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Ann Widdecombe’s blissful three-year romance with the only man she ever loved: The purple hotpants that caught his eye. Dancing until sunrise. Kisses outside college – but never a shared bed…

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Colin Maltby pictured with Ann Widdecombe in 1973, while the pair were students at Oxford University

Looking back, which she often did, Ann Widdecombe‘s years at Oxford University were among the happiest of her life.

There was a dreaminess about that time in the early 1970s, she recalled, not least because of the boyfriend – her first and last – who stood at the centre of it.

Colin Maltby, a brilliant physics scholar from Christchurch, was, she admitted, ‘the man that at that stage I thought I might marry’.

For nearly three years Ann and Maltby spent their days together, punting along the River Cherwell, trundling back and forth across town between their respective colleges in Ann’s old turquoise Morris Minor and dancing until sunrise at all-night summer balls.

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They met each other’s families. As the relationship deepened there were holidays to Portugal, Gibraltar and Morocco where the couple swam in the Mediterranean and rode on camels.

This week, drawing on previously unpublished interviews with both Ann and Maltby, the Daily Mail can tell, for the first time, the full story of their bittersweet university romance and break-up.

Conducted over several hours in the late 1990s when Ann was shadow home secretary, these extraordinary conversations reveal a softer, more romantic side to a woman who would go on to become one of Britain’s most formidable and outspoken politicians but who also, after her chaste relationship with Maltby ended in heartache, remained single until the tragic end of her life last week.

So why, in spite of the powerful affection she felt for him, did Ann’s relationship with Maltby end? And what effect did that heartbreak have on her in the decades that lay ahead?

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Colin Maltby pictured with Ann Widdecombe in 1973, while the pair were students at Oxford University

Ann was three years older than Maltby when they met in the summer of 1971.

Having failed to get into Oxford the first time around, she had left her convent school in Bath and spent three years studying Latin at Birmingham University before reapplying and winning a place to study politics, philosophy and economics at Lady Margaret Hall, at the time one of Oxford’s all-women colleges.

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She crossed paths with Maltby, a straight-A student from King Edward VI School in Birmingham, at The Oxford Union – the world’s oldest debating society which since its founding in 1823 has nurtured the persuasive talents of many an MP as well as a dozen prime ministers.

It was there, during a ‘fancy dress’ debate held at the end of summer’s Trinity Term in 1971, that Maltby, described by one contemporary as ‘an academic nerd with big glasses, a shambolic dress sense and wild hair’ first saw a different side to the politically ambitious Ann.

‘I remember that Ann appeared in a spangly pair of purple hot pants and a very garish outfit, looking extraordinary,’ he said in an interview with political journalist Nicholas Kochan, who was researching for an authorised biography on Ann when they spoke at length in the late 1990s.

At the end of the debate, Maltby recalled, she was carried out of the chamber by someone dressed as a gorilla.

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The couple pictured punting on the river in 1971. Widdecombe and Maltby were together for three years

The couple pictured punting on the river in 1971. Widdecombe and Maltby were together for three years

‘She was different,’ he said when asked what attracted him to her.

‘She was distinctive. I guess if I was going to bring it down to a single thing, she was always her own person and she still is.’

When the pair returned to Oxford for Michaelmas term in October 1971, Maltby, who like Ann was by then a final year student, purposely threw himself into life at the Union to get closer to Ann, participating in debates and inviting her for coffee under the guise of discussing strategy for committee meetings or discussing the topic of an upcoming debate.

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Both were also members of the university’s Conservative Association.

‘We became interested in each other because we were interested in each other’s political activity, ambitions and views,’ he said.

If at first Ann saw Maltby as a useful political ally then he quickly impressed her with his brilliant mind and ability to argue a point.

According to Ann: ‘We spent more time together and we got to know each other better. By the end of that year we had a relationship which had gone beyond politics. We started to care about each other as people, so we were friends. We were going out.’

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Nicholas Kochan, who went on to write the 2000 biography, Ann Widdecombe: Right From The Beginning, believes that the relationship ‘allowed her to be vulnerable and open as she had never been before’.

Ms Widdecombe, pictured at her home in Haytor, Devon, would go on to become a political firebrand and Conservative minister

 Ms Widdecombe, pictured at her home in Haytor, Devon, would go on to become a political firebrand and Conservative minister

In one unpublished short story Ann wrote and showed to Kochan: ‘Only once have I rejoiced in yielding it up, in confiding.’

Maltby, says Kochan, was the recipient of this confidence. With him she could reveal her introverted side.

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By the end of 1971 the pair were ‘romantically committed’, as Ann put it.

After they were spotted kissing in the front of Ann’s beloved Morris Minor, which she called Methuselah, outside the front of Christchurch, word spread around the Union that the friends had become a ‘power couple’.

Confronted with this recollection, Ann insisted on pointing out that the kissing was ‘chaste’.

‘We would not do anything as ghastly as sitting on the back seat,’ she told Kochan.

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On another occasion, the pair were interrupted in Maltby’s rooms at Christchurch by a friend who only realised he’d butted in when he noticed that Maltby had set aside his glasses.

They became so talked about that a fellow student even named his pet goldfish Colin and Ann.

But even the slightest whisper that their relationship was sexual was immediately shot down by Ann who, as a well-known Union hack, was a ready target for the student newspaper Cherwell.

She always maintained her relationship with Maltby, three years her junior, was chaste

She always maintained her relationship with Maltby, three years her junior, was chaste

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When in May 1972 its gossip column reported that Ann’s old Dansette record player had been moved to Maltby’s room at Christchurch – implying that they were living together – she forced them to print a retraction by threatening to sue.

Ann recalled how it became a ‘huge joke’ between her and Maltby, who quipped that his own reputation had also been damaged by reports of their celibacy.

‘Colin said: “When am I going to get my apology?”,’ she said.

If that was the year that the relationship intensified, then it still didn’t become physical in nature.

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According to Maltby: ‘Sex was never an issue. I don’t think it was discussed.’

But according to another contemporary, they often held hands in public.

‘They were sometimes billing and cooing. It was clear when you saw them that they were on affection terms,’ said a fellow student.

Ann recalled those days in her autobiography, Strictly Ann, recalling how at a Worcester College summer ball: ‘Colin and I danced to a South American steel band in the early hours of a summer’s morning before watching the dawn come up.’

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She added: ‘The world seemed my oyster. We floated through Oxford clad in black and white as we sat finals. Colin and I bought each other flowers from the market to pin on our academic gowns, we drifted down the river in punts.’

Even so, when they went on holiday to Portugal after sitting their finals, she insisted on booking separate single rooms – much to the surprise of staff at their hotel in the beach resort of Estoril.

Ms Widdecombe, who died last weekend, received a third class degree from Oxford and found temporary work after university with Oxfam

Ms Widdecombe, who died last weekend, received a third class degree from Oxford and found temporary work after university with Oxfam

Maltby recalled: ‘We had to insist to the hotel receptionists that “Yes we had booked two rooms, and yes we really did want two rooms”. And I remember the hotel being slightly surprised about this.’

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Hilariously, Ann’s recollections of the trip included their visit to a cork factory in Lisbon.

‘Portugal in those days had the most thriving cork industry,’ she said.

‘We had lots of happy moments. They were very good times.’

They returned to Oxford in the autumn where Maltby, who got a double first, embarked on a doctorate and Ann, who was awarded a third class degree, found temporary work with Oxfam, selling tickets for a charity raffle.

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Both continued to spend most of their free time at the Oxford Union.

But it was Maltby, not Ann, who was widely tipped to become a future Tory prime minister.

He ran for the coveted position of president that term but was not elected. Ann provided a shoulder to cry on.

According to Maltby: ‘She is sensitive and always was, more in concern for other people than in a sense of being unduly sensitive for herself. She is not easily wounded or hurt or upset or self-centred. She reacts to other people’s happiness and suffering and in that sense she’s absolutely genuine.’

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Maltby said of his former flame that she was 'sensitive' and reacted to others' happiness or suffering genuinely

Maltby said of his former flame that she was ‘sensitive’ and reacted to others’ happiness or suffering genuinely

Christmas 1972 was spent together at the Bristol vicarage of Ann’s brother Malcolm. It was the first time that Maltby met his girlfriend’s family.

The occasion, he recalled, was ‘Dickensian’ in its jollity: ‘Everybody spent a lot of time with each other, with the children, and lots of alcohol flowed and that was very jolly in the English winter.’

According to Nicholas Kochan, meeting Ann’s ‘formidable’ father for the first time was a key moment in the relationship. To Ann’s delight, they hit it off.

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Former Royal Navy officer James Murray Widdecombe, known to his family as Murray, served as head of naval supplies and transport at the Ministry of Defence, a career which took the family overseas, including to Singapore, where Ann attended the Royal Naval School as a young girl.

‘Murray was a huge presence in Ann’s life and in her mind,’ says Kochan. ‘The fact that her father liked Maltby was very important to her.’

The following year saw the couple’s paths begin to diverge.

While Maltby was finally elected as Oxford Union president in the spring of 1973, Ann was taken on as a graduate trainee by Unilever and moved to her first home, a 1960s flat in Ottershaw in Surrey, not far from where Murray and Rita Widdecombe lived.

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She continued to visit Maltby regularly, who was still studying in Oxford, always booking a room at the Galaxie Guest House on the Banbury Road. She also went to visit his family in Solihull.

The pair spent Christmas 1973 and New Year on holiday in Morocco, again booking separate rooms at the Chellah Hotel in Tangier.

They attended parties, visited Berber markets, rode camels and took a trip to Gibraltar. Ann forever kept the menu from the meal they were served on Christmas Eve.

But if she thought – and her parents hoped – that one day they would marry, then by the end of the year it was all over.

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Pictured on the day of her death during a television interview, Ms Widdecombe never married nor had any public romance after Maltby

Pictured on the day of her death during a television interview, Ms Widdecombe never married nor had any public romance after Maltby

Maltby, who had curtailed his post-graduate studies and was travelling widely with the Federation of Conservative Students, broke up with her over dinner at The Bear, a pub in Esher, Surrey.

He recalled: ‘I think it had been going on long enough. We had been drifting apart. At some stage I just thought to myself: “Well you really have to decide whether this is going to go on drifting or whether it’s actually sufficiently important that you’re going to do something about it.”

‘It was me who decided that we should part, not that we were together in any physical sense at all by then.’

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‘We didn’t part in an angry fashion and we weren’t at any stage hostile or bitter. But I’m sure there were some tears afterwards.’

Stoic Ann later wrote in her autobiography: ‘I knew even before we met that he was about to end what was by then a failing relationship. My feelings were mixed.

‘Naturally I was deeply upset by the end of a romance which had lasted nearly three years but I had known well enough that it had no future and the following morning my overwhelming sensation was one of relief.’

Speaking to Kochan, however, she said that ‘by the time we broke up, I had not the slightest idea that it would happen’.

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Asked what went wrong with the relationship, she poignantly concluded: ‘It blossomed and it died.’

The sting in the tail, however, was the news which came just a matter of weeks later, that Maltby had already found someone else.

Ann was ‘well aware from the indiscretion of friends’ that her boyfriend was seeing Liz Bath, a Sheffield University student and fellow official at the Federation of Conservative Students.

Their engagement was announced in the Times in March 1975, just three months after Ann and Maltby spent their final Christmas together with her family.

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Maltby, Ann said, broke the news to her a week earlier. According to Kochan, while she was shocked at being two-timed, she took the ‘pragmatic view’ that this was the way relationships ended.

Ann even attended their Dorset wedding in July 1975. She was also a guest when Maltby married for a second time to his current wife Vicky with whom he now lives in Switzerland.

According to father-of-three Maltby, he and Ann remained ‘reasonably close friends’ over the years, having dinner at each other’s houses.

‘She knows the children and we’re all fond of each other,’ he said.

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Maltby said Ms Widdecombe 'discovered for herself' that it was not 'necessary' to marry and said he believed she was 'quite fulfilled with her life as it is'

Maltby said Ms Widdecombe ‘discovered for herself’ that it was not ‘necessary’ to marry and said he believed she was ‘quite fulfilled with her life as it is’

Maltby ultimately quit politics for a career as a fund manager, taking on roles at prestigious City firms including Rothschild & Sons, Kleinwort Benson, Equitas and BP.

Ann, meanwhile, first entered Parliament in 1987 when she was elected Conservative MP for Maidstone under Margaret Thatcher and going on to become one of Westminster’s most high profile figures.

Asked whether he thought marriage might have been a hindrance to Ann’s political career, Maltby said: ‘She might just as easily have met somebody else six months later and been completely happy, got married, had children and still been a very great political force.’

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He added: ‘If Ann had really felt that she needed to have a husband to be fulfilled I’m quite sure she would have got married. Ann discovered for herself that it wasn’t necessary. I think she’s quite fulfilled with her life as it is.’

Until the terrible events of last weekend, when she was killed in horrific circumstances at her remote Dartmoor home, Ann Widdecombe would no doubt have agreed with her former love.

Reflecting on their relationship more than 20 years ago, she said: ‘Some people have rather cruelly tried to suggest that it’s because of what happened with him that I never married. That has never been true.’

Hers, she said, was ‘probably a life that was not destined for marriage’.

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Despite always treasuring those halcyon days at Oxford, being single was something she never lamented.

‘The important thing for anybody looking at my life was that it didn’t happen,’ she said.

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The worst GPs in Cambridgeshire as rated by patients

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Cambridgeshire Live

The worst rated surgery in Cambridge received a overall score of under 50%

The lowest-rated GP surgeries in Cambridgeshire have been revealed, according to a national NHS survey. It is bad news for one GP in Cambridgeshire which has received the lowest percentage for patients’ overall experience of the surgery.

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The results come from a NHS patient survey, which is sent to patients every year about the care they receive at their surgery. In Cambridgeshire, the worst-rated surgery is the Willow Tree Surgery in Bushfield, Peterborough.

The Peterborough-based surgery was given a score of 46% for patients overall experience at the surgery. A spokesperson for Willow Tree said: “We are aware of the results from the latest NHS GP Patient Survey, including the score relating to overall patient experience at Willow Tree Surgery.

“We take all patient feedback seriously and always want to learn from the experiences our patients share with us, whether that comes through national surveys, our own feedback channels, or direct conversations with the team.

“Willow Tree Surgery serves a large and diverse community and are always looking to make improvements to our services and patients’ experience of our service and this is something the whole team is committed to.

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“Patient surveys are one of several measures used to assess general practice, and we would encourage anyone with concerns about their own care to speak to us directly so we can address them personally.”

Botolph Bridge Community Health Centre in Sugar Way, Woodston, Peterborough, was the second worst with a score of 49%.

The other surgeries among the worst in Cambridgeshire are:

  • Bretton Medical Practice, Rightwell, Bretton, Peterborough – 51%
  • Waterbeach and Cottenham Surgeries, Bannold Road, Waterbeach – 53%
  • New Queen Street Surgery, Whittlesey – 53%
  • Nene Valley and Hodgson Medical Practice, Clayton, Orton Goldhay, Peterborough – 56%
  • Park Medical Centre, Park Road, Peterborough – 57%
  • Monkfield Medical Practice, Sackville Way, Cambourne – 58%
  • Nightingale Medical Centre, Damson Drive, Peterborough – 59%
  • Thorpe Road, 64 Thorpe Road, Peterborough – 59%
  • Parson Drove Surgery, Main Road, Wisbech – 61%
  • George Clare Surgery, Swan Drive, New Road, Chatteris – 64%
  • Cherry Hinton Medical Centre, 34 Fishers Lane, Cherry Hinton – 64%
  • Jenner Healthcare, Wisbech Road, Thorney – 64%
  • Boroughbury Medical Centre, Peterborough – 66%
  • East Barnwell Health Centre, Ditton Lane, Cambridge – 68%
  • Lakeside Healthcare St Neots, Huntingdon Street, St Neots – 69%
  • Clarkson Surgery, De Havilland Road, Wisbech – 69%
  • Thomas Walker Westgate Healthcare, Princes Street, Peterborough – 69%
  • Thistlemoor Medical Centre – 6-10 Thistlemoor Road, Peterborough – 69%

The data for this year’s NHS survey was collected between the start of January and end of March. Across England, over three-quarters of patients said their overall experience was “good”.

A total of one in 10 said their experience was poor or very poor. The lowest rated surgery in England was the Medicus Select Care Blmk Ccg in Enfield, London, with an overall score of 15%.

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Ryan Reynolds looks downcast in Connecticut after Taylor Swift wedding snub and Justin Baldoni’s savage video blasting Blake Lively

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Ryan Reynolds, 49, looked downcast as he was spotted on a lowkey outing on Friday in Connecticut

Ryan Reynolds looked downcast as he was spotted on a lowkey outing on Friday in Connecticut

It comes shortly after the 49-year-old star and his wife Blake Lively were snubbed by Taylor Swift after the pair did not receive a coveted invite to the singer’s lavish NYC nuptials. 

Earlier this month, Justin Baldoni also broke his nearly two-year silence after his lawsuit with Lively was settled back in May ahead of a trial. 

The Gossip Girl alum, 38, has since requested he pay her $8.3 million in legal fees, which he has slammed as ‘excessive.’ 

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Reynolds kept it casual during an excursion in the small town of New Canaan while donning a short-sleeved shirt and khaki pants. 

The Deadpool actor additionally opted for a pair of shades as he held a conversation with another individual outdoors. 

Ryan Reynolds, 49, looked downcast as he was spotted on a lowkey outing on Friday in Connecticut

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Daily Mail has reached out to reps for Reynolds for comment, but has yet to hear back.

Last week, Baldoni and his wife Emily finally broke silence following the end of the lawsuit by posting a video to Instagram. 

The pair, who have been married since 2013, accused Lively of causing them ‘pain’ over ‘untruthful’ claims. 

Baldoni, who starred in and directed the 2024 film It Ends With Us with Lively, explained the reason they hadn’t spoken yet was because ‘something was telling us not to.’

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‘And we were talking about it and feeling into it and praying about it,’ he continued, while his wife added, ‘…And this feels like the moment.’ 

Emily expressed, ‘There is so much to say, and it makes it hard to speak. It makes it hard to figure out what is right for us, for this specific moment.’ 

Baldoni told fans and viewers that ‘we’re not gonna say it all.’ 

‘But what does feel important is that we can genuinely say that we are sitting here today feeling immense gratitude for so many things and so many people and so many things that have happened to us,’ his wife said. 

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Join the discussion

How should celebrities handle being excluded from close friends’ major life events?

Reynolds kept it casual during an excursion in the small town of New Canaan while donning a short-sleeved shirt and khaki pants

Reynolds kept it casual during an excursion in the small town of New Canaan while donning a short-sleeved shirt and khaki pants

It comes shortly after Reynolds and his wife Blake Lively were snubbed by Taylor Swift after the pair did not receive a coveted invite to the singer's lavish NYC nuptials; Swift and Travis Kelce seen in March in L.A.

It comes shortly after Reynolds and his wife Blake Lively were snubbed by Taylor Swift after the pair did not receive a coveted invite to the singer’s lavish NYC nuptials; Swift and Travis Kelce seen in March in L.A. 

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Baldoni and wife Emily, who have been married since 2013, accused Lively of causing them 'pain' over 'untruthful' claims

Baldoni and wife Emily, who have been married since 2013, accused Lively of causing them ‘pain’ over ‘untruthful’ claims

Baldoni stated that what saved them was ‘gratitude.’ 

‘I also feel that it’s important as we say that, in that gratitude, it doesn’t negate the injustice and the pain that we have also felt in the last few years,’ Emily expressed in a serious tone. 

‘And we’ve had to wrestle with so many things and try to understand things like how could something like this even happen. Let alone disguise as a fight for women. So much to unpack.’ 

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She admitted that their family has been dealing with ‘a lot of trauma’ which ‘also makes it hard to speak.’ 

Baldoni then said, ‘We don’t even know this is the right thing to say, but we just know we need to share something.

‘What I will say is that there have been so many painful things that have been spoken into existence…’ 

His wife chimed in with, ‘Untruthful,’ as Baldoni continued, ‘…over the last couple years.’

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He explained they simply ‘wanted to let the justice system run its course,’ and Emily added, ‘The truth, and the facts, have spoken for themselves.’

Following the end of the lawsuit, Baldoni gave an update by saying their family is still ‘healing.’ 

He explained they simply 'wanted to let the justice system run its course,' and Emily added, 'The truth, and the facts, have spoken for themselves'

He explained they simply ‘wanted to let the justice system run its course,’ and Emily added, ‘The truth, and the facts, have spoken for themselves’

Following the end of the lawsuit, Baldoni gave an update by saying their family is still 'healing'; Baldoni and Emily seen in February in NYC

Following the end of the lawsuit, Baldoni gave an update by saying their family is still ‘healing’; Baldoni and Emily seen in February in NYC

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The filmmaker, who is also known for projects such as Jane The Virgin and Five Feet Apart, sent thanks to fans who had voiced support over the course of the legal battle. 

‘But we’re here in large part because of so many of you and all of our friends and family,’ Baldoni continued. 

‘And one thing that we’ve learned is that when God presses the reset button, and everything else is stripped away, that that’s when love shows up. And we feel so loved.’ 

He promised that they will have more to say later.

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‘But for now, we are going to focus on continuing the healing and hanging out with our kiddos and enjoying life.’ 

Following the lawsuit, Lively has since asked that Baldoni cover her legal fees which amounts to a little over $8 million. 

Attorneys for the filmmaker alleged that the actress was attempting to claim an ‘exorbitant’ amount of money from him. Baldoni’s team also claimed the sums charged by Lively’s lawyers were ‘excessive.’

Lively and Reynolds were also snubbed from Swift’s recent wedding after the singer had been dragged into the lawsuit. 

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Following the lawsuit, Lively has since asked that Baldoni cover her legal fees which amounts to a little over $8 million; seen in February in NYC

Following the lawsuit, Lively has since asked that Baldoni cover her legal fees which amounts to a little over $8 million; seen in February in NYC 

Swift and Lively had been close for many years, with the actress previously joining the Grammy winner at the 2024 Super Bowl in Las Vegas. 

The Love Story hitmaker and the Kansas City Chiefs tight end said ‘I do’ in front of 1,000 guests at Madison Square Garden on July 3. 

Some celebrities that were in attendance included Selena Gomez, Gigi Hadid, Jack Antonoff, Hugh Grant and Graham Norton. 

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Swift’s longtime publicist Tree Paine, who was also in attendance, offered details of the wedding in an email blast shortly after the nuptials.

‘The bride and groom’s wedding ceremony looks have been created by Christian Dior Haute Couture.’

Paine also revealed that Swift did not have bridesmaids and the NFL player did not have groomsmen for the ceremony.

‘Instead, her brother Austin Swift served as Taylor’s Man of Honor and Jason Kelce was Travis’ Best Man. The ceremony joined both families together and was officiated by friend Adam Sandler.’

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Kelce’s brother Jason was in attendance and his daughters served as flower girls throwing white and pink rose petals around the bride as she walked down the aisle.

At the time of the nuptials, Lively and Reynolds were spotted 300 miles away in Lake Placid, New York, TMZ reported. 

Swift and Lively had been close for many years, with the actress previously joining the Grammy winner at the 2024 Super Bowl in Las Vegas (seen above)

Swift and Lively had been close for many years, with the actress previously joining the Grammy winner at the 2024 Super Bowl in Las Vegas (seen above)

At the time of Swift's nuptials, Lively and Reynolds were spotted 300 miles away in Lake Placid, New York, TMZ reported

At the time of Swift’s nuptials, Lively and Reynolds were spotted 300 miles away in Lake Placid, New York, TMZ reported

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A source also told the Daily Mail that the actress is ‘sad and a little bit p***ed. No, a lot p***ed.’ 

‘That friendship was over before but if there was hope, it’s gone. They’ll never be friends again.’ 

The insider noted that Lively had ‘wanted to go’ to the wedding while adding, ‘It feels bad to be excluded like that. 

‘She had sort of hoped that despite everything, their history was enough that they’d be included, but that’s not the way it went.’

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We bought a normal, boring house then the BBC called wanting to see the skeleton inside

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Wales Online

Personality and fun in some spaces, calm and tranquil in others, Eve and James share their famous cottage with Starbuck the cat and a full-sized skeleton

When someone sees a traditional Welsh cottage from the outside they probably expect the inside to be that twee and deliver a traditional cottage interior design which, of course, is totally up to the resident and, arguably in most cases, accurate.

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But that’s not the case at Llantwit Cottage, where couple Eve and James have spent 10 years not only updating it but making it a unique tour through their lives, the personal treasures that they love, and the quirky items that make the house their home.

It is such an expected and distinctive cottage interior that their friend had no hesitation in putting it forward to be considered for the latest BBC Cymru Wales’ series of Wales’ Home of the Year, and it was eagerly snapped up by the producers for its visual impact; eclectic yet curated with care and thought. For more home, renovation and interiors stories sent to your inbox twice a week sign up to the property newsletter here.

READ MORE: Incredible Grade I listed mansion that was once a hotel and linked to the ‘holy grail’

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE: Couple transform tired house into stunning dream home using YouTube clips

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Called Llantwit Cottage and located near Neath, the creation of the couple’s sanctuary almost didn’t make it onto the TV screen. Eve, aged 44 and originally from the Swansea area, explains: “My husband’s a teacher locally, so he was a little bit apprehensive, you know, do we really want people to know where we live?

“But we just felt that it was something that we might regret not doing, no matter how cringe or embarrassing it might be, it just felt like it might be an opportunity not to miss really. It’s such a historic house locally, most people know it anyway.”

Llantwit Cottage was the home of renowned explorer and one of the country’s greatest naturalists, Alfred Russel Wallace, renting it from 1846 until his historic 1848 expedition to the Amazon. His most famous discovery was that of evolution; co-publishing the theory of evolution by natural selection with Charles Darwin in 1858 according to website Dramatic Heart Wales.

Now it was going to be in the public eye again, this time for the eclectic interiors this adventurous couple have created.

Eve says: “I didn’t watch it live, it was my worst nightmare being filmed, so I made James watch it first because I was so nervous how I would come across and what everything in the house was going to look like! When he said it was fine I watched it afterwards on iPlayer.

“But James did go into school the next day and some of the kids had it on their phones and they had screenshots of it and were saying, ‘oh, look at all this stuff in your house!’. I think he wasn’t as worried then because it wasn’t as bad as he was expecting.

“It’s probably the tidiest it’s ever been! I’m a very tidy person anyway, I try to keep everything pretty tidy most of the time. But we weren’t really sure what to expect with the filming crew, so we did a bit of extra spring cleaning just because we weren’t sure how close they were going to get some things – I’m not that crazy about cleaning and tidying all the time!”

The couple moved from a two-bedroom apartment in Cardiff Bay to the ten room cottage about 10 years ago and have slowly transformed it into their sanctuary.

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Eve remembers: “We had very little when we moved in, we didn’t have a lot of budget. It’s taken a lot of time, and at the beginning we didn’t do anything substantial because it was such a big jump for us. So it’s taken 10 years for us to get to this and we’ve had to do everything gradually, we’ve had to be fairly organic with how we’ve looked to decorate, and trying to use things that we had already plus buying second hand things, buying vintage things.”

When it comes to decorating a room Eve says there are no rules but there is guidance – they have to love the colours and adore the items they add in, that they mean something to them or have a cool vibe and they don’t want to be a slave to interior trends.

Eve says: “I love all of those high-end designs and all of those beautiful things you see in magazines but it’s just very expensive. You have to do it all in one go for it to look amazing, so it just wasn’t an option for us.

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“When we arrived we thought, ‘what are some easy wins, that we can do in terms of just changing some colour, getting some paint, changing some soft furnishings?’ And then it was just a case of not taking ourselves too seriously, really, with what we wanted to do.

“We did try and get a flavour for each space by spending time in it. The snug, for example, we wanted it to be nice and bright, because it’s quite a dark room, it doesn’t get a lot of natural light. So the floor is a lovely sort of copper wood colour, so we decided to bring some coppers and some pinks in. So it wasn’t planned out, mapped out to any great degree, it just developed slowly and organically.

“When we go travelling or we go places, we know, we try and pick up things that remind us of experiences or places we’ve been and that also express our personality, it’s really nice that the house has come on that journey with us.”

Not everyone has the courage to throw interior caution to the wind and express themselves fully inside their homes, worried about how it will look or judgement from others.

Eve says: “What I’d say to anyone looking to be a bit quirkier with their spaces – it’s your home, it’s your safe place. You should never be decorating to impress other people.

“But try to bring your personality into it and don’t take yourself too seriously. Ultimately, do you like it enough? To me, that is the most important thing. I don’t care if people think it’s a bit crazy, if it’s a bit strange, I like looking around my house and seeing things that just make me smile and remind me of something.”

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There are many moments to stop and admire the view in Eve and James’ house, from the cinema seats in the snug that have a full size skeleton sitting on them at Hallowe’en time, to the mix and clash of patterns and colours found in some of the rooms.

The library is a good example of bringing statement pieces into a space and letting them sing, even if they are not in ‘matching’ harmony, with walls kept plain to ensure maximum impact but the bespoke dark navy bookshelf at one end used as a visual bookmark (excuse the pun!) within the space.

Eve says: “I wanted that room to be quite sort of opulent, and I wanted deliberately to have the sort of contrasting patterns, so I’d seen the two statement chairs from Abigail Ahern, and I just love them. I’ve seen them in her store in London and they were really comfortable.

“We’ve got green blinds for contrast and then a little sofa that came with us from the flat – it was the first thing I ever bought for it, and I got it recovered in a shade of purple.

“Then I went to Rocket St. George, which is one of my favourite websites, and bought the palm tree and some crazy neon bulbs and the disco ball drinks cabinet and just some really cool things that kind of just bring everything to life.”

Eve also suggests that just a simple change of cupboard or drawer handle or the addition of a quirky cushion, piece of artwork or one of your own photographs can add some extra personality to a space without spending a lot of money or diving completely into a unique and eclectic design.

But some rooms at the cottage are calmer and more homogenised Eve thinks, including paying homage to the memory of Alfred by the introduction of Emma Shipley extinct wallpaper that has a design that includes the dodo and saber tooth tigers, plus Eve found that, quite randomly, within their eclectic collection they even had a dodo lamp.

The décor of the ‘National Park’ bedroom has Alfred’s life as inspiration, kitted out in cabin-style furniture from Barker and Stonehouse, Pendleton wool blankets and tourist pennants based in nature. That room is also where the couple keep and display their travel books and atlases and store all our camping gear.

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She says: “I suppose we’ve got a mix of some rooms that are a bit more mismatched, so our main hallway where we’ve got the cinema things, it’s a bit more of a visual soup compared to, you know, our guest room, the pink room upstairs, which is a bit more muted.

“Then the library has a slightly different feel for that space, so over the ten years it has been fairly organic, but there is usually an overarching plan, colour scheme or theme. I do try and build a room based on maybe some key items that we love. And all of our rooms have themed books in that themed room, so then I always know where they are.”

Some people have suggested that the couple’s home can seem childish in some spaces but Eve describes it as ‘a bit of a grown-up kid’s house. She says: “Ultimately, it’s about having that joy, I think, every day in your own home.”

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There’s style mixed with personality and fun that embody the heart, soul and spirit of Eve and James in every room, and surely that’s what a home is at its core, not an Instagram showcase but a comfortable place to relax and be surrounded by all that you love, even if that is a large skeleton. For more property, renovation, and interior design stories join our Amazing Welsh Homes Facebook group here.

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Three intense Coronation Street spoiler videos ‘confirm’ the end for two characters | Soaps

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Three intense Coronation Street spoiler videos 'confirm' the end for two characters | Soaps
The police close in in Coronation Street next week (Picture: ITV)

The stakes are high for several Coronation Street characters next week as the team leading Theo Silverton’s murder investigation close in on their prime suspect.

This leaves Sarah Platt (Tina O’Brien), Gary Windass (Mikey North) and DC Kit Green (Jacob Roberts) in a precarious position, given that they’re all covering up the fact that Sarah was the killer.

However, it is Sarah’s life that comes crashing down as she is interrogated and charged. Unfortunately, Gary doesn’t come out unscathed, as his marriage remains on the rocks.

Elsewhere, Betsy Swain (Sydney Martin) struggles to come to terms with her new way of life after her stroke, and it only becomes more difficult when the police ask for her statement.

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Dylan Wilson (Liam McCheyne) is in turmoil, having already been questioned by the police, but what does the future hold for him and his relationship with Betsy?

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Monday, July 20

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Sarah’s killer secret finally catches up with her as the police storm her flat and arrest her for Theo’s murder.

Monday night’s episode sees the Platt family attempt to film a birthday video message for Audrey Roberts (Sue Nicholls), who appears to be enjoying some time away from the cobbles with daughter Gail Platt.

We don’t blame her, considering all the chaos that’s been surrounding the Platts recently!

As Sarah gives up on the video message after another technical mistake by David Platt (Jack P Shepherd), the door is bashed in, and Lisa Connor-Swain (Vicky Myers) arrests Sarah in front of terrified son Harry.

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In the hospital, Betsy gets a surprise visit from Dylan, who seems ready to take accountability for his role in causing her stroke.

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He apologises profusely and assures her that he had no idea the consequences could be so dire.

However, they are soon interrupted by the arrival of a police officer who wishes to take Betsy’s statement.

What will she tell the officer? And what could this mean for Dylan?

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Maria Connor (Samia Longchambon) and Gary do well to cover their true feelings in front of Liam and Jake, but as soon as the boys leave, they drop the pretense.

Though Gary attempts to buoy Maria, suggesting that they could be worrying about nothing, Maria asserts that the damage is already done.

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She makes it clear that, no matter what happens with the police, their marriage has been damaged beyond repair.

Is this the end of the road for Gary and Maria?

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Radcliffe’s former cricket star Sir Garfield Sobers dies

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Radcliffe's former cricket star Sir Garfield Sobers dies

The 89-year old was widely regarded as one of the finest cricketers ever to play the game and died just 11 days before his 90th birthday.

In all, he made 93 Test appearances and scored 8,032 runs at an average of 57.78, while his 235 wickets came at a cost of 34.03.

The Barbados-born cricketer, who played for the West Indies for 20 years, was well-known in the Radcliffe area after being signed by the town’s cricket club in 1956.

Between that late-summer day in 1956, when Radcliffe’s John Lowe persuaded Sobers to sign on the dotted line for £500, and the start of the 1958 season, the 20-year-old Barbadian was to make the highest Test match score of all time, 365 not out against Pakistan.

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Sobers had signed for a year but stayed for five, lighting up the league with breathtaking individual performances, such as his 186 against Ashton in less than two hours; 50 in 13 minutes at Rochdale; and eight wickets for 13 runs at Werneth.

A report written by Anna Youssef for Bury Times in 2006 said he bowled extremely fast, a skill he says he learned in his first season at Radcliffe.

That first rain-hit summer, he scored 1,252 runs and took 88 wickets in a Radcliffe side which underperformed.

Barbadian cricketing great Sir Garfield Sobers has died at the age of 89, Cricket West Indies has announced. (Image: Philip Toscano/PA Wire)

In fact, Sobers took more wickets than the rest of the team put together and scored almost as many runs as them on his own.

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His achievements in subsequent seasons were no less remarkable, with the professional’s “double” of 1,000 runs and 100 wickets achieved in both 1960 and 1961, the year Radcliffe also won the Wood Cup and the league championship.

Sobers had fond memories of his five years at Radcliffe, recalling it as a time when he learned how to bowl very fast – and how to bet.

He “discovered” horse racing and poker during long, aimless days between matches and enjoyed a drink with the “locals”.

In his autobiography, published in 2002, he describes how he was warned about “Teddy Boys” who carried “flick knives” when he first came to live in Radcliffe, lodging at the Boar’s Head in the town centre.

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“When I walked home at night, the Teddy Boys in their drainpipe trousers, thick-soled shoes, bright shirts and string ties, with greased hair, would wave at me and shout hello,” he said.

“I often stopped to ask them what they were doing out on the streets at 11 o’clock and invite them to have a drink at the pub. We would have a few, and then they would go home, without any hint of trouble.”

Following his time in Radcliffe, Sobers went on to play for Nottinghamshire in county cricket and for South Australia in the Sheffield Shield.

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In all first-class matches, he scored 28, 315 runs, with 86 centuries, 400 catches, and more than 1,000 wickets.

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In 1968, while playing for Notts, he became the first man to hit six sixes in one six-ball over from Glamorgan’s Malcolm Nash.

He was knighted in 1975.

News of Sobers’ death has sparked an outpouring of warmth for a cricketer who transcended national loyalties.

England Cricket posted: “One of the greatest to ever play the game. Forever in our hearts, Sir Garfield Sobers.”

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There were tributes too from the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), which said: “The BCCI mourns the passing of Sir Garfield Sobers, a true icon of the game and one of cricket’s greatest-ever all-rounders.

“His extraordinary achievements, lasting influence on Caribbean cricket and immeasurable contribution to the global game have left an enduring legacy that will continue to inspire generations.

“Our heartfelt condolences to his family, friends, and the global cricketing fraternity. May his soul rest in peace.”

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US strikes hit Iran for seventh consecutive night

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Images shared on Friday showed a damaged bridge in Iran's southern Hormozgan province.

The US military said it carried out the seventh night of strikes on Iran since President Donald Trump declared the temporary ceasefire agreement was “over”.

In a statement shared on X, US Central Command (Centcom) wrote that its forces “hit surveillance sites, military logistics infrastructure, underground weapons storage, and maritime capabilities”.

Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) said two oil tankers had exploded in the Strait of Hormuz while passing through a mined part of the shipping channel. That was dismissed as false by Centcom.

Jordan’s armed forces said it had intercepted 10 Iranian missiles fired into its airspace overnight, though there were no casualties or damage.

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Centcom said it had ended its strikes at 21:30 ET (02:30 BST) after several hours.

“U.S. forces employed fighter aircraft, aerial drones, and warships in addition to other assets,” it said in its statement.

Iran’s state-run Fars agency had said two oil tankers “exploded and caught fire while passing through a mined route south of the Strait of Hormuz”. Later, Centcom posted on X: “Like most IRGC claims, this is false.”

Shipping traffic in the vital Strait of Hormuz has largely stopped amid the continuing tit-for-tat strikes by US and Iranian forces. The strait normally accounts for about one-fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas supplies.

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Explosions were heard in the central city of Yazd and at Qeshm island and the port of Bandar Abbas next to the strait, Iranian state media reported.

On Friday, Iran’s armed forces claimed to have attacked multiple US military facilities across the Gulf region in Kuwait, Bahrain, Jordan and – for the first time – Syria, which the US denied.

Earlier, Kuwaiti officials said Iranian drone strikes had injured a number of their soldiers, while a power plant and water desalination stations had also been damaged.

Sources have told the BBC’s US partner CBS news that several American service members were injured during Iranian attacks on two Jordanian bases over the past week.

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Washington denied Tehran’s earlier claims that its forces hit civilian infrastructure in Iran, including bridges, a train station and an airport. Provincial authorities in the affected region, Hormozgan province, said seven people were killed in the attacks.

BBC Verify and BBC Persian have verified footage of damage to Gariveh Bridge, after night videos showed a ball of flames on top of it.

Daylight images showed a crumbled stretch of road with rubble around the broken bridge.

A White House spokesperson told the BBC the US had “carried out strikes exclusively on military targets, including military logistics infrastructure”.

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Friday marks one week of nightly US attacks since peace talks with Iran collapsed, as tensions over the future of the Strait of Hormuz hampered efforts to broker a permanent ceasefire.

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Ben Affleck’s big payday: SEC filing shows INSANE sum Netflix paid for actor’s AI startup company… after reports it was worth up to $600M

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Netflix acquired Ben Affleck's AI start-up company InterPositive this past March, and now the exact figure the streaming giant paid has been unveiled; pictured in May

Netflix acquired Ben Affleck‘s AI start-up company InterPositive this past March, and now the insane sum the streaming giant paid has been unveiled.

In a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing on Friday, the streamer stated that it paid $587 million in cash for the company, per The Hollywood Reporter.

According to the outlet, the information was provided in the company’s form 10-Q, stating that ‘in March 2026, the Company completed an acquisition which was accounted for as a business combination for a total purchase price of approximately $587 million, consisting of cash consideration.’

Although the document does not explicitly name InterPositive, the Netflix deal was announced on March 5. 

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The price was also accounted for in the company’s Q1 10-Q, completed in May.

In a statement earlier this year, Affleck said he ‘couldn’t be happier’ with the deal after quietly founding the LA-based company in 2022 with a 16-person team of engineers, researchers and creatives.

Netflix acquired Ben Affleck’s AI start-up company InterPositive this past March, and now the exact figure the streaming giant paid has been unveiled; pictured in May

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The streamer disclosed in a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing on Friday that it paid $587 million in cash for Affleck's company

The streamer disclosed in a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filing on Friday that it paid $587 million in cash for Affleck’s company

An insider had previously told Bloomberg in March that the movie star-turned-senior adviser and his investors would earn up to $600 million from the streaming giant as long as it met ‘certain performance targets.’

‘InterPositive is a tool that’s designed to solve the specific problems that I’d encountered as a filmmaker that connect you more to the filmmaking,’ Affleck detailed in a Netflix video this past spring.

‘It’s not about text prompting or generating something from nothing. You’re building a model from your own material. 

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‘That’s how this works. You have to create your movie, essentially, first before you can really build your model around your movie using AI.’

He explained he wanted to ‘take out all the logistical, difficult, technical stuff that often gets in the way.’

‘You can use your own model to remove the wires on stunts, reframe a shot, get a shot you missed, shape the lighting, enhance the backgrounds,’ the Oscar-winning star said.

‘If you can take some of those problems out, yes, you can do it more quickly, you can do it more easily, you’re giving more choice, you’re giving more opportunity, you’re getting more episodes of your favorite shows, you’re getting more human work,’ he stated emphatically.

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Affleck emphasized that the goal was ‘to preserve what makes storytelling human’ and vowed that he and the streamer would do so, based on their shared ‘values’ and Netflix’s ‘responsibility with applying and scaling technology.’

Ben Affleck got a hefty boost to his reported $150million fortune when Netflix acquired his AI start-up company InterPositive last week (pictured January 13)

Ben Affleck got a hefty boost to his reported $150million fortune when Netflix acquired his AI start-up company InterPositive last week (pictured January 13)

An insider told Bloomberg in March that the movie star-turned-senior adviser and his investors would earn up to $600 million from the streaming giant as long as it met 'certain performance targets'

An insider told Bloomberg in March that the movie star-turned-senior adviser and his investors would earn up to $600 million from the streaming giant as long as it met ‘certain performance targets’

Affleck shared: 'You can use your own model to remove the wires on stunts, reframe a shot, get a shot you missed, shape the lighting, enhance the backgrounds'

Affleck shared: ‘You can use your own model to remove the wires on stunts, reframe a shot, get a shot you missed, shape the lighting, enhance the backgrounds’

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Earlier this year, Affleck starred in the Netflix crime/thriller The Rip, which he produced and acted in alongside longtime best friend and collaborator Matt Damon.

The Joe Carnahan-directed movie is about Miami cops who seize millions of dollars.

Affleck and Damon first gained notoriety in cinema with their 1997 movie Good Will Hunting, which earned them an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.

The father of three, who was previously married to Jennifer Garner and later Jennifer Lopez, also scored a Best Picture Academy Award in 2012 as a producer for Argo.

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Rory McIlroy’s fury at banned Open golf course with his wish blocked yet again

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Rory McIlroy wanted The Open Championship to be held at a banned golf course

Rory McIlroy had dreams of The Open Championship being held at Muirfield. However, a ban on female golfers put a stop to this and left him fuming.

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The Open is being held this year at Royal Birkdale in Southport. The club, situated just north of Liverpool, has hosted the major championship 10 times as well as two Ryder Cups.

McIlroy was keen for Muirfield to host for the first time since 2013 but private members refused to allow women. The Masters champion urged those who voted against allowing female golfers to join the club to “see sense.”

McIlroy said in 2016: “It’s more of a loss to Muirfield than it is to us. It’s not right to host the world’s biggest tournament at a place that does not allow women to be members. Hopefully Muirfield can see some sense and we can get it back on The Open rota.”

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As a result of the ban, the R&A confirmed they would not allow Muirfield on The Open rota until rules changed. A further vote was held in 2017 but the same outcome followed, leaving McIlroy furious.

He said: “Muirfield wouldn’t be one of my favourite Open rota courses, so no matter the decision yesterday, if it had been kept off The Open Championship rota, I wouldn’t have been that unhappy. In this day and age where you’ve got women that are the leaders of certain industries and heads of state and not to be able to join a golf course?

“I mean, it’s obscene. It’s ridiculous. It’s horrendous. I don’t get it. We’ll go back there for The Open Championship at some point and I won’t be having many cups of tea with the members afterwards.”

Eventually, the Muirfield members reneged and the ban was lifted. McIlroy was pleased and proposed that The Open be held there in 2028, but Royal Lytham & St Annes was chosen instead.

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The 37-year-old said: “It would be wonderful if it was [there]. I’m not privy to those conversations, but Muirfield deserves to be back on the Open rota.

“They rectified the issues they had. It’s a wonderful course. It’s one of the best courses on the rota and in the UK. As well, it has to commercially make sense.

“I think Mark Darbon [R&A chief executive] has been brought in to make the Open Championship commercially viable. I would say Muirfield, that area, North Berwick, that would probably be one of the more commercially viable Opens.”

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He’s not worried about his vocals! Justin Bieber puffs on a cigar days out from FIFA World Cup halftime performance alongside Madonna, Shakira and Coldplay

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Justin Bieber enjoyed a round of golf with friends at a course in The Hamptons this week

Justin Bieber enjoyed a round of golf with friends at a course in The Hamptons this week.

The 32-year-old Canadian pop star was spotted smoking a cigar during the recreational activity, just days before he’s slated to perform at the FIFA World Cup halftime show.

It seemed the musician was not at all worried about the smoke agitating his vocals as he indulged while clad in navy trousers and a short-sleeved white shirt.

The SKYLRK designer finished his look with a pair of black leather sneakers with white soles.

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His dirty blonde hair was buzzed into a short cut and he sported a scruffy beard.

Earlier this month Bieber was announced as one of several World Cup entertainers, alongside headliners Madonna, Shakira, and BTS.

Justin Bieber enjoyed a round of golf with friends at a course in The Hamptons this week

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The 32-year-old Canadian pop star was spotted smoking a cigar, days before he's slated to perform at the FIFA World Cup halftime show

The 32-year-old Canadian pop star was spotted smoking a cigar, days before he’s slated to perform at the FIFA World Cup halftime show

The halftime show will take place this Sunday, July 19 in New Jersey. 

The 11-minute production will also see appearances from Afrobeats star Burna Boy, Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel and the PS22 Chorus – a choir of elementary school students based in Staten Island, New York.

Curated by Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, it will take place during the final at MetLife Stadium. 

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The show will support the FIFA Global Citizen Education Fund, which is raising $100 million to help children access education and soccer.

‘The FIFA World Cup brings the world together in a way nothing else can,’ Bieber said in a press release. 

‘I’m grateful to be part of this Halftime Show, and even more grateful knowing it’s already helping expand access to education for children around the world.’

His inclusion in the event comes amid Bieber’s career comeback, which was prompted by the release of his album Swag in July 2025.

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One month later, the superstar followed up with a deluxe version, adding a whopping 23 more songs to Disc 2. 

He was clad in navy trousers and a short-sleeved white shirt

He was clad in navy trousers and a short-sleeved white shirt

Earlier this month Bieber was announced as one of several World Cup entertainers, alongside headliners Madonna, Shakira, and BTS; pictured at the Grammys in February

Earlier this month Bieber was announced as one of several World Cup entertainers, alongside headliners Madonna, Shakira, and BTS; pictured at the Grammys in February

Bieber captivated Coachella festival goers in back-to-back headlining weekends in Indio, California in April

Bieber captivated Coachella festival goers in back-to-back headlining weekends in Indio, California in April

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He took the stage at the 2026 Grammys this past February, delivering a showstopping acoustic rendition of his hit song Yukon.

Then, Bieber captivated Coachella festival goers in back-to-back headlining weekends in Indio, California in April.

He made history as he became the highest paid act ever booked, surpassing Beyoncé with his eight-figure payout, which reportedly totaled more than $10M.

And he negotiated directly with Goldenvoice, the festival’s promoter.

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‘It’s a groundbreaking move for a headliner, and it’s something he built entirely on his own,’ a source close to the singer told Rolling Stone last September.

‘Between headlining Coachella and the success of Swag, it’s clear this is the start of an exciting new era for Justin – one where he’s fully in the driver’s seat,’ the person added.

Insiders said his fee surpassed $5 million per weekend.

Due to his negotiating prowess, Bieber did not share a cut with an agent – making his profit all the more substantial.

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Blood-thirsty Kim has an order for Ross in Emmerdale spoiler video | Soaps

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Blood-thirsty Kim has an order for Ross in Emmerdale spoiler video | Soaps

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Disaster strikes up at Home Farm in Emmerdale soon as Kim Tate (Claire King) realises there’s been a break-in. With quite literally no other option, she decides to turn to Ross Barton (Michael Parr) for help.

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Ross works for Kim as Director of Operations, but the only thing he’s really good at operating is the door to the fridge for the posh snacks.

Still, he’s employed by Kim which means sometimes, he actually has to show up and do as she asks.

Actually getting him there on time, though, is a challenge in itself.

In this new video, Ross arrives at Home Farm and explains to Kim that he’s late because he accidentally fell back to sleep. If you ask me, he received that call at 4am and very quickly concluded that staying in bed was a far better option.

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It turns out Kim still has her head screwed on, as she makes it clear that former SAS member Graham Foster (Andrew Scarborough) would’ve dealt with the break-in, but he’s away right now.

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Kim hands Ross a piece of paper with a list of suspects and tells him to grab his deerstalker hat and get to work.

Kim Tate wants answers (Picture: ITV)

Moira Dingle (Natalie J Robb) is the first to get the Poundland detective treatment from Ross and is accused of the crime shortly before she boots him out.

His next ill-thought-out decision is to accuse Robert Sugden (Ryan Hawley).

Again, not a wise move given that Robert’s lover is Aaron Dingle (Danny Miller). Also not well thought out seeing as Robert was recently hit by a runaway trailer and not in a fit state to rob anyone.

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Aaron takes umbrage on Robert’s behalf and shows Ross what he thinks with his fists.

Michael Parr as Ross Barton, Emmerdale
Ross turns detective (Picture: ITV)
Kim standing in the pub in Emmerdale
Kim is curious to discover a USB stick has gone missing (Picture: ITV)

Serena Sugden (Casey Al-Shaqsy) steps in to protect the bruised egos from too much damage and once Ross is gone, she works on Robert and Aaron to let her stay by giving the full explanation about John.

Aaron is still wary that things about Serena remain iffy, but at least he’s not beating up Ross anymore.

Later in the week, Kim realises the person who broke into Home Farm has stolen a USB. Interesting.

The culrpit isn’t after money – they’re after information.

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But who is it?

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