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Council ‘acknowledges’ threat to community in Holywood from the film industry

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Belfast Live

In January a decision was made by councillors in secret to give up the community hall

Ards and North Down Council has “acknowledged” it will be giving up an important local resource by turning a community hall in Holywood to a film industry hub.

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Elected members at a committee meeting in Newtownards have agreed to a motion that states a decision made by the council in secret and away from the public and press might be a threat to an “important community asset.”

In January councillors chose to earmark Queens Hall Hollywood for development as the potential site for the Screen Industries Digital Innovation Hub. The full details of the vote in the restricted debate are not available, so it is unverified what parties pushed the decision through.

READ MORE: DUP proposes cross-border cooperation for coastal defences

READ MORE: 123 forgotten First World War dead to be included on County Down cenotaph

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But at the May meeting of the council’s Active and Healthy Communities Committee, elected members unanimously carried a motion forwarded by the Alliance Party. The motion states: “This council acknowledges that the decision taken in January 2026 to adopt Queen’s Community Centre as the preferred site of the proposed Holywood screen industries innovation hub has the potential to remove an important community asset from Holywood.

“The council therefore resolves to undertake an exercise to assess the need for community space in Holywood, with a report assessing need to be brought back to the relevant committee.” The motion does not attempt to reverse the decision, and will have to be ratified at the full council later this month.

The hall was built as a community centre in the 1950s, and a leisure centre was added in 2000. Although the council officially regards it as a leisure asset, the old part of the Queen’s Leisure Complex is still predominantly used as a community centre.

In October 2022 the council approved a cross-party notice of motion requiring engagement with the community in Holywood to ascertain needs and desires in respect of community use of Queen’s Hall. In 2010 Serco took over management.

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Green Party Councillor Lauren Kendall said her party voted against the original proposal to develop the hall, and added the motion was “an attempt to retrospectively justify decision-making.” She said the January decision was “taken in confidence, without the community’s knowledge or consent.”

At the committee meeting, Alliance Alderman Councillor Martin McRandal, who tabled the motion, said: “In recent years the non-leisure part of the facility has been allowed to deteriorate. Sound and lighting equipment in the main hall has been removed, the stage in the main hall is unsafe to use, floors are in desperate need of repair, and the working kitchen is dilapidated.

“The management of Queen’s Hall in Holywood stands in stark contrast to Queen’s Hall in Newtownards, where the facility has been animated over the years by the council putting on a programme of events. In regards to the 2022 Holywood motion, very little has been done – in the following three years there was one community engagement station in Holywood, that was poorly attended.”

He said: “Under the Belfast Regional City Deal, this council was awarded sizable funding to establish an Innovation Hub. It was decided that a specialist hub, serving the digital and creative industries be established in Holywood. That was very welcome news.

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“Late in 2025, Holywood and Clandeboye councillors were informed that negotiations for the preferred site had broken down, and that time was running out to identify a site, and thereby secure the funding. Having reviewed all other options, the only viable option in Holywood was the site of Queen’s Hall.

“Holywood and Clandeboye councillors were effectively presented with a Sophie’s Choice scenario. On the one hand we have a secured pot of funding that can be used to provide an economic boost to the town, on the other we have a community need, the case for which still needs to be properly made. And once that case is made, we need to seek a source of funding in order to regenerate the building.

“The decision was made by the council in January to proceed with Queen’s Hall in Holywood as the preferred site of the Innovation Hub. But nothing there is set in stone, this is the start of a process which will take some time to work through.”

He said: “The decision has the potential to remove a sizable and well-loved community asset in the heart of Holywood. Holywood has one other community hall at Redburn, away from the town centre.

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“It is our concern that the potential for losing Queen’s Hall would result in Holywood being underprovided in community space. The notice of motion calls for a report assessing need for community space in Holywood, and in undertaking the work I would like officers to carry out further engagement with the community stakeholders to assess the need, and compare community provision of space in Holywood with that of other towns of similar size, within our borough and outside.”

The Lord Mayor of Ards and North Down Borough, Alliance Councillor Gillian McCollum, seconded the motion. She told the committee: “The heart of this motion is about balance, it is about ensuring that as a council we make decisions that are both ambitious and responsible, that builds prosperity but also creates trust.”

She added: “For many years the message from the community in Holywood has been consistent – Queen’s Hall is needed and it should be maintained as a dedicated community venue.”

For all the latest news, visit the Belfast Live homepage here and sign up to our daily newsletter here.

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Hero or fall guy? Vance becomes face of Trump’s tentative Iran deal

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Hero or fall guy? Vance becomes face of Trump's tentative Iran deal

WASHINGTON (AP) — JD Vance was supposed to be spending the week promoting his new book, the kind of event a potential presidential candidate like the vice president typically uses to speak to a wide audience about his life and values ahead of a campaign.

Instead, the rollout of Vance’s second book, “Communion: Finding My Way Back to Faith,” has been largely crowded out by something else he’s put his name on: the tentative deal to end the Iran war.

The Republican vice president has embraced the role of chief defender of the agreement he and President Donald Trump signed with Tehran, giving a series of interviews touting the memorandum of understanding as a success and releasing a video championing it.

It’s a striking emergence for a politician who was known for his skepticism of foreign military interventions and who seemed reluctant to speak on the conflict when Trump launched it in late February.

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The vice president is poised to yoke himself further to the conflict’s outcome on Friday, when he’s expected to travel to Switzerland to kick off a new phase of negotiations with Iran. He was originally expected to attend a formal signing ceremony for the deal, but Trump formally signed it on Wednesday instead.

Vance becoming a hype man for the agreement seems to be an all-in gamble that, should he decide to seek the White House in 2028, voters will reward him for being the face of ending an unpopular conflict.

It’s also setting Vance up as the presumptive fall-guy should the deal with Iran falter.

Trump joked about such a possibility on Wednesday.

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“If it works out, I’m going to take the credit. If it doesn’t work out, I’m blaming JD,” Trump said.

Officials release text of the deal after backlash

The White House in a statement called Vance the president’s “right-hand man and an invaluable member of the President’s talented national security team.”

“That’s why the Vice President was trusted to lead these negotiations alongside Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner,” White House spokeswoman Olivia Wales said. “What President Trump and his team achieved on the battlefield and at the negotiating table is nothing short of remarkable and will strengthen American security for years to come.”

But backlash, including from conservatives, began growing this week after the U.S. digitally signed the memorandum of understanding with Iran on Sunday.

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Luke Schroeder, a spokesman for the vice president, said in a statement: “It’s unfortunate that some Republicans are attempting to undermine the President’s efforts to achieve peace in the Middle East and ensure Iran never has a nuclear weapon.”

Officials gave shifting answers about when they would release the text, but leaked copies of a draft were quickly met with anger and skepticism from Democratic and Republican U.S. lawmakers, as well as Israel and pro-Israel advocates. Their criticisms included concerns that the deal, meant to open a two-month negotiating period, seemed to offer Iran wins up front while guaranteeing little in return, and that Trump’s stated reason for launching the conflict, to prevent Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon, remains unresolved.

Vance has reiterated that Iran must meet its obligations.

“If they don’t behave properly, they don’t get any of the benefits of this bargain,” he said Tuesday on Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends.”

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In response to the backlash and mounting questions, the U.S. on Wednesday provided the text of the agreement to journalists.

The agreement states that Iran’s stockpile of highly enriched uranium, which is believed to be buried under rubble, must at minimum be diluted under international supervision. It also states that Iran shall not procure or develop nuclear weapons — a commitment it has made previously. But beyond stating that the U.S. and Iran will negotiate over Iran’s nuclear program, other commitments still need to be worked out.

Criticism on the right persisted after the text was released.

Conservative radio host Erick Erickson, a hawk who has defended the war, said Wednesday: “This is an American surrender.”

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Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, a potential 2028 presidential candidate, criticized the agreement and said to reporters, “I think the president, unfortunately, is receiving bad advice.”

Trump’s ‘Operation Epic Fury’ has angered wings of his movement

The conflict, which has stretched into its fourth month, has cleaved Trump’s broad Make America Great Again coalition and angered both those who favored a harder line against Iran and those drawn to Trump’s “America First” foreign policy underscored by a message of “no new wars.”

Critics, including Republicans, have already started pointing fingers in Vance’s direction, questioning whether the deal resembles the 2015 nuclear agreement struck by Democratic President Barack Obama and whether this new agreement achieves Trump’s stated objectives for launching the war.

Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, a Trump ally and Iran hawk, had been skeptical of the agreement and referred to Vance on social media as “the architect of the deal.”

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After the agreement was released, Graham issued a tepid statement of support, saying, “Whether or not the United States can reach an acceptable, verifiable deal with Iran regarding its nuclear program and other issues is yet to be determined, but I see little downside to trying.”

Ben Domenech, The Daily Wire’s opinion editor, said on Fox News that everything he was hearing about the deal “seems bad” and appeared to cast blame on Vance by alluding to his first book, “Hillbilly Elegy.”

“Are we going to backslide into being some kind of ‘hillbilly Obama’ kind of GOP?” Domenech said.

GOP allies say Vance can navigate the politics

The Trump administration has not offered formal briefings to Congress on the details of the memorandum, but Vance has quietly started doing outreach to some Republican senators on Capitol Hill.

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Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, a close ally of Vance’s, said the vice president would be able to assuage even critics within his own party who are skeptical of the deal because “JD is just the president’s messenger, and the president’s going to prove them all wrong.”

Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., said the deal “certainly adds to the national security and geopolitical chops” of Vance, who spent two years as a U.S. senator for Ohio before ascending to the vice presidency.

But Cramer acknowledged the risks if the agreement goes awry.

“I guess the nice thing is, if you’re not the No. 1 person, you can take credit and avoid risk, avoid the criticism, but probably not so easily,” Cramer said.

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Vance argues Iran is not a quagmire like the Iraq war

In interviews this week, Vance has sought to speak directly to the skeptics in his party, a preview of the difficult explanations he may be pressed to make as a candidate on the war.

On Megyn Kelly’s show, the vice president said the critics “believe Iranian propaganda” about the deal. But he acknowledged some of the frustrations on the hawkish right while trying to reassure the anti-interventionists that the Iran conflict isn’t the war in Iraq, where he served as a Marine.

“We were never going to get the quagmire that a lot of people were worrying about because Donald Trump is just not George W. Bush,” he said.

Democrats have stressed that even as Vance becomes the face of the Iran deal, the fate of any administration official who harbors presidential aspirations — particularly hawkish Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has largely been quiet in the agreement’s final phases — will be tied to its outcome.

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“I think any member of this administration is going to rise or fall on the basis of the Iran war and the handling of the economy, and I don’t think there are exceptions,” said Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii.

___

Associated Press writer Will Weissert contributed to this report.

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What makes the ideal digital icon? A psychologist explains

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What makes the ideal digital icon? A psychologist explains

Digital icons are everywhere – and usually, we interpret these visual symbols in the blink of an eye. Who today doesn’t know that a wastebasket means “delete” and a magnifying glass means “search”?

Yet icons’ meanings can be deeply shaped by culture, experience and technological history. So what seems obvious to one person may be confusing to another.

They were originally designed to make computers look friendlier and less intimidating to the few people who had access to them. For example, the icons below first appeared in 1975 in the Pygmalion visual programming system.

Years later, they attained much wider visibility thanks to the Xerox Star 8010, a pioneering office computer that introduced many graphic interface concepts that are still used today.

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The Xerox 8010 Star’s icons.
stardock.com

Research my colleagues and I conducted examines how people perceive, understand and evaluate digital icons – including which visual characteristics make icons easier to learn and use. Pygmalion’s pioneering icons worked because they relied on existing knowledge of the office world.

This meant they reduced cognitive effort by relying on recognition rather than recall. The icons looked like the physical objects they were representing – and critically, objects the computer’s users were already familiar with.

Five secrets of a good icon

The designer Susan Kare, creator of many of the original Macintosh icons, said a good icon should either be instantly recognisable or so easy to remember that a user only needs to learn it once.

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To Kare, designing icons was about solving “the little puzzle of making an image fit a metaphor”. More than 40 years later, that challenge remains.

Research, including work by my colleagues and me, suggests the most successful icons tend to share key characteristics that guide us from seeing to understanding almost instantaneously. Here are five of them.

1. They depict things we already know

Early computer icons worked because they borrowed from the office world that people already knew: folders, bins, documents, calculators, floppy disks. Psychologists refer to those as “concrete” icons because people to use their knowledge of the everyday world to interpret them.

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However, only a limited number of functions can be represented as identifiable objects, and getting a close fit between pictures and functions is not always easy. The more complex the meaning becomes, the harder it is to design concrete icons.

To test this, can you guess the meaning of these four icons? (Answers at the end of the article.)

Alt text

Icon credits:
Freepik/Flaticon; Kartini 1/The Noun Project; Elzicon/Flaticon; IconPai/The Noun Project.

2. They mean what we think they mean

Psychologists talk about “semantic distance” – how closely an image matches its intended meaning. An abstract symbol for “privacy settings” or “cloud syncing” has a much larger semantic distance than using a bin to mean “delete”.

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As digital functions become more complex, designing icons that communicate their meaning quickly becomes increasingly difficult.

3. They feel familiar

Another important feature of successful icons is consistency of use over time – which leads to familiarity. The icons shown below are widely used even though the objects depicted are no longer so widely in use. This highlights the point that icons are partly informative signs and partly shared learned conventions, whose success is based on collective familiarity.

Take the floppy disk “save” icon (below left). Younger users recognise the meaning without ever having seen the physical object that the icon originally represented. The same is true of traditional telephone handsets and perhaps even envelopes (now widely used to denote “email”). While the objects have been superseded, the icons remain.

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Alt text


Icon credits: Yogi Aprelliyanto/Flaticon

4. They look good

A well-designed object can have a positive effect on our behaviour – and the digital world is no different. Well-designed icons are more likely to attract downloads, help us perform tasks more efficiently, and learn better and faster. They even make digital environments feel more pleasant to use.

Think of the difference between an app icon that feels cluttered and amateurish and one that looks clean, balanced and professional. Even before we know what the app does, the icon’s design can influence expectations of how well the app will work.

5. They are tested with real users

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Although icons and symbols are on the rise as a global visual language, it’s important not simply to assume that icons work globally – and to understand what makes a good digital icon across languages, cultures, ages and digital experiences.

This is why the International Standards Organisation (ISO 9186) demands comprehensibility testing – because symbols should be understood without explanatory text whenever possible.

A bridge between perception and meaning

As we spend more of our lives in digitally mediated environments, icons do two jobs simultaneously. They help us interact with technology more efficiently, and shape how we feel about the experience.

A digital icon is not simply a small picture. It is a bridge between perception and meaning. The best icons make interfaces feel less intimidating, more intuitive and more approachable – creating a global visual language that crosses barriers of language and culture.

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In other words, good icons do more than help us find our way around a digital world. They help make that world feel understandable, welcoming and human.

Icon quiz answers: 1. cloud syncing; 2. privacy settings; 3. algorithmic recommendations; 4. generative AI.

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Bid for ‘permission in Principle’ for Blackrod houses vote

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Bid for 'permission in Principle' for Blackrod houses vote

The proposal is seeking permission in principle to build the two new houses on land off Little Scotland in Blackrod.

According to a Bolton Council planning report, the land is on the green belt, but meets the definition of “grey belt”, meaning previously developed land.

The report said: “The Green Belt assessment states that the Green Belt parcel in which the application site is located makes a strong contribution to this purpose, as the parcel plays an essential role in preventing the merging or erosion of the visual and physical gap between settlements of Blackrod and Horwich in particular as well as Aspull and Westhoughton.

“The parcel also plays a role in preventing the merger of Blackrod and Adlington to the north.”

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The bid is seeking permission in principle to build two houses (Image: Bolton Council)

But the report said that the site represented only a small gap between Blackrod and Aspull.

As many as 35 letters of objection from 30 households were received about the plans raising concerns about biodiversity, ecology, infrastructure and the loss of green belt land.

They also said they were concerned the new houses, if they came to be built, would be out of keeping with the character of the area.

Cllr Peter Wright, of Horwich South and Blackrod, asked that the bid be heard by Bolton Council’s planning committee raising concerns about the use of green belt land.

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He also said there could be traffic issues on a narrow road.

Blackrod Town Council also objected to the plan saying that the land has previously been used for grazing horses.

But the report put before Bolton Council recommended that permission in principle be approved.

It said: “Inappropriate development is, by definition, harmful to the green belt and should not be approved except in very special circumstances.

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“‘Very special circumstances’ will not exist unless the potential harm to the green belt by reason of inappropriateness, and any other harm resulting from the proposal, is clearly outweighed by other considerations.”

Bolton Council’s planning committee is expected to meet to consider the plans at town hall on Thursday June 18.

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Drug smuggler jailed after collecting drugs from airport

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Drug smuggler jailed after collecting drugs from airport

Dale Hosker, 50, from Bury, appeared before Bolton Crown Court following an investigation by the National Crime Agency into two organised crime groups collecting the drugs.

The dog breeder is the last offender from the group to be jailed.

Last month, his partner, from Walkden, Dale Creen, 35, was jailed for 11 years along with two men from a different organised crime group – Albanians Elton Hallaci and Artur Iseberi, who were respectively sentenced to 21 years and seven months and 18 years.

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Last year, seven US citizens who acted as the couriers were jailed for collecting the cocaine at Manchester Airport and transferring it to Hallaci, 32, and Iseberi, 27, of Liverpool, and Hosker and Creen.

The Americans flew into Manchester from the United States on 11 May 2024 without any luggage and waited until bags containing cocaine arrived from Cancun, Mexico.

Eight suitcases arrived at the airport and the couriers followed text message instructions from a US offender called ‘Nate’ to collect specific suitcases containing hundreds of kilograms of the Class A drug before transferring it to the four men who were waiting at nearby locations.

After collecting the suitcases from the carousels, they were wheeled outside and caught taxis to a nearby hotel, where they passed two to Hosker and five to Hallaci and Iseberi.

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However, one of the couriers left a case behind, which Border Force officers opened and discovered 20 one-kilogram blocks of cocaine.

The NCA investigation showed that on that day, Hosker collected 40kg of cocaine and the Albanians collected 100kg.

A few weeks later, on May 31, 266kg of high-purity cocaine with a street value of around £24m was smuggled into the airport.

Despite seven couriers being sent to collect them, the drugs were seized, and only one courier was successful and directed to a Bury address to hand over the 20 kg to Creen.

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The other suitcases were seized, each contained between 22 and 24 blocks of cocaine and a tracking device.

Hallaci, Iseberi, Hosker and Creen were arrested on 17 June 2025 by NCA officers.

Jon Hughes, NCA Branch Commander, said: “The Class A drugs trade is inextricably bound up with extreme violence which can have devastating consequences, we have seen entirely innocent victims caught in the cross-fire of feuding drugs gangs.

“But offenders like Hosker are driven by greed and don’t care about the trail of misery and harm from source countries in South America to the streets of our towns and cities.

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“The NCA works with partners at home and abroad to protect the public from the threat of Class A drugs.”

Evidence against them was damning.

The offenders were captured on CCTV at Manchester Airport on the days of the importations. And one courier took a photograph of Hosker loading cocaine-filled suitcases into his car following the 11 May handover.

Inside Hallaci’s home, officers found keys to a Jaguar car parked outside.

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It had a professionally fitted hidden compartment between the rear seats and the boot used for smuggling drugs.

Officers also discovered a treasure trove of notepads with detailed ledgers of cocaine importations. They featured references to handovers that both Hallaci and Iseberi were involved in on 11 May.

The notebooks, which were written in Albanian and contained the fingerprints of Hallaci and Iseberi, indicated how the drugs would be divvied up, with 30kg going to Bradford, 35kg going to London, 8kg to Birmingham.

As part of the investigation, NCA investigators also seized two other Jaguar cars belonging to the Albanian OCG, which were fitted with after-market hides.

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On the day the offenders were arrested, Iseberi tried to escape along the roof of his home, and an axe, a knife and a machete were uncovered in Creen’s bedroom.

Hallaci, Iseberi and Hosker pleaded guilty to smuggling cocaine and possession of cocaine with intent to supply.

Creen was convicted by a jury of possession of cocaine with intent to supply but acquitted of smuggling cocaine.

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Which shows are getting scrapped as part of the BBC’s cuts?

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Daily Mirror

Need to know

A number of high profile shows have been affected after the new director-general announced cuts

The BBC announced new cuts(Image: Mike Kemp/In Pictures via Getty Images)

Everything you need to know about the BBC’s £80 million cuts including Breakfast shake-up

  • The new director-general of the BBC, Matt Brittin, has announced plans to cut £80 million from programming on TV, radio and news, as part of huge cuts across the corporation. That’s not all, as Licence Fee payers will also notice a reduction in services and choices as part of the £40 million-a-year cuts.
  • The former Google executive unveiled his plans in a staff email on Wednesday (June 17), where he said that the BBC must be “simpler and faster” going forward and must try to avoid duplication.
  • Amongst the confirmed changes announced, BBC Breakfast will no longer air on Sunday mornings from September, whilst the production teams making Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg and Newsnight will merge. Radio 4’s The World Tonight will also end from September, and the number of permanent presenters on Today will be cut from five to four, with a single anchor on the show on Saturdays, and World Tonight is being replaced by Newshour.
  • Several other Radio 4 programmes will also end during the next year, including the Midnight News, Money Box Live, AntiSocial, The Law Show, Crossing Continents, On the World Service, The Inquiry, The Conversation and The Fifth Floor.
  • Between 1,800 and 2,000 roles are expected to go across the British broadcaster in the coming months, including 550 jobs in the BBC’s news and nations divisions.
  • In the email to staff, Brittin explained that there could also be a reduction in dramas going forward, as they are “expensive” for the BBC to make.

READ THE FULL STORY: BBC Breakfast shake-up and shows scrapped as part of £80m cuts

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‘Complex’ Wisbech investigation explored in Channel 4’s ‘best ever’ documentary

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Cambridgeshire Live

24 Hours in Police Custody is back on Channel 4 tonight with a gripping episode following Cambridgeshire Police

A groundbreaking Channel 4 documentary series is returning to television screens with another gripping instalment – and audiences won’t have to wait much longer.

24 Hours in Police Custody has established itself as a viewer favourite throughout the years, immersing audiences in authentic investigations within a local constabulary. Since launching in 2014, devotees of the programme keenly anticipate fresh episodes as they track Bedfordshire and Cambridge Police force working against time.

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Chronicling cases from the moment a distressing 999 call is received, through to a possible court appearance, officers are shown uncovering shocking and harrowing truths while examining serious and major offences that shake a community.

From homicide and sexual violence to drug networks, the award-winning series doesn’t hold back from the intense realities confronting detectives. Another hard-hitting episode is scheduled to broadcast this evening (June 18) at 9pm on Channel 4, which audiences won’t want to miss.

Entitled The No Body Murder, this evening’s episode is a repeat that draws viewers into a complicated investigation when one man vanished, reports Wales Online.

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A synopsis reads: “Cambridgeshire Police have a big problem: a murder hunt without a body. A complex search for clues takes them into the woods and across Europe, and features a mysterious post on Facebook.”

Writing on Facebook this week, the Policing Fenland page stated: “When a Wisbech man went missing in 2015 a murder investigation was launched – but it was far from straightforward.

“On Thursday (18 June) at 9pm Channel 4 will show a repeat of 24 Hours in Police Custody ‘the no body murder’.

“The investigation involved some unbelievable revelations along the way and uncovered suspected exploitation and modern slavery. We’re working hard to tackle modern slavery, but we need your help. Please know the signs to look out for and report any concerns.”

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One commenter responded: “Seen this programme, truly a staggering case with an ending nobody could have predicted. If you haven’t seen it dont Google what happened, its mind blowing.”

24 Hours in Police Custody continues to attract glowing reviews, with viewers declaring it the “best” programme of its type on television.

On IMDb, one viewer previously commented: “This is a rare reality show that makes all others look like bad tv.”

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Another noted: “It’s true crime, at its most honest and also most horrific; I like to believe in the basic good of human nature, but these episodes tell some pretty grim stories, and also show quite how hard it can be to secure a conviction.”

A third remarked: “Gripping, unpredictable, shocking. A fantastic insight into the Police in Beds/Cambs. Unmissable TV.”

Earlier instalments of the programme have left audiences appalled, with episodes also available to watch via Channel 4’s streaming platform. One viewer took to social media to write: “I saw both parts of this investigation and was sickened beyond belief.”

24 Hours in Police Custody returns to Channel 4 tonight at 9pm

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Channel 4’s 24 Hours in Police Custody returns with chilling episode tonight

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Wales Online

The landmark documentary will return to television screens tonight with a chilling instalment

A landmark Channel 4 documentary will return to screens with yet another chilling episode – and viewers don’t have long to wait.

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24 Hours in Police Custody has become a firm favourite over the years, plunging viewers into real life investigations within a local police force. Since its release in 2014, fans of the show eagerly await new instalments as they follow Bedfordshire and Cambridge Police force in a race against the clock.

Following a case from the minute a harrowing 999 call is made, right through to a potential court visit, detectives are seen uncovering horrific and brutal truths as they investigate serious and major crimes that rock a community.

From murder and sexual assault to drug gangs, the award winning programme does not shy away from the tense realities faced by detectives. Another brutal episode is set to air tonight (June 18) at 9pm on Channel 4, which viewers will not want to miss.

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Titled The No Body Murder, tonight’s instalment is a repeat episode that takes viewers into a complex investigation when one man disappeared from his home.

Ricardas Puisys vanished from his home back in 2015, but a murder investigation was launched after police suspected foul play. But with no body, detectives were stunned to uncover unbelievable revelations.

A synopsis reads: “Cambridgeshire Police have a big problem: a murder hunt without a body. A complex search for clues takes them into the woods and across Europe, and features a mysterious post on Facebook.”

Taking to Facebook this week, the Policing Fenland page wrote: “When a Wisbech man went missing in 2015 a murder investigation was launched – but it was far from straightforward.

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“On Thursday (18 June) at 9pm Channel 4 will show a repeat of 24 Hours in Police Custody ‘the no body murder’.

“The investigation involved some unbelievable revelations along the way and uncovered suspected exploitation and modern slavery. We’re working hard to tackle modern slavery, but we need your help. Please know the signs to look out for and report any concerns.”

One person replied: “Seen this programme, truly a staggering case with an ending nobody could have predicted. If you haven’t seen it dont Google what happened, its mind blowing.”

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24 Hours in Police Custody continues to bring in rave reviews, with fans saying it is the “best” show of its kind on TV.

Over on IMD, one person previously said: “This is a rare reality show that makes all others look like bad tv.”

Another added: “It’s true crime, at its most honest and also most horrific; I like to believe in the basic good of human nature, but these episodes tell some pretty grim stories, and also show quite how hard it can be to secure a conviction.”

A third echoed: “Gripping, unpredictable, shocking. A fantastic insight into the Police in Beds/Cambs. Unmissable TV.”

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Previous episodes of the show have left viewers disgusted, as they are also available to stream on Channel 4 online. One viewer wrote on social media: “I saw both parts of this investigation and was sickened beyond belief.”

Another penned: “That was GRIM #24hoursinpolicecustody.”

24 Hours in Police Custody returns to Channel 4 tonight at 9pm

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Clarkson’s Farm’s Kaleb Cooper speaks out on Jeremy Clarkson cancer diagnosis shock

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Manchester Evening News

The TV star revealed that he’s battling an aggressive form of the disease during the final episodes of his Prime Video series

Jeremy Clarkson is said to be in “spirits are high” despite his cancer diagnosis. The 66-year-old revealed that he’s battling an aggressive form of the disease during the final episodes of his Prime Video series, Clarkson’s Farm.

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In the scenes, Jeremy was heard telling farm manager Kaleb Cooper and farmhand Charlie Ireland that he had been diagnosed with cancer in May during discussions about harvest planning. The TV presenter said he expected to be “fine” but would be out of action “for a while”.

A stunned Kaleb replies: “No, you haven’t. Where?” Jeremy replied: “Where it is is of no concern of anybody. I’ve known since May. I had a medical, you remember back in May.

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“I disappeared off the other week and I had a biopsy and it is cancer and it’s aggressive, but it’s really early so the treatment will be, you know. I was praying we could get the harvest done and then I could go and get some treatment but it’s going to be slap bang in the middle.”

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He later reveals that the cancer was in his prostate and that he had undergone a procedure to remove part of it. “The prostate, 10 per cent of it’s dead,” he said. “The 10 per cent where the cancer is.”

Speaking from a hospital bed at the end of the season finale, the former Top Gear host revealed he had experienced complications during treatment. “We started season five with me in a hospital bed, and here we are at the end of season five, and I’m back in a hospital bed,” he said.

Jeremy was referring to being rushed to the hospital in 2024 after suffering chest pains. At the time, doctors found that one of his arteries was “completely blocked”. It’s said Jeremy had been “days from death”.

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Despite the shock of the news, Kaleb, his Clarkson’s Farm co-star, has revealed that Jeremy is “good” amid his health struggles. Speaking to the Daily Mail, Jeremy shared: “He is good. The spirits are high, which is good.

“If anything like this happens to any of your friends and you just said to my best mate, you’ve gotta be supported through that whole journey. And that’s where I’ve been, I’ve been right by his side and his spirits are really good, so thank you.”

Kaleb went on to praise Jeremy for the determination he’s shown since receiving his diagnosis. The TV star and farmer said: “He’s strong-minded, he’s got a strong mind on him, which is good. And the message about catching anything early is quite important.

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“That’s the main thing, but you’ve gotta keep checking, you know what I mean, it’s all these things, you know, people can sit there and say I’m busy, busy, busy. But actually, sometimes you’ve gotta go I’m gonna just have to check and see if I’m OK.”

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Makerfield by-election LIVE as Andy Burnham issues message after polls open in Wigan

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Manchester Evening News

For weeks, Restore has sparked curiosity. The party has attempted to establish itself as a challenger to Reform UK in one of the most closely watched by-elections of the year.

In Makerfield, Rupert Lowe’s party is polling third at around five per cent. Quite remarkable for a party that only established itself in June 2025 and officially registered as a national political party on March 20 this year.

Despite the growing attention on Restore, the party’s candidate has – it seemed – remained largely out of sight.

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The Manchester Evening News first contacted Restore on May 19, a day after local businesswoman Rebecca Shepherd was announced as the party’s candidate, inviting her to take part in a hustings event and requesting an interview.

Since then, there has been a lot of back and forth.

The M.E.N was unable to attend a Restore campaign event at Bryn Community Centre on May 21, but contacted the party several times to say the paper was still interested in future events and interviews.

Until today – Wednesday, June 17 – we have continued to seek an interview with candidate Ms Shepherd.

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Earlier this week, many voters said they hadn’t seen her. Other media organisations are understood to have struggled to speak to Ms Shepherd.

Read our full story on the search for Restore’s candidate HERE.

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Major Peterborough road closed after crash as police say ‘choose alternative route’

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Cambridgeshire Live

The crash reportedly involved a lorry and a car

A major city road is closed after a crash on Thursday morning (June 18). The A1139 in Peterborough has been closed since around 3am after a crash.

Traffic monitoring site Inrix said: “A1139 Fletton Parkway Eastbound closed, queueing traffic due to emergency repairs and earlier accident, a lorry and a car involved at Goldhay Way. Congestion to Orton Parkway.”

A Cambridgeshire Police spokesperson said: “Please be aware that the Fletton Parkway Eastbound at Orton Goldhay is currently closed due to a collision. Please choose an alternative route.”

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A diversion via the roundabout is in place. Emergency services have been contacted for more information.

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