Puppet comedy No Strings Attached has reportedly been axed after one series was broadcast
A Channel 4 comedy branded “profoundly silly” has reportedly been axed following just one series.
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No Strings Attached – presented by former Bake Off host Mel Giedroyc – featured celebrity guests reading out risqué fan fiction whilst puppets performed the scenes. The programme broadcast its debut series last year but struggled to impress some critics, with the Irish Independent describing it as “shockingly bad” in its review.
TVZone has now reported that the show is understood not to be returning for a second series on Channel 4.
The programme was initially announced in 2022 under the working title The Really Rude Puppet Show. Following delays, it eventually premiered on E4 in 2025, rebranded as No Strings Attached.
The format, which featured stars such as Kerry Katona and Sam Thompson, involved famous faces narrating saucy tales about their fictional romantic encounters, whilst puppets performed elements of the scenarios being recounted, reports the Mirror.
Fans had a mixed response, with some viewers taking to X (formerly Twitter) to praise it as “good fun”, “very funny” and “hilarious”. One viewer said the puppets “had me in stitches” whilst another declared: “I LOVED IT.”
Others were less enthusiastic, however, with one audience member branding it “a disappointment”. Another remarked that it was “as unfunny as it is redundant”.
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Critics were similarly harsh, with the Irish Independent’s piece stating: “Channel 4’s celebrity puppet sex show isn’t shocking – it’s just shockingly bad.”
The Guardian awarded it a mere two out of five stars, albeit acknowledging that “the presence of Giedroyc makes any kind of chat/quiz/contest caper watchable”.
“To demonstrate this beyond dispute, E4 has come up with No Strings Attached, a profoundly silly piece of flim-flam that is objectively awful, and with any other presenter would be unbearable,” stated the review.
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Channel 4 has been approached for comment.
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First conceived as a mail-order-only company in 1963, known as Biba’s Postal Boutique, the brand captured the revolutionary 1960s and 1970s attitude and style, offering trend-seekers affordable, high-fashion aesthetics and glamour akin to Paris catwalks.
Influenced by art deco, Biba’s covetable mini dresses, luxurious fabrics, rich prints and colour palettes quickly achieved a cult following, embodying the “swinging London” look. Worn by celebrities like Twiggy and Mick Jagger, and film stars like Brigitte Bardot and Raquel Welch, Biba embraced a glamorous and rebellious style that had enormous global influence.
Now, The Biba Story: 1964–1975, a new exhibition at the Dovecot Studios in Edinburgh, is showcasing the iconic fashion brand founded by designer Barbara Hulanicki and her partner Stephen Fitz-Simon.
Expanding from a small chemist shop on Church Street, Kensington, to a seven-storey department store on Kensington High Street, Biba sold a range of goods, from fashion to home products. The brand revolutionised retail with its lifestyle-focused department store and immersive interior opulence, setting a precedent for experiential luxury shopping that continues today.
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Sadly, despite its significant impact on fashion and culture, Biba struggled financially and closed in 1975, leaving a lasting legacy as a symbol of the 1960s style revolution.
Jean Shrimpton and Barbara Miller in Biba for the Telegraph in 1973. Photo Duffy @Duffy Archive
Historic moments
First seen at the Fashion and Textile Museum in London, The Biba Story communicates an engaging narrative covering the swift rise of Hulanicki’s design brand. It starts by setting the scene with a visual timeline, cleverly plotting the Biba story alongside pivotal historical movements and events, demonstrating the broader societal and cultural context that provided the backdrop to Biba’s fashion reign.
This includes reference to the not-guilty verdict for the legal action brought against Penguin Books, which in 1960 published the unexpurgated version of D.H. Lawrence’s 1932 book Lady Chatterley’s Lover. It caused a huge furore at the time and heralded the more liberal age of the swinging 60s that Biba embraced.
The exhibit also introduces Biba’s first major commercial success – a simple pink and white gingham shift dress paired with a Bardot-style headscarf. This dress, first featured in the Daily Mirror in May 1964, sold a record 17,000 dresses at 25 shillings (£1.25) each, marking the commercial success that swiftly elevated Biba to the iconic status it still retains today.
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This evocative exhibition includes a wonderful sequence of drawings, illuminating how Hulanicki started out as a talented fashion illustrator, providing artwork for major magazines like Vogue and Women’s Wear Daily. Offset by the warm decor of plum walls, The Biba Story creates a sublime, high-end feel, further complemented by vintage retro-style lighting.
Here, you really get a nostalgic sense of the 1960s and 1970s, when art nouveau, art deco and modernism combined to create the style for the time.
Biba wasn’t just about fashion, it was an aesthetic that was part of a lifestyle. Fashion & Textile Museum
The exhibition’s collective energy conveys the essence of the Biba aesthetic – it wasn’t just about the clothes, it was a whole lifestyle. Beautifully curated cases of Biba products, from cosmetics to tinned food to matches and branded wine, reveal how Biba was one of the first high street brands to offer more than clothes. Here was an accessible, glamorous and perhaps more indulgent lifestyle to the masses, especially uplifting in a drab post-war Britain.
A section dedicated to Biba textiles highlights the boldness of its patterns and prints offset by the contrasting simplicity of the garments’ designs. Biba was all about functionality over fussiness.
The outfits on display embody a somewhat stringent uniformity infused with a rebellious attitude, transitioning into a slick showcase of classic black dresses that remain timeless and enduring. Here, the exhibition also highlights the desirable body standards of the era, with the Biba look demanding wearers have “long thin arms, flat chests, low waists and straight hips”.
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This segment subtly hints at the more problematic influence of fashion in defining body image (and perhaps it’s important to note that most of the clothes on display reflect a very small body shape), offering valuable reflections on the historical evolution of beauty standards and fashion’s continuing role in shaping them.
Bring Oot Your Biba
Especially illuminating, too, are the stories of Biba customers reminiscing about the brand, describing how “there was nothing like Biba in Edinburgh. The colours, the cut, the design, the materials, all fabulous.” Personal stories are melded with the exhibition narrative throughout, and there is a wonderfully touching conclusion titled Bring Oot Your Biba. This showcases the results of an invitation to the people of Scotland to share their Biba memories and purchases, all adding warming generational insights into the treasures of Biba fashions.
Notably, the exhibition ends with a small, beautiful tapestry of the Biba Logo, woven by talented Dovecot Studios apprentice Sophie McCaffrey – a perfect, and fitting wrap to a beautifully curated exhibition.
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The Dovecot not only pays a sincere and authentic homage to Biba’s lasting legacy, it immerses the viewer in a real sense of the palpable excitement of the era: change, youth, liberation and opportunity. Many visitors will no doubt feel connected to the nostalgia of Biba’s style, while being reminded of the importance of fashion visionaries like Barbara Hulanicki to our design cultures, identities, and economies.
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A billionaire mogul says paedophile financier Jeffrey Epstein stole vast sums from his family.
Les Wexner, 88, who was behind retailers including Victoria’s Secret and Abercrombie & Fitch, was answering questions about his friendship with Epstein in a behind-closed-door session on Wednesday with US Congress.
Mr Wexner, who is pictured in the Epstein files, has not been accused of any wrongdoing and always denied any knowledge or involvement in Epstein’s crimes.
He is one of Epstein’s most prominent former friends, and their relationship stretches back to the 1980s, but he is on the record as saying he regrets the friendship.
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In August 2019, he said: “I am embarrassed that, like so many others, I was deceived by Mr Epstein.
“I know now that my trust in him was grossly misplaced and I deeply regret having ever crossed his path.”
He said he was “pleased to testify” because it would provide “an opportunity to set the record straight”, but added he had been “naive, foolish, and gullible” for trusting Epstein with his business.
Mr Wexner stressed he did not know about or witness Epstein’s crimes or take part in them.
He added that Epstein had revealed in 2006 that he had legal issues in Florida, which later turned into his conviction for sexual abuse.
A year later, he revealed the situation “could become messy” and left it to Mr Wexner’s wife to handle their personal finances.
This led to the family discovering “Epstein had stolen vast sums from our family”, he said.
Mr Wexner said: “Once I learned of his abusive conduct and theft from my family, I never spoke with Epstein again. Never.”
The businessman also testified on Wednesday that he had never seen Epstein with any young girls, and his heart goes out to each of his victims. “The pain he inflicted upon them is unfathomable to me,” he said
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Image: Mr Wexner allowed Epstein to manage his finances. Pic: US Department of Justice
The note addresses Epstein and says the author wanted to “get you what you want” over what appears to be a drawing of breasts. It is then signed with “your friend Leslie”. As there is no surname, it is unclear who the author is.
Sky News’ data and forensics team have analysed the signature and believe there are similarities with Mr Wexner’s handwriting.
Being featured in the Epstein files is not an indication of wrongdoing.
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Image: Mr Wexner said he regrets his friendship with Epstein. Pic: US Department of Justice
UK police forces investigating information from Epstein files
On Wednesday, West Midlands Police said it was assessing information “that has emerged in relation to private flights into and out of Birmingham Airport following the publication of the US DoJ Epstein files”.
It is understood private jets linked to Epstein passed through BHX, according to flight logs between the early 1990s and 2018.
Essex Police had said on Tuesday it was working through logs of private jets that had travelled through Stansted Airport, while Bedfordshire Police said it was reviewing links to London Luton Airport.
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On Wednesday afternoon, Surrey Police said it was carrying out enquires over claims of human trafficking and sexual assault, dating back to 1994.
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Where do the Royal Family stand on Andrew’s links to Epstein?
The National Crime Agency confirmed “a number” of UK police forces are assessing allegations that have emerged through the Epstein files.
Last week, Thames Valley Police said it was assessing claims that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor shared confidential documents with Epstein while acting as trade envoy.
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Andrew has vigorously denied any accusations against him related to Epstein and his crimes.
Earlier this month, the Metropolitan Police confirmed Peter Mandelson would face a criminal investigation into allegations he leaked market sensitive information from Downing Street to Epstein while serving as business secretary.
Lord Mandelson has said of his connection to Epstein in a statement: “I was wrong to believe Epstein following his conviction and to continue my association with him afterwards.
“I apologise unequivocally for doing so to the women and girls who suffered.”
This comes after Highfield Primary School, on Marsh Lane in Farnworth, was given an another Eco Schools Green Flag Award in recognition for the work they do.
The Green Party’s Cllr Hanif Alli said: “The children are a credit to the school and its focus on the environment and practically developing the land around themselves.
“I heard about a mud kitchen and a bug hotel and a new pond that they had created.
The schoolchildren were honoured for their environmental work (Image: Public)
“The children aptly call themselves eco warriors and were an absolute inspiration.
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“There is hope for our future yet, with young environmentalists like this in our midst!”
Cllr Alli says he was invited by year three pupil Penelope and year five pupil Aseel as Bolton’s only elected Green councillor to see their eco school and green projects for himself.
He said he was thrilled to be able to congratulate them on their Green Flag award.
Cllr Alli said he found the children’s work inspiring (Image: Public)
The Eco-Schools programme was established in 1994 and has been inspiring young environmentalists for over 30 years.
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It has grown into a global movement, with Eco Schools Green Flag accreditation awarded to schools in more than 100 countries.
Highfield Primary School has won nine Eco School Green Flag award over the last 20 years with the most recent having come just last November.
The school was honoured for its work across key areas like biodiversity, healthy living and litter.
They worked together to produce a detailed and impactful year-long action plan to address these priorities.
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Activities included monitoring dinnertime lunches and encouraging healthy eating.
There was also litter picking in the school grounds, eco team presenting litter picking assemblies and joining Bolton at Home for community litter picking events every term.
The school also received a grant from National Education Nature Park for a £10,000 biodiversity project with contractors North West Ltd added a pond and platform to the woodlands.
An Eco-Schools Green Flag is then valid for one academic year, before renewal is required to remain an Eco-Schools accredited Green Flag school, college, or nursery.
Donald Trump told protesters in Iran that “help was coming” little over a month ago.
But at that time, there was almost no US military presence that would have made a difference in the region.
On 22 January, he said there was a “great armada” assembling, when what he was referring to was the aircraft carrier, the USS Abraham Lincoln and its attendant Carrier Strike Group 3.
None of it matched his rhetoric. But by this weekend, it will have done so, as a powerful US military force assembles within striking distance of Iran. It has three main elements.
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First is the naval force. The Lincoln and its CSG 3 will shortly be joined by the USS Gerald Ford, and its attendant CSG 12. The USS Ford is passing through the Gibraltar Strait in the next 24 hours and can be expected to be on station south of Cyprus in about four days, travelling at normal cruising speed.
These two Nimitz-class carriers (CVN 72 and CVN 78) will be bringing extra air defence and Tomahawk-carrying destroyers with them, bringing the number of known, and named, US destroyers in the region to 11. They will join three Littoral Combat Ships already on station and a good number of support ships as well. In addition, each CSG includes – though never usually named – a nuclear attack submarine (an SSN), probably of the Virginia class.
And there may also be an Ohio-class SSN in the area, which is specifically designed to launch Tomahawk and other missiles at land targets.
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The second element has been provided over the previous 10 days by an extensive series of C-5 and C-17, Galaxy and Globemaster flights in and out of the region, bringing air defence assets to US bases, presumably as cover in the event of any Iranian retaliation in response to potential US attacks. Israeli “Iron Dome” air defence batteries have also been moved from its frontier with Gaza to its borders in the east, probably for the same reason.
Image: Satellite imagery shows F-15s and A-10 Thunderbolts at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, Jordan
And thirdly, the US has sent an extensive force of KC-130 air-to-air refuelling tankers to bolster its existing air tanker force. They left from the British base at Mildenhall (six tankers on 16 February) to Greece, and (on 18 February) no fewer than 10 more came from bases in the continental United States, via Britain, to bases in Greece and Bulgaria. In addition, US aircraft are known to be in the British base at Akrotiri in Cyprus, at Aviano in Italy, in the Azores, in Spain and at the Chagos Island base of Diego Garcia. Well over 100 US combat aircraft – F-15s, F18s, F-22s, F35s and B2 bombers – are now available to US military planners in the potential theatre of operations.
But the extra KC-130 tankers are the giveaway. They give away the possibility that US aircraft might be operating from bases not sited on the territories of America’s Middle East allies, but from less politically sensitive bases further away. And they give away the possibility that any air campaign might be quite prolonged, not just a sudden one-off attack.
The final piece of the jigsaw: no fewer than six E3 Sentry aircraft. These flying control centres can survey and control everything that happens beneath them. They are, in effect, flying HQ’s and a country can run a war from one of them. By the weekend, there will be a lot for these six E3 Sentry aircraft to look at and control.
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What all this military power will be used for is still a matter of some speculation.
What does the tracking data show us?
By Freya Gibson, junior OSINT producer
Sky News Data & Forensics team has tracked the locations of US military planes and ships heading to the region in recent days and weeks.
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Several US Navy boats have been sent to the Middle East, including the USS Abraham Lincoln, a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier that carries 90 aircraft, including F35 fighters, and 5,680 crew. The Lincoln is leading a carrier strike group which includes three destroyers. The ship was last seen in the Arabian Sea around 240km off the coast of Oman. Sky News confirmed the location of this ship on 15 January.
In addition, the USS Gerald R Ford, the lead ship of the US Navy’s nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, is en route to the Middle East. Sky News has confirmed its latest location as tracking shows the Ford was around 600km from the Strait of Gibraltar at 1.58pm on 18 January. This aircraft carrier, like the USS Abraham Lincoln, also forms a carrier strike group that includes three destroyers. In total, there are reported to be more than 12 US ships now in the Middle East.
Image: Sky News has also tracked movements of US aircraft
Sky News has also tracked movements of US aircraft in the region. More than 15 refuelling tankers have repositioned towards the Middle East and Europe since 16 January. These aircraft, the K-135s, are aerial refuelling aircraft. They can carry up to 200,000 pounds of fuel and 83,000 pounds of cargo. They have four engines and operate at speeds up to 530mph and altitudes up to 50,000 feet.
The aircraft came from multiple locations, including RAF Mildenhall in the UK, Tampa in Florida and Sioux City in Iowa. They have been landing in different locations, including Chania Airport in Greece and Sofia Airport in Bulgaria.
Satellite imagery shows F-15s and A-10 Thunderbolts at Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, Jordan. They can conduct precision airstrikes and engage armoured targets, alongside C-130 transport aircraft providing logistical support.
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What is Iran doing?
Image: Sky News has tracked positions of Iranian Navy vessels using data by TankerTrackers
Sky News has tracked the positions of Iranian Navy vessels using data from TankerTrackers. Around six vessels can be seen just off the coast of Bandar Abbas on 16 January. One of these ships is an Iranian Drone Carrier, IRIS Shahid Bagheri. Satellite imagery confirmed its location on 16 January, 10km from the coast.
It is often spotted around this location in the Strait of Hormuz. It can deploy roughly 60 drones along with helicopters.
Viewers were moved to tears watching bowel cancer surgeon Daren Francis race against time in new Channel 5 series The Surgeon
23:02, 18 Feb 2026Updated 23:03, 18 Feb 2026
Channel 5 audiences were moved as a doctor saved an elderly woman in new series The Surgeon.
The TV series, which launched on Channel 5 on Wednesday (February 18), shines the spotlight on medical professionals, with the opening episode centring on bowel cancer surgeon Daren Francis, reports the Mirror.
His first patient was Doris, a retired nurse who dedicated over 50 years to the NHS, with the voiceover describing a “life-threatening emergency” following the discovery of an obstruction in her bowel. The surgeon needed to operate before her bowel ruptured, acknowledging it was “a major operation” carrying heightened risks considering Doris was 88.
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Doris described her pain as “excruciating”, whilst her daughter elaborated: “Mum was very sick and we weren’t sure whether to come or not because mum doesn’t like to be a nuisance. She doesn’t like, you know, I think being a retired nurse, I think she just doesn’t want to be a bother.”
Dr Francis explained to her: “It looks like the bowel’s blocked with a growth or a little lump. And that, we’ve got to consider is potentially a malignant or a cancerous growth.”
He said: “The plan is to take you to the operating theatre, general anaesthetic, you’ll be asleep, and make a cut in your tummy up and down. And then remove that piece of bowel, which is blocking the rest of the bowel.
“So if we leave it there, the bowel can get stretched and stretched, and then eventually it could pop. Time is of essence. So we need to get on and do this. Otherwise, we’ll be in trouble.”
The programme subsequently followed the successful procedure, with audiences left in awe of the surgeon’s expertise.
By the end of the episode, it was revealed that Doris was recuperating at home.
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One viewer wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter: “3 mins in and I am crying already! surgeons are so compassionate, skilled and amazing!”
Another shared a crying emoji alongside their post: “What a bloke. Skill and perfect bedside manner with patients.”
A third viewer observed: “The Surgeon on 5 is phenomenal TV. Daren is an incredible human being. Amazing.”
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Another impressed audience member described the surgeon as “fantastic”, whilst someone else remarked: “People talk about miracles but people like Daren create them here and now for people using his phenomenal surgery skills. Awe inspiring.”
“Never get tired of watching programmes like The Surgeon,” wrote another viewer. “Skills beyond belief.”
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After the US captured Venezuela’s president at the start of 2026, Donald Trump promised to “unleash” the country’s oil supply. He wanted companies to invest US$100 billion (£74 billion) to get hold of it.
Big oil though, seems less than keen on that idea, appearing to consider Venezuela too expensive or risky. Exxon Mobil’s unenthusiastic response, describing Venezuela as “uninvestible”, even earned a personal rebuke from Trump.
So maybe Trump misunderstood how big oil works, and thought of oil firms as the quintessential risk takers – the ultimate exploiters of uncertainty. Perhaps he had in mind Daniel Day Lewis’s character in the film There Will be Blood, who was willing to risk everything to get his hands of more of the black stuff.
But while that may have been true for some oil firms in the early 1900s, in the 21st century, nothing could be further from the truth. Big oil in 2026 does not like uncertainty. It prefers to invest in what it knows, like plastics and petrochemicals. It does not want to get involved with things as uncertain as Venezuela and green energy.
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This idea is backed by my own research on the international oil industry, which shows that large oil companies tend to base their business strategies on long term oil production.
And South American countries play only a minor role in this outlook. Instead, big oil is focused on two key areas: shale oil in the US, and expanding petrochemical production in Asia.
The low cost of shale oil extraction gives it significant cost advantages as a raw material for refineries, while Asia’s growing share of global manufacturing provides a growth market for petrochemicals.
This in turn is linked to oil companies seeking to exploit growing demand for plastics (and lower demand for transport fuels) as part of a clear and long term path to profit. That path is what matters most to oil companies, and Trump’s plan for Venezuela (nor the green transition for that matter) does not provide it.
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The priority of profit is also the reason why governments who want greener or cheaper energy cannot rely on powerful oil companies to help them out.
Strength in oil
Underpinning the oil industry’s extreme strength in the global economy is its captive market, where consumer choice is limited to a small number of producers. In the case of the oil market, those consumers are nation states. And even those with large oil reserves of their own need the companies’ technology to refine it.
Venezuela’s oil reserves were once part of this international captive market. But research has shown that not oil is equal. And the range of products which can be manufactured from a barrel of it depends on a mix of geological characteristics and technical capabilities.
Donald Trump at a meeting with oil executives in January 2026. EPA/JIM LO SCALZO / POOL
So while Venezuela produces more crude oil then it consumes, it needs to import fuels and petrochemicals to meet the needs of its economy. This is because it lacks the refineries to produce these products domestically.
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International companies in the oil refining and services sectors control key technology and intellectual property in this area. Without their participation, Venezuela’s crude will remain unsuitable for international refineries.
This fundamental inequality around access to advanced refining technology means there is little relationship between a country’s oil reserves and whether or not it needs to import oil products.
Big oil may yet decide to stump up the investment required to open Venezuela’s oil industry if suitable guarantees are provided. But such state sponsored access places the risk with tax-payers, when those kind of guarantees could be better deployed in the development of clean energy.
And while society needs large firms to invest, politicians need to direct this investment towards productive opportunities. More cheap oil, petrochemicals and plastics are not the answer.
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Governments need to recognise that the problem with oil companies is not that they take too many risks, but rather that they take insufficient risks in areas where investment is needed most. For as my research also shows, the retreat of the oil companies from green investment has been matched by a ramping up of their investment in high emission and heavily polluting plastics and petrochemicals.
Addressing this will not be easy. It will requires strong supranational coordination among states to influence the sector, by increasing the costs of oil production and limiting the construction of new infrastructure. But that’s a very different approach to trying to “unleash” the oil supply of a whole nation.
Arsenal missed the opportunity to stretch their lead at the top of the Premier League table to seven points after collapsing against bottom-of-the-league Wolves
Mikel Arteta saw Arsenal’s title chances gunned down and told his misfiring players they will have to “take the bullet.”
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Arsenal blew a two-goal lead as they imploded to bottom-of-the table Wolves to put the title race back into Manchester City’s hands.
It was a huge blow for Arsenal who are still five points clear but City have a game in hand and the Gunners still have to go to the Etihad.
Arsenal boss Arteta looked shell-shocked afterwards and said: “I think any question, any criticism, any opinion, you have to take it on the chin today. That’s it. Any bullet, take it, because we didn’t perform at the level that is required.
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“I’m extremely disappointed, obviously, with the result, with the way the game ended. But we have to blame ourselves, I think, in the performance in the second half.
“We didn’t show anything close to the standards that are required in this league to win, with a margin that I think should have existed today, especially in the manner that we played the first half.
“So it’s a moment of disappointment. We all want to talk a lot about how we’re feeling. It’s not the moment to do that, because anything that we do has to be always and only with the intention to help the team.
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“And right now, I think we have to swallow that frustration. When you are at this level and at the top, you need to take the hits, because today we deserved them as well, and move on as quick as possible, because on Sunday we have a big game coming up.”
Arteta was clearly fuming with another collapse as they have won just two of their last seven Premier League games and warned they must bounce back in the North London derby at Tottenham on Sunday.
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Arteta added: “So anything that anybody says can be right, because we didn’t do what we had to do. And the way to do it is on the pitch on Sunday, in a great opportunity that we had.
“We’ve always done it, but you are as strong as to show it the next time you do it. To talk and say it here, it’s simple, and we have to do it on the pitch.”
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Newcastle United manager Eddie Howe has challenged his players to make more history by reaching the last 16 of the Champions League for the first time.
Howe’s team face Qarabag at the Tofiq Bahramov Republican Stadium in Baku on this evening in the first leg of their play-off tie with a place in the business end of the competition at stake and head coach Howe, who led the club to their first major domestic trophy in 70 years by clinching last season’s Carabao Cup, is determined to write a new chapter.
Speaking at his pre-match press conference, he said: “It means everything to us. The opportunity for us to get to the last 16 of this competition would be an incredible achievement.
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“We’re trying to embrace it in that way and look at the excitement and the possibility rather than feel the burden of the pressure of the occasion.
“We want to turn these moments into history and into moments people talk about for a long time. There’s a real excitement with this game.”
Newcastle will head into the game without inspirational skipper Bruno Guimaraes, who is facing a lengthy spell on the sidelines with a hamstring injury, but his Brazil team-mate Joelinton provided Howe with a significant boost by boarding the plane following his recovery from a groin problem.
Howe, who revealed defender Emil Krafth has undergone knee surgery and is likely to miss the rest of the campaign, said: “Joelinton’s back in the squad, so that’s a great boost for us.
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“He’s such an important player, such a big presence within our squad, such a real leader. He trained yesterday and trained well, and felt really good.”
Newcastle will run out in Baku on the back of successive away victories over Tottenham in the Premier League and Aston Villa in the FA Cup having previously only managed only three wins on the road in all competitions this season.
A third would not only set them up perfectly for the second leg at St James’ Park next Tuesday, but also for Saturday’s intensely difficult league trip to Manchester City, against whom they were drawn – this time at home – in the fifth round of the FA Cup on Monday evening.
Howe said: “We will play our strongest team in the sense that we will try to win the game. There’ll be no thinking of the schedule ahead. This game in isolation is hugely important.”
The company behind the pop-up bar has applied to City of York Council to use a 626m2 site outside M&S for the next five years.
This follows a similar application submitted in 2024 for Thor’s Tipi to use part of Museum Gardens every Christmas for five years, an application which has yet to be determined.
In the planning documents, Amanda Monaghan of Fabler & Co said: “Thor’s is more than just a pop-up bar. It’s a brand, an event, a venue and a destination.”
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Amanda also told the council her company has successfully operated bars and events since 2015, “believing that unique offerings can boost city centre growth and revitalisation.”
The application is for ‘Thor’s York Summer,’ she continued, on the 626m2 site managed by Make it York at 40-45 Parliament Street.
Her proposal seeks a giant Nordic tipi, terrace area with seating, real trees, fire pits and lighting. There would also be a street food truck and pop-up park.
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The application seeks to have the tipi and related features on site for 16 weeks a year, from mid-May to early September. In 2026, this would be from May 16 to September 6.
The application is for five years due to the costs of the planning application and of running the venture.
Amanda said: “We have operated for a similar timescale on this space for the past 4 summers. This length of time is important in order to recoup investments made in the structure, also driving footfall into the city centre.”
She continued: “The proposal will rejuvenate York Parliament Street, bringing the pedestrianised space to life.
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“We expect Thor’s Tipi to be a driver of footfall, therefore increasing footfall for the businesses surrounding the space.”
The venue would open Monday to Saturday from 11am to 10pm and from 11am to 6pm on a Sunday.
The application said noise management measures would ensure the venue did not disturb residents or businesses. This meant live music would only be on a weekend from 4pm to 6pm. Ambient music would be from 11am to 9pm and at lower levels from 8.30pm.
Safety would be ensured by five CCTVs and security provided by Eboracum.
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The Pop-up Park would encourage families, she continued, creating a ‘well rounded offer,’ with open mic, DJ evenings and craft clubs. Food vendors would partner with local musicians and local ales would be offered. The proposal overall, would also create jobs.
The application concluded: “Thor’s Tipi York Parliament Street has been developed in order to create a welcoming space for residents, families and visitors to York.
“By activating the space with a family-friendly venue, we hope to increase footfall into the city centre and a reason to bring communities together in that area- giving the space a sense of purpose.”
“Thor’s Tipi Bar is a pop-up temporary venue, filled with colour, vibrancy and energy. We will host weekly events encouraging dwell time in the area.
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“It will be a welcome break for families and shoppers- a green space in the city centre for everyone to enjoy.”
City of York Council has yet to determine the application.