Viktor Gyokeres puts Arsenal ahead from the spot before an equalising penalty from Atletico Madrid’s Julian Alvarez in the second half. A third penalty call for the Gunners is overturned by VAR which ensures the first leg of their Champions League semi-final ends in a 1-1 draw.
Three family members were charged for allegedly assaulting a journalist who writes for a conservative organization during a protest against immigration enforcement operations in Minnesota, according to an indictment unsealed Wednesday.
Christopher and DeYanna Ostroushko and their daughter, Paige, were each indicted by a federal grand jury. Christopher and Paige will also be charged with interfering with a federally protected activity.
Christopher Ostroushko also faces state charges of misdemeanor assault, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office.
Community members have continued to protest in opposition to immigration enforcement efforts by President Donald Trump’s administration in the weeks since federal officers’ presence in the Twin Cities was dramatically scaled back. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has used the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building at Fort Snelling as a short-term holding facility, and the area out front has become a hub of anti-ICE activity.
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Widely shared video taken by Turning Point USA contributor Savanah Hernandez outside the Whipple building on April 11 begins with Paige blowing a whistle close to Hernandez’s face. Video from other vantage points shows Hernandez with her hand protecting her face, sometimes pushing back against Paige. The two then tussle.
Hernandez says, “Get away from me.”
Paige pushes Hernandez, who falls back against a fence.
In the moments after, DeYanna and Christopher separately confront Hernandez, as does Paige again.
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Christopher Ostroushko “forcefully shoved the victim in the back, head first to the ground,” the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office said in its statement that there was insufficient evidence to bring state charges against the others involved.
Throughout, others on the scene tried to de-escalate and separate them.
After the April 11 incident, Hernandez said her glasses were broken, she was concussed with a sore neck and back, and her legs were scraped, according to posts on the social platform X. She wrote that she was talking with police about pressing charges.
James Cook, an attorney representing the family, said the videos that have circulated don’t show everything, and he believes the family will be able to provide a “vigorous defense.”
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“We think that there’s a lot of things in the videos that provide a means to exonerate,” he said.
The family was regular protesters at the Whipple building to provide “a voice and a demonstration against Metro Surge,” Cook said. He added the Ostroushkos have since been threatened online, and DeYanna and Christopher have both lost their jobs.
“They wish they could turn back the clock,” Cook said. “They wish that things didn’t turn out how they did.”
The Ostroushkos were summoned to appear before a federal judge on May 12.
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Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche said in a statement Wednesday that the Department of Justice will always “punish unhinged acts of political violence.”
“Hernandez was allegedly surrounded, physically assaulted, and shoved to the ground — simply because she was identified by the defendants as a conservative journalist,” Blanche said. “That is NOT ‘peaceful protest.’”
Hernandez said in a post that she was “incredibly grateful to see our justice system at work.” Hernandez did not immediately reply to a request for comment via email or direct message.
ITV’s new crime drama A Taste For Murder made its debut on Monday (April 29) night, but some viewers were left divided
Monde Mwitumwa TV and Celebrity Reporter
22:33, 29 Apr 2026Updated 22:37, 29 Apr 2026
A Taste For Murder viewers were swift to identify a problem just minutes into the new series.
The fresh ITV crime drama, adapted from Matt Baker’s novel of the same name, premiered on Monday (April 29) evening, yet audiences complained that the plot was “predictable”.
Travelling to Italy with his daughter Angelica to see his in-laws, he seeks to work through his bereavement but is confronted instead with a succession of baffling cases.
While trying to mend fractured family relationships with his in-laws Chef Gennaro and Elena Da Vinale, who operate a coastal restaurant, Joe becomes embroiled when his nephew and sous-chef Luca is detained for murder after a local man’s body is discovered on the beach, reports the Mirror.
Participating in the inquiry, Joe conflicts with local Inspector Lara Sarrancino, although the duo ultimately establish a hesitant partnership to uncover the truth behind the mysterious crimes plaguing the apparently perfect island.
Nevertheless, within minutes of the programme beginning, viewers at home were quick to share their responses as they claimed that the storyline was “predictable.”
One viewer posted on X: “Single parent, stroppy teenager. A bit predictable so far. #atasteformurder.”
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Another commented: “#atasteformurder Oh god, is it one of those that we will be able to write the script to ourselves.” A third commented: “Always has to be a stroppy teen child in everything #ATasteforMurder.”
A fourth remarked: “So single dad will meet a single female police detective and will hate each other at first but eventually fall in love. #atasteformurder.”
Nevertheless, other viewers appear to be thoroughly enjoying the programme, with one stating: “I am hooked! I really enjoyed Episodes 2 and 3. The family drama is just as good as the mystery. Great show! Love the story line and characters!!”
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Another enthused: “I absolutely LOVED the first season! Please renew for a second season!!!”
Meanwhile, another viewer added: “LOVE the episodes so far. Beautifully filmed, fantastically acted, tight plot twists. Please make Season 2 (at least!).”
While the testimony was billed as being about the Pentagon’s budget, it inevitably became about the War in Iran. During the testimony, Hegseth was sometimes outright belligerent. My colleague Holly Baxter said that he sounded increasingly deluded and desperate, hoping to win the support of the audience of one that is Donald Trump.
At one point, he gallingly said that “the biggest adversary we face at this point are the reckless, feckless and defeatist words of congressional Democrats and some Republicans.”
A few days ago, I hid under a table during the White House Correspondents’ Dinner as I saw Hegseth bolt out of the Washington Hilton after a shooter allegedly came to try and take out Trump. But here, he showed absolutely zero signs of trying to turn down the tone in the country.
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“Choosing to call out Democrats and some Republicans as our greatest threat, amidst all the threats, including an act of war, shows you what a f***ng joke he is,” Rep. Pat Ryan of New York, a West Point graduate, told The Independent. “I asked them questions about six Americans that were killed, and he wouldn’t even answer in a straightforward way.”
U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth departs after testifying before the House Armed Services Committee April 29, 2026 in the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, DC. Hegseth testified on the Department of Defense Fiscal Year 2027 Budget Request. (Getty)
Even Rep. Jen Kiggans (R-Va.), who represents the Navy-heavy Virginia Beach, grilled Hegseth about the dismissal of the Secretary of the Navy John Phelan.
But if Hegseth had a rough go at it at the House of Representatives, he will have an even tougher time before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Thursday.
There, he will have to face Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.), whom he has tried to punish for a video he put out with Democratic lawmakers saying U.S. servicemembers have a right to refuse illegal orders.
Members who are not on the committee will also be watching Sen. Thom Tillis (R-N.C.), who voted to confirm Hegseth, but has at times become more critical of the Trump administration while avoiding directly criticizing the president.
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“I think that we need details,” Tillis told The Independent. We need to know what the strategic objectives are. What does success look like? What is the build-up for the budget request?”
And this is to say nothing of the Republicans who voted against his confirmation: Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Susan Collins of Maine and Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. McConnell especially criticized the Pentagon.
This week, the usually taciturn McConnell put out an op-ed in The Washington Post criticizing the fact that the Pentagon has not spent $400 billion that the Senate set aside for Ukraine.
Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) hit out at the Pentagon for not spending money meant for Ukraine. (Getty Images)
“Trump’s focus on ending the war is noble,” he said. “But the price and stability of peace matter. The Pentagon’s approach of withholding or slow-rolling support to Ukraine is in effect the same strategy President Joe Biden deployed.”
For someone like McConnell, the chairman of the Appropriations Committee’s subcommittee on military spending, this was a damning condemnation. McConnell did not mention Hegset,h but it was a clear message for him to get it together.
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The Senate as a whole is more hawkish than the House, so Hegseth might not face as much criticism about the war in Iran itself as about his management of the war. And the Senate does not take kindly to people dictating what it cannot know.
A common trait of the Trump White House has been members of the administration avoiding accountability or congressional oversight and then immediately melting in front of a committee.
Homeland Security Kristi Noem avoided the Senate Judiciary Committee for months, only for Tillis and Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.) to eviscerate her. A few days later, she was gone. In February, Attorney General Pam Bondi faced a round of tough questioning about files related to Jeffrey Epstein, giving an equally pugnacious performance. By April, she got the boot.
This isn’t to say that Hegseth will suffer the same fate as the ladies. But as more members lose patience with him and as Republicans want to find someone to blame other than Trump, he might be the next sacrificial lamb.
Northumbria Police and the county council are taking steps in a bid to combat the issue following a number of reports from local residents.
Between 2020 and 2023, Cramlington had 694 incidents of anti-social behaviour related to the illegal use of electric and off-road motorbikes – the third highest figure in Northumberland. That figure had been significantly reduced by the police’s Operation Capio, but that work in Cramlington ended last March when Government funding for the operation was pulled.
Cramlington North councillor Wayne Daley described the problem as a “massive issue” for the town and feared someone
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He said: “One resident has been in touch to say they were nearly run over by an electric bike. How long is it going to be before someone is seriously injured or killed?
“I don’t want to be in a situation where anybody is injured as a result of these morons. They are idiots.
“Anybody who knows somebody with one of these stupid bikes should report them to the police so they can be seized.”
Privately owned electric scooters are currently illegal to use on public roads, pavements, and cycle lanes in the UK, while electric motorbikes require a driving license to use on the roads legally.
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Cramlington Village councillor Mark Swinburn said constituents regularly contacted their local councillors about the problem.
He said: “We get constantly barraged about the number of electric bikes and scooters and asked what we are going to do about it. People have got to report it to the police – the council is not an enforcing authority.
“It’s a difficult situation. People want to see visible action.”
Officers generally do not pursue the vehicles for fear of causing injury to the rider. However, Northumbria Police said it had recently seized a number of vehicles which were being used illegally, and that the bikes and scooters had since been destroyed.
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A spokesman for the force said: “We’ve been putting the brakes on illegal riders in Cramlington. Our Neighbourhood team together with council colleagues have been cracking down on motorcycle-related antisocial behaviour following a number of reports from the community.
“Using a range of tactics, we’ve successfully intercepted and seized 11 electric scooters and a Sur-Ron bike – all of which are illegal to ride on public roads, pavements and cycle lanes. A moped linked to reports of antisocial behaviour was also seized.”
A spokesman for the county council added: “We’re working closely with Northumbria Police to tackle illegal motorbike disorder through a coordinated approach that combines enforcement, prevention and community engagement.
“Joint patrols and targeted operations using drone technology are taking place in hotspot areas, supported by the use of police seizure powers where bikes are used illegally or antisocially.
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“Alongside this, we’re working with local communities, landowners and partners to improve reporting, protect open spaces and explore diversionary activities, sending a clear message that unlawful and dangerous riding will not be tolerated – while supporting safer alternatives for young people.”
‘Anything we can do to better safeguard victims and children who are impacted by domestic abuse, will be a priority’
There has been “positive” progress on raising awareness of domestic abuse as an offence, the PSNI said as a major inspection report was published.
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The third Criminal Justice Inspection (CJI) review of the implementation of Part 1 of the Domestic Abuse and Civil Proceedings Act (NI) 2021 was published on Thursday.
It found there was “positive” progress in raising awareness across the criminal justice system about domestic abuse as an offence.
It also recognised that police officers face a number of “difficult challenges” on a regular basis when dealing with domestic abuse cases.
Detective Chief Superintendent Zoe McKee said they welcomed the findings and the recommendations of the report.
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“We continue to work with our partner agencies in the criminal justice system to ensure that we deliver a service that meets the needs and expectations of all victims and witnesses,” she said.
“As an organisation, we have already commenced a body of work to ensure the voices of children who are impacted by domestic abuse cases are clearly heard and feature in investigations.
“This is year three of our delivery of Part 1 of the Domestic Abuse and Civil Proceedings Act (NI) 2021, which saw us equipped with new legislative tools to target those who perpetrate domestic abuse and protect the most vulnerable.
“Anything we can do to better safeguard victims and children who are impacted by domestic abuse, will be a priority.”
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Ms McKee continued: “We have delivered specialised training in partnership with Women’s Aid – which has a focus on children as victims of domestic abuse cases and the new legislation that holds perpetrators to account.
“Officers from across different departments within the police service have attended a series of awareness sessions to ensure they have the required awareness and confidence that they need when dealing with such cases.
“We’re also working with our IT systems internally to help develop and implement a technical solution that assists officers in seamlessly adding child aggravators to case files.
“Training programmes for our custody sergeants have also been developed to ensure child aggravator awareness is captured on our internal systems prior to their disposal.
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“We also continue to work with colleagues in the Public Prosecution Service to review and improve processes relating to victims, including developing a robust quality assurance process to monitor the appropriate use of aggravators.
“Domestic abuse remains a service priority and we are fully committed to delivering for victims and bringing offenders to justice.”
The plans include a cinema room and communal areas
Darren Calpin, Local Democracy Reporter
17:00, 29 Apr 2026
Barclays Bank on Church Street is set to be transformed into a block of more than 100 flats, according to plans. Application documents submitted to Peterborough City Council reveal plans to extend and infill the brutalist-style building to create 104 “high-quality co-living units”.
The ground floor and basement will still be retained for commercial use. Barclays Bank also recently submitted a planning application to take over the former Sports Direct unit on Long Causeway so that it can open a new, larger branch within the city centre.
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The company is on a push to re-open high street branches so that it can once again offer an “all-important in-person experience,” rolling back on a wave of closures which has left them with just over 200 branches across the UK.
According to documents labelled “former Barclays Bank” prepared by the FRONT architectural office, the new bedsit-style co-living units will be “affordable housing for professional individuals” within the city centre.
“All residential units have access to communal facilities including kitchens, social spaces, library/reading areas and laundry benefits,” FRONT states. A cinema room and large communal areas are also included in the plans.
While all of the small, single aspect units are designed for single occupancy, they will meet or exceed the minimum HMO (house in multiple occupation) size standards set by Peterborough City Council of 11sq/m for a bedroom and 13 sq/m for a studio (excluding en-suite facilities).
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There will be no car parking available, although the revamped basement will offer secure cycle storage capable of accommodating around 120 bikes. The application will now be considered by Peterborough City Council and can be viewed on its planning portal, using reference 26/002223/FUL.
We’ve had two nights of handball controversy, first involving Bayern Munich and now Arsenal.
In both cases, the ball took a deflection off the body before hitting the arm, and fans have been conditioned into thinking this means there cannot be a penalty.
What referees actually look for is a clear change of trajectory. Why is that? Because it means the arm position would not create a barrier to the natural direction of the ball.
If the ball stays on roughly its intended path, then the ball touching the arm takes precedent.
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The penalty given against Alphonso Davies on Tuesday would not have been awarded in the Premier League as the arm was too close to the body.
For Uefa, the fact that the arm moves out from the body before the ball hits it would trump the small deflection.
But Ben White’s handball against Atletico was a very clear penalty under Uefa’s definition. The arm was a long way out from the body and came in to make contact with the ball.
There is some discretion if the arm is being brought in to make the body smaller, but in White’s case it started from so far out, a penalty would be expected.
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The Premier League is more relaxed than Europe even when it comes to deflections before a handball. That said, Arsenal defender Gabriel should have really conceded a penalty at Newcastle earlier this season as his arm, when sliding, was raised very high and the deflection off the body was negligible.
Would the ball deflecting off White’s shin have caused VAR to stay out of this in the Premier League? Possibly, but the movement of the arm was very clear.
A definite spot-kick in Europe, borderline for the Premier League.
Other members of the public, alongside nightclub security, were forced to step in and Kerr was restrained on the ground until police arrived.
22:26, 29 Apr 2026Updated 22:27, 29 Apr 2026
A drunk Scot had to be restrained after threatening to “take a man’s face off” outside a popular nightclub.
Liam Kerr, 44, from Edinburgh, was ‘heavily intoxicated’ outside The Liquid Rooms on Victoria Street during the early hours of September 12, 2025.
Kerr was trying to engage with other people outside the club at around 2am, Edinburgh Sheriff Court heard on Wednesday, reports Edinburgh Live.
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Kerr and another man then had some sort of disagreement which saw him push the man on the body and act aggressively. He then uttered threats, including telling the man “I will take your face off.”
Other members of the public, alongside nightclub security, were forced to step in and Kerr was restrained on the ground until police arrived. He was taken to St Leonard’s Police Station.
Kerr, who has several previous convictions, pleaded guilty to threatening or abusive behaviour by shouting, swearing, uttering threats of violence and pushing the victim on the body.
He had pleas of not guilty accepted for an assault charge and a separate charge of threatening or abusive behaviour.
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Sheriff Stirling imposed a fine of £150 on Kerr, discounted from £200 due to his early plea.
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Anusuyabai Pandekar and her daughter-in-law Mandabai sit facing each other beside a stone grindmill. The mill is still. No grain rests between its stones. No flour gathers at the edges. Instead it sits between them like an object from another time.
One of the women begins to sing. The other joins. The melody carries the rhythm of a labour no longer being done, cyclical and without clear beginning or end:
It is raining heavily, let the soil become wet.
Women go to the fields, carrying baskets of bhakri (bread).
The pre-monsoon rain is beating down on the fields.
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Under the jasmine tree, the ploughman is working with the drill-plough.
Scenes like the one this song describes, once common across rural western India, now belong increasingly to the archive. Hand-grinding has given way to electric mills. The work that once informed these songs has thinned out, leaving behind recordings, fragments and memory.
Accounts of drought and environmental change rarely include such voices. In official records and news reports, what is measured often overshadows what is lived. Climate change is typically explained through numbers, including emissions targets, temperature thresholds and rainfall variability. This data is necessary. But it cannot capture how change is inhabited: how it settles into bodies, reshapes routines and presses into everyday life.
Long before climate science named the crisis, women were registering these shifts in another language – song.
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Anusuyabai Pandekar and her daughter-in-law Manda singing in May 2017 for the Grindmill Songs Project archive.
Climate, labour and everyday life
Across the world, women’s work songs function as informal archives of environmental change. Emerging from repetitive labour – including grinding, pounding, planting and carrying – they register shifts in seasons, resources and survival long before these enter formal records.
I began to understand this during my doctoral work in 2020 and 2021. I was researching labour arrangements within the sugar industry in drought-affected regions of western India. Policy reports described rainfall deficits, groundwater depletion and crop loss. But women spoke instead of work – walking further for water, delaying planting and stretching food across uncertain seasons.
Their voices extended beyond conversation into an unexpected archive – The Grindmill Songs Project. First documented in the 1990s and now hosted by the People’s Archive of Rural India, the project brings together around 100,000 songs organised by people, places and themes. I used this archive alongside ethnographic interviews to trace labour, marriage and drought in the sugarcane industry, where women’s voices were largely absent from official records.
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Here, labour and environmental strain were articulated with a precision often absent from formal accounts. Climate was not abstract; it was embedded in the rhythms of work.
The climate crisis has a communications problem. How do we tell stories that move people – not just to fear the future, but to imagine and build a better one? This article is part of Climate Storytelling, a series exploring how arts and science can join forces to spark understanding, hope and action.
The water-guzzling sugarcane crop, around which the region’s economy turns, surfaced repeatedly in both speech and song. It appeared as a metaphor for happiness, for domestic violence, even for dowry; a substance moving between fields and households, binding labour, desire and coercion. Environmental stress did not stand apart from these concerns, but moved through them. As one song goes:
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A daughter’s existence is like a sack of sugar
Father got his daughter married, he became a merchant
Another describes married life through the language of extraction:
Father says, daughter, how are you treated by your in-laws
Like a 12-year-old sugarcane crushed in the sugar-mill
A broader pattern emerges from this context. Across regions, environmental change is first encountered through its effects on labour, and only later abstracted into data. Comparable dynamics appear elsewhere. In west African farming communities, songs synchronise collective labour while expressing shared experience of seasonal uncertainty. In Malawi, during famine, women sang:
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Koke kolole … pull, pull hard, pull the clouds –
why does the rain not come?
Our dead fathers, what have we done?
Forgive us … do you want us to die?
Send us rain.
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Here, ecological crisis is framed as a breakdown within a moral and social order. Such songs interpret environmental failure through relationships between the living and the dead and between obligation and neglect.
On the Swahili coast, fishing songs similarly accompany sailing and net-making, embedding weather knowledge, labour discipline and social commentary within everyday maritime life. These songs accompany work, but they also organise it, giving rhythm to collective effort while encoding knowledge about seasons, risk and survival.
A Gaelic waulking song that helps women beat cloth to a specific rhythm, sung in the Outer Hebrides.
This relationship between labour and environment extends across very different histories. In the Caribbean, work songs bear the imprint of plantation economies shaped by extraction and environmental vulnerability. In Latin America, women’s traditions carry histories of colonial labour within their rhythms.
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In Colombia’s San Basilio de Palenque, women still sing as they coax peanuts from rain-softened soil, gathering food, language and memory in the same gesture. Elsewhere, songs track movement itself: young men leaving with the dry-season wind, rivers in flood separating families.
Along cold North Sea coasts, herring workers, known as the “gutters”, sang Gaelic work songs in the 19th century while gutting fish at speed, their rhythms coordinating labour under harsh conditions. Beyond work, women also composed laments that dwelt on separation from men at sea.
Listening to climate differently
These songs describe hardship. But they also make it perceptible, situating environmental stress within labour, social relations and obligation. Climate change follows existing inequalities. In many contexts, its earliest effects are absorbed through women’s work, through longer hours, shifting responsibilities and increased strain.
Importantly, these songs were not intentionally composed as records of environmental change. They emerge from labour, relationships and survival. Yet because women’s work is so closely tied to land, water and season, environmental shifts are registered within them, often indirectly, as part of their lived experience.
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Women working at the grindstone. The Grindmill Songs Project / People’s Archive of Rural India
Work songs therefore offer a distinct kind of record. Against archives that have historically privileged elite and male voices, they preserve forms of knowledge grounded in everyday labour.
But the conditions that sustained such singing are fading. Mechanisation and the decline of collective work have reduced the spaces in which these songs were produced and shared, with many now confined to ritual settings such as weddings and childbirth gatherings. As these practices decline, so too do the forms of knowledge embedded within them.
Listening to these songs does not replace data-driven, scientific knowledge about climate change. It complements it by making visible dimensions of change that are otherwise difficult to capture, including the reorganisation of labour, the strain on relationships and the uncertainty of survival.
The easy hack, which takes just a few clicks, has been doing the rounds on social media this week.
And bargain hunters are loving it, as reported by creatorzine.com.
Many reckon it’s one of the quickest loyalty wins out there right now, with points landing almost instantly.
UK supermarket rankings in 2026
The trick was shared on Reddit, where a post on the r/UKFrugal thread revealed how one savvy user bagged 500 Nectar points with barely any effort.
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The post, from MovieMore4352, read: “Check your emails from Nectar.
“I’ve just been given 500 Nectar points for simply registering with Marriott Bonvoy. Easy and took seconds.”
The deal is part of Nectar’s tie-up with Marriott Bonvoy, letting members link accounts, swap points and unlock bonus rewards across both schemes.
Through the partnership, shoppers can trade points for hotel stays, experiences and travel perks while also earning extras just for signing up or staying at participating hotels.
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New Marriott Bonvoy members who sign up via Nectar can pocket a 500-point bonus – worth about £2.50 – simply by linking their account, with even more points up for grabs on hotel stays.
Some shoppers initially thought they had to book a trip to qualify but later realised the sign-up alone could trigger the bonus.
(Image: Jam Press/Reddit)
Others rushed to try it, with many saying it worked straight away.
One user wrote: “Thank you, this worked for me just now!”
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Another user said: “Thank you! Just did it and got points immediately.”
A third of person added: “That was surprisingly painless. Thanks a lot for sharing.”
Others shared tips for those who didn’t get the email – pointing out the offer can also be found in the Nectar app.
One user wrote: “I didn’t get the email… but it was also listed under ‘Partner Offers’ in the Nectar app with a link that takes you straight there.”
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