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One sexist diatribe, one modern masterpiece

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Ellora Torchia and Billy Howle in 'Look Back in Anger' (Photo: Marc Brenner)

Look Back in Anger (1956) by John Osborne is, famously, the play that blasted post-war culture out of its slumber of gentility and opened the floodgates to kitchen sink drama and modern theatre as we know it. Yet here’s the rub: almost no contemporary theatre fan will have seen it on stage, as this interminable bore of an often misogynistic rant is vanishingly rarely performed.

I don’t like the piece, but can viscerally appreciate why it made such an era-defining impact. In an inspired programming move of a repertory season, the Almeida has paired Osborne’s diatribe with Arnold Wesker’s modern classic Roots (1959), a work that has at its centre an angry young woman in place of Osborne’s man. This makes for a thrilling double bill of disaffection.

A bare circle of stage, furnished with occasional props as necessary, serves both plays. An ironing board is the key accessory in Anger; there is always a woman hard at work behind it while Jimmy Porter (Billy Howle) sounds off about his fury with everyone and everything, not least the family of his upper middle class wife Alison (Ellora Torchia). His difficult working-class upbringing and his lack of career focus after a university education enrage him; much as we might dislike him, we cannot but find echoes of contemporary men who turn their ardent self-loathing onto others in similar fashion.

Osborne offers a sharp snapshot of a precise and jaded moment in time: it’s after the heroics of the Second World War and before the social revolution of the 60s, and Jimmy is livid at the staidness and sameness of it all.

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Jimmy is irresistible to women, even though his marriage is a wretched whirl of spite and violence in this small and shabby flat. Kindly friend Cliff (Iwan Davies) tries to stop things spiralling too catastrophically, although Howle is a loquacious coil of self-righteous fury. Torchia is a captivating well of quiet-ish emotion in Atri Banerjee’s well-delivered production; the eloquence of her tired eyes as she stands behind the ironing board is a marvel to behold.

Sophie Stanton and Morfydd Clark in ‘Roots’, which is showing at the Almedia alongside ‘Look Back in Anger’ (Photo: Marc Brenner)

The emotional centre of the superior Roots is Beatie Bryant (rising screen star Morfydd Clark), a young woman home to visit her family of Norfolk farm labourers after three years in London. Clark winningly portrays her as brimming with life and new discoveries; all her talk is of her “intellectual” boyfriend Ronnie and his progressive ideas, a new way of thinking that both stimulates and bewilders her.

The Bryant family’s peaceful, circumscribed rural existence, beautifully suggested by Diyan Zora’s strong and supple production, is barely troubled by the currents of modern life, but Beatie longs for her mother (Sophie Stanton) to talk about more than the arrivals and departures of local buses.

Wesker lets out an impassioned cry for working-class liberation through greater curiosity and captures the timeless emotional theme of the facility with which children blame their parents for their own failings. Beatie has strong roots in this limited but loving place; a top-quality 100 minutes of drama shows that she also has a winningly defiant mind of her own.

Overall, an infuriating but fascinating double bill – and another chance to see Look Back in Anger isn’t going to come around any time soon.

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In rep at the Almeida Theatre, London until 23 November (020 7359 4404, almeida.co.uk)

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Most popular websites for news in the UK: Monthly top 50 listing

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Most popular websites for news in the UK: Monthly top 50 listing

The Guardian was the biggest commercial news website in the UK in August, overtaking the likes of The Sun and Mail Online in Press Gazette’s monthly ranking.

The Guardian had an audience of 21.8 million people in the UK in August, according to Ipsos iris data analysed by Press Gazette. This was a slight dip since July of 1% but year-on-year growth of 1%.

The Guardian has frequently sat in around fifth place in our monthly ranking, behind the BBC, The Sun, Mail Online and the Mirror. It has also at times been overtaken by Sky News or The Independent.

Nine of the ten biggest news websites in the UK in August saw month-on-month decline after a busy news month in July that included the UK election results and new Labour government, a mass stabbing at a Taylor Swift dance class in Southport that led to days of rioting across England, Joe Biden stepping down from the US presidential race, and an assassination attempt on Donald Trump.

The only top-ten news website that grew between July and August was Yahoo!, up 4% to an audience of 17 million in August.

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Six of the ten biggest news websites did see their audience grow compared to August 2023.

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But The Sun and Mail Online, which have traditionally battled it out as the biggest non-BBC news website in the UK, both saw decline.

The Sun was down 10% month-on-month and 7% year-on-year to 21.3 million while Mail Online was down 5% and 9% respectively to 21.1 million.

Three other news websites were close behind including Sky News which in July leaped from sixth to third place in our monthly ranking. In August the broadcaster’s website was down 10% month-on-month but up 15% compared to last August, reaching 20.5 million.

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After Sky News was The Independent (20.5 million) and the Mirror (20 million).

To create this list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content of any genre.

The Ipsos iris data measures the total unduplicated number of people who used a brand’s websites and apps in a given month and includes all traffic, not necessarily just news. Reach and minutes for brands such as the BBC, ITV and Channel 4, which have a strong entertainment offering in addition to news content, will therefore be higher.

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Just ten news websites across the entire top 50 recorded growth between July and August.

The biggest growth was at Business Insider (shown in the data as Springer Insider) and politics site Joe, both up month-on-month 22.5% to 4.1 million and 2.9 million respectively.

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The biggest month-on-month decline in August was at Reach regional Gloucestershire Live, down 26% to 3 million, followed by ITV, down 25% to 12.6 million.

However Gloucestershire Live continued a run of growth when compared to 2023, up 152% year-on-year. It was followed by Tech Radar (up 95% to 3.8 million) and Forbes (up 94% to 7.7 million).

Audiences once again spent the most time with the BBC (9.7 billion minutes) followed by Yahoo! (1.8 billion) and Mail Online (1.5 billion). The same trio was top for page views, on 2.9 billion, 1.2 billion and 546 million respectively.

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To create this top-50 list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content. Our list covers both consumer and industry (B2B) media. You can consult our list of 100 brands and read more about our criteria here.

Brands such as Apple and Google, while well-known names in news, are excluded from our list given the wide reach of their non-news content. Google News and Apple News are not reported by Ipsos as separate entities in brand level data.

Ipsos iris replaced Comscore as the industry-recognised standard in 2021. Ipsos iris data is partly derived from a panel of 10,000 people aged 15 and over that is designed to be nationally representative. The participants have meters installed across 25,000 personal devices to passively measure website and app usage. This is combined with data from participating websites that are tagged so all devices visiting the site can be identified and logged.

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July 2024

Sky News leaped up the ranking of the biggest news websites in the UK in July, moving from sixth to third place in Press Gazette’s monthly ranking.

Sky News reported month-on-month growth of 10% and year-on-year growth of 22% for a monthly audience of 22.7 million people.

It was behind only the BBC (whose domain includes its entertainment content and not just news) on 40.3 million (up 3% month-on-month and 6% year-on-year) and The Sun on 23.7 million (up 1% compared to June and down 2% compared to July 2023).

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Mail Online (22.2 million) returned to its former place ahead of the Mirror (22.1 million) after the Reach tabloid overtook it last month. They are now in fourth and fifth place respectively.

In a busy news month – July saw the attempted assassination of Donald Trump, Joe Biden stepping down as presidential candidate, the UK general election, the end of the Euros and the start of the Olympics – 37 of the websites in our top 50 saw month-on-month growth, and 34 saw year-on-year growth.

Of the top ten biggest sites in July, six sites saw month-on-month growth and seven saw annual rises. Sky News and The Guardian (22 million) were both up 10% month-on-month, while on an annual basis The Telegraph led the way (18.3 million, up 32%).

Four of the top ten websites reported double-digit year-on-year growth, the same number as in June.

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Conclusions should not be drawn regarding changes in places for publishers outside the top ten in this month’s list because Press Gazette has revised and slightly altered the websites included in the analysis.

To create this list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content of any genre.

The Ipsos iris data measures the total unduplicated number of people who used a brand’s websites and apps in a given month and includes all traffic, not necessarily just news. Reach and minutes for brands such as the BBC and ITV, which have a strong entertainment offering in addition to news content, will therefore be higher.

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The biggest dips compared to the prior month were at Radio Times (5.8 million) and Reach regional website Gloucestershire Live (4 million), both down 8%.

Year-on-year, the top three audience declines were also Reach websites: Examiner Live (audience of 3.2 million, down 42%), Chronicle Live (3.6 million, down 25%) and the Daily Star (5.5 million, down 24%).

The biggest growth compared to June was at tech website Toms Guide (audience of 3.1 million, up 27%) and Reuters (4.3 million, up 24%).

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Year-on-year, Gloucestershire was up 301% despite its more short-term dip. Forbes was up 129% to 7.5 million.

The Times and Sunday Times website (11.6 million) had a smaller audience in July than the Manchester Evening News (12.2 million), Birmingham Live (11.9 million) and Evening Standard (11.8 million) which were all smaller than the national brand in July 2023.

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After a run of growth following its move to a .com website in March 2023, the GB News website (audience of 9.2 million) is now bigger than those of DMGT’s the i (9 million) or The New York Times (8.3 million).

Audiences spent the most time with the BBC (10.5 billion minutes) followed by Yahoo! (1.8 billion) and Mail Online (1.6 billion). The same trio was top for page views, on 3.2 billion, 1.3 billion and 574 million respectively.

The biggest month-on-month growth in minutes spent was at ITV (up 77% to 1.4 billion) followed by Hello! Magazine (up 20% to 42 million) and Unilad (up 18% to 5.7 million). The biggest drop was at CNN (down 26% to 15 million minutes).

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Compared to July 2023, however, Unilad was down by three-quarters making it the biggest year-on-year drop. It was followed by Good Housekeeping (down 65% to 4.5 million) and the Daily Star (down 57% to 14.7 million).

Forbes almost doubled its monthly minutes in the past year, rising by 99% to 12.4 million in July. It was followed by Gloucestershire Live (up 85% to 6.7 million) and The New York Times (up 67% to 366 million minutes).

June 2024

The Mirror overtook Mail Online to become the UK’s third biggest newsbrand in June, according to Press Gazette’s latest ranking.

Monthly audience to Reach-owned Mirror was up 2% month-on-month to 22.5 million, helping it edge past Mail Online (audience of 22.3 million, down 3%), which before this month regularly occupied a top three spot in our ranking.

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The Mirror also saw a smaller year-on-year decline than Mail Online, with the monthly audience to the news sites down 1% and 9% respectively compared to June 2023. For the Mail this was the largest annual decline in the top ten sites.

Mail Online also saw a large drop for the second consecutive month for minutes spent, according to data from Ipsos iris – down 4% month-on-month and 29% year-on-year to 1.4 billion minutes – now the joint second highest total minutes alongside ITV which grew by 77% month-on-month and 39% year-on-year.

A statement shared with Press Gazette by Mail Online publisher DMG Media said: “The seriously popular Mail Online is now bigger than ever before – bringing in hundreds of millions of readers, viewers and listeners with its unique blend of addictive content.

“The brand remains the number one commercial publisher for engagement, with substantially more page views and time spent on the website and app than any of its competitors.

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“This once again demonstrates our exceptionally loyal and engaged audience, who in turn have enabled us to successfully launch a subscription proposition in recent months. 

“We are also dominating on Snapchat, Tiktok and Facebook, have a portfolio of award-winning podcasts and are releasing a new slate of original shows as we look to take Youtube by storm.

“The Mail has never had more users consuming its content across multiple platforms and looks forward to these significant milestones being recognised in future releases.”

The BBC remained top of the table as the newsbrand with the largest monthly audience in the UK, followed by The Sun (audience of 23.5 million) in second place, the Mirror in third, Mail Online in fourth and The Independent (21.1 million) in fifth – with The Guardian knocked out of fifth place into seventh (audience of 20.1 million) also behind Sky News (20.6 million).

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The Ipsos iris data measures the total unduplicated number of people who used a brand’s websites and apps in a given month and includes all traffic, not necessarily just news. Reach and minutes for brands such as the BBC and ITV, which have a strong entertainment offering in addition to news content, will therefore be higher.

By month-on-month growth, June was also a strong month for ITV (audience of 17 million, up 15% compared to May), The Telegraph (17.2 million, up 14%) and Sky News (up 4%), which were the three fastest-growing names among the top ten newsbrands by audience size. As a result, ITV, which re-entered the top ten newsbrands by size of monthly audience in May in tenth position, climbed a further place to ninth in June in a month of position shifts at the top.

Four top ten newsbrands by audience size saw double-digit year-on-year growth in June: Metro (audience of 15.9 million, up 22%), The Telegraph (up 18%), Sky News (up 12%) and ITV (up 10%). The BBC was the remaining top ten newsbrand to see year-on-year growth in June as its audience was up 4% to 39.1 million.

For Metro, Sky News and ITV, June follows a similarly strong year-on-year performance in May, while The Telegraph, which saw its audience fall last month, reversed its fortunes.

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Among the wider top 50, Reach’s Gloucestershire Live was again the fastest-growing newsbrand year-on-year. Audience to Gloucestershire Live was up 356% to 4.4 million people, followed by Forbes (6.6 million, up 95%) and Screenrant (4 million, up 63%).

Month-on-month among the whole top 50, LBG Group’s Unilad grew fastest (4 million, up 19% compared to May), followed by ITV, The Telegraph and Time Out (4.4 million, up 10%).

Audiences spent most time with the BBC (9.2 billion minutes) while The Guardian fell from third place behind Mail Online into fourth (898.5 million minutes) due to ITV’s growth.

As well as Mail Online, its rival The Sun (348.4 million minutes, down 31%) and The Guardian (down 19%) both saw large year-on-year falls in minutes spent with their content.

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In contrast, paywalled brands continued to demonstrate strong growth in time spent. Audiences spent 810.3 million minutes with The Telegraph (up 38% year-on-year, surpassing its 23% growth in May), 569.8 million with The Times (up 38%) and 365.8 million with The New York Times (up 67%).

To create this top-50 list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content. Our list covers both consumer and industry (B2B) media. You can consult our list of 100 brands and read more about our criteria here.

Brands such as Apple and Google, while well-known names in news, are excluded from our list given the wide reach of their non-news content. Google News and Apple News are not reported by Ipsos as separate entities in brand level data.

Ipsos iris replaced Comscore as the industry-recognised standard in 2021. Ipsos iris data is partly derived from a panel of 10,000 people aged 15 and over that is designed to be nationally representative. The participants have meters installed across 25,000 personal devices to passively measure website and app usage. This is combined with data from participating websites that are tagged so all devices visiting the site can be identified and logged.

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May 2024

ITV re-entered the top ten for audience reach among UK news websites in May, according to Press Gazette’s latest ranking.

Metro saw the biggest year-on-year growth in reach among the top ten newsbrands but Sky News was second by that metric as well as top of the month-on-month growth chart.

And on engagement, Mail Online and The Sun both saw drops of more than 30% in minutes spent compared to May last year.

Audience to the Metro website was up 17% year-on-year in May to 16.1 million people, according to data from Ipsos iris. 

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It was followed by Sky News which also saw 10% growth compared to May 2023 to reach 19.7 million people.

In contrast, Mail Online (23 million, down 9% year-on-year) and The Telegraph (15.1 million, down 7%) saw the biggest falls among the top ten newsbrands by UK audience size. 

Month-on-month, the broadcasters also had a strong May with Sky News and ITV (14.8 million) topping the table for audience change among the top ten names, growing 9% compared to April. 

As a result, ITV re-entered the top ten sites by size of monthly audience in tenth place, edging Money Saving Expert down into twelfth position (audience of 14.1 million) behind the Daily Express (14.8 million) in eleventh. The rest of the top ten remained unchanged in a largely static month at the top. 

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The Mirror (audience of 22.1 million, up 6% month-on-month), BBC (39.1 million, up 4%), The Sun (23.9 million, up 2%) and Mail Online (up 2%) were the remaining four top-ten newsbrands to reach more people in May than April

The BBC was unmoved from the top of the table as the newsbrand with the largest monthly audience in the UK, followed by The Sun in second place and Mail Online in third.

Among the wider top 50, Reach’s Gloucestershire Live and Irish Mirror were again the fastest-growing newsbrands year-on-year. Audience to Gloucestershire Live was up 293% to 4 million people, while the Irish Mirror was up 183% to 3.4 million. 

Business title Forbes doubled its audience (up 100% to 6.8 million) while entertainment newsbrand Joe also performed well in May with its audience rising to 3 million, up 78% year-on-year.

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Screenrant (up 54% year-on-year), Bristol Live (up 51%),  Financial Times (up 47%), Birmingham Live (up 37%), TechRadar (up 30%) and the New York Times (up 20%) also grew in what was a strong month for many newsbrands – only 13 of the top 50 saw an audience drop compared to last May.

Month-on-month among the whole top 50, Gloucestershire Live was again the top performer (up 38%), followed by Unilad (3.4 million, up 32%) and the Financial Times (4.5 million, up 28%).

Audiences spent most time with the BBC (9.4 billion minutes) followed by Mail Online (1.5 billion minutes) and The Guardian (969.5 million minutes). 

Mail Online saw a large year-on-year fall in time spent with its content – down 30% compared to May 2023, as did rival The Sun (316.2 million minutes, down 39%).

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In contrast, paywalled brands continued to demonstrate strong growth in time spent with their content. Audiences spent 761.4 million minutes with the Telegraph (up 23% year-on-year), 565.5 million with the Times & Sunday Times (up 40%) and 379.8 million with the New York Times (up 66%). 

To create this top-50 list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content. Our list covers both consumer and industry (B2B) media. You can consult our list of 100 brands and read more about our criteria here.

Brands such as Apple and Google, while well-known names in news, are excluded from our list given the wide reach of their non-news content. Google News and Apple News are not reported by Ipsos as separate entities in brand level data.

April 2024

The Independent fell back to sixth place in Press Gazette’s latest ranking of the biggest news websites in the UK after a strong March that saw it overtake the Mirror and The Guardian.

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The Independent’s UK audience fell by 5% month-on-month in April to 19.7 million, according to the latest Ipsos iris data.

Meanwhile the Mirror moved back into fourth (audience of 21 million, up 1% month-on-month) and Guardian back into fifth (20.5 million, down 2% month-on-month).

DMGT’s Metro was however, the only top ten brand to see significant growth in audience compared to March, and was the fastest-growing top ten newsbrand in the UK, with its monthly audience up 15% year-on–year to 16.4 million people.

The Telegraph (15.9 million, up 3%) and Money Saving Expert (up 1%) were the remaining top ten newsbrands to make month-on-month gains.

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Metro was also the fastest-growing newsbrand year-on-year with audience up and 16% compared to April 2023.

Second-fastest growing year-on-year was Martin Lewis’ consumer newsbrand Money Saving Expert (audience of 13.9 million, up 6%) while Sky News (18.1 million, up 2%) was third.

They were the only three top ten names to grow year-on-year in April. Instead several well-known names, among them Mail Online (audience of 22.5 million, down 9.1%), The Sun (23.4 million, down 11%) and the Mirror (21 million, down 13%), saw significant drops.

The BBC was unmoved from the top of the table as the newsbrand with the largest monthly audience in the UK at 37.8 million people, followed by The Sun in second place and Mail Online in third.

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Among the wider top 50, Reach’s Gloucestershire Live and Irish Mirror both more than doubled their audiences compared to April last year. Audience to Gloucestershire Live was up 184% to 2.9 million, while the Irish Mirror’s audience was up 152% to 3.3 million.

A number of other newsbrands also saw growth of over 50% year-on-year in April, among them Forbes (audience of 6.7 million, up 86% year-on-year), People (3 million, up 76% and Future-owned Tech Radar (3.6 million, up 58%).

Many of the same names also performed strongly month-on-month with visitors to the Irish Mirror up 34% compared to March, up 27% at Forbes and up 24% at Tech Radar.

Looking at engagement, audiences spent most time with the BBC (9.4 billion minutes) followed by Mail Online (1.5 billion minutes) and The Guardian (904 million minutes) although the latter fell below the one billion mark.

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Paywalled brands again punched above their weight on time spent with their content compared to the size of their total reach with The Telegraph ranked eighth for reach but coming fifth for time spent at 762.4 million minutes – up both month-on-month (6%) and year-on-year (61%).

The Times and Sunday Times, which ranked 13th for audience, came in sixth for a second month in a row by total time spent with its digital content (599.5 million minutes).

To create this top-50 list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content. Our list covers both consumer and industry (B2B) media. You can consult our list of 100 brands and read more about our criteria here.

Brands such as Apple and Google, while well-known names in news, are excluded from our list given the wide reach of their non-news content. Google News and Apple News are not reported by Ipsos as separate entities in brand level data.

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March 2024

The Independent’s audience was up 8% month-on-month in March, leading to it jumping from sixth to fourth place in Press Gazette’s latest monthly ranking of the biggest news websites in the UK.

The Independent’s monthly audience was up to 21 million, meaning it has leapfrogged the Mirror (20.7 million) and The Guardian (20.8 million) to reach fourth place for the first time since Press Gazette started using Ipsos iris data for this ranking.

The Mirror fell from fourth to sixth place, with a month-on-month drop of 3% compared to The Guardian’s 2% growth.

The Independent’s growth was the joint-highest in the top ten with The Telegraph in ninth place, which was also up 8% month-on-month to 15.5 million.

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Mail Online (audience of 22.7 million, up 6%) and Metro (14.3 million, up 5%) also saw audiences that were at least 5% bigger than in February. ITV (audience of 14 million) and the Mirror saw the biggest falls, at 3% each.

Year-on-year, the UK’s biggest newsbrands saw a much slower month with all but The Independent (up 8% year-on-year) seeing smaller audiences in March 2024 compared with the same month in 2023.

ITV (down 18% year-on-year), Mirror (down 17%), Metro (down 15%), The Sun (audience of 23.7 million, down 15%) and The Guardian (down 14%) all saw-double digit drops.

Among the wider top 50, Gloucestershire Live, ranked 39th, more than doubled its audience year-on-year reaching 3.9 million people – up 139% compared to March 2023.

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It was followed by Forbes (5.3 million, up 44% year-on-year) and Canadian-based entertainment news site Screenrant (3.9 million, up 38%).

Reach regional sites, Bristol Live (audience of 4.9 million, up 8%) and Birmingham Live (11 million, up 7%) saw the next biggest year-on-year growth.

We have not included GB News in the above chart. Its audience was up 3,515% year-on-year however, this is due in part to the fact that GB News launched a new dotcom URL last year meaning that not all growth will be organic.

Compared to February, women’s lifestyle publisher Cosmopolitan saw the largest boost to its audience – up 42% month-on-month to 3.8 million.

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It was followed by Yorkshire Live (4.9 million, up 33%) and CNN (3.5 million, up 31%). Yorkshire Live (also known as Examiner Live) was one of five Reach websites, three of which are regional brands, in the fastest-growing sites month-month, along with OK (5.2 million, up 23% month-on-month), Gloucestershire Live (up 15%), Daily Express (13.2 million, up 13%) and Manchester Evening News (11 million, up 13%).

The BBC remained top of the table for overall audience (38 million), although Ipsos’ data measures the total unduplicated number of people who used a brand’s websites and apps in a given month and includes all traffic, not necessarily just news. Reach and minutes for brands such as the BBC and ITV, which have a strong entertainment offering in addition to news content, will therefore be higher.

The Sun was again the second largest newsbrand and the top commercial name (23.7 million), followed by Mail Online.

Audiences also spent most time with the BBC (9.4 billion minutes), followed by Mail Online (1.6 billion minutes) and The Guardian (1 billion minutes).

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The Guardian overtook ITV (893 million minutes) which fell into fourth place. Total time spent with The Guardian was up 29% year-on-year and 5% month-on-month. ITV in contrast recorded a 25% fall compared to February.

Paywalled brands again punched above their weight on time spent with their content compared to the size of their total reach with The Telegraph coming fifth for time spent (719 minutes) compared to eighth for reach.

The Times and Sunday Times, which ranked 13th for audience, came in sixth for total time spent with its digital content (633.2 million minutes), up one place from February, while The New York Times, ranked 23rd for audience reach, came in eighth for minutes spent (371.5 million).

To create this top-50 list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content. Our list covers both consumer and industry (B2B) media. You can consult our list of 100 brands and read more about our criteria here.

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Brands such as Apple and Google, while well-known names in news, are excluded from our list given the wide reach of their non-news content. Google News and Apple News are not reported by Ipsos as separate entities in brand level data.

February 2024

None of the ten biggest news websites in the UK saw a bigger audience in February than in January, according to Press Gazette’s latest monthly ranking.

ITV saw the biggest fall among the top sites by audience size, down 7% compared to January (14.4 million) according to data from Ipsos iris. It was followed by Mail Online (audience of 21.4 million), Sky News (17.7 million) and the Mirror (21.3 million), which each saw a 6% month-on-month fall in audience.

This trend was in contrast to January, when all but three of the top ten newsbrands grew their audiences month-on-month.

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Year-on-year the picture was the same for the top ten brands with each recording declines compared to last February. Seven saw double-digit drops including Metro (with 13.6 million unique visitors in February) seeing the largest year-on-year fall at 15%. Sky News, the Guardian (audience of 20 million) and the BBC (37.6 million) saw falls of less than 10%.

Among the wider top 50, a Reach regional newsbrand recorded the largest month-on-month growth in audience for the second month in a row. Audience to Gloucestershire Live was up 20% in February to 3.4 million, echoing Bristol Live’s gain in January, and leading to it re-enter the top 50 in 37th place. LBC (audience of 4.3 million) shared first spot with Gloucestershire Live, also up 20% month-on-month.

They were followed by Irish Mirror (audience of 2.7 million, up 16% month-on-month) and another Reach brand, Yorkshire Live (3.7 million, up 13%).

Two newsbrands just outside of the top ten, The Evening Standard (ranked 15 with an audience of 10.9 million, up 9% month-on-month) and The Times and Sunday Times (rank 12, 12.1 million, up 5%), also grew monthly in February.

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Year-on-year, relative newcomer GB News, which launched a dotcom url last year, saw the fastest growth in the top 50. Audience to the newsbrand was up 167% compared to February 2023 at 9 million people. It was followed by Gloucestershire Live (up 130% year-on-year) and People (2.9 million, up 59%).

The BBC remained top of the table for overall audience, although Ipsos’ data measures the total unduplicated number of people who used a brand’s websites and apps in a given month and includes all traffic, not necessarily just news. Reach and minutes for brands such as the BBC and ITV, which have a strong entertainment offering in addition to news content, will therefore be higher.

The Sun remained the second largest newsbrand and the top commercial name (23.4 million), followed by Mail Online (21.4 million), the Mirror (21.3 million), and The Guardian (20 million) in an order unchanged from last month.

Audiences also spent most time with the BBC (10.7 billion minutes), followed by Mail Online (1.6 billion minutes), and ITV (1.2 billion minutes), with BBC and Mail Online both seeing falls of 11% and 12% respectively in time spent with their content compared to January.

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Paywalled brands again punched above their weight on time spent with their content compared to the size of their total reach. The Times and Sunday Times, which ranked 12th for audience, came in seventh for total time spent with its digital content (572.6 million minutes), while The New York Times, ranked 21st for audience reach, came in ninth for minutes spent (323.6 million).

To create this top-50 list, Press Gazette used Ipsos’ ranking of the top online brand groups and selected the 50 biggest that Press Gazette considers to be based in journalistic content. Our list covers both consumer and industry (B2B) media. You can consult our list of 100 brands and read more about our criteria here.

Brands such as Apple and Google, while well-known names in news, are excluded from our list given the wide reach of their non-news content. Google News and Apple News are not reported by Ipsos as separate entities in brand level data.

January 2024

Money Saving Expert and The Telegraph saw month-on-month double-digit growth of their audiences in January, according to Press Gazette’s latest monthly ranking.

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Martin Lewis’ consumer newsbrand reached an audience of 14.2 million in January, up 20% compared to December, while audience at the Telegraph was up 10% to 15.2 million.

They were among seven of the top ten newsbrands by audience size that saw more visitors in January compared to December, according to data from Ipsos iris. Sky News (18.8 million visitors, up 6% month-on-month) saw the third fastest-growth.

Mail Online (22.8 million visitors) and The Sun (24.3 million) were the only two top ten newsbrands to see monthly falls in traffic. Traffic to Mail Online’s websites and apps was down slightly by 2%, while down by 1% for The Sun.

Compared to January 2023, all of the ten biggest newsbrands except Sky News saw their audiences fall year-on-year.

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The Mirror (22.6 million people, down 11%) and The Telegraph (down 10%) recorded the largest drops. Sky News saw a slightly year-on-year audience boost (up 2%) while the BBC’s audience was unchanged.

Among the wider top 50, Reach’s Bristol Live saw the biggest monthly gain in audience (5.3 million people, up 29%), followed by health newsbrand Web MD (4.7 million, up 27%) and the Financial Times (3.7 million, up 24%).

The BBC remained top of the table for overall audience with 38 million unique visitors in January, although Ipsos’ data measures the total unduplicated number of people who used a brand’s websites and apps in a given month and includes all traffic, not necessarily just news. Reach and minutes for brands such as the BBC and ITV, which have a strong entertainment offering in addition to news content, will therefore be higher.

The Sun remained the second largest newsbrand and the top commercial name, followed closely by Mail Online, the Mirror, and The Guardian (21.2 million).

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The BBC was also top for total time spent with its website and apps in January (10.9 billion minutes), followed by Mail Online (1.8 billion minutes), and ITV (1.2 billion).

Despite coming in 25th place for reach (7.3 million people), The New York Times made the top ten for time spent, coming in ninth position as its audience spent 338.3 million minutes with its paywalled content during the month.

Year-on-year once again GB News, which launched a new .com URL in March last year, saw the biggest growth with an audience of 8.7 million, up 195% compared to January. While not all growth will be organic, the publisher has invested in ramping up its digital presence.

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Email pged@pressgazette.co.uk to point out mistakes, provide story tips or send in a letter for publication on our “Letters Page” blog

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Top shale boss says US ‘unusually vulnerable’ to Middle East oil shock

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US shale magnate Harold Hamm has accused the Biden administration of leaving the nation “unusually vulnerable” to a Middle East oil price shock by draining its strategic petroleum reserve, damaging domestic production and bungling foreign policy.

The Continental Resources founder told the Financial Times he was “very concerned” that Middle East conflict could disrupt global oil supplies while the US shale patch had been put in a “weakened condition”, unable to rapidly lift output.

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“They have drained the SPR, and refinery inventories are at their lowest in America [in years]. And you just never know when you need it. It’s kind of like having gas in your car,” said the billionaire shale boss.

“We are in an unusually vulnerable position . . . everybody is looking in the direction [of the Middle East] right now — and has been for the last four years — but we had a president that frankly wasn’t at home.”

While strategic reserves have been drawn down, commercial inventories of crude and petroleum have surged 25 per cent over the past decade. Officials have been replenishing SPR reserves since June 2023, which now stand 10 per cent higher since then, at 382mn barrels.

US oil and gas production has hit record highs under President Joe Biden, while crude and LNG exports have soared.

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Kevin Book, managing director of ClearView Energy Partners, said the US was in a better position now to weather supply disruptions than in the 1970s, when some Arab Opec members imposed an embargo on shipping crude to western countries that triggered a sudden price spike.

“We’ve battened down a lot of hatches,” he said, giving the US “limited industrial exposure to high crude prices”.

The comments from Hamm, a prominent donor to Republican candidate Donald Trump’s election drive, echo campaign trail comments from the former president, who has accused the Biden administration of a “war on American energy” and taking the US to the “brink of world war three”.

Hamm, a pioneer of the shale revolution, spoke to the FT shortly before Iran fired a barrage of missiles at Israel, a response to Israel Defense Forces’ ground offensive against Hizbollah in southern Lebanon.

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The Iranian attack sent oil prices up 5 per cent to $75.40 on Tuesday, amid fears of a wider conflict in a region accounting for about a third of global oil production capacity.

Geopolitical analysts have warned any conflict involving Tehran could threaten Gulf oil and gas exports through the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow chokepoint bordering Iran through which 20 per cent of the world’s crude supplies pass.

Further fuel price rises would be uncomfortable for the Biden administration and vice-president Kamala Harris, who is running for the White House with a pledge to drive down the cost of everyday goods.

US petrol prices average about $3.40 a gallon, down about a third from their price in mid-2022, when a surge in crude markets after Russia invaded Ukraine pushed up fuel costs.

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The White House began releasing oil from the SPR in 2021 — created in the wake of the Arab oil embargo in the early 1970s — ahead of the invasion in an attempt to keep down domestic petrol prices.

It released another 180mn barrels of oil from the reserve in 2022 after sanctions on Russia brought fears of supply disruptions.

The US has been buying back some of the oil but has 382mn barrels — about half of capacity — left in the SPR, enough to meet about 19 days of consumption, according to the US Energy Information Administration.

Line chart of Weekly stocks of crude oil in Strategic Petroleum Reserve, millions of barrels showing US emergency crude stockpiles are half full

Hamm also accused the Biden administration of trying to restrict US oil and gas investment by pursuing “short-sighted” policies including curbs on some drilling and a pause on new liquefied natural gas plants, compromising energy security at a time of mounting geopolitical risk.

“It’s very important that we don’t crash this industry any further than the administration has crashed it already,” said Hamm, adding that he expected Harris to maintain curbs on the industry if she won the election in November.

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A US official rejected Hamm’s criticisms of the Biden administration, saying the Washington played an active role in ensuring conflicts overseas had not damaged Americans.

“We’ve done this by accelerating the energy transition, on the one hand reducing fossil fuels demand in the process, and making strategic releases from the SPR,” the official said.

“People said this would break the market, but it didn’t. People then said we would have $100 oil this year, but we haven’t. People said we wouldn’t be able to fill up the SPR. But we are filling the SPR. We put a plan together in January of 2022 and we have stuck to it without deviation, despite all the dire predictions.”

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AI data centers are draining water from this drought-stricken Mexican town

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AI data centers are draining water from this drought-stricken Mexican town

As the climate crisis intensifies, billions of poor and working people around the world are suffering from lack of regular (or any) access to clean water, but the dawn of “AI” is about to make the problem much worse. In their recent report for Context, “Forget jobs—AI is coming for your water,” Diana Baptista and Fintan McDonnell write, “Artificial intelligence lives on power and water, fed to it in vast quantities by data centres around the world. And those centres are increasingly located in the global south.” In Colón, a municipality in Central Mexico that is home to Microsoft’s first hyperscale data center campus in the country, working people are already bearing the environmental costs of man-made climate change, and they will be the ones to bear the costs of AI and Big Tech. “The town of 67,000 is suffering extreme drought. Its two dams have nearly dried up, farmers are struggling with dead crops, and families are relying on trucked and bottled water to fulfill their daily needs.”

In the latest installment of our ongoing series, Sacrificed, Max speaks with Diana Baptista, a data journalist at the Thomson Reuters Foundation based in Mexico City, about Mexico’s ongoing water crisis and about the human and environmental costs of AI and cloud computing.

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Featured Music…
Jules Taylor, “Working People” Theme Song

Studio Production: Max Alvarez
Post-Production: Jules Taylor


Transcript

The following is a rushed transcript and may contain errors. A proofread version will be made available as soon as possible.

Diana Baptista:

Hello, I’m Diana Baptista. I’m a data journalist for the Thomson Reuters Foundation context, and I’m based in Mexico City.

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Maximillian Alvarez:

All right, welcome everyone to another episode of Working People, a podcast about the lives, jobs, dreams, and struggles of the working class today. Brought to you in partnership with In These Times magazine and The Real News Network produced by Jules Taylor and made possible by the support of listeners like you. Working People is a proud member of the Labor Radio Podcast network. If you’re hungry for more worker and labor focus shows like ours, follow the link in the show notes and go check out all the other great shows in our network and please support the work that we’re doing here at Working People because we can’t keep going without you. Share our episodes with your coworkers, your friends and family members. Leave positive reviews of the show on Spotify and Apple Podcasts and reach out to us if you have recommendations for working folks you’d like us to talk to or subjects you’d like us to investigate and please support the work we do at The Real News Network by going to therealnews.com/donate, especially if you want to see more reporting from the front lines of struggle around the US and across the world.

My name is Maximillian Alvarez and today we’ve got another critical installment of our ongoing sacrificed series where we are speaking with people, working and living in industrial government run and climate sacrifice zones around the US and beyond where we investigate the root causes and the connections between sacrifice communities and where we talk seriously about what we can do about it. In the description of a recent video report titled, Forget Jobs. AI is Coming for Your Water, Diana Baptista and Fenton McDonald write: “Artificial intelligence lives on power and water fed to it in vast quantities by data centers around the world, and these centers are increasingly located in the global south.” One estimate from the University of California, Riverside says AI’s total water demand by 2027 could be more than half the total annual water withdrawal of the United Kingdom, but all we really have are estimates.

Big tech firms have been secretive about the amount of public water used by individual data centers, and up to half of all data centers don’t even measure how much water they use. According to one survey, a municipality of Mexico City and Central Mexico is home to Microsoft’s first hyperscale data center campus in the country. The town of 67,000 is suffering extreme drought. Its two dams have nearly dried up. Farmers are struggling with dead crops, and families are relying on trucked and bottled water to fulfill their daily needs. Mexico leveraging its proximity to the US is hoping to convince big tech to nearshore their facilities. Here, the state of Quero is offering favorable land loans, cheap electricity in a pool of local talent. Similar stories are playing out around the world. In Uruguay, Google admitted that a planned data center in Montevideo would require 7.6 million liters of drinking water per day.

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While the country was suffering a historic three year drought in the United States, a bill has been introduced in the Senate to compel big tech to reveal the environmental impacts of AI after reports of conflict over water between farmers and big tech in the desert of Arizona. So that’s what we’re going to be discussing today, and I could not be more honored to have Diana Baptista on the show with us. Diana is, as you heard, a data journalist at the Thomason Reuters Foundation. She’s based in Mexico City, and you can find a link to the vital video report that she produced with Fenton McDonald for context, a media platform created by the Thomason Reuters Foundation in the show notes for this episode. And if you haven’t already, I highly recommend that you watch the report and follow all the important work that Diana and her colleagues are doing over at context, but we’re going to have a conversation here that hopefully will encourage you to go watch the report if you haven’t already, because you really, really should.

And Diana, thank you so much for joining me today, and thank you so much for doing this important work. I was really excited to learn about it, although I was horrified to learn what you found in reporting this stuff. And so I want to dig into all of this, but I guess before we really dig into the meat of this particular story, I wanted to ask if we could start with a sort of zoomed out context here for the water crisis that is going on in Mexico and has been going on for some time. I mean, I remember as a grad student in Mexico City, like everybody else, I was getting my water and those big jugs people in our buildings were getting them delivered twice a week or you’d walk to the corner shop and carry back these heavy, expensive bottles of purified water while the stuff coming out of your taps was not fit to drink. So for folks who are listening to this who maybe don’t know about how bad the water crisis in Mexico is, I was wondering if you could just sort of give us some context there. How bad is it?

Diana Baptista:

First of all, thank you, Maximilian. It’s such a pleasure to be in this podcast. Thank you so much for the invitation. So yeah, let’s talk about Mexico. So we have drinking water. We have taps in 99% of the country. However, this is not drinking water. We don’t put a glass of water and drink from it. It all comes from bottles and the water we collect to drink afterwards. And this is because of several issues with infrastructure that have been going on for decades now. And one of the main issues we’re having right now in Mexico is drought. We have had several rain seasons that have been irregular. Our dams are not filling up, and this is all around the country except the southern part of the country, but most of it is just drying up. And the truth is that we’ve come completely dependent to water bottle companies and all these big soda companies.

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So what we are drinking as a population, everything comes from plastic and everything comes from soda. It’s a very sad reality that we have been facing for decades now here in Mexico. And because of the drought. For example, in Mexico City this year, we were very close of reaching day zero, which is the day that the dams have been completely empty and there is no more left for consumption. This has happened in other parts of the world like South Africa. They’ve overcome it and we really didn’t have any plan to overcome it. There were several plans of infrastructure and stuff, but the only way we survived that was thanks to the rain, it rained finally. It has been raining quite intensely, and it was just luck. We got lucky this rain season and it has been raining otherwise, perhaps we would’ve reached day zero for Mexico City, and that means around 20 million people without access to water.

So very serious stuff. And we focused on our investigation on a place that is north of Mexico City. It’s around three hours away. That is called Quero. And for many years this has been a semi deserter and it has been struggling with tremendous drought. This means that at least for three years, rain seasons have been irregular. Dams are almost completely empty. If you go there, everything is yellow, everything feels dry. And the sun with the heat waves, we have been getting, it has been horrible up there. And while people are dependent more than ever on water bottle companies at the moment, so one of the main issues we have in Mexico as well is unequal water distribution. So this means that this big and bottled water companies are located in these places with extreme drought and most of the water is being allocated to them. So our public water, our public resources are going to these companies so they can sell water to us in the form of plastic. And activists for many years now have been fighting this around the country because this is for soda, for bottled water and for beer and a lot of beer that’s getting exported to the United States, for example. So activists have been very angry for many years denouncing that this water inequality is just very hard on the population.

Maximillian Alvarez:

I want to circle back to that in the end when we sort of connect this story in Mexico that you’ve reported on to the other stories that we’ve been reporting on in this sacrificed series and kind of how what you’re describing is really the future that lies in store for so many of us. And that future is already here for towns like East Palestine, Ohio, where people are still living off of bottled water. So I want to end up there, but let’s kind of stay in Colon for a minute and talk about what it was like for you to really start digging into this story and what you were learning about Microsoft’s plans for this massive campus in Cologne, a municipality that’s already experiencing extreme drought.

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Diana Baptista:

Of course. So this was all burned. This all came from the fact that Thom from the Thomson Reuters Foundation, we had been investigating the expansion of data centers in the global south. And we had been reading that a lot of them were coming to Mexico, and suddenly Microsoft made this big announcement saying, we have invested billions in the state of Carrero and we’re opening up this hyperscale cloud region, which we’re not very sure yet what it means, but it came with billions of dollars of investment and it was a huge announcement. It even reached the president. The president was very happy about this investment. So we looked at Rero and wondered, oh, we know data center stick water. We know there’s not enough data on how much water they take, but there have been a lot of battles around the global south when these data centers come to town.

And we were very interested in the fact that from Carrero, we heard nothing but silence. We weren’t hearing the activists, we weren’t hearing the protests. So we wondered, is nobody looking at Carrero? What’s happening there? So we decided to make the trip up there to Cologne. The colon is this very large municipality. So you have a lot of in cologne, you have car manufacturers and you have agriculture and you have chickens and meat and protein industry. And then you have these very small towns hidden in the mountains that are the ones who small farmers and people living off tourism actually live. And they’re among the most vulnerable population in our country. So we went up there and Quero has always had a problem because of all the water that goes to the industry, you have these huge industrial parks among these yellowed hills where everything you see is dry and a lot of water is being taken by the industry.

And it’s such a stark contrast from where you’d expect big industry to grow. And then we went to this little towns in the municipality of cologne. There must be around 50 minutes away from where all the industrial parks with the data centers are located. And over there we saw people really struggling. We went to a community that is called Lare, and this is an indigenous community. Most people are very small farmers. They have very small restaurants that has no electricity, they have no tap water there. They bring their own water and water jugs, and they live of tourism from every weekend. People would go from Mexico City or from Carrero capital to that little town and just spend a couple days next to the dam in the water, eat and go back home. So that’s what the people live off. But when we went there, the dams were almost completely empty. There was nobody there. We went there on Father’s Day, which is supposed to be one of the most active days, and there was a lot of music. There were people, but after a couple of hours, everybody left and the businesses were all empty. So we saw people had nobody to sell their fish to or their produce. Nobody was doing water sports, they weren’t eating at the restaurants. It just felt very lonely. Where this town’s life is around water. When there’s no water, everything just dies around it.

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Maximillian Alvarez:

As the water protectors have famously burned onto our memories, water is life and without water, there’s no life. And that’s really the direction that we’re heading in. I mean, how more basically can we put it here? And I want to kind of drill down on this point because I know as you guys say in the report, and as I mentioned in the introduction, it’s actually hard to determine how much water these data centers and big tech in general are using. But we know that that usage has spiked since the introduction of AI products like Chat, GPT. And there’s an article by Yale’s E 360 that I’ll include in the show notes for this episode that reads, according to a recent study by Ren, Google’s data centers used 20% more water in 2022 than they did in 2021. And Microsoft’s water use rose by 34% in the same period. Google data centers host its Barred chatbot and other generative ais. Microsoft Servers host chat GPT as well as its bigger siblings, GPT-3 and GPT-4. All three are produced by open AI in which Microsoft is a large investor. So Diana, could you just flesh this out a little more for folks, how the introduction of so-called AI has played into this story and how much water usage we’re really talking about here?

Diana Baptista:

I mean, this has been quite an adventure to try to figure out how much water is being used. So when we first heard that data centers were coming to Queretaro and we’re talking about the three big companies, so we had announcements by Microsoft, Google, and Amazon for billions of dollars coming to this little town without water. So the first thing we did was ask. We asked the companies, can you tell us how much water, how many data center units you have first in the state and how many you’re planning to build and how much water they will take? Microsoft kept telling us they had no spokesperson that could give us information. Amazon gave us some explanation that the tech they’re going to use is very new, doesn’t take water, but they wouldn’t go into detail because of industrial secrecy and all that. And Google just said they’re bringing down the water usage.

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So we didn’t get answers. From there, we decided to ask the government, the local government who has been doing a major push to bring these data centers to town. So we have Governor Mauricio Kuri from the first day he was appointed as governor, he traveled to Washington DC to meet with Amazon people to try to convince them to bring their data centers to Carrero. So from day one, it has been a priority of the local government to bring them. And when I spoke to the Secretary of Sustainable Development, Marco Elte, who is one of the main figures bringing the data centers to town, he said he didn’t have the figures because he’s not the water commission, so he doesn’t allocate the water. But he also gave me some very weird numbers saying that the data centers in Quero take the same amount of water as a hotel room with 55 rooms or the same as a restaurant in 30 days.

But he wouldn’t say where these estimations came from. Very weird estimations to begin with, which meant he must have known how many gallons, at least one unit is taken. But then he said he didn’t know. So we felt we kept being played around. There was such huge capacity in the public and in the private sector, we asked the National Water Commission, and they only told us that they haven’t allocated any new concessions to any new companies in Carrera. But one thing about Mexico that is one of the roots of our water crisis is that at some point in our history, the National Water Commission gave away a lot of concessions to a lot of private people and a lot of private companies. And the way our law works is that they can sell that concession. So Maximilian, you may have owned an entire aquifer, for example, and you decide to sell it to Microsoft and you don’t have to ask anybody about this, you just tell the water commission.

You did that and that’s it. So people who owned these concessions have been selling to the industry in a way that then the public has no say in it. You have no voice in it because it’s a private thing between particulars and then the public is left without water and you don’t even know who sold it to whom. So it’s been, I don’t know, it’s very bureaucratic, but also a lot of opacity on how these concessions are being sold. And the National Water Commission told us that that’s how Microsoft got one of its commissions. It got sold to them by somebody who already owned one, which is very grave, right? Because then it allows for absolutely zero accountability. So once we had this information, we tried to figure out on our own how much water these data centers were taken. We went to public databases for the National Water Commission, and we couldn’t find anything because this information is no longer public once it belongs to a private company or you don’t know who is selling to whom.

So we were left in the dark. Companies refuse to tell this information. Local government said they didn’t have the information, which we found was ridiculous. And then you have local activists that for many, many years have been fighting for equal distribution of water in Quero, but they were also left in the dark. There are very small group to begin with who have been asking in the last month, in recent months have been asking the secretary like, Hey, can you tell us how much water these data centers are going to take? And he always says that, don’t worry about this. These data centers do not take a lot of water. They cannot come to Carrera because there’s no water to begin with, so we cannot give them more water. They’re super efficient data centers, but then we’re already left in the dark about how this technology operates, this super, supposedly super efficient new data centers that do not require water.

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We don’t know how they work. We have no way to prove that they are actually water efficient, that they require zero water. We just have to take everything at face value, everything that the local government and the companies tell you. And activists actually found out from context about the concession bought by Microsoft. So it has been very difficult to figure this out. And when Finon reached out to some international experts that have been doing this estimations of how much water this data centers take around the world, they told us the same thing. There’s no data on data centers. They have to rely on certain estimations and certain methodologies they have developed by themselves, but there is nothing certain. And it has been very frustrating trying to figure it out and trying to do the estimations by yourselves when nobody is cooperating, nobody’s giving you any numbers to start up from. So it makes a journalist job very difficult. But we also see it makes the activist jobs very difficult because then we have no certainty and no possibility for accountability.

Maximillian Alvarez:

I think that’s really beautifully and powerfully put. And again, I want to encourage everyone listening to this to go watch the report itself because Diana and Fenton dig into this a lot more there. And Diana, I just wanted to ask just to make sure that folks are keeping up with us. You guys talk a bit about what the hell they’re using the water for, but can you just give us the basics there? Why do these data centers need so much water and why does AI demand so much water?

Diana Baptista:

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Of course, it comes down to cooling. These data centers get very, very hot from all the computing, from all the computing processing it requires. It gets very hot inside a data center unit. So they can use two things, either electricity or water to cool off a data center. So you will hear information sometimes from a company saying that they have become super water efficient and they do not require fresh drinking water, which is the kind of water they need. They don’t need recycled water. They need fresh drinking water to cool down their huge computers, so using electricity. But the experts we have spoken to have also estimated how much water a country needs to power. Its electricity that powers the data centers. So no process for a data center is water free to begin with. Everything requires water. So of course they may come to Reta and say, all we’re going to need is electricity, but in the end, the power plants are also running on water.

So Queretaro needs water to run these power plants to run data centers. So in the end, everything needs water. So that becomes kind of tricky to understand. What does AI have to do with this? First of all, most of the data centers that are coming to Mexico are for the cloud for storing our images and our memes, our thousand on red emails and everything like this. The secretary, when I spoke to him, he said this was the industry of the future that everything we would need as humans would be cloud storage. And that quero would be so much stronger by become a data center valley because the world wouldn’t need our services. Which tells us a lot about balancing the creation of jobs with the depletion of our natural resources and ai. Yes, as these AI systems grow, these companies are also looking to the global south to locate their data centers.

And experts told us this is for different reasons. First of all, because local governments are giving them incentives. So water is cheap, electricity is cheap. In Creta, we found out they’re even giving some of them free land. We found a contract that the Congress approved this huge land to be giving to cloud HQ for a data center. There’s a pool of local talent that as we know in the global south, you pay less than you would in the north. And then you have all these local governments that are not asking questions. So we were very skeptical when the secretary told us he wouldn’t know how much water would be allocated to the data centers because we imagine when they traveled to Washington DC to talk to these companies, they must have discussed this, it must have come up. How much water are you going to use? What are your estimates? What is the technology you’re using? So I don’t want to think they’re not even discussing this or they’re not even thinking about these questions. They’re just telling them, come and bring your money. So these are the two technologies that are using these data centers, AI and cloud storage.

Maximillian Alvarez:

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I mean, I have so many thoughts and questions about this, but I know how busy you are and I can’t keep you for two hours. But I mean it’s so wild to think that it was less than a hundred years ago in 1938 when La Ena nationalized famously the oil industry in Mexico, thus really representing a sort of different governmental mentality and how Mexico was approaching its collective ownership over its own resources. And we’ve had a long kind of windy up and down sort of road from there to here. The government doesn’t even know, is not tracking all this water that’s being promised to these private companies from Silicon Valley. And the sales that are being made are sort of passing through private hands in a way that just sort of really shows you, I think the trajectory of the past century in a state like Mexico and what the kind of privatization, neoliberal and all those big historical forces, what they translate to 80, 90 years later in everything that you and I are talking about here.

But you and I will have to have a follow-up discussion, breaking all that down because there’s a whole lot to dig into there that we don’t have time to now. But I wanted to kind of bring it back to the working people living and working in this area because normally whether it’s the Quila, Dores on the border or these other sort of incentives that states and local governments give to industries to try to bring them them to Mexico, big promises like, oh, it’s going to mean jobs. It’s going to mean economic prosperity for the people here and the people here can provide their labor and expertise in cheaper quantities than you could get north of the border. All that stuff. I wanted to ask, is that even a thing? It feels like, and you guys touch on this in your reporting, the average working person A doesn’t even know that this is happening, let alone how it’s going to impact them, and B, they’re sure shit not going to benefit from it. So could you talk a bit about that, what this all looks like or doesn’t look like through the eyes of local working people in colon. Colon?

Diana Baptista:

One thing, colon is going to be a victim of its own success because you had this deserted area that suddenly it’s becoming the data center valley and you had all these other industries. So you’re attracting a lot of people that are not even from colon. So we’re talking people with master’s or PhD degrees, highly educated people that are not living in small towns of fishermen and people relying on tourism. They’re living in the cities, so they’re bringing these data centers and they’re not even promising that many jobs to begin with. The secretary recognized like 2000 direct jobs, which is very little, to be honest, for such a huge 20 billion investment, 2000 jobs are not a lot. He was mainly excited about indirect jobs and suppliers and stuff like that. So you’re attracting all these people from the cities. So it’s three hours away from Mexico City.

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You have these highly educated people traveling from Mexico City or from Queretaro Capital a couple of hours into colon for these data centers and then traveling back. So these are not people from colon to begin with because colon is a series of small towns of fishermen and small farmers and restauranters people with limited educational background, the most vulnerable inner country, the ones that are always left behind because you have to travel, I don’t know, five hours by car to reach LASA community. And you only go there to see the dam and take a little ride on a boat and then travel back to Mexico City. So these are abandoned people to begin with. So we were very interested to see what they thought about this. And I mean, it was funny because you ask them, do you know what an AI is to begin with? Do you know what the cloud is? And for example, 70-year-old Mr. Gu Hernandez who has this blackberry patch of land, he would be like, I don’t know what you’re talking about. I don’t know what AI is.

And what’s interesting is he was very knowledgeable about water inequality. He was very angry telling me he hates that industry comes and that he does not have enough water for his blackberries and that he has to see them die. Meanwhile, he can see these big industries coming to town. So he is aware of what’s happening. He’s just not aware of what AI is. He doesn’t have a phone, he has no idea about cloud storage or anything like that. So it felt like things were happening around him that he was completely unaware of, but also that he was feeling the effect of, so he knew there is new tech, he knew they were coming to town and they would take a lot of water. And the only way he could relate to that was because his blackberries were dying and because it hadn’t rained in two years.

And he showed me how the heat waves burned to them and they were all yellowed and they couldn’t grow because there wasn’t enough water for his crops. We went to this small restaurant next to the dam that received all the stories from year to year. And again, the same story. These are very old people who have no idea about technology, but that will tell you about how water inequality is affecting them and how they find it unfair that the priority is given to the industry instead of them and that they have to have water once a week. So for example, we spoke to this woman who owns a small restaurant next to a dam. The restaurant has no electricity, it has no tap water, so she has to bring everything from her house. So she gets water in her house every eight days. She fills all these water jugs and she carries them on her back all the way to her restaurant. And that’s how she kind of survives the entire week in her restaurant. And yeah, she will tell you she has no idea what AI is, but she knows that she’s struggling and that her business will not survive because there is drought and she doesn’t know the drought is related to the industry. She doesn’t know if these companies are taking the water from her. She does know that new industry coming means she will get less water because of water inequality. That’s a stamp that we have in Mexico because that is how the country operates.

Maximillian Alvarez:

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This sadly and morbidly kind of is where your path and mind connected, right on the kind of journalistic quests that we are on to investigate these stories that over here through our podcast we’ve been investigating by talking to working folks, living in sacrifice zones, which is exactly what you were just doing and describing, right? I mean, we may not call it that, but that is what is happening, where the lives and livelihood and the conditions for life itself are being sacrificed at the altar of corporate greed and corporate profits and technological progress that is defined by big tech companies and their supporters in government. And those things become the priorities for government policy. They become the priorities in terms of where our collective resources are being allocated, like water that we all need to live. But that’s where it really does feel to be just intimately connected to what we’ve been investigating here, talking to folks living 20 minutes from where I’m sitting in South Baltimore, black and brown and white working class communities that have been poisoned for generations by rail cars that are blowing coal dust everywhere, trash incinerator, medical incinerator that are just burning up all this stuff and spewing it into the air.

The folks living in east Palestinian, Ohio where that train derailed two years ago or almost two years ago, and they were exposed to all those chemicals and they didn’t know what was on those trains either. They didn’t know the sort of inner workings of the rail industry, but they sure as shit paid the price for all of that when one of those bomb trains derailed in their own backyard. And so I guess I wanted to just sort of take everything that we’ve been discussing here and sort of bring Mexico and places like colon Colon into this discussion of sacrifice zones and what it means to have our societies sacrificing whole communities for the sake of private corporations and serving their needs above ours and what that looks like, right? I mentioned earlier that I wanted us to end up here because when we were talking about the fact that people living in Mexico, everyone gets their water through bottles and these water bottling companies have such a stranglehold on this vital natural resource.

And I think you see something in Mexico that still seems very foreign to a lot of people here in the us, but it’s becoming increasingly less foreign, which is like, what does it look like when I can no longer trust the water coming out of my tap and I have to live on bottled water? If you’ve never done that, trust me when I say it’s a real pain in the ass, it’s a real sort of dystopian reality that folks in East Palestine have talked to us about on this very show. And that’s not something to strive for, but it feels like a reality that we’re just accepting both in areas of the global south that have been experiencing this for years, but also the global working class population. This just feels like the direction that we’re all heading in. So I guess I just wanted to sort of ask, doing this research and this reporting on these data centers, and I guess what do you think this necessarily adds to what our listeners here are hearing when we’re talking to sacrifice communities here in the United States?

Because it’s really important that folks see that it’s not just happening here. In fact, it’s been happening in the global south for a long time and what’s been happening there is coming back home or it’s been happening at home in the global south sides of our population, the poor, black, brown indigenous communities that have been living under these circumstances as well. So I just kind of wanted to give you sort of a last word there, what this has all taught you about that and how the kind of sacrifice zone question, what that looks like when we look at it through the lens of Mexico and stories like the one that you’ve been reporting on.

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Diana Baptista:

Thank you. That’s a great question. I mean, the first thing that comes to my mind is balance. So this government is making a push to bring Nearshoring to push for Nearshoring in Mexico. They want to tech companies to come to the country because we need more jobs because we have all this pool of highly educated people who need a job and we need all these communities outside of Mexico City to grow. We need more investment. We need to grow economically as a country, but at what cost is that cost, the natural resources, the dwindling natural resources of the country? And where’s the accountability? I mean, for me, the most frustrating part was this opacity from government and companies because maybe it could be the data centers will not take one ounce of water. That could be the truth. But if it’s so, why won’t they tell us?

Why won’t they respond to requests of information? Why will they not give interviews when they’re being requested? Why activists had no idea that there had been a purchase from Microsoft, from somebody who already had a concession. They were in the dark about this. And it’s very frustrating for us to be kept in the dark because then maybe the local government does have good intentions and maybe companies will do some good in the country, but we cannot know that for sure because they’re running on opacity. And that is incredibly frustrating because it also tells us that there’s a lack of regulation in the country for this kind of tech to grow. So we know AI systems will need more data centers, we’ll need more computing power, and they are looking at the global south, especially Latin America for this. But when they come to our countries, why do they come with so much secretiveness?

Why won’t they release the information? Why won’t they be open about their data? So we’ve been told this is because of industry secrecy and stuff, but that’s not enough. That’s not enough for a population who’s already running out of water. There has to be a better effort from companies government to let us know what is being done with our resources. So for me, that was the main lesson that it’s going to be very hard for these tech companies to progress in the global south if they do it with opacity and they do it without releasing the data. We saw it in your way, for example, in Montevideo activists pushed until they got the information and then they refused the data center by Google. And Google has had to change its plans in Montevideo. We saw it in Chile as well with this wonderful story by Rust World.

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And we’re seeing it in several parts. Brazil is one of the main markets for data centers in Latin America, for example, where we saw this data, and this has been very frustrating. This has been my main frustration while conducting this investigation. And the second part of it is that we didn’t see that the arrival of new technology to Quero was going to mean any change for the most vulnerable workers in the country. So yes, maybe we attract more highly educated people to this data centers, but in the end, the small farmers and the fishermen and the lady who has no electricity and cooks once in a while for a tourist or two that come into town, they will be just as vulnerable as before. Their income will not change, their opportunities will not change. And all they’re seeing is their environment changing against ’em, which is very sad because one would hope that the arrival of this new companies and all this investment would mean change for the better, for the country’s most vulnerable. But we have not seen that happen yet. So it does leaves us wondering again, where’s the balance? Where’s the balance between economic growth and equality and the protection of our environment? We were very sad to see that there was no data, no answers, and no real change for people who are most vulnerable.

Maximillian Alvarez:

All right, gang, that’s going to wrap things up for us this week. I want to thank our amazing guest, Diana Baptista for talking with me today. And I want to thank her for all the important work that she is doing. Be sure to follow Diana’s work and follow the link in the show notes to watch Diana’s video report. Forget Jobs AI is Coming for Your Water, which she and Fenton McDonald produced for context, a media platform created by the Thomason Reuters Foundation. And you can read the full text report as well, which we’ve also linked in the show notes for this episode. And as always, I want to thank you all for listening, and I want to thank you for caring. We’ll see you all back here next week for another episode of Working People. And if you can’t wait that long, then go subscribe to our Patreon and check out the awesome bonus episodes that we’ve published there for our patrons over the years and go explore all the great work that we’re doing at The Real News Network where we do grassroots journalism, lifting up the voices and stories from the front lines of struggle.

Sign up for the Real News newsletter so you never miss a story. And help us do more work like this by going to the real news.com/donate and becoming a supporter today. It really makes a difference. I’m Maximillian Alvarez. Take care of yourselves. Take care of each other. Solidarity forever.

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Rarely-visited country named top holiday spot for 2025 – it’s the ‘new Croatia’ and has some of Europe’s cheapest beer

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Bosnia and Herzegovina has been billed as a top holiday destination for 2025

BOSNIA and Herzegovina has been named as a top trending travel destination for 2025.

Described as a “less crowded alternative to Dubrovnik” by a team of travel experts at Wild Frontiers, Bosnia and Herzegovina harks back to when Brits enjoyed cheap travel to countries like Croatia.

Bosnia and Herzegovina has been billed as a top holiday destination for 2025

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Bosnia and Herzegovina has been billed as a top holiday destination for 2025Credit: Getty
Visitors have raved about its natural landscapes

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Visitors have raved about its natural landscapesCredit: Alamy

The tour operator revealed their top trending travel destinations for next year after they crunched the numbers on Google searches and holiday booking data.

While Kyrgyzstan in Asia nabbed the top spot, Europe’s Bosnia and Herzegovina took second place.

In 2023, the country saw a 17.3 per cent rise in visitors in the last year, and bookings to the Balkans, through Wild Frontiers, rose by 70 per cent over the last 12 months.

Even though Bosnia and Herzegovina has plenty to offer – from fascinating history, amazing nature and beaches with clear blue seas – the country often slips under the tourist radar.

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A sentiment echoed by travel Blogger, Dan Flying Solo, who said: “Bosnia and Herzegovina remains a relatively off-the-beaten-path – and affordable – destination in Europe.

“After two deep dive visits, I’m convinced the country’s greatest asset is the mesmerising near-photoshopped lakes, the lush countryside, and the lofty hiking trails.

Before getting to grips with the country’s natural landscapes, most Brits are likely to touch down in its capital city of Sarajevo.

Sarajevo has some of the cheapest beers in Europe, with a pint costing £1.75.

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There are plenty of places to grab a craft beer too, including Zlatna Ribica and Gastropub Vucko, both of which are popular among locals and tourists alike.

Just like the booze, grub is cheap too, with three-course meals for as little as £11.

The world’s happiest cities to visit – and one is in the UK

The Bascarsija – the city’s oldest bazaar and the cultural centre of the city – is a great place to find traditional dishes like cevapi, flat breads filled with grilled meat, and burek, flaky pastries filled with cheese, spinach or even sour cherry for dessert.

The city’s Turkish influence can be seen in the bazaar, with traditional coffee, clothes and rugs among the many stalls.

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Other attractions include the War Tunnel, or Tunnel of Hope, left over from the Bosnian war that was originally built in 1993 to get aid and humanitarian supplies into the city.

It’s one of many sites that help people learn about the fairly recent conflicts that took place in the area.

Where else is there to go?

Perhaps the most famous place in Bosnia is the town of Mostar, with its reconstructed Ottoman Empire bridge, Stari Most, one of the country’s most famous sites, spanning the Neretva River.

Every summer, brave people throw themselves off the bridge as part of an annual diving competition, with the men of the town also jumping from the bridge as a tradition.

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Other places to visit include the town of Blagaj, not too far from Mostar, which has been compared to a fairy tale by Responsible Travel.

What’s it like to visit Bosnia and Herzegovina?

SOAK up the sun along the Dalmatian Coast for half the price of Croatia – by crossing into Bosnia and Herzegovina’s little-known share of the shoreline.

With its turquoise waters, pine forests and terracotta rooftops, the Dalmatian Coast is famously pretty.

But while the tourist hordes flock to Croatia for this scenery, you could enjoy it for less by going to the Bosnian beach town of Neum instead.

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This budget haven butts into Croatia in between Dubrovnik and Split, a quirk that can be traced back to 1699 when the city state of Dubrovnik, terrified of an attack by Venetians, gave a tiny tract of land to the Ottoman empire to give itself a buffer against Venice.

This means Bosnia and Herzegovina now has the world’s smallest coastline, after Monaco, at just 12 miles.

Graced with daytime highs of 25C in September and within easy distance of both Dubrovnik and Split, the only major difference is the cost.

Even in Neum’s largest and most swanky hotel, the Grand Hotel Neum, a last-minute long weekend this month starts at £49pp per night. That includes breakfast, spa access, a choice of four swimming pools and a private beach.

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Food and drink is much cheaper too.

You’d get change from a fiver for a couple of local beers and you can find Bosnian, Mediterranean and international dishes very reasonably priced.

The real crowd-pleaser is Ćcevapi, a popular Bosnian lunch to go.

Locals joke it’s the reason KFC never took off here.

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This simple yet filling meal consists of mini grilled meat kebabs and raw onion slices stuffed inside a warm pitta bread. Again, you would struggle to spend £5 on this beloved staple.

By Laura Sanders

Its highlights include a monastery, which was originally built for a Dervish cult.

However, for the more traditional holidaymakers who like to spend their getaways by the beach, there’s more than enough to enjoy.

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Neum town is arguably the best place to visit the Bosnian seaside, with Beach Searcher praising its scenery and its waters.

They wrote; “Neum town is located in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and famous for its magnificent mountain scenery and turquoise waters of an incredible deep colour.

“It seems that nature created it for one purpose – to make your vacation unforgettable.”

Bosnia’s lakes are also another draw for holidaymakers, and among the standouts are Bilećko Lake, Boračko Lake and Perućac Lake.

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The last of those has waters that are around 22C during the summer months, making it a lovely place to cool down on a hot day.

Mostar is a popular destination in the country

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Mostar is a popular destination in the countryCredit: Getty

What else do I need to know?

Both Ryanair and Wizz Air operate direct flights from the UK to Sarajevo, with flights starting from £15 for a one-way ticket.

Flights from the UK to Sarajevo take roughly two hours and 40 minutes.

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Accommodation is also cheap, with overnight stays costing, on average £56 per night, according to the research from eurochange.

Sun Online Travel have found an overnight stay at the Pigeon Square Rooms, which is just 150 yards from the city centre, for £38 per night.

There are other options too, including a five-star hotel called Enjoy Apartments, which also costs £38 per night per room.

There are three local languages in Bosnia & Herzegovina, including Bosnian, Croatian, and Serbian – although English is likely to be spoken at most hotels, restaurants and tourist attractions.

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The Convertible Mark (KM or BAM) is the country’s official currency, with £10 getting 23.43 KM/BAM.

Wild Frontier’s Top Trending Destinations for 2025

HERE are the full list of Wild Frontier’s expert predictions for trending travel destinations in 2025.

  • Armenia
  • Bolivia
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Cambodia
  • Egypt
  • Ghana
  • Kyrgyzstan
  • Montenegro
  • Nepal
  • North Africa (Algeria & Tunisia)
  • Romania
  • Saudi Arabia
  • Sri Lanka
  • Turkey
  • The Balkans

Here’s another little-known holiday destination not far from Moldova, but with cheap flights and beer.

And we’ve recently revealed our favourite spots for an autumn break.

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Hotels, pints and food is cheap in Bosnia and Herzegovina

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Hotels, pints and food is cheap in Bosnia and HerzegovinaCredit: Alamy

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GB News seeks court injunction to stop watchdog’s sanctions process

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Stay informed with free updates

GB News is seeking to use the courts to stop regulator Ofcom from being able to carry out sanctions over breaches of the UK broadcasting code by the media group.

The UK broadcaster, which is part-owned by hedge fund boss Paul Marshall, has applied to the High Court for “interim relief” to prevent Ofcom from taking steps in sanction proceedings.

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The move is highly unusual in an ongoing and public sanctions process. Ofcom has rarely faced attempted injunctions, according to one person with knowledge of the situation. 

Details of the timing of the court case — which will be heard in the High Court in London on Thursday morning — were published on Wednesday afternoon.

GB News was in May found to have failed to preserve due impartiality in a live TV debate with then-prime minister Rishi Sunak — a breach that Ofcom said was “serious and repeated” and that would lead it to consider the imposition of a statutory sanction.

Ofcom received more than 500 complaints about the programme, including claims that it lacked due impartiality.

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Ofcom has opened 19 investigations against the channel, and found it in breach 12 times.

The regulator’s chief Melanie Dawes told the FT this week that it was now “moving to sanctions on the most recent of those breaches”, given the build-up of code breaches in coverage by the UK broadcaster. However, no decision has yet been made to sanction the broadcaster.

Sanctions could typically start with a fine, Dawes said. Ofcom has been criticised by some media commentators as being toothless in the face of the repeated breaches of broadcasting rules by GB News, which have so far resulted in little more than stern warnings.  

Ofcom is contesting arguments by GB News that the regulator acted unlawfully by commencing and then making public its investigation, according to a person close to the matter. This would stop the UK media regulator from reaching a final decision on the imposition of sanctions. 

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Central to the argument appears to be whether Sir Keir Starmer had agreed or was expected to agree to participate in a similar programme — which would indicate impartiality — and whether Ofcom’s move frustrated GB News’ efforts.

Ofcom claims that it is not arguable that it acted unlawfully by starting the investigation in public, and contends that GB News failed to schedule any linked and timely programme that might achieve the necessary impartiality.

The channel’s court application also asks that the judge grant confidentiality regarding certain correspondence relevant to the case. GB News declined to comment.

At the time of the Ofcom decision, GB News objected to the ruling and said the “threat to punish a news organisation with sanctions for enabling people to challenge their own prime minister strikes at the heart of democracy at a time when it could not be more vital”.

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Ofcom declined to comment.

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Six ways to make your dishwasher work even harder and more affordably

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Six ways to make your dishwasher work even harder and more affordably

FOR many busy families, the dishwasher is an essential kitchen helper.

But you can make yours work even harder and more affordably with a few simple tricks.

Six ways to make your dishwasher work even harder and more affordably

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Six ways to make your dishwasher work even harder and more affordablyCredit: Getty

Here’s what you need to know . . . 

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CHEAPER CLEAN: Dishwasher tablets are pricey so cut them in half if you have a smaller machine.

The reduced dose is usually still enough to get dishes sparkling.

And buy bigger packs to get the best value. For example, Sainsbury’s all-in-one dish-washer tablets 60-pack is £5.60, which breaks down to 9.3p per tablet, whereas a 30-pack is £3.10, equalling 10.3p each.

READ MORE MONEY SAVING TIPS

STAINS FOILED: Roll a sheet of aluminium foil into a ball and pop it in the cutlery basket. The foil reacts with the detergent to help get rid of dull stains on silverware, leaving it shiny and bright.

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LEMON SQUEEZY: If you have squeezed the juice from half a lemon, you can use the rest of it to clean your dishwasher.

Just pop it in and run the machine on its normal cycle.

The acid cuts through limescale and soap build-up to help keep the machine clean and running efficiently.

ACID NOUS: You can also give your dishwasher a good clean by putting a cup of white vinegar in a dish on the top shelf of the machine and running a hot cycle.

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The secret button on your dishwasher than makes washing pint glasses way easier and people never realised it was a thing

GREEN CLEAN: Unless dishes are heavily soiled, the eco function of your dishwasher will leave your pots and dishes spotless.

This cycle uses less water, and at a lower temperature, helping to reduce your water and energy bills.

FULL HOUSE: Make sure your dishwasher is full so you don’t run it more than is necessary.

Cutting out just one cycle a week knocks £12 a year off energy bills, says the Energy Saving Trust.

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  • All prices on page correct at time of going to press. Deals and offers subject to availability.

Deal of the day

Swan 1.7-litre pyramid kettle, £29.99 at Home Bargains

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Swan 1.7-litre pyramid kettle, £29.99 at Home BargainsCredit: Home Bargains

BOIL a brew with this stylish Swan 1.7-litre pyramid kettle, down from £69.99 to £29.99 at Home Bargains.

SAVE: £40.

Cheap treat

Cadbury’s Salted Caramel Dairy Milk, £1.65 for a 120g bar at Tesco

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Cadbury’s Salted Caramel Dairy Milk, £1.65 for a 120g bar at TescoCredit: Tesco

SWEETEN your day with a delicious salted caramel spin on Cadbury’s Dairy Milk, £1.65 for a 120g bar at Tesco.

What’s new?

THERE’S a refreshed brunch menu at Frankie & Benny’s, with new items including loaded bagels and buttermilk pancakes, stuffed calzones, giant mozzarella sticks and baked pretzels.

Top swap

Mint Velvet snake-print ankle boots, £149 from Next

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Mint Velvet snake-print ankle boots, £149 from NextCredit: Next
New Look’s take on the trend, for £45.99

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New Look’s take on the trend, for £45.99Credit: New Look

MAKE a style statement with these Mint Velvet snake-print ankle boots, £149 from Next. Or step up your savings with New Look’s take on the trend, for £45.99.

SAVE: £103.01

Little helper

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STRICTLY dancer Amy Dowden has designed this T-shirt for Asda’s Tickled Pink campaign. It’s £10 and profits from sales go to the charities Breast Cancer Now and CoppaFeel.

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JOIN thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle.

Every month we’re giving away £100 to 250 lucky readers – whether you’re saving up or just in need of some extra cash, The Sun could have you covered.

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The more codes you enter, the more tickets you’ll earn and the more chance you will have of winning!

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