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BBC’s ‘superb’ new drama has viewers binge-watching all episodes in one day

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Wales Online

A thrilling whodunnit premiered on the BBC at the weekend, and viewers are already hooked

BBC viewers are already loving a mystery series that aired at the weekend.

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Six-part mystery series I, Jack Wright is written by Chris Lang, who is known for his work on Unforgotten, Innocent, and The Thief, His Wife and the Canoe.

The drama first debuted in April 2025 on U&Alibi, but has now been acquired by the BBC. Season one is currently being re-aired by the broadcaster, with season two also expected to air on BBC One.

I, Jack Wright has been described as a “propulsive whodunnit” with family secrets at its core.

“The apparent death by suicide of high-powered businessman Jack Wright sends shockwaves through his family, leaving a mystery that pits greed, loyalty and suspicion against one another,” reads the official synopsis.

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“As his many wives and children fight over the remains of his estate, a dogged police detective investigates – and uncovers the shocking truth about this well-heeled clan.”

The series features a stacked cast, including John Simm, Nikki Amuka-Bird, Gemma Jones, Zoë Tapper, Daniel Rigby, Ruby Ashbourne Serkis, Harry Lloyd, Liz Kingsman, Percelle Ascott, and Niamh Cusack.

I, Jack Wright premiered on BBC One on Sunday (July 12), with another instalment airing on Monday night (July 13). However, most viewers had already binged the entire series by the time the second episode was broadcast live.

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Sharing their delight on X (formerly Twitter), one person wrote: “Already binged this. Simm is excellent, as are [the] rest of the cast. Oh but I do hate it when rich, entitled people call Josh, Joshy!”

Another added: “We binged the lot and loved it all!! Such messy lives, red herrings galore and blind endings! Money certainly doesn’t bring happiness with that lot! Loved it all!”

A third said: “There has to be another series of #IJackWright. We binged watched the lot, absolutely superb,” while someone else noted: “Watched this on alibi when it first aired. Liked it. Watching it again in anticipation for S2.”

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After the drama first aired last year, fans were quick to describe it as “faultless”, and a “cut above the rest”.

Sue Deeks, Head of Scripted Pre-buy Acquisitions at the BBC, previously said in a statement: “I, Jack Wright is a terrific family thriller. Full of enjoyable performances, with really clever twists and turns, it is simply pure entertainment.”

Polly Williams, Executive Producer at Federation Stories, added: “I, Jack Wright is a riotous, pacey treat and we are so thrilled that series one and two will air on the BBC.

“Dysfunctional families are endlessly fascinating, and in I, Jack Wright, Chris has created an unforgettable crew whom we hope audiences will be appalled, moved, and surprised by.”

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I, Jack Wright is available to stream on BBC iPlayer

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Revealed: Alarming reasons behind Britain’s alcohol death crisis – according to the scientists that spotted the surge in victims (and it’s not just Covid)

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Alexandria Hughes (left) launched a petition after her sister Zoe (right) spent up to £1,500 a month on booze delivered directly to her home before her death

Food delivery apps, cheaper-than-ever booze and the myth that wine is ‘healthier’ than spirits are fuelling a deadly liver disease crisis in the UK, experts have warned.

Alcohol-specific deaths – the majority of which involve liver disease – have risen sharply since the pandemic, climbing by more than 35 per cent since 2019. 

oRecent research published in the prestigious Lancet journal found nearly 4,000 extra Britons died from booze-related reasons between 2020 and 2022, compared to the average two-year figure. 

Scientists have noted that the rise has been the most significant among men and those from poorer backgrounds, however data also show a worrying uptick among middle-aged women.

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Some experts have put the rise down to the Covid lockdowns, suggesting that the isolation encouraged heavy drinkers to drink more. 

‘People who were already drinking at risky levels increased their consumption,’ Dr Melissa Oldham of the University College London Tobacco and Alcohol Research Group – one of the authors of the Lancet paper – told the Daily Mail.

However, there are other, lesser known yet intriguing factors that researchers say can be overlooked. 

Alcohol is easier to get hold of than ever before 

For decades we’ve been able to buy alcohol in countless shops and supermarkets, but fast-forward to 2026 and off-licenses are dispatching bottles of alcohol to homes on the back of a moped.

‘There’s growing concern in the public health community about rapid alcohol delivery services – where people can get drinks within 20 minutes or a couple of hours,’ says Dr Oldham.

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‘They are definitely changing the scope of how and when people access alcohol.’

Campaigners are calling for tighter regulations – or outright bans – on apps that sell and deliver alcohol, with some grieving families claiming they are making alcoholism and addiction harder to manage and control. 

In March, the sister of an alcoholic who was spending up to £1,500 a month on drink through delivery apps called for tighter controls on alcohol sales by food-delivery companies.

Mother-of-two Zoe Hughes, 35, was found dead at the bottom of her stairs in July 2023 after battling alcoholism for several years while struggling with personal problems.

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Her family later discovered that her drinking had intensified as alcohol became increasingly easy to order online. In the months before her death, she had regularly used Just Eat, Deliveroo and Uber Eats to buy alcohol, even taking delivery of it when she was visibly intoxicated and at her most vulnerable.

Colin Angus, Professor of Alcohol Policy at the University of Sheffield who was also involved in the Lancet study, says that Britain’s access to alcohol often comes under the spotlight through the eyes of foreign visitors.

‘I’ve met alcohol researchers from overseas who had never visited the UK before, and they were astonished by just how easy it is to buy alcohol here,’ he tells the Daily Mail.

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Alexandria Hughes (left) launched a petition after her sister Zoe (right) spent up to £1,500 a month on booze delivered directly to her home before her death

‘They were particularly shocked that it is sold in petrol stations.

‘Our team used market-research data to map every licensed premises in Great Britain. Covent Garden had the highest concentration anywhere in the country.

‘If you stood outside Covent Garden Underground station, there were more than 1,000 places selling alcohol within a one-kilometre radius.

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‘Although the number of pubs has fallen since then, the availability of alcohol in shops has increased hugely.’

The sheer variety of alcohol has also surged, with beers, wines and spirits now nestling for attention with much stronger alcopops and premixed cocktails.

Experts – including Professor Angus – believe that the foundations of the crisis have been forming since the 1960s when licensing laws first began to change after wartime restrictions imposed at the turn of the century.

Slowly, alcohol became cheaper, easier to buy and more deeply embedded in everyday life.

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In the 1960s pubs were tightly restricted by ‘permitted hours’ – they were typically allowed to serve alcohol for only nine hours from Monday to Saturday. Most opened from around 11am to 3pm, then shut before reopening between 5.30pm and 10.30pm. Sundays were even more limited, with pubs required to observe a five-hour afternoon closure.

Pubs in the 1960s were more male-centric

Pubs in the 1960s were more male-centric 

That began to change with the Licensing Act 1988, which abolished the compulsory afternoon break in England and Wales. For the first time since the First World War, pubs could remain open continuously from 11am to 11pm on weekdays and Saturdays. Sunday restrictions lasted longer, with continuous opening finally permitted following changes introduced in 1995.

Buying alcohol to drink at home was also far less convenient than it is today. In the early 1960s, most people relied on specialist off-licences, wine merchants or pub off-sales counters. But as supermarkets such as Sainsbury’s and Tesco secured alcohol licences, beer, wine and spirits became cheaper, more visible and easier to add to the weekly shop.

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It’s cheaper than ever to drink 

NHS figures released in 2024 revealed that alcohol is 91 per cent more affordable than it was in 1987.

This, says Professor Angus, is mostly driven by supermarkets offering cheaper prices than pubs and bars. 

‘When you compare the prices in pubs to the prices in shops, they’re on completely separate trajectories,’ he explains.

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‘As alcohol became much more available in shops, it also became much cheaper, and people have shifted their drinking from pubs to home.

‘It was maybe only 30 years ago that about three quarters of the alcohol sold in the UK was drunk in pubs. Now it’s drunk at home.’ 

But the cost disparity has changed not only how much we drink, but where – and for how long.

 

Most people are familiar with ‘pre-drinks’: having alcohol at home before a night out to avoid expensive bar and pub prices. But the growing availability of cheap, shop-bought alcohol has also encouraged a more significant cultural shift, with many people skipping the pub altogether and drinking at home instead.

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‘There has been a huge cultural shift in where we’re drinking, and it is very difficult to say if it is because people prefer to drink at home or they do it because it is simply more affordable,’ says Professor Angus.

‘One major issue is that if people are drinking at home, there’s no hard stop to it. 

‘If you were in a pub and subject to licensing rules, people are getting kicked out at last orders, but at home, people can just keep going.’

Women are drinking more… and are officially allowed in pubs  

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Until well into the 20th century, many British pubs treated the public bar as a male preserve, with women often expected to sit in a separate lounge or snug and receive table service. 

Although this was not a universal legal ban, pubs could still operate discriminatory policies. In 1982, the Court of Appeal ruled that London drinkery El Vino’s policy of preventing women from standing at the bar and requiring them to sit in a back room was unlawful under the Sex Discrimination Act. 

Today, millions of women think nothing of describing their personality as being a ‘wine mom’ and proudly fetishise drinking prosecco at every opportunity. 

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‘Looking at trends in liver disease, which are very highly correlated with alcohol, they have tripled in women,’ says Professor Angus, who adds that much of this can be traced back to the 1960s. 

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‘Back then, drinking for women was much rarer and a bit more taboo before slowly becoming more socially acceptable. 

‘Drinking alcohol also started to move from being very much a thing that happens in pubs, which were very male-dominated, beery environments, to drinking at home, and wine became much more available.’ 

Speaking of wine, Professor Angus adds that he finds it astounding that wine is marketed so aggressively at women.

What is also striking is that alcohol is exempt from the nutritional labelling rules that apply to almost every other food and drink product,’ he explains.

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‘Manufacturers do not have to list the ingredients or nutritional information, including calorie content. So, if you pick up a bottle of Heineken and a bottle of Heineken Zero in a supermarket, only the alcohol-free version has to tell you what is in it.

‘It is difficult to understand how we have ended up in that position without considering the influence of alcohol-industry lobbying. 

‘I suspect one reason the industry resists clearer labelling is that it does not want people to realise just how many calories can be contained in a glass of wine.’ says.

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Water safety review to be carried after Seaton Carew tragedy

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Water safety review to be carried after Seaton Carew tragedy

Council bosses have ordered a full review of the current water safety arrangements across the borough’s coastline, Hartlepool Council has today (July 13) confirmed.

It follows a tragic incident on Sunday evening (July 12) where two men lost their life while trying to rescue children in difficulty in the sea.

The incident sparked an online petition by Rebecca Ringwood – a loved one of Jordan Moon, who drowned in August 2003 at the same beach – to restore lifeguard services beyond school holidays. 

Now, Hartlepool Borough Council leader has spoken out about the “absolutely heartbreaking” incident, saying a review has been asked for.

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He said: “On behalf of Hartlepool Borough Council and the people of Hartlepool, I want to offer my deepest condolences to the families, friends and loved ones of the two men who so selflessly entered the sea to help others.

Seaton Carew Beach (Image: NORTHERN ECHO)

“Their courage, selflessness and sacrifice will never be forgotten.

“My thoughts are also with the two children involved and everyone affected by this devastating tragedy. 

“I would also like to acknowledge the bravery of the other people who entered the water to help. Their actions, alongside those of the two men who tragically lost their lives, demonstrated extraordinary courage in the face of danger.

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“I would like to thank the RNLI, HM Coastguard and all of the emergency services who responded in incredibly difficult circumstances.

“Given the tragic events of recent days, I have asked for a full review of the current water safety arrangements at Seaton Carew and across the borough’s coastline. 

“That work is now under way and will take place alongside any investigations being carried out by partner agencies.

“Right now, however, our focus remains on the families and loved ones of those affected, and we stand with them as they face an unimaginable loss.”

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Hartlepool Borough Council withdrew lifeguards at Seaton Carew in 2001 in a bid to make savings of £100,000 – and calls were made to reinstate them following Jordan’s death.  

Jordan, from Hartlepool, died after a freak 8ft wave swept him out to sea while he was paddling with a friend near the shore. 

Jordan Moon (Image: ARCHIVE)

Tragedy struck once again over the weekend when two people were pronounced dead after trying to assist two brothers in the water. The children were safe and taken to hospital.

Hero Davey Short has since spoken out of how he saw one person floating face down in the water next to a child who was struggling in rough seas – and didn’t hesitate to run to their aid.

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Read his story here: Hero recalls moment he saved child from North Sea as two others die in rescue effort

Councillor Sue Little, ward councillor for Seaton, also joined calls to reinstate lifeguards beyond the six week holiday following the incident.

She said: “This incident highlights the increasing number of people using Seaton Beach during periods of warm weather and raises the question of whether seasonal beach lifeguards should be reinstated earlier in the year.

“With warmer summers becoming more common and weather forecasts now able to predict prolonged periods of hot weather well in advance, there is an opportunity to take a more proactive approach. 

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“Seaton has a first-class beach that attracts thousands of residents and visitors whenever temperatures rise, often well before the traditional six-week summer holiday period.

“While no monetary value can ever be placed on a human life, having trained lifeguards on patrol during these peak periods could help prevent incidents, provide immediate assistance and, in some cases, reduce the scale of emergency service responses required.”

In response, the council said: “We are aware of Councillor Sue Little’s comments on social media regarding a motion to Council. 

“Given the tragic events of recent days, the Leader of the Council has this morning asked for a full review of the current water safety arrangements at Seaton Carew and across the borough’s coastline. 

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“That work is now under way and will take place alongside any investigations being carried out by partner agencies. 

“Our thoughts remain with the families and loved ones affected by this tragedy.”

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Arsenal star told he has ‘played himself out’ of England World Cup semi-final team | Football

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Arsenal star told he has 'played himself out' of England World Cup semi-final team | Football

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In The Mixer’s World Cup special

Everything you need to know about the World Cup – England updates, the games to watch and stories you missed – in five minutes, at 1pm, every day.

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My father Richard Pryor was a cheater, an addict and impossible to live with… but he never forgave my white mother for calling me the ‘N-word’

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Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor didn’t meet her famous father until she was six years old

By RUTH WALKER, U.S. BOOKS EDITOR

Richard Pryor’s funeral was ‘a travesty of a mockery of a sham,’ according to his daughter.

‘If Ikea did funerals,’ she said, ‘this would be it. Cold and sterile and monstrously hollow.’

Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor has spent the 20 years since the mercurial, ground-breaking comedian’s death trying to make sense of their complicated relationship.

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Now she has opened up about what it was really like living with her famous, often intoxicated parent, the revolving door of wives, girlfriends, and prostitutes and the truth about what happened when her father famously set himself on fire while freebasing cocaine.

In her new memoir, Something We Said, she also reveals her shock at being largely cut out of her father’s will at the 11th hour: ‘I knew in my heart that was not what he wanted,’ she said.

Richard Pryor had a total of seven children with six different women – Stordeur Pryor was his third.

Her mother Maxine – who Pryor lovingly called ‘Macky’ – met the comedian in New York in 1965, when they were both in their early 20s, and he was yet to become famous for films like Blazing Saddles, Stir Crazy, and Harlem Nights.

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But as his fame grew, writes his daughter, their relationship became more volatile, sometimes violent. And Pryor was an inveterate cheater.

Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor didn’t meet her famous father until she was six years old

The history professor has spent the 20 years since her father's death trying to make sense of their complicated relationship

The history professor has spent the 20 years since her father’s death trying to make sense of their complicated relationship

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‘On the night I was born in 1967,’ she writes, ‘things had gotten so bad between them that he was hundreds of miles away, partying in Tijuana, and ended up in a Mexican jail on a marijuana charge.

‘She went into labor alone in Los Angeles and drove herself to the hospital.’

Not long after, they broke up, and Stordeur Pryor didn’t meet her father until she was six years old.

She was in awe of the man who was, by now, making a name for himself on the comedy circuit, and she was desperate to please – despite his often erratic behavior.

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‘The more well-known my father became, the more drugs and alcohol began to take over his life,’ she writes, ‘and his drug-fueled behavior began to make the national news.’

On one occasion, he got into a drunken argument with his then wife Deboragh, and shot at her car as she attempted to drive away.

On another occasion, he set himself on fire by pouring 151-proof rum on his shirt and lighting it ablaze. He ran for a mile down the road before police were able to stop him and take him to hospital, where he was treated for burns on more than 50 percent of his body.

‘He couldn’t stop messing up,’ writes Stordeur Pryor. ‘He always had a glass of Courvoisier in his hand and mounds of cocaine all around the house.

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‘Every night, Mercy [his housekeeper] put a wastepaper basket by the side of his bed so he wouldn’t throw up on the floor.

‘He passed out all the time. Waking him was nearly impossible.’

As a professor of history, Stordeur Pryor also uses her book to examine the evolution of the n-word – the racial slur her father reclaimed in his comedy during the 1970s and later disavowed after a transformational trip to Africa. 

The word – allegedly hurled at her during a passionate fight with her White, Jewish mother – was so offensive, it drove a wedge through the family that was never fully repaired.

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Maxine ‘told everyone she was Richard Pryor’s ex-wife. She called herself Maxine Pryor. It was the name she had on her checks and her stationery,’ writes the author.

The reality was – like so much of Pryor’s life – much more complicated.

‘I was never married to your mother,’ Pryor told his daughter one night in anger when she was just 12. ‘Ask her about it. She’s always playing games.’

‘The more well-known my father became, the more drugs and alcohol began to take over his life,’ she writes

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Richard Pryor became famous for films including Brewster's Millions

Richard Pryor became famous for films including Brewster’s Millions

The comedian in Silver Streak with Gene Wilder - the pair starred in four movies together

The comedian in Silver Streak with Gene Wilder – the pair starred in four movies together

In fact, he had been married to someone else when Stordeur Pryor was born. And when she confronted her mom about the lie, they fought bitterly – ending with her mother allegedly delivering the most appalling racial slur.

‘I was waiting for you to be old enough to understand,’ her mother beseeched her.

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But Stordeur Pryor was confused and frustrated, and lashed out at the woman who had been her rock.

‘“I hate you!” I screamed, bending my body forward as if I were pumping the words out of my stomach.

‘She cackled like she’d lost her mind. “You’re exactly like him, Elizabeth.” She walked toward me and stared into my face.

‘“I am!” I shouted.

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‘The words hit my mom like a slap. She stumbled backward.

‘She looked beautiful, even though she was angrier than I’d ever seen her in my life. Then her face turned ugly, and she put her hands on her hips.

‘“You’re a n***er!” she said, like she meant it.’

When she told Pryor about the fight, he never spoke to her mom again. And Liz never forgave herself for causing the rift.

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But, as she grew more distant from her mother for a time, she became much closer to her father. So much so that one night, in a moment of vulnerability, a now-sober Pryor confessed the truth about the fire that had left him permanently scarred.

Richard Pryor in conversation with Barbara Walters in 1980, after he had set himself on fire

Richard Pryor in conversation with Barbara Walters in 1980, after he had set himself on fire

When Stordeur Pryor told her father that Maxine had called her the n-word, he never spoke to her mom again

When Stordeur Pryor told her father that Maxine had called her the n-word, he never spoke to her mom again

Stordeur Pryor (center) with her famous father and mom, Maxine

Stordeur Pryor (center) with her famous father and mom, Maxine

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‘That night, I was so tired,’ he told her. ‘I kept trying to stop doing the drugs and no matter how much I wanted to, I couldn’t. After a while, I just gave up.’

She writes: ‘He looked me right in the eyes. Tears welled up before I even understood what he was saying.

‘“It wasn’t an accident,” he said. “I lit myself on fire on purpose. I tried to kill myself.”’

In 1986, when Pryor was 41, he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. The degenerative disease gradually stole his body and his health.

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The last time Stordeur Pryor saw him, she writes: ‘He could no longer walk or use his hands, he could barely see, he was in and out of hospitals, and he needed around-the-clock care.

‘He couldn’t even speak anymore, except for a few sputtered words that took excruciating effort to get out.’

He lived alone, with a complicated schedule of carers who, towards the end of his life, she claims, barred his children from visiting for more than 45 minutes once a month, saying it caused him too much stress.

On her final visit, she alleges that a security guard even forbade her from kissing her father.

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Two days later – on December 10, 2005 – she received a phone call telling her he had died of a heart attack. He was just 65.

His funeral – held at the Forest Lawn Memorial Parks and Mortuaries in the Hollywood Hills – was, she writes, bizarrely white for the Black father she had known and loved.

‘Plain white pews, plain white walls, plain pine casket, plain glass windows,’ she writes. ‘If Ikea did funerals, this would be it.

‘Where were all the Black people? The wailing women? The cries of “Lord” and “amen”? If it weren’t for some familiar faces – my six siblings, a few of our mothers, a couple of well-known actors and comedians – I would have sworn I was in the wrong place.’

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Things got even stranger, she says, when the celebrant – who was white – made such a clumsy attempt at Black humor, she was convinced she heard Pryor’s ghost laughing at the absurdity of it all.

Richard Pryor with (left to right) daughter Rain, ex-wife Jennifer Lee, son-in-law Jerry Stordeur, and Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor when he was honored by the Kennedy Center in 1998

Richard Pryor with (left to right) daughter Rain, ex-wife Jennifer Lee, son-in-law Jerry Stordeur, and Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor when he was honored by the Kennedy Center in 1998

Pryor's health declined in the cruel grip of multiple sclerosis and, latterly, he could no longer walk or use his hands, and he could barely see

Pryor’s health declined in the cruel grip of multiple sclerosis and, latterly, he could no longer walk or use his hands, and he could barely see

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‘Richard Pryor,’ she boomed, ‘was a funny motherf***er.’

She may not have said the n-word, but Stordeur Pryor says it felt as jarring as if she had.

‘Just as the impulse to stand up and walk out nearly overtook me, I heard my dad’s throaty chuckle: “This sh*t is funny.”

‘I looked around to make sure the voice was in my head, and almost laughed out loud. It felt like he was letting me know this whole event was a joke, the one about a dead Black comedian who accidentally ends up in white heaven (or maybe Black hell) and finds himself headlining a New Age, non-denominational funeral. Ba-dum-bum.’

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Her mother agreed.

‘That funeral had no soul,’ she said afterwards, adding: ‘Imagine: A White woman calling Richard Pryor a motherf****r at his own funeral!’

Stordeur Pryor writes: ‘Even my white, Jewish mother knew that was totally out of line.’

A few days later, she received a copy of her father’s will. The details shocked her to the core.

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‘None of his creative legacy went to his kids. I knew in my heart that was not what he wanted.

‘I hired a lawyer and fought in court and lost. I appealed and lost again.

‘Soon after, I was removed completely as a beneficiary. Disinherited. Cut out of the family photo album.’

The one thing she did have of her father’s was a battered briefcase, given to her by her mother on the day of his funeral.

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‘Elizabeth,’ she’d said, ‘this will explain everything.’

She’d stashed it out of sight for 15 years. But when she finally examined the notebooks inside; the letters, unfinished jokes and journals, they told her who her father really was.

‘Every time I opened the notebook, I got to know him better,’ she writes.

‘It was the last breadcrumb leading me back to my father. It took me 15 years to understand it held the key to the connection we’d had all along. The briefcase was a priceless heirloom. It was my inheritance.’

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Something We Said: Richard Pryor, a Notorious Word, and Me by Elizabeth Stordeur Pryor is published by 37 Ink, an imprint of Simon & Schuster

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Laura Dern pays tribute to ‘dream leading man’ Sam Neill

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Laura Dern pays tribute to ‘dream leading man’ Sam Neill

Neill’s Event Horizon co-star Sean Pertwee said: “Devastated to learn my friend Sam Neill has passed away. A supreme talent, elegant, intelligent, hilarious, a truly splendid human. Also a major proponent why I married my wife for which I am eternally grateful. Love you Sam.”

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Identity of Sydney daycare worker facing 329 child abuse offences revealed

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A child plays with letter blocks in front of a window

“Any form of child sexual abuse is confronting and horrific, even more so when the alleged perpetrator is an individual trusted with the care of our youth,” Australian Federal Police (AFP) Acting Commander Luke Needham said.

Tait worked at or attended 62 early childhood education facilities in Sydney between 2009 and 2025, although police say he primarily worked in the city’s north-west.

The alleged offending occurred at five facilities including four childcare centres and his own private business.

Police have published a website, external identifying the centres where he worked and offering support for families.

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The charges also include 22 counts of aggravated use of a child under 14 years for the production of child abuse material and 18 counts of intentionally sexually touching a child under 10 years.

Police said they first linked Tait to illegal online activity in June last year. They then found child abuse material on electronic devices seized during a raid on a property in Glossodia, just outside Sydney.

Australians have been shaken by a string of cases of alleged child abuse at daycare centres in recent years.

They include the case of Ashley Paul Griffith who in 2024 confessed to 307 offences committed at childcare centres in Queensland and overseas over a 20-year period.

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And last year police urged that more than 1,200 children in Victoria be tested for sexually transmitted diseases after Joshua Dale Brown was charged with dozens of child abuse offences allegedly committed at four daycare centres.

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Woman, 20, arrested in relation to Dovestone Reservoir fire

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Woman, 20, arrested in relation to Dovestone Reservoir fire

The fire broke out at the Saddleworth beauty spot at around 8.30pm on Saturday, July 11, with residents across Greater Manchester continuing to report smelling smoke from the fire.

The woman remains in custody for questioning as part of an ongoing investigation.

Detective Inspector Andrew Day of Oldham CID said: “We are aware of social media posts circulating regarding this incident and would like to stress that this is a live police investigation.

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“We would encourage people to stop speculating regarding this and if you do have information, please report it to ourselves.”

Saddleworth neighbourhood sergeant Andy Holian added: “Officers would like to thank all emergency services who have dealt with and continue to deal with this incident. In particular, our colleagues at Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service.

“Firefighters have been working tirelessly in extremely challenging conditions to contain the fire and prevent further spread, with strong winds adding to an already difficult situation.”

Road closures remain in place at Holmfirth Road and Bank Lane with no access to Dovestone Reservoir currently permitted.

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Members of the public are being asked to avoid the affected areas to allow emergency services the space to carry out their work safely and effectively.

Anyone with any information regarding the incident is urged to get in touch with Greater Manchester Police by calling 101 or using the LiveChat function at gmp.police.uk quoting log number 3367 12/07/26.

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The Morning Poll: Should it be made easier to deport foreign-born criminals like Rochdale grooming gang leader Shabir Ahmed?

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The Morning Poll: Should it be made easier to deport foreign-born criminals like Rochdale grooming gang leader Shabir Ahmed?

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The Government is considering changes to the law that could make it easier to deport foreign-born criminals after it emerged that Rochdale grooming gang ringleader Shabir Ahmed cannot currently be removed under existing legislation.

Ministers have also suggested deportation to a third country could be explored if Pakistan continues to refuse to accept him. 

What do you think – should it be made easier to deport foreign-born criminals like Shabir Ahmed? Have your say in the Morning Mail poll.

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Trump unleashes third wave of punishing strikes on Iran after telling Congress the US is at war AGAIN

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The US announced a new round of strikes on Iran on Monday, hours after President Donald Trump said that the United States is 'reinstating' a blockade on Iran in the Strait of Hormuz

The US announced a new round of strikes on Iran on Monday, hours after President Donald Trump said that the United States is ‘reinstating’ a blockade on Iran in the Strait of Hormuz.

‘We’re taking out all of their capability for anything having to do with the strait, the Hormuz Strait,’ Trump told CBS News Monday evening. 

‘And I think in the end we will end up just controlling the whole thing.’

In response, Iran attacked Bahrain and two tankers associated with the United Arab Emirates traveling through the strait, killing one mariner and wounding eight others. 

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The Emirates threatened to retaliate against Iran, potentially drawing the nation home to Abu Dhabi and Dubai back into fighting with Tehran. 

The attacks come as Iran and the U.S. both vie for control of the strait through which a fifth of all crude oil and natural gas once passed in peacetime. 

This is the third consecutive day with American strikes on Tehran and the fifth in the past week. 

‘At 4:45 p.m. ET today, U.S. Central Command began launching the third consecutive night of strikes against Iran, at the Commander in Chief’s direction,’ CENTCOM said in a statement. 

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‘These strikes will continue imposing a heavy cost on Iranian forces and degrade their ability to attack innocent civilians and commercial shipping in the Strait of Hormuz.’

Iran has insisted it controls the critical waterway, as another exchange of fire threatened a return to all-out war.

The US had until now said the strait should remain open to all without tolls, as it was before the US and Israel attacked Iran on February 28. 

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The US announced a new round of strikes on Iran on Monday, hours after President Donald Trump said that the United States is ‘reinstating’ a blockade on Iran in the Strait of Hormuz

Central Command posts file footage of US Navy ships and aircraft operating in the Middle East

Central Command posts file footage of US Navy ships and aircraft operating in the Middle East

Any attempt by the US or Iran to charge fees would violate global norms on freedom of navigation and raise tensions, likely causing further economic disruption far beyond the region.

The new round of attacks followed Trump telling conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt, ‘We’re going to hit them very hard tonight and we’re going to hit them hard tomorrow – and there’s not a damn thing they can do about it.’

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‘They have nothing,’ Trump added. ‘They have nothing going, other than they have big mouths.’

The price of benchmark Brent crude oil rose 7.8% to $81.92 a barrel, still well below the nearly $120 reached at the height of the war but threatening to make costs everywhere higher. 

The President also claimed the US would be paid a 20 percent tariff for securing safe passage for commercial vessels through the Persian Gulf. The details of Trump’s demand were not immediately clear.  

Trump wrote on Truth Social that the US ‘will be, from this point forward, known as “The Guardian of the Hormuz Strait.”‘

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He added: ‘The process and formation will begin immediately. Thank you for your attention to this matter!’ 

The blockade will not take effect immediately: shipowners must be given 24 hours’ notice under maritime law.

Oil prices spiked by 5 percent, with Brent crude, the global benchmark, hitting $79.93 – its highest price since June 19. 

This is the third consecutive day with American strikes on Tehran and the fifth in the past week

This is the third consecutive day with American strikes on Tehran and the fifth in the past week

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Saudi Arabia launched strikes on Iran’s Houthi proxy terror group in Yemen, opening a new front in the war after Iran launched strikes against five US allies in the region.

Iranian-backed Houthi rebels say Saudi warplanes bombarded Sanaa International Airport in Yemen. The group’s spokesman declared an ‘end to the de-escalation phase’ and warned that the ‘aggression will not go unanswered or unpunished.’

The attack reportedly came as an Iranian aircraft attempted to land at the airport. Evacuation orders have been issued for the airport and surrounding areas. 

A Saudi-led military alliance based in Yemen’s south for a decade has been fighting the Iranian-backed Houthi rebels based in the north. 

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Tehran says the fallout has already reached the negotiating table, with its foreign ministry claiming Trump’s memorandum of understanding with Iran has entered a ‘crisis phase.’

Asked about the escalating strikes across the region, Trump told Fox News: ‘We’re taking over the strait.’

The Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf chokepoint carrying about a fifth of the world’s oil, has been a central flashpoint since the war began in February, sending markets spiraling with every escalation.

The truce collapsed last week when Iran struck three vessels in the Strait of Hormuz and the US retaliated with two rounds of strikes. 

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Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei speaks at a weekly press conference

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei speaks at a weekly press conference

Iran has insisted it controls the critical waterway, as another exchange of fire threatened a return to all-out war

Iran has insisted it controls the critical waterway, as another exchange of fire threatened a return to all-out war

Trump pronounced the deal dead from the Nato summit in Ankara: ‘There’s something wrong with them. They’re cuckoo. As far as I’m concerned, it’s over.’

US strikes continued this weekend after Secretary of War Pete Hegseth vowed revenge for the Iranian strike and said: ‘Iran made a poor choice. Now they pay.’

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Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) declared the strait closed until further notice after the attack, according to a statement cited by CNN. 

Iran targeted various Middle Eastern countries that host US military bases, claiming responsibility for strikes in Bahrain, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman and Qatar. 

Some of the targets attacked by US forces included missile and drone sites, naval capabilities, ammunition storage facilities, communication networks and coastal surveillance locations, US Central Command said.

A spokesman added that President Trump directed the attacks ‘to degrade Iran’s ability to attack civilian mariners and commercial vessels freely transiting the strait.’

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Iran had said the strait was being shut down ‘given the precariousness that was caused by this unlawful interference by outside parties.’

The regime added that the waterway’s closure would be ‘until further notice and until regional interference by the US ceases’ and that ‘no vessel or naval craft will be allowed to pass.’

Iran said on Saturday it struck US facilities at Jordan’s Prince Hassan Air Base, claiming it destroyed a command center and drone hangars. 

Washington denied the regime’s claim, with a US official stating no Americans were hurt and no serious damage was done. 

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Jordan said it shot down four missiles, and the three that landed caused only minor damage. 

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Day three and the moors are still burning

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Manchester Evening News

As the third day drew to a close, the moors above Saddleworth were still burning. Yet, the sights of the dried ground violently burning are nothing new. There have already been multiple wildfires in Greater Manchester this year.

Smog and smoke plumes billowed over the site again as fire crews remained on the scene after first being called out on Saturday.

Monday was another challenging day for emergency services. Roads remained closed. Strict avoid area warnings were in place. Local residents were urged to keep windows and doors closed.

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Thick plumes of smoke continued to be blown over parts of Greater Manchester, with the stench smelt again as far south at Stockport and Levenshulme. Unbelievable pictures showed Manchester’s skyline dwarfed by the size of the smoke clouds.

Arson investigation after fireworks videos

Fire crews along with police remained at the scene since it first broke out on Saturday evening (July 11). In a huge update, police then confirmed a 20-year-old woman was detained by detectives in Oldham on Monday morning and remains in custody for questioning on suspicion of arson.

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This follows concerns about the use of fireworks being let off in the vicinity on Saturday. It comes after eye-witnesses told the Manchester Evening News they heard a number of loud bangs before the fire broke out. Multiple video clips and images posted to social media also a group of youths setting off fireworks at the beauty spot in Greenfield.

Group of youths let off fireworks at Dovestone Reservoir

In clips now shared widely online, a firework appears to spark a blaze in dry grasses, before a group of bystanders run over to the smoking section of moorland. In another video recorded shortly afterwards, flames can be seen quickly spreading across a hillside at the Saddleworth beauty spot.

A group had gathered in tribute to a teenager who tragically lost his life in the reservoir on Friday night (June 10). Karl Holland, 18, was lost his life after getting into difficulties in the water, with his body sadly recovered from the scene later.

Police then confirmed to the M.E.N on Monday that the footage is forming part of investigations. A woman remains in custody to be quizzed over the incident, with enquires ongoing. Police are still urging witnesses and anyone with information to come forward.

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Detective Inspector Andrew Day of Oldham CID said: “We are aware of social media posts circulating regarding this incident and would like to stress that this is a live police investigation. We would encourage people stop speculating regarding this and if you do have information, please report it to ourselves.”

“I feel like we’re getting used to it”

Nearby residents reported hearing ‘bangs’ so loud they thought they were gunshots shortly before fire crews first arrived at 8:45pm on Saturday. They then saw the sky being lit up by fireworks during what one onlooker described as a ‘Universal Studios style display.’

As smoke continued to billow out across the moors, residents living nearby shared their sadness, bafflement and anger at what had unfolded. “It’s crazy,” one woman, who did not want to be named, said. ”Absolutely baffling. I cannot even begin to fathom or understand it. There are signs everywhere saying ‘no fireworks.’

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A woman who also lives in the village said it was ‘very sad for those who lost their friend’ but said those who let off the fireworks ‘had obviously not thought about what they were doing.’

She said residents in the village had been left facing ‘constant sirens and smoke’ from the fire. “I feel like we’re getting used to it. It has happened that often” she said. “But it seems to have gotten worse in the last five years or so. I’m not sure what, or by who, but I feel like more needs to be done.”

Smoke smothers Greater Manchester as lead firefighter says ‘we could be here for days’

Smoke had previously been blown over large swathes of Greater Manchester on Sunday, with the smell of smoke masking areas as far as Eccles as well as Stockport and Sale. The fire service said this was due to windy conditions causing a huge plume of smoke to travel across the region.

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These conditions prevailed again on Monday, with large areas of Greater Manchester still becoming masked by the smell of smoke and clouds billowing overhead.

Video shows scale of Dovestones blaze

Large avoid area warnings remained in place. Fire crews were to remain on the scene overnight and into Tuesday in an effort to stop the blaze spreading any further, with acres of land already left scorched.

Ben Levy, Head of Response for Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue (GMFRS) spoke to the Manchester Evening News on Monday. Detailing the major operation, he explained: “If this weather stays as it is, we’ll keep our efforts to control our fire. But I predict our firefighters will be here for maybe a number of days just yet.

“You can see the terrain we’ve got behind us. It’s not just open moorland, there’s some, very, very steep moorland. There’s cliffs, there’s steep rocks. It’s very challenging to get in between there to control the fire.

“What our crews are doing is going around the outside of the perimeter of this fire to try and control the fire and we’re seeking aerial assets, including helicopters, to try and control the fire.”

Major incident declared

In their latest statement, the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service confirmed a major incident had been declared due to the scale of the fire. They said crews remained at the scene to ‘prevent further spread’.

Despite warm and sunny temperatures, people are continuing to be urged to avoid the area amid the major response.

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“Due to weather conditions, smoke from the fire may be noticeable in parts of Greater Manchester and beyond,” a spokesperson said.

“If smoke is affecting your area, or there is visible smoke nearby, stay indoors where possible and keep windows and doors closed to reduce smoke entering your home.

“During the hot weather, people can help keep cool by drawing curtains to block direct sunlight, using fans to circulate air and keeping hydrated. Once smoke has moved away, consider opening windows and doors to ventilate and cool your home, while continuing to monitor conditions and follow any updated public advice.

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“We are also asking people to avoid the Dovestone area to allow emergency services to work safely and allow for access routes to be clear.”

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