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NASA has now confirmed a meteor was travelling at 75,000 miles per hour (more than 120,000 km/h) at an altitude of 40 miles when it broke apart on Saturday May 30
A meteor crashing toward Earth exploded over the north-eastern United States on Saturday with a blast equivalent to 300 tons of TNT., NASA said.
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The fireball broke up over northeastern Massachusetts and southeastern New Hampshire just after 2pm (1806 GMT), the US space agency’s deputy news chief Jennifer Dooren told AFP in a statement.
NASA Space Alerts tweeted: “Eyewitnesses in New England and @NOAA ’s GOES-19 satellite reported a bright fireball on Saturday, May 30, at 2:06 p.m EDT accompanied by a loud noise. The meteor appears to have fragmented at an altitude of 40 miles over northeast MA and southeast NH. The energy released at breakup is estimated to be equivalent to about 300 tons of TNT, which accounts for the loud noise. Eyewitness accounts supplied by the American Meteor Society.”
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Some X users questioned the fireball sighting, one said: “There are plenty of people who heard and felt it. Pretty skeptical anyone actually saw a bright fireball. Who are these eyewitnesses? Any videos?” Another said: “Due to the clouds, not able see fire ball, but sure as heck heard it.”
While others were in total shock and wrote: “I saw this while traveling with a camper. I thought it was a missle/nuke.”
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The American Meteorological Society says on its website that meteors move at extremely high speeds, and larger rocks that survive longer in the atmosphere can sometimes produce a sonic boom.
Witnessing a meteor during the day is extremely rare. While thousands of meteors enter Earth’s atmosphere daily, sunlight usually hides them, according to National Geographic.
A council’s children’s services were rated inadequate in 2024 after a ‘deterioration in the quality of practice’
A council has been praised for “driving improvements” in its children’s services, after it was deemed inadequate in 2024. Peterborough City Council’s children’s services were rated as inadequate after an Ofsted inspection at the end of 2023.
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Previously rated good in 2018, inspectors said there had been a “deterioration in the quality of practice”, following the 2023 inspection. Since then, Ofsted has been carrying out monitoring visits into the council’s children’s services.
The latest took place on February 24 where inspectors reviewed the council’s response to children experiencing neglect. Inspectors praised the council for remaining “committed and ambitious for children and families”.
They added: “There is strong corporate and political support and children’s services have benefitted from significant financial investment. The director of children’s services and the stable leadership team continue to drive improvements across the service.”
The reports also said the overall response to children experiencing neglect had improved. While there was praise for the council’s improvements, there continued to be delays in responding to some children in the multi-agency safeguarding hub due to “capacity issues”.
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During the visit, inspectors said staff made “appropriate referrals” to children’s services for children requiring help and protection due to potential neglect. Social workers were also praised about their “robust analysis of children’s needs” when looking at the functioning of a family.
When dealing with children out of hours, the commissioned emergency duty team (EDT) were praised for having an “effective interface”. Social workers were also praised for children having “positive and enduring relationships” with them.
Inspectors also said action was taken “appropriately” when children continued to experience harm due to neglect from their parents. The report added that leaders had focused on recruitment and retention to “improve the stability of the workforce”.
Inspectors said: “This is showing promising results, with some social workers converting from agency to permanent posts, citing a positive work environment as informing their decisions.”
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Councillor Katy Cole, cabinet member for children and young people at Peterborough City Council, said: “We are pleased with the outcome of this latest monitoring visit which acknowledges the ongoing progress we have made to achieve better outcomes for all children.
“We remain committed and ambitious for children and families and we continue to drive improvements across the service, including for children who have experienced potential neglect.
“I want to thank practitioners and staff for their hard work and continued dedication to the children and families of Peterborough. Our administration is fully focussed on working collaboratively and effectively to continue to improve this vital service.
“As we now build to our next full ILACs inspection this Labour led coalition is determined to make the changes needed to ensure all children in this city thrive, are safe and able to succeed in life.”
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The incident took place on Rhyl beach, Denbighshire where the “special lady” was rescued
Andrew Forgrave Countryside and tourism editor and Husna Anjum Senior Reporter
21:23, 30 May 2026
Emergency services freed a woman from sinking sand on a beach, before the tide rose worryingly higher. The incident took place on Rhyl beach, Denbighshire where emergency services reported at one point, the water ‘came up to her waist’.
Rhyl’s RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution) inshore lifeboat rushed to the scene at 9pm on Friday evening (May 29). The woman was reported to be stranded in soft sand off Splash Point in the resort, according to NorthWalesLive.
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An RNLI Rhyl spokesperson said: “The inshore lifeboat was launched within minutes. Once arrived on scene, the crew found the casualty to be trapped in the sand with the incoming tide now around their waist.
“The lifeboat was brought alongside the casualty and crew put them in a lifejacket. A crewmember supported the casualty on their back, which popped their feet out of the sand.
“The casualty was recovered into the inshore lifeboat, and brought back to the lifeboat station for a check-over and warm up. Rhyl Coastguard Rescue Team was also tasked to the incident.”
Quick to thank the RNLI crew, on social media, was the woman’s mum from Rhyl. Another person added: “Thank you so very much for saving a very special lady.”
People stuck in soft sand are advised to remain calm and not struggle as this can worsen the problem. While leaning back to distribute your weight, gently wiggling your legs can let water loosen the sand’s suction.
Meanwhile, RNLI Holyhead responded to its fourth shout of the half-term break when two jetskiers became stuck on sandbanks near Traeth Penrhos beach. Initial reports suggested one jetskier might be injured.
Other information indicated they were in fact stranded near the Stanley Embankment (Valley Cob). Heading to Traeth Penrhos, RNLI Holyhead’s inshore boat was joined by local cliff rescue teams.
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An RNLI spokesperson said: “On reaching the location, it was found that there were two jetskiers, and no injuries. The casualties had been stuck on sandbanks – however they had managed to re-float and were starting to head back to Llanfwrog (also known as Sandy Beach) where they had come from.
“Suitable safety advice was given, and the casualties then headed back to Llanfwrog, where they were being met by the Holyhead volunteer Coastguard team.”
RNLI Holyhead Lifeboat Station said water sports enthusiasts should always wear a suitable lifejacket or buoyancy aid. They should also have a means of calling for help.
The station added: “We’d like to remind everyone to be aware of the tides and layout of our local waters – it can be very difficult to judge the depth of water in certain locations.”
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Belfast-based designer Rebekah Murphy is the youngest person showing at Ireland Fashion Week 2026 and has just finished her first year of Textile design and Fashion at the Belfast School of Art, with her own brand in the works for the summer.
Speaking with RSVP Live, she discusses the struggles of finding affordable studio space, her childhood in Belfast, and the epicentre of Irish fashion.
Growing up in Belfast, it’s clear the area has had an effect on her work: “Living here post everything that has happened here has influenced my work. I feel like people in Belfast have a way of storytelling that is quite nuanced, that they don’t necessarily tell things quite heavily.
“They like to pick up the light parts of it. So when my mum or my dad was telling me stories about growing up, there would be this really heavy day, and they would say, ‘but it’s okay because we went to the pub after’ or something like that. They picked up the fun parts. So I try to do that a lot with my work, do the kind of lighter, more quirky bits of storytelling rather than focusing on the heavy thing that it might actually be about.”
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Rebekah works from her bedroom, as there is a stark amount of studio spaces in the country: “The price of rent in Ireland at the moment is insane to try to get a studio. My best friend and I, she’s a painter. She just graduated. So, we were looking at a studio together, but it’s totally not feasible even with two people.”
The designer was set on becoming a painter with her uni applications all sorted until she met fellow designer Rion Hannora at Dublin’s RDS for a school trip: “This is such a tangible space for design. It was the first time I’ve seen Irish design up close. On the bus journey home to Belfast. I pulled out of three of the uni options I had been accepted for and applied for a foundation year instead because I was like, ‘Right, I like that, but I can’t sew.’
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“I have no knowledge about this. I was daunted by applying just for fashion. I did a foundation year last year, and I loved it. I fell in love with the fashion.
“I got to actually work with Rion on her Dublin fashion show, and it was class.
“She’s insane, and she’s so down to earth, that was one of the things that made me realise people actually talk to you here. This is a real community down here, and I always thought there’s nothing like this happening in Belfast.”
Witnessing Belfast’s fashion scene first-hand, Rebekah says, “it has really, really taken off.”
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“I’ve spoken to one of my mentors, Lucinda Graham, about it, and she was really like, ‘You’re touching on something that’s on the top of everybody’s tongue at the moment,’ that Dublin is this kind of false epicentre of fashion.”
“Being part of Ireland Fashion Week this year, I’ve got to meet so many people from every corner of Ireland. Without Ireland Fashion Week, the opportunity for us to meet would have been nil. So, it’s really great to have this kind of hub where we can all meet, chat, and get to know each other as designers from every part, not just Dublin designers.”
Rebekah has experimented with all sorts of pieces that always tie into some aspect of Irish history, including her Punt Ties.
“So I took inspiration from the punts, going out of currency, and the women being legally guaranteed entry into the pub in 2004. I wasn’t old enough to remember, but my mum and dad would still recall it even with Euros. They always had a punt purse that they kept in the car for whenever they were going down south or anything like that. So that was another weird thing that was in my ear whenever I was designing that.”
She also experimented with making bikinis and briefs, yet not with the typical material, but with an old football, which was a “total nightmare” to craft.
“Growing up, there was never a night you walked into the living room, in the kitchen, and the TV didn’t have football on. It used to do my head, and I was like, ‘Wow, we’re still watching football. You don’t even support these teams.’
“We had a ball in our back garden since we were kids, and we never used to play football or anything like that. I used to think it was so silly. It was obviously quite worn and torn to shreds, and I am a firm believer that my idea of sustainability is that everything you need exists in the world. There is no point in buying crazy fabrics or anything like that to communicate what you’re trying to do.
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“So, I cut up this football, asking, ‘Is anybody going to use this? ‘No.’ ‘Right, okay.’ I took it into my room, and I cut it up, and the leather is really thick. These specific footballs also have a kind of ‘plasticky coating’. I think it’s for rain and similar things. So I cut it up and made a bikini out of it.
“I remember my sister opening the door, and she was like, ‘What are you doing?’ And I replied, ‘It’s a football bikini.’ And she just said, ‘Okay.’ But that was for my collection last year. which was about kind of reminiscence of girlhood, and kind of what I remember through rose-tinted glasses, you always remember that, that’s the funny part of how I felt about it.
“My collection last year was all around the parts of a memory that you thought were really flippant at the time. I quit dance, and that was part of the collection last year, but I only really remember the nice aspects of it. I was really flippant about it at the time and didn’t want anything to do with dance. So last year, I was living in that memory, picking out the bits I remembered that were really positive about dance.”
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Following current attempts to bring back Star Fox from the brink of obscurity, a reader suggests pairing it up with another of Nintendo’s forgotten franchises.
Back in the Wii U era there was a weird rumour going around that there was going to be a crossover between Star Fox and Metroid. I think it was just before the launch of the Wii U, so before they announced Star Fox Zero. It was odd because any rumour about Nintendo stuff is rare and also because it didn’t seem to make much sense.
Metroid is about the most serious franchise Nintendo has got (which isn’t saying much, admittedly) whereas Star Fox is a bunch of cuddly animals having a star war. Back then neither franchise was in a good state and things haven’t really got better for either since.
It was one step forward for Metroid Dread and two steps back with Metroid Prime 4 and, well… we’ll see how the Star Fox 64 remake does. Although everyone already likes that game, so the real question is can Nintendo make a new Star Fox game that is both good and popular?
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The rumour at the moment is that if the remake goes well then Nintendo will greenlight a bigger budget new game. That makes logical sense but it also kind of implies they’ve already got an idea ready to go. I doubt we’ll find out what that is unless they want us to, but my idea is to combine Star Fox with another franchise, but not Metroid.
I’d say that the other most popular Nintendo franchise that doesn’t seem to have much chance of coming back at the moment, and hasn’t had a new game in years, is F-Zero. Hardcore fans will know there is already a connection, because someone called James McCloud (Fox McCloud’s dad) is in F-Zero GX and drives a vehicle that looks a bit like an Arwing.
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As I understand it, he’s a homage and not meant to be the same character (he’s a human with a weird haircut, not a fox) but I don’t think you’d need to change anything to say that Star Fox and F-Zero take place in the same universe. And even if you didn’t the Super Mario Galaxy movie already had Fox go to the Mario universe, so it doesn’t seem like Nintendo has much of a problem with that type of thing.
In terms of what kind of game this crossover would be, I would take another idea that I think is fairly common (or at least I’ve seen it mentioned a couple of times in the Inbox) of expanding Star Fox into an Elite style space trading game.
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I think this is an excellent idea and I think it’d be even better if you had a crossover with F-Zero, because then you’d have stuff to do on ground level, when you land your spaceship. Since I can’t imagine Nintendo wanting everyone to be running around and shooting each other.
Captain Falcon is meant to be a bounty hunter (a Metroid and F-Zero crossover also would’ve made more sense than Star Fox and Metroid) so there’s another gameplay hook, as the Star Fox team seem to be basically mercenaries already.
So you’d have space combat, car racing, and space exploration and trading. It’s not something Nintendo has done before – which you can’t say about most genres – and it’s not something that’s common in general nowadays.
It’s also a good way to solve the problem of what to do with both franchises. Not enough people are interested in playing F-Zero nowadays and anything that’s not just a linear space shooter has never worked for Star Fox. But open things up a bit, make the game more of a sandbox and I think you’ve got your answer.
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By reader Rocky
Star Fox needs to expandits horizons (Nintendo)
The reader’s features do not necessarily represent the views of GameCentral or Metro.
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Before their performance, the group described Clarkson as their “biggest cheerleader” and added they “couldn’t thank him enough”, while judge KSI, real name Olajide Olatunji, said he wanted to add their original song, This Is Home, to his Spotify playlist after they performed it.
Grosmont Station Tea Room, located on the platform at Grosmont Station, has become a popular stop for walkers, railway enthusiasts and families visiting the North Yorkshire Moors Railway.
Set within one of the line’s best-known stations, the tea room is described by many visitors as “a step back in time”, with its vintage railway atmosphere and views across the historic platforms.
Grosmont Station Tea Room (Image: TRIPADVISOR)
One visitor wrote on TripAdvisor: “Lovely place to watch the trains go by and get the taste of a bygone age.”
Another said: “A thorough, authentic experience in keeping with the North Yorkshire Moors Railway objectives.”
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The tea room, which holds a 4.3-star rating on TripAdvisor, is particularly popular with walkers making the journey between Goathland and Grosmont, many of whom stop for lunch or tea while watching heritage steam locomotives arrive and depart.
Visitors regularly praise the relaxed atmosphere, outdoor seating and simple traditional menu.
One reviewer described the tea room’s tuna and cucumber sandwiches as “divine,” adding: “We always look forward to our lunch at the tea rooms on Grosmont station.”
Others have highlighted bacon and egg baps, cream teas and homemade cakes after long hikes through the Esk Valley and surrounding moorland.
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Many say the tea room’s charm lies in its authenticity.
Unlike modern chain cafés, visitors describe it as preserving the feel of an old-fashioned railway buffet from the 1940s, 50s and 60s.
One reviewer wrote: “This is not Starbucks, Costa or Greggs.
“It is part of the exhibit of the railway buffet bars of the 40s to 60s.”
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The tea room forms part of the wider visitor experience at Grosmont Station, which serves as a key hub on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway and attracts thousands of tourists every year.
Families, railway enthusiasts and photographers frequently gather at the station to watch steam engines, explore the engine sheds and enjoy the atmosphere of one of the country’s best-known heritage railways.
For many visitors, the tea room has become an essential part of the experience.
One tourist wrote: “If it’s dry, we always sit outside on one of the picnic tables and soak up the atmosphere of this beautiful railway station.”
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Another added: “A real feel for times past and long forgotten by many.”
RE: Mr Zimmott’s letter and match day travel. Many supporters do come to matches on foot and bike.
They would have been helped if a crossing had been installed sooner from Anthea Drive to the path to Vangarde.
This was agreed after a site visit with council officers and local Lib Dem councillors nearly 4 years ago.
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In terms of bus travel we had a series of meetings with council officers before the stadium opened and special buses were agreed from around the city – Haxby, Acomb etc. Then Covid stopped bus travel and these buses didn’t happen. Time to get them started.
The success of City and the Knights is brilliant for the clubs, supporters and our city but local people should not have to worry whether emergency vehicles can get through on their street.
We have reported the concerns of residents a number of times since crowds increased from 3,000 to over 6,000.
The solution already applies on part of New Lane where parking is restricted on match days.
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If the will is there this could be replicated on the streets where local people want them by the start of next season.
We want everyone to enjoy the success of City and the Knights without putting local people in danger.
Cllr Keith Orrell
Liberal Democrat councillor for Huntington and New Earswick
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Some thoughts on our Labour government…
AS this country deteriorates into oblivion, what hope for the next generation when we gave a Government who instead of working hard to promote employment is happier to see these youngsters sit on the settee all day being paid sufficient benefit payments to avoid seeking work.
Thank goodness we live in a society which embraces “freedom of speech” for were we to live under tight state control the damning report compiled by Alan Millburn concerning our Governments mishandling of the “welfare state” would never have seen the light of day.
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It is little wonder the opinion polls are showing the public’s distaste for socialist policies. Hidden within every one is a desire for them to take ownership of other people’s success achieved through years of hard work to give to those who simply do not wish to contribute to society.
And finally, the previous Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair launches a scathing attack on socialist policies being introduced by Keir Starmer’s government. Is this a prelude to him announcing he is applying to join the Conservative Party?
Peter Rickaby,
Moat Way,
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Brayton,
North Yorkshire
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Please define ‘bolder’
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FOLLOWING Labour’s disastrous local election results, Luke Charters MP says the answer is for Labour to be “bolder” but he doesn’t specify exactly what this means.
He mentions the Renters Act that is having a detrimental impact on housing availability, the provision of “Oyster” style transport cards that are hardly an essential necessity and Breakfast Clubs. But other than that he explains nothing.
So is this “boldness” yet more taxation and stifling regulation that is already crippling the economy?
Is it more financial burdens on businesses that making employing people so onerous that jobs are being lost every day.
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Is it a continuation of uncontrolled illegal migration that is costing taxpayers a fortune while the character of our towns and cities change beyond recognition and essential services continue to crumble by being overwhelmed?
If the MP for outer York could clarify exactly what he means by more “boldness” from Labour it would help us all enormously at the ballot box.
Matthew Laverack,
Lord Mayors Walk,
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York
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As Cuba heads into another month of blackouts due to the near-total fuel blockade imposed by the US, many say their lives now revolve around these power outages.
For Ana Rosa Romero, a 70-year-old widow living in a high-rise building, the constant power cuts have transformed her daily life.
BBC’s Will Grant spoke to her about the impact of the blackouts.
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