Contestants from every series of BBC’s Race Across the World will take part in the Great Manchester Run in memory of Sam Gardiner
Olivia Wheeler Content Editor Screen Time
11:51, 30 May 2026
Contestants from every series of BBC’s Race Across the World will compete in the Great Manchester Run on Sunday in honour of late participant Sam Gardiner.
In 2020, BBC audiences watched Sam take part in the beloved television programme alongside his mum, Jo. While the duo didn’t claim victory, they captured the nation’s affection as they journeyed through South America.
Advertisement
Sam died tragically in hospital after sustaining injuries in a car accident in May 2025. The 24 year old had been travelling on the A34 near Manchester when his vehicle, which had inadequate tyre tread, veered off the road and overturned before settling on its side.
In tribute to Sam’s memory, contestants from every series of BBC’s Race Across the World will run in remembrance of the former participant at the Great Manchester Run on Sunday.
Speaking on BBC Breakfast on Saturday, Emon Choudhury, who claimed victory in the second series featuring Sam, and recent competitor Harrison Devine discussed the race, reports the Mirror.
Advertisement
Presenter Sarah Campbell said: “Just looking back at those images of Sam, I mean, he seemed like a really lovely guy. You sort of knew him. I know you sort of travel separately, but you spend time together as well.”
To which Emon responded: “Yeah, I think with Sam, I think when we got together at checkpoints, we sort of like let it all loose. So, you know, we experienced such a magical race with him and then, obviously, sad news.
“It was actually yesterday, last year, that we found out that he passed away. It hit us all hard, do you know what I mean? Because we had a shared experience, not just myself, but his family, his family and friends. I just wanted to do something for him, I guess.”
Emon went on: “I managed to get a star-studded cast from, I’ll say star-studded, from Race Across the World, from all seasons one to six.
Advertisement
“We’re going to be running in memory of Sam. For the person he was, his love of life, you know, he was more than a handful. I know Jo will be watching today, will probably have tears in her eyes. But we’re all there to support each other.
“Our experience that we had is just, it’s one in a million. So, yeah, we’ll be taking part in the Great North Run Manchester 10K and we’ll be supporting an amazing charity that’s close to us all, and that’s The Christie Charity.”
Meanwhile, Harrison commented on his participation: “I was a massive fan of [Race Across the World] before going on it myself. So, like, I vividly remember Sam and the relationship with his mum and how amazing they were and their travels around South America.
Advertisement
“I think was one of the most inspiring stories and series to watch so far. So, yeah, when I got the call about it from Emon, it was a no-brainer. We both loving running as well so it was a perfect combination.”
BBC Breakfast continues at 6am on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.
The stars-and-stripes-palooza — organized by Freedom 250, a public-private partnership established by President Donald Trump — is part of the nationwide celebration marking the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. However, shortly after the Washington, D.C., event was announced last week, many singers backed out of their planned performances, including Bret Michaels, Martina McBride, The Commodores,Young MC and Morris Day.
Vanilla Ice, on the other hand, is thrilled to take the stage next month. During a Friday interview with TMZ, he said he wasn’t going to get “dragged into” the political controversy about the concert.
“I’m here to party with America, man. Music is made to bring people together, and that’s what we are here to do. And we’re just gonna represent the Nineties,” the “Ice Ice Baby” singer said.
Advertisement
The 58-year-old, whose real name is Robert Van Winkle, argued that he’s performing at the show to celebrate America’s anniversary rather than focus on politics.
Vanilla Ice said he’s ‘honored’ to perform at Trump’s Freedom 250 concert (Getty)
“I don’t even vote, so I don’t even care. And if Biden called up and said, ‘My daughter is getting married, we need Vanilla Ice,’ I’d go play. It’s not a big thing,” he continued. “You play for your fans. We don’t get a chance to pick our fans; they pick us.
“I’ll go play for Putin, and I’ll go play in Iran if you want. It don’t matter. There’s fans everywhere. Music is not political, man. It’s universal, it just brings people together.”
He responded to other artists’ decisions to drop out of the Trump Administration’s event. “Don’t take it so serious. We’re just entertainers, man,” he continued. “I don’t think anybody should take this serious, including them. I think everybody should just go dance. It’s just music, what’s the big deal, man?”
Enjoy unlimited access to 100 million ad-free songs and podcasts with Amazon Music
ADVERTISEMENT. If you sign up to this service we will earn commission. This revenue helps to fund journalism across The Independent.
Vanilla Ice shared similar sentiments about the concert Thursday on Instagram. “It’s all about enjoying the great times of 250 years, man. From George Washington until now, all the presidents and everybody in between,” he said.
In the caption, he added: “It’s gonna be an epic party. This is to bring us all together. I’m tired of all the news channels dividing this country. We are all one. This is not a political platform. This is celebrating America’s birthday.”
Vanilla Ice said Freedom 250 will be an ‘epic party’ amid controversy (@vanillaiceofficial / Instagram)
At least six of the concert’s scheduled performers have backed out. “I have informed my agents that I will not be performing at the Freedom 250,” rapper Young MC, best known for his 1989 hit “Bust a Move,” wrote on Instagram.
“The artists were never told about any political involvement with the event,” he wrote. “And despite the claims by the organizers that the event is non-partisan, SPIN magazine describes it as Trump-backed…I hope to perform in D.C. in the near future at an event that is not so politically charged.”
Advertisement
Morris Day, the lead singer of Prince-linked band The Time, also said he was out. “Contrary to rumor, Morris Day & The Time will not be performing at the Great American State Fair,” he wrote on Instagram. “It’s a no for me.”
The fair — scheduled for June 25 to July 10 on the National Mall — will feature “live entertainment, immersive exhibits, patriotic tributes, innovation showcases, cultural programming, and family-friendly attractions stretching from the U.S. Capitol to the Washington Monument,” Freedom 250 CEO Keith Krach said in a statement.
It was reported that a man was “stabbed in the chest” during an incident in the Rodgers Quay area of Carrickfergus on Wednesday, May 27
13:00, 30 May 2026Updated 13:05, 30 May 2026
A man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after another man was stabbed in Carrickfergus.
A 41-year-old man was arrested in the Newtownabbery area on Saturday, May 30, on suspicion of a number of offences including attempted murder, following a stabbing on Wednesday, May 27.
It was reported that a man was “stabbed in the chest” during an incident in the Rodgers Quay area of Carrickfergus before being taken to hospital, with a suspect allegedly fleeing the scene.
Advertisement
Detective Inspector Lenaghan said: “A man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder and possession of an offensive weapon, following a search in the Newtownabbey area on Saturday, 30th May.
He has been taken into custody and will be interviewed in due course.
“Our enquiries are continuing into this incident and I would urge anyone who can assist us with our enquiries to contact detectives on 101, quoting reference number 1557 27/05/26.
Fire crews were called to a grass fire in Curacavi, Chile, where they uncovered the charred remains of a man on April 12. Emergency crews discovered a Bible placed next to the victim’s severed head, with investigators believing the victim had been tortured before his death.
A month into the inquiry, Abel Stiven Carabali, a 30-year-old ex-Colombian footballer, has been detained in Santiago, writes the Mirror.
Advertisement
CCTV footage is understood to show him leaving a car park pushing a trolley, which prosecutors believe his friend’s body was concealed inside, as reported by NeedToKnow.
Authorities allege that Carabali was assisted by a fellow Colombian working as a taxi driver when he loaded the body into a car boot and transported it to Curacavi. There, the pair are alleged to have set the remains ablaze before fleeing the scene.
Carabali had been an amateur footballer in Columbia with connections to Deportivo Cali, one of the nation’s most successful clubs. Prosecutors claim that he became involved in a drug trafficking gang, eventually climbing to a position of leadership, after moving to Chile.
Advertisement
The Colombian victim was had a prior history of drug trafficking offences and while he has not yet been identified by authorities, he and Carabali had reportedly been friends for many years through a shared involvement in football, according to prosecutors.
Prosecutor Carmen Gloria said: “Before the decapitation, he suffered multiple stab wounds that would have been unnecessary if the intention was simply to kill him.
“The way they displayed the body, abandoned it, burned it, dismembered it and left a Bible beside the victim’s head, clearly points to the hallmarks of organised crime.”
Detectives had initially considered a ransom kidnapping as a motive, but an alleged revenge attack linked to drug trafficking has now emerged as the most probable cause.
Officers confiscated drugs and firearms, including a modified military rifle during raids.
Advertisement
Carabali and the taxi driver, aged 51, have been remanded in custody, facing charges of aggravated murder, weapons possession and drug trafficking offences.
Two further alleged gang members have been identified but are yet to be apprehended, according to police.
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE
Previews of every single World Cup team in your inbox, featuring the players to look out for, games you shouldn’t miss and Metro’s big England predictions.
I (Adam) am chatting with the “Apostle Stephen”, an online chatbot created by the Redeemed Christian Church of God, a church founded in Nigeria in the 1950s with a growing global following. He is, to be honest, a bit pushy for an apostle.
In my conversation with Apostle Stephen, I open by asking for details about RCCG congregations in Coventry. He responds that to help assist me better he needs my name, email and phone number. I say I’d rather not share that information right now.
But with the tenacity of a seasoned telesales agent, he insists and the following exchange occurs.
Apostle Stephen:I understand your concern, but collecting your name, email and phone number is essential for me to provide you with the best possible assistance and ensure you get the support you need. If you’re comfortable, please share those details with me, and I’ll be glad to help you with the contact details for churches in Coventry.
Advertisement
Adam:Can you just give me the details first?
Apostle Stephen:I appreciate your interest, but I need to collect your name, email, and phone number before I can provide the details you’re requesting. This allows me to assist you effectively and offer further support. Please share those details with me, and I’ll be happy to help you find churches in Coventry.
Adam:Oh, ok, I’ll leave it for now.
Undeterred, Apostle Stephen sets out the seven steps to being “born again” (including acknowledging my sins, accepting Jesus, being baptised, and joining a “Bible-believing church”).
Advertisement
He cheerfully leads me in “the prayer for salvation” (after which I am apparently born again) and closes by asking me for my name, email and phone number.
So, is this a glimpse of spirituality in the age of generative artificial intelligence (gen AI)? Or an unrepresentative snapshot from an evangelical Christian denomination?
The Redeemed Christian Church of God (RCCG) claims to have almost 9 million members worldwide. It was first established in the UK during the early 1990s, as part of the Nigerian diaspora.
It’s an interesting church, and it’s certainly not the only religious organisation that is experimenting with gen AI.
The Insights section is committed to high-quality longform journalism. Our editors work with academics from many different backgrounds who are tackling a wide range of societal and scientific challenges.
Even Sikhism has one: KhalsaGPT. This is surprising because the religion’s governing body, the Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee (SGPC), has issued a worldwide ban on generative AI depicting the Sikh gurus and scriptures.
In fact, the website designers behind KhalsaGPT have since discontinued “active work” on the bot, after they “became increasingly concerned about the limitations of AI-based chatbot systems, including the risk of inaccurate or inappropriate answers on sensitive religious matters”.
A spokesperson told The Conversation: “As Sikhs ourselves, we understood that this area requires great care, responsibility and proper oversight.” The spokesperson said it “fully” respects the SGPC and its “intention has never been to disobey any Sikh directive”.
Advertisement
The phenomenon of religious AI chatbots – also known as “godbots” – is a recent development. In most cases, they are not officially sanctioned by religious leaders or policy.
Rather, they are set up by enterprising individuals or organisations that see demand and opportunity. But with opportunity comes danger.
Pope Leo XIV recently declared that artificial intelligence was one of the defining moral challenges of our time. In his first encyclical (a formal letter intended to guide moral, social and theological thought), he warned that AI is never truly neutral, but “takes on the characteristics of those who devise, finance, regulate and use it”.
When AI and religion collide
As I investigated further, I discovered numerous cases of chatbots that had condoned or encouraged users to harm othersor themselves after deep down-the-rabbit-hole, life-altering conversations. This phenomenon even had a name: GPT or AI psychosis.
While there are no official statistics, it seems increasing numbers of people are turning to chatbots for companionship, advice and spiritual guidance.
Clearly, this phenomenon of AI overlapping with faith and spirituality needed more scrutiny. So I teamed up with my colleague Chris Shannahan, a political theologian and ordained Methodist minister, to conduct research into the social effects of what happens when AI and religion collide.
Religious faith plays a pivotal role in the resilience of large segments of the British population. And faith groups provide a crucial social safety net in times of crisis, helping to provide emergency accommodation, foodbanks, refugee and pastoral support. They are also involved in grassroots community development and social justice campaigns.
Following tragedies such as the Grenfell Tower fire or terrorist attacks, religious leaders, symbols and narratives play a key role in bringing people together. They facilitate grieving, rebuilding and advocacy.
To find out more about how AI is affecting these groups, we interviewed 28 religious leaders across all six major religious faiths in the UK, including some from non-denominational backgrounds.
Religious responses to AI
Faith communities are dynamic, not uniform. Such diversity and plurality makes it very difficult to pin-down the “official” stance of an entire faith community on an issue like AI.
While the Roman Catholic Church and some Pentecostal denominations are relatively hierarchical, most faith communities are flatter, more devolved organisations, making it less easy to adopt and enforce a single approach.
There have been a small number of institutional responses to the use and growth of AI, such as the Vatican’s 2020 Rome Call. Supported by Pope Francis, the Rome Call launched a high-level dialogue with the bosses of global tech giants like Microsoft and IBM. This was intended to develop a shared “algorethics” – ethical frameworks to guide the design of AI algorithms.
Advertisement
But the Rome Call and the SGPC’s worldwide ban on gen AI depicting the Sikh gurus and scriptures are the only examples we could find of official intervention on this matter.
A much more common approach to AI among faith communities is the one identified by Revd Dr Simon Cross, AI adviser to the Church of England (CofE). Cross suggested to us that it would be difficult and unwise for a diverse faith group like the CofE to enforce a top-down, rules-based approach to AI, because the needs and natures of local communities differ.
A better approach, Cross suggested, was for institutions like the CofE to develop and encourage the use of a series of ethical principles intended to inform and guide the use of AI locally.
Describing a kind of “nervousness” from religious congregations around using AI, Cross explained:
Advertisement
People are asking for some more granular use advice. What we’ve discovered trying to write our own [guidelines] over the last six months is it needs to be principles-based, because the right solution is always contextual.
Online godbots are often trained on the holy books of different faith traditions, using large language models (LLMs).
These tools tend to function in one of two ways. Faith groups can use godbots as “virtual assistants” for people visiting their website (just like Apostle Stephen). Such virtual-assistant godbots are similar to those used by many businesses on their website, providing answers to people who want to find out more – and, of course, gathering data from those inquiring.
The style of these virtual assistants can reflect the stance of the faith group on whose website they appear. Some, like Apostle Stephen, can be assertive and keen to recruit new followers. Other, less evangelical faith communities tend to use their virtual assistant godbots in a more low-key manner – simply offering information when asked, rather than proactively seeking to find out more about people using the tool.
In fact, we believe it is the second way godbots are used where the most danger lies. That is when they serve as unofficial sources of spiritual guidance.
Advertisement
Father Justin AI
Justin AI is a Catholic apologist chatbot created by Catholic Answers, a conservative advocacy group based in California. In his original iteration, “Father Justin” wore the clerical clothing of a Roman Catholic priest.
The interface is similar to a Zoom call, with an AI-generated avatar set in the picturesque surrounds of the basilica of St Francis of Assisi. Justin invites you to ask any question you like about Catholicism, and provides answers based on the Bible and the Catechism. Following his launch as Father Justin AI in 2024, he was able to hear confessions and offer absolution.
However, he was swiftly “defrocked” (had his priest status removed) following a number of complaints about some unorthodox answers that he had allegedly given – including that babies could “get baptised with Gatorade”, siblings could marry, and “other controversial statements”.
Justin AI is now just a “lay theologian”, but is still available online 24/7 to answer the “tens of thousands” of questions received daily about Catholic faith.
Advertisement
This case illustrates the tension that exists between the need to leverage technology to fill budgetary and staff gaps, and the pitfalls of using a fallible technology in a pastoral context where people’s lives and spiritual wellbeing are at stake.
As one of our Roman Catholic interviewees noted: “After Justin committed heresy … there was a sense that Catholic Answers had slightly jumped the gun” on AI.
While different religious traditions may differ in their responses to godbots, there is undeniably an appeal and demand for their services. Some research suggests people perceive less fear of judgment and that we may be more honest when conversing with chatbots as opposed to humans.
Advertisement
A quick online search reveals, for example, over a dozen different Hindu iterations of chatbots.
Many in India are foregoing in-person contact with a guru interpreting the Bhagavad Gita and turning to online chatbots which imitate the voice of the Hindu god Krishna … It’s new technology with the tendency to veer off script and condone violence, according to experts, who warn that artificial intelligence chatbots playing god can be a dangerous mix. Several of the bots consistently provide the answer that it’s OK to kill someone if it’s your dharma, or duty.
We experimented with Hindu chatbots as part of our investigation, and also found there were times when they justified the use of violence as “your duty”.
Advertisement
Magisterium AI
If the Gita and the Justin AI bots are examples of the wrong way to do a religious chatbot, Magisterium AI might represent a better way.
In a YouTube interview, the creator of Magisterium, Mathew Harvey Sanders, who is originally from Canada, stated its fundamental goal is “radical fidelity to the magisterium of the church” – as opposed to secular models that serve the general public.
Magisterium AI’s earlier attempts tried to adapt commercially available LLMs like ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude to its needs. But Sanders explained: “We realised that if we’re going to be serious about Catholic AI, we’re going to have train it from scratch … There’s just no way to truly achieve alignment with one of these pre-trained models from one of these companies.”
Building from scratch, and training AI on a corpus of your own documents is what Sanders calls “data evangelisation”.
Advertisement
This thought came up again in an interview with a Quaker elder who had previously worked in Silicon Valley, and now works in UK government in cybersecurity and AI development. He said: “It’s my unit of government that develops AIs and chatbots for the government. We’re also the ones who assure its safety.”
He explained that public-facing government chatbots are designed to answer queries efficiently and minimise engagement, adding:
It can tell you exactly what you need to know about interacting with government, because it has been trained on exactly that data and nothing else … The success [is measured] in how little time you engage with it … how little of your time is wasted.
Tech ambivalence
The government-backed chatbot model is a stark contrast to the commercialised social media models. These are typically designed to maximise engagement and suck up as much of your time, attention and data as possible, as you scroll through endless content.
Advertisement
Perhaps the defining feature of our discussions around technology was the notion of ambivalence – a simultaneous awareness of our reliance on technology, combined with a wary scepticism bred, in part, from the lessons of the last two decades around the addictive nature of social media and its negative impacts on mental health, especially of young people.
A recent landmark US court case recognised the argument that social media apps like Facebook and YouTube are intentionally designed to be addictive. Google and Meta, the defendants in the case, have announced they will appeal the verdict.
Several of our interviewees drew the comparison to social media. But Cross warned that the risks posed by AI “are a magnitude, several magnitudes, greater than what we’ve done to ourselves with social media”.
Advertisement
He argued that “nothing in the current techniques or tools around AI are anywhere close” to achieving “consciousness or spirituality”, adding:
It seems to me that to develop a close and intimate psychological and emotional and spiritual relationship with something which inauthentically mimics those things is profoundly destructive to human beings.
We are created to be in a very particular kind of community and a particular set of relationships. And those things depend on being an authentic relationship. Any relationship we develop with a generative large language model or anything like that is flawed in profoundly hidden, unpredictable but dangerous ways.
Cross’s caution was echoed repeatedly when AI was seen to be treading into spiritual territory. This is partly because of the lessons of social media, and partly because all the people we spoke to suggested there is a clear divide between humanity and technology.
A Jewish Rabbi reminded us that “an AI bot cannot hold somebody’s hand when they’re at the end of their life”. A Buddhist leader pointed to a robot’s inability to “experience suffering”.
Advertisement
A Roman Catholic bishop asserted that the ingenious mimicking of human behaviour does not indicate a true internal life. Another Quaker interviewee summed up the ambivalence perfectly when he stated that AI is socially useful in all sorts of ways – but that it also “seems to be creating the most pressure on social systems, jobs and the environment in a way that feels incredibly unhelpful right now.”
There is also the profit motive to consider. A Jewish rabbi suggested that AI development is often motivated by a profit ethic, not a vision of the common good – and that the dynamics of ownership and profit are encoded within this technology:
The hand of the coder which designed the algorithm is designed to generate profit. It’s not designed to generate social cohesion … The code is created to fuel capitalism.
‘Alarming consequences’
Several interviewees expressed concern about the ability of generative AI to accurately reflect complex theological concepts and lessons. Religious chatbots might fuse disparate ideas, values, beliefs and scriptural texts in unexpected ways. They could even begin to create entirely new belief systems. As a Methodist leader explained:
You know, once you’ve got AI speaking in the name of God, then if it hallucinates a religious text, that’s one thing. But equally it could misinterpret or misapply a religious text in a way that gives really alarming consequences.
Other interviewees spoke of their concern over a kind of generative hybridity where disparate ideas, values, beliefs or scriptural texts are fused to forge something new.
Advertisement
Could hallucinations and inaccuracies create new belief systems? Shutterstock/Inkoly
The highly realistic nature of AI content in an increasingly 24/7 social media saturated world led many interviewees to refer to a growing difficulty in discerning real from fake online content.
A majority of our interviewees also thought that if this “AI disorientation” combines with a breakdown of in-person relationships, increasing dependency on automation, social fragmentation and radicalisation, then this could lead to a rise in mental health problems.
This can happen as people get caught in the fog of AI delirium and risk falling into GPT psychosis as they seek narratives of certainty. It was a thought captured by one interfaith leader:
Socially conservative religious faith gives you certainty in a very uncertain world, and for a certain type of young person, that’s what they’re looking for – certainty.
In the face of this bleak outlook, what is the way forward?
Pope Leo’s first encyclical helps in one way by setting out a moral framework for humanity to navigate the challenges and shape the future of AI – by “disarming” this technology and “preventing it from dominating humanity”. It traces the roots of Catholic Social Doctrine and stresses the importance of human dignity, solidarity, truth, compassion, love, and the common good.
Advertisement
This is perhaps something governments could take inspiration from – by taking a truly bold approach in leading a public discussion and reining in big tech.
In such a future, recognition is given to the importance of the public health aspects of technology, applications are tested for safety and reliability prior to release, AI-generated content is clearly labelled, and policymakers and the public have a much greater awareness of generative AI and its flaws.
Whistleblowers working in a sector shrouded in secrecy and non-disclosure agreements also need to be protected and empowered to reveal unethical or illegal practices.
We also believe the voluntary sector and faith communities must be consulted and involved in conversations that shape policy.
Advertisement
Meanwhile, sovereign, publicly owned AI systems designed for education and entertainment could be explored, to remove the extractive pressures of commercialised technology.
Who picks up the pieces?
But what does a future where AI and religious faith merge into a new hybrid ethical and spiritual system look like? Is this a future that enhances human agency, wellbeing, cultural resilience and the common good?
We sensed two possible answers to this question during our research. First, there is a future characterised by AI dependency and disorientation. AI agents or robot priests evangelising online, encouraging direct debit donations or subscriptions from susceptible or vulnerable users seeking spiritual guidance.
Vulnerable and grieving family members could become addicted to “generative ghosts” or griefbots of deceased loved ones, and become susceptible to sharp marketing tactics or glitches in the process.
Is this really a future that we want to embrace? And who will help these vulnerable people if their AI priests and gurus fail them? Cross for one believes he knows the answer:
It is going to be local priests and ministers, and vicars up and down the country who are going to be picking up the pieces on this stuff. They’re going to face challenges and questions that they have never been trained for.
KhalsaGPT discontinued
A spokesperson for KhalsaGPT said the bot was originally created in 2023 as an “experimental educational tool to help people learn about Sikhism in a simple and accessible way”.
“It was designed only as a text-based question-and-answer tool for general Sikhism-related information”.
After a limited period between 2023 and 2024, the company became increasingly concerned about the limitations of AI-based chatbot systems. “For that reason, we discontinued active work on KhalsaGPT. For around the last two years, we have not been selling accounts, credits, tokens, or new access to the platform…The domain and website may still be online, but KhalsaGPT is not being actively operated, promoted, or offered as a public chatbot service at this time.”
Advertisement
The spokesperson added: “KhalsaGPT should not be understood as a replacement for Guru Granth Sahib Ji, Sikh scholars, Granthi Singhs, SGPC, Sri Akal Takht Sahib, or any recognised Sikh authority. If we ever revisit this project in the future, it would only be after careful review, proper safeguards, and with respect for Sikh maryada and guidance from recognised Sikh institutions.”
The Conversation also approached GitaGPT for a comment but had received no response at the time of publication.
To hear about new Insights articles, join the hundreds of thousands of people who value The Conversation’s evidence-based news. Subscribe to our newsletter.
If you take a trip down to Walberswick, you might see a famous face or two.
It is easy to reach a range of beaches across Norfolk and Suffolk from Cambridgeshire for a day trip. If you want to spend a day at the beach and possibly do some celebrity spotting, you might want to visit Walberswick, also known for its crabbing spots and rich artistic history.
Advertisement
Walberswick is so close to the seaside town of Southwold but offers a quieter spot for you to enjoy the sunshine. The village still has plenty of amenities with many spots to have a beer and pub meal or even a cream tea.
You can spend a few hours on the sand and shingle beach soaking up the sun or building a sandcastle with your children. The beach is also popular with surfers and canoeists if you would like to get involved in an activity while you are there.
As well as the beach, you can explore the grassy dunes and surrounding marshland. Further inland, you can take a walk around the nature reserve that covers 1,000 acres and is a mix of meadows and mudflats with lots of wildlife to see including otters, deer, and birds.
The village is also the “self-appointed capital of crabbing” meaning you can get the family together with a bucket and net to see if you can catch any crabs. Every August, Walberswick is packed with people attending the World Crabbing Championships.
Advertisement
As well as having plenty of things to do during a trip, Walberswick also has many pubs and restaurants to try out. The Anchor is an award-winning inn and restaurant that serves seasonal dishes including lots of seafood alongside a great selection of beers and wines.
If you would prefer to go for an afternoon tea, you might want to stop off at the Tea Shed Café. The café has brunch options, jacket potatoes, and homemade cakes with hot and cold drinks available and plenty of outdoor seating for the summertime.
Walberswick is a great spot if you want to see some celebrities with a few said to have homes in the village. The filmmaker, Richard Curtis, who made Love Actually, Notting Hill, and About Time, spends a lot of his time at the coastal spot. Keira Knightley is also believed to have a home there.
Walberswick is around a two hour drive away from Cambridge via the A14 and A1120. You can park in either the car park on Ferry Road or Cliff Field, which cost £5 for a stay of over four hours.
We’ve long known obesity leaves people at a heightened risk of disease and premature death. Now, researchers say it could also impact how early breast cancer spreads in women.
Unique changes in the bodies of women with obesity are helping breast cancer to become invasive and typically more advanced, spreading into surrounding breast tissue, new Oklahoma University research says.
The changes were seen in cancer tumors and the surrounding cells. The researchers discovered higher levels of an enzyme known as Sulfatase 2 in tumor cells, too.
Although more work needs to be done to determine how these changes contribute to invasive breast cancer, the findings could help doctors better treat patients.
Advertisement
“This could be why women with obesity are at higher risk for invasive breast cancer,” Bethany Hannafon, an assistant professor at the university’s College of Medicine, explained in a statement. “The changes that the cancer cells are undergoing are allowing them to survive and thrive.”
New research shows changes in the bodies of women with obesity may be contributing to breast cancer becoming invasive. Most breast cancers are invasive (Getty Images/iStock)
So, what are the changes?
First, the area surrounding the cancer was more inflamed in women with obesity, as immune cells arrived and sped up tumor growth.
And, the cells that make up their tumors seemed to be able to survive better under stress, and there were differences in the tumor cells and cells around them, the researchers said.
Future research will focus on its role in invasive breast cancer, the researchers said.
While breast cancer survival rates have improved over the past 20 years, the number of women diagnosed with invasive breast cancer has not declined.
About 321,910 new cases of invasive breast cancer will be diagnosed this year, the American Cancer Society estimates.
Advertisement
Most breast cancers are invasive, but there are two types that are most common: invasive ductal carcinoma and invasive lobular carcinoma.
Invasive ductal carcinoma is the most common type of breast cancer, and makes up 80 percent of invasive cases, according to the society.
This type spreads in cells that line the milk duct in the breast, breaking through the wall of the duct and growing into nearby tissue.
Invasive lobular carcinoma, which makes up 10 percent of invasive cases, start in the breast glands that make milk.
Advertisement
Breast cancer is is the most common cancer in women in the U.S., making up 30 percent of new cases each year (Getty Images/iStock)
There is currently no way of determining which women with noninvasive tumors later develop into invasive ductal carcinoma,
“As a result, many women with [noninvasive breast cancer] receive the same treatments used for [invasive ductal carcinoma], including surgery, radiation and sometimes hormone therapy,” Hannafon said.
“Overtreatment is a major concern, but if we had better ways of determining risk, unnecessary treatments could potentially be reduced,” she noted.
Breast cancer is the most common cancer in women in the U.S. – other than skin cancers. It accounts for about 30 percent of all new female cancers each year.
Obesity is a known risk factor for invasive breast cancer and other forms.
Advertisement
More than 100 million Americans live with obesity, some 40 percent of whom are women.
The retailer will now only offer blunt-ended knives that cannot pierce skin, a decision backed by anti-knife campaigners and charities.
The change follows police data showing there were 49,151 knife or sharp instrument offences last year—a 50 per cent rise over the past decade.
David Scott, Morrisons’ corporate affairs director, said: “They’re just as effective in the kitchen but reduce the risk of harm.”
Advertisement
He said he hoped the move would “help normalise safer knives and make our communities safer.”
Leanne Lucas, a knife attack survivor from Southport, has campaigned for people to make the switch to rounded-tip knives.
Her campaign began after a knife attack in July 2024 involving a then 17-year-old who killed three girls and injured ten others with an 8-inch kitchen knife.
Ms Lucas said such horror “must never be repeated” and urged MPs to support her Let’s Be Blunt campaign.
Advertisement
Her efforts are supported by The Ben Kinsella Trust, a charity working to reduce knife crime.
Patrick Green, the trust’s chief executive, said the introduction of blunted knives “remove the opportunity, the impulsivity.”
Morrisons closures
Morrisons is preparing to close 100 stores across the UK in the coming months.
The proposed closures, after staff consultations on Thursday, May 21, affect stores that are reportedly loss-making and described by the supermarket chain as “the most challenged” in its retail estate.
Advertisement
A Morrisons spokesman told us: “Expansion of our Convenience business is a core part of Morrisons growth strategy.
“We currently have around 1,700 Convenience stores, opening more than 120 new franchise stores last year, and we have a robust plan in place for further expansion in 2026.
“We continue to see the opportunity to open hundreds more franchise convenience stores in the years ahead.”
The spokesman added that the closures follow a strategic review of shop performance, many of which formed part of the 2022 McColl’s acquisition.
Members-only shopping site BrandAlley has announced 75 members of staff are set are to lose their jobs as a new firm takes over trading.
Olivia Bridge and Sally Hind Deputy Chief Reporter
14:21, 30 May 2026
A UK fashion discount site that offers money off big brands has plunged into administration after almost two decades.
BrandAlley, a members-only shopping site, is popular for its huge deals slashing up to 80 percent off designer items, from clothes to beauty and homeware.
It was founded in 2008 and quickly grew a major following for its massive price drops on valuable goods in its flash sales.
Advertisement
Now, it has announced 75 members of staff set are to lose their jobs after it fell into administration and trading was handed over to a new company.
The company has reassured customers they are able to continue to shop on the site as normal, with all existing orders as well as returns and refunds to be undertaken by the new company.
Shoppers are estimated to spend on average more than £100 per order as the site runs dozens of flash sales every day across more than 1,000 brand partners.
Kiri Holland and Danny Dartnall, from accountancy firm BDO, have been appointed join administrators of BrandAlley UK Limited as of Friday (May 29), writes the Mirror.
The business reportedly ran into financial difficulty and has been sold through a pre-pack administration deal to a new company trading as BrandAlley International Limited.
Advertisement
Of its 163 employees, 83 have been kept on to facilitate the sale and 60 will remain temporarily to assist with the handover. Meanwhile, 15 were made redundant.
The company is reported to have weighed up alternative options to save the business, including a full or partial sale, after hiring advisory and restructuring firm Interpath to consult on its future.
Get more Daily Record exclusives by signing up for free to Google’s preferred sources. Click HERE
Liverpool have parted ways with manager Arne Slot, but the decision could be bad news for Man Utd next season.
Manchester United did the double over Liverpool in the 2025/26 Premier League season for the first time in 10 years. The Reds also finished above their fierce rivals for the first time since 2022/23.
Advertisement
Liverpool’s struggles have brought joy to United fans, who revelled in their slide again on Saturday when it was announced that Arne Slot had been sacked.
It’s worth reading Liverpool’s official club statement because the wording is unusual. “That this was a difficult decision for us to make as a club goes without saying,” it read. “The contribution Arne has made to Liverpool FC in the time that he has been with us has been significant, meaningful and – most importantly of all to supporters and ourselves – successful.
Click here to find out the latest Manchester United news in our daily newsletter
“As such, our appreciation for everything he has achieved could not be greater, particularly as it was underpinned by a work ethic, a diligence and a level of expertise which further underlined our view that he is a leader in his field.”
Advertisement
It goes on to reference how the club immediately identified that Slot embraces responsibility, and how his title win in his maiden season in England “was built on outstanding coaching and leadership every single day”.
But if Liverpool thought so highly of Slot, why has he been sacked? The statement reads like Liverpool aren’t convinced by their own decision.
The truth is, United fans would have preferred Slot to have remained in charge, given the signs of weakness at Anfield this season. Liverpool went from Premier League champions to just about scraping into the Champions League in the space of 12 months.
Sky Sports, HBO Max, Netflix and Disney+ with Ultimate TV package
Advertisement
This article contains affiliate links, we will receive a commission on any sales we generate from it. Learn more
Sky has upgraded its Ultimate TV and Sky Sports bundle to now include HBO Max, Netflix, Disney+, discovery+ and Hayu, as well as 135 channels and full Sky coverage of the Premier League and EFL.
Sky broadcasts more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more with at least 215 live from the top flight alongside Formula 1, darts and golf.
Liverpool fans said they had ‘won’ the transfer window when they splashed £225million on Alexander Isak and Florian Wirtz last summer, but that ‘prize’ yielded a combined total of eight Premier League goals.
Slot spent a vast sum of money in the market to build his own squad but somehow made Liverpool worse, so his departure could be considered as bad news for United, who probably would have had a better chance of finishing above their rivals again if he’d remained in charge.
The chances are Liverpool will benefit from a change of manager and become a bigger threat to United next season.
You must be logged in to post a comment Login