The restaurant has earned multiple awards but has now entered voluntary liquidation
An award-winning restaurant in a Cambridgeshire city has announced that it has permanently closed its doors due to entering voluntary liquidation. Amelie at Ben’s Yard, in Ely, confirmed it is closing after “much careful consideration” and “great sadness” on Thursday (April 2).
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The team have said that this follows a “sustained period of challenging economic decisions” . In a post announcing the news, the team said: “From day one, we’ve been so proud to share our flammekueche with you and we’re incredibly grateful to everyone who has supported us, recommended us and helped spread the word – you’ve been amazing.”
Last year, the award-winning restaurant earned two AA Rosettes. It was named Best Regional Restaurant in Suffolk and Cambridgeshire in the Muddy Stilettos Awards and as a ‘Local Gem’ in The Good Food Guide.
Aside from awards, the restaurant also gained a highly appraised reputation online with an average of 4.6 stars out of five on Google Reviews. One customer commented: “I would rank Amelie as my top dining experience in Cambridgeshire.”
Another highlighted the restaurant’s “fantastic food” especially their “famous Flammekueche”.
Andrew Stanley admitted breaking the 30mph speed limit in Elvington Lane, Elvington, on June 17 last year.
The 50-year-old company director who lives off Clifton Park Avenue, Rawcliffe, York, already had points on his licence so should have been disqualified for at least six months under the totting up procedure, Harrogate magistrates heard
But they decided he would suffer exceptional hardship if he were banned and decided not to disqualify him. Instead they gave him three penalty points and fined him £284.
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The court heard that he had been a finance director for 20 years for a company that employs 70 people, and he believed that if he lost his driving licence he would be unable to do his job.
Although he mostly worked in an office, he had to travel for work purposes to construction sites.
As well as work purposes, he also needed his licence for family matters, the court heard.
Thanks to acclaimed dramas like Cucumber, Years And Years and It’s A Sin, Bafta-winning screenwriter Russell T Davies has been responsible for some of the most heartbreaking scenes in recent TV history.
But even compared to the most jaw-dropping and breath-taking moments of his past works, his latest offering, Tip Toe, stands apart as his most unflinching work to date.
Taking an up-close look at modern life, the hard-hitting drama introduces us to two neighbours – played by Alan Cumming and David Morrissey – who have tolerated living next door to one another for more than a decade.
However, in an ever-divided society and a culture that increasingly pits people against one another, the two men find themselves suddenly at war over their deeply-held beliefs, with ugly consequences as their feud drags them both over a point of no return.
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Speaking to HuffPost UK ahead of the show’s release, Russell told us that there were “various incidents” both in his own life, and in those of “every friend I’ve got”, that led to the inception of Tip Toe.
“Things happened both at work and at home – in ways that I’m not going to go into because it’ll only encourage them to happen again, genuinely – that made me think ‘that’s enough’,” he explains.
“If this anger, this violence and these lies are getting close to my life – I’m in a very privileged, lucky and well off position, so for those who are not so well off, then this must be really bad. These times must be getting worse and worse and worse.”
Bafta winner Russell T Davies’ new series may be his most hard-hitting to date
Fabio De Paola/Shutterstock
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While his friends in the queer community are “feeling more and more pressure, and more and more attacks upon them” in the current climate, Russell notes that these fears are also being felt by other marginalised people.
“I have a friend who is a wheelchair user, and someone turned up at her door, rang the doorbell, and when she opened the door, there was a man saying, ‘you’re lying, you can walk, you’re claiming this on benefits’. To her face!” he recalls.
“And the fear of physical proximity was so terrifying. The anger that I always thought was online is now visibly stepping into the modern world.”
He says these feelings of fear, anxiety and division only continued to “rise up and rise up”, until he “literally felt driven to write” the script that eventually became Tip Toe.
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“I had to,” he explains. “There was no way I was not going to write it. If they’d then refused to make it, I still would have felt happy [to have written it], because I would have got it out of my system.”
Tip Toe touches on timeless themes like family relationships, sexuality, gender expression and tolerance, but also hones in closely on more thorny topics relevant to today’s world, from misinformation and online radicalisation to the resurgence of far-right politics, the “manosphere”, transphobia and the dangers and consequences of unregulated social media.
Episode one actually starts at the end of the story, in the aftermath of an act of unspeakable violence and hatred, before rewinding to just days earlier, leaving viewers pondering how the hell things could reach that point (and, as Russell puts it, “how the hell is society reaching this point? Which we are!”).
Unlike some of his other most popular works, for Tip Toe’s writer, the show isn’t so much a cautionary tale as a reflection of Britain in 2026 as he sees it.
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Tip Toe – starring Alan Cumming and David Morrissey – makes for tough viewing in its darker moments
“I think it’s here,” he insists. “If this was a drama about a Jew living next door to someone [targeting them because of their religion], not one person would be doubting the credibility of the story. In fact, I’d be told that I was out of date, because it’s literally already happening out there, in front of us.”
As a result, both he and Channel 4 – with whom he’s been collaborating since the 1990s – both felt it was “urgent and needed and necessary” to get Tip Toe on the air as quickly as possible.
“I love that,” he enthuses. “That’s a clarion call for me.”
Throughout his TV career, beginning with Queer As Folk through to the aforementioned Years And Years and even Doctor Who, Russell has been commenting on all aspects of society (“I’ve done an awful lot to try and stop these terrible things happening – and it just gets worse,” he observes) for a quarter-century.
Regrettably, he now believes things are in a more dire state than ever.
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“Queer As Folk went out in 1999 when the age of consent was 18, section 28 was in place, there was no gay marriage, there was no gay adoption,” he points out. “All those things have come in within those 26 years. Those are extraordinary leaps. But those are also the very things now that are being weaponised against us.”
“All this time I thought visibility was the answer, or the cure,” he laments. “To the extent that I dragged my gayness into every interview that I’ve ever done. You could literally be asking about the weather and I’ll say, ‘yes, I’m gay… and it’s sunny’ – because I genuinely believe in [the importance of] visibility.
“[I think about] someone sitting at home, trapped in a closet. or trapped in a lonely house, or trapped in a lonely town, where they’ve never heard anyone say that before – and I will be that person to say it. And I still believe in that!”
“But now, I also have to reckon with, ‘what happens then?’,” he continues. “I never thought ahead! It’s as if I were imagining some sort of a future nirvana, which no society ever has. We’re always at war with something. And here we are at war with ourselves.
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“So, yes, you can point to things that are demonstrably better. Yet now, they’re being weaponised to make it worse.”
Russell T Davies believes that progress made in the last 20 years for the LGBTQ+ community is now being “weaponised”
“What happens when we’ve got visibility, when we’ve got equality, when we’ve got representation?” he adds. “What happens when they see us and they still don’t like us?”
These are the same questions Alan Cumming’s Tip Toe character, Leo, is found asking himself in the drama’s first episode following when reflecting on fresh attacks on the queer community.
As the owner Leo is the owner of a popular venue in Manchester’s iconic Canal Street, Leo who has fought for LGBTQ+ equality over the decades. As he reflects on progress made for queer people, a friend reminds him that as a community figurehead, and the employer of trans bar staff, he’s still on the frontline of the culture war whether he likes it or not. As Russell quotes these character’s concerns verbatim, it’s not difficult to see similarities between Leo and Russell himself in these moments.
“Oh! The weaponisation against me online began the moment I put a trans character into Doctor Who,” he agrees.
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After helming the hugely successful reboot of Doctor Who in the mid-2000s, he returned to the franchise in the early 2020s, and remains its showrunner.
During his tenure, he’s been repeatedly forced to defend his vision for the show against far-right critics who have argued that it’s “too woke”.
The backlash against him personally, he says, “began then, on that date” when it was first announced he’d be introducing a transgender character into the long-running series.
“And it has never stopped,” he says, before quickly clarifying: “With lunatics. And idiots. I mean, there is no measure of their lack of intelligence. But that is now crossing over into the real world. That’s the scary thing.
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“Lunatic action is being taken. Violent thoughts are being expressed and then violent action is being taken.”
This harsh introduction to the sinister side of social media included things being “aimed at me professionally, and in my own house, that really seriously make me fear for what the situation might be in the future”.
“I had always imagined that a death threat was not deathly and not threatening,” he claims. “And now, you realise they are becoming deathly, and they are becoming threatening.
“And they’re being aimed in all directions – there are people whose views I profoundly disagree with who are also receiving death threats. It’s become part of normal language. And you have to wonder what the hell is happening to us and where are we going, with no end to this in sight.”
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Russell T Davies poses similar questions to Alan Cumming’s Tip Toe character Leo in light of recent attacks on LGBTQ+ people
The root of it all, Russell says, began “right there”, gesturing to his phone “the moment we all went online”.
“We all love it so much that we don’t question it,” he observes. “It’s a brand new form of communication in the history of the human race. This has never happened before.
“They say when the printing press was invented there were then 200 years of war. And the printing press was a lot slower – believe you me, Bibles did not reach those villages as fast as the internet does
“Now, we’re all connected to each other all of the time, and we’re not evolved to communicate like that. It is absolutely wrong in every shape and form.”
“I know for a fact that communicating what you think in the form of writing is very, very difficult,” he says. “Now that we’re all typing, we’re all led on as though it’s easy – and it’s not.
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“People are expressing their thoughts when they’re not always their thoughts. They haven’t worked out how to say things properly, so they say things simply, and they say things brutally. And then, because that’s said so often, they do end up thinking that. It becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.
“We’re absolutely trapped in that loop. It’s utterly the wrong way to communicate. And now, we sit here wondering why children’s mental health is so bad. It’s completely fucking obvious.”
Indeed, as tensions continue rising in the world of Tip Toe, preventable situations are exacerbated even more by characters’ online lives, whether they’re using social media as a well-intentioned means to connect or being drawn into the dark underbelly of these platforms.
Online radicalisation is just one of the many themes examined in Russell T Davies’ new series
Addressing the fact where we now live in a world where “hatred” can be “monetised” and “rewarded” rather than “challenged”, Russell says: “If you’re a YouTube channel now, expressing this hate, you can attract adverts, and you get paid. And that makes you angrier, and express it more, and more money comes in.
“This is the revolution that’s happening. This is why everything’s going completely wrong. And we’re letting it happen! I’m describing something we all know is happening, every single day, and then we’ll go and have our tea tonight and do nothing about it.”
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Russell is similarly critical of X, the platform once known as Twitter, which he’s not posted on since 2021, branding it a “hate site”.
He goes on to share that he’s recently run into some “very big problems” in his work at the BBC, having “refused to be part of any press release that went on Twitter”.
“I said, I’m taking my name off anything [that goes on Twitter],” he claims. “There is no way a publicly-funded corporation should be posting on a hate site. And it is a hate site now – it’s run by one man with an aim to increase hatred, and all the safeguards have been taken off, and public bodies still post on it. It should stop immediately.”
“In fact,” he offers. “We should sue those public [bodies]. We pay for the BBC – we pay for Channel 4 as well – and they’re public bodies. They should absolutely stop posting on a site that is not a public forum, but is a hate site.”
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Last year, these questions around online radicalisation were raised with the release of another well-received drama, Netflix’s Adolescence, in which a teenage boy is sucked into the so-called “manosphere” and winds up murdering a young girl at his school.
A key difference between Adolescence and Tip Toe is that, in the latter, it’s the adult characters who find themselves being radicalised by content they’re viewing on social media.
“Go and look at the venom that was directed at Jack Thorne. He became public enemy number one,” Russell says. “Go and look at the tweets despising him, calling him a liar, calling him a fraud… all because it was a white child and not a Black child [depicted in the series].
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“He is absolutely under attack to this day, still. [After Adolescence’s release], the bile and anger festered and [was] weaponised more than ever.”
Alan Cumming and David Morrissey on the set of the new Channel 4 drama Tip Toe
Increasingly divided though the world of Tip Toe may be, Russell was adamant when sitting down to write it that he didn’t want to portray either side of any argument as perfect. Deplorable though some characters’ actions might be, we discover they’re capable of kindness and compassion in the most surprisingly and seemingly unlikely of places.
He claims: “I think I’d be a terrible writer if I didn’t do that. I think that’s why I love writing, is exploring people like that.
“I’ve absolutely no interest in just being nice about people, because I think people are complicated and strange, and that’s why I write.”
As for what’s next, Russell admits he’s not sure how we get ourselves out of the corner we’re now backed into – or if people even want to.
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“I don’t feel particularly optimistic,” he admits. “Great people will always do great things. That’s the story of the human race. But I think we’re now out of control in a way that we won’t even contemplate, because getting rid of your WhatsApp thread for your street, so you know what days the bins go out, is more important than children’s mental health.
“We’ve got every standard wrong, and we’re trapped. And we’re monetised to stay in this position – and you cannot vote against an algorithm and I think actually there’s no hope. That’s what I think. There is no hope.”
Prompted for a solution as to how we reverse things, he jokes: “You tell me! That’s why I wrote it. I put something like this into the world so that somebody can come up with something we can do.”
He does, however, have a warning for anyone standing by complacently as persecution against minorities in all forms continues to increase.
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“That world out there is going to ‘other’ all of us,” he states. “It’s going to find ways to do this to every single one of us.”
This interview has been edited for clarity and length. Tip Toe premieres on Channel 4 on Sunday 31 May.
May’s “Flower Moon”, or the full moon which marked the beginning of the month, has come and gone. But its second “blue moon” is yet to come.
In a relatively uncommon cosmic event, May 2026 will be bookended by a second moon – a “monthly blue moon,” to be precise.
Here’s what that means and when to see it.
What’s a monthly blue moon?
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There are two types of blue moons: seasonal and monthly.
The one we’ll see this May is a monthly moon. These are a little easier to understand than seasonal blue moons and, BBC Sky At Night Magazine explained, technically “astronomically incorrect”.
A monthly blue moon just means you see two full moons in the same month. That happens because while the moon takes 29.5 days to complete all of its phases, most Earth months have 30 or 31 days.
So, while our years have 365 days (except for leap years), 12 cycles of the moon take about 354 days. That’s a pretty big discrepancy.
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As a result, every two to three years, we experience a 13th moon in the calendar year rather than a single full moon every month. This is called a “blue” moon, because unlike our regular moons, which are all called things like the “flower”, “blood”, and “wolf” moons, they aren’t named.
But this is a fairly new idea, first invented in 1946. They came about because of James Hugh Pruett, who misunderstood some dates in a farmer’s almanack.
The much older, original “blue moon” type is a seasonal blue moon, though the newer term is arguably the more common definition now.
What’s a seasonal blue moon?
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Instead of looking at moons in an Earth month, seasonal blue moons relate to the astronomical season, which is marked by solstices and equinoxes.
The period between a solstice and an equinox is one astronomical season.
Most of the time, these only get three moons, but sometimes, because (like the Earth) the moon cycles aren’t perfectly aligned with these seasons, we get four.
A seasonal blue moon is the third moon in an astronomical season of four moons.
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The next monthly blue moon, like the kind we’ll have on Sunday, will be on December 31, 2028.
But the next seasonal blue moon will fall on 20 May 2027.
When can I catch the May 2026 blue moon in the UK?
Hawkstone Farmers’ Choir was crowned the Britain’s Got Talent 2026 winner in Sunday’s live final, making history as the first choir to win the show
As Britain’s Got Talent returned tonight (May 30) for its 19th series finale, just one of the 10 remaining acts could be crowned the ultimate winner. ITV‘s beloved talent show first aired in 2007 and has since cemented itself as a fixture of British TV, attracting millions of viewers annually.
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Over the years, the programme has produced a wealth of memorable winners, including Diversity, Ashleigh and Pudsey, Sydnie Christmas and Paul Potts, each of whom captured the nation’s hearts before going on to perform in front of the Royal Family.
This year’s winner will pocket a £250,000 cash prize and secure a coveted spot on The Royal Variety Performance later this year.
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Viewers were treated to an evening packed with entertaining performances as judges Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden, Alesha Dixon and KSI took their seats on the judging panel for the final time this series.
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Following months of auditions, semi-finals and one million votes, the popular talent show crowned The Hawkstone Farmers’ Choir as the winner of the latest series. The singing group made history by becoming the first choir ever to win the programme.
The group comprises farmers and agricultural workers from across the United Kingdom. Originally established in 2024 with backing from television presenter and farmer Jeremy Clarkson, the choir was founded to celebrate and champion the farming community.
Viewers at home were quick to take to social media to congratulate the group, but not everybody was in agreement with the outcome.
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Many fans flocked to X, formerly Twitter, to state that one act, singer Matty Juniosa, had been “robbed”.
@lyla_fletcher wrote: “Matty robbed #bgt,” as @DannyLeeDawber agreed: “Matty was robbed #BGT.”
@CookDan184724 shared: “Matty got robbed there but it was probably the wrong song. Still gave him fifteen votes all the same #BGT.”
@j_amyyy added: “Matty was robbed! As was the Liverpool dancers. Shocking results !! #bgt,” as @supergela echoed: “Matty J got rigged! It’s heartbreaking!.”
Visitors and performers have shared that they are ‘truly gutted’ about the closure
A popular city centre music venue has announced it’s upcoming closure after four years of business. The Six Six Bar in Cambridge has announced that “after an unforgettable journey” their “time has come” to “close this chapter at 170 East Road”.
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An official date has not yet been decided for the closure but the venue said they are working closely with Music Venue Trust and Stonegate to confirm the date.
In a statement announcing the upcoming closure, the music venue wrote: “What was built here was never just a bar or a music venue. The Six Six became a home for music, for misfits, for artists finding their voice, and for a community that showed up night after night and turned four walls into something far bigger than any of us imagined. And we walk away incredibly proud of what this venue achieved.”
In just four years, the independent venue and rock bar built a reputation “far beyond Cambridge“, it said. The venue worked with artists, agents and creatives from Nashville, Los Angeles, New York, Canada, Australia, Europe and Asia.
The statement adds: “Like many independent venues, we faced relentless pressure behind the scenes. Rising operational costs. Increasing supplier prices. Energy costs. Licensing costs. A hospitality industry becoming harder and harder for independents to survive within.”
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A realistic weekly breakeven point for The Six Six adds up to roughly £8,300–£9,300 before profit equalling to four sold out shows a week, according to the venue. They added: “We could have continued we had a large financial package ready to implement if we decided to continue.
“This is not a collapse. This is not us being forced out. This is not the story some people hoped it would become. This is a conscious decision to evolve, move forward and build something new and exciting from everything we’ve learned and experienced over the last four years.”
The owner of the venue, Adam, said that the team are already exploring future events, touring concepts, collaborations and new projects. He said: “This isn’t the end of the story. It’s the end of one chapter in Cambridge.”
Adam feels as though what is “forcing” venues like theirs into “impossible positions” is the “wider economic climate in the UK”. He added: “The cost of operating independent venues has become unsustainable.”
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Since announcing the closure on Wednesday, May 27 on social media, the post has received more than 70 comments in response. One person wrote: “Sad to see such an amazing venue go, after all that you put into it. Excited to see where your next venture takes you.”
Another commented: “Truly gutted to read this post, The Six Six has been an amazing venue to perform at, each and every time.”
Since the announcement, the team at the venue have launched a Go Fund Me to keep the establishment going for longer. The Six Six said that the fundraiser is “not about begging for sympathy” but giving them the “chance to exit properly, responsibly and with dignity while buying a little more time to continue doing what [they] love for as long as possible”.
The venue was formally known as The Boat Race, which saw a number of well-known acts perform there. Among them were Snow Patrol, Placebo and one of its most famous acts, who performed there in the 1990s, were Britpop legends, Oasis.
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A spokesperson for Music Venue Trust said they are “saddened by the loss of another beloved grassroots venue”. The spokesperson added: “For four years, and in the face of significant pressures faced across the sector, the team behind Six Six have been dedicated to supporting grassroots music in Cambridge. The venue has platformed local, national and internationally touring artists alike, while providing a space for a community to thrive around the music.“MVT supports the Six Six team’s decision to step away from the venue in the interests of their wellbeing. Running a grassroots music venue is a job which demands a great deal from operators. We wish Adam and his staff all the best for the future and hope they enjoy their well-earned break.”
“Our schools do an excellent job in educating children on personal safety and I know the community will work together to ensure this message is reinforced”
An investigation has been launched following reports of suspicious approaches towards two children in a Co Down town.
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Police are investigating the incidents which took place in the Spa Road area of Ballynahinch on Thursday, May 28, when an “unknown individual” approached two schoolchildren and offered to give them lifts home.
The reports have caused concern in the area with local DUP councillor Alan Lewis calling for increased police patrols and greater community awareness.
Councillor Lewis said: “Thankfully the children involved did exactly the right thing. They continued on their journey, did not engage and immediately made adults aware of what had happened.
“While there is no cause for alarm, incidents of this nature are understandably concerning for parents and the wider community. It is important that they are treated seriously and that appropriate steps are taken to provide reassurance.”
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He said: “I will be engaging directly with PSNI and other relevant agencies to ensure every possible step is taken to reassure families. I would encourage parents to take the opportunity to speak with their children about road safety, stranger awareness and the importance of reporting any incident that makes them feel uncomfortable.
“Our schools do an excellent job in educating children on personal safety and I know the community will work together to ensure this message is reinforced.”
A PSNI spokesperson told Belfast Live: “Police received a report of a suspected suspicious approach towards two children in the Spa Road area of Ballynahinch on Thursday afternoon, 28th May.
“Enquiries are ongoing. Anyone with information, or who witnessed what happened, is asked to contact police on 101, quoting reference number 1420 28/05/26.”
10 acts battled it out for a place in the Royal Variety Show in the Britain’s Got Talent live final tonight.
A choir established by Jeremy Clarkson has been voted as the winner of this year’s Britain’s Got Talent final. Hawkstone Farmers Choir made history as the first choir to win the 19th edition of the talent competition.
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They group wowed judges Simon Cowell, Amanda Holden, Alesha Dixon and KSI to reach the live semi-finals before winning over the voting public to be crowned champions and earn a spot at the Royal Variety Performance.
Clarkson, dubbed their “biggest cheerleader”, erupted into cheers when the choir won along with several members of the group.
Drone precision group Celestial finished as runner-up while dog act Anastasia Beaumont and Salsa were third following an enthralling final.
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However, not everyone seemed happy with the result. Though the choir’s win was met with cheers, the audience booed when dance group LMA and singer Matty Juniosa failed to crack the top three, reports the Mirror.
One BGT fan has slammed the show as “brutal” after they notice a hidden detail in the music choices.
Ed Sheeran‘s single Celestial began to play after Hawkstone Farmers Choir were announced as the winners.
The fan said: “Celestial losing the BGT final then Celestial by Ed Sheeran playing in the background is brutal.”
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A special guest performance from girl group Mis-Teeq featured in the final before the results were announced. The group has recently reunited after a 21-year hiatus.
Judge Alesha was joined by bandmates Sabrina Washington and Su-Elise Nash
Alesha, Sabrina and Su-Elise have reunited on the BGT stage for a performance to celebrate the 25th anniversary of their first studio album.
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The three started on a raised platform in red and black outfits. They performed a medley of songs – One Night Stand, Scandalous and All I Want – as they danced around the stage.
At the end of the performance, Alesha said that the trio would be performing a show in September at Wembley.
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But there will still be plenty to celebrate in N5 on Sunday despite that agonising loss in Budapest.
Unforgettable moment: Arsenal captain Martin Odegaard lifted the Premier League trophy at Selhurst Park
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Arsenal trophy parade date, start time and route
Arsenal’s ‘Champions’ trophy parade will take place from 2pm BST on Sunday May 31, 2026, beginning on Holloway Road.
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A route has now been confirmed by Arsenal, with the parade set to travel down Seven Sisters Road and follow Blackstock Road before turning onto Mount Grove Road, Green Lanes, Petherton Road, Beresford Road, Newington Green Road and Essex Road.
It will then turn onto Upper Street. There will be no trophy lift and the buses will not stop, in order to ensure that fans spread evenly across the route for safety reasons, while the club shop will be closed along with the Emirates Stadium, Drayton Park and the surrounding roads.
The Arsenal Supporters’ Trust (AST) have claimed that the club and Metropolitan Police – who will deploy more than 500 officers to police the parade – are expecting at least 500,000 supporters to line the 9km-long route, with the possibility for more than a million people to turn up in total.
Arsenal’s trophy parade route
Arsenal FC
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There will be four open-top buses in total, including a lead-off ‘Champions’ truck featuring DJs. The Arsenal players will be in the lead bus, with the men’s team staff to follow in a second and then another featuring the Arsenal Women’s squad, who will parade their FIFA Women’s Champions Cup trophy.
The fourth bus will feature fans from Arsenal in the Community programmes plus other Arsenal staff who have been nominated for their outstanding contributions to the club.
“All of the buses will move continually along the route,” Arsenal said. “Wherever you choose to stand, you will have a similar experience to the rest of the route. We encourage supporters to spread out along the full route so that everyone can enjoy the celebrations safely.”
Fans have also been advised that the parade will not be visible from Hornsey Road, Benwell Road or Drayton Park, while there will be no toilet facilities along the route.
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The parade, which should last for around two hours, takes place on Sunday because many of Arsenal’s World Cup-bound stars are due to be released to their respective international squads on Monday.
The start time for the parade means that many of those fans in Budapest for the final will likely miss out, unless they have managed to secure early return flights to get them back to London in time.
Luis Enrique’s future at PSG has been the subject of speculation, with Liverpool looking for a new manager following Arne Slot’s departure
Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi has expressed confidence that Lus Enrique will remain the club’s manager, on the same day that the Liverpool job became available. The Reds parted company with Arne Slot on Saturday, with the Dutchman leaving Anfield after two years in charge.
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Slot had guided Liverpool to fifth place in the Premier League this season, qualifying for the Champions League in the process, but the club made the decision to make a change ahead of the summer transfer window.
Former Bournemouth boss Andoni Iraola has been listed as the early favourite to get the job at Liverpool, but there have been tentative links that Enrique could be a candidate.
Saturday night saw Enrique guide PSG to victory in the Champions League final against Arsenal, claiming a 4-3 win in a penalty shootout after the match finished 1-1 after extra time.
Al-Khelaifi spoke after PSG’s famous win, where he was asked about Enrique’s future at the club, amid rumours that he could put pen to paper on a new deal to remain at the Parc des Princes.
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“He’s very, very special, as a coach, human being, as a person, he is fantastic,” Al-Khelaifi told TNT Sports. “He’s the best coach in the world. He has done amazing with the team.
“With a young team, you know the story. I would also like to thank the players of PSG. This is also for them. They all gave to this project.”
When specifically asked if he expects to still have Enrique as the club’s manager, Al-Khelaifi gave a clear answer.
“He’s the best coach, I cannot answer the question, but I’m really confident, and it’s all about the project,” the PSG president said. “And he is the best one for the project.”
Enrique had been tipped as the favourite to replace Slot by the bookies earlier this week before news emerged about the club’s interest in Iraola. Despite the ex-Bournemouth boss looking likely to land it, Danny Murphy called on his old club to go for Enrique when speaking ahead of PSG’s final with Arsenal.
He said: “Part of me still thinks [Luis] Enrique, [Liverpool] might be able to nick him from PSG, especially if they beat Arsenal.
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“I’m going to watch his mannerisms after the game tonight. I am going to watch to see after the game if there are any tears. If he cries, he’s coming to Anfield.”
Liverpool legend Steven Gerrard reacted to the news of Slot’s departure, explaining why he believes the Reds will already have a replacement in mind.
“Well, look, I think we’ve all been around the game long enough to know how the ‘process’ works,” Gerrard told TNT Sports. “I would be very surprised if they made that decision and all of a sudden thought, ‘Well, who are we going to appoint next?’
“Liverpool don’t work like that. Liverpool are an organised machine, up top, they have been for a long time.
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“I think it is the right time because it is the end of the season. A new guy will get a pre-season, and he will get that chance to recruit players. As a manager going in, it is the best time to go in, to reset everyone, and get everyone moving forward in the right direction.
“I’d be extremely surprised if the people above Slot who make the big decisions at Liverpool all of a sudden started from three or four hours ago looking for a successor.”
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The long-running inquest into the death of the 14-year-old is being heard with a jury at Belfast Coroner’s Court
Fiona Donohoe (centre), the mother of 14-year-old Noah Donohoe, outside Belfast Coroner’s Court, for the inquest into his death(Image: Mark Marlow/PA Wire)
Investigating a culvert in which Noah Donohue’s body was found after he went missing was “not a priority” during the first few days of the search for him, a police constable told the inquest this past week.
Questioned on Tuesday by Brenda Campbell KC, counsel for Noah’s mother Fiona Donohoe, Constable George from the PSNI said searching the culvert in the first two days after Noah was reported missing was “not a priority”.
Mr George, who was police search adviser at the time, told the inquest he arrived at Northwood Linear Park in north Belfast, near where the culvert is located, at about 11pm on June 22, the day after the teenager was reported missing. He said he walked around the park and then to the park’s gates, from which he could overlook the culvert, but did not go to the tunnel to take a closer look.
Asked by Ms Campbell if he had thought it was worth going to the culvert then, Mr George said: “At that point no, because I wasn’t prioritising this area as part of my search.” Asked if he could see, from where he was standing at the gates, how “attractive” the culvert may have been for a child, and how “feasible” it may have been to get to the culvert, Mr George replied: “No.”
Ms Campbell said Mr George had a conversation with Community Rescue Service regional commander Sean McCarry, during which the latter said the culvert should be searched. Asked again why he did not go to the culvert, with this conversation in mind, Mr George said: “Because I was prioritising other areas in that significant searching area. I was prioritising other areas.”
Later on Tuesday, Mr George told the inquest he had never worked on another case involving a missing person being found in a culvert. Mr George also sais he had to bear in mind the safety of his team, as the searches were being conducted in “many dangerous areas”.
He said he was told to prioritise searches in places missing persons were likely to be found, as part of his search and rescue training, adding that the area around Northwood Linear Park “had a great many sheds, derelict buildings, unoccupied houses, derelict houses, places where people could take shelter and conceal themselves”.
Police investigating Noah’s death never followed up on multiple reports of noise and screaming near the culvert where his naked body was found, the inquest heard on Wednesday.
Jurors at Belfast Coroner’s Court were told that police collected statements from only four of the seven residents who reported hearing noises – including screams – between 12 midnight and 3am on June 22, despite having a team of 25 detectives.
The inquest also heard that one of the couples, who reported hearing three screams at around 1.30am at the back of their house in Northwood Road, were approached by police only 11 months after their initial questionnaire, by which time the elderly pair said they “did not hear any shouting”, according to a police notebook entry.
Another resident who reported hearing “something at the front door” and a “letterbox opening and shutting” was never approached by the police for a statement, while a caller to the public appeal who said her daughter heard a scream on June 21 at around 6.25pm at Dunlambert Drive near the culvert also never gave a statement.
The inquest heard the police logs recorded: “Caller states that her daughter was on above location at Dunlambert Drive end on Sunday evening approx 6.25pm and she heard a loud scream. She did not see anything.”
On Thursday, the inquest heard it’s “extremely unlikely” that Noah entered the storm drain where he was found dead anywhere other than the Premier Drive stream culvert, an inquest has heard.
Engineer and hydrologist Jeremy Benn had previously given evidence along with three other expert witnesses last month. The inquest heard all four thought it was “extremely unlikely” Noah entered the culvert system at any other point.
Mr Benn said the alternatives were manholes, which he described as having heavy covers, designed not to be easy to lift, and if Noah had entered via a manhole the cover would have remained off. He said other parts of the watercourse were fenced off, while another section would have involved wading through deep mud, and the train depot where the section of storm drain where his body was found, is gated with 24-hour security.
Meanwhile, the experts were at odds over whether Noah’s body would have moved in the tunnel. Mr Benn said Noah’s body could have moved a short distance downstream with the outgoing tidal flow, while the other experts felt any movement would have been short, less than a few metres.
Mr Benn returned to the probe on Friday to give evidence around the culvert. He was instructed by the Department for Infrastructure.
Ms Campbell put to Mr Benn that he and the company he currently works for, and was previously a director of, JBA Consulting, had a long history of working with the department. The inquest previously heard that Mr Benn was one of the authors of Construction Industry Research and Information Association (CIRIA) guidelines around culverts. He has also been involved with training both department staff and consultants who work with the department on those guidelines.
Ms Campbell also put to Mr Benn that his advice had been referred in a letter to then Infrastructure Minister Nichola Mallon and police following Noah’s death, and to the inquest as having approved an existing debris screen at the culvert instead of a security screen. Mr Benn said that had come from a five minute phone call with a person who had attended a training course he had led.
Ms Campbell put to Mr Benn that either he was “underplaying his involvement or the department was overplaying his involvement”. Mr Benn responded saying he had not been given any formal instruction to review and approve.
Pressed if the department had overplayed his involvement, Mr Benn said he didn’t feel it would have been deliberate. Asked whether a successful working relationship with the department had continued after Noah’s death, Mr Benn responded: “There is a lot of work, yes.”
Ms Campbell asked that given that background, and that new CIRIA guidance was going to be “stress tested” for the first time in the circumstances in which a child had died, whether the department could have approached “someone more independent” for the inquest. Mr Benn responded saying that was up to the department.
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