As ministers propose new bathing waters across England, swimmers, councils, brands and campaigners are beginning to align around a shared goal – cutting single-use plastic at source
Communities across England could soon benefit from thirteen new designated bathing water sites, in what ministers describe as a significant expansion of safe, monitored places to swim.
Among the proposals is the first ever designated bathing spot on the River Thames in London at Ham and Kingston – a stretch of river once declared biologically dead in the 1950s because of pollution. Today, it is being put forward as a symbol of renewal.
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If approved, the additions would bring the total number of bathing waters in England to 464. Last year, 93% met acceptable standards for swimming, with four in five rated either ‘excellent’ or ‘good’. The proposals follow reforms to the Bathing Water Regulations intended to modernise monitoring and better reflect how people actually use rivers, lakes and beaches.
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Outdoor swimming in England is no longer a fringe pursuit but is becoming part of civic identity, and with it comes a new kind of environmental leverage.
On a cold January morning in Brighton, swimmers gathered at Sea Lanes – the national open water swimming centre built directly on the beach – pulling on wetsuits and adjusting goggles before heading into the Channel. Others opted for the heated 50-metre outdoor pool that runs parallel to the shoreline.
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Sea Lanes, which opened only three years ago, is thriving and has recently announced plans for similar facilities to open later this year in Portsmouth and in London, where construction has started on a floating natural water pool at Eden Dock in Canary Wharf.
Construction on a new pool at Eden Dock in Canary Wharf. Image: Jess Hurd
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In Brighton, swimmers emerging from the sea were handed hot drinks in refillable bottles rather than disposable ones. The giveaway was organised by frank green, an Australian-founded reusable bottle brand that has made open water swimming central to its UK campaign this year. The event was supported by MINI, whose electric Countryman formed part of the backdrop – a low-emissions model positioned around similar environmental values.
The message was about normalising and rewarding refill culture in places where single-use plastic has long been the default.
Dan Roberts, head of UK for frank green, believes swimming offers a cultural turning point. “We’re encouraging people to reconnect with the water but at the same time plastic waste is still ending up in those same waters,” he says. “If this movement is going to grow responsibly, the environment has to be front and centre.”
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In England, the average adult buys around 175 single-use plastic bottles each year. Roughly 7.7bn plastic bottles are sold annually, with an estimated 3.5bn used for water, according to a House of Commons Environmental Audit Committee report. Only a fraction are recycled. Around 80% of marine litter is plastic, and bottles are the second largest contributor and drinks containers remain among the most common items found in coastal clean-ups.
The question is whether a visible, growing swimming culture can accelerate policy change. There is precedent. In 2019, the Isle of Skye became one of the first places in the UK where local retailers voluntarily stopped selling single-use plastic water bottles following a community campaign. Across Europe and parts of the United States, national parks, cities and cultural institutions have introduced partial or full bans on single-use plastic bottles, replacing them with refill infrastructure.
Roberts argues that behaviour change depends on convenience. “We can’t just tell people to do better,” he says. “Convenience drives behaviour, so it’s integral that carrying refillable bottles becomes part of our culture. But there also has to be infrastructure – water fountains, public refill stations – to support it.”
If this movement is going to grow responsibly, the environment has to be front and centre
Funding that infrastructure is where collaboration might lead to change. In Brighton, the Pride in Place programmehas awarded the city £20 million over ten years to support regeneration and public realm improvements. Community leaders will help decide where that money is spent and expanding refill points along the seafront could sit within that framework, alongside potential public-private partnerships in which brands contribute funding or equipment.
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Community groups are alert to the risks of superficial alignment. Organisations such as Leave No Trace Brightonhave previously made clear they only want to work with partners whose environmental commitments run deeper than marketing.
That alignment is beginning to take shape on the south coast. Sea Lanes provides facilities. The council shapes infrastructure. Brands push culture change and campaign groups maintain scrutiny.
Brighton’s Big Swimis expected to bring together more than 1,000 women in March, to mark International Women’s Day and raise funds for Surfers Against Sewage.
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“We’re turning a joyful sea dip into a powerful call to end pollution,” says event organiser and Surfers Against Sewage ambassador Nicky Chisholm.
Individually, refusing a plastic bottle is a small act, but shifts in culture may force councils to go further – whether through restricting sales in sensitive areas, expanding refill networks or embedding plastic reduction into regeneration plans.
The rise of outdoor swimming will not solve England’s plastic problem on its own but as access to designated bathing waters expands, rivers and coastlines become shared spaces, protected by the people who use them.
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On Brighton beach, swimmers wrapped in towels cradled reusable bottles instead of disposable ones. A modest gesture that if scaled across England’s growing swimming community, could well shift culture and policy.
Main image: jax10289
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NEW YORK (AP) — Three brothers, including two of the nation’s most successful luxury real estate brokers, were convicted of sex trafficking Monday after a five-week trial over accusations that they drugged and raped scores of women they had dazzled with their wealth and opulent lifestyle.
The verdict came after 11 women testified in Manhattan federal court they were sexually assaulted by one or more of the brothers: twins Oren and Alon Alexander, 38, and Tal Alexander, 39. All three shook their heads as the jury foreperson said “guilty” 19 straight times, a powerful reckoning that could put them behind bars for the rest of their lives.
Tal Alexander dropped his head into his crossed arms. Their stunned parents sat in the gallery behind them. Alon Alexander’s wife shielded her face with her hand and appeared to fight back tears.
Judge Valerie E. Caproni set sentencing for Aug. 6. The brothers, jailed since their 2024 arrests, will appeal the verdict, their lawyers said.
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AP AUDIO: Alexander brothers are convicted of sex trafficking in case that shocked real estate world
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AP correspondent Jennifer King reports the verdict is guilty at the sex-trafficking trial of the Alexander real estate brothers.
“We believe in our clients’ innocence and we’re not going to stop fighting until we prevail, and we believe that we will one day prevail,” defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said outside the courthouse.
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U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton lauded the verdict as vindication for victims of crimes that often go unreported and unpunished.
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“The truth is sex trafficking and other federal sex offenses are present in many walks of life and we have not done enough to root it out,” Clayton said in a statement.
Dozens of women say they were drugged and assaulted
The verdict represented a spectacular fall for Oren and Tal Alexander, once known as real estate’s “A Team” for their high-ticket sales and celebrity clientele. After smashing sales records at industry powerhouse Douglas Elliman, the brothers started their own firm. Alon Alexander ran their family’s private security company.
Victims testified that they met the brothers at nightclubs, parties and on dating apps, and were attacked after accepting their invitations to all-expense paid getaways to the Hamptons; Aspen, Colorado; and a Caribbean cruise. More than 60 women say they were raped by one or more of the brothers, according to prosecutors.
Defense lawyers suggested the accusers had faulty memories or were hoping to cash in on the brothers’ fortunes. The brothers were womanizers, their lawyers conceded. But they insisted any sex was consensual.
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In addition to the top charges, Alon and Tal Alexander were also convicted of sex trafficking of a minor while Alon and Oren Alexander were convicted of aggravated sexual abuse by force or intoxicant and sexual abuse of a physically incapacitated person. Oren Alexander was also convicted of sexually exploiting a minor after prosecutors showed the jury a video he recorded of himself appearing to assault a drugged 17-year-old.
Lawsuits expose an open secret in the real estate world
Besides the criminal case, the brothers have faced about two dozen lawsuits over the last two years, including one filed last week in which Tracy Tutor, a star of Bravo’s “Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles,” alleges Oren Alexander drugged and assaulted her while she was in New York City for a real estate event.
When the first of the lawsuits were filed, multiple women came forward claiming they had also been assaulted, and that the brothers’ misconduct had been an open secret in the real estate world. The government took notice and opened a criminal case.
During the trial, many women who testified said they believed the brothers had spiked their drinks. Some described feeling like they’d lost control of their bodies.
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One woman testified that she met the brothers in 2012 at a party at actor Zac Efron’s Manhattan apartment. She said she had almost no interaction with the actor, who was not accused of any misdeeds, and went to a nightclub later in the night before waking up naked with a nude Alon Alexander standing over her.
“I don’t want to have sex with you,” she testified telling him. “Haha, you already did,” she recalled him snapping back as he “laughed in my face.”
Testimony challenges claim that money drove allegations
Prosecutors pushed back against the idea that the accusers were hoping to cash in on lawsuits. Only two have lawsuits pending, prosecutor Elizabeth Espinosa told jurors, and both are wealthy.
One woman who testified said she was raped by Alon Alexander in Aspen, Colorado, in 2017, when she was 17. She said she was the daughter of a billionaire.
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“I don’t want their money. I just don’t want them to have it,” she told jurors.
Lindsey Acree, an artist and gallery owner, testified she was raped by Tal Alexander and another man at a home in the Hamptons in 2011 after taking a drink that left her feeling paralyzed.
The woman said she sued last year even though she will “never need their money” because the Alexanders “kept calling us gold diggers, shake down artists, con artists.”
“If there’s a kid with a stick who keeps hitting people, you take their stick away,” she told the jury. “Money is their stick, so you take it away so they can’t hurt people anymore.”
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The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they choose to come forward publicly, as Acree and Tutor have done.
Travis Kelce will return for another season with the Kansas City Chiefs, who have also agreed a deal to sign Kenneth Walker, according to reports.
Kelce, a three-time Super Bowl winner, has spent his entire NFL career with the Chiefs and the veteran tight end is out of contract after his 13th season.
But a social media post, external by New Heights, the podcast he produces with his brother Jason, said: “He’s back! Travis Kelce is back with the Chiefs for year 14.”
Kansas City hoped the 36-year-old would commit to another season and NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport reported that Kelce has turned down more lucrative offers, external from other teams to agree a one-year deal worth up to $15m (£11.2m).
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After reaching five Super Bowls in six years, the Chiefs missed the play-offs last season for the first time since the 2014 campaign.
During the regular season, Walker passed 1,000 rushing yards for the second time in four years with the Seattle Seahawks, and the 25-year-old then helped fill the void after fellow running back Zach Charbonnet suffered a torn ACL in the play-offs.
Walker led the NFL for most carries (65), rushing yards (313) and rushing touchdowns (four) during the post-season, becoming the first running back to be the Super Bowl MVP since 1998.
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Champions Seattle were willing to let Walker test the free agency market and he will become the first Super Bowl MVP to immediately switch to a new team since 2003.
The Competition and Markets Authority said it ‘won’t hesitate to take action’ if it suspects consumer or competition law is being broken
The competition watchdog has warned that it expects consumers who have ordered heating oil to receive it at the agreed price, as the Middle East conflict sends the cost of the fuel soaring.
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The Competition and Markets Authority said it “won’t hesitate to take action” if it suspects consumer or competition law is being broken.
The CMA’s statement came as households that rely on heating oil are already grappling with rising costs due to disruption caused by the conflict.
Home heating oil is used by around 1.5 million households in the UK, but sudden volatility in the global oil trade has caused prices to spike by up to £100 in the past week alone.
The problem is particularly acute in Northern Ireland, where 62.5% of homes rely on the fuel, compared to the UK average of just over 5%.
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Heating oil customers fall outside of Ofgem’s energy price cap protections, which currently fixes prices until the end of June.
Emma Cochrane, acting executive director for consumer protection at the CMA, said: “We know the situation in the Middle East is putting pressure on heating oil prices, and we recognise that this will worry people who may find it hard to afford these extra costs.
“Generally, we would expect that customers who have placed orders for heating oil should receive it at the agreed price. Suppliers should be clear what they are charging and terms must be fair.
“We won’t hesitate to take action if we suspect that consumer or competition law is being broken.”
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Earlier on Monday, Energy Secretary Ed Miliband and energy minister Michael Shanks wrote to UK and Ireland Fuel Distributors Association chief executive Ken Cronin, telling him that the CMA was gathering evidence and looking at whether consumers were being treated fairly.
The letter stated: “We want to strongly remind you of your commitments under the UK and Ireland Fuel Distributors Association (UKIFDA) Customer Charter and Code of Practice and that the industry remains fully subject to consumer protection and competition law, overseen by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA).
“The Minister for Energy has today spoken to the CMA who will now gather evidence on the situation in the market and look at whether consumers are being treated fairly.
“We will be talking to them again in the coming days and they have the power to launch an investigation into anything relating to unfair contract terms, misleading consumer practices or anti-competitive behaviour.
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“Where there is evidence that consumers are being treated unfairly, we will act accordingly and ensure that the appropriate regulatory bodies are engaged.”
The letter continued: “To be clear, our firm expectation is that pricing remains fair, transparent and fully justifiable, reflecting genuine market conditions.
“Customers should be provided with clear, timely and clear explanations for any price changes, including where prices are confirmed shortly before delivery.”
The Treasury – a new bar and restaurant set to open in Whitby – has announced it will partner with Whitby Distillery when the venue opens to the public in Summer 2026.
The full range of Whitby Distillery’s spirits, including seasonal releases and limited editions, will be available at the new bar with its signature London Dry Gin made using locally foraged botanicals, including sugar kelp gathered from Whitby shores.
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Mark Appleton, general manager at The Treasury Whitby, said: “We are incredibly proud to partner with Whitby Distillery as our house pour gin.
“Whitby Distillery have created something truly special – a spirit that captures the character of our coastline – and their commitment to the community through the Whitby Lifeboat makes this collaboration even more meaningful.
“It’s a partnership rooted not only in quality, but in shared values.”
Co-founder of Whitby Distillery, Luke Pentith, and founder of The Treasury, Ali Hussain, also both volunteer with the RNLI Whitby Lifeboat Station – an organisation which the gin company raise money for through the sale of their spirits.
The landmark film and TV studio development now looks back on track as North East Mayor Kim McGuinness announces a £104m package to “turbocharge” the region’s creative industries.
The project, hoped to create thousands of jobs and bring blockbuster film production to the region, has been allocated £38.5 million as part of the push.
It is now hoped to be up and running by late 2027, with construction starting as early as this summer.
But Mayor Kim McGuinness said the funding, which is set for approval at next week’s Cabinet, will prove that “if you have a creative dream, you don’t need London to succeed”.
The vision for the vast £450m complex was originally led by FulwellCain, a joint venture between global entertainment company Fulwell 73 and Cain International, who had hoped to build 19 sound stages at the riverside site.
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However, in 2025, the council revealed the proposals were being presented to the investment market, with the aim to find a final funder and developer.
Land preparation works next to the Northern Spire Bridge have already gotten underway following the plans being approved in 2024 – but no building work has begun.
The Northern Echo pushed then Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to back the Crown Works (Image: THE NORTHERN ECHO)
The first phase of construction will now begin in July, with the £38m figure including £11m recyclable funding, operational revenue support of £500k per year for five years and reconfirmation of £25m Trailblazer Devolution Deal funding first offered by the Government in 2024.
Once open in late 2027, the studio will feature 125,000 sq ft of flexible space across a new ‘Studio One’ alongside the transformation of the existing Doxford Printworks building.
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The Cabinet is also set to approve £24m to start work on a new 12,500-15,000 seat arena to rival Manchester and London at Gateshead Quays on the banks of the Tyne, where development has been stalled since the pandemic.
The on-site works will create a stand-alone platform for a new arena, a new performance square next to The Glasshouse International Centre for Music and a green linear park connecting the riverside to Baltic Quarter.
And Mayor Kim McGuinness has also committed to spend millions more to back small venues across North East England, fund a diverse programme of festivals, events and sporting programmes, and provide financial support for local people to build their creative careers and businesses.
The investment marks the first major scheme since the Newcastle-Gateshead Mayoral Development Zone was created last year.
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The £104m package also includes a £42m North East Culture, Creative Industries and Sport framework, backed by £25m from the combined authority’s integrated settlement, to develop grassroots talent, improve small venues, and boost access and participation across the region.
The North East Culture, Creative Industries and Sport framework will be shaped by industry stakeholders to map the investment needed to sustainably grow the creative sector.
Mayor Kim McGuinness said: “We’ve heard leading voices from Sam Fender to Jade talk about their pride in their north east roots and the huge barriers working class young people from the north face when trying to make it in music and film.
“I said in my manifesto I’d change that, and here’s the next big step – £104m backing both the inspirational big venues to the vital local space need for your first gig.
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“Last week we announced the skills funding to help you learn on the job, this week we’re backing more venues.
“If you have a creative dream, you don’t need London to succeed. We’ll prove that.”
At the point of his death, Graham betrayed her by planning to run off with Rhona Goskirk (Zoe Henry). He faked his death as he knew Kim would never just let him be happy. Extreme.
Graham then rocked back up by literally popping out of the shadows and almost giving Kim a coronary, claiming he used his SAS training to fake his death and run off to Mexico to start a new life away from her.
There’s been serious tension at Home Farm ever since Graham returned (Picture: ITV)
Graham is well and truly under her skin – she’s allowed him to stay under roof despite all that he’s done, and her bark has well and truly lost its bite. Gotta say Kim, losing a bit of respect here.
It’ll soon become clear that he burrows under her skin even further after he gives Rhona an ultimatum that goes one of two ways. Graham is toying with Kim while trying to convince Joe Tate (Ned Porteous) that she is a bad apple.
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But deep-down Kim isn’t stupid and recognises Graham’s games. She gets vulnerable with her only pal Lydia Dingle (Karen Blick) as she confesses her feelings and vows to remain closed off to Graham.
Graham doesn’t like how much Joe has changed while living with Kim (Picture: ITV)
Joe is also getting fed up of Graham trying to turn him against Kim.
This only spurs Graham on, who decides to try harder to prove to Joe that Kim is evil incarnate.
He sinks to a new low in trying to grab Joe’s attention, but will it work or will he end up feeling the familiar wrath of Kim?
Police have yet to formally identify the body which was found in a river
A body has been recovered in a river while searching for a woman who was reported missing last month. Carol Hillier was reported as missing from Sutton in February, 22 days ago. Police have yet to make a formal identification.
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Carol, 64, was first reported as a missing person on February 15. She was last seen near a pub, and Cambridgeshire Police has continued to investigate her disappearance.
A spokeswoman for Cambridgeshire Police said: “Police searching for missing woman Carol Hillier from Sandy in Bedfordshire recovered a body from the river at Sutton Gault yesterday (Sunday).
“Carol, 64, went missing on Sunday, 15 February near The Old Anchor pub off Bury Lane, Sutton, near Ely.
“Her family has been informed of this development, however, no formal identification has been carried out.”
It’s MAR10 Day today but while there are plenty of games starring Mario himself, which of his allies and enemies also deserve a spin-off game?
While the Super Mario franchise’s actual anniversary is September 13, international Mario Day is actually March 10, since the US date format renders today as MAR 10 – if you’re using the right kind of digital watch or other old school display.
Nintendo has adopted it as an official holiday but it usually doesn’t do anything other than run a limited sale for Mario games, so don’t expect a surprise 3D Mario game reveal. Although there have been rumours of a relatively big Mario Kart World update.
Mario himself has had plenty of games over the decades and while he’s occasionally stepped aside to let others, like Luigi and Wario, take the spotlight, there are still several Mushroom Kingdom residents who are overdue the chance to headline their own adventure.
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1. Toad
Yes, there is a singular Toad called Toad (Nintendo)
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No, we’re not talking about Captain Toad, who already starred in his own game, Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker. We mean just… Toad. While the mushroom headed citizens of the Mushroom Kingdom are also called Toads, a singular Toad, called Toad, has frequently appeared as his own character in the various sports and party game spin-offs.
Aside from being one of the four playable heroes in Super Mario Bros. 2, he’s missed out on most of Mario’s recent mainline adventures, with blue and yellow Toads taking his spot in 2D platformers like Super Mario Bros. Wonder.
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Maybe he’s retired and prefers to hold down the fort at home. Given the popularity of Animal Crossing: New Horizons and, most recently, Pokémon Pokopia, a Mario version of those games where you’re a humble Toad building and managing a town in the Mushroom Kingdom sounds like one of those ideas so obvious it’s surprising it hasn’t been done yet. Especially if you could end up making it look like it does in the animated movie.
2. Goomba
Goombas are surprisingly dexterous despite their lack of limbs (Nintendo)
The poor Goomba race has been getting stomped on by Mario and friends for 40 years, so when will they get their turn in the spotlight? Their standing has improved over time; in fact, the Switch 2 has seen their racing and tennis debuts with Mario Kart World and Mario Tennis Fever.
However, we’ve yet to see a Goomba be the star of the show. The closest is the Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga remake, which added a real-time strategy side-game where a lowly Goomba leads Bowser’s minions on a quest to find their missing king.
The idea could be fleshed out into a proper tactics game, with you challenging other armies in a bid to conquer the Mushroom Kingdom in Bowser’s name, but we think a puzzle platformer similar to the Captain Toad games would be a better fit, with a dash of Pikmin thrown in where you recruit more Goombas to bypass certain puzzles.
3. Lakitu
We already got a taste for a Lakitu fishing game in Super Mario Odyssey (Nintendo)
Much like the Goombas, Lakitus (Lakiti?) have frequently served as Bowser’s minions, but a few have been friendly enough to assist Mario, whether it be as the cameraman in Super Mario 64 or as a party member in Paper Mario.
Nintendo clearly sees Lakitu as important, since one has served as a referee in multiple sports games and, even after a promotion to playable character, kicks off races in all the Mario Kart games. So, why not give Lakitu their own game?
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Since they’re typically seen flying on clouds, how about a Mario themed horizontal shooter à la R-Type, with them throwing their Spiny shells as their main projectile? Or, since they’re known for fishing racers back onto the track in Mario Kart, a chill Lakitu fishing game.
4. Boo
These cackling ghouls have menaced Mario and Luigi for decades now (Nintendo)
Boos are the most famous ghost characters in the Mario franchise, but there have been other types of ghosts throughout the series, most notably in the Luigi’s Mansion games. So, what makes the Boos different? Feels like there’s some untapped lore there.
Like Goomba and Lakitu, there have been plenty of playable Boos throughout the spin-offs (sometimes it’s even been King Boo), but no dedicated Boo games outside of the Luigi’s Mansion series, where they serve as primary antagonists.
A Boo-led game would probably be the reverse of that – a stealth game of sorts where you sneak up on Luigi and scare him before he spots you. Kind of like a child friendly Dead By Daylight that replaces the bloody murders with cartoonish jump scares. The fact that most Boos can’t look you in the face seems like a game mechanic ripe for exploitation.
5. Kamek
Can you believe it took until the mobile game for Kamek to get into Mario Kart? (Nintendo)
One last minion before we move on, Kamek has been Bowser’s right-hand baddie since the king was a baby and is important enough to have his own name, distinguishing himself from the generic Magikoopa enemies.
He also gets to be one of the main enemies in the Illumination Mario movies, and yet it took until 2012’s Mario Party 9 before he finally got to be playable. He’s since had a few more playable appearances in spin-offs but after finally making it into the racing games with Mario Kart Tour and Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, he was demoted to just an item in Mario Kart World.
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Given his position in Bowser’s army, Kamek might be a better lead role for a strategy game than a Goomba and his flying broomstick and spells make him a good fit for any kind of arcade-style shoot ‘em up. Alternatively, a Kamek game could focus on his early years rearing Bowser, kind of like a Nintendogs life-sim parody where you’re taking care of an evil toddler and trying to make him even more evil.
6. Waluigi
Waluigi is a far more popular character with fans than he is in-universe (Nintendo)
While Luigi’s lanky doppelganger has thrived in the spin-off games, he’s never so much as been acknowledged in the mainline entries. He’s completely absent in the Wario Land and WarioWare games too, despite being Wario’s partner in crime.
The closest he’s come to having a substantial role in the franchise is as the starting villain in 2005’s Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix and even then, he serves as the first boss fight, vanishing completely after he’s bested in a dance off.
Like Wario, Waluigi’s unhinged personality means any game he’d star in could afford to get really weird in ways a regular Mario game can’t. Something akin to those bizarre Legend Of Zelda adventure games starring Tingle would suit Waluigi’s weirdo vibes perfectly, where you explore dungeons and complete puzzles to gather treasure. At the very least, it’d be great to see him appear as a co-op partner in a new Wario Land platformer.
7. Princess Peach
The highest profile character on the list (Nintendo)
Okay, yes, we’re cheating with this one as Peach has already had the lead role in two games: 2005’s Super Princess Peach and 2024’s Princess Peach: Showtime! So, why are we including her on this list? It’s because we feel neither of those games did her justice.
Super Princess Peach was a perfectly fine 2D platformer but suffered from some (presumably unintentional) sexist overtones and while not without its charms, Princess Peach: Showtime! is patronisingly easy even for a kids game and does little to expand on Peach’s character in the same way Luigi’s Mansion did for Luigi.
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A more dedicated platformer, with Peach as the lead, makes a lot more sense now that the animated movies have turned her into a hyper-competent action hero, but we’d also welcome an expansion on Showtime’s formula if it had more engaging gameplay and a funnier script. Maybe even give it to Luigi’s Mansion studio Next Level Games, so it can flex its animation chops.
8. Daisy
Daisy’s personality can simply be described as loud (Nintendo)
Like Waluigi, Daisy is mostly known for her appearances in the spin-offs, serving as Peach’s louder and more tomboyish counterpart. Unlike Waluigi, though, she finally made the jump to the mainline platformers in 2023 as one of Super Mario Bros. Wonder’s playable characters, 34 years after her debut in Super Mario Land.
Hopefully this is a sign she’ll appear more frequently in the platformers and considering the games often hint at her being a love interest for Luigi, she’s arguably overdue an appearance in a Luigi’s Mansion game, though ideally not just as a kidnap victim.
A Daisy-centric platformer would also be the perfect excuse to return to her home kingdom of Sarasaland, which still has untapped potential for new locations. Or alternatively she could share the spotlight with Peach in a hypothetical Showtime sequel, as a co-op partner.
9. Nabbit
Weird that Nabbit never showed up in the Mario + Rabbids games (Nintendo)
Debuting as a new enemy in 2012’s New Super Mario Bros. U, Nabbit’s antagonistic role was quickly dropped in favour of him being the beginner friendly playable character in the 2D games. Since he’s completely invincible (although he’s not immune to falling into pits) he’s meant for little kids who have never played a platformer before.
A Nabbit game, though, could be a good opportunity to return to his roots. His whole thing was speeding away after robbing someone’s house, so how about a Super Meat Boy-esque platformer where the levels are bite-sized and the emphasis is on how fast you can complete them, with you helping Nabbit flee his pursuers.
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Such a game could also explain where Nabbit came from and why he’s made a habit out of stalking Mario and company in the 2D games. Super Mario Bros. Wonder describes him as ‘someone keeping an eye on Mario and his friends,’ so maybe he’s just lonely and awkward.
10 & 11. Geno and Mallow
Geno must have earned himself new fans through the Super Mario RPG remake (Nintendo)
The Mario role-playing games are full of fan favourite characters, but if any of them were going to headline their own game, our vote is for the double act of Geno and Mallow, who both served as party members in Super Mario RPG. Coincidentally, that game turned 30 years old the day before MAR10 Day, on March 9.
You’re likely already familiar with Geno thanks to the enduring fan demands that he be playable in Super Smash Bros., but if not, he’s a sagely star spirit who inhabits the body of a wooden doll and fights with energy blasts and kid-friendly firearms.
Mallow, meanwhile, is an adorable cloud boy raised by frogs who wields weather-based magic. He’s also the only party member with a real character arc, joining Mario on his quest to track down his birth parents and eventually outgrowing his cry-baby tendencies.
Super Mario RPG’s overall plot was rather thin, but a direct sequel with a script thatrelies on the comedic stylings of the Paper Mario games would be very welcome and the perfect opportunity to further flesh out Geno and Mallow. Alternatively, their unique abilities could be used for a co-op platformer in the style of Hazelight’s games like Split Fiction.
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Mallow is part of a small list of Mario characters who undergo any sort of character development (Nintendo)
PSNI revealed that the man tried to escape officers and said the matter is being treated as a hate crime
A man has been released on bail pending further inquiries after being arrested on suspicion of common assault and disorderly behaviour – including shouting racist slurs at children.
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The alleged incident took place in Portadown, Co Armagh, on Sunday evening, March 8. Police responded to complaints after a male was reported in the Park Road area of the town allegedly aggravating children.
A spokesman from PSNI told Belfast Live: “Police received a report of a man acting in a disorderly manner in the Park Road area of Portadown on Sunday, March 8.
“On police arrival, at around 5.55pm, it was reported that the man was assaulting children and shouting racist slurs. The matter is being treated as a racially-motivated hate crime.
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“When officers approached the man he made off and a short foot pursuit ensued before he could be detained. The man, aged 22, was arrested on suspicion of common assault and disorderly behaviour. He remains in custody at this time.”
The Turkish president with a reputation for being bullish, no-nonsense and tough was clear as he addressed his cabinet on Monday.
He does not want Turkey to be dragged into this war on Iran.
“Our primary goal is to keep our country clear of this fire. Ensuring Turkey’s security and the peace of its 86 million citizens is our greatest priority,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan told his ministers.
He was speaking the same day a second ballistic missile fired from Iran to Turkey was intercepted by NATO defences.
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Debris from the interception landed in a field in the southern Turkish city of Gaziantep. A first missile fired days earlier on was also intercepted, this time, as it was headed towards Turkish airspace.
Image: Debris of a NATO air defence system in Turkey’s Hatay province. Pic: Reuters
That incident drew words of caution from the Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan who urged their Iranian neighbours not to test Turkey’s patience.
“We are not a country that gets provoked easily,” Mr Fidan said. “We spoke with our Iranian friends and said if this missile lost its way, that’s one thing, but if it continues, be careful…”
Image: Mr Erdogan called for calm amid fears the conflict could spill across European borders. Pic: Reuters
The president went further at a Monday Iftar dinner in Ankara for ambassadors. “We do not accept the Middle East geography to be put on the operating table just like a century ago.”
“Last week, and today,” the president said. “The ballistic missiles headed to our country were neutralised on time and the necessary warnings were made very clearly to be Iranian side.
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“I emphasise again, that the war should be ended without spreading further in our region.”
The Turkish leader insisted he was actively working to lower tensions and had conducted multiple talks with more than a dozen leaders to try to broke a way through the crisis.
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On Monday evening it also emerged that Mr Erdogan had had a phone call with Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian. Turkey said on social media that this had come at the request of the Iranians. The post said Mr Erdogan had told his counterpart that Turkey “doesn’t approve of unlawful interventions against Iran and Iran’s targeting of the brotherly countries in the region”.
“President Erdogan stated that targeting the brotherly countries benefits no one and that these must all stop,” the statement from his office added.
Day 10 Iran war: Videos from on the ground
The US embassy has raised its advice for travelling to the country to Level Four, urging travellers against travel to southeast Turkey and has ordered non-emergency US government employees and family members to leave the Consulate General in Adana “due to security risks”.
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Americans in southeast Turkey have been “strongly encouraged to depart now”.
Security along Turkey’s long border with Iran has been tightened and Sky’s journalists along the border have detected very little movement out of Iran and into Turkey.
There is usually visa-free movement for Iranians wanting to visit Turkey and vice-versa along the three border gates the two countries share. But right now, Iran is only allowing in Iranians.
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Our team at a border crossing detected limited movement with higher numbers of Iranians wanting to travel back to their homeland to check on relatives there, than the numbers departing.
Image: A Turkish soldier stands guard in front of the Kapikoy Border Gate in the eastern Van province. Pic: Reuters
Turkey’s disquiet over Iranian missiles near or through its airspace led to Iran’s Ankara ambassador being summoned to the Turkish foreign ministry.
And in a sign of the country’s increasing concerns over tensions, the country has sent six F-16 fighter jets to the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus as part of a “phased approach to enhancing security”.
The aircraft are expected to operate from Ercan International Airport west of the capital Nicosia and will be equipped to conduct air patrol and air defence missions over the eastern Mediterranean.
Turkey hosts American forces in Incirlik airbase in the southern Adana Province but has not allowed its bases or airspace to be used in the war against Iran.
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Additional reporting by Turkey producer Zeynep Bilginsoy