president’s official residence. AP BELGIUM Buddhism becomes an official religion Belgium officially recognised Buddhism as a non-denominational worldview yesterday after the country’s council of ministers approved a draft law that will open the door to federal funding, official delegates and school classes. The Belgian Buddhist Union estimates that the number of Buddhists in Belgium is 150,000. The only other EU country where Buddhism is recognised is Austria The federal justice minister Vincent Van Quickenborne, said: “This community has proven that it can structure itself in an orderly manner, both administratively and representatively.”

7 days 7 days 39 The stories that shaped the news What we learned this week has unveiled a prototype of the spacesuits (main) that will be worn on its next mission to the Moon in 2025. The next-generation spacesuits, designed by Texasbased Axiom Space,will feature ‘the range of motion and flexibility needed to explore more of the lunar landscape’, according to Nasa. The new suits will ‘fit a broad range of crew members, accommodating at least 90 per cent of the US male and female population’. Not a lot of people know this Thousands of euro one cent coins have been used to create a mosaic portrait of Sir Michael Caine, in his role as British spy Harry Palmer, to celebrate the veteran actor’s 90th birthday. Artist Ed Chapman said: ‘I chose to make Sir Michael using euro one cents (below) as they’re smaller than pennies, so can create more detail.’ Healthy eating People who have a Mediterranean diet rich in fruit, nuts, seafood, whole grains and vegetables are significantly less likely to develop dementia, according to scientists. After accounting for genetic risks for the condition, researchers discovered that people who followed a strict Mediterranean diet had a 23 per cent lower risk of developing dementia than those who did not. The findings, published in the journal ‘BMC Medicine’, are based on data from more than 60,000 people on the UK Biobank – an online database of medical and lifestyle records from more than half a million Britons. Remote working The UK Antarctic Heritage Trust has launched a recruitment drive to find people willing to spend five months working at Port Lockroy on Goudier Island, Antarctica – some 9,000 miles from the UK. There is no access to Wi-Fi or running water at the remote outpost (inset below), which is home to the world’s most southern Post Office. Lung disease breakthrough More than 500 new genes have been linked to lung function for the first time, allowing scientists to better understand lung disease. The discovery will help in treating conditions such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma. Professor Martin Tobin, from the Department of Population Health Sciences at the University of Leicester, said: ‘It’s a huge step in the number of associated genetic variants that we’ve discovered. Our genetic findings can be used to generate individual risk scores that could personalise medicine.’ Green light for green energy The Welsh government has approved plans for a floating offshore wind farm off the Pembrokeshire coast that will produce enough power for 93,000 homes. Seven 14-megawatt turbines will be built on floating platforms anchored to the seabed 40km from shore. Construction of the first offshore wind farm in Wales is set to begin in January 2025, with the turbines in operation by the end of 2026. Future phases of the development could generate enough power for four million homes. Falling down The UK has plummeted down the global rankings for life expectancy, researchers from the University of Oxford and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine have found. In 1952, people in the UK had one of the longest life expectancies in the world, ranking seventh globally. By 2021, the UK had fallen to 29th, according to analysis published in the ‘Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine’. Over the past 70 years, the UK has done worse than all G7 countries except the US. Historic art An art exhibition showcasing the human cost of the Troubles in Northern Ireland will be displayed at Stormont next month to mark the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement. ‘Silent Testimony’, by Colin Davidson, features 18 portraits depicting the perspectives of people who suffered loss during the Troubles. Bill blunder The BBC has apologised to Joan Lawrence, whose daughter Claudia has been missing for 14 years, after it sent demands for licence fee payments to her daughter’s old address. Mrs Lawrence said: ‘I just wish they’d think before they do these things, because it can be hurtful.’ Facebook founder flounders Mark Zuckerberg, chief executive of Meta, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, has revealed plans to cut 10,000 jobs. The move comes after the company’s growth ‘slowed considerably’ last year. In a memo to staff, he said that the redundancies ‘will mean saying goodbye to talented and passionate colleagues’. FILM Brendan Fraser won the Oscar for Best Actor, for his portrayal of morbidly obese recluse Charlie in The Whale. CULTURE Stormzy, Dua Lipa, Tracey Emin, Barbara Kingsolver and Richard Osman are among this year’s line-up at the Hay Festival. 1 West End star Ruthie Henshall is set to appear on which soap? 2 Uber is trialling free what to help its drivers? 3 Which former prime minister is to publish a book about the abuse of power in the UK? 4 The first set of stamps to bear Charles III’s silhouette will feature what? 5 Which US sandwich chain is planning a $1bn expansion into Europe and Asia? 6 Avril Lavigne confronted a topless woman protesting against what at the Juno Awards, the Canadian equivalent of the Brits? 7 Fiona Bruce stepped back from her role with which charity after a Question Time brouhaha? 8 Popular cough and cold medicines containing which ingredient have been withdrawn? 9 Citizens of which global city handed in cash and lost possessions totalling a value of £24.5m to police over the past year? 10 Which bank had a “Lehman moment” as its shares fell 26 per cent to a record low? Answers below it’s been a good week... HONOURS Queen guitarist Sir Brian May received a knighthood from King Charles III at Buckingham Palace, for services to music and charity. iNewsQuiz SPORT Midfielder Aaron Ramsey, who plays for Nice, has been announced as the new captain of the Wales men’s football team. MUSIC Yusuf/Cat Stevens is to release his 17th album – a decade in the making – days before he plays Glastonbury. RETAIL Nish Kankiwala, ex-chief executive of Hovis, has been appointed the first chief executive of the John Lewis Partnership. DIPLOMACY Senior civil servant Edward Hobart has been named the UK’s ambassador to the United Arab Emirates. iNewsQuiz answers 1. Coronation Street. 2. Childcare. 3. Theresa May. 4. Flowers. 5. Chick fil-A. 6. Housing developments on green belt land. 7. Refuge. 8. Pholcodine. 9. Tokyo. 10. Credit Suisse. Astronaut makeover Nasa 7 days COMPILED BY JONATHAN OWEN
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Puzzles p47 l 7-day TV guide p54 l Gardening p68 l itravel p71 50 things to look forward to this spring From longer evenings to a bonus bank holiday and the return of food and music festivals. By Emily Cope SENSE OF OPTIMISM “Spring is the most uplifting season, as it follows on from winter, when many people experience symptoms of seasonal affective disorder,” says Lowri DowthwaiteWalsh, senior lecturer in psychological interventions at the University of Central Lancashire. “More sunlight increases serotonin release in the brain, which is associated with more positive emotions, and can help to reduce feelings of depression. “The change in weather also brings life to green spaces. The sight of green grass, newborn chicks and blooming flowers can instil a sense of hope and optimism as we come out of winter.” AL FRESCO DINING While we love cosying up at the pub with a crackling fire, lighter and warmer evenings mean pub gardens and al fresco dining are on the horizon. Who doesn’t love tucking into a burger and chips while outside in the sunshine? STARGAZING This month brings the transition from winter to spring and is a great time to see the bright stars and constellations both seasons have to offer. Plus, the warmer evenings means outdoor stargazing is more enjoyable. Look out for Auriga, home to the sixth-brightest star Capella, as well as bright star Sirius in the constellation of Canis Major, twice the size of the Sun, which lies around eight light years away. Looking east, the spring constellation of Leo (the lion) is now above the horizon, with the heart of the lion depicted by bright star Regulus, a four-star system around 80 light years away. 30 DAYS WILD RETURNS One of the UK’s most popular nature challenges will be back in June. The Wildlife Trusts’ 30 Days Wild event inspires people across the UK to try one “random act of wildness” every day for 30 days, be it listening to bird song or identifying a wildflower. SEASONAL FRUITS AND VEGETABLES With spring comes a whole host of seasonal fruits and vegetables, and eating seasonally can do wonders for your health. “When harvested and sold in season, fruits and vegetables are often at their optimal nutrient value and best taste,” says Rhiannon Lambert, registered nutritionist and author of The Science of Nutrition. “Dark leafy green veg such as kale, spinach and cavolo nero are high in calcium, which we need for bone health, as well as essential micronutrients such as vitamin K, vitamin C, folate and iron. “Strawberries are also very high in vitamin C, which we need to support our immune system, while rhubarb contains antioxidants, fibre and vitamin K. Why not try to pick a new ingredient to try each week?” BIRD SONG The sound of bird song is one of the first welcome signs that spring has sprung. Each bird species has its own unique song, so listen out for robins (which tend to sing first thing in the morning), great tits (two sharp notes – higher and then lower), wrens (loud and warbling), chiffchaffs (a gentle, plodding song) and chaffinches (a loud trill that descends into a little flourish). EUROVISION COMES TO THE UK After decades of disappointment, we have Sam Ryder’s success to thank for Eurovision coming to the UK, on behalf of Ukraine, for the first time since 1998. Mae Muller (left) will represent us
42 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Continued from p41 when the annual song contest lights up Liverpool in May, so get ready for catchy songs, outrageous outfits and plenty of flag-waving. GARDENING Now is a great time for the greenfingered, with March and April bringing the perfect opportunity to plant perennials, sow hardy annuals such as marigolds and plant summer-flowering bulbs such as lilies and gladioli. MORE SLEEP Longer days and more sunlight can also mean better sleep (above right), which will come as a welcome relief to many. “To boost the benefits of spring’s positive influence on your sleep, get outside in the morning,” suggests Theresa Schnorbach, sleep scientist at Emma: The Sleep Company. “Exposure to daylight helps to keep the rhythms of our body clock in sync with our environment, boosting nocturnal melatonin production, which signals to your body that it is time to sleep. Similarly, it increases the morning production of the steroid hormone cortisol, which helps you to feel refreshed.” DAFFODILS The national flower of Wales is a classic spring flower and can be found blooming from February through to May, so keep an eye out for those first signs of spring. LOGAN vs KENDALL’S FINAL SHOWDOWN Many of us have been waiting on tenterhooks since the last explosive episode of Succession. The fourth and final series of the hit HBO show kicks off on 27 March. But who will come out on top? Patriarch Logan Roy, pitiable Kendall, ruthless Shiv or black sheep Tom? OUTDOOR SWIMMING For those of us not into cold water therapy, outdoor swimming in (slightly) warmer waters is back on the cards. There are a number of new lidos opening across the UK, including the Cleveland Pool in Bath (which was built in 1815 and has undergone a £9.3m renovation) as well as a 50m lido along the beachfront in Brighton. And the best bit? It’s heated. clevelandpools. org.uk, sealanesbrighton.co.uk ASCOT SPRING FAMILY RACE DAY The historic racecourse’s first family race day of 2023 comes with a host of thrilling races and themed activities, including face painting, pony rides, arts and crafts, walkabout ducks, jugglers and sheepdog demonstrations. From £25, under-18s go free, ascot.com MOVIE MAGIC SPRING CLEANING The season to throw open all the windows, “Marie Kondo” your wardrobe and start loading up boxes for donation is upon us. According to clinical psychologist Dawn Potter, PsyD, decluttering isn’t just good for our homes, it can lift our mood by giving a sense of accomplishment. Plus, the movement counts as exercise. RACE FOR LIFE CELEBRATES 30 YEARS Cancer Research is marking 30 years of Race for Life this year, with running events throughout the spring. Lace up your trainers and sign up for a 5k or a 10k, which you can walk, jog or run, while also raising money for a great cause. raceforlife.cancerresearchuk.org LAMBING SEASON These days lambing takes place any time between November and May – but the birth rate still peaks in spring. Many farms offer lambing days, including Snettisham Park in Norfolk and Coombes Farm in Sussex, where visitors can bottlefeed lambs (above), watch them play and take part in themed activities. On a more macabre note, it is also the best season for roast lamb... Cinemagoers will be spoilt for choice this spring with the release of Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves (31 March), Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol 3 (5 May) and live-action musical The Little Mermaid (26 May). THE FRENCH OPEN One of professional tennis’s biggest events runs from 28 May to 11 June. Seeing the best players in the world take to the clay courts is a nice primer for fellow Grand Slam tournaments Wimbledon and the US Open in the summer. BETTER MEMORY “Not only do lighter evenings and more temperate weather help our moods, they can also greatly improve our cognitive function, leading to improved concentration and memory,” says Lowri Dowthwaite-Walsh. DRESSES, DENIM JACKETS AND SHORTS BUTTERFLIES The onset of March means the first butterflies will be coming out of hibernation. You are most likely to spot a peacock, small tortoiseshell or a red admiral, but also look out for an early brimstone or comma, which enjoy relaxing in sunny sheltered spots. Pack away your winter coats, tights and scarves – spring garments are back in fashion. Strut your stuff in your very best floral dresses, denim jackets, sunglasses, polo shirts and shorts. QUEEN BUMBLEBEES EXTRA BANK HOLIDAY King Charles’s coronation in May will undoubtedly be a significant historical event. Whether you are a monarchist or not, celebrations and street parties will bring the country to life – and it’s not every year we get an extra bank holiday. EASTER Speaking of bank holidays, it may come around every year but who doesn’t love the four-day Easter weekend? Get ready to eat as much chocolate as you can. HEALTHIER SKIN Listen out for the bird song of robins first thing in the morning GETTY Emily Henry’s Happy Place and The Soulmate by Sally Hepworth. “Our skin changes in response to the fluctuations of the seasons, and while winter weather can cause dry skin and inflammation, springtime can be beneficial to skin health,” says anti-ageing expert Nina Prisk, of Update Aesthetics. “Sebum production tends to increase at this time, helping to keep skin hydrated and flexible, while lips are less likely to become dry and chapped. Low humidity and central heating during the winter months can affect the water content of our skin, causing it to appear dull. However, with springtime this water content usually improves, so skin starts to appear brighter and less dull.” Just remember to wear some suncream! BOOKS GALORE Bestselling author of The Girls, Emma Cline, is blessing us with another psychological thriller in the form of The Guest, while Jennifer Saint is publishing her latest Greek mythology retelling with Atalanta. Other highly anticipated books include Kate Morton’s Homecoming, The beginning of spring also means the arrival of some very large – and occasionally dopey – bumblebees. If you spot one they will be fresh out of hibernation and on the lookout for somewhere to nest, so give them plenty of space. EUROPEAN HOLIDAYS With warmer climes closer to home, holidaymakers don’t have to look so far afield for a healthy dose of sunshine. Temperatures in Greece, Spain, France and Portugal are perfect for a sun-filled weekend away. Goodbye jet lag! TONS OF TV After an evening stroll, tuck into a menagerie of TV treats, from an adaptation of Naomi Alderman’s bestselling novel The Power (out 31 March) to Marvel’s Secret Invasion (release tbc) and Netflix’s Queen Charlotte, which will delve into the Bridgerton monarch’s intriguing
life to-sunset fasting of Ramadan. This year the festival falls on the evening of Friday 21 April and continues until the following day, with events taking place across the UK. SHOWTOWN BLACKPOOL OPENS Branding itself as a “museum of fun and entertainment”, this all-singing, all-dancing attraction at Blackpool’s new Sands Venue Resort Hotel & Spa celebrates the comedians, dancers, acrobats and characters who have brought showbiz to the seaside town. Opening 1 May, MUSIC FESTIVALS ARE BACK Spring means the return of the great British music festival. Don your wellies and rain jackets before picking up a ticket to festivals, from Mighty Hoopla in London to Love Saves the Day in Bristol and Cambridge Club, which boasts an impressive line-up including Grace Jones, Lionel Richie and Billie Ocean. showtownblackpool.co.uk SPRING COCKTAILS With fresh herbs and fruits springing up in gardens, now is the time to indulge in lighter, more floral cocktails than your winter favourites. Think gin and tonic with a twist of orange, cherry spritzes, mint juleps (right) or a lavender lemon drop. AND FOOD FESTIVALS Spring means outdoor feasting, which sees food festivals come out of hibernation. There are plenty to choose from, including Exeter Food Festival, Tom Kerridge’s Pub in the Park and Broadstairs Food Festival in Kent. MORE TIME SPENT WITH FRIENDS AND FAMILY “With more energy and daytime, we tend to be much more social in the warmer months, which is crucial to our mental health,” says Dr Tom MacLaren, consultant psychologist at Re:Cognition Health. “Friendships help to reduce stress and anxiety, improve selfconfidence and can also help reduce the risk of many health conditions, including obesity, high blood pressure and even dementia.” THE GRAND NATIONAL Held at Aintree National Course, near Liverpool, the Grand National is a major fixture on the horseracing calendar. Even if you don’t turn up to place your bets in person, it’s still great fun to watch on TV, organise a work sweepstake or just enjoy the colourful outfits of the attendees on 15 April. THE OPENING OF THE ENGLAND COASTAL PATH backstory, including her rise to power and her marriage to King George (from 4 May). More time spent with family (above) can help our mental health; ‘Queen Charlotte’ (left) arrives in May GETTY EVENING STROLLS Increasingly lighter evenings give us a chance to take a leisurely stroll in the daylight after work, or perhaps a bike ride. Any time spent outdoors is beneficial to your body and mind. JUPITER ICY MOONS EXPLORER LAUNCHES One of the highly anticipated space moments of 2023 will see the launch of the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (or Juice) on 13 April. “The spacecraft will carry out mission studies to Jupiter’s moons and will reach Jupiter in July 2031 after eight years of travel,” says Dr Atma Prakash, senior lecturer in aerospace engineering at Teesside University. “It will eventually enter the orbit around Ganymede for its close-up mission, becoming the first spacecraft to orbit a moon other than our own.” out for gardeners. £21.50, 20-23 Apr, flowershow.org.uk WEDDING SEASON KICKS OFF Spring is the one of the most popular times to get married, and that means wedding invitations galore. Enjoy celebrating the lovely couple with champagne, cake and a boogie on the dance floor – and pray it’s an open bar. The longest continuous hiking path in the world, winding from the bottom of Berwick-upon-Tweed in Northumberland around the south coast of England, then back up to Cumbria, this 2,795-mile route is finally due to be completed this season. Free, nationaltrail.co.uk/ en_GB/trails/england-coast-path/ route-descriptions FARMER’S MARKETS While farmer’s markets are great all year round, spring is when they really come into their own. With seasonal fruits and veg galore and sunny mornings to spend strolling Staging the very best in gardening and horticulture, from spectacular plant nursery displays and stunning floral features to talks and demonstrations plus great garden shopping, Harrogate’s Spring Flower Show makes the perfect day A BIG VITAMIN BOOST through the stalls, it is a lovely start to the weekend. WATCHING SUNRISE Watching the sun rise can be a beautiful and therapeutic experience, helping us to unwind, relieve stress and providing us with inspiration – many authors, painters and poets have used the sunrise as their muse. Set your alarm clock early and head outside with a warm cuppa to make the most of it. UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE FINAL AND FA CUP FINAL Football fans will be happy to indulge in all the finals heading their way this spring, from the FA Cup final on 3 June to the Uefa Champions League final on 10 June. THE JUMANJI THEME PARK WILL BE UNVEILED This epic park just outside London will include an iconic Jaguar shrine just like in the film, which will stand at 55ft tall, as well as the world’s only Jumanji rollercoaster, Mandrill Mayhem. There will also be two family rides, Mamba Strike and Ostrich Stampede, plus six themed bedrooms at the Chessington Safari Hotel. Opening spring, chessington.com BLUEBELLS Bluebells are in full bloom in spring, and the delightful flowers can be seen popping up across the country. “The wildflowers really brighten up our woodlands and make them extra special to walk through,” says Sarah Callander Beckett, owner of Combermere Abbey in Cheshire. “It’s wonderful watching the woods come alive with so much colour each year, and members of the public can join our bluebell walks throughout spring.” HARROGATE’S SPRING FLOWER SHOW combermereabbey.co.uk EID AL-FITR Watch the woods come alive with bluebells throughout spring GETTY 43 Eid al-Fitr, or the Festival of Sweets, is the religious holiday celebrated by Muslims worldwide and marks the end of the month-long dawn- One of the most well-known benefits of longer days with more exposure to sunlight is your body having an increased production of vitamin D – but what exactly does that mean? “Vitamin D promotes healthy bones, muscles and teeth, as well as probably helping to increase your energy levels and likely strengthening your immune system,” explains Dr Brian Fisher, GP at wellness app Evergreen Life. “Evidence also suggests that vitamin D may protect us against various long term-conditions, including type 2 diabetes.” SIR ELTON JOHN’S FINAL TOUR With multiple Grammys, more than 70 top 40 hits and more than 300 million records sold worldwide, Sir Elton John (top left) has well and truly earned his retirement. We have been assured this year’s Farewell Tour will be his last (it’s been going on since 2018), with more dates kicking off on 23 March in Liverpool, before finishing on 8 July in Stockholm. Tickets are flying, so if you want to see the legend in action, grab them while you can. eltonjohn.com/tours CREATIVITY BURST A study from the University of Michigan found that spending time outside in the warmer weather is not just a mood booster – it can also leave you more open to new information and creative thoughts. There is no time like the present to take up a new hobby, or get those paints out of the loft. WINE-TASTING Spring is a transitional season for wines, marking the shift from winter dormancy to reawakening for many winemakers, making it one of the more interesting times to go wine-tasting. New releases include rosé and sauvignon blanc, as well as pinot noir and grenache making a comeback with lighter spring fare. SUMMER If spring isn’t quite doing it for you, at least summer is just around the corner.
44 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Past its shelf life From kettles to toilet brushes, pet bowls to pillows, we’re all guilty of holding on to household essentials – but experts reveal just why it might be high time to replace some of them. By Emily Cope EVERY WEEK Fish tank water We should replace the water in fish tanks every week. “Fish health is directly linked to water quality, so it’s important to keep on top of tank maintenance. Each week you should use a gravel scoop to remove 10-20 per cent of your aquarium’s water and replace it with dechlorinated water,” advises Dr Karlien Heyrman, a vet at Pets at Home. EVERY MONTH Cleaning cloths We use cloths on a daily basis, which means they can quickly become a breeding ground for germs and bacteria. “We should be washing cleaning cloths after every use, and switching them out every four weeks,” advises cleaning guru Danielle Mason. “You should always have a different cleaning cloth for each section of the house. Washing-up brushes should be replaced every four weeks.” Ice cube trays “It may be surprising, but ice cube trays need a little maintenance to keep them germ-free,” says cleaning expert at Property Rescue, Emily Barron. “Clean the trays regularly to remove any debris and replace the water every month to prevent the cubes from turning cloudy.” EVERY THREE MONTHS Vacuum filter “This depends on whether you have pets, as dog or cat hair can block up filters a lot quicker,” advises Mason. “I would say change your filter every three months, because dust mites can live in there and bad smells can also build up.” Mascara Our eye area is a breeding ground for bacteria, so mascara (above right) should be replaced regularly. “You should change your mascara every three months,” says founder of Skin Rocks, Caroline Hirons. “If you use an expired product, you could expose yourself to bacteria.” Make-up brushes It is important to regularly clean your make-up brushes to avoid the build-up of bacteria and product residue. “If, like most people, you use your brushes every day, you need to replace them more frequently than if you use them only occasionally,” says Natalie Yorke, founder of helloskin. “In some cases, the higher the quality of the brush, the longer they may last. As a rule, you should replace your make-up brushes every three to six months. But if you have had any eye infection or skin conditions, it is a good idea to replace your brushes to avoid reinfection.” Toothbrush Many of us may use the same toothbrush for months, but this can be damaging to our dental health, says Dr Sam Jethwa, founder of Bespoke Smile and vice president of the British Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry. “I’d advise changing your toothbrush, or the head to your electric toothbrush, every three to four months,” says Dr Jethwa. “If your bristles are splaying, looking worn-out or feeling less stiff, then you should change it as it won’t be cleaning effectively. Change your toothbrush sooner if you’ve been unwell to avoid harbouring germs on the brush.” Passwords There is a lot of debate about how often to change your passwords on social media, email and finance accounts. Some experts say every 90 days will keep your A B C B accounts safe; others think this is counterproductive. One thing is certain: change your password immediately if you discover there has been a data breach. essential to keep an eye on when the product is going out of date. “You can find the PAO inside the small jar symbol on SPF bottles,” explains Hirons. “You should be using two finger lengths of SPF daily (rain or shine), so it’s unlikely you will surpass this. However, if you continue to use the sunscreen after this date, the protection properties deteriorate.” Pet bowls Face moisturiser Household items such as herbs and spices have long shelf lives – but can languish in cupboards for years, so check the expiration dates GETTY “It is best to replace plastic pet bowls every few months to avoid bacteria build-up. However, ceramic and stainless steel bowls can last a lifetime if cared for properly, as they are much easier to sanitise,” advises Dr Heyrman. “Always clean your pet’s food and water bowls after every meal, and remember to wash them separately from yours – even if using a dishwasher – to minimise the spread of bugs.” EVERY SIX MONTHS Hairbrush A “People are so unaware that you should clean your hairbrush C “Moisturisers also have a PAO that you should pay attention to,” adds Hirons. “Once opened, most face moisturisers tend to have six months, but check the packaging.” often,” says Mason. “Pull the hair out and leave the brush to soak in bicarbonate of soda at least once a month, and then replace every six months. This prevents bacteria and oil build-up on the teeth and ensures your hair doesn’t get greasy between washes.” Sunscreen Sunscreen SPFs (sun protection factor) tend to have the shortest PAO (period after opening) of all skincare products. Due to its importance in protecting your skin from harmful UV rays, it is Car oil As a general rule, experts suggest changing your engine oil every 3,000-5,000 miles or approximately every six months. Depending on your car’s age, oil type and driving conditions, you may be able to change the oil every 7,50010,000 miles, but it’s best to check your owner’s manual to see the manufacturer recommendations. Bras Even with gentle usage and care, all bras lose their shape over time. In fact, experts recommend replacing
life 45 that aren’t ventilated,” says Aggie MacKenzie, from How Clean is Your House? and author of The Miracle of Vinegar. “If you have a cheap one and it doesn’t cost much to replace, I’d suggest throwing them away as soon as they are starting to look grubby or mouldy, which can be after six months. But you can wash them in the washing machine to make them last longer.” Shower head Shower heads can be a hotbed of germs. A study by the University of Colorado Boulder found the warm and wet conditions lead shower heads to develop a collection of bacteria and fungi, known as biofilm. Then, every time we shower, the hot water disperses this scum into the air. For this reason, it is recommended to replace your shower head every six to eight months. However, they can last a lot longer with regular cleaning. Toilet brush Perhaps the most disgusting part of every bathroom, toilet brushes can be a serious health hazard if you aren’t keeping them cleanly. Henry Paterson, senior operations executive at Housekeep, advises replacing them every six months, while MacKenzie says they are not necessary at all. “There should be a law against toilet brushes,” says MacKenzie. “Just use bleach and toilet paper instead.” EVERY 1-2 YEARS Chopping boards A B bras every six months – or after about 180 wears. “If you have a large selection of bras in rotation, you can go longer than six months, especially if you’re caring for those bras properly,” says Ali Cudby, author of Fit My Bras and founder of Fab Foundations. “Putting your bras in the dryer breaks down the elastic much more quickly, so let them airdry and hand-wash when possible.” C Gym trainers It is generally accepted that the standard life span of gym or running trainers (right) is somewhere between 300 and 500 miles, and lightweight shoes tend to be somewhere between 250 and 300 miles. If you’re running 20 miles a week, you will probably need to replace them after four to six months, advises Runners Need. However, if you’re less active, then you can wait longer – or at least until they start to smell. Shower curtain “Shower curtains can get really grotty, especially in bathrooms “The marks from knives can cause bacteria to deepen into the chopping board and could potentially lead to contamination of food, which can be harmful when preparing meats and fish,” says Nick Shacklock from Online-bedrooms.co.uk. “We’d advise replacing every year.” Protective phone screens Research shows that our mobile devices can be as dirty as a toilet seat, in particular the front screens. Many people buy a cover for the front to prevent the screen from being damaged, but this can accumulate bacteria from the constant typing and swiping, which is why it is recommended to replace them once a year. Cat litter trays Cat owners know how important it is to maintain their pets’ litter tray, as some cats may refuse to use it otherwise. But how often should we be replacing the tray? “Litter trays should be spot-cleaned daily and once a week you should replace the litter and clean out the tray with hot water and mild detergent,” says Dr Heyrman. “It is best to replace a plastic litter box once a year, or sooner if you notice it is stained.” A B C Pillows “Using your pillow every night leads to a build-up of dead skin cells, sweat, oils, saliva, make-up and allergens, so you should replace them every one to two years,” explains sleep expert for And So to Bed, Dr Lindsay Browning. “Not replacing often enough can also cause neck pain due to a lack of support. You’ll know you need to replace your pillow when it is flat or lumpy, or smells and has stains.” Smoke alarm batteries Smoke alarms can save lives. The London Fire Brigade advises changing the battery every 12 months in a standard smoke alarm. “Smoke alarm sensors degrade over time, leading to a reduced sensitivity in detecting heat or smoke,” adds a spokesman. “We would advise buying a smoke alarm with a 10-year, or long-lasting sealed battery with a British Standards or European safety mark.” Herbs and spices Dried herbs typically last one to three years, while ground or powdered spices will expire in two to three years according to wellness website Healthline. Whole spices have the longest shelf life, lasting up to four years. Refreshing them within their expiration date is key to maintaining the quality, taste and health benefits. Medication Over-the-counter medications such as antihistamines, paracetamol and ibuprofen can languish in cabinets and first aid kits for months, but they do have a use-by date. “I would advise people to replace over-thecounter medications as they come up to their use-by date, which is usually around one year,” says Dr Claire Ashley. “It might be helpful to put a reminder in your calendar to double-check your medications periodically, and don’t take anything that has expired.” Tupperware If these handy tubs aren’t cleaned and maintained they can be a breeding ground for bacteria. “Get into the habit of replacing your Tupperware every few years – and more often if it’s used frequently or is used to store strong, acidic content,” says Emily Barron. Bath mats “Bath mats are a surprisingly dirty part of bathrooms,” explains MacKenzie. “They’re touching soggy feet as well as the bathroom floor and collecting all the wash-off from your body when you get in the shower.” As such, experts suggest you replace them every two years. Bath towels Although we mainly use them once we are clean, towels pick up a lot of excess dirt. Paterson advises switching them for new ones every one to three years. Kettles Over time, kettles gather dirt, limescale and rust, which can affect their performance, ruin the taste of your daily cuppa and even affect your health. “It’s a good idea to replace a kettle every few years, or before if it shows signs of wear and tear, or heavy limescale build-up,” advises Barron. “Don’t leave water sitting in it for more than a couple of days, and clean the inside once a week.” Water bottles “Plastic water bottles can start to break down after continued use and need to be replaced about once a year,” says Leanne Stapf, chief operating officer at The Cleaning Authority. “Stainless steel bottles generally need to be replaced only due to wear and tear.” EVERY FIVE YEARS Carpet “This depends on how you treat your carpet and how many people you have in and out of your house,” says Danielle Mason. “Our shoes carry so much bacteria, dirt and germs, it is a good idea never to wear shoes in the house. I shampoo my carpets every six months and change them every five years, although they can last up to 15 years.” Toilet seat “As long as you keep your toilet bleached, cleaned and sanitised on a regular basis, they can last five years,” says Mason. “My cleaning advice would be to use anti-bac wipes so they can be thrown away.” Duvets “The average duvet should last five years if it is washed every six months so stains and odours are removed,” says Rex Isap, CEO of Happy Beds. “Keeping a duvet for too long can cause sweat and dust mites to build up, as well as dead skin – we each lose around 300,000 dead skin cells a night.” Non-stick cookware “Providing you clean them properly, you should be able to get five years usage out of non-stick pans,” says Mason. “Avoid using harsh scourers which can scratch it – if there is stubborn dirt in a pan, soak it.” Bike helmets A cycling helmet is good for around five years, advises Cycles UK. “Of course, you should also change your helmet if you have a crash or even a small tumble, because this could compromise the helmet’s performance,” they add. EVERY EIGHT YEARS Mattresses “Most guidance suggests that mattresses should be changed every eight years,” says Hannah Shore, sleep expert at Silentnight. “However, materials used now mean some can last longer. Spring mattresses last better.”
46 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 I had a baby in my fifties – and he has given us all new life Lara Kilner hears the story of one woman beset by family tragedy who now wants to give hope to others like her T wo months after the unimaginable tragedy of her daughter Rosie’s death, Carolyn ­Mayling was standing in the garden of her home in Berkshire when she realised that the only way she could face the future would be to have another baby. “All of a sudden, I saw this image of a baby in my head and a voice like Rosie’s saying, ‘Come on, you can do this.’ After that, the image just wouldn’t go away. It wasn’t like I was trying to replace Rosie, because she was irreplaceable, but the house was silent, there was this dark void and I didn’t know how to face the future,” she says. Carolyn was already 48 – but she refused to be fazed by this or her loved ones’ opinions. “My now ex-husband, David, was not really up for it, but he said, ‘If that’s really what you want, we can see what happens.’ My mum rolled her eyes and said, ‘You must be crazy. If it happens, the mums at the school gates will be so much younger than you. How do you think this child will feel about having a much older mum?’” She also had to talk to Rosie’s sister, Ellie, who was 14. “It was a difficult age to confront her with a possibility like that. She was very close to Rosie. But I felt like I couldn’t not go ahead with it and that eventually she would come round.” Rosie was 11 and rehearsing for a panto run by the family’s performing arts school in 2003 when she developed a cough that wouldn’t shift. “She’d never been ill; she was a vibrant, lively, healthy girl. But we ended up having to take her off the show and she was referred to a specialist, who said it was asthma and then pneumonia. Eventually, she had a CT scan and, within 20 minutes, the consultant found pulmonary embolism on the arteries going into her lungs. That’s when it got really scary,” says Carolyn. Rosie was rushed to hospital, where she stayed for two months and was diagnosed with vasculitis, an autoimmune disease where the body cannot fight infection. “It affected the blood vessels going into her lungs, so she couldn’t breathe properly.” Eventually, Rosie was discharged but, six days later, had a pulmonary haemorrhage and suffered a cardiac arrest. “She spent nine days on a ventilator until we were told there was no hope and we had to turn off the life support,” says Carolyn. “I remember going to my mum’s house, because we couldn’t face going home, and curling up in a ball, rocking.” Two days later, David suffered a heart attack and was rushed to hospital. “He said, ‘I don’t want to live, I want to die.’ And I said, ‘Don’t you dare die, how dare you say that? You can’t die. We still have a child. You can’t leave us’.” Mercifully, David did survive and was discharged the day before his daughter’s funeral. “I went on automatic pilot and thought, ‘I’ve got to get through this.’ Sitting at home rocking wasn’t an option,” says Carolyn – even when, six weeks later, there was further sadness when their dog died. “It was a whole chain of horrendous events,” she reflects. Carolyn knew Rosie would want her family to try to live to the fullest, and so booked an appointment with her GP to discuss having a baby, expecting a negative reaction to her age. “Actually, she said she would back me every inch of the way and referred me to a clinic in Windsor. The doctor said that if I did conceive naturally, which was unlikely, the chances are I’d have a child with foetal anomalies, but I could go down the IVF route, using a donor egg. I went home with the idea of asking my sister, who is 10 years younger and, before I even asked, she said she’d donate her eggs.” Already having two daughters, Carolyn’s sister wasn’t planning any more, and after the necessary counselling, they went through a cycle of IVF. Sadly, there was more pain when it failed, as did the second try. “I was convinced that it would work, but it didn’t, and it was really gutting. By this time, I’d turned 50 and the hospital couldn’t treat us any more because that was their cut-off age.” Yet Carolyn was still determined. “I was probably a bit crazy, but I just couldn’t give up,” she says. “I had to find somewhere else to do it and a friend, who has her own IVF children, recommended a clinic where they treat women over 50. They had a three-year waiting list, but their sister hospital in Cyprus said we could start in three months.” From top: Carolyn Mayling with baby Dominic; Rosie (on left) with her sister Ellie; Carolyn and Dominic now I want to show people that they can come through loss and, for women told they can’t have children, there is a way The next hurdle was the expense. “We were offered an exclusive batch of eggs, but the cost was ridiculous. My heart sank. I thought, ‘I just can’t afford this.’ We had to put it on the back-burner as we saved up and life went on.” Carolyn was 53 by the time another opportunity came along. “The clinic offered us a donor who would do a shared cycle, which would halve the cost, because half of the eggs would be for another anonymous woman.” It was an easy decision. “We had the pre-treatment in London. David sent his sperm donation, they mixed it with the egg – which came from a woman in Moldova – and we were told that as soon as we got the call, we would have to fly to Cyprus for the embryo transfer. We got a call on Saturday and were told to be at the clinic at 8am on Monday. I hung upside-down like a fruit bat before they told me to go home and take it easy. At the age of 54, Carolyn was pregnant. “I was in disbelief. I showed David, and he was silent,” she says. “It was the first time I’d felt happy since Rosie died.” The stakes were high for this pregnancy. “I did have anxious moments, but I had this feeling it was all going to be fine, and I found an amazing obstetrician.” Carolyn didn’t find the pregnancy any tougher because of her age. “I remember when I had Ellie at 33, even then they wrote ‘geriatric mother’ on my forms. This time, no one said anything. I had nothing but support,” she says. “I did stop working as a tap dancing teacher early on, but mostly it was the same as my other two pregnancies.” Dominic was born in December 2008 by Caesarean section. “I did have a moment when I wondered whether I would be able to bond with him, but the minute he was born, there was no doubt. By the time he arrived, Ellie was 20. “She took it all in her stride. She looked into the crib and fell in love. It was a wonderful, tender, special moment. There was new life. I felt like he was a gift from Rosie to give us all a future.” Carolyn, now 68, has never faced any negativity for having a child so late in life.“I’ve known an amazing group of mums since Dominic was at nursery. No one’s ever thought it was an issue.” Carolyn sees nothing but the positives in older motherhood, despite the toll of everything from the sleepless nights to the trials of adolescence now Dominic is 14. “I want to show people, first, that they can come through loss and, also, for women who are told they can’t have children, actually, there’s often a way, even in the most difficult circumstances. “Being older, I think I’m more appreciative of the little moments. When he was a baby, I’d just stare into his cot, looking at him. Now, he has his mates around all the time and it’s very lively. If I hadn’t done this, what would I be doing now? Life would be so quiet.” The Future is Rosie by Carolyn Mayling (Alliance Publishing, £11.99) is out now
games puzzles 6 pages of puzzles Give your wits a workout with the weekend’s best puzzling package Jumbo General Knowledge Crossword ACROSS 11 German author awarded the 1999 Nobel prize in literature (6,5) 13 1969 BBC documentary series subtitled A Personal View by Kenneth Clark (12) 15 Yorkshire cricketer who amassed 809 runs in his first six Test appearances for England (5,5) 16 Raymond Chandler’s first original screenplay (3,4,6) 17 A chimpanzee, orang-utan or gorilla (5,3) 18 Oscar-winning 2016 film starring Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone (2,2,4) 19/39 English writer best known for Swallows and Amazons (6,7) 21 American sitcom starring Fred MacMurray that ran from 1960 to 1972 (2,5,4) 23 Actor whose film roles include Sam Mussabini in Chariots of Fire and Bilbo Baggins in The Lord of the Rings (3,4) 24 See 31 27 One of the bony segments of the spinal column (8) 29 2022 film that earned Brendan Fraser a Best Actor Oscar (3,5) 31/24 Technical name for athlete’s foot (5,5) 35 French author awarded the 1947 Nobel prize in literature (5,4) 36 Drink created by Coca-Cola as a competitor to 7 Up in 1961 (6) 37 The larger of the two parts of Lake Constance (7) 39 See 19 40 An opinion or doctrine contrary to the orthodox tenets of a church (6) 41 Currency unit of Austria from 1924 to 1938 and from 1945 to 1999 (9) 43 See 48 44 Australian port that is the capital of Queensland (8) 45 Seaside town in Lincolnshire that’s “so bracing” according to a famous 1908 poster (8) 48/43 American singer-songwriter who had a 1978 top ten hit with Because the Night (5,5) 50 Kent village that boasts the only church in the world that has all its windows in stained glass designed by Marc Chagall (7) 52 Swedish singer-songwriter whose debut album, Raw Like Sushi, was released in 1989 (5,6) 56 Blackcurrant-based soft drink invented in Bristol in 1933 (6) 57 Wheelchair racer who has become the 42nd Blue Peter presenter (4,4) 58 Joint between the upper arm or forelimb and the main part of the body (8) 61 1979 Francis Ford Coppola film based on Joseph Conrad’s novella Heart of Darkness (10,3) 62 American actor who received a Golden Globe nomination for Mask (4,6) 63 Former tabloid editor who presented the TV series Do They Mean Us? (5,7) 64 Gremlins actress who married actor Kevin Kline in 1989 (6,5) DOWN 1 2 American boxer who won world titles in five weight classes between 1977 and 1997 (5,3,7) Mountainous state of Austria whose capital is Graz (6) 1 2 3 4 11 5 12 6 7 8 9 10 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 27 28 29 26 30 31 32 33 35 36 34 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 46 48 45 47 49 50 51 54 52 53 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 Card game in which one may get “one for his nob” (8) 4 Japan’s third-largest city (5) 5 Widescreen process famously used for the 1962 film How The West Was Won (8) 6 American actor who won a Best Actor Oscar for the 1953 film Stalag 17 (7,6) 7 Valley in which the quest to destroy the One Ring began in The Lord of the Rings (9) 8 Thai energy drink company that began sponsorship of the EFL Cup in 2017 (7) 9 1853 Charlotte Brontë novel whose protagonist is Lucy Snowe (8) 10 Autonomous region of Spain 64 3 12 14 20 22 25 26 28 that was a centre of Moorish civilisation (9) Breed of domestic fowl that originated in America (5,6,3) In Greek mythology, a Titan compelled to support the sky on his shoulders (5) Mitford sister who had the middle name Valkyrie (5) One of two or more words pronounced differently but spelt the same (9) In Greek mythology, the son of the dawn goddess Eos (8) Apple’s name for the IEEE 1394 High Speed Serial Bus (8) American animated sitcom that has featured guest appearances by Jon Hamm, Hugh Jackman and Tyler The Creator (3,5) 30 East Sussex town associated with former Conservative Lord Chancellor Quintin Hogg (8) 32 1861 novel by Ellen Wood (4,5) 33 County Cricket Club with three pears on its badge (14) 34 The first darts player to win both the BDO and WDC world championships (6,9) 38 Welsh singer who recorded the theme songs to three James Bond films (7,6) 42 The brightest star in the constellation Cygnus (5) 46 A type of biscuit with a layer of currants in the centre (9) 47 Period of time equal to 354.3671 days (5,4) 49 Irish band comprising the siblings Andrea, Sharon, Caroline and Jim (3,5) 51 1970 western starring Jim Brown and Lee Van Cleef (2,6) 53 Chinese-style American dish whose name means “odds and ends” (4,4) 54 Form of entertainment whose name means “empty orchestra” in Japanese (7) 55 North Wales market town with a 13th-century castle (5) 59 The interior of the fruit of a gourd used as a bath sponge (6) 60 In Greek mythology, a river of Hades that caused forgetfulness (5) Solutions, page 52 Inquisitor l Jigsawdoku l Zygolex l Codeword l Sudoku l idoku l Word Wheel
48 games puzzles 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Zygolex® CRYPTIC CROSSWORD No 3779 BY FILBERT 1 2 9 3 4 5 10 6 7 Solution to yesterday’s Cryptic 8 P L A S T E A S H T A S T E C U E HOME V I Y E I L A A S E M I K E Y A P E E H A L F L I E K B U T T E R I O E A NNU L E 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 D E B A S E D 24 25 26 E M B A R G O 27 28 29 ACROSS 1 Chinese group departs after warning shot (8) 5 Excellent suggestion might finally work (6) 9 It helps you hear note played relatively quietly (3) 10 Harry wrote “Markle, I’m no different from Smith” (11) 12 Feast always started with bananas and plums (4,6) 13 Low point for every drink (4) 15 Maybe Pavarotti right away gets to grips with church music (6) 16 New feud brewing among the Spanish poor (7) 18 On edge, lawyer rejected potential suitor (7) 20 A Scottish idiot set my punt adrift (6) 23 Boring, with no relief (4) P E R S U A D E A D I D S A D S T L E R S P T T E A N GA N D E OND Full rules at www.zygolex.com GRUB 24 Bother, the candlestick’s covered in grime (10) 28 Occasionally, lines entering gents; more often, here (6) 29 Headgear protects several bits of PE assistant (8) DOWN R A I S E S R T P GRU E L U T O R E A T E D E G ME RGE I E E D T R A P D I L A D L E E I R GMA T I C E T E E NUOU S 7 Split receipts on holiday (4,3) 8 After being overthrown, Napoleon’s exile too easy to bear? (8) 26 Unlikely to be silly, because of dodgy heart (4,2,5) 27 It’s made by boiling water, endlessly (3) I L EMMA P L I B E E A R S D OWN M C D I T A S H E N T A E I ME N S I ON A C N C N S U E S P E T I R I E F I NGS C A C H E A C T E N I T A R F V E R L I E T 11 Smear top of nasty verruca in gel – it’ll show improvement (8,5) 14 Prevent wandering of his cool hand (10) 17 Narcissus slid off a divingboard, absorbed by reflection (8) 1 Fellow abseiling loses footing on ice (6) 19 Accepting ring, end up married – as did the pussycat? (7) 2 Dish out pleasure, not a kick in the teeth (7) 21 Show nipple pierced by husband; sore, but not very (7) 3 Half the world is into cannabis, I say (10) 22 Royal house opening for everyone to see inside (6) 4 There’s no chance of solvers entering unacceptable term (3,2,4,4) 25 Sore losers forget they were ever in last place (4) 6 Billy’s head down in the swimming pool (4) HONE THRASH PIPE 4 ROWDY Solution to last Saturday’s Cryptic 21 22 23 R H E L I I O E G O T OWA I P D D EOS B T P B R A DOO A T W RWO O D M E A UNDR E G O R NU T OR E C O T H AMM Find the missing words by following the RHYME, LETTERS and MEANING links – eg, a word that rhymes with ‘cheek’, has one letter different from ‘pear’ and has the same meaning as mountain, would be ‘peak’. Full rules at zygolex.com. Find the missing words by following the RHYME, LETTERS and MEANING links, e.g. a word Solutions, page 52 that rhymes with ‘cheek’, has the same meaning as ‘mountain’ and has one letter different from RHYME LETTERS MEANING ‘pear’, would be ‘peak’. Note: only one letter is changed in a Letters link. 4 5 6 4 DOWRY 5 5 3 WEIR 8 8 5 DAD 6 FROCK BLACK RHYME KNOT LETTERS MEANING Mensa® Brain Number Teasers Square Zygolex (from left to right) - drub; hose; dowdy; How to playstranFill the empty l Rearrangepicked; the letters of chose; jab; poke; choke; drab; jam; SMART GARAGE MATE gle; dam; straggle; block; tangle. squares with numbers that will make the across and down to give two seaside towns in Kent. calculations produce the results What are they? shown in the grey squares. Each l The combined age of Alfie and Dana is 43. numeral from 1 to 9 must only The combined age of Dana and Seth is 51. The appear once. The calculations combined age of Seth and Alfie is 46. How old should be performed from are Alfie, Dana and Seth? left to right and top to bottom, rather than in strict l On each row, place a word beginning with mathematical order. R to fit the clue given. When completed a topical word will be read down the shaded column. What is it? A dilapidated building Easier x Anger 0 0 2 1 2 2 3 2 1 1 1 1 3 3 2 3 1 5 3 0 1 0 1 1 1 2 3 2 1 2 1 3 2 3 4 2 1 0 1 4 4 2 0 1 4 2 3 3 2 3 3 1 2 1 1 23 Word Wheel How to play This is an open-ended puzzle. How many words of three or more letters, each including the letter at centre of the L A wheel, can you make from M D this diagram? O We’ve found 63, including one R E nine-letter word. F M Solutions, page 52 ÷ x x Curious about IQ? Take the workout, mensa.org.uk 6 -13 ÷ x + Solution, page 52 2 - x Fruit peel 2 LAG TINGLE A length of cord 2 HAGGLE 3 Uncommon How to play Find all the mines in the grid. Numbers in certain squares indicate how many mines there are in the neighbouring squares, including diagonally touching squares. Mines cannot be placed in squares with numbers. KICKED 4 3 A flower Minesweeper PECKED 1 10 x - 108 44 28 Harder x - - - + - + x -9 4 + x 10 4 5 270 14
games puzzles 49 Solutions minURL.co.uk/i Killer Sudoku Jigsawdoku How to play Each row, column and 3 by 3 box must contain each number (1 to 9) only once. The sum of all numbers contained in a dotted area must match the number printed in its top-left corner. No number can appear more than once in a dotted area. How to play Place the numbers 1-9 once in each row, column and bold-lined jigsaw region. 18 15 12 4 8 7 15 14 8 13 10 24 15 7 9 12 13 9 7 9 9 12 4 3 1 1 7 6 3 4 2 7 8 6 8 6 3 Codeword No 3521 Sudokarrow How to play As traditional sudoku, but numbers along the path of an arrow must also add up to the circled square at the top of each arrow. 2 7 25 The numbers in the grid correspond to the letters of the alphabet. Solve the puzzle and fill in the letters in the key as you discover them. Three letters are provided to give you a start. The solution will be printed in Monday’s paper; the solution to yesterday’s codeword is on page 52. 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 7 1 M T 19 6 16 2 20 WENT 9 16 25 16 E 19 23 21 3 23 Need a little help getting started? Then call for up to four extra clue letters on 0901 292 5204. Calls cost £1 plus your telephone company’s network access charge (if you are having trouble with the phone service, call the helpline: 0333 202 3390). Or text THEI CLUE to 85100 to receive your clues. Texts cost £1 plus your standard network charge (if you are having trouble with the text service, call the helpline: 0333 335 3351). Clues change each day at midnight. 5 7 16 19 25 23 19 11 23 14 16 23 8 1 23 23 14 20 4 5 5 11 20 26 14 25 13 19 13 25 22 14 25 20 23 22 5 26 25 25 23 25 20 22 7 25 25 23 7 14 23 23 23 19 24 25 7 11 4 3 7 3 5 5 24 17 24 20 15 22 1 4 24 20 7 20 13 16 25 10 22 25 5 2 18 23 25 26 25 23 12 25 19 11 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Concise Crossword No 3843 2 3 4 5 6 7 GOOD 8 9 10 11 12 13 ACROSS 1 3 7 8 9 12 13 14 17 18 20 21 14 17 20 Compound used as an insect repellent (4) White fur (6) Estrange (8) Tense (4) Determination (10) Live-in family helper (2,4) Thickset (6) Improvement (10) Tibetan priest or monk (4) Immediate medical assistance (5,3) Seem (6) Traditional story (4) DOWN 1 2 3 4 5 6 10 11 13 15 16 19 Frenzy (8) Before (Poetic) (3) Vote in (5) Tempo-keeping device (9) Naming word (4) Adapt (6) Impasse (9) Playful (8) Fortified wine (6) Deduce (5) Moist (4) Attempt (3) Stuck on the concise crossword? Then call our solutions line on 0906 751 0201. Calls cost 80p per minute plus your telephone company’s network access charge. If you are having trouble accessing this number, please call our helpdesk on 0333 202 3390. 15 16 PAST 5 5 2 3 2 1 7 3 1 7 5 1 3 6 4 7 2 8 6 9 6 4 7 5 4 5 7 1 WILD 9 3 3 16 11 3 How to play Convert the word at the top of the ladder into the word at the bottom of it, using only the four rungs in between. On each rung, you must put a valid fourletter word that is identical to the word above it, apart from a one-letter change. There may be more than one way of achieving this. 6 9 4 1 2 8 4 7 4 9 1 9 Word Ladder 2 5 1 2 8 4 3 5 6 9 9 9 8 8 7 22 5 6 Easier 2 9 5 7 16 9 8 1 idoku Exclusive to i In addition to the usual constraints, each numeral from 1 to 9 must appear (once only) in the squares forming the red letter i. 7 6 3 6 11 8 11 6 12 5 12 7 11 4 5 2 Sudoku 18 19 21 Solution to yesterday’s Concise Crossword ACROSS 1 Newt, 3 Reno (Neutrino), 7 Fierce, 8 Cravat, 9 Exterminate, 10 Hamper, 13 Tulips, 15 Respectable, 19 Gigolo, 20 Billet, 21 Leaf, 22 Vary. DOWN 1 Naive, 2 Worktop, 3 Receipt, 4 Nyala, 5 Bear, 6 Make-up, 11 Adroit, 12 Reel off, 14 Lobelia, 16 Scone, 17 Tuba, 18 Enemy.
50 games puzzles 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Solutions minURL.co.uk/i Kakuro Word Fit Binary How to play Fill the white squares so that the total in each across or down run of cells matches the total at the start of that run. You must use the numbers from 1-9 only and cannot repeat a number in a run. How to play Can you fit all the words into the grid to complete the puzzle? Some words may initially fit in more than one place, but there is only one way to fit all the words together to complete the grid. How to play Complete the grid so that each row and column contains five 0s and five 1s. The same number cannot appear in more than two consecutive squares in any row or column. In the finished puzzle, each row must have a different sequence of 0s and 1s to any other row, and likewise for each column. 12 18 10 21 6 4 letters 4 letters Amen Amen Blab Blot Blab Garb Blot Host Garb Hues Host Lute Hues Wish Lute 6 letters Wish Badger 6 letters Buzzes Clique Badger Fencer Buzzes Fevers Clique Milieu Fencer Shaver Fevers Thrash Milieu Tidied Shaver 7 letters Thrash Swivels Tidied Varying 711letters letters Swivels Impermeable Varying 11 letters Impermeable 18 3 14 23 6 29 28 4 15 21 24 16 15 16 18 16 15 35 4 12 14 8 10 10 16 6 3 16 Battleships How to play Locate the position of each of the ships listed below in the grid. Numbers around the edge tell you the number of ship segments in each row and column of the puzzle. Ships are surrounded on all sides by water, including diagonally. 5 8 1 6 5 4 3 0 1 2 4 2 1 2 4 2 1 5 5 5 6 4 6 6 3 6 0 5 3 2 2 4 5 4 5 1 3 3 3 0 3 0 3 2 0 6 0 1 1 2 5 0 4 5 6 4 4 3 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 1 1 3 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 6 4 2 1 2 2 5 5 5 6 64 6 68 1 3 6 0 5 3 2 2 0 4 5 4 5 1 1 3 0 3 0 3 2 0 6 6 0 2 5 0 1 4 5 11 1 4 3 0 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 6 4 4 8 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 1 4 2 2 2 3 2 2 2 1 4 6 4 2 2 2 6 3 1 4 1 3 3 6 2 2 2 2 1 3 4 3 5 2 5 1 1 2 1 2 2 3 3 5 2 4 1 4 4 1 6 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 6 2 3 5 Hexalex How to play Place each of the letters below once into the empty hexagons, crossing them off as you do so. Enter the letters in such a way that it is possible to find all the words listed alongside the grid by moving from hexagon to adjacent hexagon to spell out each word. F 1 3 3 W A B E H I 3 3 CRIMP FUME FUME GAZE GAZE JOLT KNOT JOLT LONG KNOT RIP LONG SLOTH RIP SLY SOLD SLOTH WHET SLY CRIMP O G 2 BRAVO BRAVO D M C 4 3 2 A B E H I J L N P R S T U V Y Z 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 2 53 32 4 3 3 5 4 1 2 3 2 4 7 5 4 6 3 9 6 1 3 3 5 2 1 5 2 7 2 Dominoes 0 0 0 0 1 3 3 0 0 0 How to play Connect every island (represented by circles) into a single interconnected group. To do this draw bridges between islands. The number in each circle states how many bridges must be connected to that island. Bridges cannot cross each other, can only be drawn horizontally or vertically, and there can be a maximum of two bridges between any pair of islands. 1 2 1 1 How to play Each hexagon is divided into six triangles. The sum of these six triangles is always 25. Place a number from 1-9 in each empty triangle to complete the puzzle; you cannot repeat a number within a hexagon. 4 1 0 0 Bridges 3 2 2 1 1 3 3 Locate the position of each of the ships 2 listed below in the grid. Numbers3around the edge tell you the number 3of ship segments 3 in1each row 4 and 0column1 6of the 1 1 puzzle. Ships are surrounded on 1 all sides by water, including diagonally. 3 3 3 3 3 3 0 1 0 3 3 3 1 3 1 3 2 1 006 1 5 0 1 1 6 3 2 1 0 6 1 5 0 1 1 How to play Each 3 2 of the 28 domino 1 pieces from 0-0 1 through to 6-6 have 0 1 1 been placed once 0 into the grid. Can you work out where 1 each of them are placed? 6 1 0 Number Hexagon 1 4 Locate the position of each of the ships Locate the position of each of thearound ships listed below in the grid. Numbers listed belowtell in the around the edge yougrid. the Numbers number of ship the edge in telleach yourow theand number segments columnofofship the segments in each row and column the puzzle. Ships are surrounded on allof sides puzzle. are surrounded by water,Ships including diagonally. on all sides by water, including diagonally. 0 0 0 0 0 1 K J L N P R S T U V Y Z SOLD WHET
CHILDREN’S PUZZLES WO R SE A RC H Countries In D Asia Z A G W M K P L X V I S U L N Q A C V M A N I H C J N A G I I A U R H M O M K L A G Y Z A W A P G I N N A F Y P I N A I T Y S I D E Q N E M M Y I R N M O V I Z A F A A E R U V Y R Y X Q W Y K U O N CHINA MINDIA AT C H I N G DIRAN I N O S AU R 1 IRAQ How to play I MALAYSIA SUM FINDER 14 W 10 18 32 CHINA INDIA IRAN IRAQ JAPAN MALAYSIA MONGOLIA MYANMAR VIETNAM YEMEN L E T T E R F I T CanJAPAN you find the matching dinosaur? YEMEN T SPOT TH E DIFFER ENCE 3 letters Odd Odd 4 letters 4 letters Zany Zany 5 letters 5 letters Silly Silly Weird Weird Witty Witty 6 letters 6 letters Quirky Quirky 7 letters 7 letters Amusing Amusing Bizarre Bizarre Unusual Unusual 8 letters 8 letters Peculiar Peculiar Puzzling Puzzling Uncommon Uncommon 9 letters 9 letters Diverting Diverting Hilarious Hilarious 1010 letters letters Mysterious 1 1 5 2 Can you find the matching dinosaur? 5 3 7 Can you find the matching dinosaur? 2 6 3 7 W CLUES l Magician’s stick (4) l Abandon; leave (6) l Propel through the air; toss (5) l Sorceress who flies on a broomstick (5) l Period of 60 minutes (4) l Fix or mend (6) Can you spot the 6 differences between the two pictures? Abandon; leave (6) Can youPropel spot the 6 differences between the two pictures? through the air; toss (5) VIETNAM Each word only has one position and must fit exactly in the given3squares letters 3 R R END 13 22 MYANMAR How to play Fill the grid with the words given in the list. 6 D Magician's stick (4) MONGOLIA 2 How to play Solve the crossword-style clues below to fill the grid, writing one letter per square. The last letter of each answer is the first letter of the next answer. These have been written in for you, along with the first and last letter of the whole puzzle. H 39 16 20 29 28 minURL.co.uk/puzzles ROU T E WO R D How to play Can you find Three of How the to numbers thenumbers box below play Threein of the in the add up to 41. the words in box below add up to 41. But can you worknumbers are? the grid? They But can you work out what those three out what those three numbers are? may be written horizontally, vertically or diagonally, and either forwards or backwards. START 19 Solutions 4 4 HowSorceress to play Can youon spot the 6 differences between the two pictures? who flies a broomstick (5) Period of 60 minutes (4) Fix or mend (6) 4 Mysterious NUMBER PY R A M I D HEX MAZE ↓ How to play The value of each square in the number pyramid is the sum of the two squares directly under it 315 158 64 29 44 9 25 1 17 12 12 How to play Find your way out of the grid, entering at the entrance arrow. You must follow only one path which does not cut corners, jump walls or repeat itself. WO R D BUILDER ↓ How to play Answers to every clue contain only the letters in the grid, are five letters long and include the central letter. A E L H T R W O Z l Type of dance l Item used for drying lType Organof that pumps blood dance l Wide awake Item used for drying Organ that pumps blood Wide awake
52 games puzzles 1 2 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 3 4 5 6 11 INQUISITOR 13 No 1795 15 Come Into Force by Apt A letter must be inserted into all down and most across clues before solving. In down clues these give the first of five sentences of a statement. In across clues they describe a famous three-word feature of the statement, which must replace two entries to represent the fifth sentence (in original and updated forms) creating new real crossing words. These entries must be highlighted, together with 16 cells spelling out part of the fourth sentence. Drawing a circle through the 16 cells will produce a rough depiction of the entity named in the second sentence. ACROSS 1 Spoil my game point (7) 7 A massive top! (5) 16 18 19 21 22 26 27 30 33 31 17 23 24 28 34 29 36 38 5 Move nine, but down one, with no rook (6) 6 Banksy might paint on elevated platform with no sides (3) 7 I provide bright orange tin: a natural container for tomato (6) 8 Were star-cross’d lovers met in Dover on arrival? (6) 9 Society met up to think once (5) 19 Maybe beloved writer’s alas taking time over third letter (7, 2 words) 20 Cut off secret Neil Armstrong holds after launch? (8) 37 More than one sat slightly reclining? (4) 26 Aging Verity shot husband down (5) 38 Sculpted lad back on tour of Home Counties (9) 27 I repeatedly wove borders, wanting a bit of Gingham (6) 39 Seen more than three in contention (3) 28 Course that’s taken with expert on statues (6) 40 Learner to don: “Latin, that is most useless!” (6) 31 Spanish gent cycling like Greg (5) 41 Nonsense about red setter and alsatian? (6) 33 Astrobiologist’s had scientific cells producing spores (4) 34 Amour in the form of rings and letters (4) DOWN I’ll peak at being bedecked by golds (6) Futoshiki ABC Logic How to play Place the numbers from 1-5 exactly once in each row and column. The greater than and less than signs (‘>’ and ‘<’) indicate where one cell is greater/less than the adjacent cell indicated. How to play Place the letters A, B and C only once in each row and column. Each row and column has two blank cells. The letters at the edge of a row/column indicate which of the letters is the first/last to appear in that row/column. > > > < C C B > < A > A 4 B 2 > A B B < > > C B B C NEW THIS MONTH For the full range of i puzzle books see minURL.co.uk/ibooks S P O L L E A I RA N D E O C G K L L I I M N P E S S E S AD L E T E I N R D E O AM C E A T U T L WORD WHEEL JUMBO CROSSWORD Across 11 Günter Grass, 13 Civilisation, 15 Harry Brook, 16 The Blue Dahlia, 17 Great ape, 18 La La Land, 19/39 Arthur Ransome, 21 My Three Sons, 23 Ian Holm, 27 Vertebra, 29 The Whale, 31/24 Tinea pedis, 35 André Gide, 36 Sprite, 37 Obersee, 40 Heresy, 41 Schilling, 44 Brisbane, 45 Skegness, 48/43 Patti Smith, 50 Tudeley, 52 Neneh Cherry, 56 Ribena, 57 Abby Cook, 58 Shoulder, 61 Apocalypse Now, 62 Eric Stoltz, 63 Derek Jameson, 64 Phoebe Cates. 5-CLUE CROSSWORD Across: 3 E-laps-E, 5/6 Reading matter* Down: 1 Pe-set-a, 2 Man-date, 4 Sent-Ry ZYGOLEX LEFT TO RIGHT: drub; hose; dowdy; picked; drab; chose; jab; poke; choke; jam; strangle; dam; straggle; block; tangle Down 1 Sugar Ray Leonard, 2 Styria, 3 Cribbage, 4 Osaka, 5 Cinerama, 6 William Holden, 7 Rivendell, 8 Carabao, 9 Villette, 10 Andalusia, 12 Rhode Island red, 14 Atlas, 20 Unity, 22 Heteronym, 25 Hesperus, 26 FireWire, 28 Big Mouth, 30 (Lord) Hailsham, 32 East Lynne, 33 Worcestershire, 34 Dennis Priestley, 38 Shirley Bassey, 42 Deneb, 46 Garibaldi, 47 Lunar year, 49 The Corrs, 51 El Condor, 53 Chop suey, 54 Karaoke, 55 Conwy, 59 Loofah, 60 Lethe. FRIDAY’S CODEWORD 3520 1 2 3 4 5 14 15 16 17 18 O N G T D R E S S A G E Given the harrumphing that accompanied the minesweeperbased Inquisitor – a puzzle that nevertheless came seventh in the 2022 voting – it was a touch ironic that the year’s champion Listener and IQ puzzles needed sudoku and Wordle to arrive at their respective solutions. We’ve already congratulated Artix for the latter; now we salute Twin, winning the Ascot Gold Cup for “Singles Only”, his sixth solo Listener. Twin is a new name in the Independent, too. From his first brace of puzzles, try: “Opportunity to cut north, say, for point on top (6,4)”; and “Completely impractical to get herringbone trousers (10)”. John Henderson (Nimrod), @enigmatistelgar Nine-letter word malformed Other words ado, adore, deform, demo, doe, doer, dole, dome, earldom, fedora, floe, flora, foal, foaled, foam, foamed, foe, fold, folder, for, ford, fore, form, formal, formed, fro, from, load, loader, loaf, loafer, loam, lode, lord, lore, memo, modal, mode, model, modem, molar, mole, moral, morale, more, oaf, oar, ode, old, older, oral, ordeal, ore, redo, reload, road, roam, roamed, rod, rode, roe, role 1. Margate and Ramsgate 2. Alfie – 19, Dana – 24 and Seth – 27 3. Spring The words are ROSE, ROPE, RARE, RUIN, RIND and RAGE For more puzzles, see www.clarity-media.co.uk G D N R D A R I C P L I E A Puzzle solutions MENSA BRAIN TEASERS The i Book of Concise Crosswords Vol 16 With 100 brand new puzzles. Available on Amazon for £4.99. See minURL.co.uk/ crosswordsvol16 I M P I N D AWN I EMS S U AME T E T I F I E E F A LM D O G L E E R O L E OMN I A S H S U R T Y C O L L D E D O E R RY B R O P L E Give Me a Clue 25 Furiously on a sulk? To donkeys we’re elated! (7) 30 Twelve finally decode cipher (5) S A R A P E N M A G S E R A R E N S I L E D Solution to 1793 Green Light by Check Letters ignored in wordplay spell PARTIAL ECLIPSE, defining the “shaded” area; those removed before solving spell OPTIMISATION OF ENERGY OUTPUT, hinting at the exchange of 5 HYDRO and 34 SOLAR to bring the latter into the light. 36 Deprived person defied by volume editor (7) 2 Solvers may e-mail queries and comments to nimrod1@jetdoc.co.uk at any time. Twitter @enigmatistelgar You can comment about today’s puzzle after 10am on 28 March at fifteensquared.net, which hosts a weekly blog. P E T U N I A S 24 Killed, like flies let in women’s place, with thin strips (7) 35 Left you, and I ought to have left not (4) > Learned by myself to adjust gain (7) 22 Pet getting head stuck in lab safety device (7, 2 words) 41 18 He’ll refuse article after day’s reflection (5) > 4 16 Dishonoured Doctor of Education suppresses lie (7) 39 32 Stop growing up: a late change (7) < An Italian cook’s stale asparagus sandwiches (4) 13 Chefs from local eateries negotiate a number of days without rich food? (6) 37 40 3 10 Sheet’s lying about this, and this (5) 35 17 Half-heartedly rolls and eases out (5) 4 25 32 29 Swap portions of deliberately unsophisticated pastry (4) 15 Move contents of most vulgar compositions (6) 10 20 26 To start, fixes sentence produced by computer learner (7, 2 words) 14 Wet and shivering, dear old thesp (7) 9 14 23 Young animals lash out, having nothing by way of height (5) 12 Scots under order of Athena (6) 8 12 21 Catch paw with skill when retreating (4) 11 Sorting body, bandaging recurrently tight ligaments (6) 7 I 6 7 19 20 E J 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 22 23 24 25 26 Y F B D Q M C H X A U K W Z R V S P L More solutions: minURL.co.uk/i Terms & Conditions SMS services on these pages are provided by BBA Digital Ltd, KT18 5AD, helpline: 0333 335 3351. Phone services on these pages are provided by Spoke AL10 9NA, helpline: 0333 202 3390, and by Advanced Telecom Services, EC1M 4BH. Helpline: 0330 333 6946.
culture 53 culture The five best this weekend TALKING POINT FILM PEARL A prequel of sorts to last year’s slasher X, this is not your average horror film. Shot instead like a Golden Age flick, it stars Mia Goth as a (psychotic) farm girl dreaming of being on the chorus line. TV EXTRAPOLATIONS Apple TV+ This anthology drama weaves together eight stories set in a near-future where the effects of climate change are embedded in daily life. Forest Whitaker and Marion Cotillard star. PODCAST QUEER & THE BEAT! Paris Munro struggled with abandonment and gender identity issues growing up and relied on music to heal their traumas. Here, they interview celebrities about how music saved their lives, too. RADIO A TOMB WITH A VIEW Radio 4/BBC Sounds Peter Ross uncovers the stories behind the headstones in UK graveyards in this “Book of the Week”. A compassionate celebration of both life and death. ALBUM 10,000 GECS By 100 Gecs The American hyperpop duo blur genres from rap-rock to deathmetal to ska and doo-wop with surreal invention and, most importantly, a real sense of fun. Reality TV returns to golden age of social experiments Armchair anthropologists assemble! ‘Rise and Fall’ is the latest series to drop contestants into a pit of Machiavellian manipulation. By Anna Bonet A sk anyone who watches reality television why they enjoy it and I’ll bet plenty of responses will contain the word “anthropology”. It is fascinating, we say, trying to justify our “guilty pleasure”, to watch the relationship dynamics, the power shifts, the deceits, the betrayals. Now, into this world of very important human studies has entered a new reality competition from the makers of The Traitors. Channel 4’s Rise and Fall, presented by Greg James, sounds as though it will have many of the components that made the hit BBC show so good: hubris, treachery and Machiavellian levels of manipulation. Sixteen people begin as equals, but through a series of challenges either rise to be a Ruler (and live in the “opulent penthouse”) or fall to be a Grafter (and survive in basic conditions in the basement). It sounds rather like the games once played on Big Brother, which actively encouraged a hierarchy, with some contestants rewarded with special luxuries – except it is on a macro scale, affecting the entire show, rather than time-limited tasks. And at the end of this game of snakes and ladders, one of the Rulers will walk away with the prize money of up to £100,000. Rise and Fall is just the latest piece of evidence to suggest that the social experiment branch of reality television is having a moment. Most notable is The Traitors, last year’s Claudia Winkleman-presented phenomenon in which 22 spectacularly good personalities decamped to the Scottish Highlands to convince one another they were “100 per cent” faithful (when in fact some of them were saboteurs lying through their teeth at every turn). Just a month before The Traitors, Netflix resurrected The Mole, a competition with a very similar format, which first aired in the early Noughties (and is equally silly and addictive). Why this change? I’d hazard a guess that it’s because we are in the age of self-analysis We’ve also had Channel 4’s The Bridge (can strangers work together to build a bridge?) and The Simpler Life (can digital obsessives spend a summer cut off in a remote farm?) – and let’s not forget ITV’s forthcoming reboot of Big Brother, where it all began. There is also a whole subsection in the dating world: from Netflix’s Love is Blind asking what dating could look like without physical attraction to The Ultimatum, which asks whether couples will finally tie the knot when presented with… yes, an ultimatum. By contrast, scripted reality shows – The Only Way is Essex, Keeping Up with the Kardashians, Made in Chelsea, Geordie Shore, The Real Housewives – are experiencing all-time lows in viewing figures. So why have our tastes changed? I’d hazard a guess that it’s because we are in the age of self-analysis, though it may also be a hangover from the pandemic: there is something appealing about observing people being pushed to extremes in weird circumstances after we’ve all been in weird circumstances, pushed to our own extremes. Channel 4’s chief content officer, Ian Katz, has described Rise and Fall as “timely”, because “the gap between the ‘haves’ and the ‘have nots’ has never felt wider”. I think this is undoubtedly true – and watching people wield power recklessly could feel painfully familiar. Yet I also can’t help but feel that a reality programme is hardly the most appropriate place to explore inequality. Pretending it is anything more worthy than entertainment is unnecessary. Indeed, we shouldn’t need to justify everything – not least our interest in reality TV. Yes, it is great for anthropology. But also, let’s be honest, it is mostly just as excellent for our amusement. Rise and Fall begins at 9pm on Sunday on Channel 4 Your seven-day guide to television, on-demand services and radio p54-67
54 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Saturday television CRITIC’S CHOICE Six Nations Live 12pm, BBC One and 1.55pm & 4.30pm, ITV1 The final round of fixtures begins at Murrayfield with Scotland vs Italy (kick-off 12.30pm) before moving on to Paris for France vs Wales (Kick-off 2.45pm) and culminating in Dublin as Ireland host England (kick-off 5pm). Ireland claimed an impressive 32-15 win at Twickenham last year and will fancy their chances this evening after enjoying a strong campaign so far. Match of the Day Live: The FA Cup 6.00 Breakfast (S). 9.45 Saturday Kitchen Live (S). 11.15 Football Focus (S). 11.45 BBC News; Weather (S). 12.00 Live Six Nations Rugby Union Scotland vs Italy. Kick-off is at 12.30pm (S). 3.00 Money For Nothing (R) (S). 3.30 Comic Relief – Highlights 2023 (S). 4.30 Final Score (S). 5.10 BBC News (S). 5.20 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 5.25 Match Of The Day Live: The FA Cup Manchester City vs Burnley. Kick-off is at 5.45pm (S). 5.25pm, BBC One Manchester City vs Burnley (kick-off 5.45pm). Gary Lineker, 6.45 Dennis & Gnasher Unleashed! (R) (S). 6.55 Boy Girl Dog Cat Mouse Cheese (R) (S). 7.10 The Football Academy (R) (S). 7.35 The Dengineers (R) (S). 8.05 Operation Ouch! (R) (S). 8.35 Newsround (S). 8.45 Blue Peter (R) (S). 9.15 Deadly Pole To Pole (R) (S). 9.45 Deadly Pole To Pole (R) (S). 10.15 Life In The Air (R) (S). 11.15 Rick Stein’s Cornwall (R) (S). 11.45 Coast To Coast Food Festival (R) (S). 12.15 Celebrity Best Home Cook (R) (S). 1.15 FILM: Doctor Zhivago (David Lean 1965) (S). 4.20 The Real Marigold On Tour (R) (S). 5.20 Flog It! (R) (S). 5.50 Celebrity Antiques Road Trip (R) (S). 6.00 CITV 9.25 ITV News (S). 9.30 James Martin’s Saturday Morning (S). 11.40 Ainsley’s Fantastic Flavours (S). 12.40 James Martin’s American Adventure (R) (S). 1.40 ITV News; Weather (S). 1.55 Six Nations Live France vs Wales. Kick-off is at 2.45pm (S). 4.30 Six Nations Live Ireland vs England. Kick-off is at 5pm (S). 6.50 Saving Lives At Sea A crew rescue a boy who has got into difficulties after jumping off rocks (R) (S). recent furore about criticising the Government now behind him, presents the sixth-round tie at Etihad Stadium. Burnley are managed by former City captain Vincent Kompany, who won this trophy twice while at the club. The Clarets have performed well under his stewardship and look set for an immediate return to the Premier League. Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway/Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel 7.15pm, ITV1/7.55pm, BBC One Thanks to the live football on BBC One (see above), Ant & Dec are able to steal a considerable start on Michael McIntyre in the battle of the Saturday-night light entertainment behemoths. The Geordie twosome greet Toni Collette (as the “Star Guest Announcer”), Joe Wicks and Jake Shears of Scissor Sisters (appearing in a disco “End of the Show Show”). Among those risking motion sickness on McIntyre’s wheel of specialist knowledge are Jonathan Ross (on comic books), Tom Allen (on gardening), and Sara Cox (on dogs). Challenge Anneka 8.50pm, Channel 5 Channel 5 has a habit of reviving old TV shows, whether All Creatures Great and Small or a mooted resurrection of The X Factor. Viewers with memories of the early 90s will recall this 6.00 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 6.25 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 6.50 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.15 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 Everybody Loves Raymond (R) (S). 9.00 Everybody Loves Raymond (R) (S). 9.30 Everybody Loves Raymond (R) (S). 10.00 The Simpsons (R) (S). 12.30 The Simpsons (R) (S). 1.00 Four In A Bed (R) (S). 1.35 Four In A Bed (R) (S). 2.05 Four In A Bed (R) (S). 2.35 Four In A Bed (R) (S). 3.05 Four In A Bed (R) (S). 3.40 FILM: The Karate Kid (Harald Zwart 2010) (S). 6.00 Milkshake! 10.00 The Smurfs (S). 10.15 SpongeBob SquarePants (R) (S). 10.25 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 10.30 Friends (R) (S). 10.55 Friends (R) (S). 11.25 Friends (R) (S). 11.55 FILM: Calendar Girls (Nigel Cole 2003) Fact-based comedy drama, starring Helen Mirren and Julie Walters (S). 2.05 FILM: Steel Magnolias (Herbert Ross 1989) Drama, with Sally Field and Julia Roberts (S). 4.25 FILM: The Deep End Of The Ocean (Ulu Grosbard 1999) Drama, starring Michelle Pfeiffer (S). 6.20 Channel 4 News (S). 6.50 Bettany Hughes’ Treasures Of The World (S). 6.30 5 News Weekend (S). 6.35 Zara & Anne: Like Mother, Like Daughter? (R) (S). Anneka Rice rebuilds a dog rescue centre as Channel 5 reboots ‘Challenge Anneka’ 8.50pm, Channel 5 7.50 Universe Last in the series (R) (S). 7.15 Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway Actress Toni Collette is the Star Guest Announcer (S). 7.45 Edward VIII: Britain’s Traitor King (R) (S). 7.45 Harry Wild Investigates Harry and Fergus agree to help a local loan shark (S). 7.00 Michael Palin: The Art Of Travel (S). 7.10 Michael Palin’s Hemingway Adventure (S). 8.50 Casualty Charlie questions his loyalties as the ED reaches breaking point (S). 8.50 Chaka Khan At The BBC Archive performances by the American singer (S). 8.45 Starstruck Four more teams of superfans are transformed into their music idols (S). 8.50 Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix Qualifying Highlights Action from Jeddah Corniche Circuit (S). 8.50 Challenge Anneka New series. Revival of the show in which Anneka Rice takes on tasks (S). 8.00 Michael Palin: Travels Of A Lifetime (S). 9PM 9.40 Not Going Out Lee decides to teach the twins about the facts of life (R) (S). 9.30 Aretha Franklin: Duets A 1993 concert from Manhattan’s Nederlander Theatre (R) (S). 9.55 The Jonathan Ross Show With Liam Neeson, Mel Giedroyc and Munya Chawawa (S). 10.10 BBC News; Weather (S). 10.30 Match Of The Day Highlights of the latest matches (S). 10.20 Randy Crawford At Drury Lane A 1981 concert by the American jazz and R&B singer (R) (S). 10.55 ITV News; Weather (S). 11.50 FILM: Halloween (David Gordon Green 2018) Horror, starring Jamie Lee Curtis (S). 11.30 Queens Of Soul Celebration of the female singers who define the genre (R) (S). 11.15 Bradley & Barney Walsh: Breaking Dad (R) (S). 11.45 English Football League Highlights (S). 1.35 BBC News (S). 12.30 FILM: Northern Soul (Elaine Constantine 2014) Drama, starring Elliot James Langridge (S). 2.05 Dave (R) (S). 2.35 Dave (R). 3.05 Dave (R) (S). 3.35 This Is BBC Two (S). 1.30 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 Unwind With ITV (S). 4.15 Love Your Weekend With Alan Titchmarsh (R) (S). LATE 11PM 8PM 7PM 7.55 Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel With guests including Jonathan Ross and Sara Cox (S). 1.00 FILM: Patriots Day (Peter Berg 2016) Fact-based drama (S). 3.15 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (R) (S). 4.05 Jamie’s One-Pan Wonders (R) (S). 4.15 Hollyoaks Omnibus (R) (S). 10.20 When Classic TV Goes Horribly Wrong (R) (S). 1.10 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 3.10 Tutankhamun With Dan Snow (R) (S). 3.55 The Woman With 106 Dogs (R) (S). 4.40 Friends (R) (S). 5.30 Nick’s Quest (R) (S). 5.55 Peppa Pig (R) (S). Paris Police 1905 9pm, BBC Four The final double bill of this rather fine French period detective drama begins with Inspector Jouin (Jérémie Laheurte) banged up for his “nocturnal habits” in the Bois de Boulogne and (these being less enlightened Jouin ends up on the wrong side of the law 9pm, BBC Four 6.00 Unwind With ITV (S). 6.15 Coronation Street Omnibus (S). 9.00 Dress To Impress (S). 10.00 Dress To Impress (S). 11.00 Australian Ninja Warrior (S). 12.40 FILM: The Sisterhood Of The Traveling Pants 2 (Sanaa Hamri 2008) Comedy sequel, starring Amber Tamblyn (S). 2.55 FILM: The Lego Batman Movie (Chris McKay 2017) Animated comedy, featuring the voice of Will Arnett (S). 5.00 FILM: Matilda (Danny DeVito 1996) Children’s fantasy comedy, starring Mara Wilson (S). 6.55 FILM: Yes Man (Peyton Reed 2008) Comedy, starring Jim Carrey (S). 6.50 FILM: I, Robot (Alex Proyas 2004) Sci-fi thriller, starring Will Smith (S). 9.00 FILM: The Equalizer (Antoine Fuqua 2014) Action thriller, starring Denzel Washington (S). 9.00 FILM: There’s Something About Mary (Peter Farrelly, Bobby Farrelly 1998) (S). 11.20 Michael Palin’s Hemingway Adventure Travel series following in the author’s footsteps (S). 11.40 FILM: The Equalizer 2 (Antoine Fuqua 2018) Action thriller, starring Denzel Washington (S). 11.25 Family Guy (S). 11.55 Family Guy (S). 12.05 Clive James: Postcard From Miami (S). 12.55 Paris Police 1905 (S). 1.55 Paris Police 1905 (S). 2.55 Bent Coppers: Crossing The Line Of Duty (S). 3.55 Close 2.00 FILM: Cube (Vincenzo Natali 1997) Sci-fi horror, starring Nicole deBoer (S). 3.50 Close 12.25 American Dad! (S). 12.55 American Dad! (S). 1.25 All American (S). 2.15 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 2.45 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping 9.00 Paris Police 1905 (S). 9.55 Paris Police 1905 Last in the series (S). 10.20 FILM: Midway (Roland Emmerich 2019) Second World War drama, starring Ed Skrein (S). reality show in which Anneka Rice – the then-breakout star of Channel 4’s Treasure Hunt and famous for leaping out of helicopters in a yellow jumpsuit – was given tasks to accomplish in a set time. She begins this reboot at a dog rescue centre in Kent with the building of a new block of kennels, a grooming parlour, and a play area. Sara Cox takes on canine questions 7.55pm, BBC One 10PM 6PM DAYTIME England captain Owen Farrell’s side visit Ireland in the Six Nations finale, 4.30pm, ITV1 radio 10.50 As Time Goes By Jean makes a play for Alistair (S).
culture times) being sniggered at by colleagues for being an “invert”. Out for revenge, Jouin plots a raid on the pleasure palace of the Chateau de Bagatelle in the hope of bagging a few hypocrites in the Vice Squad. FILM CHOICE Dublin Narcos 9pm, Sky Documentaries After heroin and ecstasy, cocaine became the drug of choice in the Irish capital. The economic boom that saw the nation being dubbed the Celtic Tiger also witnessed the city’s new breed of yuppies snorting white powder with wild abandon sparking a deadly turf war between rival gangs. Gerard Gilbert 6.00 Bless This House (S). 6.40 Bless This House (S). 7.10 FILM: Holiday On The Buses (Bryan Izzard 1973) Comedy, starring Reg Varney (S). 8.50 Larry Grayson: Shut That Door! (S). 10.50 Rosemary & Thyme (S). 11.50 Rosemary & Thyme (S). 12.50 Midsomer Murders (S). 2.55 Midsomer Murders (S). 4.55 Midsomer Murders (S). Bend It Like Beckham 2.30pm, Film4 (Gurinda Chadha, 2002) Likeable and popular culture-clash sporting drama, about a suburban English teenager (Parminder Nagra) who dreams of playing professional football despite the objections of her traditional Sikh parents, who think it unseemly for a girl. Keira Knightley makes a splash as her supportive best friend and teammate. Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Harrison Ford returns as Indiana Jones in ‘The Last Crusade’, 6.25pm, E4 6.25pm, E4 (Steven Spielberg, 1989) Indiana Jones’s third adventure recycles too many elements of his first, having a mythological 8.55 Food Unwrapped (S). 9.30 A Place In The Sun (S). 10.25 A Place In The Sun (S). 11.25 A Place In The Sun (S). 12.30 Location, Location, Location (S). 1.35 Come Dine With Me (S). 2.05 Come Dine With Me (S). 2.35 Come Dine With Me (S). 3.10 Come Dine With Me (S). 3.40 Come Dine With Me (S). 4.15 Four In A Bed (S). 4.45 Four In A Bed (S). 5.20 Four In A Bed (S). 5.50 Four In A Bed (S). 6.25 FILM: Indiana Jones And The Last Crusade (Steven Spielberg 1989) (S). 6.20 Four In A Bed The B&B owners meet to settle some scores (S). 6.55 Home Greek Home (S). 6.00 Hawaii Five-0 A murder investigation leads the team to the local roller derby (R) (S). 6.40 Succession Kendall and Logan arrange a secret meeting with PGM CEO Rhea Jarrell (R) (S). 7.55 Jonathan Ross’ Myths And Legends (S). 7.00 Hawaii Five-0 A tour company falls victim to a string of arson attacks (R) (S). 7.50 Succession Kendall makes his case to Naomi Pierce (R) (S). 7.00 Midsomer Murders A prize-winning author is murdered (S). 6.00 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 6.30 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 7.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 8.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 9.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 10.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 11.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 12.00 Fringe (R) (S). 1.00 Fringe (R) (S). 2.00 Fringe (R) (S). 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 4.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 5.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 6.00 Fish Town (R) (S). 6.55 Fish Town (R) (S). 7.50 Fish Town (R) (S). 8.40 The Affair (R) (S). 9.45 The Affair (R) (S). 10.50 The Affair (R) (S). 11.55 The Affair (R) (S). 1.00 The Affair (R) (S). 2.05 Gomorrah (R) (S). 3.10 Succession (R) (S). 4.20 Succession (R) (S). 5.30 Succession (R) (S). 6.00 Supernanny USA (S). 6.50 Lego Masters Australia (S). 8.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 9.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 10.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 11.00 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 12.30 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 2.00 Modern Family (S). 2.30 Modern Family (S). 3.00 Modern Family (S). 3.30 Modern Family (S). 4.00 Modern Family (S). 4.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.25 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.55 The Big Bang Theory (S). School of Rock 9pm, Comedy Central (Richard Linklater, 2003) Dewey Finn, a thirty-something arrested-adolescent rock geek who poses as a substitute teacher and inducts the children at a stuffy prep school into the ways of anti-authoritarianism and ridiculous guitar solos, was a part written especially for Jack Black – and he plays his signature role with gusto. A mildly anarchic and great fun family comedy. Laurence Phelan Radio listings BBC Radio 1 6am Radio 1 Happy 7.00 Adele Roberts 10.00 Radio 1 Anthems 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Radio 1 Anthems 11.02 Katie Thistleton 1pm Matt And Mollie 4.00 Radio 1’s Dance Anthems 5.00 Radio 1’s Dance Anthems 6.00 Radio 1’s Dance Anthems 7.00 Radio 1’s Soundsystem Party With Jeremiah Asiamah 9.00 1Xtra’s Rap Show 11.00 Radio 1’s Drum & Bass Show 12mdn’t Radio 1’s Drum & Bass Mix 12.30 Radio 1’s Drum & Bass Mix 1.00 Radio 1’s Classic Essential Mix 3.00 Future Dance Mix With Sarah Story 3.30 Pete Tong’s Hot Mix 4.00 Radio 1’s Dance Anthems 5.00 Radio 1 Relax BBC Radio 1Xtra 8.00 A League Of Their Own Road Trip: Southeast Asia Previously unseen footage from the show (R). 9.00 Midsomer Murders A postman’s murder exposes dark dealings (S). religious artefact as the MacGuffin and the Nazis as the villains again, and even recreating key action scenes. What is new and quite fun is Sean Connery as Dr Jones Sr. 6am 1Xtra’s R&B Chill Mix 7.00 Saturday Breakfast 10.00 Nick Bright 1pm Fee Mak 4.00 Sian Anderson And Tazer Black 7.00 1Xtraís Pre-Party Show With DJ Target 9.00 1Xtra’s Rap Show 11.00 Ace 12.30am Ace 1.00 1Xtra’s Throwback Party 2.00 1Xtra’s Cosmic Wind Down With Jamz Supernova 3.00 Benji B 5.00 Amapiano To AfroHouse BBC Radio 2 6am Sounds Of The 60s With Tony Blackburn 8.00 Dermot O’Leary 10.00 Anita Rani 1pm Pick Of The Pops 2.00 Pick Of The Pops 3.00 Rylan On Saturday 6.00 Liza Tarbuck 8.00 Sounds Of The 80s With Gary Davies 10.00 Sounds Of The 90s With Fearne Cotton 11.00 Sounds Of The 90s With Fearne Cotton 12mdn’t C2C London Live – Thomas Rhett 1.00 Dance Sounds Of The 90s With Vernon Kay 2.00 C2C Live – Lady A 3.00 The Showstopper 4.00 Radio 2 In Concert: Scissor Sisters 5.00 Tracks Of My Years BBC Radio 3 7am Breakfast 9.00 Record Review 11.45 Music Matters 12.30pm This Classical Life 1.00 Inside Music 3.00 Sound Of Cinema 4.00 Music Planet 5.00 J To Z 6.00 Opera On 3 10.30 New Music Show 12mdn’t Freeness 1.00 Through The Night 9.00 Celebrity Gogglebox Dragons’ Den, Gok Wan’s Easy Asian and The Yorkshire Vet are appraised (S). 9.00 24 Hours In A&E A 79-year-old woman is brought in with signs of a stroke (S). 9.00 Freddie Down Under Andrew Flintoff and Rob Penn set off on a barbecue adventure (R) (S). 9.00 Game Of Thrones Cersei finds herself seeking forgiveness (R) (S). 10.00 Gogglebox Appraised programmes include Naked Attraction and Escape from Pretoria (S). 10.00 24 Hours In A&E A retired firefighter is treated after being hit in the face with a golf club (S). 10.00 Banshee (R) (S). 10.55 Fantasy Football League With Roman Kemp and Russell Howard. Last in the series (R). 10.05 Game Of Thrones The fate of Jon Snow is revealed (R) (S). 11.05 Arthur & George Period drama, starring Martin Clunes as Arthur Conan Doyle (S). 11.05 Gogglebox Opinions on Line of Duty and Ant & Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway (S). 11.05 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown With Lee Mack, Catherine Tate, Sean Lock and Miles Jupp (S). 11.30 A Town Called Malice Crime thriller, starring Jack Rowan (R). 11.10 Game Of Thrones The Night’s Watch stands behind Alliser Thorne (R) (S). 12.05 Arthur & George (S). 1.10 Arthur & George (S). 2.20 Unwind With ITV (S). 2.30 Teleshopping 12.10 First Dates (S). 1.15 First Dates (S). 2.20 Celebrity Gogglebox (S). 3.15 Gogglebox (S). 4.10 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 5.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 12.10 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 1.15 24 Hours In A&E (S). 2.15 24 Hours In A&E (S). 3.20 Food Unwrapped (S). 3.50 Close 12.40 Funny Woman (R). 1.35 Road Wars (R). 2.00 Air Ambulance ER (R) (S). 3.00 Caribbean Cops (R) (S). 4.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 5.00 Air Ambulance ER (R) (S). 12.15 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 1.20 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 2.25 Perry Mason (R) (S). 3.35 In Treatment (R) (S). 4.05 Fish Town (R) (S). 5.00 Fish Town (R) (S). BBC Radio 4 6am News And Papers 6.07 Ramblings 6.30 Farming Today This Week 6.57 Weather 7.00 Today 9.00 Saturday Live 10.30 Rewinder 11.00 The Week In Westminster 11.30 From Our Own Correspondent 12noon News 12.04 Money Box 12.30 The Now Show 12.57 Weather 1.00 News 1.10 Any Questions? 2.00 Any Answers? 2.45 Drama: Look Back In Anger 4.15 Weekend Woman’s Hour 5.00 Saturday PM 5.30 Sliced Bread 5.54 Shipping Forecast 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.15 Loose Ends 7.00 Profile 7.15 The Infinite Monkey Cage 8.00 Archive On 4: Writing Our Mothers 9.00 GF Newman’s The Corrupted 9.45 The Skewer 10.00 News 10.15 The Moral Maze 11.00 Counterpoint 11.30 The Poet Laureate Has Gone To His Shed 12mdn’t Midnight News 12.15 Understand: The Economy 12.30 Blackspot 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service 5.20 Shipping Forecast 5.30 News Briefing 5.43 Bells On Sunday 5.45 Profile BBC Radio 4 LW 8.30am Yesterday In Parliament 12.01pm Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 6am Bag-a-Bagel 6.45 Double Trouble 7.30 Wannabe 8.15 Showing Up 9.00 We’re In Business 9.30 Whack-O! 10.00 Mastertapes – Access All Areas 11.00 Bag-a-Bagel 11.45 Double Trouble 12.30pm Wannabe 1.15 Showing Up 2.00 We’re In Business 2.30 55 On Demand Bono and the Edge: A Sort of Homecoming Disney+ Dave Letterman visits Dublin to hang out with the U2 musicians. Better BBC iPlayer A bent cop attempts to go straight in this claustrophobic thriller series. Physical: 100 Netflix Forget Squid Game; this South Korean survival contest is for real. Whack-O! 3.00 Mastertapes – Access All Areas 4.00 Doctor Who: The War Doctor 4.36 Mysterious Tales By Wilkie Collins 5.00 Baga-Bagel 5.45 Double Trouble 6.30 Wannabe 7.15 Showing Up 8.00 We’re In Business 8.30 Whack-O! 9.00 Mastertapes – Access All Areas 10.00 Comedy Club: John Finnemore’s Souvenir Programme 10.30 Comedy Club: I, Regress 10.45 Comedy Club: The In Crowd 11.00 Comedy Club: Extinction Compendium 11.30 Comedy Club: Will Smith’s Midlife Crisis Management 12mdn’t Doctor Who: The War Doctor 12.36 In The Abyss 1.00 Baga-Bagel 1.45 Double Trouble 2.30 Wannabe 3.15 Showing Up 4.00 We’re In Business 4.30 Whack-O! 5.00 Mastertapes – Access All Areas BBC 5 Live 6am Saturday Breakfast 9.00 Patrick Kielty 11.00 Fighting Talk 12noon 5 Live Sport 3.00 5 Live Sport 5.00 Rugby Union 7.00 5 Live Sport 7.30 6-0-6 9.00 Stephen Nolan 12mdn’t Newscast 1.00 Laura McGhie 5.00 Sports Desk BBC 6 Music 6am Amy Lamé 8.00 Stuart Maconie 10.00 The Huey Show 1pm Jamz Supernova On 6 3.00 Gilles Peterson 6.00 The Craig Charles Funk And Soul Show 9.00 The Blessed Madonna 12mdn’t Lose Yourself With 1.00 Lose Yourself With 2.00 The Morning After Mix 4.00 The Morning After Mix Classic FM 7am Alan Titchmarsh 10.00 Aled Jones 1pm Alexander Armstrong 4.00 A Hastings Concert Exclusive With Moira Stuart 7.00 Saturday Night At The Movies 9.00 David Mellor’s Melodies 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Katie Breathwick 4.00 Sam Pittis Absolute Radio 8am Frank Skinner 11.00 Sarah Champion 2pm Rock ’n’ Roll Football With Matt Forde 5.00 Andy Bush’s Indie Disco 7.00 Absolute Classic Rock Party With Claire Sturgess 10.00 Sophie K 4am Emil Franchi Heart 6am Rob Howard 9.00 Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With JK&Kelly Brook 12noon Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Dev Griffin 4.00 Mark Wright 7.00 Heart’s Club Classics With Pandora Christie 11.00 Rezzy Ghadjar 1am Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Katrina Ridley TalkSPORT 6am GameDay Breakfast 10.00 GameDay Warm Up 1pm GameDay Live 5.30 FA Cup GameDay Live 8.00 The GameDay Phone-In 10.00 Fight Night 1am Extra Time With Martin Kelner RADIO PICK Archive on 4: Writing Our Mothers 8pm, BBC Radio 4 Archive clips exploring how female writers have tackled mother figures in their work throughout history. Featuring interviews with writers including Maya Angelou (above), who reflects on how being abandoned by her mother shaped her examinations of class, race and love.
56 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Sunday television CRITIC’S CHOICE 6.20 Gardeners’ World (R) (S). 7.20 Countryfile (R) (S). 8.30 Pilgrimage: The Road To The Scottish Isles (R) (S). 9.30 Saturday Kitchen Best Bites (S). 11.00 Rick Stein’s Cornwall (R) (S). 11.30 Coast To Coast Food Festival (R) (S). 12.00 FILM: The Cruel Sea (Charles Frend 1953) Second World War nautical adventure, starring Jack Hawkins (S). 2.05 FILM: Brief Encounter (David Lean 1945) Romantic drama, starring Celia Johnson and Trevor Howard (S). 3.35 Hippos: Africa’s River Giants (R) (S). 4.35 Interior Design Masters With Alan Carr (R) (S). 5.35 Flog It! (R) (S). 6.00 CITV 9.25 ITV News (S). 9.30 Love Your Weekend With Alan Titchmarsh (S). 11.15 Live FA Cup Football Sheffield United vs Blackburn Rovers. Kick-off is at 12pm (S). 2.15 Celebrity Lingo (R) (S). 3.15 You’ve Been Framed! (R) (S). 3.45 Live FA Cup Football Manchester United vs Fulham. Kick-off is at 4.30pm (S). 6PM 6.00 Countryfile Matt Baker and Anita Rani meet volunteers doing conservation work (S). 6.00 Six Nations Rugby Special Ugo Monye presents action from the final round of fixtures (S). 6.45 ITV News; Weather (S). 6.55 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 7PM 7.00 Wild Isles The wildlife of Britain’s woodlands through the seasons (S). 7.00 Amazing Hotels: Life Beyond The Lobby Last in the series (R) (S). 7.00 The Chase Celebrity Special Bradley Walsh presents the quiz show. (S). 8PM 8.00 Antiques Roadshow Fiona Bruce presents the show from Clissold Park in Stoke Newington (S). 8.00 Britain’s Biggest Warship Goes To Sea HMS Queen Elizabeth sets out on a transatlantic crossing (R) (S). 8.00 Grace New series. Return of the crime drama, starring John Simm (S). 9PM 9.00 The Gold Boyce, Jennings and Brightwell make a shocking realisation. Last in the series (S). 9.00 We Need To Talk About Cosby A look at how Bill Cosby struck television gold with The Cosby Show (S). 10.00 BBC News; Weather (S). 10.25 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 10.30 Match Of The Day 2 (S). 10.00 QI XL (S). 10.45 FILM: The Hurt Locker (Kathryn Bigelow 2008) Iraq War drama, starring Jeremy Renner (S). 11.10 Go Hard Or Go Home The final three fight to be crowned winner. Last in the series (R) (S). LATE DAYTIME 6.00 Breakfast (S). 7.40 Match Of The Day (R) (S). 9.00 Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg (S). 10.00 Politics England (S). 10.30 Sunday Morning Live (S). 11.30 Homes Under The Hammer (R) (S). 12.15 Bargain Hunt (R) (S). 1.00 BBC News; Weather (S). 1.15 Songs Of Praise (S). 1.50 Match Of The Day Live: The FA Cup Brighton & Hove Albion vs Grimsby Town. Kick-off is at 2.15pm (S). 4.35 Wild Isles (R) (S). 5.35 BBC News (S). 5.50 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 10PM 7pm, BBC One If you have been gardening and found yourself being followed around by a robin, David Attenborough reckons it’s because, to the little bird, “We’re just a pig on two legs.” He is referring to the symbiotic relationship between robins and the wild boar newly introduced to the Forest of Dean, as the naturalist surveys British woodlands through the seasons. He begins by standing next to a tree that makes him seem like a whippersnapper in comparison – a 700-year-old oak. Other creatures featured include the world’s largest land slug and starlings falling prey to owls on Bodmin Moor. 11PM John Simm’ detective superintendent ‘Grace’ investigates a rape in Brighton, 8pm, ITV1 Wild Isles 12.10 Emma, Oti & Rylan’s Big Red Nose Day Challenge (R) (S). 1.15 BBC News (S). 10.00 ITV News; Weather (S). 10.15 DNA Journey With Alex Brooker and Johnny Vegas (R) (S). radio Enigma: The Monster of Loch Ness 7pm, Channel 5 From real wild creatures to legendary ones – unless, of course, you happen to be a firm believer in the Loch Ness Monster. This new series examines forensic evidence of Nessie’s existence and begins by looking at how the purported monster’s fame was spread by a series of sightings and press photographs in the 30s. The Great Celebrity Bake Off for Stand Up to Cancer 7.45pm, Channel 4 Matt Lucas hosts the stellar awareness-raising series of the baking show. The first batch of contestants are David Schwimmer, 6.20 FILM: Rugrats In Paris (Stig Bergqvist, Paul Demeyer 2000) Animated adventure, with the voice of Christine Cavanaugh (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 The Simpsons (R) (S). 9.00 The Simpsons (R) (S). 9.30 Sunday Brunch (S). 12.30 The Simpsons (R) (S). 1.00 The Simpsons (R) (S). 1.30 FILM: Tooth Fairy (Michael Lembeck 2010) Family comedy (S). 3.35 The Dog House (R) (S). 4.35 Channel 4 News (S). 5.05 The Andrew Neil Show (S). 5.50 FILM: Sister Act (Emile Ardolino 1992) Comedy, starring Whoopi Goldberg (S). 12.20 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 Cold Case Detectives (R) (S). 3.50 Unwind With ITV (S). 5.00 Jeremy Pang’s Asian Kitchen (R) (S). Grace We Need to Talk About Cosby 8pm, ITV1 If these adaptations of Peter James’s crime novels have yet to do for Brighton what the various Morse series have done for Oxford, it’s perhaps because they haven’t really tapped into what makes the East Sussex city so special. A new series begins with a story based on James’s 2010 book Dead Like You, where Assistant Chief Constable Alison Vosper (Rakie Ayola) is holding her retirement party at the same hotel where 7.00 Enigma: The Monster Of Loch Ness (S). 9pm, BBC Two It may have less resonance with a British audience, but this series has done a fine job of revealing the dissonance in American minds between the image of Bill Cosby as “America’s Dad” and those copious allegations of sexual assault. This episode looks at how The Cosby Show – about a family “living in a sort of black utopia” – saved NBC (one-quarter of the US population tuning in to one A look at disgraced comedian Bill Cosby 9pm, BBC Two David Schwimmer is among the famous faces in the ‘Great Celebrity Bake Off’ tent 7.45pm, Channel 4 6.00 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 6.35 Love Bites (S). 7.35 Love Bites (S). 8.30 Love Bites (S). 9.30 Dress To Impress (S). 10.35 Dress To Impress (S). 11.35 Catchphrase (S). 12.20 Family Fortunes (S). 1.25 FILM: Step Up 3 (Jon Chu 2010) Dance drama sequel, starring Rick Malambri (S). 3.30 FILM: Dr Seuss’ The Lorax (Chris Renaud, Kyle Balda 2012) Animated fantasy, with the voice of Danny DeVito (S). 5.20 FILM: Despicable Me 3 (Kyle Balda, Pierre Coffin 2017) Animated sequel, with the voice of Steve Carell (S). Greg James hosts ‘Rise and Fall’ 9pm, Channel 4 7.00 Come Dancing (S). 7.40 Inside Classical: Sol Gabetta Plays Elgar’s Cello Concerto (S). 6.15 FILM: X-Men: Apocalypse (Bryan Singer 2016) Superhero adventure sequel (S). 7.05 FILM: Legally Blonde (Robert Luketic 2001) Comedy, starring Reese Witherspoon (S). 9.00 FILM: Cast Away (Robert Zemeckis 2000) Drama, starring Tom Hanks and Helen Hunt (S). 9.00 Love Island: The Reunion This year’s islanders reunite to discuss their time on the show (S). 8.00 Bargain-Loving Brits In The Sun New series. Return of the documentary (S). 9.00 Rise And Fall New series. Reality contest on the theme of wealth and power (S). 9.00 Into Death Valley With Nick Knowles Nick ventures into one of the least hospitable places (S). 9.10 Wayne Shorter At The London Jazz Festival (S). 9.50 Britain’s Most Fragile Treasure (S). 10.15 Formula 1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix Highlights The second round of the campaign (S). 10.00 Britpop: The Music That Changed Britain The story of 1995 (S). 10.50 Clive James: Postcard From Chicago The writer visits the Windy City (S). 11.30 Britain’s Favourite 90s Hits Celebrating the biggestselling singles of the 1990s (R) (S). 11.45 Victorian Sensations Philippa Perry explores ghosts, science and early cinema in the 1890s (S). 11.50 FILM: Calm With Horses (Nick Rowland 2019) Crime drama, starring Cosmo Jarvis and Barry Keoghan (S). 11.00 Family Guy Peter opens up his own food truck business (S). 11.30 Family Guy (S). 11.55 Family Guy (S). 1.20 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 3.20 Friends (R) (S). 3.45 Friends (R) (S). 4.10 Get Your Tatts Out: Kavos Ink (R) (S). 5.00 Britain’s Great Cathedrals With Tony Robinson (R) (S). 12.45 Sold! Inside The World’s Biggest Auction House (S). 1.45 Britain’s Most Fragile Treasure (S). 2.45 Michael Palin: Travels Of A Lifetime (S). 3.45 Close 1.55 FILM: Chained For Life (Aaron Schimberg 2018) Comedy drama, starring Jess Weixler and Adam Pearson (S). 3.50 Close 12.25 American Dad! (S). 12.55 American Dad! (S). 1.25 All American (S). 2.20 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 2.45 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping 11.25 Unbelievable Moments Caught On Camera Alexander Armstrong presents (R) (S). 12.50 Dave (R) (S). 1.20 Sign Zone: Question Time (R) (S). 2.20 Sign Zone: Sort Your Life Out With Stacey Solomon (R) (S). 3.20 This Is BBC Two (S). a rape is committed. Roy Grace (John Simm) fears the attack may signal the return of the so-called Brighton Prowler – a rapist he failed to put away 10 years earlier. 6.00 Milkshake! 10.00 The Smurfs (S). 10.10 SpongeBob SquarePants (R) (S). 10.25 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 10.30 Friends (R) (S). 12.25 Friends (R) (S). 12.55 FILM: The Disappearing Game: An Aurora Teagarden Mystery (Terry Ingram 2018) (S). 1.55 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 2.00 FILM: The Disappearing Game: An Aurora Teagarden Mystery (Terry Ingram 2018) (R) (S). 2.35 Holidaying With Jane McDonald (R) (S). 4.05 When Cruises Go Horribly Wrong (R) (S). 5.35 Greatest Chocolate Ads Of All Time (R) (S). 6.55 5 News Weekend (S). 7.45 The Great Celebrity Bake Off For Stand Up To Cancer New series. Matt Lucas hosts (S). Jesy Nelson, Rose Matafeo and Tom Davis, who must take on a fiddly French confection and recreate their most embarrassing celebrity fail in meringue. 12.50 FILM: Hell Or High Water (David Mackenzie 2016) (S). 2.35 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (R) (S). 3.25 Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 5.35 Jamie’s Comfort Food 10.35 Family Guy Brian and Chris look after Stewie when he gets injured playing football (S).
culture episode) and made Cosby millions in commercial sponsorship. Meanwhile, in his dressing room… FILM CHOICE Rise and Fall 9pm, Channel 4 BBC Radio 1 presenter Greg James hosts this new live “part reality show, part social experiment” from the makers of The Traitors. Sixteen contestants are divided into “Rulers” and “Grafters” – the former living in an “opulent penthouse”, the latter subsisting in the basement while being set tasks that win cash for the Rulers. If the Grafters are pushed too hard, there may be trouble for the penthousedwellers. Politics for beginners, you might call it. Gerard Gilbert Brief Encounter 2.05pm, BBC Two (David Lean, 1945) This much loved weepie, from a Noël Coward play in which a middle-class housewife and mother (Celia Johnson) deliberates about whether or not to act on her attraction to kindly doctor Trevor Howard, is a genuinely heady mix of bygone moral constraints, Rachmaninoff and steam trains. The Bling Ring Jeff Bridges tracks two wayward brothers in ‘Hell or High Water’, 12.50am, Channel 4 9pm, BBC Three (Sofia Coppola, 2013) Like an unauthorised Cribs, Coppola’s deadpan comedy breaks us into the homes of LA’s rich and famous circa 2010 (Paris Hilton; Lindsay Lohan, Rachel Bilson) in 6.00 Hollyoaks Omnibus (S). 8.30 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 10.00 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 11.35 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 12.35 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 1.35 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 2.35 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 3.35 The Big Bang Theory (S). 4.05 The Big Bang Theory (S). 4.35 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 8.55 George Clarke’s Amazing Spaces (S). 9.55 Ugly House To Lovely House With George Clarke (S). 11.00 George Clarke’s Old House, New Home (S). 12.00 Come Dine With Me (S). 12.35 Come Dine With Me (S). 1.05 Come Dine With Me (S). 1.35 Come Dine With Me (S). 2.10 Come Dine With Me (S). 2.40 Four In A Bed (S). 3.10 Four In A Bed (S). 3.40 Four In A Bed (S). 4.10 Four In A Bed (S). 4.40 Four In A Bed (S). 5.15 Come Dine With Me (S). 5.50 Come Dine With Me (S). 6.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 7.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 8.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 9.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 10.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 11.00 NCIS: New Orleans (R) (S). 12.00 NCIS: New Orleans (R) (S). 1.00 NCIS: New Orleans (R) (S). 2.00 NCIS: New Orleans (R) (S). 3.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 4.00 Fringe (R) (S). 5.00 Fringe (R) (S). 6.00 The Big Bang Theory Guest starring Billy Bob Thornton (S). 6.25 Lego Masters Australia (S). 6.20 Come Dine With Me (S). 6.55 Come Dine With Me Eleri Watson hosts the fourth dinner party (S). 6.00 Fringe Olivia is pursued by a mysterious entity. Drama, starring Anna Torv and Joshua Jackson (R) (S). 6.30 Succession Logan, Kendall, Gerri and Tom testify before Congress (R) (S). 7.45 FILM: Indiana Jones And The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull (Steven Spielberg 2008) (S). 7.25 Come Dine With Me Ken Brown hosts the final dinner party in Co Durham and Wearside (S). 7.00 Fringe The team finds a tunnel filled with human remains. Sci-fi drama, starring Anna Torv (R) (S). 7.40 Succession Logan weighs up a huge decision (R). 8.00 Long Lost Family A woman searches for her Sri Lankan birth mother (S). 8.00 Emergency Helicopter Medics A woman is trapped in her car on the A66 (S). 8.00 SEAL Team Bravo is deployed in Russiancontrolled territory (R) (S). 9.00 Joanna Lumley’s Unseen Adventures Unseen footage from the actress’s travelogues (S). 9.00 24 Hours In A&E An 85-year-old woman faces potentially life-changing injuries (S). 9.00 S.W.A.T The team tackles a series of random shootings (S). 9.00 The Last Of Us Joel and Ellie near the end of their journey. Last in the series (R) (S). 10.00 24 Hour Baby Hospital Roscommon couple Orlaith and James arrive at the Rotunda (S). 10.00 NCIS: Los Angeles A shoot-out results in the theft of a rare cultural artifact (S). 10.00 Yellowjackets The Yellowjackets opt to throw one last party before careening into oblivion (R) (S). 11.05 Emergency Helicopter Medics: Extreme Cycling Emergencies (S). 11.00 The 80s: Cinema’s Greatest Decade The stand-out movies of the 1980s (R) (S). 11.05 Yellowjackets The girls navigate damning evidence and false alibis (R) (S). 12.10 24 Hours In A&E (S). 1.15 24 Hour Baby Hospital (S). 2.20 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 3.25 Food Unwrapped (S). 3.55 Close 12.00 A League Of Their Own Road Trip: Southeast Asia (R). 1.00 Brassic (R) (S). 2.00 The Force: North East (R) (S). 3.00 Road Wars (R). 4.00 Air Ambulance ER (R) (S). 5.00 Caribbean Cops (R). 12.15 Perry Mason (R) (S). 1.30 City On A Hill (R) (S). 2.35 In Treatment (R) (S). 3.05 Fish Town (R) (S). 4.05 Fish Town (R) (S). 5.05 Fish Town (R) (S). 6.00 Man About The House (S). 6.35 Emmerdale Omnibus (S). 9.25 Man About The House (S). 9.55 Downton Abbey (S). 11.10 Downton Abbey (S). 12.20 Downton Abbey (S). 1.35 Downton Abbey (S). 2.50 Downton Abbey (S). 4.20 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 5.25 Rosemary & Thyme (S). 6.30 Rosemary & Thyme A wine critic is murdered at a vineyard. Starring Felicity Kendal (S). 10.00 Wycliffe Pilot episode of the detective drama, starring Jack Shepherd as the Cornish copper (S). 10.05 FILM: John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum (Chad Stahelski 2019) Action thriller (S). 11.35 Wycliffe An archaeology student is shot. Detective drama, guest starring Bill Nighy. (S). 12.40 Upstairs, Downstairs (S). 1.50 Scott & Bailey (S). 2.50 Emmerdale Omnibus (S). 5.30 Unwind With ITV (S). 12.40 Derry Girls (S). 1.10 Derry Girls (S). 1.40 Derry Girls (S). 2.10 Derry Girls (S). 2.40 Derry Girls (S). 3.05 Derry Girls (S). 3.30 Hollyoaks Omnibus (S). 6.00 Fish Town (R) (S). 6.55 Fish Town (R) (S). 7.50 Fish Town (R) (S). 8.40 The Affair (R) (S). 9.45 The Affair (R) (S). 10.50 The Affair (R) (S). 11.55 The Affair (R) (S). 1.00 The Affair (R) (S). 2.00 Gomorrah (R) (S). 3.05 Succession (R) (S). 4.10 Succession (R) (S). 5.20 Succession (R) (S). the company of a gang of vapid, celebrity-obsessed teen burglars. It is based on a real case but suffused with a gauzy, dreamlike quality and set in a peculiar, consequence-free atmosphere. Hell or High Water 12.50am, Channel 4 (David Mackenzie, 2016) Chris Pine and Ben Foster play brothers on a bank-robbing spree in rural Texas; Jeff Bridges is one of the Rangers on their tail. It is all about codes of loyalty and masculinity and everyone has a gun and a Stetson, but this isn’t a modern-day Western so much as morally ambiguous Texan noir like No Country for Old Men. Laurence Phelan Radio listings BBC Radio 1 6am Radio 1’s Chillout Anthems 7.00 Adele Roberts 10.00 Radio 1 Anthems 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Radio 1 Anthems 11.02 Radio 1 00s With Nat O’Leary 1pm Mollie 4.00 Radio 1’s Life Hacks 6.00 The Official Chart: First Look On Radio 1 7.00 Radio 1’s Chillest Show 9.00 Radio 1’s Indie Show With Jack Saunders 11.00 BBC Introducing On Radio 1 12mdn’t Radio 1’s Future Soul With Victoria Jane BBC Radio 1Xtra 6am 1Xtra’s R&B Chill Mix 7.00 Fee Mak 10.32 The Gospel Corner 11.00 Trevor Nelson 1pm David Rodigan 3.00 The Official UK Afrobeats Chart Show With Eddie Kadi 4.00 Rampage 7.00 Heartless Crew 9.00 1Xtra Talks 10.00 1Xtra Introducing Show 11.30 1Xtra Introducing Show 12mdn’t Throwback Throwdown: 10 1.00 1Xtra @ 20-20 Years Of R&B 2.00 The Story Of Soul BBC Radio 2 9am Steve Wright’s Sunday Love Songs 11.00 The Michael Ball Show 1pm Elaine Paige On Sunday 3.00 Sounds Of The 70s With Johnnie Walker 5.00 Paddy O’Connell 7.00 Tony Blackburn’s Golden Hour 8.00 Sunday Night Is Music Night 10.00 Radio 2 Unwinds With Angela Griffin 11.00 Radio 2 Unwinds With Angela Griffin 12mdn’t Phil Williams BBC Radio 3 7am Breakfast 9.00 Sunday Morning 12noon Private Passions 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert 2.00 The Early Music Show 3.00 Choral Evensong 4.00 Jazz Record Requests 5.00 The Listening Service 5.30 Words And Music 6.45 Sunday Feature: X-Ray Vision – Rudolph Fisher In Harlem 7.30 Drama On 3: The Dance Of Death 9.30 Record Review Extra 11.00 The Silent Musician 12mdn’t Classical Fix 12.30 Through The Night BBC Radio 4 6am News Headlines 6.05 Something Understood 6.35 Natural Histories 6.57 Weather 7.00 News; Sunday Papers 7.10 Sunday 7.54 Radio 4 Appeal 7.57 Weather 8.00 News; Sunday Papers 8.10 Sunday Worship 8.48 A Point Of View 8.58 Tweet Of The Day 9.00 Broadcasting House 10.00 The Archers 11.15 Desert Island Discs 12noon News 12.04 The Museum Of Curiosity 12.30 The Food Programme 12.57 Weather 1.00 The World This Weekend 1.30 Desperate Calls 2.00 Gardeners’ Question Time 2.45 Opening Lines 3.00 Drama: Confessions Of A Justified Sinner 4.00 Open Book 4.30 The Poet Laureate Has Gone To His Shed 5.00 File On 4 5.40 Profile 5.54 Shipping Forecast 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.15 Pick Of The Week 7.00 The Archers 7.15 The Ultimate Choice 7.45 Funny Bones 8.00 Feedback 8.30 Last Word 9.00 Money Box 9.25 Radio 4 Appeal 9.30 Analysis 10.00 The Westminster Hour 11.00 Loose Ends 11.30 Something Understood 12mdn’t News And Weather 12.15 Sideways 12.45 Bells On Sunday 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service 5.20 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 LW 12.01pm Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 7.40am Inheritance Tracks 7.50 Blowing The Bloody Doors Off Omnibus 9.00 Harry Worth In Things Could Be Worse 9.30 Something To Shout About 10.00 Desert Island Discs: Longplay 11.00 Poetry Extra 11.30 Golden Child Omnibus – Part Two 12.40pm Inheritance Tracks 12.50 Blowing The Bloody Doors Off 57 On Demand Paul Whitehouse: Our Troubled Rivers BBC iPlayer The comic and fisherman investigates Britain’s polluted waterways. Extrapolations Apple TV+ Meryl Streep, Kit Harington and Tobey Maguire head a star-studded cast in this climate-change drama. Endeavour ITVX Shaun Evans signs off as young Morse in a trilogy of 70s-set mysteries. Omnibus 2.00 Harry Worth In Things Could Be Worse 2.30 Something To Shout About 3.00 Desert Island Discs: Long-play 4.00 Doctor Who: The War Doctor 4.34 In The Abyss 5.00 Poetry Extra 5.30 Golden Child Omnibus – Part Two 6.40 Inheritance Tracks 6.50 Blowing The Bloody Doors Off Omnibus 8.00 Harry Worth In Things Could Be Worse 8.30 Something To Shout About 9.00 Desert Island Discs: Long-play 10.00 Comedy Club: The Hudson And Pepperdine Show 10.30 Comedy Club: Isy Suttie’s Love Letters 11.00 Comedy Club: Life With Lederer 11.15 Comedy Club: The Kneebone Bonanza 11.30 Comedy Club: Rigor Mortis 12mdn’t Poetry Extra 12.30 Golden Child Omnibus – Part Two 1.40 Inheritance Tracks 1.50 Blowing The Bloody Doors Off Omnibus 3.00 Harry Worth In Things Could Be Worse 3.30 Something To Shout About BBC 5 Live 7am Sunday Breakfast 10.00 Helen Skelton 11.30 5 Live Sport 12noon 5 Live Sport 2.00 5 Live Sport 4.00 5 Live Sport 5.00 5 Live Formula 1 6.45 6-0-6 8.00 Rugby Union 9.00 Stephen Nolan 12mdn’t Obscene: The Dublin Scandal 12.30 Obscene: The Dublin Scandal BBC 6 Music 6am Amy Lamé 8.00 Stuart Maconie 10.00 Cerys Matthews 1pm Dream Fuel With Arlo Parks 2.00 Guy Garvey’s Finest Hour 4.00 Bill Nighy 6.00 Now Playing @6Music 8.00 Stuart Maconie’s Freak Zone 10.00 Don Letts’ Culture Clash Radio 12mdn’t Dream Fuel With Arlo Parks 1.00 Dream Fuel With Arlo Parks Classic FM 7am Aled Jones 10.00 Andrew Marr 1pm Catherine Bott 4.00 John Humphrys 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven 9.00 The KannehMason Family Takeover 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Bill Overton 4.00 Early Breakfast Absolute Radio 8am Jason Manford 11.00 Sarah Champion 2pm Rock ’n’ Roll Football With Dan Noble 6.00 Request Show With Claire Sturgess 8.00 Sunday Night Music Club 12mdn’t Dan Noble Heart 6am Rob Howard 9.00 Zoe Hardman 12noon Yasmin Evans 4.00 The Official Big Top 40 7.00 Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Emma Bunton 10.00 Anna Whitehouse 12mdn’t Anna Whitehouse 1.00 Simon Beale TalkSPORT 6am Weekend Sports Breakfast 9.00 Jonny Owen And Friends 11.00 The Warm Up 1pm FA Cup GameDay Live 4.00 FA Cup GameDay Live 7.00 The Boot Room 9.00 Trans Europe Express 12mdn’t A TalkSPORT Special RADIO PICK Drama on 3: The Dance of Death 7.30pm, BBC Radio 3 Conor McPherson’s darkly comic version of August Strindberg’s classic play about a toxic marriage, starring Robert Glenister, Hattie Morahan and Blake Ritson. In a military outpost off the coast of Sweden, the Captain (Glenister, above) and his wife Alice (Morahan) embark on a series of spiteful games.
58 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Monday television CRITIC’S CHOICE Jamie’s £1 Wonders 8pm, Channel 4 These aren’t the best-looking dishes that Jamie Oliver has ever concocted, so we’ll have to take his mantra (“maximum flavour, minimum cost”) on trust. This week’s hacks include using tinned mushroom soup as the sauce in his chicken and veg pie, and a top 10 of Jamie’s store cupboard musthaves (number one, in case anyone was wondering: tinned tomatoes). Helping out this week is chef Miguel Barclay, author of a series of books titled One Pound Meals. Taken Hostage Alan Yentob (right) meets Stephen Frears in ‘Director for Hire’, 10.40pm, BBC One 8.30pm, PBS America The 1979 Iran hostage crisis was one of the defining moments 6.00 Good Morning Britain (S). 9.00 Lorraine (S). 10.00 This Morning (S). 12.30 Loose Women (S). 1.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 1.55 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal (R) (S). 3.00 Lingo (R) (S). 3.59 ITV Regional Weather (S). 4.00 Tipping Point (R) (S). 5.00 The Chase (R) (S). 6.00 BBC News At Six; Weather (S). 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 6.00 Richard Osman’s House Of Games (R) (S). 6.30 Coast To Coast Food Festival (S). 7.00 The One Show (S). 7.30 EastEnders Ravi tries to gain access to Jack’s files (S). The Gold: The Inside Story 9pm, BBC One BBC One’s dramatisation of the Brink’s-Mat robbery, The Gold, finished on Sunday night – although it was so well executed, it would be surprising if most people hadn’t binged the whole series weeks ago. Anyone wondering about the accuracy of Hugh Bonneville’s portrayal of Detective Chief Superintendent Brian Boyce can meet the man himself in this documentary helping sift facts from dramatic licence about the 1983 heist. Unforgotten 9pm, ITV1 The pieces of the jigsaw are falling into place in the cold-case team’s latest investigation. We know that Jay (impressive newcomer Rhys Yates) is the victim’s son, while that mysterious Polish taxi driver in Paris was her social worker. So why did he quit being Precious’s case worker the day after she disappeared, Sunny (Sanjeev Bhaskar) asks as he interviews Karol (Max Rinehart) in the French capital? 24 Hours in Police Custody: The Honeytrap Murder 9pm, Channel 4 Two-part special following the case of a naked man found stabbed to death in Luton. Police discover that it may be one of a series of crimes in which men are lured with the promise of sex so that they can be robbed. Imagine: Stephen Frears – Director for Hire 10.40pm, BBC One Despite decades of success across both film (My Beautiful 6.00 World’s Funniest Videos (S). 6.35 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 7.00 Love Bites (S). 8.00 Dress To Impress (S). 9.00 Chuck (S). 10.00 One Tree Hill (S). 11.00 The O.C (S). 12.00 Love Bites (S). 1.00 Dress To Impress (S). 2.00 Supermarket Sweep (S). 3.05 Chuck (S). 4.00 One Tree Hill (S). 5.00 The O.C (S). 6.00 Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine (S). 1.45 Home And Away (R) (S). 2.15 FILM: She Went Missing (Danny J Boyle 2022) Thriller, starring Corbin Reid (S). 4.00 Bargain-Loving Brits In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 5 News At 5 (S). 6.00 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 6.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 6.00 The Simpsons (R) (S). 6.30 Hollyoaks Mercedes longs to be with her little boy again (R) (S). 6.00 Cash In The Attic (S). 6.30 Eggheads New series (S). 6.55 5 News Update (S). Jamie Oliver reveals his top 10 store cupboard must-haves in ‘£1 Wonders’ 8pm, Channel 4 7.00 Between The Covers (S). 7.30 Saving Lives At Sea A volunteer has to rescue his own father (R) (S). 7.30 Emmerdale Bob is worried for his daughter (S). 7.00 Channel 4 News (S). 7.55 The Political Slot Political comment from the Labour Party. 7.00 Motorway Cops: Catching Britain’s Speeders (R) (S). 7.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 7.30 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 8.00 Surviving The Pay Squeeze – Panorama (S). 8.30 Scarlett’s Driving School (S). 8.00 Mastermind Clive Myrie hosts (S). 8.30 University Challenge With Jeremy Paxman (S). 8.00 Coronation Street Rufus threatens to expose Stephen (S). 8.00 Jamie’s £1 Wonders Jamie champions the virtues of tinned fish with a speedy pasta dish (S). 8.00 Traffic Cops A tip-off leads to a major drugs bust in North Yorkshire (S). 8.00 Archaeology: A Secret History Discovering more about the ancient common man (S). 9.00 The Gold: The Inside Story The true story of Britain’s biggest bullion heist (S). 9.00 Inside The Factory XL: Buses Ruth Goodman learns about London’s earliest double deckers (R) (S). 9.00 Unforgotten The victim’s mother and son are put under the microscope (S). 9.00 24 Hours In Police Custody: The Honeytrap Murder The case of a naked man stabbed to death (S). 9.00 Casualty 24/7: Every Second Counts Patients are flooding into Barnsley A&E (S). 9.00 Britain’s Lost Masterpieces Tracking down previously unknown paintings by great artists (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 10.30 BBC Regional News (S). 10.40 Imagine: Stephen Frears – Director For Hire (S). 10.00 Detectorists Comedy, starring Mackenzie Crook and Toby Jones (R) (S). 10.30 Newsnight (S). 10.00 ITV News At Ten; Weather (S). 10.30 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 10.45 Cold Case Detectives (R) (S). 10.00 Rise And Fall The action continues as the first Ruler is eliminated from the game (S). 10.00 999: Critical Condition Dr Richard Fawcett treats a woman who fell 50 metres down a waterfall (R) (S). 10.00 The Rise Of The Murdoch Dynasty (S). 11.45 FILM: Philomena (Stephen Frears 2013) Fact-based drama, starring Judi Dench (S). 11.15 The Holy Land And Us: Our Untold Stories Two-part documentary (R) (S). 11.40 English Football League Highlights Action from the latest fixtures (R) (S). 11.05 Gogglebox The armchair critics are back to watch the best of the week’s television (R) (S). 11.05 A&E After Dark A patient refuses to leave A&E after his treatment (R) (S). 11.00 Sword, Musket & Machine Gun: Britain’s Armed History Sam Willis traces the evolution of weaponry (S). 11.10 FILM: Punisher: War Zone (Lexi Alexander 2008) Comic-book thriller, starring Ray Stevenson (S). 11.00 Family Guy Stewie runs away when Meg babysits him (S). 11.30 Family Guy (S). 1.20 Have I Got A Bit More News For You (R) (S). 2.10 BBC News (S). 12.30 Sign Zone: Countryfile (R) (S). 1.35 Sign Zone: Dragons’ Den (R) (S). 2.35 Sign Zone: Make It At Market (R) (S). 3.20 This Is BBC Two (S). 1.15 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 All Elite Wrestling: Dynamite (S). 4.40 Unwind With ITV (S). 5.35 Eat, Shop, Save (R) (S). 12.10 Send Nudes: Body SOS (R) (S). 1.05 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (R) (S). 1.55 Couples Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 2.45 Extraordinary Escapes At Christmas With Sandi Toksvig (R) (S). 12.05 Police Interceptors (R) (S). 1.00 Motorway: Hell On The Highway (R) (S). 1.50 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 2.00 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 3.50 Parking Hell (R) (S). 4.15 Parking Hell (R) (S). 12.00 Archaeology: A Secret History (S). 12.55 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 1.25 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 1.55 The Rise Of The Murdoch Dynasty (S). 1.15 FILM: Thunderbolt And Lightfoot (Michael Cimino 1974) Comedy drama, starring Clint Eastwood and Jeff Bridges (S). 3.40 Close 12.00 American Dad! (S). 12.30 American Dad! (S). 12.55 Superstore (S). 1.25 Superstore (S). 1.55 Don’t Hate The Playaz (S). 2.40 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping LATE 9PM 8PM 7PM 6PM DAYTIME 6.10 Countdown (R) (S). 6.50 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.15 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 9.00 Frasier (R) (S). 9.30 Frasier (R) (S). 10.00 Frasier (R) (S). 10.30 Undercover Boss USA (R) (S). 11.25 Channel 4 News Summary (S). 11.30 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 12.30 Steph’s Packed Lunch (S). 2.10 Countdown (S). 3.00 Tool Club (S). 4.00 A New Life In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 Four In A Bed (S). 5.30 Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 10PM 6.15 Walks Of Life (R) (S). 7.15 Antiques Road Trip (R) (S). 8.00 Sign Zone: Rick Stein’s Cornwall (R) (S). 8.30 Sign Zone: Weatherman Walking: The Welsh Coast (R) (S). 9.00 BBC News (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 12.15 Politics Live (S). 1.00 Impossible (R) (S). 1.45 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.15 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.45 Hairy Bikers’ Best Of British (R) (S). 3.15 Eat Well For Less? (R) (S). 4.15 The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes (R) (S). 5.15 Flog It! (S). of the 70s, a slap in the face for America from a country that had once been a staunch ally, and a major factor in President Jimmy Carter’s landslide loss to Republican rival Ronald Reagan in the 1980 Presidential election. This documentary charts the dramatic events that saw 52 Americans taken hostage and held prisoner for 444 days by militarised students supporting the Iranian Revolution. 11PM 6.00 Breakfast (S). 9.15 Morning Live (S). 10.00 Crimewatch Live (S). 10.45 Critical Incident (S). 11.15 Homes Under The Hammer (R) (S). 12.15 Bargain Hunt (S). 1.00 BBC News; Weather (S). 1.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 1.45 Doctors (S). 2.15 Jay And Dom’s Home Fix (R) (S). 3.00 Escape To The Country (S). 3.45 Antiques Road Trip (R) (S). 4.30 Bridge Of Lies (R) (S). 5.15 Pointless (R) (S). radio Brian Boyce recalls the Brink’s-Mat case 9pm, BBC One Jess struggles to keep her focus on the job 9pm, ITV1 7.05 FILM: My Super Ex-Girlfriend (Ivan Reitman 2006) Superhero comedy, starring Uma Thurman (S). 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase With Dianne Buswell, Ria Hebden and Neil Morrissey (S). 7.00 The Masked Singer US The four Group A singers compete in the semifinals (S). 8.00 Superstore (S). 8.30 Superstore The employees are forced to address systemic racism in the store (S). 9.00 FILM: Deadpool (Tim Miller 2016) Superhero comedy adventure, starring Ryan Reynolds (S). 9.00 Loaded In Paradise Jamie and Guy swipe the Gold Card and are crowned as the Spenders (S). 10.00 Revenge Porn: Georgia vs Bear Georgia Harrison opens up about being the victim of revenge porn (S).
culture Launderette, Dangerous Liaisons, Philomena, Grifters, High Fidelity and The Queen, to name but a few) and television, Stephen Frears subscribes to Billy Wilder’s maxim that, “The best director is the one you don’t see.” Nevertheless, Alan Yentob catches up with Frears in Vienna, where he is making a movie with Kate Winslet and Hugh Grant charting the tortured making of Wilder’s penultimate film, Fedora. Grant, with whom Frears also made A Very English Scandal, is among an illustrious list of contributors that speaks for itself: Helen Mirren, John Malkovich, Judi Dench, Jack Black, Steve Coogan and Hanif Kureishi. Gerard Gilbert 6.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 6.35 Classic Emmerdale (S). 7.00 Classic Coronation Street (S). 7.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 8.05 Man About The House (S). 8.35 Man About The House (S). 9.05 Where The Heart Is (S). 10.10 Where The Heart Is (S). 11.15 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 12.25 Heartbeat (S). 1.25 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.05 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.40 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 4.50 Downton Abbey (S). 6.55 Heartbeat Armed robbers spread mayhem (S). FILM CHOICE Deadpool 9pm, Film4 (Tim Miller, 2016) Even more aware of its own ridiculousness than all the other Marvel superhero films, this origins story about a compulsively quipping red leather-clad avenger gets a long way on the charms of its star, Ryan Reynolds. In the end, though, it seems even postmodern self-awareness is no defence against CGI superhero genericism. The First Wives Club Bette Midler, Goldie Hawn, Diane Keaton in ‘The First Wives Club’, 9.35pm, Sky Cinema Comedy 9.35pm, Sky Cinema Comedy (Hugh Wilson, 1996) Diane Keaton, Goldie Hawn and Bette Midler star as old college pals who reunite in middle age to commiserate and to plot their 6.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 8.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 9.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 10.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 12.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 1.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 2.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 3.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 4.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 5.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 6.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.55 The Affair (R) (S). 9.00 The Affair (R) (S). 10.05 Gomorrah (R) (S). 11.10 Gomorrah (R) (S). 12.15 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 1.20 Fortitude (R) (S). 2.25 Fortitude (R) (S). 3.25 Gomorrah (R) (S). 4.30 Succession (R) (S). 5.40 Succession (R) (S). 6.00 Hollyoaks (S). 6.30 Hollyoaks (S). 7.00 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell (S). 8.00 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell (S). 9.00 The Goldbergs (S). 10.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 10.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 11.00 Modern Family (S). 11.30 Modern Family (S). 12.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 12.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 1.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 1.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 3.00 Modern Family (S). 4.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 4.30 Brooklyn NineNine (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 8.55 Kirstie’s House Of Craft (S). 9.15 A Place In The Sun (S). 10.05 A New Life In The Sun (S). 11.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 12.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 1.10 Heir Hunters (S). 2.10 Four In A Bed (S). 2.40 Four In A Bed (S). 3.15 Four In A Bed (S). 3.50 Four In A Bed (S). 4.20 Four In A Bed (S). 4.50 Location, Location, Location (S). 5.55 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It (S). 6.00 The Big Bang Theory Jim Parsons stars (S). 6.30 The Big Bang Theory Comedy, starring Johnny Galecki (S). 6.55 Chateau DIY A couple seek a chateau that could also be run as a donkey sanctuary (S). 6.00 Stargate SG-1 Cassandra develops telekinetic powers. Starring Richard Dean Anderson (R) (S). 6.50 Yellowjackets Misty prepares to welcome a surprise house guest (R) (S). 7.00 Hollyoaks Norma’s life hangs in the balance (S). 7.30 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 7.55 Grand Designs Kevin McCloud meets Spanish architect Jaime and his wife Mimi (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 Daniel’s friend is abducted by slave traders. Sci-fi drama, starring Michael Shanks (R) (S). 7.55 Game Of Thrones Tyrion seeks a strange ally. Fantasy drama, starring Peter Dinklage (R) (S). 8.00 McDonald & Dodds Detective drama, starring Jason Watkins and Tala Gouveia (S). 8.00 NCIS: Los Angeles A shoot-out results in the theft of a rare cultural artifact (R) (S). revenge on the husbands who have left them for younger women. Inevitably, 90s Hollywood’s idea of feminist sisterhood looks different to today’s, but the film undeniably struck a chord, and the sharp script can still turn heads. Philomena 11.45pm, BBC One (Stephen Frears, 2013) Though it has the familiar beats of an odd-couple comedy, this film tells a true story. Judi Dench plays an unworldly but plainspeaking Irish Catholic woman, and Steve Coogan the cynical journalist who helps her search for the son taken from her 50 years previously in a convent for unwed mothers. Laurence Phelan Radio listings 9.00 Jonathan Ross’ Myths And Legends Jonathan is joined by Michael Sheen (S). 9.00 A Town Called Malice Crime thriller, starring Jack Rowan, Jason Flemyng, and Tahirah Sharif (R). 9.00 The Last Of Us Joel and Ellie near the end of their journey. Starring Pedro Pascal Last in the series (R) (S). 10.00 Blue Murder Part one of two. Crime drama, starring Caroline Quentin and Ian Kelsey (S). 10.05 Gogglebox The Masked Singer, Dragons’ Den and Pam & Tommy are appraised (S). 10.00 Return Of The Black Death: Secret History Experts investigate the plague of the 14th century (S). 10.10 Funny Woman The team reunites to record a triumphant last show. Last in the series (R). 10.00 Big Little Lies Renata throws Amabella a disco-themed birthday bash (R) (S). 11.35 Wycliffe An amateur flautist apparently commits suicide. Starring Jack Shepherd (S). 11.10 Naked Attraction A man who is HIV positive, and a musician from Burnley take part (S). 11.05 24 Hours In A&E A train driver is rushed in with fractured ankles after falling from a tree (S). 11.15 Fantasy Football League Last in the series (R). 11.50 A League Of Their Own Road Trip: Southeast Asia (R). 11.05 Lovecraft Country The team travel to 1921 Tulsa (R) (S). 12.45 Where The Heart Is (S). 1.45 Man About The House (S). 2.20 Unwind With ITV (S). 2.30 Teleshopping 12.15 First Dates (S). 1.20 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 2.50 Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins USA (S). 3.40 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell (S). 4.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 4.50 The Goldbergs (S). 12.10 Jonathan Ross’ Myths And Legends (S). 1.15 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 2.20 24 Hours In A&E (S). 3.25 Food Unwrapped (S). 3.50 Close 12.55 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 2.00 Air Ambulance ER (R) (S). 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 4.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 5.00 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 5.30 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 12.10 Lovecraft Country (R) (S). 1.20 Billions (R) (S). 2.30 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 3.35 In Treatment (R) (S). 4.05 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 5.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). On Demand Sky High: The Series Netflix A gangster’s widow goes it alone in this Spanish thriller series spun off from a movie of the same name. Nazanin All4 Documentary about Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, the British-Iranian charity worker accused of spying. Ted Lasso Apple TV+ Jason Sudeikis returns in the Emmy-laden culture-clash football comedy. 6.57am Newsbeat 7.00 Radio 1 Breakfast With Greg James 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Rickie, Melvin And Charlie 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Dean And Vicky 3.30 Newsbeat 3.32 Going Home With Vick And Jordan 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Radio 1’s Future Sounds With Clara Amfo 7.00 Radio 1’s Hottest Records Of The Week 8.00 Radio 1’s Future Artists With Jack Saunders 10.00 Radio 1’s Power Down Playlist With Sian Eleri 11.00 Rock Show With Daniel P Carter 1am BBC Introducing Rock On Radio 1 With Alyx Holcombe 2.00 Radio 1’s Future Alternative 3.00 Radio 1’s Workout Anthems Round The Horne 1.30 Legal, Decent, Honest And Truthful 2.00 All The Way From Memphis 2.30 Ring Around The Bath 3.00 Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead 4.00 The Toff And The Runaway Bride 4.30 Lord Of Misrule 5.00 Sweet Sorrow 5.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 5.30 Lobby Land 6.00 Round The Horne 6.30 Legal, Decent, Honest And Truthful 7.00 All The Way From Memphis 7.30 Ring Around The Bath 8.00 The Moth Radio Hour 8.50 Inheritance Tracks 9.00 Mastertapes 9.30 Lennox 10.00 Comedy Club: The Museum Of Curiosity 10.30 Comedy Club: IGod 10.45 Comedy Club: Hamish And Dougal: You’ll Have Had Your Tea 11.00 Comedy Club: The Now Show 11.30 Comedy Club: Masala FM 12mdn’t Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead 1.00 The Toff And The Runaway Bride 1.30 Lord Of Misrule 2.00 Sweet Sorrow 2.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 2.30 Lobby Land 3.00 Round The Horne 3.30 Legal, Decent, Honest And Truthful 4.00 All The Way From Memphis BBC Radio 1Xtra BBC 5 Live BBC Radio 1 6am Battle Of The Mixes 6.30 Battle Of The Mixes 7.00 Nadia Jae 10.00 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 10.15 Ace 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Remi Burgz 3.45 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 4.00 Reece Parkinson 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Reece Parkinson 7.00 DJ Target 9.00 Sian Anderson 11.00 Snoochie Shy 1am Seani B 3.00 Amapiano To AfroHouse 4.00 1Xtra @ 20 – 20 Years Of Homegrown BBC Radio 2 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show 9.30 Gary Davies 12noon Jeremy Vine 2.00 Scott Mills 4.00 Sara Cox 6.30 Sara Cox’s Half Wower 7.00 Jo Whiley’s Shiny Happy Playlist 7.30 Jo Whiley 9.00 The Blues Show With Cerys Matthews 10.00 Trevor Nelson’s Magnificent 7 10.30 Trevor Nelson’s Rhythm Nation 12mdn’t OJ Borg 2.30 One Hit Wonders With OJ Borg BBC Radio 3 6.30am Breakfast 9.00 Essential Classics 12noon Composer Of The Week: Bizet 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert 2.00 Afternoon Concert 4.30 New Generation Artists 5.00 In Tune 7.00 Classical Mixtape 7.30 Radio 3 In Concert 9.30 Compline 10.00 Music Matters 10.45 The Essay: Thinking Black 11.00 Night Tracks 12.30am Through The Night BBC Radio 4 9.00 Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins USA The remaining recruits go behind enemy lines (S). 59 6am Today 9.00 Start The Week 9.45 Breaking Mississippi 10.00 Woman’s Hour 11.00 How Ukraine Made Us Care 11.30 Lady Killers With Lucy Worsley 12noon News 12.04 You And Yours 12.57 Weather 1.00 The World At One 1.45 Shock And War: Iraq 20 Years On 2.00 The Archers 2.15 Drama: 7 Ghosts 3.00 Counterpoint 3.30 The Food Programme 4.00 Talking Of Michelangelo – The Poet 4.30 The Digital Human 5.00 PM 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 The Museum Of Curiosity 7.00 The Archers 7.15 Front Row 8.00 The Great Inflation 8.30 Analysis 9.00 Troubled Water 9.30 Start The Week 10.00 The World Tonight 10.45 Book At Bedtime: Old God’s Time 11.00 I Feel Therefore I Am 11.30 Today In Parliament 12mdn’t News And Weather 12.30 Breaking Mississippi 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service 5.20 Shipping Forecast 5.30 News Briefing BBC Radio 4 LW 9.45am Daily Service 12.01pm Shipping Forecast 5.54 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 6am The Toff And The Runaway Bride 6.30 Lord Of Misrule 7.00 Sweet Sorrow 7.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 7.30 Lobby Land 8.00 Round The Horne 8.30 Legal, Decent, Honest And Truthful 9.00 All The Way From Memphis 9.30 Ring Around The Bath 10.00 Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead 11.00 The Toff And The Runaway Bride 11.30 Lord Of Misrule 12noon Sweet Sorrow 12.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 12.30 Lobby Land 1.00 6am 5 Live Breakfast 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Naga Munchetty 1pm Nihal Arthanayake 4.00 5 Live Drive 7.00 5 Live Sport 9.30 Match Of The Day: Top 10 10.00 Colin Murray 1am Dotun Adebayo 5.00 Wake Up To Money BBC 6 Music 7.30am Lauren Laverne 10.30 Mary Anne Hobbs 1pm Craig Charles 4.00 Steve Lamacq 7.00 Marc Riley 9.00 Gideon Coe 12mdn’t In Their Own Words: Depeche Mode 1.00 6 Music Festival 2.00 Depeche Mode Live 4.00 The Depeche Mode Playlist 5.00 Chris Hawkins Classic FM 6am More Music Breakfast 9.00 Alexander Armstrong 12noon Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00 John Brunning 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Bill Overton Absolute Radio 6am Dave Berry 10.00 Leona Graham 1pm Ben Burrell 4.00 Bush And Richie 7.00 Danielle Perry 10.00 Jay Lawrence 1am Dan Noble Heart 6.30am Heart Breakfast With Jamie Theakston And Amanda Holden 10.00 Pandora Christie 1pm Matt Wilkinson 4.00 JK And Kelly Brook 7.00 Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Dev Griffin 10.00 Fia Tarrant 1am Simon Beale 4.00 Early Breakfast With Lindsey Russell TalkSPORT 6am TalkSPORT Breakfast With Laura Woods 10.00 Sam Matterface & Alex Crook With Martin Keown 1pm Hawksbee And Jacobs 4.00 TalkSPORT Drive With Andy Goldstein 7.00 Kick Off 10.00 Sports Bar 1am Extra Time RADIO PICK Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley 11.30am, BBC Radio 4 The unfailingly engaging historian (left) investigates the ordinary life and extraordinary crimes of a respectable Victorian spinster who became a mass poisoner after being thwarted in love. Lucy is joined by Dr Gwen Adshead and Professor Rosalind Crone to analyse her case.
60 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Tuesday television CRITIC’S CHOICE Adrian Dunbar and Neil Morrissey trace their family histories in ‘DNA Journey’, 9pm, ITV1 Interior Design Masters with Alan Carr Anton & Giovanni’s Adventures in Sicily The Holy Land and Us: Our Untold Stories 9pm, BBC One There must be a factory somewhere mass-producing these TV travelogues in which celebrities are paired off and sent to sunny climes. This time it’s the turn of Strictly Come Dancing’s Anton Du Beke and Giovanni Pernice, who get to explore the latter’s birthplace of Sicily – the island having quite the moment after The White Lotus and Amanda & Alan’s Italian Job. Their tourism sector must be thrilled, although this series feels rather laboured, as Anton practises his rubbish Italian 7.00 Your Home Made Perfect (R) (S). 7.30 Emmerdale Alex shows his true colours (S). 7.00 Channel 4 News (S). 7.55 The Political Slot Political comment from the Labour Party (S). 7.00 GPs: Behind Closed Doors (S). 7.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 7.30 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 8.00 Interior Design Masters With Alan Carr (S). 8.00 Great British Menu The chefs from the Central England region serve up starters and fish dishes (S). 8.00 The Martin Lewis Money Show: Live The cash expert presents live from Liverpool (S). 8.00 24 Hours In A&E Some of the most memorable stories from St George’s Hospital (S). 8.00 Dogs Behaving (Very) Badly (S). 8.00 As Time Goes By (S). 8.30 The Mistress Luke plans to spend a Sunday with Maxine. From 1987 (S). 9.00 Anton & Giovanni’s Adventures In Sicily New series (S). 9.00 The Holy Land And Us: Our Untold Stories Two women tell Rob Rinder and Sarah Agha their stories (S). 9.00 DNA Journey Actors Neil Morrissey and Adrian Dunbar explore their family histories (S). 9.00 24 Hours In Police Custody: The Honeytrap Murder (S). 9.00 Ben Fogle: New Lives In The Wild Ben heads back to Western Australia to revisit 69-yearold Barbara (S). 9.00 A History Of Britain By Simon Schama The expansion of imperialism (S). 10.00 BBC News At Ten (S). 10.30 BBC Regional News (S). 10.40 FILM: Official Secrets (Gavin Hood 2019) (S). 10.15 QI XS (S). 10.30 Newsnight (S). 10.10 ITV News; Weather (S). 10.45 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 10.55 Starstruck (R) (S). 10.00 Rise And Fall The grafters take on their next Work Shift challenge (S). 10.00 The Night Stalker: Terror In A Small Town (S). 10.00 The Killer Wave Of 1607: Timewatch (S). 10.50 Climbing Blind (S). 6PM 6.00 Cash In The Attic (S). 6.30 Eggheads The Clubturns take part (S). 6.55 5 News Update (S). 7PM 6.00 The Simpsons Homer and Bart go rafting (R) (S). 6.30 Hollyoaks Norma’s life hangs in the balance (R) (S). 6.00 Richard Osman’s House Of Games (R) (S). 6.30 Coast To Coast Food Festival (S). 7.00 The One Show Live chat and topical reports (S). 7.30 EastEnders (S). DAYTIME and the pair race between historic ruins on tuk-tuk-like vehicles. 6.00 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 6.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 6.00 BBC News At Six; Weather (S). 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 8PM that he is actually more Irish than his travelling companion. 6.00 Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine (S). 1.45 Home And Away (R) (S). 2.15 Chronicle Mysteries (R) (S). 4.00 BargainLoving Brits In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 5 News At 5 (S). 6.00 Good Morning Britain (S). 9.00 Lorraine (S). 10.00 This Morning (S). 12.30 Loose Women (S). 1.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 1.55 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal (S). 3.00 Lingo (R) (S). 3.59 ITV Regional Weather (S). 4.00 Tipping Point (R) (S). 5.00 The Chase (R) (S). 9PM 9pm, ITV1 Pairing up famous ancestor hunters makes for livelier television than Who Do You Think You Are?, allowing for some rather amusing (and often revealing) banter. This week, Line of Duty co-stars Neil Morrissey and Adrian Dunbar are packed off to Ireland. Morrissey was placed in care at the age of 10 and knows next to nothing about his family history, while the Northern Irish Dunbar’s journey actually begins in England – and a Norfolk forebear suspected of running an illegal gambling racket. Morrissey is delighted to find some hellraisers in his family tree and to learn from a DNA test 6.10 Countdown (R) (S). 6.50 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.15 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 9.00 Frasier (R) (S). 9.30 Frasier (R) (S). 10.00 Frasier (R) (S). 10.30 Undercover Boss USA (R) (S). 11.25 Channel 4 News Summary (S). 11.30 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 12.30 Steph’s Packed Lunch (S). 2.10 Countdown (S). 3.00 Tool Club (S). 4.00 A New Life In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 Four In A Bed (S). 5.30 Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 6.15 Walks Of Life (R) (S). 7.15 Antiques Road Trip (R) (S). 8.00 Sign Zone: Secrets Of The Jurassic Dinosaurs (R) (S). 9.00 BBC News (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 12.15 Politics Live (S). 1.00 The Super League Show (R) (S). 1.45 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.15 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.45 Hairy Bikers’ Best Of British (R) (S). 3.15 Eat Well For Less? (R) (S). 4.15 The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes (R) (S). 5.15 Flog It! (R) (S). 11.15 Murder In The Pacific The bomber reveals how he planted explosives on the Rainbow Warrior (R) (S). 11PM 10PM DNA Journey 8pm, BBC One The remaining eight contestants go solo this week as they are sent to a luxury golf and spa resort in Scotland. Four of them get to redecorate rooms for spa visitors, while golfers are to be treated to a “maximalist Scottish experience”. Firm-but-fair judge Michelle Ogundehin explains to Alan Carr that by ‘Scottish maximalist” she is not looking for antlers, tartan and Braveheart – more “a fullbodied red wine as opposed to a rosé”. Helping her this week is guest judge interior designer Matthew Williamson, who will be helping to adjudicate on the resulting transformations. 6.00 Breakfast (S). 9.15 Morning Live (S). 10.00 Crimewatch Live (S). 10.45 Critical Incident (S). 11.15 Homes Under The Hammer (S). 12.15 Bargain Hunt (R) (S). 1.00 BBC News At One; Weather (S). 1.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 1.45 Doctors (S). 2.15 Jay And Dom’s Home Fix (R) (S). 3.00 Escape To The Country (S). 3.45 Antiques Road Trip (R) (S). 4.30 Bridge Of Lies (R) (S). 5.15 Pointless (R) (S). 12.25 The Apprentice (R) (S). 1.30 BBC News (S). LATE radio 12.15 Dave (R) (S). 12.45 Dave (R) (S). 1.20 Sign Zone: Great Australian Railway Journeys (R) (S). 1.50 Sign Zone: Rip Off Britain: Holidays (R) (S). 2.35 Sign Zone: Make It At Market (R) (S). Alan Carr’s ‘Design Masters’ go golfing 8pm, BBC One 11.05 UEFA European Qualifiers Preview (S). 11.40 Gogglebox (R) (S). 12.00 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 The Bay (R) (S). 3.50 Unwind With ITV (S). 5.05 Dickinson’s Real Deal (R) (S). 12.40 Untold: Gay Under The Taliban (S). 1.35 999: On The Front Line (R) (S). 2.30 The Last Leg (R) (S). 3.25 Extraordinary Escapes With Sandi Toksvig (R) (S). 9pm, BBC Two There is barely suppressed anger in the Palestinian contributors to this enlightening series as they reflect on the events of 1948 – known to Palestinians as the Nakba, or the Catastrophe. In this week’s very moving episode, the Irish-Palestinian comedian Joanna Carolan makes her first trip to what were once her family’s orange groves in Jaffa near Tel Aviv – linking up with two elderly uncles who recall fleeing to Jordan in 1948. Rob Rinder, meanwhile, meets 12.05 Born To Kill: Patrick Mackay (R) (S). 12.55 Killer At The Crime Scene (R) (S). 1.50 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 2.00 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 4.00 Parking Hell (R) (S). 5.15 Wildlife SOS (R) (S). Giovanni Pernice and his ‘Strictly’ mate Anton Du Beke explore the island of Sicily 9pm, BBC One Rob Rinder concludes his look at Israel 9pm, BBC Two 7.15 FILM: Bride Wars (Gary Winick 2009) Comedy, with Kate Hudson and Anne Hathaway (S). 6.00 World’s Funniest Videos (S). 6.35 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 7.00 Love Bites (S). 8.00 Dress To Impress (S). 9.00 Chuck (S). 10.00 One Tree Hill (S). 11.00 The O.C (S). 12.00 Love Bites (S). 1.00 Dress To Impress (S). 2.00 Supermarket Sweep (S). 3.05 Chuck (S). 4.00 One Tree Hill (S). 5.00 The O.C (S). 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase With Sarah Millican, Vernon Kay and Joel Dommett (S). 7.00 The Masked Singer US The four Group B singers compete in the semifinals (S). 8.00 Superstore Glenn returns from quarantine to resume store manager duties (S). 8.30 Superstore (S). 9.00 FILM: Glass (M Night Shyamalan 2019) Thriller, starring James McAvoy (S). 9.00 Loaded In Paradise (S). 10.00 Family Guy Meg takes advantage of Peter’s temporary job as principal of her school (S). 10.30 Family Guy (S). 11.50 How To Make: The Trainer Designer Zoe Laughlin makes her own training shoe (S). 11.35 FILM: Hitman (Xavier Gens 2007) Action thriller, starring Timothy Olyphant (S). 11.00 Family Guy Peter gets locked in a library (S). 11.30 American Dad! (S). 12.50 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 1.20 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 1.50 The Killer Wave Of 1607: Timewatch (S). 2.40 A History Of Britain By Simon Schama (S). 3.40 Close 1.25 FILM: Goat (Andrew Neel 2016) Fact-based drama, starring Ben Schnetzer (S). 3.35 Close 12.00 American Dad! (S). 12.30 Superstore (S). 1.00 Superstore (S). 1.30 Hey Tracey! (S). 2.15 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 2.40 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping
culture a Jewish woman born in Egypt who wants to learn more about her beloved aunts’ move to the fledgling state of Israel. FILM CHOICE Jerk 10pm, BBC Three Comedian Tim Renkow continues to ride roughshod over contemporary pieties as Tim is invited to join a parliamentary select committee on disability. Meanwhile, his mate Idris (Rob J Madin) begins to regret sinking his life savings in to the AfricanCaribbean bookshop – especially after his mother suggests stocking Jeremy Clarkson’s books. You have been warned. The cast also features Sharon Rooney. Gerard Gilbert 6.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 6.35 Classic Emmerdale (S). 7.00 Classic Coronation Street (S). 7.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 8.05 Man About The House (S). 8.40 Man About The House (S). 9.10 Where The Heart Is (S). 10.15 Where The Heart Is (S). 11.15 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 12.25 Heartbeat (S). 1.25 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.30 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.00 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.30 Midsomer Murders (S). 5.30 Downton Abbey (S). 7.00 Heartbeat A family of crooked travellers pitches camp in Aidensfield (S). Straight Outta Compton 8pm, Sky Cinema Drama (F Gary Gray, 2015) Rappers NWA variously fascinated, thrilled, terrified and appalled the world with their tales of street-level life in the ghettos of LA in the late 80s and early 90s. This is the authorised and sanitised version of their story – which means it arguably misunderstands what is most interesting about the group’s lives. If Keira Knightley stars as a whistleblower in spy thriller ‘Official Secrets’, 10.40pm, BBC One 10.25pm, Sky Cinema Greats (Lindsay Anderson, 1968) A classic of the British new wave, in which young rebel Malcolm McDowell, making his film debut, leads an uprising against the 6.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 8.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 9.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 10.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 12.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 1.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 2.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 3.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 4.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 5.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 6.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.00 Ramsay’s Hotel Hell (S). 8.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 9.00 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 10.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 11.00 Modern Family (S). 11.30 Modern Family (S). 12.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 12.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 1.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 1.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 3.00 Modern Family (S). 3.30 Modern Family (S). 4.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 4.30 Brooklyn NineNine (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 8.55 Kirstie’s House Of Craft (S). 9.15 A Place In The Sun (S). 10.05 A New Life In The Sun (S). 11.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 12.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 1.10 Heir Hunters (S). 2.10 Four In A Bed (S). 2.40 Four In A Bed (S). 3.15 Four In A Bed (S). 3.50 Four In A Bed (S). 4.20 Four In A Bed (S). 4.50 Location, Location, Location (S). 5.55 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It (S). 6.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 6.30 The Big Bang Theory The boys are challenged to a robot duel (S). 6.55 Escape To The Chateau: DIY It is crunch time for Jonathan and Michael as they face their investors (R) (S). 6.00 Stargate SG-1 The team searches for missing soldiers (R) (S). 7.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.30 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 7.55 Grand Designs A couple decide to build a house heavily inspired by American modernist properties (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 The Tollans share their technology (R) (S). 6.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.55 The Affair (R) (S). 9.00 The Affair (R) (S). 10.05 Gomorrah (R) (S). 11.10 Gomorrah (R) (S). 12.15 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 1.20 Fortitude (R) (S). 2.25 Fortitude (R) (S). 3.30 Gomorrah (R) (S). 4.35 Succession (R) (S). 5.40 Succession (R) (S). ruling classes as represented by the staff of his all-boys public school. The film itself rejects the established order, being an unruly work that abandons narrative order in favour of surrealism. Official Secrets 10.40pm, BBC One (Gavin Hood, 2019) Keira Knightley stars as GCHQ whistleblower Katharine Gun in this real-life spy movie, a work whose cool tone and careful accretion of convincing detail make it one of the best dramatisations of the behind-the-scenes wrangling in the intelligence and legal communities at the time of the 2003 invasion of Iraq. Laurence Phelan Radio listings BBC Radio 1 6.57am Newsbeat 7.00 Radio 1 Breakfast With Greg James 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Rickie, Melvin And Charlie 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Dean And Vicky 3.30 Newsbeat 3.32 Going Home With Jordan 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Radio 1’s Future Sounds With Clara Amfo 8.00 Radio 1’s Future Artists With Jack Saunders 10.00 Radio 1’s Power Down Playlist With Sian Eleri 11.00 Annie Nightingale Presents 1am Radio 1’s Drum & Bass Mix-DNB60 2.00 Radio 1 Relax 3.00 Radio 1’s Dance Anthems BBC Radio 1Xtra 8.00 Midsomer Murders A horse trainer is murdered (S). 6.50 Yellowjackets Taissa leads a last-ditch effort and/or suicide mission (R) (S). 7.55 Game Of Thrones Jaime faces off with the High Sparrow (R) (S). 6am Battle Of The Mixes 7.00 Nadia Jae 10.00 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 10.15 Ace 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Remi Burgz 3.45 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 4.00 Reece Parkinson 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Reece Parkinson 7.00 DJ Target 9.00 1Xtra’s Alternative Selection With CassKidd 11.00 Snoochie Shy 1am The Story Of Soul-Part 3 3.00 Battle Of The Mixes 4.00 1Xtra’s Influence With Koffee 5.00 1Xtra’s Cosmic Wind Down With Jamz Supernova BBC Radio 2 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show 9.30 Gary Davies 12noon Jeremy Vine 2.00 Scott Mills 4.00 Sara Cox 6.30 Sara Cox’s Half Wower 7.00 Jo Whiley’s Shiny Happy Playlist 7.30 Jo Whiley 9.00 The Jazz Show With Jamie Cullum 10.00 Trevor Nelson’s Magnificent 7 10.30 Trevor Nelson’s Rhythm Nation 12mdn’t OJ Borg 3.00 Sophie Ellis-Bextor’s Kitchen Disco BBC Radio 3 6.30am Breakfast 9.00 Essential Classics 12noon Composer Of The Week: Bizet 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert 2.00 Afternoon Concert 5.00 In Tune 7.00 Classical Mixtape 7.30 Radio 3 In Concert 10.00 Free Thinking 10.45 The Essay: Thinking Black 11.00 Night Tracks 12.30am Through The Night 8.00 The Flash New series. Barry and Iris keep reliving the same day (S). BBC Radio 4 9.00 Fred’s Last Resort (S). 9.00 Home Greek Home Sarah recruits her sons to help with the build (S). 9.00 Peacemaker (R) (S). 9.00 The Gilded Age In the aftermath of a tragedy, George agrees to help Bertha (R) (S). 10.00 Blue Murder Conclusion of the crime drama, starring Caroline Quentin (S). 10.00 Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins USA Last in the series (S). 10.00 24 Hours In A&E A five-year-old is rushed to A&E after being hit by a car (S). 10.00 Freddie Down Under Freddie and Rob prepare to swim with sharks (R) (S). 10.05 The Plot Against America Drama, starring Winona Ryder (R) (S). 11.35 Wycliffe An ancient Cornish custom ends in murder (S). 11.00 First Dates Essex DJ Terry ’Turbo’ is back (S). 11.05 999: On The Front Line A diabetic woman is trapped in a three-car pile-up on the M6 (R) (S). 11.00 A League Of Their Own Road Trip: Southeast Asia Previously unseen footage from the show (R). 11.10 The Plot Against America (R) (S). 12.10 Home Greek Home (S). 1.15 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 2.20 24 Hours In A&E (S). 3.25 Food Unwrapped (S). 3.50 Close 12.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 1.00 Fantasy Football League (R). 1.35 Road Wars (R). 2.00 Air Ambulance ER (R) (S). 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 4.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 5.00 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 5.30 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 12.20 The Wire (R) (S). 1.30 In Treatment (R) (S). 2.00 Django 3.05 Django 4.10 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 5.05 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 12.45 Where The Heart Is (S). 1.45 Man About The House (S). 2.20 Unwind With ITV (S). 2.30 Teleshopping 12.05 Naked Attraction (S). 1.10 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 2.30 Fred’s Last Resort (S). 3.35 Celebrity SAS: Who Dares Wins USA (S). 4.15 The Big Bang Theory (S). 4.40 The Goldbergs (S). 61 On Demand Nope Prime Video A Californian rancher is menaced from above in Jordan Peele’s celestial horror movie. Paula All 4 Docuseries about the ill-fated TV presenter Paula Yates. Deadline Acorn TV A woman hires a journalist to clear her of murder in this cliffhanger-laced thriller series. The Geneva Mystery 11.30 Lord Of Misrule 12noon Sweet Sorrow 12.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 12.30 Ed Reardon’s Week 1.00 The Goon Show 1.30 For Better Or For Worse 2.00 Who Goes There? 2.30 No Commitments 3.00 Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead 4.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 4.30 Lord Of Misrule 5.00 Sweet Sorrow 5.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 5.30 Ed Reardon’s Week 6.00 The Goon Show 6.30 For Better Or For Worse 7.00 Who Goes There? 7.30 No Commitments 8.00 TED Radio Hour 8.50 Inheritance Tracks 9.00 Mastertapes 9.30 Lennox 10.00 Comedy Club: Mark Watson Talks A Bit About Life 10.30 Comedy Club: Innes Own World 10.55 Comedy Club: The Comedy Club Interview 11.00 Comedy Club: The Damien Slash Mixtape 11.15 Comedy Club: Political Animals 11.30 Comedy Club: Old Harry’s Game 12mdn’t Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead 1.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 1.30 Lord Of Misrule 2.00 Sweet Sorrow 2.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 2.30 Ed Reardon’s Week 3.00 The Goon Show 3.30 For Better Or For Worse BBC 5 Live 6am 5 Live Breakfast 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Naga Munchetty 1pm Nihal Arthanayake 4.00 5 Live Drive 7.00 5 Live Sport 8.00 5 Live Sport 9.00 5 Live Sport 10.00 Colin Murray 1am Dotun Adebayo 5.00 Wake Up To Money BBC 6 Music 7.30am Lauren Laverne 10.30 Mary Anne Hobbs 1pm Craig Charles 4.00 Steve Lamacq 7.00 Marc Riley 9.00 Gideon Coe 12mdn’t 6 Music Artist In Residence 1.00 Depeche Mode At The BBC 2.00 The Man Machine: Kraftwerk, Krautrock And The German Electronic Revolution 3.00 6 Music’s Indie Forever Classic FM 6am More Music Breakfast 9.00 Alexander Armstrong 12noon Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00 John Brunning 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Bill Overton Absolute Radio 6am Dave Berry 10.00 Leona Graham 1pm Ben Burrell 4.00 Bush And Richie 7.00 Danielle Perry 10.00 Jay Lawrence 1am Dan Noble 6am Today 9.00 The Life Scientific 9.30 One To One. Presenter Angellica Bell talks to therapist Alice Bearn about the different ways of starting new chapters in life. Last in the series. 9.45 Breaking Mississippi 10.00 Woman’s Hour. Nuala McGovern presents the magazine show. 11.00 The Spark 11.30 Rethinking Music 12noon News 12.04 Call You And Yours 12.57 Weather 1.00 The World At One 1.45 Shock And War: Iraq 20 Years On 2.00 The Archers 2.15 Drama: Deacon: A Reckoning 3.00 Short Cuts 3.30 Costing The Earth 4.00 Law In Action 4.30 A Good Read 5.00 PM 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 Mark Watson Talks A Bit About Life 7.00 The Archers 7.15 Front Row 8.00 File On 4 8.40 In Touch 9.00 Inside Health 9.30 The Life Scientific 10.00 The World Tonight 10.45 Book At Bedtime: Old God’s Time 11.00 Please Use Other Door 11.30 Today In Parliament 12mdn’t News And Weather 12.30 Breaking Mississippi 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service 5.20 Shipping Forecast 5.30 News Briefing Heart BBC Radio 4 LW Gritty contemporary supernatural drama by Edson Burton. Enigmatic drifter Deacon is back to help a troubled soul. James has lost his wife, Mavis, and he, too, seems lost. Deacon tries his best to help. Starring Don Warrington (above). 8.31am Yesterday In Parliament 9.45 Daily Service 12.01pm Shipping Forecast 5.54 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 6am Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 6.30 Lord Of Misrule 7.00 Sweet Sorrow 7.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 7.30 Ed Reardon’s Week 8.00 The Goon Show 8.30 For Better Or For Worse 9.00 Who Goes There? 9.30 No Commitments 10.00 Rosencrantz And Guildenstern Are Dead 11.00 Paul Temple And 6.30am Heart Breakfast With Jamie Theakston And Amanda Holden 10.00 Pandora Christie 1pm Matt Wilkinson 4.00 JK And Kelly Brook 7.00 Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Dev Griffin 10.00 Fia Tarrant 1am Simon Beale 4.00 Early Breakfast With Lindsey Russell TalkSPORT 6am TalkSPORT Breakfast With Laura Woods 10.00 Jim White And Simon Jordan 1pm Hawksbee And Baker 4.00 TalkSPORT Drive With Andy Goldstein 7.00 Kick Off 10.00 Sports Bar 1am Extra Time RADIO PICK Drama: Deacon: A Reckoning 2.15pm, BBC Radio 4
62 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Wednesday television CRITIC’S CHOICE Secret Life of the Forest 8pm, Channel 5 David Attenborough is hanging out in Britain’s woodlands in this week’s episode of Wild Isles (see Sunday’s TV choices), just as this arboreal-minded docuseries concludes with autumn in Dalby and Cropton Forests. Over at the beaver pond, ecologist Cath is keeping a close eye on the family, as the older siblings begin to show signs of causing conflict in the wider group. Race Across the World why surely you would fly (and first-class too). Except that’s not allowed – neither are smartphones nor bank cards – as this resourcetesting competition returns, this time rightly promoted to BBC One. Five pairs of “ordinary Britons” begin their odyssey in Vancouver, British Columbia, their first leg offering the choice between taking the ferry or going inland. The majority opt for the ferry, little realising the paucity of sailing times, while one couple’s decision to hire a taxi proves costly. The Bay Tyrant: The Rise of Adolf Hitler 9pm, Channel 5 This curiously titled history series (Adolf Hitler had well and truly risen by the time of the events recalled here) now focuses on the period between September 1938 and March 1939 – that is, between the Munich Agreement that seemed like it would avert war by forestalling Hitler’s intended invasion of Czechoslovakia, and the invasion itself. The Cockfields 10pm, BBC Two This charming, well-observed sitcom was originally broadcast on Gold in 2019 but now sees the light of day (or late evening) on BBC Two. It is co-written by Joe Wilkinson, who also stars as Simon Cockfield, who has returned to his family home on the Isle of Wight for his 40th birthday celebrations and to introduce his new partner (played by Motherland’s Diane Morgan). Simon’s mother is 6.00 Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine (S). 1.45 Home And Away (R) (S). 2.15 FILM: To Die For (Robin Hays 2020) Thriller, starring Julie Benz (S). 4.00 Bargain-Loving Brits In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 5 News At 5 (S). 6.00 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 6.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 6.00 The Simpsons A cat burglar puts Springfield in a panic (R) (S). 6.30 Hollyoaks (R) (S). 6.00 Cash In The Attic Helping people make money (S). 6.30 Eggheads (S). 6.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 The One Show (S). 7.30 EastEnders Whitney and Zack agree to talk about their issues (S). 7.00 Your Home Made Perfect Will Foster and Lynsey Elliott compete to remodel a home in Gosport (R) (S). 7.30 Emmerdale Alex plans his robbery (S). 7.00 Channel 4 News (S). 7.00 The Gadget Show: Shop Smart, Save Money (S). 7.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 7.30 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 8.00 The Repair Shop New series. Experts restore a painting belonging to a Ukrainian family (S). 8.00 Great British Menu The chefs from the Central England region serve up their main dishes and desserts (S). 8.00 Coronation Street Paul comes to Gemma’s rescue (S). 8.00 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It: Brilliant Builds (S). 8.00 Secret Life Of The Forest (S). 8.00 Chris Packham’s Animal Einsteins (S). 9.00 Race Across The World New series (S). 9.00 Saving Lives In Leeds A cancer patient suffering from anxiety tries to discharge himself (S). 9.00 The Bay CCTV evidence leads to a major development in the case (S). 9.00 Grand Designs A couple building a curved glass family home in Manchester (R) (S). 9.00 Tyrant: The Rise Of Adolf Hitler (S). 9.00 Six Wives With Lucy Worsley The historian explores the fate of the last three wives of Henry VIII (S). 10.00 BBC News At Ten (S). 10.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 10.40 Jerk (R) (S). 10.00 The Cockfields New series. Comedy, with Joe Wilkinson and Diane Morgan (S). 10.30 Newsnight (S). 10.00 ITV News At Ten; Weather (S). 10.30 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 10.45 Peston (S). 10.00 Rise And Fall One Grafter has the opportunity to rise (S). 10.00 Casualty 24/7: Every Second Counts (R) (S). 10.00 The Six Wives Of Henry VIII The Duke of Norfolk presents his niece Catherine Howard to the king (S). 10.00 Family Guy Peter’s past as a sperm donor catches up with him (S). 10.30 Family Guy (S). 11.05 Jerk (R) (S). 11.30 Live NBA Dallas Mavericks vs Golden State Warriors (Tip-off 11.30pm) (S). 11.15 FILM: Radioactive (Marjane Satrapi 2019) Biopic of Marie Curie, with Rosamund Pike (S). 11.40 Heathrow: Britain’s Busiest Airport Airside officer Ian has a close shave out on the runway (R) (S). 11.05 Night Coppers On the beat with the police officers of Brighton after dark (R) (S). 11.05 Motorway Cops: Catching Britain’s Speeders (R) (S). 11.30 The Six Wives Of Henry VIII Last in the series (S). 11.00 Family Guy (S). 11.30 American Dad! Steve announces he is going through puberty (S). 2.05 BBC News (S). 1.00 Sign Zone: Saved And Remade (R) (S). 1.40 Sign Zone: Rip Off Britain: Holidays (R) (S). 2.25 Sign Zone: Amanda & Alan’s Italian Job (R) (S). 2.55 Sign Zone: Scarlett’s Driving School (R) (S). 12.05 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 Queens Of The Street (R) (S). 3.50 Unwind With ITV (S). 5.05 The Secret Life Of Our Pets (R) (S). 12.10 24 Hours In A&E (R) (S). 1.05 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (R) (S). 1.55 Couples Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 2.50 Nazanin (R) (S). 12.05 Police: Night Shift 999 (R) (S). 12.55 Ambulance: Code Red (R) (S). 1.45 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 2.00 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 4.00 Hijacked (R) (S). 1.00 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 1.30 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 2.00 Six Wives With Lucy Worsley (S). 3.00 Chris Packham’s Animal Einsteins (S). 4.00 Close LATE 11PM 10PM 9PM 6PM DAYTIME 6.10 Countdown (R) (S). 6.50 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.15 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 9.00 Frasier (R) (S). 9.30 Frasier (R) (S). 10.00 Frasier (R) (S). 10.30 Undercover Boss USA (R) (S). 11.25 Channel 4 News Summary (S). 11.30 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 12.30 Steph’s Packed Lunch (S). 2.10 Countdown (S). 3.00 Tool Club (S). 4.00 A New Life In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 Four In A Bed (S). 5.30 Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 7PM 9pm, ITV1 Having a family liaison officer as a central character does give a crime drama greater latitude than most to delve into domestic affairs – although you wonder whether they would be quite as proactive as DS Jenn Townsend (Marsha Thomason) in real life. Anyway, more secrets and lies surface in Morecambe as the Metcalf children struggle to come to terms with their loss, and CCTV evidence leads to a major development in the case. 8PM Claudia and Kevin have 16,000km to travel in ‘Race Across the World’, 9pm, BBC One 9pm, BBC One Imagine you’d been given £2,500 to travel the 16,000km from Canada’s Pacific coast to its Atlantic fringe in the quickest possible time – radio 6.00 Breakfast (S). 9.15 Morning Live (S). 10.00 Crimewatch Live (S). 10.45 Critical Incident (S). 11.15 Homes Under The Hammer (R) (S). 12.15 Bargain Hunt (R) (S). 1.00 BBC News At One; Weather (S). 1.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 1.45 Doctors (S). 2.15 Jay And Dom’s Home Fix (R) (S). 3.00 Escape To The Country (R) (S). 3.45 Antiques Road Trip (S). 4.30 Bridge Of Lies (R) (S). 5.15 Pointless (R) (S). 6.15 Walks Of Life (R) (S). 7.15 Bargain Hunt (R) (S). 8.00 Sign Zone: Take A Hike (R) (S). 8.30 Sign Zone: 24/7 Pet Hospital (R) (S). 9.00 BBC News (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 11.15 Politics Live (S). 1.00 Impossible (R) (S). 1.45 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.15 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.45 Hairy Bikers’ Best Of British (R) (S). 3.15 Eat Well For Less? (R) (S). 4.15 The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes (R) (S). 5.15 Flog It! (R) (S). 6.00 Good Morning Britain (S). 9.00 Lorraine (S). 10.00 This Morning (S). 12.30 Loose Women (S). 1.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 1.55 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal (R) (S). 3.00 Lingo (R) (S). 3.59 ITV Regional Weather (S). 4.00 Tipping Point (R) (S). 5.00 The Chase (R) (S). 6.00 BBC News At Six; Weather (S). 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 6.00 Richard Osman’s House Of Games (R) (S). 6.30 Coast To Coast Food Festival (S). Marsha Thomason stars in ‘The Bay’ 9pm, ITV1 Donna (Diane Morgan) heads to the Isle of Wight to meet her boyfriend Simon’s family 10pm, BBC Two Ecologist Cath keeps an eye on the beavers 8pm, Channel 5 6.45 FILM: Bumblebee (Travis Knight 2018) Transformers prequel (S). 6.00 World’s Funniest Videos (S). 6.35 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 7.00 Love Bites (S). 8.00 Dress To Impress (S). 9.00 Chuck (S). 10.00 One Tree Hill (S). 11.00 The O.C (S). 12.00 Love Bites (S). 1.00 Dress To Impress (S). 2.00 Supermarket Sweep (S). 3.05 Chuck (S). 4.00 One Tree Hill (S). 5.00 The O.C (S). 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase With Richard Arnold, Danny Miller and Rachel Stevens (S). 7.00 The Masked Singer US The final two singers from group A perform solo (S). 8.00 Superstore Jonah finds himself in trouble with Sandra (S). 8.30 Superstore (S). 9.00 FILM: Titanic (James Cameron 1997) Romantic drama, starring Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio (S). 12.50 FILM: Elle (Paul Verhoeven 2016) French thriller, starring Isabelle Huppert (S). 3.35 Close 9.00 Loaded In Paradise Kara and Kishon and Jamie and Guy face the chop (S). 12.00 American Dad! (S). 12.30 Superstore (S). 1.00 Superstore (S). 1.30 CelebAbility (S). 2.15 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 2.40 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping
culture played by Sue Johnston and his controlling father by the late Bobby Ball. FILM CHOICE The Six Wives of Henry VIII 10pm, BBC Four BBC Four’s new role as a “heritage channel” (so, saving cash by mining the archives) has led to some wonderful disinterment of classic dramas on recent Wednesdays. In the final double bill of this 1970 drama, Keith Michell’s Tudor monarch has his head turned by the Duke of Norfolk’s pretty niece Catherine Howard (Angela Pleasence) before she completely loses her head, to be replaced by Catherine Parr (Rosalie Crutchley). Gerard Gilbert 6.00 Classic Coronation Street (S). 6.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 7.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 8.05 Man About The House (S). 8.35 Man About The House (S). 9.05 Where The Heart Is (S). 10.10 Where The Heart Is (S). 11.15 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 12.25 Heartbeat (S). 1.25 Classic Emmerdale (S). 1.55 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.30 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.05 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.40 Midsomer Murders (S). 5.55 Downton Abbey (S). 6.55 Heartbeat Nick gets a promotion (S). Inglourious Basterds 9pm, 5Star (Quentin Tarantino, 2009) The titular Jewish American commandos are one-dimensional cyphers for derring-do – but they have only supporting roles. What Tarantino’s Second World War movie unexpectedly lacks in action, it makes up for with things that are missing from his excursions into genre cinema: three-dimensional characters, suspense and plot. Radioactive Brad Pitt stars in Quentin Tarantino’s wartime adventure ‘Inglourious Basterds’, 9pm, 5Star 6.00 Hollyoaks (S). 6.30 Hollyoaks (S). 7.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 9.00 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 10.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 11.00 Modern Family (S). 11.30 Modern Family (S). 12.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 12.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 1.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 1.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 3.00 Modern Family (S). 3.30 Modern Family (S). 4.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 4.30 Brooklyn NineNine (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 8.55 Kirstie’s House Of Craft (S). 9.15 A Place In The Sun (S). 10.05 A New Life In The Sun (S). 11.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 12.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 1.10 Heir Hunters (S). 2.10 Four In A Bed (S). 2.40 Four In A Bed (S). 3.15 Four In A Bed (S). 3.50 Four In A Bed (S). 4.20 Four In A Bed (S). 4.50 Location, Location, Location (S). 5.55 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It (S). 6.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 6.30 The Big Bang Theory Sheldon lends Penny money to pay her rent (S). 6.55 Escape To The Chateau: DIY (S). 7.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.30 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 7.55 Grand Designs Building a radical, self-heating family home (S). 11.15pm, BBC Two (Marjane Satrapi, 2019) The life and times of Marie Curie, the double Nobel winner and discoverer of radioactivity, get the 6.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 8.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 9.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 10.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 12.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 1.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 2.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 3.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 4.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 5.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 6.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.55 The Affair (R) (S). 9.00 The Affair (R) (S). 10.05 Gomorrah (R) (S). 11.10 Gomorrah (R) (S). 12.15 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 1.20 Fortitude (R) (S). 2.25 Fortitude (R) (S). 3.30 Gomorrah (R) (S). 4.35 Succession (R) (S). 5.45 Succession (R) (S). standard-issue biopic treatment, with a lead performance by Rosamund Pike, and an emphasis on Curie’s battle against the prejudices of the stuffy male establishment who dominated the sciences. Elle 12.50am, Film4 (Paul Verhoeven, 2016) This psychological drama centres on a remarkable performance of icy hauteur by Isabelle Huppert. She plays a video game-maker who is violently raped in her own Parisian apartment in scene one, then declines to act for the rest of the film in any of the ways you think a victim should or would. Laurence Phelan Radio listings BBC Radio 1 6.57am Newsbeat 7.00 Radio 1 Breakfast With Greg James 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Rickie, Melvin And Charlie 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Dean And Vicky 3.30 Newsbeat 3.32 Going Home With Vick And Jordan 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Radio 1’s Future Sounds With Clara Amfo 8.00 Radio 1’s Future Artists With Jack Saunders 10.00 Radio 1’s Power Down Playlist With Sian Eleri 11.00 Benji B 1am Radio 1’s Wind Down Presents 2.00 The Radio 1 Interview 2.15 Radio 1 Playlists 2.30 6 Degrees From Jamie And Spencer BBC Radio 1Xtra 8.00 Lewis A student dies during a clinical trial (S). 6.00 Stargate SG-1 The team meets a new race (R) (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 Carter goes missing (R) (S). 6.50 Yellowjackets Shauna dabbles in some light cyber stalking (R) (S). 7.55 Game Of Thrones Arya makes a plan (R) (S). 6am Battle Of The Mixes 7.00 Nadia Jae 10.00 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 10.15 Ace 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Remi Burgz 3.45 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 4.00 Reece Parkinson 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Reece Parkinson 7.00 DJ Target 9.00 DJ Edu – Destination Africa 10.30 DJ Edu’s DNA Mix 11.00 Snoochie Shy 1am Pressed 1.40 1Xtra Playlists 2.00 Sir Spyro 4.00 1Xtra @ 20-20 Years Of R&B 5.00 1Xtra Salutes.. BBC Radio 2 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show 9.30 Gary Davies 12noon Jeremy Vine 2.00 Scott Mills 4.00 Sara Cox 6.30 Sara Cox’s Half Wower 7.00 Jo Whiley’s Shiny Happy Playlist 7.30 Jo Whiley 9.00 The Folk Show With Mark Radcliffe 10.00 Trevor Nelson’s Magnificent 7 10.30 Trevor Nelson’s Rhythm Nation 12mdn’t OJ Borg 3.00 C2C Live – Midland BBC Radio 3 6.30am Breakfast 9.00 Essential Classics 12noon Composer Of The Week: Bizet 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert 2.00 Afternoon Concert 4.00 Choral Evensong 5.00 In Tune 7.00 Classical Mixtape 7.30 Radio 3 In Concert 10.00 Free Thinking 10.45 The Essay: Thinking Black 11.00 Night Tracks 12.30am Through The Night 8.00 S.W.A.T The team tackles a series of random shootings (R) (S). BBC Radio 4 9.00 Fred’s Last Resort (S). 9.00 24 Hours In Police Custody The arrest of a man on suspicion of conspiracy to murder (S). 9.00 SEAL Team The members of Bravo are deployed to northern Syria. 9.00 Django John tries to turn New Babylon into a fortress (S). 10.00 Blue Murder Detective Janine Lewis returns to work following her maternity leave (S). 10.00 First Dates Ireland New series. Limerick twins Mary and Martina arrive for a double date (S). 10.30 24 Hours In A&E A 10-year-old needs surgery for a broken femur (S). 10.00 A Town Called Malice Crime thriller, starring Jack Rowan (R). 10.05 Django John and Django track down Sarah (S). 11.30 Wycliffe A body is found at a farm (S). 11.05 Gogglebox The households’ opinions on shows including Love Is Blind, Starstruck and Cheaters (S). 11.35 999: On The Front Line (S). 11.10 Fantasy Football League Last in the series (R). 11.45 A League Of Their Own Road Trip: Southeast Asia (R). 11.10 The Last Of Us Joel and Ellie near the end of their journey (R) (S). 12.05 Naked Attraction (S). 1.10 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 2.35 Fred’s Last Resort (S). 3.30 First Dates Ireland (S). 4.25 The Big Bang Theory (S). 4.50 The Goldbergs (S). 5.15 The Goldbergs (S). 12.40 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 1.45 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 2.50 24 Hours In A&E (S). 3.50 Close 12.40 Funny Woman (R). 1.35 Strike Back: Shadow Warfare (R) (S). 2.30 Road Wars (R). 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 4.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 5.00 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 5.30 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 12.10 Perry Mason (R) (S). 1.20 The Gilded Age (R) (S). 2.25 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 3.30 In Treatment (R) (S). 4.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 5.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 12.40 Where The Heart Is (S). 1.45 Man About The House (S). 2.20 Unwind With ITV (S). 2.30 Teleshopping 6am Today 9.00 The Patch 9.30 One To One 9.45 Breaking Mississippi 10.00 Woman’s Hour 11.00 The Shamima Begum Story 11.30 Poison In The Womb 12noon News 12.04 You And Yours 12.57 Weather 1.00 The World At One 1.45 Shock And War: Iraq 20 Years On 2.00 The Archers 2.15 Drama: Passenger List 3.00 Money Box Live 3.30 Inside Health 4.00 Sideways 4.30 The Media Show 5.00 PM 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 Conversations From A Long Marriage 7.00 The Archers 7.15 Front Row 8.00 The Moral Maze 8.45 Lent Talks 9.00 Costing The Earth 9.30 The Media Show 10.00 The World Tonight 10.45 Book At Bedtime: Old God’s Time 11.00 Where To, Mate? 11.15 The Skewer 11.30 Today In Parliament 12mdn’t News And Weather 12.30 Breaking Mississippi 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service 5.20 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 LW 8.31am Yesterday In Parliament 9.45 Daily Service 12.01pm Shipping Forecast 5.54 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 6am Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 6.30 Lord Of Misrule 7.00 Sweet Sorrow 7.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 7.30 Women Talking About Cars 8.00 Hancock’s Half Hour 8.30 Life, Death And Sex With Mike And Sue 9.00 Nature Table 9.30 The Small World Of Dominic Holland 10.00 All Things Betray Thee 11.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 11.30 Lord Of Misrule 12noon Sweet Sorrow 12.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 12.30 63 On Demand Christine McGuinness: The Secret World of Autistic Women BBC iPlayer The model looks back at how her own life could have been very different. My Kind of Country Apple TV+ Country music goes diverse in this reality talent contest. Waco: American Apocalypse Netflix Series about David Koresh’s Texan cult that ended in a tragic siege. Women Talking About Cars 1.00 Hancock’s Half Hour 1.30 Life, Death And Sex With Mike And Sue 2.00 Nature Table 2.30 The Small World Of Dominic Holland 3.00 All Things Betray Thee 4.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 4.30 Lord Of Misrule 5.00 Sweet Sorrow 5.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 5.30 Women Talking About Cars 6.00 Hancock’s Half Hour 6.30 Life, Death And Sex With Mike And Sue 7.00 Nature Table 7.30 The Small World Of Dominic Holland 8.00 Well, He Would, Wouldn’t He? 9.00 Short Cuts 9.30 Lennox 10.00 Comedy Club: Conversations From A Long Marriage 10.30 Comedy Club: Jason Cook’s School Of Hard Knocks 10.55 Comedy Club: The Comedy Club Interview 11.00 Comedy Club: Pippa Evans Grows Up 11.30 Comedy Club: This Is Craig Brown 11.45 Comedy Club: Gus Murdoch’s Sacred Cows 12mdn’t All Things Betray Thee 1.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 1.30 Lord Of Misrule 2.00 Sweet Sorrow BBC 5 Live 6am 5 Live Breakfast 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Naga Munchetty 1pm Nihal Arthanayake 4.00 5 Live Drive 7.00 5 Live Sport 7.30 5 Live Sport: The Euro Leagues Podcast 9.00 5 Live Boxing 10.00 Colin Murray 1am Dotun Adebayo 5.00 Wake Up To Money BBC 6 Music 7.30am Lauren Laverne 10.30 Mary Anne Hobbs 1pm Craig Charles 4.00 Steve Lamacq 7.00 Marc Riley 9.00 Gideon Coe 12mdn’t Freak Zone Playlist 1.00 Buzzcocks 2.00 The Totally Wired World Of The Fall Classic FM 6am More Music Breakfast 9.00 Alexander Armstrong 12noon Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00 John Brunning 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Bill Overton Absolute Radio 6am Dave Berry 10.00 Leona Graham 1pm Ben Burrell 4.00 Bush And Richie 7.00 Danielle Perry 10.00 Jay Lawrence 1am Dan Noble Heart 6.30am Heart Breakfast With Jamie Theakston And Amanda Holden 10.00 Pandora Christie 1pm Matt Wilkinson 4.00 JK And Kelly Brook 7.00 Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Dev Griffin 10.00 Fia Tarrant 1am Simon Beale 4.00 Early Breakfast With Lindsey Russell TalkSPORT 6am TalkSPORT Breakfast With Laura Woods 10.00 Jim White And Simon Jordan 1pm Hawksbee And Jacobs 4.00 TalkSPORT Drive With Andy Goldstein 7.00 Kick Off 10.00 Sports Bar 1am Extra Time RADIO PICK Radio 3 in Concert 7.30pm, BBC Radio 3 Martin Handley (left) presents this recording from the Barbican’s Milton Court, as the BBC Singers perform Johann Sebastian Bach’s six motets with Dutch conductor Peter Dijkstra and musicians from the acclaimed Academy of Ancient Music.
64 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Thursday television CRITIC’S CHOICE Live England International Football 7pm, Channel 4 Italy vs England. All the action from both teams’ opening Euro 2024 Group C qualifier in Naples. Italy are unbeaten in their past six meetings with England, with the most famous of those contests the Azzurri’s penalty shoot-out triumph at Wembley Stadium in the Euro 2020 final. However, unlike their opponents, they have failed to reach the past two World Cups. Isle of Wight: Jewel of the South 9PM 10PM 11PM LATE 8pm, Channel 5 It is refreshing to see Cornwall and Devon being given a rest as 6.00 Breakfast (S). 9.15 Morning Live (S). 10.00 Crimewatch Live (S). 10.45 Critical Incident (S). 11.15 Homes Under The Hammer (R) (S). 12.15 Bargain Hunt (R) (S). 1.00 BBC News At One; Weather (S). 1.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 1.45 Doctors (S). 2.15 Jay And Dom’s Home Fix (R) (S). 3.00 Escape To The Country (R) (S). 3.45 Antiques Road Trip (S). 4.30 Bridge Of Lies (R) (S). 5.15 Pointless (R) (S). 6.15 Homes Under The Hammer (R) (S). 7.15 Escape To The Country (R) (S). 8.00 Sign Zone: Digging For Britain (R) (S). 9.00 BBC News (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 12.15 Politics Live (S). 1.00 Impossible (R) (S). 1.45 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.15 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.45 Hairy Bikers’ Best Of British (R) (S). 3.15 Eat Well For Less? (R) (S). 4.15 The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes (R) (S). 5.15 Flog It! (R) (S). 6.00 Good Morning Britain (S). 9.00 Lorraine (S). 10.00 This Morning (S). 12.30 Loose Women (S). 1.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 1.55 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal (R) (S). 3.00 Lingo (R) (S). 3.59 ITV Regional Weather (S). 4.00 Tipping Point (R) (S). 5.00 The Chase (R) (S). 6.00 BBC News At Six; Weather (S). 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 6.00 Richard Osman’s House Of Games (R) (S). 6.30 Coast To Coast Food Festival (S). 7.00 The One Show (S). 7.30 EastEnders Things get worse for Jack and Denise (S). Channel 5 continues its sojourn across the Solent. The focus this week is on Darcy Muncer, whose job it is to keep the island’s hundreds of thatched properties looking top-notch. Meanwhile, in East Cowes, B&B owners Karl and David are preparing for the arrival of tourists Meryl and Dave from Wales. “Thrilling stuff,” you may say dismissively – but that’s not the point of a series like this one. Customers: Are We Being Served? Tonight 8.30pm, ITV1 When did customer service become so bad? Was it during the pandemic, when so many customer-service personnel were working from home? Or is digitalisation to blame? Either way, customer complaints are said to have risen to their highest levels for more than 10 years, with poor customer service estimated to cost UK businesses billions of pounds each month. So what happens when you take on the big companies? Adam Shaw finds out how to complain and win. The Apprentice 9pm, BBC One Despite some amusing rounds, this latest series of The Apprentice doesn’t seem to have captured the public imagination. Perhaps we are just tiring of the format. In any case, the finalists take on their last challenge to win a £250,000 investment, with 6.10 Countdown (R) (S). 6.50 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.15 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 9.00 Frasier (R) (S). 9.30 Frasier (R) (S). 10.00 Frasier (R) (S). 10.30 Undercover Boss USA (R) (S). 11.25 Channel 4 News Summary (S). 11.30 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 12.30 Steph’s Packed Lunch (S). 2.10 Countdown (S). 3.00 Tool Club (S). 4.00 A New Life In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 Four In A Bed (S). 5.30 Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 6.00 Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine (S). 1.45 Home And Away (R) (S). 2.15 FILM: The Stepmother (David DeCoteau 2019) Thriller, starring Vivica A Fox (S). 4.00 BargainLoving Brits In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 5 News At 5 (S). 6.00 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 6.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 6.00 Channel 4 News (S). 6.00 Cash In The Attic Helping people make money (S). 6.30 Eggheads 6.55 5 News Update (S). How Jeffrey Archer won a libel trial – then lost his freedom after being found to have lied 9pm, Channel 5 7.00 Your Home Made Perfect (R) (S). 7.30 Emmerdale Moira reveals the theme for the Stag and Hen do (S). 7.00 Live England International Football Italy vs England. Kick-off is at 7.45pm (S). 7.00 Motorhoming Yorkshire With Merton & Webster (S). 7.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 7.30 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 8.00 Dragons’ Den (S). 8.00 Great British Menu (S). 8.30 Customers: Are We Being Served? Tonight How consumers can complain and win (S). 8.00 Isle Of Wight: Jewel Of The South (S). 8.00 Pluto: Back From The Dead (S). 9.00 The Apprentice The finalists take on their last challenge to win a £250,000 investment. Last in the series (S). 9.00 Inside Taiwan: Standing Up To China (S). 9.00 Cold Case Detectives Investigators question a new suspect in a 40-year-old rape case (S). 9.00 Scandal: Jeffrey Archer & The Call-Girl (S). 9.00 FILM: Victoria & Abdul (Stephen Frears 2017) Drama, starring Judi Dench (S). 10.00 The Apprentice: You’re Hired Last in the series (S). 10.30 BBC News At Ten (S). 10.00 Mock The Week With Angela Barnes, Alasdair Beckett-King, Rhys James and Ria Lina (R) (S). 10.30 Newsnight (S). 10.00 ITV News At Ten; Weather (S). 10.30 ITV Regional News (S). 10.45 The Jonathan Ross Show (R) (S). 10.00 Rise And Fall The Grafters set out to impress the Rulers in the Work Shift challenge (S). 10.30 X-Rated: I Like A Good Spanking! The unconventional side of sex and how it enhances people’s lives (S). 10.45 FILM: Florence Foster Jenkins (Stephen Frears 2016) Fact-based comedy, starring Meryl Streep (S). 11.00 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 11.10 Question Time Fiona Bruce hosts the debate (S). 11.15 Saving Lives In Leeds A cancer patient suffering from anxiety tries to discharge himself (R) (S). 11.45 All Elite Wrestling: Rampage Hard-hitting, high-flying wrestling action (R) (S). 11.05 Gogglebox The armchair critics are back to watch the best of the week’s television (R) (S). 11.25 Adults Only: Sex Dolls Gone Wild A look at the business of life-sized adult dolls (R) (S). 12.10 Newscast (S). 12.40 The Gold: The Inside Story (R) (S). 1.45 BBC News (S). 12.15 Becoming Frida Kahlo (R) (S). 1.15 Sign Zone: Rip Off Britain: Holidays (R) (S). 2.00 Sign Zone: Inside Our Autistic Minds (R) (S). 3.00 This Is BBC Two (S). 12.40 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 Unforgotten (R) (S). 3.50 Unwind With ITV (S). 5.05 Bling (R) (S). 12.05 England International Football (S). 1.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (R) (S). 1.50 FILM: Victor Frankenstein (Paul McGuigan 2015) Gothic horror (S). 12.20 Inside The Sex Toy Factory (R) (S). 1.10 999: Criminals Caught On Camera (R) (S). 2.00 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 4.00 Parking Hell (R) (S). 4.25 Parking Hell (R) (S). 4.50 Parking Hell (R) (S). 8PM 7PM 6PM DAYTIME Lord Sugar prepares to finally name his latest ‘Apprentice’, 9pm, BBC One radio contestants ejected earlier in the series returning to aid them in their endeavours. As usual, the final two must launch their business, create a brand for their company, produce a digital billboard, direct and edit a television advertisement and (a new feature) design a metaverse, before pitching to Lord Sugar and industry experts. Inside Taiwan: Standing Up to China 9pm, BBC Two There has been a paucity of details about this documentary, although the title tells you most of what you want to know. It’s about the precautions being taken in Taiwan as China ratchets up the sabre- Harry Kane will hope for a win against Italy 7pm, Channel 4 12.30 Imagine: Stephen Frears – Director For Hire (S). 1.35 Great British Railway Journeys (S). 2.05 The Flying Archaeologist (S). 2.35 Victorian Sensations (S). 3.35 Close Darcy Muncer restores a very old thatched roof 8pm, Channel 5 6.45 FILM: Finding Your Feet (Richard Loncraine 2017) Comedy, starring Imelda Staunton (S). 6.00 World’s Funniest Videos (S). 6.35 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 7.00 Love Bites (S). 8.00 Dress To Impress (S). 9.00 Chuck (S). 10.00 One Tree Hill (S). 11.00 The O.C (S). 12.00 Love Bites (S). 1.00 Dress To Impress (S). 2.00 Supermarket Sweep (S). 3.05 Chuck (S). 4.00 One Tree Hill (S). 5.00 The O.C (S). 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase With Joe Lycett, Chizzy Akudolu and Nick Knowles (S). 7.00 The Masked Singer US The final two singers from Group B perform solo (S). 8.00 Superstore Carol’s lawyer arrives at Cloud 9 to depose the employees (S). 8.30 Superstore (S). 9.00 FILM: Cast Away (Robert Zemeckis 2000) Drama, starring Tom Hanks (S). 9.00 Loaded In Paradise The five pairs are back on the Chase on the island of Ios (S). 10.00 Family Guy The Griffins go on a rock music cruise (S). 10.30 Family Guy (S). 11.50 FILM: XXx: The Return Of Xander Cage (DJ Caruso 2017) Action thriller, starring Vin Diesel (S). 11.00 Family Guy (S). 11.30 American Dad! Roger believes his identity has been stolen (S). 2.00 FILM: Eagle vs Shark (Taika Waititi 2006) Romantic comedy, starring Loren Horsley (S). 3.50 Close 12.00 American Dad! (S). 12.30 Superstore (S). 1.00 Superstore (S). 1.30 Hey Tracey! (S). 2.15 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 2.40 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping
culture rattling and threatens what would be a globally catastrophic invasion. FILM CHOICE Scandal: Jeffrey Archer & the Call-Girl 9pm, Channel 5 Jeffrey Archer was deputy chairman of the Conservative Party when forced to resign in 1987 after newspaper allegations that he paid a sex worker – subsequently winning libel damages because of the claim. It later emerged that he had lied during the libel trial, leading to the then Lord Archer’s imprisonment for perjury and perverting the course of justice. Here, political figures, journalists and, er, comedians retell the sorry tale. Gerard Gilbert 6.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 6.35 Classic Emmerdale (S). 7.00 Classic Coronation Street (S). 7.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 8.05 Man About The House (S). 8.35 Man About The House (S). 9.05 Where The Heart Is (S). 10.10 Where The Heart Is (S). 11.15 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 12.25 Heartbeat (S). 1.25 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.10 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.45 Midsomer Murders (S). 5.50 Downton Abbey (S). 6.55 Heartbeat Greengrass starts a devious plot (S). Year One 7pm, Great! movies (Harold Ramis, 2009) In the final movie by Harold Ramis, Jack Black and Michael Cera play two hunter-gatherer buddies who are exiled from their tribe and end up bumping into various Old Testament characters. Much of the humour is lowbrow, but the leads complement one another very well and it is a goofy, free-form, blithely anachronistic comedy. Florence Foster Jenkins Meryl Streep stars as a tone-deaf socialite in ‘Florence Foster Jenkins’, 10.45pm, BBC Four 10.45pm, BBC Four (Stephen Frears, 2016) Meryl Streep gives a delightful comic turn as a fabulously wealthy and spectacularly tonedeaf soprano who “entertained” 6.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 8.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 9.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 10.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 12.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 1.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 2.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 3.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 4.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 5.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 6.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.00 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 7.50 The Affair (R) (S). 8.55 The Affair (R) (S). 10.05 Gomorrah (R) (S). 11.10 Gomorrah (R) (S). 12.15 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 1.20 Fortitude (R) (S). 2.25 Fortitude (R) (S). 3.30 Gomorrah (R) (S). 4.30 Succession (R) (S). 5.40 Succession (R) (S). 6.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 8.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 9.00 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 10.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 11.00 Modern Family (S). 12.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 12.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 1.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 1.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 3.00 Modern Family (S). 3.30 Modern Family (S). 4.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 4.30 Brooklyn NineNine (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 8.55 Kirstie’s House Of Craft (S). 9.15 A Place In The Sun (S). 10.05 A New Life In The Sun (S). 11.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 12.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 1.10 Heir Hunters (S). 2.10 Four In A Bed (S). 2.40 Four In A Bed (S). 3.15 Four In A Bed (S). 3.50 Four In A Bed (S). 4.20 Four In A Bed (S). 4.50 Location, Location, Location (S). 5.55 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It (S). 6.00 The Big Bang Theory Leonard’s mother visits (S). 6.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 6.55 Escape To The Chateau: DIY A big wedding is threatened by a sewage problem (S). 6.00 Stargate SG-1 O’Neill becomes technical adviser on a television series (R) (S). 6.50 Yellowjackets The girls opt to throw one last party (R) (S). 7.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.30 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 7.55 Grand Designs A couple building a home that looks like a work of art in south Devon (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 A cadet team is needed for a mission (R) (S). 7.55 Game Of Thrones Tyrion’s plans bear fruit (R) (S). Death Wish 11.40pm, ITV4 (Michael Winner, 1974) As with its four sequels and every other urban vigilante movie, Death Wish is a reactionary fantasy offering an immoral and simplistic solution to a problem of its own devising. Which isn’t to say its evocation of a New York populated by muggers and rapists isn’t effective, nor that watching Charles Bronson blow them away isn’t viscerally enjoyable. Laurence Phelan Radio listings BBC Radio 1 6.57am Newsbeat 7.00 Radio 1 Breakfast With Greg James 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Rickie, Melvin And Charlie 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Dean And Vicky 3.30 Newsbeat 3.32 Going Home With Vick And Jordan 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Radio 1’s Future Sounds With Clara Amfo 8.00 Radio 1’s Future Pop With Mollie King 10.00 BBC Introducing Dance 11.00 Radio 1’s Residency 12mdn’t Radio 1’s Residency 1.00 Radio 1 Dance Presents 2.00 Radio 1 Relax BBC Radio 1Xtra 8.00 Vera The detective reopens an unsolved case (S). 8.00 An Idiot Abroad 2 Karl Pilkington travels to Australia to swim with dolphins (R) (S). 6am Battle Of The Mixes 6.30 Battle Of The Mixes 7.00 Nadia Jae 10.00 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 10.15 Ace 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Remi Burgz 3.45 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 4.00 Reece Parkinson 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Reece Parkinson 7.00 DJ Target 9.00 Seani B 11.00 Snoochie Shy 1am Kenny Allstar 3.00 Future Wave With Complexion 4.00 If You Don’t Know BBC Radio 2 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show 9.30 Gary Davies 12noon Jeremy Vine 2.00 Scott Mills 4.00 Sara Cox 6.30 Sara Cox’s Half Wower 7.00 Jo Whiley’s Shiny Happy Playlist 7.30 Jo Whiley 9.00 The Country Show With Bob Harris 10.00 Trevor Nelson’s Magnificent 7 10.30 Trevor Nelson’s Rhythm Nation 12mdn’t OJ Borg 3.00 C2C Live – Old Crow Medicine Show 3.30 C2C Live – Lindsay Ell 4.00 Owain Wyn Evans BBC Radio 3 9am Essential Classics 12noon Composer Of The Week: Bizet 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert 2.00 Afternoon Concert 5.00 In Tune 7.00 Classical Mixtape 7.30 Radio 3 In Concert 10.00 Free Thinking 10.45 The Essay: Thinking Black 11.00 The Night Tracks Mix 11.30 Unclassified 12.30am Through The Night BBC Radio 4 9.00 Gogglebox The households’ opinions on shows including Love Is Blind, Starstruck and Cheaters (S). 9.00 24 Hours In A&E A 78-year-old man is rushed in with breathing difficulties (S). 9.00 A Town Called Malice Cindy leads Gene on a mission to evade police suspicion. 9.00 Billions Axe makes an aggressive business move (R) (S). 10.00 Naked Attraction A forensics student hopes to find his ideal partner in crime (S). 10.00 999: What’s Your Emergency? Wiltshire’s emergency services deal with people who live alone (S). 10.05 Brassic Cardi proposes to Carol (R) (S). 10.05 Perry Mason Maynard Barnes goes public with a shocking new development (R) (S). 11.35 Wycliffe A ritual death points to satanic practices (S). 11.05 First Dates Bank manager Ross hopes it will be third time lucky (S). 11.05 24 Hours In A&E A 77-year-old man is rushed to St George’s after collapsing at home (S). 11.05 NCIS: Los Angeles A shoot-out results in the theft of a rare cultural artifact (R) (S). 11.20 Django John tries to turn New Babylon into a fortress (R) (S). 12.45 Where The Heart Is (S). 1.45 Man About The House (S). 2.20 Unwind With ITV (S). 2.30 Teleshopping 12.15 Gogglebox (S). 1.20 Rick And Morty (S). 1.50 Smiling Friends (S). 2.00 YOLO: Silver Destiny (S). 2.15 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 3.35 Gogglebox (S). 4.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 12.10 999: On The Front Line (S). 1.15 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 2.20 24 Hours In A&E (S). 3.25 Food Unwrapped (S). 3.50 Close 12.05 Resident Alien (R) (S). 1.05 Road Wars (R). 2.00 Caribbean Cops (R). 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 4.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 5.00 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 5.30 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 12.25 Django (R) (S). 1.30 In Treatment (R) (S). 2.00 Drift – Partners In Crime (S). 3.00 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 4.05 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 5.05 Urban Secrets (R) (S). 10.00 Blue Murder A suicide case takes a complex turn (S). New York high society between the wars. Hugh Grant stars as her husband, who earns his keep bribing whomever it is necessary to maintain her delusions. 6am Today 9.00 In Our Time 9.45 Breaking Mississippi 10.00 Woman’s Hour 11.00 From Our Own Correspondent 11.30 All The Names You’ve Ever Called Me 12noon News 12.04 You And Yours 12.30 Sliced Bread 12.57 Weather 1.00 The World At One 1.45 Shock And War: Iraq 20 Years On 2.00 The Archers 2.15 Drama: Passenger List 3.00 Ramblings 3.27 Radio 4 Appeal 3.30 Open Book 4.00 The Infinite Monkey Cage 4.30 BBC Inside Science 5.00 PM 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 Meet David Sedaris 7.00 The Archers 7.15 Front Row 8.00 Law In Action 8.30 My Cousin, Regime Changer 9.00 BBC Inside Science 9.30 In Our Time 10.00 The World Tonight 10.45 Book At Bedtime: Old God’s Time 11.00 My Teenage Diary 11.30 Today In Parliament 12mdn’t News And Weather 12.30 Breaking Mississippi 12.48 Shipping Forecast 1.00 As BBC World Service BBC Radio 4 LW 8.31am Yesterday In Parliament 9.45 Daily Service 12.01pm Shipping Forecast 5.54 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 6am Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 6.30 Lord Of Misrule 7.00 Sweet Sorrow 7.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 7.30 Guilt Trip 8.00 The Burkiss Way 8.30 The World As We Know It 9.00 The Unbelievable Truth 9.30 Clare In The Community 10.00 All Things Betray Thee 11.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 11.30 Lord Of Misrule 12noon Sweet Sorrow 12.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 12.30 Guilt Trip 1.00 The Burkiss Way 1.30 The World As We Know It 2.00 The Unbelievable Truth 2.30 Clare In The Community 3.00 All Things Betray Thee 4.00 65 On Demand Saint Omer Mubi Witchcraft and baby-killing in an extraordinary real-life French courtroom drama. The Night Agent Netflix There is a mole in the White House in this action thriller series. Murder in the Pacific BBC iPlayer Absorbing docuseries about the fatal 1985 bombing of the Greenpeace ship Rainbow Warrior. Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 4.30 Lord Of Misrule 5.00 Sweet Sorrow 5.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 5.30 Guilt Trip 6.00 The Burkiss Way 6.30 The World As We Know It 7.00 The Unbelievable Truth 7.30 Clare In The Community 8.00 Mastertapes – Access All Areas 9.00 Great Lives 9.30 Lennox 10.00 Comedy Club: Meet David Sedaris 10.30 Comedy Club: Paul Sinha’s History Revision 11.00 Comedy Club: Creme De La Crime 11.15 Comedy Club: Bird Island 11.30 Comedy Club: Richard Herring’s Objective 12mdn’t All Things Betray Thee 1.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 1.30 Lord Of Misrule 2.00 Sweet Sorrow 2.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time BBC 5 Live 6am 5 Live Breakfast 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Adrian Chiles 1pm Nihal Arthanayake 4.00 5 Live Drive 7.00 5 Live Sport 7.45 5 Live Sport 10.00 Colin Murray 1am Greg McKenzie 5.00 The Big Green Money Show BBC 6 Music 7.30am Lauren Laverne 10.30 Mary Anne Hobbs 1pm Craig Charles 4.00 Steve Lamacq 6.00 Steve Lamacq’s Roundtable 7.00 Marc Riley 9.00 6 Music Festival: Tom Robinson BBC Introducing Special 9.35 6 Music Festival: Phoebe Green 9.45 6 Music Festival: Tom Robinson BBC Introducing Special 10.15 6 Music Festival: The Lathums 11.00 6 Music Festival: Tom Robinson BBC Introducing Special 12mdn’t New Music Fix With Steve Lamacq 1.00 New Music Fix With Mary Anne Hobbs 2.00 New Music Fix With Tom Ravenscroft 3.00 New Album Fix Classic FM 6am More Music Breakfast 9.00 Alexander Armstrong 12noon Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00 John Brunning 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Bill Overton Absolute Radio 6am Dave Berry 10.00 Leona Graham 1pm Ben Burrell 4.00 Bush And Richie 7.00 Danielle Perry 10.00 Jay Lawrence 1am Dan Noble Heart 6.30am Heart Breakfast With Jamie Theakston And Amanda Holden 10.00 Pandora Christie 1pm Matt Wilkinson 4.00 JK And Kelly Brook 7.00 Heart’s Feel Good Weekend With Dev Griffin 10.00 Fia Tarrant 1am Simon Beale 4.00 Early Breakfast With Lindsey Russell TalkSPORT 6am TalkSPORT Breakfast With Alan Brazil 10.00 Jim White And Simon Jordan 1pm Hawksbee And Baker 4.00 TalkSPORT Drive With Andy Goldstein 7.00 Kick Off 10.00 Sports Bar 1am Extra Time RADIO PICK Ramblings 3pm, BBC Radio 4 Steve Jenkinson helps a range of organisations develop harmonious relationships with dog walkers who use their land. He lives on Orkney, where Clare Balding (above) meets him and his border collie, Teal, for a coastal walk that passes by the Broch of Gurness. Jenkinson advises Balding how to safely and considerately walk with a dog in the countryside.
66 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Friday television CRITIC’S CHOICE Phoenix Rise 7.30pm, BBC Three “Don’t worry about your past, at Phoenix Rise we concentrate on your future,” says the head at the titular West Midlands secondary school in this lively, upbeat new coming-of-age drama (co-writer Matt Evans also had a hand in Sky’s equally perky A Town Called Malice). Six very different misfit teenagers take their first tentative steps into mainstream education after exclusion. Locked Away: Our Autism Scandal – Dispatches 6.00 Hollyoaks (R) (S). 6.30 Hollyoaks A helpless Diane struggles to convince Tony to seek help (R) (S). 6.00 Cash In The Attic Helping people make money (S). 6.30 Eggheads (R) (S). 6.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 The One Show Live magazine show (S). 7.30 Question Of Sport (S). 7.00 Your Home Made Perfect Laura Jane Clark and Will Foster compete to remodel a home in Belfast (R) (S). 7.30 Emmerdale Dawn is aghast that Naomi has fallen for Alex (S). 7.00 Channel 4 News (S). 7.30 Locked Away: Our Autism Scandal – Dispatches (S). 7.00 Motorway Cops: Catching Britain’s Speeders (R) (S). 7.55 5 News Update (S). 7.00 Top Of The Pops (S). 7.30 Top Of The Pops (S). 8.00 Beyond Paradise A man is found dead in the middle of a crop circle (S). 8.00 Gardeners’ World How to make the most of herbaceous perennials (S). 8.00 Coronation Street Paul makes a worrying discovery about his injury (S). 8.00 Highclere: Behind The Scenes (R) (S). 8.00 Motorway: Hell On The Highway (S). 8.00 Top Of The Pops With Tony Capstick, Bad Manners and Kim Wilde (S). 8.30 Top Of The Pops (S). 9.00 Would I Lie To You? (S). 9.30 The Cleaner New series (S). 9.00 Becoming Frida Kahlo Last in series (S). 9.00 Redemption Colette visits the hospital where Stacey worked (S). 9.00 Gogglebox The armchair critics appraise the latest shows (S). 9.00 Amazing Railway Adventures With Nick Knowles (S). 9.00 Dolly Parton At The BBC Archive performances by the country superstar (S). 9.00 FILM: A Vigilante (Sarah Daggar-Nickson 2019) Drama, starring Olivia Wilde (S). 9.00 Loaded In Paradise (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 10.30 BBC Regional News 10.40 FILM: Shakespeare In Love (John Madden) (S). 10.00 Cunk On Britain Philomena Cunk investigates the origins of the universe (R) (S). 10.30 Newsnight (S). 10.00 ITV News At Ten; Weather (S). 10.30 ITV Regional News 10.45 FILM: Identity Thief (Seth Gordon 2013) (S). 10.00 Rise And Fall One of the Grafters has the chance to rise to the Penthouse and become a Ruler (S). 10.00 Live: World Championship Boxing: Arthur vs Suarez (S). 10.00 Dolly Parton: Here I Am An intimate portrait of the acclaimed songwriter (S). 10.50 FILM: The Hunt (Craig Zobel 2019) Premiere. Horror thriller, starring Betty Gilpin (S). 10.00 Family Guy Peter causes a fight between Lois’s parents (S). 10.30 Family Guy (S). 12.35 Michael McIntyre’s The Wheel (R) (S). 1.35 BBC News (S). 11.05 MOTDx (R) (S). 11.35 FILM: Eaten By Lions (Jason Wingard 2018) Comedy, starring Antonio Aakeel (S). DAYTIME 6PM 6.00 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 6.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 9PM 6.00 Richard Osman’s House Of Games (R) (S). 6.30 Coast To Coast Food Festival (S). 9.30pm, BBC One Greg Davies returns as crimescene cleaner Paul “Wicky” Wickstead for a new series of what are essentially self-contained comedy two-handers – albeit a bit of a three-hander in this opening episode set in a pub. Having promised his girlfriend he will lay off the alcohol, Wicky is discombobulated to find himself wiping up blood in the public bar of a dodgy London boozer run by a hard-bitten landlady played by Harriet Walter (who is tremendous). Charlie Rawes, meanwhile, plays a muscle-bound 6.00 BBC News At Six; Weather (S). 6.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 10PM 6.00 Good Morning Britain (S). 9.00 Lorraine (S). 10.00 This Morning (S). 12.30 Loose Women (S). 1.30 ITV News; Weather (S). 1.55 ITV Regional News; Weather (S). 2.00 Dickinson’s Real Deal (R) (S). 3.00 Lingo (R) (S). 3.59 ITV Regional Weather (S). 4.00 Tipping Point (R) (S). 5.00 The Chase (R) (S). 9pm, Sky Atlantic This glossy new action-packed German thriller begins with a car chase along a twisty coastal road in Greece before reeling back six days. Police investigator Ali (Ken Duken, who once played a Prince Harry lookalike) attempts to transport an arrested Bundeswehr soldier from Austria to Germany and hits some major bumps in the road – including a spectacular bridge collapse. But who exactly The Cleaner 6.00 Milkshake! 9.15 Jeremy Vine (S). 1.45 Home And Away (R) (S). 2.15 FILM: Tracking A Killer (Richard Switzer 2021) Drama, starring Laurie Fortier (S). 4.00 Bargain-Loving Brits In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 5 News At 5 (S). 11PM 6.30 Saturday Kitchen Best Bites (R) (S). 8.00 Sign Zone: Gardeners’ World (R) (S). 9.00 BBC News (S). 10.00 BBC News (S). 12.15 Politics UK (S). 1.00 Impossible (R) (S). 1.45 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.15 Eggheads (R) (S). 2.45 Hairy Bikers’ Best Of British (R) (S). 3.15 Eat Well For Less? (R) (S). 4.15 The World’s Most Extraordinary Homes (R) (S). 5.15 Flog It! (R) (S). 9pm, BBC Two When we left Kahlo in last week’s instalment, she had lost both her baby and her mother. Now she discovers that her husband, Diego Rivera, is sleeping with her sister – a sustained relationship and not just a fling. It makes you marvel at the loving Drift – Partners in Crime has gone to such pains to liberate the arrested soldier? 6.10 Countdown (R) (S). 6.50 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.15 3rd Rock From The Sun (R) (S). 7.40 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.05 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 8.30 The King Of Queens (R) (S). 9.00 Frasier (R) (S). 9.30 Frasier (R) (S). 10.00 Frasier (R) (S). 10.30 Celebrity Undercover Boss USA (R) (S). 11.25 Channel 4 News Summary (S). 11.30 Emergency Helicopter Medics (S). 12.30 Steph’s Packed Lunch (S). 2.10 Countdown (S). 3.00 Tool Club (S). 4.00 A New Life In The Sun (R) (S). 5.00 Four In A Bed (S). 5.30 Come Dine With Me (R) (S). LATE 6.00 Breakfast (S). 9.15 Morning Live (S). 10.00 Crimewatch Live (S). 10.45 Critical Incident (S). 11.15 Homes Under The Hammer (R) (S). 12.15 Bargain Hunt (R) (S). 1.00 BBC News At One; Weather (S). 1.30 BBC Regional News; Weather (S). 1.45 Hope Street (R) (S). 2.30 The Repair Shop (S). 3.00 Escape To The Country (R) (S). 3.45 Antiques Road Trip (R) (S). 4.30 Bridge Of Lies (R) (S). 5.15 Pointless (R) (S). Becoming Frida Kahlo tone she sustained in her letters to and about Rivera – although her affair with Rivera’s mentor, the Russian Communist leader Leon Trotsky could be seen as revenge of sorts. 7PM 7.30pm, Channel 4 A film by award-winning autistic director Richard Butchins (The Truth About Disability Benefits) in which, for the first time, autistic patients housed in mental health units relate their experiences in their own words. Some have been incarcerated for years in unsuitable wards and hospitals across the UK. The videos, made secretly by patients and sent to Butchins, paint a stark portrait of a healthcare system in crisis. 8PM Charlie Rawes,Greg Davies and Harriet Walter star in ‘The Cleaner’, 9.30pm, BBC One radio 1.05 Dave (R) (S). 1.40 Sign Zone: Surviving The Pay Squeeze – Panorama (R) (S). 2.10 Sign Zone: Parole (R) (S). 3.10 Sign Zone: Our Flag Means Death (R) (S). 3.45 This Is BBC Two (S). Richard Butchins tells autistic patients’ stories 7.30pm, Channel 4 12.05 Father Ted (R) (S). 3.20 Father Ted (R) (S). 3.50 Couples Come Dine With Me (R) (S). 4.40 Location, Location, Location (R) (S). 5.30 Best Of Britain By The Sea (R) (S). Turbulent love shakes Frida Kahlo’s world 9pm, BBC Two 6.50 FILM: I, Robot (Alex Proyas 2004) Sci-fi thriller, starring Will Smith (S). 12.05 FILM: Creed (Ryan Coogler 2015) (S). 2.20 Entertainment News On 5 (S). 2.30 The LeoVegas Live Casino Show (S). 4.30 Parking Hell (R) (S). 5.15 Friends (R) (S). 12.40 Country Queens At The BBC (S). 1.40 Top Of The Pops (S). 2.10 Top Of The Pops (S). 2.40 Top Of The Pops (S). 3.10 Close 6.00 Celebrity Catchphrase With Jenny Ryan, David Baddiel and Hollie Arnold (S). 7.00 The Masked Singer US The final two singers perform Christmas songs (S). 8.00 Superstore Jonah tries to build Sandra’s confidence (S). 8.30 Superstore (S). 11.30 Dolly Parton At Glastonbury 2014 The country singer’s complete set on the Pyramid stage (S). 11.05 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (R) (S). 12.35 Shop: Ideal World 3.00 The Jonathan Ross Show (R) (S). 3.55 Unwind With ITV (S). 5.05 Ainsley’s Fantastic Flavours (R) (S). An intimate portrait of acclaimed country singer and songwriter Dolly Parton 10pm, BBC Four 6.00 World’s Funniest Videos (S). 6.35 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 7.00 Love Bites (S). 8.00 Dress To Impress (S). 9.00 Chuck (S). 10.00 One Tree Hill (S). 11.00 The O.C (S). 12.00 Love Bites (S). 1.00 Dress To Impress (S). 2.00 Supermarket Sweep (S). 3.05 Chuck (S). 4.00 One Tree Hill (S). 5.00 The O.C (S). 11.00 Family Guy Brian is forced into being Carter’s guide dog (S). 11.30 American Dad! (S). 12.35 FILM: Free Fire (Ben Wheatley 2016) Comedy crime drama, starring Cillian Murphy (S). 2.20 FILM: In Fear (Jeremy Lovering 2013) Horror, starring Iain De Caestecker (S). 4.00 Close 12.00 American Dad! (S). 12.30 Superstore (S). 1.00 Superstore (S). 1.30 CelebAbility (S). 2.15 Totally Bonkers Guinness World Records (S). 2.45 Unwind With ITV (S). 3.00 Teleshopping
culture bar manager called Cuddles. Further guests in the series will include Simon Callow, Asim Chaudhry and Davies’s former Man Down co-star, Roisin Conaty. FILM CHOICE Dolly Parton: Here I Am 10pm, BBC Four “I look bizarre and artificial but I’m totally real inside,” says Dolly Parton as the country music legend gives extensive access to her life and thoughts in a featurelength documentary from Francis Whately, the Bafta-winning director of the David Bowie: Five Years trilogy. It is part of an evening dedicated to the country music star that culminates in her 2014 appearance at Glastonbury. Gerard Gilbert 6.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 6.35 Classic Emmerdale (S). 7.00 Classic Coronation Street (S). 7.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 8.05 Man About The House (S). 8.35 Man About The House (S). 9.05 Where The Heart Is (S). 10.10 Where The Heart Is (S). 11.15 Agatha Christie’s Poirot (S). 12.25 Heartbeat (S). 1.25 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.00 Classic Emmerdale (S). 2.35 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.10 Classic Coronation Street (S). 3.40 Midsomer Murders (S). 5.55 Downton Abbey (S). 7.00 Heartbeat A death in custody causes problems for Mike (S). Olivia Wilde stars as a woman helping domestic abuse victims in ‘A Vigilante’, 9pm, Film4 12.40 Where The Heart Is (S). 1.45 Man About The House (S). 2.20 Unwind With ITV (S). 2.30 Teleshopping 9pm, 5Star (Taylor Hackford, 1982) There is more to this hit Cinderella story than just a famous theme song and Richard Gere in uniform. The love affair between Gere’s 6.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 (R) (S). 8.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 9.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 10.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 11.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 12.00 NCIS: Los Angeles (R) (S). 1.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 2.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 3.00 Quantum Leap (R) (S). 4.00 DC’s Legends Of Tomorrow (R) (S). 5.00 Supergirl (R) (S). 6.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 8.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 9.00 Married At First Sight Australia (S). 10.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 11.00 Modern Family (S). 12.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 12.30 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 1.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 1.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 2.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 3.00 Modern Family (S). 3.30 Modern Family (S). 4.00 Brooklyn Nine-Nine (S). 4.30 Brooklyn NineNine (S). 5.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 5.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 8.55 Kirstie’s House Of Craft (S). 9.15 A Place In The Sun (S). 10.05 A New Life In The Sun (S). 11.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 12.05 Find It, Fix It, Flog It (S). 1.10 Heir Hunters (S). 2.10 Four In A Bed (S). 2.40 Four In A Bed (S). 3.15 Four In A Bed (S). 3.50 Four In A Bed (S). 4.20 Four In A Bed (S). 4.50 Location, Location, Location (S). 5.55 Kirstie And Phil’s Love It Or List It (S). 6.00 The Big Bang Theory (S). 6.30 The Big Bang Theory (S). 6.55 Escape To The Chateau: DIY Jonathan and Michael prepare for a wedding day with 45 guests (S). 6.00 Stargate SG-1 The team races to save Teal’c (R) (S). 7.55 Grand Designs A couple building a house on a sheer cliff on the west coast of Scotland (S). 7.00 Stargate SG-1 A giant asteroid threatens Earth (R) (S). 7.00 Hollyoaks (S). 7.30 The Farmer Wants A Wife: Australia (S). 6.00 Richard E Grant’s Hotel Secrets (R) (S). 7.00 Richard E Grant’s Hotel Secrets (R) (S). 7.55 The Affair (R) (S). 9.00 The Affair (R) (S). 10.05 Gomorrah (R) (S). 11.10 Gomorrah (R) (S). 12.15 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 1.20 Fortitude (R) (S). 2.25 Fortitude (R) (S). 3.25 Gomorrah (R) (S). 4.25 Succession (R) (S). 5.35 Succession (R). 9.00 FILM: John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum (Chad Stahelski 2019) Action thriller (S). naval cadet and Debra Winger’s factory worker is credible and sexy, and thrown into relief by the cynicism the rest of the film shows towards gender relations. Shakespeare in Love 10.40pm, BBC One (John Madden, 1998) It is 1593, and William Shakespeare (Joseph Fiennes) is struggling to complete his new play, “Romeo and Ethel”. Enter Viola (Gwyneth Paltrow), a noblewoman who is disguised as a boy so she may join his acting company, but becomes his muse instead. Literate and witty but also energetic and bawdy, this is a romantic comedy worthy of the Bard’s endorsement. Laurence Phelan Radio listings BBC Radio 1 6.33am Radio 1’s Best New Pop 6.57 Newsbeat 7.00 Radio 1 Breakfast With Greg James 10.00 Radio 1 Anthems 10.30 Newsbeat 10.32 Radio 1 Anthems 11.02 Katie Thistleton 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Matt And Mollie 3.00 Radio 1’s Party Anthems 4.00 The Official Chart On Radio 1 With Jack Saunders 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Radio 1’s Dance Party With Danny Howard 8.00 Radio 1’s Future Dance With Sarah Story 10.00 Pete Tong 12mdn’t Radio 1’s Essential Mix 2.00 Radio 1 Dance Presents BBC Radio 1Xtra 6.50 Yellowjackets The girls navigate damning evidence and false alibis (R) (S). 7.55 Game Of Thrones As the Starks prepare to fight, Davos loses something dear (R) (S). 6am Battle Of The Mixes 6.30 Battle Of The Mixes 7.00 Nadia Jae 10.00 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 10.15 Nick Bright 12.45pm Newsbeat 1.00 Remi Burgz 3.45 1Xtra’s Pull Up Mix 4.00 Sian Anderson 5.45 Newsbeat 6.00 Sian Anderson 7.00 1Xtra’s Rave Show With Jeremiah Asiamah 8.30 Jeremiah Asiamah’s Get Lit Mix 9.00 Kenny Allstar 11.00 Sir Spyro 12mdn’t 1Xtra’s R&B Weekender-R&B Takeover 1.00 1Xtra Salutes… 2.00 1Xtra @ 20-20 Years Of R&B BBC Radio 2 6.30am The Zoe Ball Breakfast Show 9.30 Gary Davies 12noon Jeremy Vine 2.00 Scott Mills 3.30 Scott Mills’ Wonder Years 4.00 Sara Cox 7.00 Michelle Visage 8.30 Michelle Visage’s Handbag Hits 9.00 The Good Groove With DJ Spoony 11.00 The Rock Show With Johnnie Walker 12mdn’t Romesh Ranganathan: For The Love Of Hip-Hop 1.00 Zoe Ball Meets Pedro Pascal 1.30 Zoe Ball Meets Idris Elba 2.00 U2’s Bono And The Edge – A Piano Room Special BBC Radio 3 6.30am Breakfast 9.00 Essential Classics 12noon Composer Of The Week: Bizet 1.00 Radio 3 Lunchtime Concert 2.00 Afternoon Concert 4.30 The Listening Service 5.00 In Tune 7.00 Classical Mixtape 7.30 Radio 3 In Concert 10.00 The Verb 10.45 The Essay: Thinking Black 11.00 Late Junction 1am Composed with Devonté Hynes 8.00 Strike Back: Shadow Warfare (R) (S). 9.00 The Wall: Cover Your Tracks Celine concludes her daughter is in danger. Last in the series (S). 9.00 A League Of Their Own Road Trip: Southeast Asia Last in series. 9.00 Drift – Partners In Crime German thriller, starring Ken Duken (S). 10.00 24 Hours In A&E A man faces extensive surgery after colliding with a car on his motorbike (S). 10.00 Peacemaker (R) (S). 10.00 Drift – Partners In Crime Ali is suspended from duty (S). 11.35 Naked Attraction Flight attendant Alex from Bristol hopes he can find the perfect man (S). 11.05 24 Hours In A&E A woman is rushed to A&E with signs of a stroke (S). 11.00 Banshee Calvin faces Kurt (R) (S). 12.40 Naked Attraction (S). 1.45 Gogglebox (S). 2.45 The Farmer Wants A Wife: Australia (S). 4.00 Ramsay’s Kitchen Nightmares USA (S). 4.50 The Goldbergs (S). 5.15 The Goldbergs (S). 12.10 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 1.10 8 Out Of 10 Cats Does Countdown (S). 2.10 24 Hours In A&E (S). 3.15 Food Unwrapped (S). 3.45 Close 12.10 SEAL Team (R). 1.05 Road Wars (R) (S). 2.00 The Force: North East (R) (S). 3.00 Hawaii Five-0 (R) (S). 4.00 S.W.A.T (R) (S). 5.00 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 5.30 Highway Patrol (R) (S). 10.00 Blue Murder A popular mullah is murdered (S). 11.30 Wycliffe A boat owner dies mysteriously (S). 9pm, Film4 (Sarah Daggar-Nickson, 2018) Olivia Wilde gives a mesmerising performance in this indie revenge drama as a young woman with a lot of scars and trauma, who, armed with the power that comes from having nothing left to lose, sets herself up as an avenging angel righting the wrongs suffered by fellow domestic abuse survivors. An Officer and a Gentleman 8.00 Doc Martin The irascible medic and Louisa embark on a date (S). 9.00 Doc Martin News of Martin and Louisa’s engagement spreads (S). A Vigilante 11.00 Billions Wendy faces a moral dilemma (R) (S). BBC Radio 4 6am Today 9.00 Desert Island Discs 9.45 Breaking Mississippi 10.00 Woman’s Hour 11.00 The Battle For Liberal Democracy 11.30 Lemn Sissay Is The One And Only 12noon News 12.04 AntiSocial 12.57 Weather 1.00 The World At One 1.45 Shock And War: Iraq 20 Years On 2.00 The Archers 2.15 Drama: Who Killed Aldrich Kemp? 2.45 Understand: The Economy 3.00 Gardeners’ Question Time 3.45 Sunil Patel: An Idiot’s Guide To Cryptocurrency 4.00 Last Word 4.30 Feedback 5.00 PM 5.57 Weather 6.00 Six O’Clock News 6.30 The Now Show 7.00 The Archers 7.15 Add To Playlist 8.00 Any Questions? 8.50 A Point Of View 9.00 National Health Stories – Omnibus 10.00 The World Tonight 10.45 Book At Bedtime: Old God’s Time 11.00 Americast 11.30 Today In Parliament 12mdn’t News And Weather BBC Radio 4 LW 8.31am Yesterday In Parliament 9.45 Daily Service 12.01pm Shipping Forecast 5.54 Shipping Forecast BBC Radio 4 Extra 12.10 Christian (R) (S). 1.20 The Plot Against America (R) (S). 2.30 Game Of Thrones (R) (S). 3.40 In Treatment (R) (S). 4.10 Richard E Grant’s Hotel Secrets (R) (S). 6am Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 6.30 Lord Of Misrule 7.00 Sweet Sorrow 7.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 7.30 The Wilsons Save The World 8.00 Steptoe And Son 8.30 Babblewick Hall 9.00 Act Your Age 9.30 Trevor’s World Of Sport 10.00 All Things Betray Thee 11.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 11.30 Lord Of Misrule 12noon Sweet Sorrow 12.15 A Woman On The Edge Of 67 On Demand Up Here Disney+ Musical romcom series about self-sabotaging lovers in 1999 New York. Love is Blind Netflix A new batch of singletons aim to fall in love without meeting face-to-face. Phil Lynott: Songs for While I’m Away BBC iPlayer Documentary recalls the frontman of Irish rock band Thin Lizzy. Time 12.30 The Wilsons Save The World 1.00 Steptoe And Son 1.30 Babblewick Hall 2.00 Act Your Age 2.30 Trevor’s World Of Sport 3.00 All Things Betray Thee 4.00 Paul Temple And The Geneva Mystery 4.30 Lord Of Misrule 5.00 Sweet Sorrow 5.15 A Woman On The Edge Of Time 5.30 The Wilsons Save The World 6.00 Steptoe And Son 6.30 Babblewick Hall 7.00 Act Your Age 7.30 Trevor’s World Of Sport 8.00 The School Is Full Of Noises 8.30 That Reminds Me 9.00 The Curious Cases Of Rutherford & Fry 9.30 Lennox 10.00 Comedy Club: The Ultimate Choice 10.30 Comedy Club: Beauty Of Britain 10.55 Comedy Club: The Comedy Club Interview 11.00 Comedy Club: John Kearns 11.15 Comedy Club: Poets’ Tree 11.30 Comedy Club: Listen Against 12mdn’t Doctor Who: The War Doctor 12.35 The New Accelerator BBC 5 Live 6am Breakfast 9.00 Nicky Campbell 11.00 Chiles On Friday 1pm The Footballers’ Football Podcast 1.30 Kammy & Ben 2.00 Elis James And John Robins 4.00 Drive 7.00 The Friday Football Social 9.00 Rugby Union 10.00 Stephen Nolan 1am Laura McGhie 5.00 Boxing BBC 6 Music 10.30am Mary Anne Hobbs 1pm Craig Charles 4.00 Steve Lamacq 7.00 6 Music Festival: Jamz Supernova And Afrodeutsche 7.45 6 Music Festival: Wu-Lu 9.00 6 Music Festival: Deb Grant And Tom Ravenscroft 9.15 6 Music Festival: Loyle Carner 10.30 6 Music Festival: Deb Grant And Tom Ravenscroft 11.30 6 Music Festival: Yard Act 12mdn’t 6 Music Festival: 6 Music’s Indie Forever Classic FM 6am More Music Breakfast 9.00 Alexander Armstrong 12noon Anne-Marie Minhall 4.00 John Brunning 7.00 Smooth Classics At Seven 10.00 Smooth Classics 1am Katie Breathwick Absolute Radio 6am Dave Berry 10.00 Leona Graham 1pm Ben Burrell 4.00 Bush And Richie 7.00 Absolute 80s Greatest Hits With Claire Sturgess 10.00 Sophie K 4am Emil Franchi Heart 6.30am Heart Breakfast With Jamie Theakston And Amanda Holden 10.00 Pandora Christie 1pm Matt Wilkinson 4.00 JK And Kelly Brook 7.00 Heart’s Club Classics With Toby Anstis 11.00 Rezzy Ghadjar 1am Katrina Ridley TalkSPORT 6am TalkSPORT Breakfast 10.00 Jim White And Simon Jordan 1pm Hawksbee And Jacobs 4.00 TalkSPORT Drive With Andy Goldstein And Darren Bent 7.00 Kick Off 10.00 Sports Bar 1am Extra Time With Martin Kelner RADIO PICK Drama: Who Killed Aldrich Kemp? 2.15pm, BBC Radio 4 Julian Simpson’s mystery returns, with Phoebe Fox and Nicola Walker (left). Secret service researcher Clara Page has a fresh riddle: who killed the elusive Aldrich Kemp? The ensuing roller coaster ride flies from the Italian Riviera to the Malaysian jungle. However, things begin with trouble in London…
68 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 gardening GUY BARTER is the Royal Horticultural Society’s (RHS) chief horticulturalist Jobs for the weekend …perennials from seed P erennial flowers – those that die down each winter then return to flower in summer – are such a flexible way of adding colour that most gardeners often want more. Seeds are a cost-effective way to do just that. The downside is that many seed-raised perennials won’t flower until the second year – although some, if sown early, will flower in the first year in late summer or early autumn. To get plants to flower early, sow as soon as possible in a heated propagator and grow in a warm greenhouse or even on a window sill until large enough for individual seedlings to be set out in small pots. Packets of mixed colours are a nuisance if only particular colours are wanted. But sowing outdoors in a row where space is available allows growers to select the plants they want to retain when they flower in the second year. Drought in many regions last year led to casualties that can be filled with drought-resistant plants. Lavender grows readily from seed and often flowers in its first year as well – “Vicenza Blue”, for example,. Consider also anise hyssop (Agastache), origanum and sea holly (Eryngium), which need little water once established. South African plants love heat and light, tolerate some drought and thrive in sheltered gardens; Berkheya purpurea, with purple Seed-raised dahlias can replace casualties of this winter’s severe frosts flowers and spiky foliage, and red hot pokers (Kniphofia) with fierycoloured flower spikes are both very willing from seed. Very severe frosts this winter have also caused gaps in borders. Plants that often survive reasonably well in the south such as agapanthus and penstemon look deeply unpromising at present. Happily, these grow well from seed. Agapanthus “Headbourne Hybrids”, in characteristic blue, are widely sold. Other plants hit hard by frost include chrysanthemums, rosemary and salvia. These are available in seed – Korean chrysanthemums are particularly charming, while salvias from seed include Salvia patens “Blue Angel” and Salvia transylvanica. This might be the year that dahlias left in the ground don’t make it, but again seed-raised ones can replace casualties. Try Dahlia variabilis “Bishop’s Children”. Single-flowered dahlias are very attractive to bees, not least as they flower in late summer, when native flowers are largely over. Supporting biodiversity by reorienting borders to particularly pollinator-friendly plants can also be economically accomplished by seed. Try achillea (left), aquilegia, Aubrieta, Nepeta cataria (catnip), sea kale (Crambe) and especially daisy flowers – Echinacea purpurea, cardoons, Coreopsis and Rudbeckia fulgida “Goldsturm”. Pollinators are not the only insects, and native plants that feed larvae are also important. Succisa pratensis or devil’s-bit scabious and betony (Betonica officinalis) are wild flowers that look well in borders. @GuyBarter The RHS is a charity inspiring everyone to grow via its research, advisory, outreach, shows and gardens. For more information, visit: rhs.org.uk

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i travel For all the latest travel news and advice, see inews.co.uk/travel Do you have a question about travel? Send them to us asktravel@inews.co.uk 71 itravel Cracking Easter getaways, for less Seven destinations nobody else is thinking of – from the national parks of Montenegro to Portugal’s wild Vicentina coast. By Sophie Lam A lthough Easter is just three weeks away, those who haven’t booked a break haven’t necessarily left it too late, with flight and train fares as well as accommodation still reasonably priced in destinations that are experiencing lower demand. That doesn’t mean to say you need to set the bar low, or look at destinations you might consider unsuitable. For example, summer staple Mallorca can be considerably cheaper in April than in June, July and August. The Met Office gives an average daily maximum temperature of 20.4°C on the island in April, although the chance of rain is higher than in June (but still considerably lower than in autumn). Vintage Travel, which specialises in villa rentals with private pools in key Mediterranean destinations, points out that rentals in Mallorca are “great value” over Easter, costing on average between £700 and £1,000 a week, which can double in June. Its one-bedroom Ca Na Reieta near Pollenca costs £595 for a week commencing 1 April, rising to £695 the following week (vintagetravel.co.uk). Of Skyscanner’s most popular flight searches over the key Easter period this year (1-16 April), Palma only just scrapes into the top 20, while Ibiza comes in 27th. Airlines such as easyJet and Wizz Air currently have returns from London to Palma from around £150pp in the first week of April, while fares to Ibiza can be as low as £100 on easyJet and Ryanair. Search-comparison site Kayak highlights Ibiza as one of the best-value destinations for Easter, with average return flights costing £116. Its new deals page (kayak.co.uk/c/flightdeals) guides users to the cheapest fares for their chosen destination – such as one-way fares to Palma for £14 on 14 April. Looking further down Skyscanner’s list of popular Easter searches, some interesting destinations pop up, such as Lisbon, Copenhagen and Marrakech. Skyscanner spokeswoman Naomi Hahn told i: “A flexible mindset has been key for those looking to get away over the past three years, and this has meant many travellers have discovered destinations they wouldn’t have previously considered. The year looks set to be a year of new discoveries as emerging, pocketfriendly destinations come to the fore.” This might mean swapping Andalucia for Galicia, with flights to Santiago de Compostela almost 40 per cent cheaper in the first week of April, or looking at even less obvious destinations. We’ve analysed the data and spoken to experts to highlight seven of the most cost-effective last-minute breaks to consider this Easter. NETHERLANDS The Rota Vicentina is a network of hiking trails in the rugged Costa Vicentina (top); Ca Na Reieta, Mallorca (above) GETTY London to Amsterdam is one of the busiest – and therefore pricey – flight routes. However, it pays to look further afield. Ryanair has return flights from Stansted to Eindhoven from £73pp between 4 and 8 April, while Eurostar has return fares from London to Rotterdam from £173 between 9 and 14 April. Return ferry crossings for a car (two adults
72 life 18 – 19 MARCH 2023 Continued from p71 and two children) from Harwich to Hook of Holland cost from £252 between 4 and 12 April (stenaline.co.uk). It is easy to explore this compact country, which is more than a third smaller than the UK. Rotterdam is well-connected to the rest of the Netherlands by fast and efficient trains, while being an excellent-value city break destination itself, and the country’s many holiday parks are easily reached from both Eindhoven and Hook of Holland. Within an hour of Eindhoven, in the south-east of the country, are several appealing parks, such as Landal Het Vennenbos and Landal Domein de Schatberg. The first is set amid forest and lakes in the Brabant countryside, with cycling trails, playgrounds and a central 650m2 indoor pool complex. Domein de Schatberg is close to the borders of Germany and Belgium and encompasses playgrounds, water sports and indoor pool with slides and rapids, alongside its handsome lodges. Also in the region is Farmcamps BoeBaDoe – a dairy farm with safari-style tents, pony-riding lessons, farm animals and a playground – and TerSpegelt Holiday Park, with a heated indoor pool, woodland walks, bike rides, a gnome path and the nearby Efteling theme park. All parks are offered by Little Clogs Holidays, with a week in a glamping lodge at TerSpegelt costing from €515 (£454) for up to seven guests from 31 March (little-clogs-holidays.co.uk). MONTENEGRO EasyJet Holidays highlights good-value deals in a handful of Europe’s “up-andcoming city and beach destinations” over Easter. In Montenegro, a week’s B&B at the five-star Iberostar Slavija costs from £592pp including Gatwick flights on 9 April and transfers. Next door to popular Croatia, Montenegro is currently outside the EU and has a much lower cost of living than its neighbour, with prices around a third cheaper than in the UK. April temperatures average in the high teens, making beaches viable, though sea swimming is still on the chillier side. Its tourist board is also encouraging visitors to look beyond its sparkling Adriatic coast and visit rural areas such as its five national parks. Lovcen, for example, looms large over the Bay of Kotor with the old royal capital Cetinje clinging to its forested slopes, while Lake Skadar is a tranquil haven of wetlands, rare birdlife and tiny islands. Spring is the ideal time of year to explore the countryside by bicycle, cycling past fields of wildflowers and stopping at rustic restaurants to refuel on iz crepulje, bread baked in the ashes of a fire. Farm stays can cost as little as £30 per night for four (montenegro.travel). the south. In pretty Arras, Entre Cour et Jardin, an 18th-century mansion, has doubles from €115/£101 (sawdays.co.uk). Spring is also an ideal time to visit the region’s many theme parks, among them Parc Astérix, Bagatelle and, of course, Disneyland Paris. Irish Ferries has a three-night package including Disneyland tickets, vehicle ferry crossings and accommodation at Marne la Vallée Noisy hotel for £225pp from 4-7 April. On the coast, Berck-sur-Mer hosts a huge kite festival from 15-23 April (hautsdefrancetourism.com). MENORCA Just as comparison sites such as Skyscanner and Kayak and villa rental companies are pointing towards lower demand for Mallorca, the same applies on neighbouring Ibiza and Menorca. The most easterly of the Balearics, Menorca is also one of the most low-key islands, with its dozens of quiet coves and rural hamlets – a contrast to mountainous Mallorca and chi-chi Ibiza and Formentera. It is also one of the easiest to explore, either by hire car or bus, taking little more than an hour to get from one end to the other. Jet2 Holidays has packages from around £450pp commencing 8 April, from self-catering holidays at Villas Playas de Fornells with Manchester flights and a week’s car hire, to an apartment at Carema Beach resort in Cala’n Bosch on the south-west coast, also with Manchester flights and transfers (jet2holidays.com). PORTUGAL Tui Blue Xanthe Resort and Spa Hotel, Turkey (top); Efteling theme park (above); Flycatcher treehouse, Stirling (inset left); Grmožur fortress on Lake Skadar, Montenegro (below) CEZARE WHITE, GETTY TURKEY Tui is seeing good availability for packages in the Dalaman and Antalya regions, where temperatures average 22°C in April – ideal for enjoying the beaches and coastline, but also for exploring the interior before the scorching heat of summer. It has a week’s all-inclusive for £495pp at the Tui Blue Xanthe Resort and Spa Hotel in Side, Antalya, with Manchester flights on 11 April, and a week’s all-inclusive at Liberty Hotels Lykia, set against the emerald waters of Ölüdeniz for £660pp with Gatwick flights on 10 April. The Post Office’s recent Holiday Money Index revealed that Turkish lira is now more than 180 per cent weaker than in March 2020, meaning that visitors will receive £321 more in lira on a £500 transaction compared with three years ago. HAUTS-DE-FRANCE North-western France is too often overlooked, packed with gorgeous Opal Coast beaches, forests, great food and fascinating cities. Calais, for instance, now has a giant, smoke-breathing dragon you can ride (compagniedudragon.com) while Amiens chocolatiers Maison Jean Trogneux is celebrating its 150th anniversary and is ideal for Easter treats (trogneux.fr). Dover-Calais ferry crossings cost from £87 during the Easter holidays with DFDS; Eurotunnel crossings start at £85. Hotels in this part of France can be as much as 50 per cent cheaper than in The Costa Vicentina is Portugal’s wild, south-west coast, where the Atlantic fizzes on to miles of golden sand and hiking trails thread across the clifftops. Easily accessed from Faro (flights from around £170 return in the first half of April), it is also an excellent-value part of the Algarve and Alentejo, where rustic hotels can cost as little as £70 a night over Easter. The Monte das Alpenduradas has rooms from £53 B&B and is half-anhours’ walk from the fishing village and beach of Praia Zambujeira do Mar (alpenduradas.com). Also nearby is Kuanza Farmhouse and Lodge, with safari-style tents from £150 for four (lodgekuanza.pt). UK The demand for domestic breaks soars at Easter, when much of the UK can arguably look its best. Travel Chapter, which includes self-catering brands Original Cottages, Holidaycottages.co.uk, Canine Cottages and Farm Holidays, is seeing high demand in the usual suspects – Wales, Devon, Cornwall, the Lake District, Norfolk and the Peak District. However, better availability include Northumberland, Scotland and Suffolk. Rentals in Suffolk cost from around £530 for the first week in April, such as Japonica Cottage in Wenhaston, near seaside favourites Southwold and Walberswick. Canopy & Stars’ most popular destination is Devon, followed by Herefordshire. However, there is good availability in Stirling, where Flycatcher is a stylish treehouse sleeping up to four overlooking the River Teith near the Trossachs. Twonight stays over the first two weeks of Easter cost £620 (canopyandstars.co.uk).
i travel Do you need a new passport? The new passport will arrive by courier or Royal Mail. How can I order a new passport? You can apply for a new or passport renewal online by visiting gov.uk/ apply-renew-passport. Alternatively, you can pick up passport application forms from most Post Offices and apply by post or use the Post Office Check and Send service, which is an extra £16 (gov.uk/how-the-post-officecheck-and-send-service-works). With Passport Office strikes looming, you may need to renew your documents sooner than planned T his spring, more than 1,000 UK Passport Office workers will hold a five-week strike in a dispute over pay and working conditions. The i n d u s t r i a l ac t i o n w i l l coincide with a peak period for passport renewals ahead of the May half-term and school summer holidays. When is the strike? The strike will start on Monday 3 April and run until Friday 5 May. It will affect Passport Offices in Durham, Glasgow, Liverpool, London, Newport, Peterborough and Southport, and in Belfast, where the strike will begin on Friday 7 April. How long does it take to renew a passport? The Government has a 10-week deadline for processing passport applications. A report published by the National Audit Office found that 360,000 people waited more than 10 weeks to receive their passport in the first nine months of 2022. However, by the end of September, the average processing time was 12 days for staightforward applications. There are one-week and same-day appointments available for people who urgently need a passport. The strike action is likely to cause delays, meaning you should renew your passport as soon as possible if it is due to expire ahead of a trip. Travellers should note that the strike announcement could also lead to a surge in applications ahead of the walkout, and longer wait times. UK passport-holders travelling to the EU or Schengen Area should also check that their passport validity dates meet the rules for third-country travellers. The passports should have been issued less than 10 years before a traveller’s arrival in the EU or Schengen Area, with an expiry date at least three months from the date they plan to leave. These rules do not apply to UK passport holders travelling to the Republic of Ireland. 73 To renew a passport online you will need… A digital photo, a credit or debit card and your existing passport. Passports can be renewed at any time, regardless of their expiry date, but unexpired time is no longer added to new passports. How much does a passport cost? Passport fees increased by nine per cent in February. The cost to renew or replace a standard passport when applying online is now £82.50 for an adult passport and £53.50 for a child passport. For postal applications, it is £93 for an adult passport and £64 for a child. Your passport will need at least three months left on it to enter the EU or Schengen Area GETTY How does the fast-track service work? The one-week fast-track option can be used to renew an adult or child passport that is soon to expire; change personal details on your passport; replace a lost, stolen or damaged passport; or apply for a first child passport. To use the one-week service, you will need to get a paper application form from a Post Office. Book an appointment online or over the phone, pay a fee, fill in your application form and gather your documents before your appointment. The service costs £155 for an adult passport or £166 for a 50-page frequent traveller version; £126 for a child passport or £137 for the 50-page version.
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i travel 75 W NTER WEEKEND Carmarthen One of Wales’s oldest towns is home to a Roman amphitheatre, a tiny pub, the 2022 chef of the year – and Merlin’s magical influence. By Izin Akhabau Why Carmarthen? Some claim that Carmarthen is the oldest town in Wales. In 75AD, the Romans built a fort here and named it Moridunum. Filled with circuitous streets and quiet lanes, the town is still in possession of one of Britain’s seven surviving amphitheatres. Later civilisations noted Carmarthen’s strategic importance, including King William II, son of William the Conqueror, who built a castle here (which, after centuries of rebuilding, is where you’ll find the tourist information centre and museum). Connections between Carmarthen and the legends of Merlin gave the town its Welsh name: “Caerfyrddin”, meaning Merlin’s Fort. Sitting on the banks of the tidal River Tywi, it has a population of around 16,000 and about 39 per cent of the community speak Welsh – double the nation’s average. Among the town’s attractions are indoor and outdoor markets (it has been a market town since the Roman period), a strong community of local artisans and independent businesses that include vintage boutiques and antique stores. Getting there and around Carmarthen railway station is served by Transport for Wales (tfw.wales). There are direct services to Cardiff, Crewe, Manchester and Swansea. Trains to Swansea can take as little as 42 minutes and it is a connecting hub. Swansea also has direct services to Manchester and London. You can reach Carmarthen by car on the M5, M6, M42 and M50, making it easily accessible. Once in the town, you can get around on foot. Drop your bags Mansion House Llansteffan is a seven-minute walk from Morfa Bach Junction, which itself is a 13-minute bus ride on the 227 from Carmarthen Bus Station. This Georgian mansion offers wide views across Carmarthen Bay and is surrounded by a five-acre hilltop garden. Each bedroom is named after a farm in the local area and has an original design (think velvet headboards and mosaic flooring). “Stef” and “Bri” are the most accessible rooms for those with mobility issues (with two steps to the porch entrance). Breakfast is included. Among the hot options are traditional or vegan Welsh breakfast, egg dishes and American pancakes. Rooms from £150 a night, mansionhousellansteffan.co.uk. Browse the shops Oriel King Street Gallery is run by a collective of around 25 artists, whose works are free to view and available to buy. Look out for Donna Grey’s haunting portraits and Vivienne Albiston’s sculptures, which celebrate the diversity of the human form (picture gigantic fingers and voluptuous bodies). Also on King Street are Found & Seek, which, styled on a French brocante, offers an eclectic range of hand-made items as well as vintage pieces; gifts emporium Mooch Etc; and Blasus Deli, where you can find Welsh food and plenty of cheese. Alternatively, buy vegan options at Waverley Stores on Lammas Street. Drop by the indoor market. Open six days a week, it has arts and crafts, jewellery and fresh produce, including Carmarthen ham. There is an outdoor market on Wednesdays and Saturdays, plus a farmers’ market on the first Friday of each month. Cosy cafés Y Sied (ysied.co.uk), in St Catherine’s Walk, is a cookery school, café and coffee shop run by television cook Lisa Fearn. For a hearty lunch (served until 2pm), try the Welsh ham cawl with homemade bread. Traditionally, the soup contained potatoes, meat, plus any vegetables that were available. The cakes are made on site, usually by Fearn’s daughter. Look out for the caramel and vanilla cake. Vegan and gluten-free alternatives are available. Tea Traders, on Guildhall Square, stocks more than 100 loose leaf teas, including own blends, such as Welsh Breakfast tea. Rainy day refuge Carmarthenshire County Museum is currently exhibiting the work of The New Curiosity on King Street (thenewcuriosity.co.uk) ensures a leisurely meal as the owners, Rachel and Dan Williams, give guests a table for the whole evening. Roast dinner, sea bass and vegan dishes are on offer. Save room for their seasonal crumble and custard. Mansion House’s Moryd (mansionhouse llansteffan.co.uk/moryd-restaurant) has two AA Rosettes; its signature dishes include venison loin, roast cauliflower linguine and vanilla panna cotta. From top: the town sits on the banks of the River Tywi; dine on awardwinning food at The Warren; Llansteffan Castle VISIT WALES local artists who have created responses to Rembrandt’s portrait of his wife, Saskia, which is also on show. Julia Griffiths Jones’s reply on porcelain enamel is especially eye-catching and mimics the trinkets found in the artist’s home. Among the thousands of exhibits, one section covers the county’s links to the coal industry. The natural resource was mined on a small scale for centuries, until the industry expanded in the 1880s. Tensions between workers and mine owners had deteriorated by the 1920s, which led to strikes. A drink by the fire Housed in a 19th-century building, The Plume of Feathers on St Mary Street is one of the smallest pubs in Wales, but has plenty of character. Grab a pint at the tiny bar and admire the rugby memorabilia on the walls. Cwrw (“beer” in Welsh) is a small music venue and pub on King Street that has a colourful, cosy interior. With a capacity of just 120, it hosts UK and international artists from around the world and some performers sing in Welsh. Dinner time At The Warren on Mansel Street (warrenmanselst.co.uk), head chef Dan Ionascu was named Chef of the Year at the Food Awards Wales 2022. His succulent lamb chops come with unexpected (but delicious) pickled carrot. Don’t miss the sticky toffee pudding. Winter walks At Llansteffan beach, coastal walks range from two to five miles. For a less rigorous option, from the beach car park head to St Anthony’s Well. Hidden behind a nondescript door, the natural spring is said to have healing properties. Llansteffan Castle has a dramatic outlook, and climbing the spindly tower staircase offers an even better view of the secluded, sandy Scott’s Bay. For more information, go to Cwtch up in Carmarthenshire discovercarmarthenshire.com/explore/ cwtch-up-in-carmarthenshire. Carmarthen THREE THINGS YOU MIGHT NOT KNOW ABOUT CARMARTHEN 1) Geoffrey of Monmouth’s writing popularised the legends of King Arthur and the wizard Merlin and, in his manuscripts, Carmarthen was Merlin’s birthplace. 2) An oak tree known as Merlin’s Oak was planted in the town in 1659. In the 19th century, a local poisoned it to prevent meetings under its branches; its last fragments are displayed in Carmarthen Civic Hall. 3) During the 1839 Rebecca Riots, men disguised themselves as women to attack tollgates they deemed unfair.
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SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 business@inews.co.uk money SPACE UK and Japan to boost co-operation Britain and Japan have agreed to co-operate in space, the latest move in a deepening of defence ties between the two countries which are building a new fighter jet together. The UK said it signed an arrangement with Japan on future space co-operation including sharing information, collaborative training and personnel exchanges. FRAUD SFO gets £6m from money launderer The Serious Fraud Office confiscated more than £6m from a former Petrobras employee said to be linked to a Brazilian corruption scandal involving the state-run oil firm. It said $7.7m (£6.3m) was recovered from convicted money launderer, Mario Ildeu de Miranda, 71, who laundered the funds using different company names. RETAIL Aldi raises store workers’ pay again Discount supermarket Aldi has increased its workers’ pay for the third time in 12 months. The supermarket group will increase starting pay to £11.40 an hour nationally and to £12.85 in Greater London from July. Aldi said the latest pay increase for its 28,000 employees was in recognition of cost of living pressures as well as labour shortages. CHINA Deloitte fined for Huarong lapses China has fined auditing firm Deloitte ¥211.9m (£25.3m) for failing to perform its duty in assessing the asset quality of China Huarong Asset Management Co, finance offcials said. Deloitte’s Beijing operations are suspended for three months. The financial corporation was fined for internal governance lapses, risk control failures and severe inaccuracy of accounting. 79 business PERSONAL FINANCE Behind the scenes: what the Budget really means for you Can’t figure out if your energy bills are going up or if you’ll be eligible for free childcare? Paul Lewis talks you through Jeremy Hunt’s plans F rom extended energy support to a scrapping of the pension lifetime allowance, this week’s Budget set out a range of new measures – with a few interesting surprises thrown in. But what didn’t Jeremy Hunt tell you? Paul Lewis has gone through the fine print to find out. that much through raising the basic rate of income tax it would need to increase from 20p to 24p. But he avoided that shock announcement. More tax from savers The £1,000 savings allowance has also been frozen. That’s the amount of interest you can earn before paying income tax. Two years ago you would have needed over £150,000 in a best buy one-year savings account to earn enough interest for tax to be due. Today’s higher interest rates mean you would need just over £23,000. So millions of savers will find that they have to pay income tax on their savings interest. And the amount you can protect from tax in an Isa has also been frozen again at £20,000 a year, an amount unchanged since 2017/18. Subsidy boost for bigger pensions Tax relief on pensions costs an eyewatering £27bn a year and most of that goes to people who pay higher or top rate tax. Now the Chancellor will spend another £1bn a year helping them put even more into their pensions. From April he will let you bung £60,000 a year into a pension pot. The current annual limit is £40,000 and there is also a lifetime limit of just over £1m – which is being completely abolished. For context, my rough calculation is that someone on the National Living Wage who paid into an auto-enrolment pension would be lucky to have £60,000 in their pot after 30 years, never mind one year. To bung £60,000 into your pension pot, your income must be at least £60,000 in 2023/24. You must also find the money to make that contribution. The higher your income, the less that will cost you. Basic rate taxpayers need to find £48,000 and the ever generous (to some) Jeremy Hunt will bung in £12,000 tax relief to make up the £60,000. Higher rate taxpayers can then reclaim another £12,000 tax relief. So to get £60,000 in their pension pot will cost them just £36,000. And top rate taxpayers can reclaim £15,000 meaning they only need spend £33,000 to get £60,000 in their pension – a massive £27,000 subsidy from other taxpayers. Then, if they are aged 55 or over, they can immediately take out a quarter of that £60,000 free of tax. Win-winwin – if you can afford it. Fuel bills to rise The Government is spending nearly £3bn to keep your energy bills down from April. But you probably won’t notice. Because average bills will actually rise by £67 a month to £2,500 a year – roughly double what they Free childcare for unborn children Jeremy Hunt’s childcare plan will only benefit children who are yet to be conceived GETTY were in winter 2021. That is because the £400 payment from the Energy Bill Support Scheme which cut them by £67 a month for six months ends on 31 March and is not being replaced. So at the moment your average annual bill is around £2,100. But from 1 April it will be £2,500 – a rise of nearly a fifth. Income tax up In every Budget I can remember there has been some announcement about income tax – normally a change from April. Not this year. The only mention of income tax was to say how marvellous it was that “people in our country can earn £1,000 a month without paying a penny of tax”. The Chancellor failed to mention his policy to freeze that personal tax allowance at £12,570 not just this year and next year, but every year until 2027/28. The result is that from April basic rate taxpayers will be paying £340 a year more in tax than if it had risen with inflation – as it should have done – to £14,270. The independent Office for Budget Responsibility revealed on Wednesday that this six-year freeze will mean another 3,200,000 people on low incomes will start to pay income tax for the first time as wage and pension rises push their income above the frozen allowance. The freeze will cost higher rate taxpayers even more. The 40 per cent rate of tax begins (outside Scotland) at £50,270. From April that should have reached £57,170 but it too is frozen – so higher rate taxpayers will pay £1,720 extra tax in 2023/24. The six-year freeze will mean 2.1 million people will pay higher rate tax for the first time. Overall, taxpayers will be sending the Chancellor £110bn extra over the six years to 2027/28. To bring in Nearly seven million working-age people do not work and are not looking for work. The Chancellor calls them “economically inactive” though in fact many are performing unpaid roles, such as caring for older people or children, which are very important for the economy. The Chancellor wants to help some back to work by extending free childcare to working parents with a child aged from nine months to two years old. Currently parents in England only get that free childcare once a child is three. But the extension will not be fully in place until September 2025. So it will only help parents of children who have not yet been conceived. Work or lose your benefits People on universal credit who are looking for work can have their universal credit cut or taken away altogether if their efforts in finding a job are deemed not good enough. This sanctions regime applies to around two million people and the number sanctioned in any month has doubled to around one in 15. But the Chancellor wants to go further and apply sanctions “more rigorously to those who fail to meet strict worksearch requirements”. And if they earn less than £189 a week they will have to earn more or suffer “a more intensive conditionality regime”. Also known as a big stick. Easy ways to save for your child’s future p80 l Best savings deals p81 l Money watch p83
80 MONEY PERSONAL FINANCE Simple ways to save for your child’s future without leaving yourself short Putting away a little bit of money can benefit kids a lot by the time they reach adulthood. By Eve McGowan H ow do you provide for your children’s future when you have very little spare cash? For many, putting money aside for their kids has had to take a back seat – one in five parents of children under 18 have either reduced or halted saving since the cost of living crisis. Those who do save are not always opting for the most lucrative options, according to research based on a Janus Henderson Investment Trusts survey of more than 1,200 parents. It found 39 per cent opted for physical cash and 48 per cent in low-interest savings accounts. And while risk is a word you often don’t want connected to your kids, much less so their money, this is what financial advisers suggest you should do with your child’s savings, assuming you have a long time before they need the money. Our guide shows you how to make your savings work hard for your children’s future, even if you can only afford to set aside a small sum each month. Open a Junior Isa Investment returns on Junior Individual Savings Accounts (Jisas) are tax free, making them a great way to save for your child’s future. They have an annual limit of £9,000. “The best part of £1bn was paid into Jisas in 2019/20 (£971m), so a huge number of parents – and their wider families – are finding a way to give their children a great head start in life,” says Coles. She suggests setting up a standing order to come out of your account on pay day – you can invest as little as £25 a month in a Jisa – to build up a nest egg before really noticing the money going in to your account. If you could manage to increase this sum to £55.50 a month, you’d end up with a pot of £18,000 by the time your child hits adulthood. “Some months you might have a bit more to put away, and others you might have a little less. But starting early, and regularly putting some money aside is a great place to start,” says Emma-Lou Montgomery (inset), associate director for Personal Investing at Fidelity International. Invest in the stock market Pairing risk with anything to do with children seems like a counter intuitive combination – nobody wants to be reckless when their offspring’s precious nest egg is at stake. However, if your children are still little then time is on your side – any money you put aside now will be able to ride out the ups and downs of the stock market. A general rule of thumb is that if you’re investing for more than five years, stock markets will usually rise. Of all the money paid into Jisas in 2019/20, 61 per cent of it went into cash but Coles believes a stocks and shares Jisa is likely to deliver a better return over the long term. “There are some cases where cash makes sense, such as when the child is an older teenager, or where the money is needed for something very specific at a specific time, and this is the only money that will ever be available for it. If you don’t fit into either category, when you’re putting aside money for the long term of up to 18 years, you really should consider investments,” she says. Ask the grandparents Coles points out that you don’t have to save alone. The Bank of Gran and Grandad are helping out more than Grandparents often like to help children reach their savings targets if they are in the position to GETTY
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 SPORT 90-104 81 The I paper chart_Layout 1 16/03/2023 12:08 Page 1 If you fear your kids will be too feckless at 18, then saving for them using your own personal Isa allowance and transferring the cash further down the line for tuition fees or a deposit on a first home may seem a more palatable alternative. Start a pension for your child You can start saving into a Junior Sipp (self-invested personal pension) as soon as your child or grandchild is born. Each child can have a total of £3,600 a year, or £300 a month, saved into a pension. Just as with your pension, the Government automatically tops up payments by 20 per cent, so for your child to have the maximum £3,600, total annual contributions only need to come to £2,880. “Of course, it’s pretty much inevitable that tax rules and reliefs will change between now and your child’s retirement, and you have to factor in inflation, which will erode the spending power of any money built up in the pension, but you cannot doubt that this is the ultimate way to make sure your child has the makings of a secure financial future,” says Montgomery. Other options ever, with research showing one in five grandparents are now financially supporting two generations of their family. “A lot of Jisas are paid into by more than one adult. Grandparents are often keen to do something for their grandchildren, so they might pitch in with regular payments. If they’re not up for making monthly payments, they might be happy to pay money in for things like birthday and Christmas presents,” she says. Talk to your kids about finances It’s worth bearing in mind that any money paid in to a Jisa becomes the child’s once they turn 18. As they get older, engaging children with their Isa can help build up their understanding before they take responsibility for it, especially if you’ve decided to invest. “Show them how much has been paid in, and how their Isa has A lot of Jisas are paid into by more than one adult. Grandparents might pitch in with regular payments grown,” says Rajan Lakhani, money expert at money app Plum. He recommends talking to children about stocks they might be familiar with, such as shares in digital subscription providers they use (e.g. Disney+ or Netflix) or supermarkets that you regularly visit with them to help them learn. Get them to suggest companies they’d like to invest in, then research which might be worthy of their investment. “You could also talk to them about how you choose the funds for their Isa, what causes are important to them and how these investments might have a positive impact on the environment or society,” says Lakhani. Children can access a Junior Isa at 18 – so talk to them about money early GETTY If you’ve already used up your Junior Isa allowance or you’d like more control over your child’s cash, investing in a bare trust will allow you to save in their name with a parent or grandparent as the trustee. These accounts can be accessed before they turn 18 for school fees for instance, or continue beyond 18, and unlike Jisas there is no limit to the amount you can save in them. While the investment return is taxed, you can use their annual income tax and capital gains tax allowances. Premium Bonds through National Savings & Investments are another popular investment option. You can buy any whole-pound amount of bonds between £25 and £50,000 in your child’s name, and every month each £1 bond is entered into a cash prize draw. There’s an app for that In this digital age there’s a plethora of apps and tech solutions to keep your saving on track. The Plum app sets aside small amounts automatically each week, calculating what you can afford from income and outgoings, without you having to work it out for yourself. “You can set the app up with different ‘pockets’ with goals and adjust how the savings are split between them, meaning you can save smaller amounts in pockets with a longer outlook,” explains Lakhani. Meanwhile, the True Potential app from the Newcastle-based wealth management company of the same name allows users to set a financial goal – such as saving enough for their child’s tuition fees by the time they turn 18 – and then regularly review investments against this, while quickly topping-up on their smartphone if needed. “Our impulseSave technology on our True Potential app allows savers to invest from as little as £1 into their investments,” says the firm’s chief executive, Daniel Harrison. “With a Junior Isa you could put in however much you can afford each week, whether it be £1 or £20, and this could build into a significant pot for your child by the age of 18.” Provider Account Chip Instant Access by ClearBank None Notice or Term Deposit AER £1 3.40% Yorkshire Building Society Online Rainy Day 2 None £1 3.35% HSBC Online Bonus Saver None £1 3.25% Zopa Smart Saver None £1 3.21% Ford Money Flexible Saver None £1 3.10% Provider Account Notice or Term Deposit AER Al Rayan Bank (A) Fixed Term Deposit 18­mth bond £5,000 4.57% (F) Al Rayan Bank (A) Fixed Term Deposit 12­mth bond £5,000 4.50% (F) United Trust Bank UTB 15 Month Bond 15­mth­bond £5,000 4.35% (F) OakNorth Bank Fixed Term Savings 18­mth­bond £1 4.34% (F) OakNorth Bank Fixed Term Savings 15­mth­bond £1 4.33% (F) Provider Account Notice or Term Deposit AER Tandem Bank 5 Year Fixed Saver 5­yr bond £1 4.60% (F) Monument Bank Fixed Term Deposit 5­yr bond Isbank Raisin UK ­ Fixed Deposit 5­yr bond Isbank Raisin UK ­ Fixed Deposit 7­yr bond £1,000 4.50% (F) Hampshire Trust Bank 5 Year Bond (28) £1 4.45% (F) 5­yr bond £25,000 4.51% (F) £1,000 4.50% (F) Provider Account Notice or Term Deposit AER Furness BS 45 Day Notice Cash ISA 45 Day £1,000 3.30% Mansfield BS Notice ISA (2nd Issue) 180 Day £1 3.25% Shawbrook Bank Easy Access ISA ­ 23 None £1,000 3.17% Principality BS Online ISA None £1 3.10% (B) Paragon Bank Triple Access ISA ­ 12 None £1 3.10% Provider Account Min Funding (pm) Account fee Reward Halifax Reward Current £1,500 Nil £5.00pm (C) TSB Spend & Save Plus None Nil £5.00pm Nationwide BS FlexDirect £1,000 Nil 5.00% (B) Kroo Bank Ltd Current Account None Nil 3.03% Virgin Money M Plus Account None Nil 2.02% (A) = Provider operates under Islamic nance principles, rate shown is expected prot rate. (B) = Introductory rate for a limited period. (C) = Paid net of income tax. (F) = Fixed rate. All rates are shown as AER variable unless otherwise stated. Methods of opening and operating accounts will vary. Current account interest rates paid up to a specied level, terms may apply to qualify for rates shown. Provider Rate Period Max LTV Cumberland BS 4.29% to 1.6.25 60% £999 Furness BS 5.28% for 2 years 90% ­ HSBC 4.34% to 30.6.26 75% £999 first direct 3.99% for 5 years 60% £490 TSB 4.69% to 30.6.28 90% ­ Provider Rate Period Max LTV Fee rst direct 5.94% for term 75% £490 rst direct 6.09% for term 75% ­ rst direct 6.39% for term 80% £490 rst direct 6.54% for term 80% ­ rst direct 6.79% for term 90% £490 ArrEAR UnarrEAR Fee 0% overdraft limit Provider Account Starling Bank Current Account 15.0% 0.0% Nil rst direct 1st Account 39.9% 39.9% £250 Virgin Money M Plus Account 19.9% 19.9% Nil Lloyds Bank Club Lloyds 27.5% 0.0% £50 TSB Spend & Save Plus 39.9% 39.9% £100 Provider Card Type Rate PM APR Bank of Scotland Credit Card Mastercard 0.869% 10.9% Halifax Credit Card Mastercard 0.869% 10.9% ­ Tesco Bank Low APR Credit Card MC 0.869% 10.9% £5,000 NatWest Credit Card Mastercard 1.016% 12.9% £10,000 Royal Bank of Scotland Credit Card Mastercard 1.016% 12.9% £10,000 Min income ­ All borrowing rates and availability of products are subject to individual credit ratings. All rates and terms subject to change without notice and should be checked before finalising any arrangement. This information is provided by Moneyfactscompare.co.uk on 8.00am 16th March 2023 in good faith. For full details visit Moneyfactscompare.co.uk. Neither Moneyfacts nor can be responsible for its accuracy. No liability can be accepted for any direct or consequential loss arising from use of, or reliance upon, this information. Readers who are not finance professionals should seek expert advice.
82 BUSINESS ECONOMY TELECOMS UK GDP among weakest of G20 nations Regulator delays decision on BT fibre pricing By David Connett The UK’s economy is expected to be worst performing out of any Group of 20 (G20) economies apart from Russia this year, according to a study by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). Inflation, the energy crisis and low productivity will all slow its recovery, the Parisbased organisation said in its half-yearly analysis. UK gross domestic product (GDP) is forecast by the OECD to fall 0.2 per cent this year, leaving the UK and Russia, which is subject to economic sanctions, as the only G20 economies to shrink. The UK’s economy is predicted to rise by 0.9 per cent next year. The OECD expects global GDP to grow by 2.6 per cent this year and 2.9 in 2024. China will see the biggest growth (+5.3 per cent) this year, followed by India (+5 per cent). OECD secretary general Mathias Cormann said: “We believe the measures the Government is taking to address these issues are going to be very important to improve the economic outlook for the United Kingdom moving forward, but there are some particular challenges that are playing out at the moment.” The OECD said inflation across the G20 remained high and urged countries to “stay the course” and continue raising interest rates. By Paul Sandle Ofcom, the telecoms regulator, needs more time to consider BT’s wholesale pricing, it said after concerns were raised over the company’s boss saying its network expansion will “end in tears” for some of its competitors. BT wants to offer discounts to internet service providers such as Sky, Vodafone and TalkTalk in return for moving customers to the national fibre network it is building. Rivals such as Virgin Media O2 and alternative fibre providers, known as altnets, are investing billions of pounds to build competing networks. However, Ofcom said that to provide certainty and stability it would not be appropriate for BT’s Openreach to launch its Equinox 2 pricing scheme, planned for 1 April, until the regulator gave final approval. Openreach said it was important that Ofcom had time to consider all feedback fully and fairly and so its discounted prices would be delayed. “Our offer is a response to customers who want lower prices and longterm certainty to help them switch,” it said. Ofcom previously said it did not consider the offer from the former monopoly to be anti-competitive. It follows comments by BT chief executive Philip Jansen to the Financial Times that Openreach’s fibre push will “end in tears for rivals” caused “significant concern”, Ofcom said. Ofcom chief Dame Melanie Dawes said in a letter to Mr Jansen that the regulator was committed to network competition. “Were it to become apparent that BT is able nonetheless to distort competition in the market, we would not hesitate to take regulatory action to address this,” she said. Mr Jansen said his comments had been taken out of context. A BT spokesperson said the company had “always believed that competition is good for customers”. INCA, the altnets’ representative body, said Ofcom’s initial evaluation of Equinox 2 was insufficient. “They must question why BT is reducing its wholesale charges whilst increasing the prices that consumers pay for broadband,” INCA said. BT’s earlier wholesale pricing, Equinox, was challenged by altnet CityFibre, but Ofcom decided not to intervene. Virgin Media O2, BT’s biggest network rival, has said Equinox 2 needed to be thoroughly scrutinised to ensure Openreach was not using its market power to stop providers switching to other networks. St Patrick’s Day smiles in Dublin St Patrick’s Day Festival organisers said it was impossible to say how much it is worth to “Brand Ireland” but this year’s four-day festival is bigger than last year – and Dublin’s economy set to benefit to the tune CHINA The Business Matrix The day at a glance of €50m (£43.8m), with 500,000 people expected to line the streets – 28 per cent of them tourists. Last year an estimated 12,000 days of employment were created, organisers said. ECONOMY Banks allowed to cut cash they hold Inflation fears are falling, says Bank China’s central bank said it would cut the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves for the first time this year to help keep liquidity ample and support economic recovery. Chinese leaders pledged to step up support for the world’s second-largest economy, which is rebounding from a pandemicinduced slump after coronavirus curbs were lifted in December. UK inflation fears have fallen, a Bank of England survey found. Britons’ average expectation of inflation was 3.9 per cent for the coming year, the lowest since late 2021. Expectations for the following 12 months fell to 3 per cent from 3.4 per cent. Dissatisfaction with the Bank’s handling of inflation also fell. It meets on Thursday to determine whether to increase rates. TECHNOLOGY TRANSPORT ENERGY BANKING ECONOMY Ethical Capital snaps up Pornhub VW invests in mines to cut battery costs Rolls-Royce given Moon base funds Staley faces quiz on Turkey counts huge Epstein relationship cost of earthquake The company that owns pornographic video-streaming site Pornhub is being bought by Canadian private equity firm Ethical Capital Partners. The Ottawa firm is not saying how much it is paying for Luxembourg-headquartered, Montreal-based MindGeek. Pornhub was the world’s 12th most visited website last year. Volkswagen plans to invest in mines to bring down the cost of battery cells, meet half of its demand and sell to third-party customers. Europe’s biggest car-maker wants its battery unit PowerCo to be a global battery supplier, as well as meet half its own demand, with plants mostly in Europe and North America. It said mining capacity was a bottleneck for raw materials. Rolls-Royce has received funding from the UK Space Agency to develop a nuclear reactor for a Moon base. The project will investigate how nuclear power could support a future base on the Moon for astronauts. The UK Space Agency announced £2.9m new funding for the plan. Rolls-Royce said it hoped to have a reactor ready to send to the Moon by 2029. Jes Staley, the former Barclays chief executive and ex-JP Morgan executive, faces questions next week about his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein and his knowledge of his former client’s sex trafficking operation. JPMorgan accuses Staley, its former head of private banking, of concealing information about Epstein. JP Morgan faces legal claims it failed to stop Epstein. The earthquakes in Turkey last month caused about two trillion liras (£85.3bn) of damage, the government said. The official estimate, higher than the World Bank figure of $34.2bn (£28.1bn), said affected areas accounted for 9.8 per cent of the economy and 8.6 per cent of exports in 2022. They were also responsible for 35 per cent of Turkey’s textile exports.
NEWS 2-37 UNITED STATES Biden calls for more banking accountability LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 Money watch TV 54-67 Weekly change Year high Year low Apollo gets longer to mull takeover US private equity group Apollo has been given longer to decide whether to launch a takeover bid for Scottish engineering firm John Wood. Apollo had a deadline of next Wednesday to declare a “firm intention” to make an offer but has been granted an extension to 19 April. John Wood has already declined three prior Apollo offers. Year high Year low CHINESE YUAN 1.33 2.76% ¥8.38 1.04 1.88% 8.74 7.51 1.45% 1.24 1.02 SWISS FRANC EURO €1.14 1.21 1.54% CHF1.13 1.08 THE MARKETS THIS WEEK FTSE 100 Dow* 31,913.74 4.10 Nasdaq* 11,65897 520.08 4.67% 7,600 S&P* 3,925.12 63.53 7,500 Nikkei 27,333.79 810.18 2.88% 7,400 CAC 40 6,925.40 295.27 4.09% 7,300 DAX 14,768.20 659.77 7,700 Tue Wed Thu Fri Week intraday 412.95 High: 7,752.43 5.33% Low: 7,309.30 7,335. 40 7,800 Mon Weekly change FTSE 100 The FTSE 100 finished down by 74.63 pts, or 1.01 per cent, to end at 7,335.40. Riser in the news 0.01% 1.65% 4.28% Faller in the news 1,7600.0p, +2.44% 137.75p, -6.07% The Africa-focused gold miner has upped its annual dividend payout to $200m (£164m) after another solid year of production analysts said. The telecoms group was forced to delay its broadband discount plan after Ofcom said it wanted more time to examine competition concerns. THE ECONOMY £1.06 per kilo The average price of bananas in the United Kingdom this week. UK employment statistics Employment is estimated at 75.7%, unemployment at 3.7% while ‘inactivity’ was at 21.3% the ONS said. 3% Inactive men Employment rate 2% Employed women HEALTH TAKEOVER SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 83 Friday’s FTSE 100 down 1.01% at 7335.4 Weekly change US DOLLAR $1.22 Inactive women A watchdog has warned a merger between two healthcare technology specialists would lead to higher costs and “worse outcomes for the NHS”. The Competition and Markets Authority said the £1.2bn deal between US firm UnitedHealth and UK rival EMIS could cut competition in digital products for the health service. MONEY 79-83 The week in numbers 1% The percentage of the 360 million tonnes of freight trade with the UK coming by air. Unemployed women Unemployed men Watchdog warns over tech merger TRAVEL 71-75 CURRENCIES (relative to sterling) By David Connett US President Joe Biden called on Congress to give regulators greater power over the banking sector, including imposing higher fines, clawing back funds and barring officials from failed banks. “No one is above the law,” Mr Biden said, “and strengthening accountability is an important deterrent to prevent mismanagement in the future.” The current law “limits the administration’s authority to hold executives responsible,” he said. The White House is asking Congress to give the Federal Depository Insurance Corporation (FDIC), which insures deposits and supervises banks, greater authority to claw back compensation, “including gains from share sales from executives at failed banks like Silicon Valley Bank,” the White House said later. The President is also asking Congress to give the FDIC more authority to ban bank executives from the industry when their banks go into receivership, and fine bank managers whose banks fail. His call came as the Silicon Valley Bank’s former parent company filed for bankruptcy protection a week after a run on deposits prompted regulators to seize its banking unit. SVB Financial Group listed assets and liabilities of as much as $10bn (£8.2bn) each in a Chapter 11 petition filed in New York to protect its remaining assets and work on repaying creditors. The bank was placed in receivership by the FDIC. OPINION 25-30 ONS May to Jul 2020 May to Jul 2021 1% 0% -1% -2% Employed men -3% May to Jul 2022 2,400 The number of patients per fully qualified GP in England. 2.8 gigawatts The increase in UK wind turbine capacity in the year between September 2021-22. -4% GOOD WEEK BAD WEEK ▼ DAME SHARON WHITE ▲ NUSRAT ▲ HARRIET ▲ BARONESS The business minister could unveil positive FTSE 100 Board diversity figures The chair of the Treasury Select Committee chased ministers and regulators this week The Financial Ombudsman chair is cutting its complaints logjam GHANI BALDWIN ZAHIDA MANZOOR SUPER STAT 139,000 tonnes This week’s changes SOURCE: ONS, GOV.CO.UK *VALUE AT 6PM FRIDAY The boss of Meta announced yet more job losses – 10,000 in fact ▼ MIKE LYNCH The former Autonomy boss was back in court fighting extradition to the US on alleged fraud charges SHOCK STAT UK coal production between July and September last year, which is a new record low. KEY COMMODITIES The John Lewis leader presided over widening losses and no staff bonuses ▼ MARK ZUCKERBERG £394m £ £ £ Oil 73.02 $/barrel -9.30 The sum yet to be claimed in the matured child trust funds of young adults who reached 18 between September 2020 and 5 April 2021. Company Price Chg % High Low 3i Group abrdn Admiral Airtel Africa Anglo Amer Antofagasta AB Foods Ashtead Group AstraZeneca Auto Trader Group Aviva BAE Systems Barclays Barratt Dev BAT Beazley Berkeley Grp Hldgs B&MEurValRtl BP British Land BT Bunzl Burberry Centrica Coca-Cola HBC Compass Convatec CRH Croda Intl DCC Diageo Endeavour Mining Entain Experian F&C Inv Trust Flutter Entrtmt Frasers Group Fresnillo Glencore GSK Haleon Halma Hargrve Lans Hiscox HSBC Hldgs IAG Imperial Brands Informa IntCont Htls Intertek JD Sports Fashion Johnson Matthey Kingfisher Land Secs Legal & Gen Lloyds Bk Gp Lon Stock Ex M&G Melrose Ind Mondi National Grid NatWest Group Next Ocado Group Pearson Pershing Square Persimmon Phoenix Prudential Reckitt Ben RELX Rentokil Initial Rightmove Rio Tinto Rolls-Royce RS Group Sage Sainsbury(J) Schroders Scot Mort Inv Tst Segro Severn Trent Shell Smith&Neph Smith (DS) Smiths Gp Smurfit Kappa Grp Spirax-Sarco Eng SSE Stan Chart St. James’s Place Taylor Wimpey Tesco Unilever Unite Group United Utilities Vodafone Weir Group Whitbread WPP 1482.5 199.3 1914.5 107.6 2504.0 1444.0 1901.5 4866.0 10814.0 587.0 402.2 905.6 139.6 432.6 2948.5 519.5 3990.0 458.0 479.9 391.4 137.8 2975.0 2267.0 101.2 2118.0 1941.0 228.4 3945.5 6340.0 4290.0 3475.0 1760.0 1207.5 2647.0 910.0 13625.0 721.5 710.0 432.6 1400.8 315.4 2067.0 767.8 1042.0 542.1 133.3 1884.5 672.2 5244.0 3976.0 162.3 1944.5 269.7 602.2 226.6 46.2 7470.0 177.8 147.3 1266.0 1039.0 258.0 6578.0 416.1 837.6 2765.0 1211.0 559.0 1008.0 5810.0 2530.0 546.8 545.6 5250.0 140.3 893.5 733.6 249.2 441.0 671.2 737.6 2813.0 2214.0 1169.5 302.5 1675.0 2827.0 11100.0 1698.0 634.0 1141.0 113.9 246.9 4047.5 916.5 1044.0 90.4 1712.5 2804.0 916.0 -2.40% -5.54% -2.05% -2.27% +1.01% -0.69% -2.46% -1.48% +0.15% -0.44% -3.08% -1.22% -1.98% -1.46% -0.67% -2.72% -1.36% -2.55% -0.52% -2.13% -6.07% -0.87% -0.79% -2.41% -0.66% +0.75% -0.44% -1.40% -1.31% +0.05% -1.68% +2.44% -0.49% -0.23% -0.87% -1.48% -1.30% +1.75% +2.23% +0.99% -2.20% -1.15% -2.79% -4.84% -2.87% -2.39% +1.18% -0.88% -2.02% -1.09% -2.64% -1.24% -2.67% -2.21% -3.33% -2.56% +1.97% -2.12% -3.19% -2.77% -1.80% -1.38% -2.58% -4.48% -0.05% -0.54% -2.89% -1.93% -3.95% -1.22% -0.51% -1.23% -0.76% -0.59% -4.10% -1.87% -2.60% -2.08% -2.20% -1.61% -2.33% -1.30% +0.23% -0.43% -1.69% -1.03% -3.52% -0.76% -2.13% -2.52% -2.98% -1.89% -2.02% -0.97% -1.93% -1.97% -2.48% -1.69% -2.33% -2.51% 1685.0 237.0 2648.0 173.1 4292.5 1837.5 2076.0 6012.0 11886.0 684.4 606.6 944.1 198.9 576.6 3645.0 735.8 4505.0 588.5 570.6 546.8 196.6 3249.0 2606.0 108.1 2194.0 1970.9 267.8 4412.0 8082.1 6508.0 4067.0 2176.0 1725.0 3160.0 992.0 14345.0 1001.7 996.8 584.5 3408.2 337.9 2598.0 1076.5 1152.5 653.8 173.6 2185.0 707.6 5796.0 5368.0 213.1 2536.0 298.4 812.8 311.1 54.3 8612.0 229.9 169.2 1719.0 1271.5 313.1 7082.0 1249.5 1006.3 3115.0 2332.0 690.4 1381.5 6824.0 2580.0 565.4 679.6 6406.0 160.0 1169.0 823.0 272.2 544.7 1081.8 1408.0 3228.0 2613.5 1338.5 369.1 1807.0 3798.6 13140.0 1935.5 799.4 1520.0 146.7 307.2 4868.6 1209.0 1186.9 132.3 2072.0 3651.9 1095.5 1042.0 131.0 1691.5 105.6 2437.5 971.2 1223.0 3269.0 9275.0 479.8 341.9 683.6 132.1 313.0 2893.0 385.4 3120.0 289.0 359.0 317.8 110.5 2542.0 1473.5 65.8 1496.0 1568.8 190.9 2736.5 5862.0 3986.0 3363.0 1435.0 994.6 2242.0 769.0 7340.0 573.6 637.2 395.4 1280.9 241.2 1855.3 735.6 789.2 434.7 90.5 1553.0 498.8 4174.0 3485.0 88.4 1755.0 198.6 459.3 201.4 38.5 6710.0 159.3 94.8 1265.0 844.3 210.9 4306.0 380.3 680.0 2295.0 1113.5 501.0 782.4 5400.0 2064.0 441.2 437.8 4424.5 64.4 790.0 587.2 168.7 348.0 657.7 669.2 2167.4 1897.8 959.2 238.1 1352.5 2415.0 9008.0 1405.0 478.6 904.6 80.6 194.3 3351.7 773.0 813.2 83.2 1312.0 2245.5 713.0 Gold 1,963.70 $/oz +104.95 For enquiries call +44 (0)20 7825 8300
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89 Today’s Weather Today’s high Temp Rain Sun (Midday yesterday) (mm) Aberdeen Aberporth Aberystwyth Aviemore Belfast Birmingham Bournemouth Bridlington Bristol Cardiff Cromer Durham Eastbourne Edinburgh Eskdalemuir Glasgow Holyhead Hove Hull Huntingdon Ipswich Isle of Man Isle of Wight Kinlochewe Kirkwall Leeds Lerwick Leuchars Lincoln Liverpool London Manchester Margate Milford Haven Morecambe Newcastle Norwich Nottingham Okehampton Oxford Plymouth Portland Portsmouth Prestwick Rhyl Sheffield Shrewsbury Skegness Southend Stoke Stornoway Swansea Tiree 12 12 14 11 12 13 11 13 14 12 13 14 11 12 9 11 11 11 14 13 10 10 10 9 7 13 7 12 13 13 12 14 11 12 12 14 12 13 12 13 12 11 11 12 14 14 13 12 10 12 7 11 10 SH C SH C SH SH F F SH SH R SH SH F SH SH C SH C SH SH R F R C R C SH C SH T SH R SH SH SH SH C SH SH SH F SH SH F C SH C R SH DR SH C (hrs) 1.4 1.2 1.1 0.6 14.5 1.0 0.2 0.3 1.3 1.7 2.3 0.1 6.3 0.1 6.8 1.4 0.3 6.3 0.6 0.8 0.0 0.2 3.7 1.6 1.0 0.4 3.4 0.7 0.4 3.7 1.6 1.3 2.4 1.2 0.9 1.6 2.7 0.9 0.7 0.9 0.8 2.4 5.2 0.1 1.0 0.3 1.0 0.2 7.2 1.7 3.2 1.5 1.8 1.6 1.0 0.9 2.9 2.3 2.1 3.4 6.7 2.0 0.6 1.0 6.2 2.5 1.9 0.9 0.1 2.3 2.5 6.4 2.0 1.5 1.8 4.9 0.0 2.3 4.1 4.1 2.4 2.8 4.1 3.0 4.8 1.6 1.2 3.2 5.5 1.0 3.3 0.7 3.1 0.2 5.6 3.0 0.8 4.7 3.3 2.5 3.1 2.0 1.7 0.0 1.2 1.1 Global City 27 35 19 14 11 33 16 6 11 15 9 7 27 29 10 13 14 1 21 8 23 18 13 15 °C 17 S S S S SH F S F S S S SH TH S R S S F F R S S C F 24 13 1 32 11 9 14 19 16 9 -1 30 14 3 14 26 20 14 7 8 10 8 14 21 S S C SH S S S S F S C S S F S S F C F F S S S F Key: C=Cloudy, DR=Drizzle, F=Fair, FG=Fog, H=Hail, M=Mist, R=Rain, S=Sunny, SH=Showers, SL=Sleet, SN=Snow, SS=Sandstorm, TH=Thunderstorm Wind speed 10 7 Highlands North East Scotland Central Scotland Scottish Borders Northern Ireland North West & Mersey North East Yorkshire & Humber North Wales West Midlands East Midlands South Wales South West South East Eastern Greater London 17 Moderate Kirkwall Rough 15 mph 7 Inverness 10 11 Lerwick 15 20 5 Aberdeen 10 9 11 Fort William 13 Dundee 11 5 SUNDAY Mainly dry and bright with spells of sunshine however clouds will build during the day bringing rain across western areas later. Edinburgh Glasgow Atlantic Ocean 12 North Sea Dumfries Derry/Londonderry 17 Newcastle Carlisle 11 Belfast 9 14 12 York Galway 11 Liverpool 12 Sheffield Llandudno 13 Nottingham 11 Norwich Birmingham 12 13 Cambridge 17 Oxford Swansea Celtic Sea Cardiff Bristol 12 Alderney 11 13 London Reading 13 Channel Islands Exeter Southampton 13 Portsmouth 11 Brighton Plymouth English Channel Jersey 5 GENERAL SITUATION An area of low pressure will slowly track eastwards during the day across the United Kingdom bringing a series of weak weather fronts. It will be a dull start to the day with cloudy skies which will break during the day and brighter spells will develop. There is also a chance of showers developing which may be locally heavy and thundery in nature. Thick cloud cover and longer spells of rain across north-west Scotland. SE England, London, E Anglia, E England: A dull start to the day with cloudy skies and scattered showers or longer spells of rain during the morning. Clouds will break to reveal sunny spells and showers during the afternoon which may be locally heavy and thundery in nature. Gentle to moderate northerly winds will be locally brisk. Max temp: 12C. Tonight, clear spells and dry. Min temp: 5C. W Isles, NW Scotland, SW Scotland: A dull and damp start with cloudy skies and outbreaks of rain which may be locally heavy. It will continue to be cloudy during the day with rain which will gradually clear from the west. Rain will ease from most areas during the evening. Mostly gentle southerly winds which will be locally strong. Max temp: 9C. Tonight, chance of showers. Min temp: 4C. HIGH N Ireland, Republic of Ireland: A dull and damp start with cloudy skies and outbreaks of rain across western areas which will spread eastwards during the day to reach eastern coastal areas during the afternoon. A dry evening with clouds breaking to reveal clear spells. Gentle to moderate north-westerly winds will be locally brisk. Max temp: 14C. Tonight, clouds will build. Min temp: 2C. N Isles: A dry but dull start to the day with cloudy skies. It will continue to be dull and grey during the day with thick cloud cover and outbreaks of rain and showers will spread in from the south-west during the afternoon and evening. A breezy day with brisk easterly winds which will be locally strong. Max temp: 9C. Tonight, chance of showers. Min temp: 4C. SW England, N Wales, S Wales, IoM, Cen S England, Channel Is, Midlands, NW England, NE England, NE Scotland, SE Scotland: A dull start to the day with cloudy skies and a chance of some showers. Clouds will tend to break during the day and spells of sunshine will develop. There is a continued threat of showers during the day and some of these could be heavy. There will be gentle to moderate south-westerly winds. Max temp: 14C. Tonight, clear spells and dry. Min temp: 5C. SYNOPTIC PRESSURE An area of low pressure will be centred over the United Kingdom today and will track eastwards but will be generally weak and will fill. Another area of low pressure over Scandinavia will fill and slowly track eastwards. Low pressure out in the Atlantic will slowly track north-eastwards and will slightly fill. LOW 1024 14 15 FRANCE Sark MONDAY A largely dry but dull day with cloudy skies and there is a threat of some showers or longer spells of rain which may be heavy. 14 Cork 5 13 Hull Manchester Irish Sea Dublin 12 Leeds 5 levels Air PollutionLowAir(1)pollution Very high (10) uk-air.defra.gov.uk Index Region Five-day outlook Shetland Calm Slight Temp Cond (in C) Miami Milan Moscow Mumbai Munich New York Nice Palma Paris Prague Reykjavik Rio Rome Stockholm Strasbourg Sydney Tenerife Tokyo Toronto Vancouver Vienna Warsaw Washington Wellington 06:08 18:09 Orkney Guernsey Temp Cond City (in C) Abu Dhabi Abuja Alicante Amsterdam Athens Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Brussels Budapest Chicago Delhi Dubai Dublin Frankfurt Geneva Helsinki Hong Kong Istanbul Johannesburg Lisbon Los Angeles Madrid Sea state Sunset 12 TUESDAY Clouds will break during the day to reveal spells of sunshine, patchy cloud cover and a chance of showers developing. Drier later. 17 13 11 14 11 WEDNESDAY A mainly dry but dull day with cloudy skies and outbreaks of rain will spread into western areas and may be heavy at times. 17 Today Tomorrow 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 2 LOW 1016 1000 1008 Key: HIGHS AND LOWS (Yesterday, up to 2pm) 1016 LOW 1008 1024 HIGH Isobars: air pressure in millibars mp_d1d_aiii_00002023 Weather City Temperature Sunrise Moon Phase 14º 2º Clouds will break and brighter spells will develop however there is also a chance of showers. Longer spells of rain across the north-west. Around Britain Today’s low Warm front 1024 HIGH Cold front Occluded front Warmest: Cardiff, Bute 968 Park, Cardiff, 15C Coldest: 976 Tain Range, Easter Ross, 1C 984 1032 Wettest: Dunstaffnage, Argyll Bute, 21.6mm 992and1040 Sunniest: Tiree, Argyll and 1048 Bute, 4.3hrs HOURS OF DARKNESS Aberdeen 18.18-06.15 Birmingham 18.16-06.13 Bristol 18.19-06.16 Cardiff 18.21-06.18 Glasgow 18.26-06.22 Hull 18.10-06.07 Inverness 18.25-06.21 Liverpool 18.21-06.17 London 18.09-06.06 Manchester 18.18-06.14 Stornoway 18.35-06.31 Swansea 18.24-06.21 York 18.13-06.10 13 11 14 12 THURSDAY Clouds will break during the day to reveal spells of sunshine but also a chance of some showers. A mainly dry evening with clear spells.
Slip 90 iSportsQuiz FA Cup quarter-finals 1 Who were the two non-Premier League sides in last year’s quarter-finals? 2 Who were the last team to win a quarterfinal on penalties, beating Millwall in 2019? 3 Which television star is top scorer in this season’s competition, with eight goals? 4 Which television star scored last time Blackburn won at Sheffield United, in 1994? iPaperSport @iPaperSport to the Scots’ fortunes. France then steamroller Wales, before Ireland waltz to a Grand Slam over England. MIDDAY SKY SPORTS FOOTBALL Football Motherwell v Rangers The last time Motherwell beat Rangers in the league, manager Stuart Kettlewell had only just turned 18. He’ll be 39 in June. What to watch from getting up on Saturday to bedtime on Sunday 2PM BT SPORT 2 Cricket Legends League SATURDAY 9.50AM SKY SPORTS CRICKET Cricket Indians v Warriorz May the likes of England’s Nat Sciver-Brunt and Issy Wong (right) of the Mumbai Indians absolutely thrash their WPL opposition today, just because of the Z at the end of their name. It’s a cricket competition, not a 1980s nightclub. MIDDAY BBC ONE/ITV1 Rugby union Six Nations Scotland v Italy is first up and the prevailing mood at Murrayfield will again be “what if…?” with regards Answers: 1 Middlesbrough and Nottingham Forest. 2 Brighton. 3 Wrexham’s Paul Mullin. 4 Alan Shearer. 5 Wigan. 6 Ipswich. 7 Tenth in the old First Division. 8 Six. 9 Chelsea. 10 None. inews.co.uk/sport Our initial reaction to this payday for recently retired players is of ­derision. But if Guns and Roses, led by 61-year-old Axl, can headline Glastonbury and the Pixies can still fill arenas a full 35 years after their first album was released, then why can’t Monty Panesar twirl a few more deliveries in Dubai for a bit of extra pocket money? 5 Which side shocked Manchester City in their last quarter-final loss, in 2014? 6 Burnley were taken to a replay by which League One side this season? 7 Grimsby last won a quarter-final in 1939. Where did they finish in the league that year? 8 How many successive home draws have Manchester United had in the FA Cup? 9 Fulham last won a quarter-final in 2002 – before losing to who in the last four? 10 Four previous fourth-tier sides made the last eight. How many reached the semis? 5.25PM BBC ONE Football Manchester City v Burnley Speaking of woke: Gary Lineker is back on the box, fresh from his spell on the naughty step for daring to call Suella Braverman’s quasi-fascist choice of language quasi-fascist. He is here to present this FA Cup quarter-final tie, which was dripping with intrigue even before the crisppeddling presenter’s wild 10 days. SUNDAY get you into this FA Cup quarterfinal: Jobi McAnuff, a pundit here, was Wimbledon’s last-ever captain before they became Milton Keynes. 1.50PM BBC ONE Football Brighton & Hove Albion v Grimsby Town This could get messy. Seagulls playing host to a crowd from a wellknown fishery town. 3.30PM SKY SPORTS F1 Formula One Saudi Arabia Grand Prix 11.15AM ITV1 Football Sheffield United v Blackburn Rovers Here’s a tenuously related fact to 5PM SKY SPORTS PREMIER LEAGUE Football Chelsea v Everton The We-Were-Dreadful-UnderFrank-Lampard derby. You get the strong impression that there would not be a lot of common ground p ­ olitically between Everton manager Sean Dyche and C ­ helsea’s Graham Potter. The words “patriot” and “woke” would feature heavily in any d ­ iscussion – neither in a good context. In case you haven’t made up your mind about posh insipid electronic act Clean Bandit, this might swing it for you. They are playing a gig after the race. Four years ago they campaigned in support of Jeremy Corbyn in the general election. Now they are trousering Saudi cash and conspiring to polish up the image of the oppressive fossil-fuel regime in exchange for a few bars of “Symphony”. Doesn’t life move fast? triumph was the 2002 Intertoto Cup – and there were three of them so it doesn’t really count. 5PM SKY SPORTS GOLF Golf Valspar Championship It is golf sponsored by a paint company and it is in Florida. And that is exciting as it gets. 7.30PM AMAZON PRIME Tennis Indian Wells 3.45PM ITV1 It is men’s and women’s final day at Indian Wells, the conservative Californian conurbation whose ­population of just over 5,000 could fill less than a third of the main arena. And it still gets to be called a city. Football Manchester United v Fulham Here’s something that may surprise you – unless, like Richard Osman (above) and Hugh Grant, you are a Cottager. Fulham have never won the FA Cup. Indeed, their only knockout @mattbutler503 RESULTS SERVICE PREMIER LEAGUE Nottm Forest (1)........ 1 Dennis 26 Newcastle (1)........................2 Isak 45, 90 (pen) Att 29,362 SKY BET LEAGUE ONE Sheff Wed (1).................. 1 Bolton (1)..................................1 Gregory 11 Adeboyejo 36 Att 29,230 CINCH SCOTTISH CHAMPIONSHIP Arbroath (0).................... 1 Morton (1)................................1 Adarkwa 78 Oakley 28 CYCLING UCI PROSERIES, BREDENE KOKSIJDE CLASSIC, BELGIUM, Final Race Positions (Bredene - Koksijde, 191.6km): 1 G Thjssen (Bel) Intermarche-Circus-Wanty 4hrs 17mins 44secs, 2 P Ackermann (Ger) UAE Team Emirates, 3 S Welsford (Aus) Team DSM, 4 L Taminaux (Bel) Alpecin-Deceuninck, 5 J Mareczko (It) AlpecinDeceuninck, 8 S Flynn (GB) Team DSM, 32 Z Coleman (GB) VolkerWessels Cycling Team 3, 33 E Vernon (GB) Soudal Quick-Step 3 all at the same time, 50 D McLay (GB) Team ArkeaSamsic +13s. FOOTBALL UEFA CHAMPIONS LEAGUE QUARTER FINAL DRAW (Games to be played 11-12th April):Real Madrid v Chelsea............................................................. Inter Milan v Benfica................................................................ Manchester City v Bayern Munich.............................. AC Milan v Napoli........................................................................ UEFA EUROPA LEAGUE QUARTER FINAL DRAW (Games to be played 13th April):Man Utd v Sevilla......................................................................... Juventus v Sporting Lisbon................................................ Bayer Laverkusen v Union Saint-Gilloise............. Feyenoord v Roma..................................................................... UEFA EUROPA CONFERENCE LEAGUE QUARTER FINAL DRAW (Games to be played 13th April):Lech Poznan v Fiorentina..................................................... Gent v West Ham......................................................................... AZ Alkmaar v Anderlecht..................................................... Basel v Nice....................................................................................... GOLF VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP, PALM HARBOR, FLORIDA, FIRST ROUND (US unless stated, Par 71): 66 R Brehm; S Jaeger (Ger); A Schenk; 67 L Glover; M McNealy; J Spieth; 68 ByeongHun An (S Kor); T Fleetwood (GB); K Hickok; P Kizzire; A Smalley; 69 S Burns; S Cink; M. J. Daffue (SA); D Ghim; B Griffin; A Hadwin (Can); B Martin; D Riley; J Thomas. SDC CHAMPIONSHIP, EASTERN CAPE, SOUTH AFRICA, SECOND ROUND LATEST (Rsa unless stated, round suspended due to high winds): 136 J Brun (Fr) 69 67; 137 A Venter 70 67; J Dantorp (Swe) 74 63; M Baldwin 70 67; 139 J Hugo 72 67; 140 R Ramsay 73 67; R Cabrera (Sp) 73 67; S Valimaki (Fin) 70 70; A Rozner (Fr) 72 68; 141 J Kamte 71 70; T McKibbin (GB) 76 65; 142 J Ahlers 78 64; Jbe’ Kruger 73 69; T Aiken 72 70; 143 D van Tonder 75 68; D Naidoo 75 68; J van Zyl 74 69; M Bremner 71 72; C. J. Du Plessis 74 69; K Thomas 79 64; O Bekker 72 71; G Coetzee 72 71; M Southgate 74 69; A Cockerill (Can) 77 66; R Sciot-Siegrist (Fr) 71 72; 144 S Norris 74 70; L Brown 75 69; J Prinsloo 72 72; L Jerling 78 66; B Easton 73 71; L Filippi 73 71; D Whitnell 73 71; A Sullivan 72 72. LADIES ARAMCO TEAM SERIES, SINGAPORE, SECOND ROUND (GB & Irl unless stated): 137 D Kang (US) 69 68; P Bouchard (Fr) 68 69; N Garcia (SA) 67 70; 139 A van Dam (Neth) 70 69; L Grant (Swe) 68 71; E Spitz (Aut) 70 69; 140 L Ko (NZ) 72 68; K Spilkova (Cz Rep) 68 72; B Law (GB) 70 70; N Broch Estrup (Den) 69 71; C Noja (Ger) 71 69. HORSE RACING RESULTS Cheltenham Soft-good to soft in places 1.30 1. LOSSIEMOUTH (P Townend) 11-8 fav; 2. Gala Marceau 10-3; 3. Zenta 12-1. 15 ran. 21/4l, nk. (W P Mullins (IRE) ). Tote: £2.38; £1.20, £1.30, £2.70. Exacta: £6.20. Tricast: £38.36. Trifecta: £46.80. CSF: £5.88. 2.10 1. FAIVOIR (Bridget Andrews) 33-1; 2. Pied Piper 12-1; 3. Filey Bay 6-1; 4. Sharjah 10-1. 24 ran. 9-2 fav Pembroke (17th). hd, 21/2l, nk. (D Skelton). Tote: £66.40; £10.40, £2.60, £2.20, £2.50. Exacta: £963.10. Tricast: £2746.97. Trifecta: £10592.70. CSF: £392.62. NRs: Glan, Magnor Glory. 2.50 1. STAY AWAY FAY (H Cobden) 18-1; 2. Affordale Fury 150-1; 3. Sandor Clegane 28-1; 4. Letsbeclearaboutit 16-1. 20 ran. 9-4 fav Corbetts Cross (RanOut). 1l, nk, 33/4l. (P Nicholls). Tote: £19.00; £7.00, £4.10, £29.00. Exacta: £2820.00. Tricast: £52244.14. Trifecta: £29605.20. CSF: £1587.40. 4.10 1. PREMIER MAGIC (Mr B Gibbs) 66-1; 2. Its On The Line 28-1; 3. Shantou Flyer 50-1; 4. Rocky’s Howya 11-1. 23 ran. 9-4 fav Vaucelet (7th). 13/4l, 11/4l, 1l. (B Gibbs). Tote: £67.70; £13.00, £7.00, £12.10. Exacta: £1942.10. Tricast: £59185.51. Trifecta: £26440.90. CSF: £1352.47. NR: Not That Fuisse. 4.50 1. IMPERVIOUS (B Hayes) 15-8; 2. Allegorie De Vassy 13-8 fav; 3. Pink Legend 33-1. 9 ran. 21/2l, 51/2l. (Colm Murphy (IRE) ). Tote: £2.88; £1.30, £1.70, £3.30. Exacta: £5.30. Tricast: £66.54. Trifecta: £103.80. CSF: £5.29. 5.30 1. IROKO (A P Kelly) 6-1; 2. No Ordinary Joe 14-1; 3. Buddy One 28-1; 4. Might I 6-1. 21 ran. 5-1 jt-fav Imagine (5th), 5-1 jt-fav Cool Survivor (15th). 11/2l, ns, 31/4l. (O Greenall & J Guerriero). Tote: £7.60; £2.50, £3.40, £4.30, £2.40. Exacta: £104.90. Tricast: £2266.38. Trifecta: £2580.00. CSF: £79.21. NRs: Grozni, Hey Johnny, Innatendue, Vultan, Wonderwall. Jackpot: Not won, pool of £130,711.97 carried over to Uttoxeter. Placepot: £23,675.10. Quadpot: £2,038.20. Place 6: £4,767.50. Place 5: £3,352.57. Doncaster Good-good to soft in places 1.20 1. HENRY’S FRIEND (K Brogan) 2-1; 2. Moon Hunter 13-8 fav; 3. Idealdes Villerets 7-4. 8 ran. 31/2l, 43/4l. (B Pauling). Tote: £3.00; £1.10, £1.10, £1.10. Exacta: £5.40. Trifecta: £7.60. CSF: £6.48. 2.00 1. BIG CHANGES (L Dobb) 4-1; 2. Elleon 2-1 fav; 3. Mance Rayder 28-1. 7 ran. 13/4l, 21/4l. (L Morgan). Tote: £5.00; £2.20, £1.60. Exacta: £13.50. Tricast: £189.20. Trifecta: £143.80. CSF: £12.73. NR: Where’s Hector. 2.40 1. SHELIKESTHELIGHTS (P Brennan) 2-1 fav; 2. Flirtatious Girl 10-3; 3. Lady Hamilton 100-1. 13 ran. 1/2l, 23/4l. (F O’Brien). Tote: £3.00; £1.30, £1.70, £15.20. Exacta: £10.70. Trifecta: £510.00. CSF: £9.09. 3.15 1. DREAMING BLUE (R Dingle) 11-2; 2. Sainte Doctor 3-1 fav; 3. Grand Voyage 13-2. 8 ran. 1l, 7l. (A Honeyball). Tote: £6.50; £1.80, £1.60, £2.00. Exacta: £25.90. Tricast: £109.53. Trifecta: £144.90. CSF: £23.30. 4.00 1. MISS MILANO (C Rabbitt) 13-2; 2. Armchair Farmer 4-7 fav; 3. Grand Du Nord 9-2. 4 ran. 17l, 24l. (N Richards). Tote: £7.50; Exacta: £10.10. Trifecta: £17.40. CSF: £11.71. NR: Horacio Apple’s. 4.40 1. FINGAL’S HILL (T Dowson) 15-2; 2. Heros 7-1; 3. Couldbeaweapon 10-3. 9 ran. 3-1 fav Saturday Song (4th). 1l, 21/4l. (P Atkinson). Tote: £8.50; £2.30, £1.90, £1.60. Exacta: £65.00. Tricast: £209.16. Trifecta: £288.00. CSF: £58.96. NRs: Hasty Brook, No Tackle. 5.15 1. LUCKIE SEVEN (D McMenamin) 4-1; 2. Crystal Mer 9-2; 3. Destroytheevidence 9-1. 8 ran. 3-1 fav It’s Tuesday (5th). 2l, 33/4l. (N Richards). Tote: £5.20; £1.60, £1.80, £2.60. Exacta: £23.70. Trifecta: £128.20. CSF: £21.88. NRs: The Old Bull, Zolpharine. Placepot: £196.10. Quadpot: £130.10. Place 6: £109.88. Place 5: £103.15. ICE HOCKEY NHL: New Jersey Devils 3 Tampa Bay Lightning 4 (SO); New York Rangers 4 Pittsburgh Penguins 2; Florida Panthers 9 Montreal Canadiens 5; Ottawa Senators 4 Colorado Avalanche 5; Nashville Predators 1 Chicago Blackhawks 2; Winnipeg Jets 0 Boston Bruins 3; Edmonton Oilers 4 Dallas Stars 1; Arizona Coyotes 3 Vancouver Canucks 2; Vegas Golden Knights 2 Calgary Flames 7; Los Angeles Kings 4 Columbus Blue Jackets 1; San Jose Sharks 1 Seattle Kraken 2 (OT). MOTOR RACING RALLY MEXICO, LEON, MEXICO, Stage 2: 1 O Tanak (Est) Ford 1min 54.2secs, 2 K Rovanpera (Fin) Toyota +1.7, 3 E Lappi (Fin) Hyundai +2.2, 4 T Neuville (Bel) Hyundai +2.8, 5 S Ogier (Fr) Toyota +2.8, 6 E Evans (GB) Toyota +3.3, 7 D Sordo (Sp) Hyundai +3.4, 8 P-Louis Loubet (Fr) Ford +3.7, 9 T Katsuta (Japan) Toyota +4.1, 10 E Lindholm (Fin) Skoda +6.1, 12 G Greensmith (GB) Skoda +8.0secs. RUGBY LEAGUE BETFRED SUPER LEAGUE Huddersfield (6).............. 12 Wigan (8)....................14 Huddersfield: Tries: Naiqama. Goals: Russell (4). Wigan: Tries: French (2), Wardle. Goals: Smith. Att: 5,777. St Helens (4).........................20 Hull (0)...........................12 St Helens: Tries: Davies, Bennison (2), Welsby. Goals: Lussick (2). Hull: Tries: Taylor, Clifford. Goals: Clifford (2). Warrington (22)...............38 Leigh (8).......................20 Warrington: Tries: Drinkwater, Vaughan, Ratchford, Dufty, Ashton (3). Goals: Ratchford (5). Leigh: Tries: Briscoe, Charnley, Amone, Hardaker. Goals: Hardaker (2). Att: 12,073. P W D L F A Pts Warrington 5 5 0 0 160 76 10 Catalans D 4 4 0 0 108 46 8 Wigan 5 3 0 2 138 57 6 Huddersfield 4 2 0 2 72 46 4 Salford 4 2 0 2 110 84 4 St Helens 4 2 0 2 80 63 4 Hull K R 4 2 0 2 86 76 4 Leeds 5 2 0 3 87 102 4 Leigh 5 2 0 3 86 109 4 Hull 5 2 0 3 86 166 4 Castleford 5 1 0 4 56 136 2 Wakefield 4 0 0 4 24 132 0 RUGBY UNION RFU CHAMPIONSHIP Bedford (24).........................39 Richmond (0).............5 SKIING FIS ALPINE SKIING WORLD CUP FINALS, SOLDEU, ANDORRA, Mixed Team Parallel: 1 Norway, 2 Switzerland, 3 Austria, 4 Germany, 5 Italy, 6 Androrra. Standings: 1 Norway 400pts, 2 Switzerland 320, 3 Austria 240, 4 Germany 200, 5 Italy 180, 6 Andorra 160. TODAY’S FIXTURES BASKETBALL BBL CHAMPIONSHIP: Plymouth City Patriots v Cheshire Phoenix, Surrey Scorchers v Caledonia Gladiators. CRICKET SECOND ONE DAY INTERNATIONAL: South Africa v West Indies (East London, 11am). SECOND TEST MATCH—SECOND DAY OF FIVE: New Zealand v Sri Lanka (Wellington, 10pm). GOLF USPGA TOUR VALSPAR CHAMPIONSHIP (Palm Harbor, Florida). DP WORLD TOUR SDC CHAMPIONSHIP (Eastern Cape, South Africa). LADIES EUROPEAN TOUR ARAMCO TEAM SERIES - SINGAPORE. USPGA TOUR CHAMPIONS HOAG CLASSIC (Newport Beach, California).+ ICE HOCKEY ELITE LEAGUE: Belfast Giants v Cardiff Devils, Coventry Blaze v Dundee Stars, Guildford Flames v Glasgow Clan, Manchester Storm v Fife Flyers, Sheffield Steelers v Nottingham Panthers. NETBALL VITALITY SUPERLEAGUE:Severn Stars v Manchester Thunder. RUGBY LEAGUE BETFRED SUPER LEAGUE (5.0): Catalans Dragons v Hull K R. BETFRED CHAMPIONSHIP (3.0): Newcastle v London Broncos, Widnes v Toulouse. BETFRED LEAGUE 1 (3.0): London Skolars v Hunslet. RUGBY UNION GUINNESS SIX NATIONS. PW D L F A 4 4 0 0 122 56 4 3 0 1 133 87 4 2 0 2 92 84 4 2 0 2 84 106 4 1 0 3 56 106 4 0 0 4 75 123 Ireland France Scotland England Wales Italy B 3 3 2 2 1 1 Pts 19 15 10 10 5 1 France v Wales (2.45), Ireland v England (5.0), Scotland v Italy. RFU CHAMPIONSHIP (2.0): Ampthill v Doncaster, Coventry v Caldy (3.0), Jersey Reds v Hartpury RFC, London Scottish v Cornish Pirates (3.0), Nottingham v Ealing Trailfinders. NATIONAL LEAGUE 1 (2.0): Chinnor v Leeds Tykes (3.0), Hull v Birmingham Moseley. NATIONAL LEAGUE 2 NORTH (3.0): Harrogate v Huddersfield, Hull Ionians v Sedgley Park, Sheffield Tigers v Otley. 2 WEST (2.0): Hinckley v Loughborough Students (3.0), Newport (Salop) v Redruth (2.15), Old Redcliffians v Luctonians. 2 EAST (3.0): Bury St Edmunds v Blackheath, Henley v North Walsham, Old Albanians v Westcliff, Rochford Hundred v Dorking (2.0), Sevenoaks v Barnes. TOMORROW’S FIXTURES BASKETBALL BBL CHAMPIONSHIP: London Lions v Sheffield Sharks, Manchester Giants v Newcastle Eagles, Plymouth City Patriots v Cheshire Phoenix. ICE HOCKEY ELITE LEAGUE: Belfast Giants v Cardiff Devils, Dundee Stars v Coventry Blaze, Fife Flyers v Glasgow Clan, Nottingham Panthers v Manchester Storm, Sheffield Steelers v Guildford Flames. NETBALL VITALITY SUPERLEAGUE: Loughborough Lightning v Leeds Rhinos. RUGBY LEAGUE BETFRED SUPER LEAGUE (3.0): Salford v Wakefield. BETFRED CHAMPIONSHIP (3.0): Bradford v Sheffield, Halifax v Keighley, Swinton v Featherstone, York v Whitehaven. RUGBY UNION PREMIERSHIP RUGBY CUP FINAL (2.0): London Irish v Exeter. GUINNESS U20 SIX NATIONS (2.0): France v Wales (8.0), Ireland v England (5.0), Scotland v Italy. PW D L F A B Pts Ireland 4 4 0 0 203 92 3 19 France 4 3 0 1 155 79 4 16 England 4 3 0 1 117 124 3 15 Italy 4 1 0 3 108 129 6 10 Scotland 4 1 0 3 73 194 1 5 Wales 4 0 0 4 90 128 3 3
Slip NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 ‘Once I got the bipolar label, it felt like a problem’ CRICKET Ex-captain Paine calls time on his career Former Australia Test captain Tim Paine has ended his cricket career. Wicketkeeper Paine played 35 Tests for Australia, including 23 as skipper after Steve Smith was stripped of the role following a ball-tampering scandal during the team’s 2018 tour of South Africa. Paine quit the Test captaincy in November 2021 following revelations that he was investigated in 2018 for sending lewd text messages. He subsequently withdrew from the game and took a mental health break for nearly a year before returning to play domestic cricket. TENNIS Raducanu is left out of GB team for key cup tie Olympian Caragh McMurtry reveals how a misdiagnosis harmed her career – and that the discovery she had autism changed everything. By George Simms T 91 SPORT IN BRIEF ROWING rying to make it to the Olympics is a challenge enough on its own. Trying to make it while on medication that means it is extremely difficult to get out of bed, feeling as though neither the world nor your coaches understand you, is near impossible. That is Caragh McMurtry’s story. She spent nearly a decade on the Team GB Olympic rowing squad, yet every day presented its own struggle far beyond the expected rigours of training and elite competition. McMurtry has Autism Spectrum Condition (ASC). Autism is so wideranging and varied that finding a specific definition can be difficult, but it is a form of neurodivergence, thinking differently. It is often characterised by challenges with social interaction, sensory over- or undersensitivity and highly focused interests or hobbies. Other common neurodivergent conditions include Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Dyslexia, Dyspraxia and Tourette’s Syndrome. McMurtry was diagnosed in 2019, aged 28. For five years beforehand she was misdiagnosed with bipolar disorder, having been sent to visit therapists and doctors in 2014 as her mental health worsened. She was prescribed lithium, lamotrigine and quetiapine, two mood stabilisers and an antipsychotic. Lithium alone is often enough to severely impede daily function, and side-effects can include severe drowsiness, weight gain, and suicidal thoughts. None of those are exactly conducive to becoming an Olympic athlete. Yet McMurtry persevered. “For five years I was just hanging around, being made to feel like crap, never SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 quite performing as well as I could do but still beating a lot of other people,” she tells i. “It was the medication more than anything, but also the diagnosis. I used to think I was a bit unhinged. I actually felt it was my secret weapon. I was proud of being able to go that little bit further. “Once I got the bipolar label, it felt like a problem. Suddenly it became a weapon against myself, it undermined me. I had never tried so hard as when I was on that medication, but I’d never performed as badly.” When Brendan Purcell became British Rowing’s performance director in 2019, everything changed for McMurtry. Promoting a personcentred approach, Purcell sent her to the UK Sport Mental Health Panel. She was their first client. “I hit a wall and said ‘I can’t do this any more. I need some help’,” McMurtry explains. “Very early on [the mental health panel] realised I was neurodivergent, I have a different way of processing and thinking. “Before that, they were supposed to be making me better, but it was getting worse. The misdiagnosis actually exacerbated all my neurodivergent struggles. Before that, when things were bad it was ‘go to the doctor, go to the Priory, get cognitive behavioural therapy’. It was like someone had read WebMD.” McMurtry’s autism diagnosis ­massively improved both her everyday life and rowing performance. Within a year, her 2k race time improved by 17 seconds. Suddenly, she realised why everything had not quite made sense before. “When I came off the medication and got the support I needed, my performance shot up, because I’d still been doing everything right, I just wasn’t getting the ­results,” she says. McMurtry finally made it to the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, rowing in the women’s eight. While it did not go to plan, she had demonstrated a single-minded determination and ability to push herself beyond expected limitations which has become associated with autism. In many ways, it was her autism that had made her a great athlete in the first place, as Michael Phelps or Simone Biles have said of their ADHD. “If I decide to do something, if I really believe in something and you convince me why it’s the right thing to do, I will do it, I will find a way. “The problem comes when people don’t explain it in a way that suits my brain. Sometimes it’s hard to get into something or change what I’m doing, but once I’m on track, I can Caragh McMurtry (fifth from left) with the GB eight at the Tokyo Olympics GETTY go and go. Being autistic, I’m very passionate about the things I care about. Autism seems to come with a drive to make life worth something, because your mind forces you to pursue whatever your passion is.” McMurtry retired last December at 31, and now runs Neurodiverse Sport, an organisation she founded to help other neurodivergent sports­people. She says she has been contacted by around 150 elite or Olympic athletes since starting. “My main priority is making sure people don’t go through what I went through. You never know what you’re capable of, but I know I’m capable of a lot more than I achieved, especially in the five years I was on lithium. I didn’t need to go through those traumatic experiences and be made to feel so small and so wrong, and ­different, like nothing I said or did was right or good. I would never want anyone to go through that,” she says. “If a neurodivergent person is good enough to make it to the top in their worst environment, imagine if we actually gave them a bit of ­understanding and support? “People just don’t have an ­understanding. I was always told ‘you need fixing’, but in retrospect, what made me different made me a really f**king good athlete. When they tried to fix me, I lost it.” Ultimately, McMurtry hopes that her work to raise awareness, and the work done by organisations like Neurodiversity Celebration Week (13-19 March), will mean others do not have to struggle in the same way. “Once we accept that people don’t need to be the same and people don’t need to conform, things will progress” she says. “Being autistic is being ­different, not being wrong.” Emma Raducanu will not feature in Great Britain’s Billie Jean King Cup Finals qualifying tie against France next month. Captain Anne Keothavong has named the same team which reached the semi-finals in September and said former US Open champion Raducanu was “unavailable” for the two-day tie in Coventry from 14 April. Raducanu (right) said after her opening victory in Indian Wells that she did not even know when the tie was, a comment which did not appear to go down well with Keothavong. The captain posted on social media, seemingly in r­ eference to Raducanu’s revelation: “My communication skills are ­generally good in case anyone was wondering.” RUGBY LEAGUE French brace ensures Wigan bounce back Two tries from Bevan French proved just enough to ensure Wigan would avoid consecutive Super League defeats as they dredged up a 14-12 win over Huddersfield at the John Smith’s Stadium. Errors from both sides scattered a thoroughly disjointed affair but Matt Peet’s men proved marginally more clinical at the business end as they bounced back from last week’s surprise home defeat to Catalans. Matty Ashton bagged himself a hat-trick of tries as leaders Warrington eased past Leigh Leopards 38-20. St Helens proved too powerful for Hull running out 20-12 winners.
92 SPORT KEMPTON GOOD TO SOFT NOVICES’ LIMITED HANDICAP CHASE ITV4 (GBB RACE) (CLASS 3) £21,400 added 2m 2f 1 423112 CAP DU MATHAN (BF) P Nicholls 8 11 10.............H Cobden T 2 33-211 WHISTLEINTHEDARK L Morgan 8 11 9..........P Cowley (3) H 3 43-883 ANY NEWS N Mulholland 8 11 2.........S Twiston-Davies C,T 4 6231-1 STORMIN CROSSGALES T R George 6 11 1... J J Burke H,T 5 /1147P QUID PRO QUO D Skelton 7 10 13.................................F Gregory T 6 /223-F ATHOLL STREET Alexandra Dunn 8 10 7..............C Ring (3) T 7 -FPP22 TRIPLE TRADE Joe Tizzard 7 10 5.....................................B J Powell - 7 declared BETTING: 2-1 Stormin Crossgales, 7-2 Cap Du Mathan, 4-1 Whistleinthedark, 5-1 Any News, 8-1 Triple Trade, 10-1 others. 1.30 FORM VERDICT An important clue to the outcome of this race could be the Wincanton clash between STORMIN CROSSGALES (first) and Cap Du Mathan (second) in November, and it is the Tom George-trained six-year-old who is taken to uphold the form on just his second go over fences, with the step up in trip expected to suit. The progressive Whistleinthedark is two from two over the larger obstacles so has to be considered closely too. VIRGIN BET HANDICAP HURDLE (GBB RACE) ITV4 (CLASS 2) £40,000 added 2m 5f 1 1UPP01 PRESS YOUR LUCK (CD) C Gordon 8 12 0.Mr F Gordon (7) 2 411-34 PULL AGAIN GREEN (D) F O’Brien 7 11 10.L Harrison (3) T 3 37-206 A DIFFERENT KIND D McCain 6 11 9...........P J Kavanagh (5) 4 1-134P HARBOUR LAKE (D) A King 7 11 8................ S Twiston-Davies 5 121P21 OUTLAW PETER (CD) P Nicholls 7 11 6....................H Cobden T 6 1P337P UHTRED D Skelton 8 11 5............................................................F Gregory 7 /111-6 LADY ADARE H Fry 7 11 4..........................................................J J Burke T 8 21-414 YORKSEA G L Moore 5 11 2......................................N F Houlihan (3) 9 -42224 TOO FRIENDLY D Skelton 5 11 2......................Bridget Andrews 10 7-11P4 SCARFACE (D) Joe Tizzard 6 11 2.......................................B J Powell 11 128-4P THE BOMBER LISTON N Henderson 7 10 13.. N De Boinville 12 6-1213 MOVEIT LIKE MINNIE (D)(BF) N Twiston-Davies 6 10 7 .........................................................................................................................F Lambert (5) T - 12 declared BETTING: 4-1 Outlaw Peter, 7-1 Pull Again Green, 8-1 The Bomber Liston, Harbour Lake, Yorksea, Press Your Luck, 10-1 others. 2.05 FORM VERDICT A taking winner of this contest last year off 8lb lower, PRESS YOUR LUCK can repeat the feat, having returned to form with an easy success at Wincanton last month. Disappointing in the Lanzarote over C&D in January, Outlaw Peter has got back on track since and must enter calculations, along with Too Friendly, who keeps on running well without getting his head in front. Others to note include Harbour Lake, Lady Adare and Pull Again Green. FORM VERDICT COLLECTORS ITEM lost little in defeat when going down by a short head in a Grade 2 contest at Haydock last month and he may have been let in lightly on this handicap debut off a mark of 132. Lord Snootie lurks at the foot of the weights and was last seen winning on his handicap bow at Warwick on New Year’s Eve. With the second from that race subsequently bolting up, he’s feared most, ahead of Wilde About Oscar, who was far from disgraced when coming home in sixth in a Grade 3 event at Sandown in February. RACING CHELTENHAM FESTIVAL MIDLANDS GRAND NATIONAL HANDICAP ITV4 CHASE (CLASS 1) £150,000 added 4m 2f 1 3/11-1 IWILLDOIT S Thomas 10 12 0..............................................S Sheppard 2 RP-B23 MR INCREDIBLE W P Mullins (IRE) 7 11 4...............Doubtful 3 1D-3F2 THE GALLOPING BEAR Ben Clarke 10 11 4...B R Jones C,T 4 -P0188 FLOUEUR G Hanmer 8 11 1..................Tabitha Worsley (3) C,T 5 F1-1F1 FRENCH PARADOXE O Signy 8 10 13................... G Sheehan H 6 21UFPF CAPTAIN KANGAROO W P Mullins (IRE) 8 10 8.D E Mullins T 7 36-945 TRUCKERS LODGE (CD) P Nicholls 11 10 8............... B Frost B 8 1F-141 GUETAPAN COLLONGES (C) C Longsdon 7 10 5..J O’Neill Jr 9 23-437 NOTACHANCE A King 9 10 5................................................ T Cannon C 10 1-2241 TILE TAPPER Chris Honour 9 10 5.......................................S Bowen 11 42-731 THE TWO AMIGOS Nicky Martin 11 10 5.........D Prichard (5) 12 5P-923 SECRET REPRIEVE E Williams 9 10 5.............................A Wedge 13 30-PP8 TIME TO GET UP (CD) Jonjo O’Neill 10 10 3...K Brogan C,T 14 31-341 SCIPION T Lacey 7 10 2.....................................................................J Tudor C 15 123-03 MAJOR DUNDEE A King 8 10 2...................................................R Dingle 16 P-PP21 BUSHYPARK P Kirby 9 10 2.......................................................T Dowson 17 113P-1 MAX DYNAMO Mrs E Bishop 13 10 2........H Beswick (3) H,T 18 7P3414 D’JANGO D Pipe 10 10 2.........................................Sean Houlihan B,T - 18 declared BETTING: 9-2 Guetapan Collonges, 5-1 Iwilldoit, 7-1 The Galloping Bear, 8-1 French Paradoxe, 10-1 The Two Amigos, Secret Reprieve, 12-1 others. 3.00 FORM VERDICT A competitive renewal of this valuable event, in which marginal preference is for MAJOR DUNDEE, who has found 3m on decent ground too sharp on his two starts so far this season. As a result, he is now 3lb lower than when third in the Scottish Grand National last year and that form gives him a big chance. Iwilldoit is an obvious threat following his Classic Chase victory in January, although an 8lb rise will make his life tougher. The Galloping Bear could easily make the frame if fully recovered from his effort in the Eider three weeks ago, while The Two Amigos and French Paradoxe are others to note. 3.35 NOVICES’ HANDICAP CHASE (GBB RACE) (CLASS 2) £40,000 added 3m ITV4 1 1-1512 IRON BRIDGE Jonjo O’Neill 7 12 0.......................Jonjo O’Neill Jr 2 2-219P FERN HILL (C) B Case 8 12 0.................................................S Sheppard 3 32-431 GUSTAVIAN (C)(D) A Honeyball 8 12 0........................R Dingle T 4 121-21 SUPER SURVIVOR (D) J Snowden 7 11 9.................. G Sheehan 5 10-213 OUR JET (BF) D Skelton 7 11 8............................................H Skelton T 6 314-21 BLACKJACK MAGIC (D) A Honeyball 8 11 7.....A Coleman T 7 30F-P3 DANS LE VENT (D) E Williams 10 11 5.Isabel Williams (3) VIRGIN BET FIVES HANDICAP CHASE (GBB 565-31 MISTER WATSON B Pauling 9 11 2....................................T Cannon ITV4 8 RACE) (CLASS 2) £60,000 added 2m 4f 110yds 9 352-31 MACKELDUFF (D) O Murphy 7 11 2.....................................S Bowen 1 3F-10P BRAVE SEASCA (D) V Williams 8 12 2..........................C Deutsch 10 32-222 AUTONOMOUS CLOUD (BF) F O’Brien 7 11 2..... A P Heskin 2 P2-P4P MISTER FISHER (CD) N Henderson 9 11 10.. N De Boinville C 11 D-1422 HOW’S THE CRICKET (D) H Fry 8 10 5....B Bromley (5) C,T - 11 declared 3 12-512 COMPLETE UNKNOWN (D)(BF) P Nicholls 7 11 6.H Cobden BETTING: 9-2 Super Survivor, 6-1 Gustavian, Iron Bridge, 7-1 Blackjack 4 13U-10 FANTASTIC LADY (D) N Henderson 8 11 5.S Twiston-Davies Magic, 8-1 Mackelduff, Autonomous Cloud, Our Jet, 10-1 others. 5 1244-2 FIDELIO VALLIS (C) Harry Derham 8 11 5........ Paul O’Brien 6 P3-539 SILVER HALLMARK (D) F O’Brien 9 11 1.......................... C Brace FORM VERDICT 7 4-F596 ROUGE VIF H Whittington 9 11 1...........................................D Jacob T 8 2-2921 GALAHAD QUEST (D) J Williams 7 10 12.........D Noonan C,T OUR JET was a beaten favourite over an extended 2m3f at Wetherby 9 13-444 BEAKSTOWN (D) D Skelton 10 10 11.................B Andrews C,T last time, but he was not disgraced on that occasion and the son of Jet Away may relish this step up in trip. If he does, a mark of 131 may 10 F-27P7 CAPTAIN TOM CAT (D) Dr R Newland 8 10 11.C Hammond not be enough to stop him. Super Survivor accounted for a useful 11 -52935 DUBLIN FOUR (D) F O’Brien 9 10 10........................J Hogan (5) T rival at Chepstow in December and is an obvious threat. Iron Bridge is 12 496618 JACAMAR (CD) M Harris 8 10 10......................................J J Burke V another who should benefit from going up in trip, and the consistent 13 185563 ONE TRUE KING (D) N Twiston-Davies 8 10 6......J Nailor C Autonomous Cloud is likely to be in the mix once again. - 13 declared BETTING: 4-1 Complete Unknown, 13-2 Galahad Quest, 7-1 Fidelio Vallis, 8-1 Fantastic Lady, Mister Fisher, 10-1 Brave Seasca, 12-1 others. 2.40 FORM VERDICT Value may lie with talented mare FANTASTIC LADY, who is far better than she showed at Cheltenham on New Year’s Day. The eight-year-old, who plundered a Listed prize at Market Rasen prior to that, should be far better suited by this track, with the ground also in her favour. Course winner Fidelio Vallis made a pleasing enough start for Harry Derham at Musselburgh, while Complete Unknown lost little in defeat behind a good mare in a Warwick Grade 2. Brave Seasca and Galahad Quest can also have a say. VIRGIN BET HANDICAP CHASE (CLASS 4) £13,400 added 3m 1 3/32-2 SOUTHERN SAM R Bandey 9 12 0.............................. H Bannister 2 -22141 JUST DON’T KNOW (D) Paul Robson 10 11 13.Craig Nichol 3 061315 HARLEM SOUL Syd Hosie 5 11 12.............................................J Nailor 4 -PF344 EDE’IFFS ELTON (BF) R Walford 9 11 10.........H Cobden C,T 5 51-PF0 PUTDECASHONTHEDASH K Burke 10 11 7......... D Jacob C,T 6 2/1P41 NORTHERN POET N Gifford 8 11 5.................................J M Davies 7 -63372 ANIMAL Miss Suzy Smith 7 11 3..................................C Hammond 8 -1132P OZZIE MAN (D)(BF) G L Moore 7 11 3...................... D Noonan C 9 62-5P5 MISTER MURCHAN (D) R Rowe 10 11 0.N F Houlihan (3) C 10 P-P514 UALLRIGHTHARRY (D) K Jewell 11 10 13............ B J Powell C 11 2-4P83 I’M A STARMAN M Rimell 10 10 5.........S Twiston-Davies B - 11 declared BETTING: 4-1 Just Don’t Know, 9-2 Southern Sam, 6-1 Northern Poet, 8-1 Ozzie Man, Ede’iffs Elton, Animal, 10-1 others. FONTWELL BETGOODWIN OUR BEST ODDS GUARANTEED MARES’ HANDICAP CHASE (CLASS 4) £14,800 added 3m 2f 1 -15124 ROSE OF ARCADIA (CD) Joe Tizzard 8 12 2.H Kimber (3) T 2 -61511 LOVE ACTUALLY K Burke 7 11 3...................................Jamie Moore 3 0-25P3 GOOD LOOK CHARM A Honeyball 7 11 2.B Godfrey (3) B,T 4 3-3132 DO YOU THINK E Lavelle 7 10 12.........................................T Bellamy - 4 declared BETTING: 13-8 Love Actually, 2-1 Rose Of Arcadia, 4-1 Do You Think, 5-1 Good Look Charm. 4.20 3.50 UTTOXETER SOFT OPTIMUM EXPERIENCE HANDICAP ITV4 HURDLE (CLASS 3) £14,000 added 2m 4f 1 3P7-37 UP FOR PAROL J Snowden 7 12 0..................................... G Sheehan 2 1P8-P2 STAG HORN (D) A Watson 6 11 12.......................... N Scholfield C 3 23-211 HITCHING JACKING (CD) D Skelton 6 11 12.............H Skelton 4 4-9124 RAFFERTY’S RETURN (D) R Menzies 8 11 12....N Moscrop 5 3PP-10 OPTIMISE PRIME (D) B Pauling 7 11 11.........................T Cannon 6 /11-10 EQUUS DANCER (D) P Bowen 9 11 10..........................S Bowen C 7 125-58 DEL LA MAR ROCKET B Pauling 7 11 5............................. D Bass T 8 1P-4PP CHINWAG (D) N Mulholland 8 11 4..................... A P Heskin B,T 9 12-8P6 BATMAN FOR EVER R Menzies 6 10 10.....................T Dowson 10 P/7887 LIMITED RESERVE Christian Williams 11 10 3...J Tudor C - 10 declared BETTING: 15-8 Hitching Jacking, 6-1 Rafferty’s Return, Up For Parol, 7-1 Optimise Prime, 10-1 Equus Dancer, Stag Horn, 12-1 others. 1.50 FORM VERDICT HITCHING JACKING completed a brace of wins over hurdles when displaying a game attitude at Wetherby in January and Dan Skelton’s gelding could have more to offer now foraying into handicaps. Up For Parol finished a cracking third in the Lanzarote in January and, although disappointing at Carlisle last month, he is feared most. Rafferty’s Return arrives in better form than most and completes the shortlist. OPTIMUM PAY HANDICAP HURDLE ITV4 (GBB RACE) (CLASS 2) £50,000 added 2m 7f 1 P1-35P SAM BROWN (D) A Honeyball 11 12 0...................A Coleman T 2 1-P21P FLIGHT DECK Jonjo O’Neill 9 11 11................................ K Brogan C 3 11-140 DOLPHIN SQUARE (D) P Hobbs & J White 9 11 9.S Houlihan C 4 314-1P BALLYGRIFINCOTTAGE (D)(BF) D Skelton 8 11 7 ............................................................................................................................. F Gillard (3) T 5 51-495 PARTY BUSINESS I Williams 7 11 4..........................................C Todd 6 2-7034 GENTLEMAN AT ARMS S Edmunds 6 11 3..... C Gethings T 7 7-03P6 WILDE ABOUT OSCAR (C) D Skelton 8 11 3........H Skelton T 8 /0-81F LYNWOOD GOLD (D) B Barr 8 11 2.............................. G Sheehan T 9 44-P20 STELLAR MAGIC P Hobbs & J White 8 11 1....... B R Jones C 10 11U-3P ASK ME EARLY (C) H Fry 9 11 0..........................................S Bowen T 11 2-1512 COLLECTORS ITEM Jonjo O’Neill 6 10 13...Jonjo O’Neill Jr 12 13-1 TRELAWNE K Bailey 7 10 11.............................................................. D Bass 13 2-2413 SILVER FLYER (BF) D McCain 7 10 7......................A P Heskin C 14 13741 LORD SNOOTIE Christian Williams 6 10 2......................J Tudor - 14 declared BETTING: 9-2 Collectors Item, 6-1 Lord Snootie, Trelawne, 8-1 Wilde About Oscar, 10-1 Ballygrifincottage, Flight Deck, Ask Me Early, 12-1 Silver Flyer, Party Business, Dolphin Square, 14-1 others. 2.25 SOFT NEWCASTLE SOFT GUINNESS COLD BREW COFFEE HANDICAP HURDLE (CLASS 3) £15,400 added 2m 1f 1 1-1551 STAINSBY GIRL (CD) N Alexander 9 12 0.Mr K Alexander (5) 2 3/6-0P BAND OF OUTLAWS B Haslam 8 11 13................ J Hamilton C 3 42P-25 ALBERT’S BACK M & D Easterby 9 11 10..................B Hughes 4 P0-19P LEBOWSKI M Scudamore 8 11 6.................P W Wadge (5) H,T 5 8248F3 VOIX DU REVE (C)(D) I Jardine 11 11 5.............T Midgley (5) C 6 543134 THEREISNODOUBT (D) L Russell 10 11 3.............D R Fox H,T 7 7-4110 WAR SOLDIER (C) A M Thomson 6 11 3........D McMenamin 8 31284/ HOUSTON BERE (D) A Hales 6 11 1........................ Sean Quinlan - 8 declared BETTING: 3-1 War Soldier, Stainsby Girl, 4-1 Thereisnodoubt, 6-1 Voix Du Reve, 7-1 Albert’s Back, 8-1 Lebowski, 20-1 others. GUINNESS NITRO SURGE HANDICAP CHASE (CLASS 3) £18,000 added 2m 7f 1 11P-3P OMAR MARETTI (CD) A Hales 9 12 1................................D R Fox C 2 5-6128 BURROWS DIAMOND (C) S Smith 8 11 13..... Sean Quinlan 3 3-682P BAVINGTON BOB (CD) A Hamilton 8 11 12.D McMenamin B 4 P0-0P4 BLAKLION D Skelton 14 11 11......................................T Durrell (5) T 5 P-4536 SMALL PRESENT Sue Smith 8 11 5............................. R Chapman 6 2-3422 GERYVILLE (CD)(BF) M Hammond 7 11 1...................B Hughes 7 26-316 DONNA’S DOUBLE (C)(BF) A M Thomson 7 10 13.T Midgley (5) 8 9-5P38 THE FERRY MASTER (CD) A M Thomson 10 10 10.H Brooke C,T 9 21-5FP NICEANDEASY (C) N Alexander 10 10 8.............C O’Farrell C 10 -26833 CASH TO ASH (CD) M Walford 10 10 8...........J Hamilton C,T - 10 declared BETTING: 7-2 Geryville, 6-1 Small Present, 7-1 Burrows Diamond, Omar Maretti, 8-1 Bavington Bob, Cash To Ash, Donna’s Double, 10-1 others. 2.50 3.25 THURLES SOFT PIERCE MOLONY MEMORIAL NOVICE CHASE (GRADE 3) (CLASS 1) E26,549 added 2m 2f 1 -34311 INDIANA JONES M F Morris 7 11 8...................D J O’Keeffe C,T 2 126333 SOLE PRETENDER (D) N Lee 9 11 5......................S D Torrens H 3 -113FB UPPING THE ANTI H De Bromhead 7 11 5....... R Blackmore 4 2-3173 FLAME BEARER (C)(BF) W P Mullins 8 11 1.P Townend T 5 1P-1FP GLENGOULY (CD) W P Mullins 7 11 1............................Jack Foley 6 148414 IL COURRA C Farrell 8 11 1................................M J M O’Sullivan T 7 9-3332 LARGY DEBUT H De Bromhead 8 11 1...............S W Flanagan - 7 declared BETTING: 13-8 Flame Bearer, 9-4 Indiana Jones, 7-2 Sole Pretender, 10-1 Upping The Anti, Glengouly, 14-1 Il Courra, Largy Debut. 2.30 WOLVERHAMPTON STANDARD TOP ODDS EVERY DAY WITH BETUK HANDICAP (RIDER RESTRICTED RACE) (CLASS 3) £18,800 added 1m 4f 1 -14111 ZEALOT M Appleby 5 10 4(5ex)........Billy Loughnane (5) C 5 2 24-112 NOLTON CROSS (CD) H Palmer 4 9 4.........................T Whelan 7 3 3-8923 PROTECTED GUEST (D) G Margarson 8 9 4..H Burns (3) 2 4 111131 BUXTED TOO (D) I Williams 5 9 2...........................S Feilden (7) 8 5 42-212 OBSIDIAN KNIGHT (D) T Kent 5 8 10..............L Williams (7) 3 6 U5257- IN THE BREEZE (D) M Appleby 5 8 9.................................. T Ladd 4 7 11223- WHIMSY (D) A Balding 4 8 7..........................................................W Cox 1 8 4461-7 MYBOYMAX (C)(D) M Hammond 5 8 7..........A Brookes (5) 6 - 8 declared BETTING: 9-4 Zealot, 4-1 Nolton Cross, 9-2 Buxted Too, Obsidian Knight, 7-1 Whimsy, 12-1 Protected Guest, 16-1 In The Breeze, 33-1 Myboymax. 7.00 Townend keeps his cool to win for Mullins Jon Freeman RACING EDITOR AT PRESTBURY PARK It was another happy St Patrick’s Day for Willie Mullins at Cheltenham as Galopin Des Champs, the ace in the Irish champion trainer’s starstudded pack, won the race of the season, the Gold Cup. Watched from the second-last fence, everything seemed straightforward as Galopin Des Champs loomed alongside Bravemansgame and then surged clear to win by an emphatic seven lengths. But this was a triumph for the class and cool of stable jockey Paul Townend, who judged expertly every twist and turn and change in momentum throughout a dramatic ROUND-UP Andrews turns back clock for sweet Faivoir victory By Jon Freeman An abiding memory of the 2018 Festival is Bridget Andrews and her soonto-be husband Harry Skelton embracing after one of our foremost female jump jockeys had swooped to conquer aboard Mohaayed in the County Hurdle, her first ever winner at the meeting. Five blank years on and Bridget was back yesterday with her second Festival triumph, in the very same race on another 33-1 outsider, Faivoir. Both were for her brother-in-law trainer, Dan, who was saddling his fourth winner of the County Hurdle in the past eight years. This time Andrews (left) had to work harder on a horse she describes as “a character, a bit of a monkey” to get the better
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 93 FOOTBALL GOLD CUP RESULTS 1 Galopin Des Champs 7-5 (W Mullins) P Townend 2 Bravemansgame 6-1 (P Nicholls) H Cobden 3 Conflated 22-1 (G Elliott) S Ewing 4 Noble Yeats 14-1 (E Mullins) S Bowen For other results, see p90 contest in a ride Sir A P McCoy said was the best he had ever seen. It might be presumed that riding world-class horses for a world-class trainer every day was a relatively stress-free occupation, but the heat was definitely on in the build-up to the big day. Mullins felt it, perhaps not as convinced as he was letting on that Galopin Des Champs was guaranteed of the determined Pied Piper by a head, but it was a win that gave her just as much satisfaction after spending half of last year recovering from a broken neck sustained in a Warwick fall. Lossiemouth and Gala Marceau have dominated the juvenile hurdle scene in Ireland all season and duly proved much too good for the home team in the Triumph Hurdle. Willie Mullins is spoilt for choice in this division and though the much-fancied Blood Destiny flopped, it was still a 1-2-3-4 for the trainer with Zenta taking third spot and Gust Of Wind fourth. Gala Marceau beat Lossiemouth at Leopardstown last time, but the runner-up had valid excuses. to see out a distance – three and a quarter miles – he was trying for the first time. Galopin Des Champs is an exuberant character and Mullins had changed his whole training regime in order to get him as relaxed as possible. “There wasn’t so much fast work, it was all about stamina, switching him off and keeping the lid on,” the boss explained. Townend was the man charged with putting the concept into practice on the racecourse, when the chips were down, but rider and horse were so calm going about it that Mullins was soon fretting that the plan might have been overdone. “Was he too far back?” he wondered. “I thought he needed to get away from any deadwood at the back.” He needn’t have worried. Creeping closer down the back straight and avoiding the trouble caused by the front-running Ahoy Senor’s fall six fences from home, Townend was soon in touch with the leaders and once he drew alongside Bravemansgame at the second last it was basically all over. “It wasn’t clean sailing everywhere,” said the rider. “Everywhere I went, I ran into trouble, but I had faith in him getting me out of it and he did. “He’s a proper, proper horse because he’s run about three different races [within a race] and still won a Gold Cup.” Conflated, ridden for Michael O’Leary’s Gigginstown Stud by young Sam Ewing after Davy Russell stood himself down (“sore rib”), finished an honourable third, just ahead of last year’s Grand National winner Noble Yeats, who had been taken off his feet. Mullins rates Galopin Des Champs an exceptional Gold Cup winner and is already looking forward to bringing him back next year to defend his crown. Harry Cobden, who was already enjoying a good week with wins on Stage Star and Stay Away Fay, was delighted with Bravemansgame. “He did everything right and ran a phenomenal race,” said the jockey. “But the winner was better and I’m wondering how are we going to come back next year and beat him?” “She’s a star mare,” said Mullins. “And but for traffic problems last time, she’d be unbeaten.” That’s fighting talk, according to Kenny Alexander (also the owner of Honeysuckle), who can’t wait for Punchestown next month. “There will have to be a rematch,” he challenged. “I’m definitely not scared of taking her on again.” As for the Prestbury Cup, the annual friendly scrap between GB and Ireland for the most Festival winners, it was no contest again, wrapped up by the visitors on Thursday evening, prompting one unkind but reasonable suggestion that, for the time being at least, it should be GB v Mullins to make more of a contest of it. BEST BET Too Friendly (2.05, Kempton) Knocking on the door in competitive handicaps. Ready to win again. SUNDAY BEST Lord Du Mesnil (3.35, Carlisle) At his best on this testing ground. Secret Reprieve well suited to Uttoxeter run By Jon Freeman Four days at the Cheltenham Festival is a slog in itself and now it’s the Midlands Grand National, three and a bit laps around Uttoxeter, the longest race in the calendar aside from the big one at Aintree. Stamina is at a premium, especially when the going is as soft as it will be today. Step forward, at your own laboured pace, Secret Reprieve, Iwilldoit and The Two Amigos, the last three winners of the similarly arduous Welsh National. Secret Reprieve hasn’t been the easiest for Evan Williams to train, running only run only five times since his 2021 Chepstow triumph. But still only nine, there were signs of a revival on two winter outings and he turns up today fresh and nicely handicapped in a contest that suits his strengths down to the ground. Iwilldoit has proved even harder to keep sound and it was an achievement by trainer Sam Thomas to bring him back to the track more than a year after his Welsh National win to land Warwick’s Classic Chase last month. He commands respect again, even under top weight, while Notachance and Guetapan Collonges also make the shortlist, particularly the latter, who enjoyed gutsy success at today’s course last month. Willie Mullins’s Captain Kangaroo, Ireland’s only player after an exhausting week in the Cotswolds, is worth a second glance, but will need to jump a lot more like his namesakes to figure seriously here. Adam Wedge won the 2021 Welsh National on Secret Reprieve James tipped to fire England to World Cup glory By Megan Armitage Lauren James is the most exciting English talent since Kelly Smith and can fire the Lionesses to World Cup glory this summer, according to Euro 2022 champion Jill Scott. Chelsea ace James (below), 21, has emerged as a crucial cog in Sarina Wiegman’s England machine over the last year as her creativity helped them successfully defend their ­Arnold Clark Cup title. Lionesses legend Scott believes she can emulate former 46-goal England striker Smith and propel her country all the way in Australia. “I do think we can go there and win it,” she said. “We have such a great squad. You can just look at people like Lauren James, who is such an exciting talent. “She is a great player technically on the ball. I watch her and I just haven’t seen players like that since Kelly Smith. “I’m sure that Lauren can get the crowd on their feet if she makes this World Cup squad. “We will definitely be the best prepared team going into this summer – I’m really excited.” Scott was part of the team that made history in the Euro 2022 final at Wembley last summer, and she was back under the arch as a keynote speaker for the Women In Football Be Inspired Conference. She added: “This event is for all – for people who are already in the football community or those just embarking on their career in f­ ootball. So it’s fantastic to be here. It was a one-day event last year and they’ve grown it to two days now, which just shows how much the women’s game is progressing. “And it’s great to be back at Wembley. Being back here brings back so many memories of lifting that trophy on the pitch. “I don’t think I left the pitch for about an hour and a half after the final whistle, just going around and talking to fans. It gives me goosebumps being back.” LEWES CHELSEA Murphy hails ‘player activism’ over prize money Hayes: We will need everyone to compete for all Lewes chief executive Maggie Murphy says it would be “incredibly powerful” if Fifa’s talk of equal prize money for men’s and women’s World Cups became reality. On Thursday, Fifa president Gianni Infantino said the world governing body’s ambition was equal money for the 2026 men’s and 2027 women’s World Cups. Ahead of Lewes’ quarter-final at home to Manchester United tomorrow, Murphy said: “The ­important thing is prize money is now being put on the agenda as something that is up for debate, and has been seen to have too much disparity until now. “I think it’s really important that the players called for equal prize money for the World Cup, and it shows the power of player activism.” Chelsea manager Emma Hayes says the depth of her squad faces a huge test over the coming two weeks. Hayes’s FA Cup holders make a trip to Reading tomorrow for a quarter-final match, before they travel to Lyon on Wednesday for the first leg of their Champions League last-eight tie. A WSL match against Manchester City is up next on Sunday week, before the return leg against Lyon at Kingsmeadow. And Hayes said: “The whole squad has worked so hard so each and every one of us is able to play their best part. I know what we’ve developed over time. We’ve built a team to cope with these situations. “We’re going to need every single player.”
94 SPORT FOOTBALL IN BRIEF WEST HAM UNITED ‘We have to be higher up the table’ – Lanzini Manuel Lanzini knows West Ham need to replicate their European form in the Premier League. The Hammers have endured a tough campaign domestically and are embroiled in the relegation battle, a stark contrast to their run in the Europa Conference League, where they have won 10 in 10 to reach a quarter-final tie against Belgian side Gent. “When you win you get more confidence,” said Argentinian midfielder Lanzini. “It’s good for the group and we hope we’ll be able to get more wins in the League. That’s something we’ll continue to work on. “We have a team to be (higher) up. We need to sort that.” CHELSEA Mount’s England call-up a surprise for Potter Mason Mount’s inclusion in the England squad came as a surprise to Graham Potter, the Chelsea manager has revealed. The midfielder (below) has not featured in a club game since 26 February because of a pubic bone problem. Gareth Southgate left out clubmate Raheem Sterling, who has a hamstring problem. Mount was included but Potter made it clear he would not be joining up. “As far as I was aware, he wasn’t going to be available for us at the weekend. He needed a bit of time for his injury to settle down, which pretty much ruled him out of England. “It is just a bit of a niggly one with Mason,” he said. “He will have days when he feels good and then days when he has had setbacks.” BOURNEMOUTH O’Neil puts faith in bonding session Bournemouth boss Gary O’Neil is hoping clay pigeon shooting and a South American barbecue have helped the team build on their shock win over Liverpool. A draw at Aston Villa today could be enough to take the Cherries out of the relegation zone and O’Neil revealed some team bonding has only strengthened the cause. “A few of them thought it was a really good idea to do something together,” he said of the shooting and barbecue get-together. “We’ve had a lot of new players come in, I was in full support of it. They had a little afternoon, a local place, a few team-bonding exercises and a lot of smiles.” Slip PREMIER LEAGUE Isak penalty pinches win for wasteful Magpies NOTTINGHAM FOREST 1 Dennis 26 NEWCASTLE UNITED 2 Isak 45, pen 90 By Graham Hill AT THE CITY GROUND Alexander Isak scored a dramatic penalty in stoppage time, his second goal of the game as Newcastle gave their Champions League hopes a major boost. Eddie Howe’s side looked to have been denied victory by a controversial VAR decision. But recalled Forest defender Moussa Niakhaté handled in the box and Isak – who scored the winner against Wolves last week – took full advantage to take Newcastle to within a point of fourth-placed Tottenham. The result increased Forest’s fears of the drop as they lost at home for the first time since September. Emmanuel Dennis put Steve Cooper’s side ahead with an exqui- site chip after a poor back-pass from Newcastle defender Sven Botman. Newcastle equalised in first half stoppage time when £63million man Isak rescued a seemingly lost cause to volley in off the post. Howe’s men fell victim to a lengthy VAR check just after the hour. Substitute Elliott Anderson looked to have headed his first Newcastle goal to put his team ahead. But after VAR looked at the incident, and referee Paul Tierney looked at the pitchside monitor, it was ruled out for offside for the faintest of touches by Sean Longstaff. Newcastle deserved the win as they created the better chances, hitting the bar twice and forcing Forest keeper Keylor Navas to pull off two stunning saves. But they had to wait until late on to secure victory. Cooper’s side who took the lead after 26 minutes. Former Newcastle midfielder Jon Shelvey’s ball was met by Botman, but his weak backpass was pounced on by Dennis. The ex-Watford striker then produced a pinpoint chip over goalkeeper Nick Pope to find the net. But Newcastle were rewarded for Alexander Isak scores Newcastle’s equaliser last night PA their pressure when Isak somehow managed to get to a Joe Willock pass that fell behind him. The Swedish forward’s outstretched right leg connected and the ball bounced in off the post. Howe sent on Anderson at halftime and the 20-year-old came close to making an instant impact but his powerful volley was brilliantly kept out by Navas. Nottingham Forest (4-2-3-1) Navas; Aurier, Felipe, Niakhaté, Lodi; Yates (Freuler, 58), Shelvey (Furtado Scarpa, 90); Johnson, Gibbs-White, Dennis (N Williams, 79); Ayew (Surridge, 79). Newcastle United (4-3-3) Pope; Trippier, Schär, Botman, Burn; S Longstaff, Guimaraes, Willock; Murphy (Ritchie, 85), Isak, Saint-Maximin (Anderson, h-t). Booked: Nottingham Forest Dennis, GibbsWhite, Freuler, Navas, Lodi. Newcastle Burn. Man of the match Isak. Match rating 7/10. Possession: N Forest 39% Newcastle 61%. Attempts on target: N Forest 3 Newcastle 4. Referee P Tierney (Lancs). Attendance 29,362. TOTTENHAM HOTSPUR Forster proving a rare understudy that fits bill By Katherine Lucas Fraser Forster has got used to being jeered when he plays in goal for Tottenham – but not by his own fans. The former Celtic goalkeeper, who celebrated his 35th birthday yesterday, made his debut at Ibrox in front of a hostile Rangers crowd. The first competitive game he played at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium was against Portsmouth, who were unforgiving of the eight years he spent on Southampton’s books. Forster (right) returns to St Mary’s today in a happier spot. Hugo Lloris’s knee injury in February could have been catastrophic for Spurs’ Champions League hopes but thanks to their second-choice stopper, they have kept three clean sheets, beaten West Ham and Chelsea, and have the chance to consolidate their place in the top four with a victory over his old side. Spurs have typically not had such luck with back-up keepers. Joe Hart’s Achilles was exposed early on – anyone could have a go from 20 yards out. Pierluigi Gollini earned the unfortunate nickname “Goal-­­inny”. Michel Vorm twice made errors that led to FA Cup exits aga i n s t L e i ce s ter and Norwich. Paulo Gazzaniga was probably the best of them, but he inevitably became dissatisfied with the lack of game time. “Forster, he’s been brilliant, I wouldn’t think anybody could criticise him,” former Spurs goalkeeper Pat Jennings tells i. “Poor old Hugo has been criticised for half-mistakes. They’re saying it’s his age, 36 – I was playing in the World Cup finals on my 41st birthday. He’s got a long way to go to catch up to that, and how can you criticise a World Cup winner? “He’s been brilliant over the years – I wouldn’t be thinking about replacing him, he’s as good as anybody there is out there at the minute.” Indeed Antonio Conte has ­confirmed Forster will not oust Lloris permanently, though that was never the intention when he signed. He did not cost Spurs a penny and has had moments of inspiration – tipping Serge Aurier’s header over the bar against Nottingham Forest and saving Andre Ayew’s penalty. There have been slip-ups, such as his positioning in the 4-1 defeat to Leicester and failing to deal with Raul Jimen e z ’s s h o t against Wolves that ultimately l e d t o Ad a m a Traore’s winner. That is not necessarily a damning mark against him – Lloris too has made four errors leading directly to goals this season. “Fraser is showing to be a reliable player,” Conte said. “He is a really good person – a fantastic signing for the club, honestly.” Lloris could return after the international break, against Everton on 3 April. By then, they could be seven points clear in fourth, thanks in large part to his deputy. “A week ago, I would have said no [to Spurs finishing in the top four],” says former striker Teddy Sheringham. “All of a sudden the results change around, you go back in a nice spot. It’ll be a big push, the likes of Brighton, Liverpool, Newcastle still want to get in there. “It’s big money for all those clubs, it’s a big carrot to dangle – it’s going to be tough, but why not?” The Champions League is not just about money, but at least partly about the future of Harry Kane. “He has got to ask himself, is he going to win things, or is he better off going somewhere else,” says Sheringham. The top four looks attainable whether it is Lloris or Forster in goal – that has to make him Spurs’ best signing of the summer.
Slip NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 2 PitchBattles Aston Villa 4-4-2 Bailey Konsa Mings McGinn Luiz Moreno Ramsey Buendia Watkins Solanke Billing Anthony Rothwell Kelly Lerma Ouattara Senesi Stephens Smith Neto Bournemouth 4-4-1-1 Kick-off Today, 3pm (H­ighlights BBC One, 10.30pm) Odds Home 4-6 Draw 11-4 Away 4-1 Referee R Jones 1 68 LAST 10 MEETINGS All competitions B A D A A A B B B B Southampton 4-2-3-1 Arsenal Manchester City Manchester United Tottenham Hotspur Newcastle United Liverpool Brighton & Hove Albion Brentford Fulham Chelsea Aston Villa Crystal Palace Wolverhampton Wdrs Nottingham Forest Everton Leicester City West Ham United Bournemouth Leeds United Southampton Hojbjerg Lenglet Porro Skipp Dier Dawson Romero S T S D T T T D S T Manchester City 3-4-3 Neves Harrison Firpo Aït-Nouri Nunes Phillips Grealish Wöber Koch Ayling Zaroury Barnes Cullen Maatsen Roberts Ekdal Muric Burnley 4-3-3 Kick-off Today, 4.45pm, BBC One Odds to reach SF Home 1-6 Away 14-1 Referee J Brooks 0 5 LAST TIME IN FAC SEMI-FINAL Manchester City 2022 Burnley 1974 LAST FA CUP MEETING R4 2019 Manchester City 5-0 Burnley Mudryk Tarkowski Keane Dunk Leicester City 4-2-3-1 Kick-off Today, 3pm (H­ighlights BBC One, 10.30pm) Odds Home 10-11 Draw 13-5 Away 11-4 Referee D Bond 0 11 LAST 10 MEETINGS All competitions L L L D L L L L L D Holding Gabriel White Odegaard Partey Hedges Coleman Travis Carter RankinCostello Pears Blackburn Rovers 4-2-3-1 Kick-off Tomorrow, noon, ITV1 Odds to reach SF Home 3-5 Away 4-1 Referee T Robinson 0 16 LAST TIME IN FAC SEMI-FINAL Sheffield United 2014 Blackburn 2007 LAST FA CUP MEETING R6r 1993 Sheffield Utd 2p-2 Blackburn Xhaka Trossard Martinelli Olise Schlupp Ayew Doucouré Milivojevic Mitchell Guéhi Andersen Clyne Whitworth Kick-off Tomorrow, 2pm (H­ighlights BBC One, 10.30pm) Odds Home 1-4 Draw 19-4 Away 11-1 Referee S Attwell 2 65 LAST 10 MEETINGS All competitions A D C D D D A D C A Manchester Utd 4-2-3-1 Butland Webster Estupinan Varane Dalot Lindelof Shaw McTominay Fred Mitoma Buonanotte Sancho Orsi Morris Holohan Rashford Fernandes Elanga Vinicius Clifton Amos Zinchenko Crystal Palace 4-2-3-1 McAtee Szmodics Pereira Amartey Souttar Ward Ferguson Gallagher Hyam Castagne Caicedo Gilmour Sarmiento McBurnie Ndiaye Pickering Gueye Doucouré D D E E C E C D E C Gross Tete Dewsbury-Hall Ndidi Zaha Iwobi Kick-off Today, 5.30pm, Sky Sports PL (H­ighlights BBC One, 10.30pm) Odds Home 1-2 Draw 3-1 Away 13-2 Referee D England 3 44 LAST 10 MEETINGS All competitions Lowe Doyle Morton Barnes Efete Maher Waterfall Smith Crocombe Grimsby Town 3-4-1-2 Kick-off Tomorrow, 2.15pm, BBC One Odds to reach SF Home 1-8 Away 22-1 Referee J Gillett 1 7 LAST TIME IN FAC SEMI-FINAL Brighton & Hove 2019 Grimsby T 1939 LAST FA CUP MEETING R3r 1930 Grimsby T 0-1 Brighton & Hove Pereira James A Robinson SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 95 WEEKEND FOOTBALL FIXTURES 3.0 unless stated TODAY Palhinha Reed Ream Diop 6 7 8 9 10 Aston Villa v AFC Bournemouth............. Brentford v Leicester......................................... Chelsea v Everton (5.30) TV ............................ Southampton v Tottenham.......................... Wolves v Leeds........................................................ 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 20 Wissa Iheanacho Maddison Sanchez Norwood Berge Dolan Mbeumo Toney Saka Brighton & Hove 4-2-3-1 Robinson Henry Damsgaard Norgaard Jensen Felix McNeil Godfrey Pinnock Ramsdale Everton 4-5-1 Sheffield United 3-5-2 Tella Mee Hickey SPORT 90-104 43 44 45 - Dundee Utd v St Mirren.................................. Kilmarnock v St Johnstone........................... Livingston v Ross County.............................. Motherwell v Rangers (12.30) TV .............. 2 Man City v Burnley (5.45) TV ........................ Raya Pickford L WWWWW D L L W Egan MONEY 79-83 Arsenal 4-3-3 James Fernandez Kovacic Chilwell Onana Kick-off Today, 3pm (H­ighlights BBC One, 10.30pm) Odds Home 6-5 Draw 11-5 Away 12-5 Referee M Salisbury 1 55 LAST 10 MEETINGS All competitions Baldock Pts 66 61 50 48 47 42 42 41 39 37 35 27 27 26 25 24 24 24 23 22 Gray Aaronson Summerville Basham A 25 25 35 37 19 29 31 33 37 26 39 34 37 49 38 46 34 51 42 43 W Fofana Koulibaly Badiashile Havertz Neto Leeds United 4-2-3-1 Palmer Alvarez Mahrez Beyer Kilman Foderingham Laporte Gudmundsson Cork F 62 67 41 49 39 47 46 42 38 27 32 21 20 22 20 37 24 25 31 20 Bamford Ortega Silva L 3 4 6 9 3 8 7 5 10 9 11 12 14 13 14 16 14 14 13 17 Meslier Kick-off Today, 3pm (H­ighlights BBC One, 10.30pm) Odds Home 7-2 Draw 5-2 Away 4-5 Referee S Hooper 0 62 LAST 10 MEETINGS All competitions Foden D 3 4 5 3 11 6 6 11 6 7 5 9 6 8 7 3 6 6 8 4 Chelsea 3-4-2-1 McKennie Roca Tottenham Hotspur 3-4-3 Dias W 21 19 15 15 12 12 12 10 11 10 10 6 7 6 6 7 6 6 5 6 Kepa Lemina Forster Walker P 27 27 26 27 26 26 25 26 27 26 26 27 27 27 27 26 26 26 26 27 Sarabia Jimenez Kane Richarlison Son Davies Sulemana Alcaraz Adams Semedo TRAVEL 71-75 LEICESTER CITY HAVE ONLY LOST TWO OF THEIR 16 VISITS TO BRENTFORD AND HAVE WON EACH OF THE LAST SIX Sa Bednarek Bella-Kotchap MaitlandWalkerNiles Peters Ward-Prowse Lavia TV 54-67 Brentford 4-3-3 Wolverhampton 4-3-3 Bazunu Walcott PUZZLES 47-52 PREMIER LEAGUE TABLE Martinez Cash LIFE 41-75 Wilson Tete Rodak Fulham 4-2-3-1 Kick-off Tomorrow, 4.30pm, ITV1 Odds to reach SF Home 4-9 Away 6-1 Referee C Kavanagh 0 0 LAST TIME IN FAC SEMI-FINAL Manchester United 2020 Fulham 2002 LAST FA CUP MEETING R4 2013 Manchester United 4-1 Fulham Blackpool v Coventry......................................... Middlesbrough v Preston............................... Millwall v Huddersfield................................... QPR v Birmingham.............................................. Reading v Hull.......................................................... Rotherham v Cardiff........................................... Stoke v Norwich...................................................... Sunderland v Luton............................................ Watford v Wigan.................................................... P W D L F A Pts 37 24 11 2 74 29 83 Burnley Sheff Utd 37 21 7 9 58 33 70 Middlesbrough 37 19 7 11 65 42 64 Luton 37 17 12 8 45 34 63 Blackburn 37 19 4 14 43 42 61 Millwall 37 17 9 11 48 39 60 Norwich 37 16 8 13 52 41 56 West Brom 37 15 10 12 47 39 55 Coventry 37 14 12 11 43 36 54 Watford 37 14 12 11 44 39 54 Preston 37 14 11 12 34 39 53 Sunderland 37 14 10 13 52 45 52 Bristol City 37 12 12 13 45 44 48 Stoke 37 13 8 16 48 45 47 Hull 37 12 10 15 42 52 46 Reading 37 13 5 19 39 57 44 Swansea 37 11 10 16 49 57 43 Birmingham 37 11 9 17 41 50 42 QPR 37 11 9 17 38 58 42 Rotherham 37 9 13 15 41 51 40 Cardiff 37 10 9 18 28 41 39 Blackpool 37 8 11 18 39 54 35 Huddersfield 37 8 9 20 31 53 33 Wigan 37 7 12 18 32 58 33 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Accrington v MK Dons...................................... Bristol Rovers v Portsmouth...................... Cambridge Utd v Charlton............................. Cheltenham v Exeter.......................................... Derby v Fleetwood............................................... Ipswich v Shrewsbury....................................... Lincoln City v Peterborough (1)................. Morecambe v Oxford Utd............................... Plymouth v Forest Green.............................. Port Vale v Burton Albion.............................. Wycombe v Barnsley......................................... P W D L F A Pts 35 23 9 3 62 23 78 Sheff Wed Plymouth 36 22 8 6 63 41 74 Ipswich 36 20 12 4 70 31 72 Barnsley 34 20 6 8 55 29 66 Derby 36 18 10 8 59 35 64 Bolton 38 18 10 10 52 31 64 Wycombe 36 18 6 12 50 34 60 Peterborough 36 18 3 15 60 47 57 Shrewsbury 36 16 7 13 47 39 55 Portsmouth 36 14 12 10 49 42 54 Exeter 35 12 10 13 47 45 46 Charlton 36 11 12 13 50 48 45 Lincoln City 35 9 18 8 33 35 45 Bristol Rovers 36 12 9 15 50 58 45 Port Vale 36 12 8 16 36 50 44 Fleetwood Tn 36 10 13 13 37 38 43 Cheltenham 36 11 7 18 29 46 40 Burton Albion 35 10 8 17 44 68 38 Oxford Utd 36 9 9 18 38 48 36 Accrington 35 8 11 16 30 55 35 MK Dons 36 9 6 21 32 54 33 Morecambe 37 7 12 18 36 61 33 Cambridge Utd 36 8 6 22 27 57 30 Forest Green 36 5 8 23 28 69 23 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 AFC Wimb’don v Crawley Tn...................... Bradford v Hartlepool (1)................................ Carlisle v Stevenage............................................ Harrogate Tn v Barrow.................................... Leyton Orient v Colchester.......................... Northampton v Crewe...................................... Rochdale v Swindon........................................... Salford City v Doncaster................................. Stockport County v Mansfield.................. Tranmere v Newport County..................... Walsall v Gillingham.......................................... P W D L F A Pts Leyton Orient 35 21 9 5 46 22 72 Stevenage 35 19 9 7 50 31 66 Carlisle 35 18 10 7 58 35 64 Northampton 36 17 12 7 49 33 63 Stockport C 36 17 8 11 49 31 59 Bradford 35 16 11 8 43 30 59 Salford City 36 16 8 12 54 41 56 Mansfield 34 16 7 11 54 44 55 Sutton Utd 37 15 10 12 40 40 55 Barrow 36 15 7 14 38 41 52 Swindon 35 13 11 11 45 38 50 Doncaster 35 15 5 15 38 46 50 Tranmere 36 13 9 14 35 35 48 Walsall 35 10 15 10 36 32 45 Grimsby 34 12 9 13 37 41 45 AFC Wimbledon 36 10 13 13 38 42 43 Crewe 35 9 15 11 33 44 42 Newport C 36 9 13 14 35 42 40 Gillingham 35 9 11 15 23 37 38 Colchester 36 9 8 19 31 43 35 Harrogate Tn 36 8 11 17 41 54 35 Hartlepool 36 6 12 18 38 64 30 Crawley Town 34 7 8 19 37 58 29 Rochdale 36 6 7 23 29 53 25 P W D L F A Pts 28 26 1 1 90 20 79 Celtic Rangers 28 22 4 2 68 25 70 Hearts 28 13 6 9 49 40 45 Hibernian 28 12 4 12 44 43 40 Aberdeen 28 12 2 14 43 52 38 St Mirren 28 10 7 11 30 41 37 Livingston 28 10 6 12 29 43 36 St Johnstone 28 9 4 15 32 47 31 Motherwell 28 8 6 14 34 40 30 Ross County 28 6 6 16 24 41 24 Kilmarnock 28 6 6 16 23 50 24 Dundee Utd 28 5 6 17 29 53 21 41 Aberdeen v Hearts................................................ 42 Celtic v Hibernian.................................................. 46 47 48 49 Hamilton v Ayr......................................................... Partick v Dundee.................................................... Queen’s Park v Inverness CT....................... Raith v Cove Rangers......................................... P W D L F A Pts Queen’s Park 28 15 6 7 56 37 51 Dundee 27 13 7 7 44 31 46 Partick 28 13 5 10 49 39 44 Ayr 27 12 7 8 50 35 43 Morton 29 11 10 8 41 35 43 Inverness CT 27 9 9 9 38 39 36 Raith 27 9 8 10 33 36 35 Cove Rangers 28 6 8 14 33 56 26 Arbroath 28 4 13 11 25 41 25 Hamilton 27 6 7 14 25 45 25 - Airdrieonians v Peterhead............................ Alloa v Clyde............................................................... Dunfermline v FC Edinburgh..................... Kelty Hearts v Montrose................................. Queen of the South v Falkirk....................... P W D L F A Pts Dunfermline 27 18 8 1 46 16 62 Falkirk 27 16 6 5 56 29 54 FC Edinburgh 28 14 3 11 52 41 45 Alloa 28 13 6 9 44 37 45 Airdrieonians 28 12 7 9 58 43 43 Montrose 27 10 8 9 39 36 38 Queen of South 28 10 6 12 42 46 36 Kelty Hearts 28 9 6 13 33 44 33 Clyde 28 3 6 19 27 55 15 Peterhead 27 2 6 19 13 63 12 - Bonnyrigg Rose v East Fife.......................... Dumbarton v Albion............................................ Elgin v Stenhousemuir.................................... Forfar v Annan Athletic................................... Stranraer v Stirling............................................. P W D L F A Pts Dumbarton 26 16 5 5 40 24 53 Stirling 25 15 6 4 50 28 51 Annan Athletic 28 11 7 10 50 43 40 East Fife 28 11 6 11 39 43 39 Stenhousemuir 28 10 8 10 44 45 38 Forfar 26 9 7 10 29 33 34 Elgin 27 9 6 12 39 46 33 Stranraer 27 9 5 13 35 45 32 Albion 27 7 6 14 32 36 27 Bonnyrigg R 28 7 6 15 29 44 27 VANARAMA NATIONAL LEAGUE Barnet v Notts County, Bromley v Wrexham, Dagenham & Redbridge v Oldham, Eastleigh v Altrincham, FC Halifax v Yeovil, Gateshead v Torquay, Maidenhead Utd v Maidstone Utd, Scunthorpe v Wealdstone, Solihull Moors v Boreham Wood, Southend v Aldershot, Woking v Chesterfield (12.30), York v Dorking Wanderers. NATIONAL LEAGUE NORTH AFC Telford v Curzon Ashton, Alfreton Tn v AFC Fylde, Boston Utd v Bradford P A, Brackley v Blyth Spartans, Buxton v Farsley Celtic, Chester FC v Scarborough Athletic, Chorley v Banbury Utd, Darlington v Hereford FC, Gloucester v Kidderminster, King’s Lynn Tn v Spennymoor Tn, Peterborough Sports v Leamington, Southport v Kettering. SOUTH: Bath City v St Albans, Chelmsford v Worthing, Concord Rangers v Dartford, Dover v Hampton & Richmond, Eastbourne Borough v Slough, Ebbsfleet United v Dulwich, Farnborough v Chippenham, Havant and W v Tonbridge Angels, Hungerford Tn v Braintree Tn, Oxford City v Cheshunt, Taunton Tn v Hemel Hempstead, Weymouth v Welling. GERMAN LEAGUE Augsburg v Schalke (2.30), Borussia Dortmund v Cologne (5.30), Hoffenheim v Hertha Berlin (2.30), Stuttgart v Wolfsburg (2.30), VfL Bochum v RB Leipzig (2.30). DUTCH LEAGUE Emmen v Sparta (5.45), RKC v NEC Nijmegen (8.0), Utrecht v GA Eagles (3.30). FRENCH LEAGUE Lens v Angers (8.0), Toulouse v Lille (4.0). SPANISH LEAGUE Almeria v Cadiz (1.0), Atletico Madrid v Valencia (8.0), Espanyol v Celta Vigo (5.30), Rayo Vallecano v Girona (3.15). ITALIAN LEAGUE Monza v Cremonese (2.0), Salernitana v Bologna (5.0), Udinese v AC Milan (7.45). TOMORROW FA CUP SIXTH ROUND 1 Brighton v Grimsby (2.15) TV ........................ 3 Man Utd v Fulham (4.30) TV .......................... 4 Sheffield Utd v Blackburn (12) TV ............. PREMIER LEAGUE 5 Arsenal v Crystal Palace (2)........................... SKY BET CHAMPIONSHIP 19 Swansea v Bristol City (12.30).................... WOMEN’S FA CUP QUARTER FINALS Aston Villa v Man City (6.0), Birmingham City v Brighton (2.0), Lewes v Man Utd (12.30), Reading v Chelsea (2.0). GERMAN LEAGUE B Leverkusen v B Munich (4.30), Mainz v Freiburg (6.30), U Berlin v E Frankfurt (2.30). DUTCH LEAGUE Ajax v Feyenoord (1.30), Excelsior v Cambuur (1.30), Groningen v Heerenveen (11.15), Twente v AZ Alkmaar (7.0), Vitesse v PSV Eindhoven (3.45). FRENCH LEAGUE AC Ajaccio v Monaco (12.0), Montpellier v Clermont Foot (2.0), Nice v Lorient (2.0), Paris SG v Rennes (4.05), Reims v Marseille (7.45), Strasbourg v Auxerre (2.0), Troyes v Brest (2.0). SPANISH LEAGUE Barcelona v Real Madrid (8.0), Getafe v Sevilla (5.30), Osasuna v Villarreal (3.15), Real Betis v Mallorca (1.0), Real Sociedad v Elche (3.15). ITALIAN LEAGUE Fiorentina v Lecce (2.0), Inter Milan v Juventus (7.45), Lazio v Roma (5.0), Sampdoria v Verona (11.30), Torino v Napoli (2.0).
96 SPORT PREMIER LEAGUE ARSENAL Sporting pain leaves Gunners vulnerable in mind and body Katherine Lucas Before Arsenal were knocked out of the Europa League by Sporting on Thursday night, flickers of Tony Adams, Martin Keown and Sol Campbell lit up the big screens at the Emirates. The great Arsenal championshipwinning sides were built on great centre-backs – good to watch, but equally unbreakable and resilient. This defeat hurt the Gunners. Both in the practical sense, with William Saliba and Takehiro Tomiyasu forced off within 21 minutes through injury, and in more intangible ways too. There was a subdued resignation among the fans as they left – there was no real anger, just concern at what may lie ahead. Ask Aaron Ramsdale, who was caught off his line for Pedro Goncalves’ equaliser and failed to save any of Sporting’s penalties, if he considered the result a blessing in disguise ahead of the title run-in. Or Gabriel Martinelli, who at 21 must bear the scars of a decisive penalty being saved, with another chance for this young group to win a first trophy fizzling away as suddenly as the brilliant green of the pyrotechnics lobbed from a euphoric away end. Arsenal have 11 “finals” to ensure their European demise will be no more than a footnote in a historic campaign. It risks being far more than that, if it is remembered as the night that defensively, the wheels started to fall off. Manager Mikel Arteta has become reliant on Saliba. During his loan spells in France, which lasted three years, Arsenal fans pleaded for his return. Whether his impact has been down to good fortune, rather than good foresight, is up for debate. The thought that the Gunners may now have to traverse an alarming run of fixtures (Liverpool, Manchester City and Chelsea feature in their next seven games) without him will not be a pleasant one for Arteta. He said the Frenchman had been White has a point to prove, at least to Gareth Southgate having been left out of the England squad for the Euro qualifiers Arsenal are now reliant on William Saliba, who limped off on Thursday in some “discomfort” as he left the pitch. Saliba was not wearing any strapping when he left the ground, but Tomiyasu departed on crutches, with Arteta describing his injury as “looking pretty serious”. Ben White will discount the injury to Tomiyasu for now – indeed had Arteta gone full strength, he would probably have started anyway – but herein lies one of the first major tests of Arsenal’s depth. Mercifully, it begins with a visit of Crystal Palace, who do not score goals. There goes that serendipity again. There is always a risk that will change with a “new manager bounce”, though whether they have an immediate replacement in mind for Patrick Vieira is unclear after his surprise sacking. White has a point to prove, at least to Gareth Southgate having been left out of the England squad for the upcoming Euro 2024 qualifiers. It is not public knowledge why he was sent home early from the World Cup and his international future remains unclear. Take away White, and Arsenal are without a recognised right-back. Subtract Saliba and you are still left with Gabriel Magalhaes, but he is suddenly partnered by Rob Holding. This season Holding has managed a fifth of Saliba’s passing stats relatively in the Premier League, and an eighth of his tackling success. Edu, the club’s sporting director, was wise to bring in another centreback in Jakub Kiwior, particularly as he is versatile, can play in midfield, and fits Arteta’s model of developing young defenders. However, the first leg at Sporting was a tough debut. Arsenal will take solace in no longer having to fly around Europe for Thursday night games to be followed by even more arduous Sundays in the title race. Arteta was powerless to stop the physical blows of a gruelling, bruising night. The real test is whether he can protect them from the emotional ones. CRYSTAL PALACE DROP FEARS SPELL END FOR VIEIRA D efensively sturdy but not so prolific in front of goal. Crystal Palace might not have been the complete embodiment of Patrick Vieira in his playing days, but it certainly looked as though he was trying to sculpt a football team in the image of one of the Premier League’s most formidable defensive midfielders. But time and patience finally ran out for Vieira yesterday, when a 12game winless run caused such nervous twitches at Crystal Palace that they pressed the emergency button to terminate his contract. The news, i was told, will have been received with sadness by many at Crystal Palace. Vieira leaves as a hugely popular figure who might have been afforded a little more time, especially with a run of more winnable games coming up. “Very approachable,” was how one Palace source described him. In any other season, 12th in the Premier League with 11 games remaining would be seen as a comfortable position for Palace. But, if anything, Vieira has been swallowed up by what is possibly the tightest relegation battle in Premier League history: five points between them and Southampton at the bottom. There was a huge sense of reluctance from Palace chairman Steve Parish to sack Vieira, having been impressed as he led the club to a 12th-placed finish last season, with a longing glance at the European places for a brief period halfway through, as well as the FA Cup semi-finals, all while playing highly entertaining football. During that Premier League sea- WINLESS RUN UNDER VIEIRA 4 Jan Tottenham (h) Lost 4-0 7 Jan Southampton (h) Lost 2-1 (FA Cup) 15 Jan Chelsea (a) Lost 1-0 18 Jan Man United (h) Drew 1-1 21 Jan Newcastle (h) Drew 0-0 4 Feb Man United (a) Lost 2-1 11 Feb Brighton (h) Drew 1-1 18 Feb Brentford (a) Drew 1-1 25 Feb Liverpool (h) Drew 0-0 4 Mar Aston Villa (a) Lost 1-0 11 Mar Man City (h) Lost 1-0 15 Mar Brighton (a) Lost 1-0 Sam Cunningham CHIEF FOOTBALL CORRESPONDENT son they conceded just 1.2 goals per game. This season, it has slightly increased to 1.3 goals, but they have still let in fewer goals than Manchester United and Tottenham. Even now, there remains the nagging feeling that had Parish held on for just a little longer, things could have turned around. In Vieira’s last 10 Premier League games, Palace lost and drew five times, yet they conceded a maximum of one goal each game, apart from the two against Manchester United. The run included conceding only once in defeats by Manchester City and Chelsea, goalless draws with Liverpool and Newcastle, and a 1-1 draw with Manchester United. Such fine margins ultimately cost Vieira his job. As always in football there are many ways of looking at things, of weighing up the numbers to assess progression, but no shots on target in three Premier League games during that period puts that run in a different light. And a Palace source wondered to i whether, perhaps, one of Vieira’s weaknesses was that he didn’t quite understand that footballers weren’t as self-motivated as he was in his playing days. Unlike Vieira and many of the ex-stars now trying to make their way in management, a lot of modern players need their pathway mapped out for them, with close guidance and care. “It is with enormous regret that this difficult decision has been made,” Parish said. “Ultimately, results in recent months have placed us in a precarious league position and we felt a change is necessary to give us the best chance of retaining Premier League status. “That said, Patrick’s impact since joining us in the summer of 2021 has been significant, and he is held in the highest regard by myself, and all of his colleagues. “He led the team to a Wembley FA Cup semi-final and respectable 12th-placed finish last season playing some exciting football, which was a challenging and crucial Patrick Vieira was a popular figure at Crystal Palace GETTY campaign for the club given the changes we made to the squad prior to his arrival.” It is easy to see why people at Palace liked Vieira. He would often be seen leaving the club’s Beckenham training ground long after the players had gone home, and was frequently spotted watching the academy players train and play, thinking of ways to bring them into the first-team fold. Parish was clear during the interview process that he regards
Slip NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 Parish: It’s just football, Patrick is a great guy By Rachel Steinberg integrating players from the academy, who now train in a £20m facility opened in 2021, into the first team as an important focus for any Palace manager. One issue this season has been trying to replace Conor Gallagher, after his season-long loan from Chelsea last year, which has been difficult. But that relationship at least points to Vieira’s ability to get the best out of a talented young footballer, who has still not quite cracked it back at his parent club. Questions have been raised about the quality of Vieira’s backroom staff team – whether his picks were quite good enough, if they matched his ability or were capable of realising his vision. Meanwhile, Michael Carrick has been mooted as a replacement, following an impressive five months at Middlesbrough. Carrick is another former elite midfielder who could get Palace ticking if he were able to reproduce in a squad the ethos and work ethic of his playing days. Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish insisted the mood around his club remains optimistic following Patrick Vieira’s sacking, and threw his full faith behind former captain Paddy McCarthy against Arsenal. A club statement confirmed McCarthy will occupy the manager’s seat when Palace travel to meet the Premier League leaders tomorrow. The under-21s coach is set to be supported by his assistant at that level, Darren Powell, and retained first-team goalkeeping coach Dean Kiely. Palace held on to 12th place for nine straight weeks but their recent run of form – 12 matches across all competitions without a win and just five goals – ultimately forced the ownership’s hand after teams lower down the table closed the gap to leave the south London side just three points clear of the relegation zone. “The players are fine and everybody is looking forward to Sunday, really,” Palace co-owner Parish (above) told Sky Sports. “The feeling is good. You know, everybody loved Patrick, genuinely. The players had all the time in the world for him. You saw from the performances he never lost the players at all, they were all running and playing for him. “I think things just weren’t happening, so the mood was good, it was fine, but obviously we’re hoping that there’s a bit of fresh impetus, different ideas. “We’ve got good players, we’ve got a good squad, we’ve got good lads. They follow Patrick and they will follow Paddy and they will follow Darren and they will do the best for the football club. “Everybody is positive and wants to do their best and believes that we can win football matches. I’m not going to tell you it’s amazing today because Patrick is gone, because Patrick is a great guy and people loved working with him. “I’m sure he will go on and be as successful as he was last year for us somewhere else, and he will maybe learn from the bits where it lost its way a little bit, and I really hope he does. It’s just football, isn’t it?” Palace are the only Premier League team without a win in 2023 and Vieira’s replacement – temporary or permanent – will have just 11 games to secure their survival in the top flight, though eight are against sides currently lower down the table. TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 97 MANCHESTER UNITED Personal touch from Ratcliffe a clever tactic Mark Douglas NORTHERN FOOTBALL CORRESPONDENT At around 9.45am yesterday morning, Sir Jim Ratcliffe stepped out of black Mercedes, briefcase in hand and into a warm welcome at the doors of Old Trafford from Manchester United Chief Executive Richard Arnold. They’d rolled out the red carpet but not especially. The parade of potential owners has been in full flow all week and Ratcliffe’s presence was just the latest chapter of this extraordinary takeover story. It also seemed to be a deliberate message after his chief rival Sheikh Jassim Bin Hamad Al Thani did not make a personal trip from Doha for the meetings. Ratcliffe has branded his bid as “for the fans” and being visible and approachable around Old Trafford for 24 hours could be construed as a sign of things to come if his offer jumps through the hoops of beating off stiff competition from Qatar and the US and also convinces the Glazers to cash in. Ratcliffe’s play is that he’d be accountable and his presence showed how personally invested he is. It also threw into sharp contrast how relatively little we know about Al Thani and his bid, which has been pitched as an investment by a private individual rather than the state-sponsored takeovers at Newcastle and Manchester City. Al Thani’s access to vast resources is undisputed but there only appears to be one confirmed photograph of the Sandhurst-educated lifelong Manchester United fan. Search for Ratcliffe (below) on Google and you’ll get a wealth of information. The Qataris would counter that the meetings this week were about the financials, not the football, so why would he attend? Al Thani sent his most senior personal advisor Fady Bakhos, whose expertise spans banking and real estate to the north west alongside Shahzad Shahbaz, the president of the Nine Two Foundation and Sam Powers from Bank of America. Sources close to the process described them as “world leading experts” and said that over ten intensive hours on Thursday relationships were solidified. That was needed after suspicions in recent weeks that the Glazers aren’t actually all that serious about selling. Those fears have been allayed by the tone and detail that was divulged in a series of presenta- Yet another Spanish test for United in quarter-final By Ian Whittell Manchester United face Sevilla in the Europa League quarterfinals, seeking to avoid another Spanish disaster. The Reds have seen their European campaigns ended by teams from that country in each of the last five seasons. And having swept past Seville-based Real Betis easily in the last 16, manager Erik ten Hag must now face another opponent from the same city. Sevilla have won the Europa League a record six times from 2006-20, and Ten Hag said: “Back to Sevilla and, as you say, they have a very good record we have to be aware of it. “It is going to be tough, they are very experienced in the Europa League, won it so many times.” However, Sevilla are ­struggling domestically this season and currently sit 13th in La Liga. The winners of United’s tie face Juventus or Sporting Lisbon in the semi-final. tions this week. Everything from commercial contracts to the club’s property portfolio – with their approach to data and recruitment in between – was covered and the Qatari team at least walked away “more committed than ever” to buying the club, according to sources close to the process. Al Thani’s team are confident theirs is the best bid and “the best bid for United”. Ratcliffe – flanked by Ineos director of sport Dave Brailsford – believes the same and will lodge his second bid by the middle of next week. The flurry of activity almost makes you forget how tangled the political and ethical considerations are – but a Greenpeace statement released to coincide with Ratcliffe’s visit should focus minds. “It’s worrying that the Man Utd bidding process has turned into a dirty derby between entities linked to fossil fuels,” it read. “Whichever way this goes, the winner won’t be the climate.” A sobering reminder, among the breathless takeover talk.
98 SPORT FA CUP KOMPANY MANCHESTER CITY v BURNLEY With his Burnley side heading for a return to the top flight after his first season in charge, the former Manchester City captain faces his old club with the plaudits ringing loud and clear D ay one for Vincent Kompany at Burnley’s Barnfield training base and his new charges have been called into the staff canteen. After brief introductions to his backroom staff Kompany speaks for nearly 12 minutes. His oratory is clear, emphatic and precise, peppered with humility and the odd dash of humour as he maps out the journey the club will go on with him. The players hang off every word. “I was never as good as the players I played with,” he says at one point. “Ask anyone that I played with and they’ll tell you my biggest strength was what I did behind the scenes, making every guy in the squad get better. “One year I was injured 50 per cent of the time but I came in for the last 10 games, lifted the trophy and it looked like I had an amazing season. Fifty per cent of the time I wasn’t there but what I was doing was in the gym when there was a teammate feeling down or overthinking things like footballers do, worrying that the manager didn’t like him, I spoke to him and reassured him. “The key thing is: lift everyone around you, all the time.” Kompany has certainly done that at a club besieged by uncertainty when he walked through the door. Burnley’s daunting transition year has become a soaring Championship tour de force, the departed players replaced astutely Vincent Kompany takes instructions from mentor Pep Guardiola in 2018 Mark Douglas NORTHERN FOOTBALL CORRESPONDENT and the mentality transformed completely. They travel to Manchester City for today’s FA Cup quarter-final backed by 7,800 travelling supporters and just three wins away from an immediate return to the Premier League. In that initial meeting Kompany told the players “you have more football in you”, and true to his word he has moulded an attack-minded team that plays at full throttle. They have scored 74 goals in 37 games. “It doesn’t surprise me that he has been such a big success. Vinny is always one step ahead,” his close friend and former teammate Joleon Lescott tells i. Lescott was Kompany’s centreback partner in the Manchester City side that smashed through the club’s glass ceiling. They lined up together on Aguero day in 2012 when the first Premier League title of the Abu Dhabi era was won so dramatically. They were brothers on and off the field. “He was only 23, 24 when I arrived but you could immediately see how professional he was,” Lescott recalls. “Of course Vinny was a very good player but there was – and still is – something else about him. He left no stone unturned in terms of how to get the best out of himself and that’s how he became a world-class centre-back. “We had a dressing room full of leaders and that really benefited him because he’s like a sponge in terms of wanting to learn. He took something from them all. “Vinny’s very single-minded in terms of where he wants to go and what he wants to achieve but he’s also a sponge for taking in information and innovation. If he sees an opportunity to learn, he will take that – whether he’s learning from someone’s mistakes or from someone’s positive impact. “It’s not just football, it’s how he sees life, business, coaching. Whatever field he wanted to succeed in, he could.” A brilliant player and hugely promising coach, those close to Kompany insist he is an even better man. He has a Masters degree in business, speaks seven languages, manages an extensive property portfolio and has raised millions to combat homelessness in Manchester through his Tackle4MCR initiative. He is a man of integrity and conviction. Those values have made him a good fit at Burnley. “He’s definitely got something very, very special,” Alastair Campbell tells i. Campbell (left) wears many hats these days – author, podcaster, acerbic critic of a flailing Conservative government. But as a passionate supporter of Burnley and a man who literally wrote the book on leadership, he is well-placed to offer insight into what makes Kompany such a natural manager. “A few years ago I went to Manchester City to interview Raheem Sterling for GQ and Vicky Kloss [City’s former chief communications officer] was looking after me,” he says. “After I’d spoken to Raheem, Vincent Kompany was still there after everyone else had left and I had a very brief chat with him. “I remember really well that Vicky said two things to me after that. The first was that Vincent was the nicest bloke you’ll ever meet and the second was that he’s just got an aura about him and leads by example.” The demands he puts on his players are high, the standards exacting. But the Burnley squad have responded and then some. Campbell tells a story of trying to set up lunch with one of the players he knows well a fortnight ago. A couple of texts were sent trying to set it up, the first in the morning followed by an early afternoon message. Eventually his phone pinged with a reply at 5pm and an apology. “He told me they’d only just finished training,” Campbell says. “They’d done two training They absolutely love him and you can see the respect on the pitch, the ­players look over to him ­during the game sessions with a team meeting in between. He works them bloody hard.” No one in the squad is complaining. “The players I know say his work ethic and ethos is just phenomenal. They absolutely love him and you can see the respect on the pitch, they look over to him during the game. Even the subs look happy when they warm up at halftime,” Campbell adds. Kompany’s bond with supporters
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 MAN Vincent Kompany walks out to train with Manchester City teammate and good friend Joleon Lescott in 2011 is strong, too. He has taken time to understand the role that the club plays in its community and recognises what a source of pride it would be for such a small town to once again have a presence in the Premier League. Matt Moss from the No Nay Never podcast says today is “a chance to show the world what we’ve achieved in the nine months he’s been here. “There’s no doubt in my mind that Vincent Kompany has been the key to Burnley’s recovery and incredible form this season,” Moss continues. “He has made going to Turf Moor an enjoyable experience again. We know that we won’t be able to hold on to him for long, but boy are we enjoying the experience of having him in charge while it lasts.” Today in the FA Cup quarter-final there is a chance to see whether the swagger of Burnley’s new approach survives contact with a world-class opponent in Pep Guardiola’s City. It is a fascinating meeting between managerial master and student. It is not kidology or mind games from the Catalan when he says that his natural successor at the Etihad is Kompany. He really believes it. “I can definitely see that,” Lescott says. “It makes sense to put that out there and suggest that, and it would make sense for that to happen down the line. The next man after Pep? I’d be surprised if that was the case because it’s going to be a tough job for anyone to take. But for all the factors that Pep mentioned – his history with the club, the fans, the understanding of what it takes to play for Man City and win stuff at that level – it makes sense.” First, though, there are summits to scale in East Lancashire. “Having spoken to him recently I don’t think he’s in a rush to do that,” Lescott adds. “He’s aware of what the process will take and where he needs to develop as a coach and a manager.” Then he pauses before delivering the pay-off. “Whenever that opportunity comes, I know Vinny will be ready.” LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 ‘Guardiola has to stop tipping me as replacement at Etihad’ By Ian Whittell and Stuart Brennan Vincent Kompany has pleaded with Pep Guardiola to stop anointing him as the next Manchester City manager. The two City legends meet in the FA Cup quarter-finals today when Kompany takes Burnley, the runaway Championship leaders, to the Etihad. The City manager has repeatedly tipped Kompany as his replacement although the timing of his latest endorsement seemed to momentarily fluster his former captain. “He’s got to stop saying it,” joked Kompany. “I’m a Championship manager. I don’t know what you want from me. “I keep saying, he is trying to win the Champions League, I am trying to win the Championship, so I don’t think those kind of conversations make sense. “I think he should stay for another 10 years at Manchester City, first and foremost. They need to have the best manager of the world. I want to be extremely respectful to the club I manage as well. This club to me means everything. I want this club to get better.” Kompany will get a hero’s welcome at Manchester City today, but the “new” model is already in full working order. Guardiola will head the queue of people wanting to show their appreciation but he is certain that in Ruben Dias he has found the ideal man to take over his mantle as captain, inspiration and motivator. Dias has been a cornerstone of two successive Premier League titles for the Blues, and since his return from a hamstring injury he picked up at the World Cup, has been a key reason Guardiola’s side are unbeaten in nine games. Tough draws for both City and Chelsea Manchester City and Chelsea were both handed tough Champions League quarter-final ties but will meet in the last four if they advance. The Blues face holders and record 14-time winners Real Madrid, managed by former Chelsea boss Carlo Ancelotti, with the first leg taking place in Spain. City manager Pep Guardiola will also be returning to an old side after being drawn against Bayern Munich. Full draw, P90 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 99 BRIGHTON v GRIMSBY Mariners determined not to be deflated, even if they end up battered By Oliver Young-Myles An unfortunate consequence of Grimsby’s giant-killing run to the FA Cup quarter-final is that the demand for Harry Haddock inflatables seems to have outstripped supply. “My Harry Haddock died at Southampton,” Kelly Billings of the Mariners Trust tells i. “I got a bit excited at the second penalty and he sort of deflated – a sad death. I went to get another one yesterday but we’ve sold out.” St Mary’s became awash with blow-up fish (right) as Grimsby fans revelled in an unlikely victory that ensured a first FA Cup quarter-final appearance since before the Second World War, at Premier League Brighton. Just under 5,000 Grimsby fans are expected to make the trip. The toy fish haven’t always been welcomed by opposition clubs, however, and Southampton initially threatened to confiscate supporters’ beloved mascots ahead of the fifth-round tie, before performing a U-turn after a backlash. Brighton have taken an altogether different approach by fighting fire with fire. Inflatable seagulls have been hastily added to the club’s online shop at the bargain price of £3 each. The Mariners, 15th in League Two after promotion last season, have already beaten five clubs from higher divisions: Plymouth Argyle, Cambridge United, Burton Albion, Luton Town and Southampton. They will be the first fourthtier club to play a quarter-final since Cambridge in 1990 and the exploits of manager Paul Hurst, in his second spell in charge, and his squad have not gone unnoticed. The town has been given a welcome boost. “Grimsby, let’s be honest, when it’s in the papers it tends to not be for a good reason,” supporter Alex Green tells i. “It’s usually Grimsby is one of the top 10 worst places to live in the UK, so this is a great opportunity to put it in the spotlight for something more than that. It has had a rebirth as a hub of green energy and the positivity is not just around the football club but the town itself too.” Although Grimsby have defied the odds each step of the way, high-flying Brighton represent by far their biggest test. Roberto De Zerbi’s side are one of the Premier League’s most in-form teams and been beaten just once in 12 games in 2023. Unlike Southampton, they are not preoccupied with a relegation battle but instead targeting European football. This is a golden opportunity to win a first FA Cup. “The eternal hope in me, as a long-standing Grimsby Town fan, is we might sneak a 1-0 win,” says Billings. “Whatever the outcome, I’m so proud of the team and the fans because it’s an amazing achievement for a little club like Grimsby Town to reach the quarterfinals of the FA Cup.” “If they are on their game they could absolutely batter us, pardon the pun,” admits Green. The Cup run has encapsulated the feel-good factor that has seeped into the club. Owners Jason Stockwood and Andrew Pettit have pledged to reinvest every penny – about £1m – into next season’s playing budget, with the aim of assembling a squad that can compete at the top of League Two. Whatever their fate, the Mariners are a source of immense local pride. And they have helped return Harry Haddock to celebrity status – 34 years after his first appearance, at an FA Cup tie at Wimbledon. SHEFFIELD UNITED v BLACKBURN ROVERS Tomasson: I’d have preferred to face Premier League team Jon Dahl Tomasson would have preferred Blackburn to be playing a Premier League side at home in the FA Cup quarter-finals rather than travelling to Championship rivals Sheffield United tomorrow. Rovers are aiming to reach the last four for the first time since 2006-07. They won 2-1 at Leicester in the last round, having beaten West Ham on penalties in the Carabao Cup. Tomasson said: “I would actually have rather played a Premier League side at home. “First of all to give our fans the experience, and second, it’s also nice to try to win against a Premier League side – we’ve been able to do that twice this season.” Blackburn’s FA Cup run has also featured victories at Norwich and Birmingham, the latter in a replay. “It’s crazy, we’re playing every game away,” Tomasson added. “We are doing well when we are playing away, but I would rather have played at home because I think our fans deserve a home game at this stage.” Rovers will be without on-loan winger Sorba Thomas, who is cuptied having played for parent club Huddersfield this season. Keeper Thomas Kaminski is near a return from a knee injury but will not play.
100 SPORT FORMULA ONE Kevin Garside CHIEF SPORTS CORRESPONDENT F ernando Alonso was one of the first through the gates on the season’s opening day in Bahrain. The paddock paparazzi standing sentry to ­capture the arrivals were grateful for an early banker and noted how chipper he looked, giving off anything but fortysomething vibes. Alonso (below) is practised at the grand entrance, as you would expect after making them for 21 years, and would have known the value of arriving unaccompanied by members of the Aston Martin retinue, offering a clean shot of the only component that matters, the driver. He skipped through, a broad smile creasing his handsome features. A brief detour delivered him into the embrace of Moko, the Chrome Hearts jewellery designer and paddock fixture who was taking in the first-day atmosphere. The exchange was revealing in so much as it demonstrated not only a driver at ease but also energised, keen, eager to crack on. After driving to what was only his second podium in nine years two days later, we understood a little more of the substance behind Aston Martin’s astonishing development over the winter and the optimism fuelling Alonso’s Indian summer. There are, of course, the usual caveats. Bahrain’s abrasive circuit was more of a handicap to Ferrari and Mercedes than an Aston Martin kinder to its tyres. Saudi Arabia and Australia will provide a more accurate assessment of Aston Martin’s capabilities, but as Alonso counters, this is just the start of the learning curve with this car. Even if their rivals, in chasing the peerless Red Bulls, gain an uplift here and in Melbourne, the developmental potential at Aston Martin is greater since they have more to discover about the behaviour of the AMR23. And they have greater No complaints if Hamilton moves away, says Wolff By Philip Duncan IN JEDDAH Toto Wolff has admitted he would not blame Lewis Hamilton for seeking a move away from Mercedes if the once-dominant team fail to reverse their slump. Hamilton’s £40m-a-year contract expires at the end of the season and Wolff’s team have made a poor start to the 2023 campaign. THE SECRETS OF ASTON MARTIN’S FAST START research and development capacity courtesy of a handicap system that compensates teams lower down the field with more wind tunnel time. Though Ferrari and Mercedes have the edge in straight-line speed, the new-look Aston generates more downforce and was far more efficient through the corners. And in Alonso’s hands the car was a scalpel through turns nine and 10, where he accounted first for Lewis Hamilton and later Carlos Sainz, both of whom had no answer on fading rubber. Alonso warned at the car launch at Silverstone that Aston Martin was a team with which to be reckoned, if at that point he believed race wins would be hard to secure in 2023. He was bluffing. The team were armed with wind tunnel and simulator data projections that Hamilton came fifth in the first round in Bahrain before he finished a distant 11th in practice for this weekend’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix yesterday, one second adrift of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen. Team principal Wolff remains convinced that the seven-time world champion, 38, will sign a new deal but admitted: “If Lewis wants to win another ­championship he needs to make sure he has the car. “And if we cannot demonstrate that we are able to give him a car in the next couple of years then he will need to look everywhere. “I don’t think he is doing it at this stage, but I will have no complaints would be substantiated on day one of the pre-season test in Bahrain. Alonso was less equivocal about the long-term prospects of an organisation investing heavily in a competitive future. He was persuaded to leave the fourth-best performer of 2022, Alpine, a team backed by the manufacturer heft of Renault, by a charismatic owner with insane ambition. The former Jordan facility at Silverstone is already unrecognisable as the factory continues its £200m expansion, with a new wind tunnel to come online in 2024 as part of a 37,000 square metre upgrade. A pristine new home set out over three distinct buildings connected by bridges speaks of big cat desire, of ego and muscular determination, characteristics that have made a billionaire of Lawrence Stroll and are transforming Aston Martin into the Ferrari of the shires. If the fabric of the building is impressive, so too has been a stop-at-nothing recruitment policy that saw Stroll bag the biggest brains from the best teams, including the lead if that happens in a year or two.” Yesterday the British driver announced a sudden split from his long-time ally and performance coach Angela Cullen, saying “we all need a kick”. Verstappen’s arrival in Jeddah was delayed by 24 hours with a stomach bug, but the double world champion set the fastest times in both practice sessions. In the day’s second running he finished two tenths clear of Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso, with Sergio Perez third in the other Red Bull. Mercedes’ George Russell was fifth with the British driver half a second back from Verstappen. aerodynamicists from Red Bull and Mercedes. Dan Fallows, who worked alongside Adrian Newey in making Red Bull the class of the field under the new regulations, was appointed technical director with Mercedes guru Eric Blandin, the architect of Brackley’s hybrid era dominance, joining as his deputy. Under Fallows and Blandin, Aston Martin have made brilliant use of Mercedes’ powertrain and gearbox in a car birthed from the Mercedes wind tunnel. Alonso is the final component, an alchemist spinning gold from the moving parts. The appropriation of Mercedes powertrain technology married to aero principles brazenly borrowed from Red Bull have catapulted Aston Martin into unchartered territory and given Alonso scope to consider what was unimaginable when he committed his signature to Aston Martin six months ago. To witness Alonso scythe past Hamilton on the inside of turn 10, drawing the exclamation “yes, let’s go”, and reel in Sainz at the same spot on lap 45, “yes, bye bye”, was to hail a Tardis to 2005 when he was hunting down Ferrari in a Renault and taking Michael Schumacher on the outside of Suzuka’s formidable 130R. That commitment at 180mph moved the ITV commentator to say he had never seen anything like it. The episode signalled the end of Schumacher’s F1 hegemony and alerted the world to the potential of a 23-year-old who within weeks would become F1’s youngest champion. Had owner Ron Dennis managed better the dynamic between Alonso and Hamilton in 2007, McLaren would almost certainly have taken Alonso to a third world championship. Alonso has always been popular, but he is collecting admirers by the million as F1’s burgeoning new audience flocks to the story of 2023. And if you believe in number magic, the one that adorns Alonso’s car, 14, is that which took him to his first international kart title in Genk, aged 14 on 14 July 1996. Now invert his age and tell me there is nothing cosmic going on. ROUND 2 SAUDI ARABIA Jeddah Corniche Laps 50 Race distance Length 191.82 miles (308.45km) 3.84 miles es (6.17km)) 3 62mph 0 Gear 3 62mph 8 180mph 7 146mph TV 8 174mph 7 155mph 8 180mph 8 177mph 6 109mph 6 106mph ish fin / t ar St 7 146mph Lap record L Hamilton (Mercedes) 2021, 1:30.734sec QUALIFYING Today: Sky Sports F1, 5pm GMT RACE Tomorrow: Sky Sports F1, 5pm
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 RUGBY UNION SIX NATIONS FRANCE v WALES Galthié still looks for improvement after record win After demolishing England with a performance that made him cry with joy, France head coach Fabien Galthié wants his entertainers to finish the Six Nations in style with a home win against Wales today. The defending champions even have an outside chance of keeping their title. But they must win at Stade de France and hope No 1-ranked Ireland then slip up at home to an England side reeling from last weekend’s 53-10 hammering by Les Bleus. It was England’s third heaviest defeat ever, a humiliation made even worse by France’s highest score and largest margin of victory in 110 meetings with their old rival. Four of France’s seven tries were by ­forwards who ran like centres, such was the attacking threat throughout the side. Scrum-half Antoine Dupont was so good the English crowd briefly forgot the torture being inflicted, giving him a standing ovation when he came off. “The Twickenham match gave us a lot of satisfaction, we can’t hide that,” said Galthié (right), who did not try to hide his tears of joy. “But we also saw some room for improvement. We could have played better with the ball and without the ball, done better in our transitional play.” Striving for per- fection typifies Galthié, whose team won every match last year – including against every other side in the top 10 – on their way to a nationalrecord 14-game winning streak. It ended when the indomitable Irish won 32-19 last month to stamp their authority on this tournament. But Galthié does not want to lose any momentum from the England game in what is the No 2-ranked side’s last official Test before cranking up their bid to win the World Cup for the first time. The tournament is on home soil and the three-time runners-up have a mouth-watering opener against three-time champions New Zealand at Stade de France on 8 September. Galthié expects 2021 Six Nations champions Wales to offer a sterner test than their poor form suggests. “Two years ago, this Wales side were two minutes away from winning the Grand Slam in our stadium,” Galthié said, referring to France’s 32-30 win. “Two seasons isn’t a long time ago and there are players in that side who won three Grand Slams and five [Six Nations] tournaments.” Wales captain Ken Owens accepts his side will need to hit another level against France if they are to beat them, saying: “No one is expecting anything from us after France’s performances in this competition.” STADE DE FRANCE LINEUPS Kick-off Today, 2.45pm GMT Television ITV1/S4C Referee N Berry (Aus) France T Ramos D Penaud E Dumortier 15 14 11 13 G Fickou 12 J Danty 9 10 R Ntamack A Dupont (capt) 8 G Alldritt 7 C Ollivon 5 R Taofifénua 4 T Flament 6 F Cros 3 U Atonio 2 J Marchand 1 C Baille 1 W Jones 2 K Owens (capt) 3 T Francis 7 J Tipuric 4 A Beard 5 AW Jones 8 T Faletau D Biggar 10 9 R Webb N Tompkins 12 13 G North 11 15 R Dyer L Rees-Zammit 6 A Wainwright 14 J Adams Wales REPLACEMENTS France: 16 P Mauvaka 17 R Wardi 18 S Falatea 19 B Chalureau 20 S Macalou 21 M Lucu 22 Y Moefana 23 M Jaminet Wales: 16 B Roberts 17 G Thomas 18 D Lewis 19 D Jenkins 20 T Reffell 21 T Williams 22 O Williams 23 L Halfpenny TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 101 SCOTLAND v ITALY Ritchie: Now is the time for a complete display ahead of World Cup By Anthony Brown Jamie Ritchie believes a strong performance against Italy and a thirdplace finish behind the top two sides in the world will seal a positive Six Nations campaign for Scotland. Back-to-back defeats by France, ranked second in the world, and the top-ranked Ireland mean Scotland can no longer claim silverware from a tournament that started with wins over England and Wales. But ­Ritchie feels there is still plenty at stake going into today’s campaign finale at Murrayfield as Gregor Townsend’s side bid to make it three wins out of five and finish third for the first time since 2018. “I outlined our goal of five good performances and I think we’re at three and a half just now,” said the captain. “To get it up to four and a half would be good so we’re looking for a strong performance. To secure that third place outright would be a positive. “We shouldn’t change our application based on the opposition. For us it’s about maintaining the same standards. I don’t think we’ve put out that complete 80-minute performance so tomorrow’s the day, hopefully.” Ritchie believes it would represent a solid building block ahead of the World Cup in the autumn if Scotland can get the win that all but guarantees they will finish as best of the rest behind the two clear big-hitters. “Arguably against France for the majority of the game we were the team in the ascendancy,” he said, pointing out Scotland had troubled the world’s elite. “We put ourselves under pressure with a slow start but for huge parts of that game, I believed we could go on and win it. “There will be a huge amount o f p o s i t i ve s t o t a ke o u t o f the tournament.” MURRAYFIELD LINEUPS Kick-off Today, 12.30pm Television BBC One Referee A Gardner (Aus) Scotland O Smith K Steyn D van der Merwe 15 14 11 13 H Jones 12 S Tuipulotu 9 10 B Kinghorn B White 7 H Watson 3 Z Fagerson 8 J Dempsey 5 J Gray 1 D Fischetti 2 G Turner 4 S Skinner 1 P Schoeman 2 G Nicotera 4 E Iachizzi 7 M Lamaro (capt) 6 J Ritchie (capt) 3 M Riccioni 5 F Ruzza 8 L Cannone P Garbisi 10 9 A Fusco T Menoncello 12 13 JI Brex 11 15 S Gesi T Allan 6 S Negri 14 P Bruno Italy REPLACEMENTS Scotland: 16 E Ashman 17 R Sutherland 18 WP Nel 19 S Cummings 20 M Fagerson 21 A Price 22 B Healy 23 C Redpath Italy: 16 M Manfredi 17 F Zani 18 P Ceccarelli 19 N Cannone 20 G Pettinelli 21 M Zuliani 22 A Garbisi 23 L Morisi. Italy have lost all four of their matches but Ritchie is adamant they will be a dangerous opponent: “They’ll be frustrated that they’ve played a lot of really good rugby and run a couple of good teams close but not converted that into results.”
102 SPORT SIX NATIONS IRELAND v ENGLAND How green machine found top gear again Irish look to claim first Grand Slam in Dublin with World Cup in mind Hugh Godwin RUGBY UNION CORRESPONDENT As tens of thousands of people packed the streets of Dublin yesterday, the skies were grey and rain fell on their St Patrick’s Day parade. They are used to that all right, but the feeling of Ireland’s rugby team being ranked No 1 in the world is something new, and with their top province Leinster leading the way in the URC and competing hard in the Champions Cup every season, too, it is surely the envy of England, who will aim to deny the green machine the Six Nations Grand Slam today. The Ireland squad’s families, 80 relatives of all ages, were invited into the eve-of-match training run at the Aviva Stadium yesterday morning. “It’s always a nice touch for the kids It made no sense to me not to work with the clubs closely on a shared philosophy – of how England were going to try and play to come in and see what dad does,” said Mike Catt, the Ireland backs coach who formerly played for and coached England. “They’re all off school for St Patrick’s Day, so it’s fallen nicely.” But Catt made it clear the mood was one of celebration – not triumphalism. Everyone who has laid the foundations of this success have their eyes on the World Cup six months away, knowing Ireland have a dire record of never going beyond the quarter-finals. Still, it is well worth understanding how they got here. “Luck and expertise and experience,” is how Peter Boyle, an Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) committee member during the crucial transitional days after rugby went open in 1995, describes it. Boyle helped draw up the first player contracts of around £20,000. “Ireland would have gone into professionalism kicking and screaming,” he recalls, “but the quality of people in the IRFU was high. They were people successful in business, not just people who loved rugby.” The IRFU looked at what other countries were doing. They blocked the bid by Garryowen, one of the leading clubs in the All-Ireland League, to take part in the then new European Cup. Instead they marshalled limited resources into the next level up: the provinces Leinster, Munster, Ulster and Connacht, who had a ready-made historical back story, and home stadiums. Munster and Ulster won three European GOING GREEN ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT TODAY’S SIX NATIONS FINALE RESULTS HOW THEY STAND W D L F A 1 Ireland 4 0 0 122 56 3 19 +66 2 France 3 0 1 133 87 3 15 +46 3 Scotland 2 0 2 92 84 2 10 4 England 2 0 2 84 106 2 10 5 Wales 1 0 3 56 106 1 5 6 Italy 0 0 4 75 123 1 1 Owen Farrell has backed Henry Arundell to impress on his first start for England in the feverish atmosphere of Dublin’s Aviva Stadium, where hosts Ireland are going for the Six Nations and Farrell’s side will be desperate to restore pride after the hammering by France. ROUND 3 ROUND 4 Italy 20-34 Ireland Wales 10-20 England France 32-21 Scotland Italy 17-29 Wales England 10-53 France Scotland 7-22 Ireland ROUND 5 ALL TIMES GMT Scotland v Italy (12.30pm, BBC) France v Wales (2.45pm, ITV) IRELAND 13 England 5pm, ITV ENGLAND 12 Wales HEAD-TO-HEAD All competitions 10 France Draws 1997 England’s biggest win over Ireland in Dublin, a 46-6 victory 3 Ireland (1948, 2009, 2018) 8 2007 Ireland’s biggest win over England in Dublin, a 43-13 success 3 Scotland 551 LOSING IT England are seeking to avoid a losing Six Nations record for the fourth time in six years 2018 2 Wins Ireland wins 139 matches 3 Losses 2019 3 Wins 1Draw 1 Loss 2020 4 Wins 1 Loss 2021 2 Wins 3 Losses 2022 2 Wins 3 Losses 2023 2 Wins 2 Losses 2011 So far Cups between 1999 and 2008; Leinster built more gradually under Mick Dawson, the chief executive. “Mick got the whole of Leinster involved,” says Boyle. “They created an academy system to go with the existing, strong schools system.” Quality players from abroad – Isa Nacewa, Brad Thorn, Rocky Elsom – set Leinster on the road to four European Cup titles, and their successors Mack Hansen, James Lowe, Bundee Aki and Jamison GibsonPark are in this weekend’s Ireland but now the hottest prospect in the English game must help to hold off an Irish team on a run of nine wins. “People who do it at club rugby week in, week out don’t always find it as easy to do when they come into the Test team and in training,” Farrell, the England captain restored in place of Marcus Smith, said of Arundell. “It seems like every 80 80 England wins MACK HANSEN IRELAND GRAPHIC: BRETT DIETRICH RESEARCH: JAMES MARINER England have not lost three successive matches to Ireland in 12 years ‘Electric’ Arundell backed to hit the ground running in Dublin Arundell (right), 20, burst on to the scene with spectacular tries for England’s under-20s and London Irish last season, finishing as the ­Premiership’s young player of the year. He put another exhilarating score past Australia last July in the first of his six Test appearances, all from the bench. Injury intervened in the autumn ROUND 2 Wales 10-34 Ireland Ireland 32-19 France England 23-29 Scotland Scotland 35-7 Wales Italy 24-29 France England 31-14 Italy TODAY’S FIXTURES MOST NATIONS GRAND SLAMS ENGLAND By Hugh Godwin ROUND 1 B Pts PD 1987 team. Standards were set early on by Keith Wood, the hooker, and the great centre Brian O’Driscoll. The fly-half Johnny Sexton is about to become the Six Nations’ record points scorer; the flanker Josh van der Flier was 2022’s world player of the year. Then there are the foreign coaches, including four who in a crucial twist were sacked by England after the 2015 World Cup failure: Ireland’s head coach Andy Farrell, Catt, Graham Rowntree at Munster and Leinster’s Stuart Lancaster. The days of time he touches the ball people expect him to do something good, and he doesn’t normally disappoint. So we’re looking forward to trying to get him into the game.” The former England wing David Trick built an after-dinner speaking career around his experience of catching – or rather, failing to catch – a high ball at the old Lansdowne Road on his debut in 1983. Trick only played once more for his country. England have finished with a negative points difference once in 36 years (-9 in 2021) Warren Gatland coaching Ireland were lean in results but he blooded several stars of the next decade. Lancaster, in his seventh and last season as Leinster boss after leading England from 2012 to 2015, says Ireland’s “all in it together” philosophy differs from that of his homeland. “There is a genuine desire in Ireland for the provincial teams to help,” Lancaster tells i. “Obviously it’s more complex in England, where there are more clubs, and fewer contractual agreements, whereas the Irish have But England flanker Lewis Ludlam is also confident in ­Arundell’s capability. “He is ­electric,” he said. “I remember one of the first training sessions, pre-Australia. He was running and I thought, ‘oh, I’ve got him’, and then he properly just took off. I’ve never seen anyone take off like that in the flesh. He’s a freak in terms of his speed, but he’s got a great head on his shoulders as well.” At the other end of the scale, prop
NEWS 2-37 OPINION 25-30 Ireland H Keenan M Hansen 15 14 13 R Henshaw B Aki 12 J Sexton (capt) 10 P O’Mahony 6 5 J Ryan 2 D Sheehan 1 E Genge 6 L Ludlam 9 J Gibson Park C Doris 8 J van der Flier 7 3 T Furlong J Lowe 11 4 R Baird 2 J George 4 M Itoje 1 A Porter 3 K Sinckler 5 D Ribbans 8 A Dombrandt O Farrell (capt) 10 7 J Willis 9 J van Poortvliet M Tuilagi 12 13 H Slade 11 H Arundell England 15 F Steward 14 A Watson REFEREE J Peyper (SA) R E PLACE ME NT S IRELAND 16 R Herring 17 C Healy 18 T O’Toole 19 K Treadwell 20 J Conan 21 C Murray 22 R Byrne 23 J O’Brien ELLIS GENGE ENGLAND 1 Ireland have only lost to England once in their last four meetings in Dublin 32 got central contracting. And there are 21 Leinster players in the Ireland squad – there aren’t 21 players from one club in the England squad.” Lancaster tried to close the gap between club and country in England. “I think it’s the only way for England to be successful,” he says. “I would do directors-of-rugby meetings and show what we’d learned from something like the New Zealand tour of 2014. It made no sense to me, really, not to work with the clubs closely on a shared philosophy – not Dan Cole is poised for his 100th England cap from the bench. And there was some familial fun surrounding Farrell and his father, Andy, the Ireland head coach, who welcomed his grandsons – Owen’s sons – Tommy and Freddie to training yesterday. The boys are aged four and two, so it is early days to declare any national allegiance. “They’re a bit young yet; they’re just doing as their granddad’s told them to,” said Owen, who did not know about the training invitation, as England had their stadium run three hours after Ireland’s. “They’re staying at their granddad’s house, so I guess it’s his rules this weekend, so far.” ENGLAND 16 J Walker 17 M Vunipola 18 D Cole 19 N Isiekwe 20 B Curry 21 A Mitchell 22 M Smith 23 J Marchant Points scored by Ireland in each of their last two matches against England in terms of shaping the way they play, but their understanding of how England were going to try and play.” It hasn’t all been smooth for Ireland. Farrell was under pressure for his job two years ago, and eased it with a win over, guess who, England. The Irish went on to a first series win in New Zealand, in 2022, and now eye their fourth Grand Slam of all time, and the first to be sealed in Dublin’s fair city. “You do have to blink sometimes to take it all in,” says Boyle. He revealed the boys both possess Ireland and England jerseys, so which would they be wearing for the match? “They came over yesterday on the ferry,” Owen said. “He [Andy] is not there – they are staying with my mum. I assume they will be wearing England jerseys but I see they are trying to sway him.” A more serious line over England righting the wrongs of the record home defeat, 53-10 by France, came from hooker Jamie George: “We’re a team that prides ourselves on physicality and that’s probably why it hurt as much as it did. “We’re very clear about why and we’re also very clear that it can never happen again.” LIFE 41-75 PUZZLES 47-52 TV 54-67 TRAVEL 71-75 MONEY 79-83 SPORT 90-104 SATURDAY 18 MARCH 2023 103 Who needs what to win the title IRELAND Victory would secure a Grand Slam. A draw would also do. Defeat but securing two losing bonus points would be enough, as would a onepoint defeat if they also maintain their points difference lead over France, or a no-point defeat if France fail to get a bonus and fail to close the points deficit. FRANCE Must beat Wales. A win in Paris without a bonus would mean they need Ireland to lose without a bonus and concede their points lead (which is 20 points over France). Winning with a bonus and by more than 20 points would leave Ireland needing two points against England. THE OTHERS England could mathematically finish second – if they secure a bonus-point win over Ireland, overturn the 68-point deficit to France, hope that Les Bleus lose to Wales and Scotland fall to Italy. Scotland can finish second, in a slightly more likely scenario. Wales can dream of fourth.
Slip VIEIRA SACKED SIX NATIONS FINALE Palace left with no option but to remove popular manager after dismal run Sport P96 inews.co.uk/sport iPaperSport @iPaperSport FORMULA ONE Aston thriller The secrets of Alonso’s fast start to the season. By Kevin Garside P100 DUBLIN READY TO ROAR Ireland holds its breath with Grand Slam on the line P102 Qataris ramp up United bid battle By Mark Douglas The Qatari bidders for Manchester United are preparing to table a second and even third offer for the club as rival bidder Sir Jim Ratcliffe spent a “positive” day at Old Trafford with his Ineos team. After 48 hours of meetings, the ­resolve of both would-be owners to get their hands on Manchester United has hardened and that will have encouraged the Glazers they can rake in close to their £6bn price tag for the club. Qatari banker Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad Al Thani has emerged as the early front runner and i has learned that his team is prepared to negotiate with Manchester United to table several bids in the coming weeks, with the aim of finding a valuation that satisfies all parties. A second offer – based on 10 hours of “constructive and productive” meetings between Al Thani’s experts and representatives from Raine bank and United on Thursday – is due within days and is not a “take it or leave it” proposition. Al Thani’s team hope it will be enough to secure exclusivity in the next 10 to 14 days, which would pave the way for more detailed due diligence. While some reports have put a number on the revised Qatari bid, US sources have indicated to i that the size of the offer will be based on this week’s presentations and depend on their expert’s view of “what the numbers look like”. There is no guarantee it will be improved from the indicative bid of £4.5bn tabled last month but sources admit it is likely. Ratcliffe’s Ineos will also table a second bid after the billionaire himself attended a day of meetings yesterday. He was introduced to Erik Ten Hag and given a tour of the training ground in a sign of how invested he is in the takeover. There are other groups interested in buying into the club who have been hosted at Old Trafford this week but the two publicly declared bids are understood to have the most financial muscle. Analysis, P97 P92 CHELTENHAM GOLD CUP Galopin makes it a glorious St Patrick’s Day for Mullins Willie Mullins might have won just about everything in racing – but the most successful trainer in Festival history admitted to feeling a level of pressure he had never previously experienced ahead of Galopin Des Champs’ victory in the Cheltenham Gold Cup. “I think what stands out is the pressure I put myself under. I was surprised ­actually coming to the thirdlast how much I started to feel it,” he said. “When he went through the third-last and I saw Paul [Townend] back on the bridle again I thought, ‘wow, this could happen’, and I was amazed how much it meant to me. I didn’t think it would.”