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NewsBeat

‘Harry never wanted to be estranged but he was madly in love. Now the veil is lifting’: Inside plan to reverse Megxit as friends tell ALISON BOSHOFF about communication between Harry and William… and why the Sussexes’ American dream is over

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Prince Harry is said to have agreed ‘in a heartbeat’ to conditions of the reconciliation amid his visit to the UK last week

The drama before the ‘low-key family meeting’ was quite the media whirlwind.

But since Prince Harry, his wife Meghan and their children Archie, seven, and Lilibet, five, met the King and Queen for tea at Highgrove last Friday, all has been silent.

Just as I revealed in these pages three weeks ago, the conditions of the reconciliation were that there were to be no cameras in the room, no briefings and no Instagram posts about jam or anything else.

To these strictures, an apparently humbled Harry agreed ‘in a heartbeat’ and he has been as good as his word.

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As a friend of his says: ‘Harry was never going to let the kids down, they were so invested in the trip.

‘They FaceTime with Charles all the time, so they already have a relationship but they were so excited to finally come. It was their first proper chance to meet.’

Meghan, 44, had not visited the UK since the Queen’s funeral in September 2022. The children meanwhile had not been in the UK since the Platinum Jubilee in June that year.

Queen Camilla, described by Harry as ‘dangerous’ and a ‘villain’ who left ‘bodies in the street’ in a television interview to promote Spare just three years ago, sat out his previous (brief) meeting with the King in February 2024. This time, significantly, she was also there.

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However, this week People magazine – long understood to be the unofficial Sussex mouthpiece – reported that there was actually ‘a lot of sadness’ over how the week unfolded.

Prince Harry is said to have agreed ‘in a heartbeat’ to conditions of the reconciliation amid his visit to the UK last week 

A friend of Harry's said that he was ‘never going to let the kids down’ as ‘they were so invested in the trip’ to see their grandfather, King Charles

A friend of Harry’s said that he was ‘never going to let the kids down’ as ‘they were so invested in the trip’ to see their grandfather, King Charles

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Meghan was upset not to be able to be by her husband’s side in public and the fact that the chaos over their security arrangements was hashed out in public left her feeling ‘humiliated’.

But in the end the most important objective was achieved and those close to the Prince say that this significant step towards making peace with his father was actually all that mattered.

He was said to feel ‘buoyed’ and ‘energised’ after the meeting and certainly was in high spirits the following day fooling around with water bombs and goat yoga at Maxstoke Castle, Warwickshire, for the Scotty’s Little Soldiers charity, which supports bereaved military children.

But then I can reveal what was at stake was more than simply a grandfather, who has not been in the best of health, spending time with his grandchildren or even healing the wounds caused by Oprah, Spare, Harry & Meghan on Netflix, the court actions against the Home Office and all the rest of it – the Sussexes are seeking to reverse Megxit.

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It seems that a return to the UK is being contemplated in some form and that the couple’s holiday home in Portugal will be used as a staging post back to Britain.

I’m told there are two key reasons for this.

A friend of Prince Harry says: ‘There is definitely a feeling in his camp that he has started to feel a bit unwelcome in America.

‘That has been an increasing and significant shift in sentiment, a feeling that the American dream might not be all that it was cracked up to be.

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‘I am told that this is coming from Meghan as well as from him. I hear that Meghan is all for rekindling with and reconnecting with Harry’s English side. She is fully behind it.’

Their dwindling star power and the end of their deals with Spotify and Netflix must surely play a part, as must Meghan’s fading popularity among the supporters, like Ted Sarandos of Netflix, who had previously been her cheerleaders.

The source adds: ‘England is where Harry’s heart has always lain. It is no secret that they went to the States to try and seek their fortune, to try to capitalise on his fame and his royalty to some degree.

‘They have had successes. A $100million Netflix deal is not nothing.

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‘But that American dream is cooling and she feels an outcast status as well.

‘She feels like she is trying to push fresh thoughts and projects but it is not easy. So maybe enough water has now passed under the bridge here for some form of a return.’

That’s not a permanent or imminent return, but to hear it being mooted still feels like a bombshell.

Another source, who is less sympathetic to the Sussexes, says they suspect a different kind of cooling may lie behind the manoeuvres.

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The source said: ‘I don’t think he’s ever wanted to be estranged from his family. I think when he was madly in love with Meghan he could be blind enough to choose her. Now things are different, and the veil is lifting.’

Harry was said to feel ‘buoyed’ and ‘energised’ and was in high spirits after fooling around with goat yoga at Maxstoke Castle, Warwickshire, for the Scotty’s Little Soldiers charity

Harry was said to feel ‘buoyed’ and ‘energised’ and was in high spirits after fooling around with goat yoga at Maxstoke Castle, Warwickshire, for the Scotty’s Little Soldiers charity

Travelling to the UK is going to be made easier by the Sussexes’ purchase of a home in Portugal, perhaps allowing Harry and Meghan to be ‘half in and half out’

Travelling to the UK is going to be made easier by the Sussexes’ purchase of a home in Portugal, perhaps allowing Harry and Meghan to be ‘half in and half out’

Prince Harry still sees himself as a ‘working royal’, but there’s a growing acceptance by the Palace that he and Meghan will have to be busy commercially if they are to fund their expensive life, and expensive private security, in Montecito.

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The couple want to carry on making money in the US and elsewhere, but to be treated as ‘working royals’ when in the UK.

The situation now is that Harry earns money from sustainable travel company Travalyst and business coaching firm BetterUp, and is trying to make money from the Archewell production company, while Meghan has her lifestyle company As Ever and gets commission from plugging outfits she has worn on an e-commerce platform. But Harry is also undertaking charity work with his patronages on UK soil and being welcomed by the King in his home.

It is a short hop from that reality to Harry and his family staying in a royal palace when he is next in the UK.

And if that protocol is established, which Harry apparently feels sure can happen next time, then he looks as ‘half in and half out’ – precisely what the late Queen barred the couple from doing – as you can imagine.

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What we do know is that Harry will be back in September for another charity event.

There is an expectation that there will be another meeting with the King, and that he will accept an offer to stay at Buckingham Palace – in good time, this time.

(On this visit he declared that he had accepted the offer to stay at Buckingham Palace but it then transpired that he had left it too late, and the offer had been withdrawn because it didn’t give staff enough notice.)

Next summer, he will be in Birmingham for all ten days of the Invictus Games and the plan is that Meghan will come with him for the whole thing. ‘If she is in the UK then they will want to bring the children too,’ says the friend.

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If it is possible, I’m told he would like the children to see what he does and experience some of the atmosphere of the games, which are very close to his heart. Where might they stay? Highgrove would make perfect sense, geographically.

The view from the Palace side, as told to the Sunday Times, was that the King ‘will never shut the door on the possibility of spending time with his family because despite all the trouble, blood is blood’.

Crucially, this travelling to the UK is going to be made easier by the Sussexes’ purchase of a home in Portugal.

As revealed in October 2024 by Richard Eden in this newspaper, the home on a private estate in Alentejo is near to one owned by Princess Eugenie and her husband Jack Brooksbank.

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A source says: ‘They had a house built in Portugal for the kids to be close to their royal side in case they want to participate. It’s in a private part, I’m not sure it’s finished yet. Meghan was having Soho House decorate it.’

Harry’s friend says: ‘The house in Portugal is a foot on the right side of the pond and I believe that they spent time there after being in the UK last week and before it as well. It’s striking distance for them to get to London.

‘Harry has no desire to be Eurotrash, he is very proudly British and English and wants to be in England but Portugal could be a kind of a stepping stone for a couple of years.’

The issue which vexed last week’s visit was security. Harry felt that the provision, unchanged for the past five years, wasn’t good enough.

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He wanted RAVEC, the Home Office committee, to reassess the security he and his family were given, and he wanted his own private security to receive intelligence from the security services.

From the Palace side, the King has reportedly said he ‘will never shut the door on the possibility of spending time with his family because despite all the trouble, blood is blood’

From the Palace side, the King has reportedly said he ‘will never shut the door on the possibility of spending time with his family because despite all the trouble, blood is blood’

What remains unresolved is the schism between Harry and his brother Prince William – but Harry's friends claim the two men ‘do communicate’

What remains unresolved is the schism between Harry and his brother Prince William – but Harry’s friends claim the two men ‘do communicate’

According to briefings from Team Sussex, he believed this was going to happen but then, after announcing that he, Meghan and the children were coming to the UK together it became apparent that the security situation was unchanged. Within 24 hours, his PR team said that an ‘upset’ Prince had to reconsider everything in the light of their safety.

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A few days on, a briefing document from his security team which said there were a number of credible terrorist threats to his safety somehow found its way to ITN News, to add to the pressure. Still nothing changed.

Meghan didn’t go to the Invictus ‘One Year To Go’ event, nor was she at his side for any public engagements. It felt like an ugly stalemate.

But she and the children still travelled privately to Highgrove, and are thought to have then gone on to Althorp to be hosted by Harry’s uncle, Earl Spencer, and pay a visit to his mother’s grave on the estate.

A friend says that despite appearances, and without going into operational details, security actually was ‘improved’ this time for the visit.

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‘He would have liked full security from the start but that was not on the table. But what was on the table was a considerable upping of what was there previously. For that reason the visit was very much better and everything is in a better place. It is still baby steps, but there is reason to hope going forward.’

The Prince apparently believes his security will continue to improve and after the shocking murder of former MP Ann Widdecombe – that seems to be a fair assumption.

There’s no prospect of any further legal action from him against the Home Office – that legal action which had put his father in such a difficult position because he would not and could not intervene and which Harry lost on appeal last May. Indeed, I am told: ‘There are no more fights to come. That era has closed.’

The colossal defeat against Associated Newspapers, the publishers of the Daily Mail, over wild allegations of bugging and hacking will, according to friends, be the very last time the Prince comes to court. ‘That’s it now, he is putting down his fists,’ says the friend.

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The loss was ‘absolutely a no-go area for discussion’ during his visit.

The judgment was handed down on Tuesday last week, as Harry prepared to give a speech.

A friend says: ‘He was deeply disappointed but also somewhat embarrassed. He ended up with significant egg on his face.

‘The “CG” revelations [the release of a host of friendly messages in court between him and Mail on Sunday journalist Charlotte Griffiths] was a very embarrassing moment for him. The follow up piece in the Daily Mail last week [by Charlotte detailing their friendship] was mortifying, too.

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‘It was a disaster which didn’t need to happen. He is shutting up about it – silence, silence silence now.’

First, though, he released an intemperate statement attacking the High Court Judge, Justice Nicklin, and saying the judgment was an ‘obvious whitewash’.

According to a well-sourced report in the Sunday Times last weekend, it caused astonishment in Palace circles.

‘There were jaws on the floor with a statement attacking not just a High Court judge but the entire judicial system that acts in the King’s name. There is profound upset constitutionally about that attack,’ a source said.

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However, if he chooses to move on and be silent, there can surely only be relief for the Palace.

What remains unresolved is the schism between Harry and his brother Prince William, the heir to his spare.

Friends of Harry claim the two men ‘do communicate’ and say: ‘It would have been the most amazing signal to everybody if William had managed to be at Highgrove.’

That seems the faintest of prospects but Harry must be serious indeed about reconciliation to even talk about aiming for this outcome. As one Sussex source observes: ‘Everyone knows their future is not in his dad’s hands – it’s in his brother’s.’

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Arthur’s Seat fire live: Emergency services battle huge blaze at iconic UK city cite

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Daily Mirror

A statement from the Scottish Fire and Rescue Service reads: “We are currently attending a fire in the open at Arthur’s Seat in Edinburgh.

“Four fire appliances are at the scene. We were alerted at 6.38pm on Sunday, 19 July.

“There is no need to call Operations Control regarding this incident.”

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Burst water pipe in Leeman Road – low pressure and flooding

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Burst water pipe in Leeman Road - low pressure and flooding

Reports are coming in of a burst pipe in Leeman Road this evening (July 19).


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People across Acomb and Holgate are reporting low water pressure and some homes appear to have been left without water.

North Yorkshire Police are also at the scene and have asked the public to avoid the area.

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A spokesperson for the force said: “Avoid Salisbury Road (off Water End) due to water in the road

“There is a significant flood affecting Salisbury Road, Salisbury Terrace and surrounding roads.

Burst water main in Leeman Road, York (Image: Daniel Innes)

“We are at the scene now, assisting residents, alongside Yorkshire Water and North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service.

“Roads are impassable and closed. Please avoid the area and find alternative routes for your journeys.”

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Yorkshire Water have been contacted for comment – once we receive their reply, we will update this story.

More to follow.

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why clear communication matters as testing expands

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why clear communication matters as testing expands

“I think you always believe it’s never going to happen to me.” That is how one parent described learning that their newborn baby had been identified as being at possible risk of a rare genetic condition through routine newborn screening.

Known as the newborn blood spot test, or heel prick test, this involves taking a small blood sample from a baby’s heel to check whether they may have one of several rare but serious conditions. These are conditions where early treatment can make a major difference.

The test has transformed thousands of children’s lives by identifying serious, treatable conditions before symptoms appear.

But screening also brings challenges. The UK National Screening Committee recommends screening only when the benefits outweigh possible harms, including false alarms, missed cases, treatment that is not needed, uncertain findings and anxiety.

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For most families, screening happens during the overwhelming first days of caring for a newborn. Pregnancy scans and routine tests may not have identified any concerns. Research suggests it is not always clear to parents that this screening is designed to identify rare conditions in babies who appear completely healthy.

This is because screening reverses the usual route to finding out that something may be wrong. Typically, symptoms appear first and parents seek medical advice. With newborn screening, the possibility of a serious condition may be raised before symptoms appear. This can make the result feel, as one parent described it, “a complete bolt from the blue”.

Most parents have no family history of the condition identified. They simply do not imagine their baby could be affected. The routine nature of screening can also mask this possibility – it can seem like something “everyone does” for reassurance, rather than something that could bring life-changing news.

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Screening is only the start

Many parents expect screening to give simple yes-or-no answers: either everything is normal, or their baby definitely has a condition. In reality, screening is more complex.

A negative result means the condition is not suspected – although in rare cases, this can turn out to be false. A positive result means the baby may have the condition, and further tests are needed.

Screening is the start of a process, rather than a definitive answer. But when parents are told their baby has a positive screening result, they may hear it as a diagnosis, even though further tests are often needed.

Parents can experience intense distress after receiving a positive newborn screening result. Our research has shown that shock, disbelief, denial and anger are common.

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The first conversation with healthcare professionals can shape how parents understand what is happening. Studies suggest that who communicates screening results, how they do it, and where the conversation takes place can all strongly influence parents’ early response. For some families, it marks the beginning of a long-term relationship with specialist healthcare teams.

Research we have conducted with parents points to several ways this experience can be improved. Where possible, parents prefer to receive the information together, so both hear the same information at the same time and neither has to relay complex news.

Parents also value hearing from healthcare professionals with expertise in the suspected condition. Although non-specialist clinicians may sometimes be able to deliver results faster, our recent research on attitudes to newborn screening for spinal muscular atrophy found that speaking with someone who can answer immediate questions, explain what happens next and acknowledge uncertainty can help reduce anxiety.

Clinicians, meanwhile, need to give parents enough information to help them understand the result and make decisions, without overwhelming families who are already distressed. Structured approaches to communicating screening results can help clinicians strike this balance.

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Spinal muscular atrophy

These communication challenges are becoming more urgent as newborn screening expands. We will explore them further in a new evaluation study focusing on newborn screening for spinal muscular atrophy, known as SMA, in England.

SMA is a rare genetic condition that causes progressive muscle weakness. It affects the nerves that control movement, so babies and children can have difficulty moving, swallowing and breathing. Its most severe infant form, type 1 SMA, was historically often fatal before the age of two without treatment. Today, newer treatments are dramatically improving prospects, especially when started early.

Our study will explore how much information parents want about their child’s screening result, when they want to receive it, and who they would prefer to hear it from. This will help shape how results are communicated if screening is expanded.

Newborn screening remains a vital public health programme, with strong support from parents and healthcare professionals. As screening programmes evolve to include more conditions, communication with families needs the same level of attention as the science behind the tests.

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The Generation Study, a research programme led by Genomics England in partnership with NHS England, is exploring newborn genomic screening. This means looking at a baby’s DNA to identify rare conditions that may benefit from early treatment.

The study aims to sequence the genomes of up to 100,000 newborn babies in England, and is looking for changes linked to more than 200 rare genetic conditions.

Parents need to know that newborn screening can bring reassuring results – but that it can also raise difficult possibilities. They need clear information before screening, and careful communication if a result suggests their baby may have a serious condition.

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A screening result is more than a laboratory finding. For parents, the first contact with clinicians can be one of the most significant conversations of their lives. How that conversation is handled can shape their early experience of the healthcare system, and the trust they place in it.

Timely, accurate and compassionate communication is essential if newborn screening is to deliver its full promise.

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Mum-of-six achieves nursing dream after devastating loss of sister

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Belfast Live

“There is so much support and everyone checks in with you. It really is like a family.”

Meet Laura Carley who has finally achieved her dream of being a nurse

A mum-of-six and grandmother of two has achieved her lifelong dream by graduating as a registered nurse. Laura Carley has now taken up her post at the Ulster Hospital, but she faced challenges along the way such as her mother becoming ill, and the devastating loss of her sister.

The 42-year-old proudly put on her nursing uniform and took up her post on the wards this week after years of study, determination, and balancing family life.

Laura said nursing was a natural career choice as she had always wanted to work in a caring profession. She explained: “The journey has been a long one.

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“I completed a university access course and then studied for a HNC (Higher National Certificate). During that time, I had baby number five and then baby number six.

“From there, I applied to Queen’s University and was accepted. The first year of university was plain sailing, but during my second year, my mum became critically ill in Scotland.”

Laura said her mother later returned to Northern Ireland to receive treatment at the Ulster Hospital.

“We spent a lot of time with her and then mum came back here, to be cared for in the Ulster Hospital. She spent several weeks here and underwent a number of surgeries,” she added.

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During this already challenging period, Laura was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes and suffered the devastating loss of her sister.

Laura reflected: “We donated my sister’s organs through the Ulster Hospital, so I feel a real connection to this hospital. I would not want to work anywhere else.”

Encouraging others who may be considering a career in nursing later in life, Laura said: “It is hard work, but it is doable. There is so much support and everyone checks in with you. It really is like a family.

“I have six children at home who range in age from six to twenty one and we work as a team. I would not be here, wearing this uniform today, without them. It has been a real team effort to get here.”

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

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Drivers who went too fast on the A666/ St Peter’s Way in Bolton

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Drivers who went too fast on the A666/ St Peter's Way in Bolton

The A666 at St Peter’s Way runs from the M60 ring road into the centre of the town.

It is subject to a 50mph speed limit which is monitored by average speed cameras.

The devices capture the speed at which a vehicle goes between two set spots on the route.

And a number of people have recently been found to have driven too fast in the area.

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Below is a summary of the cases.

Benice Nkpokiti, 28, of Kennington Road, Ashford, Kent.

Nkpokiti admitted exceeding the 50mph speed limit on the A666 St Peter’s Way southbound between Bradford Street and the Raikes Lane slip road on July 4, 2025.

He appeared at court on May 27, 2026.

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Manchester Magistrates’ Court fined him £130, ordered him to pay a £55 surcharge and £85 costs, and endorsed his licence with three penalty points after reopening the case and setting aside an earlier conviction for failing to identify the driver.

Speed camera in Egerton, on Blackburn Road. (Image: Google)

Gavin Pilkington, 48, of Martin Drive, Darwen.

Pilkington admitted driving at 43mph in a 30mph limit on the A666 Blackburn Road, north west of Longworth Road, on August 2, 2025.

Pilkington’s court date was June 16, 2026 at Tameside Magistrates’.

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He was fined £461, ordered to pay £120 costs and a £184 surcharge, and received four penalty points after the court heard disqualification would cause financial hardship and affect other people’s jobs.

Haroon Khan, 21, of Dickens Street, Blackburn.

Khan admitted driving at 41mph in a 30mph limit on the A666 Blackburn Road, north west of Longworth Road, on August 3, 2025.

He was to appear on May 19, 2026.

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He was fined £40, ordered to pay a £16 surcharge and received three penalty points.

No costs order was made because of his financial means.

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Former Liverpool FC striker makes Spain vs Argentina World Cup final prediction

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Former Liverpool FC striker makes Spain vs Argentina World Cup final prediction

“I think that’s down to De la Fuente. So if he’s capable of winning the World Cup too, I’d obviously put him up there with the great managers. And when we talk about the great managers, we obviously mean the ones who’ve been capable of winning both the World Cup, with Del Bosque, and the Euros, with Luis Aragones.”

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Car ‘ends up in underpass’ after Cambridgeshire city centre crash

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Cambridgeshire Live

The road was closed while the vehicle was recovered

A car “ended up in an underpass” after a crash in a city centre. Cambridgeshire Police were called to a two-vehicle crash on Bourges Boulevard in Peterborough at around 3.16pm on Saturday (July 18).

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A Cambridgeshire Police spokesperson said one car “ended up in an underpass”. The incident was reported as “damage only”, with no arrests made and no one injured.

The cars were deemed as driveable and the incident was closed at around 5.15pm. While the incident was dealt with, officers asked drivers to “avoid the area” as it resulted in the partial closure of the road.

Do you want more of the latest Cambridgeshire news as it comes in from across the county? Sign up to our dedicated newsletter to make sure you never miss a big story from Cambridge or anywhere else in the county. You can also sign up to our dedicated Traffic and Crime newsletters for the latest updates on the topics you are most interested in .

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Police increase patrols around Smithills and Winter Hill

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Police increase patrols around Smithills and Winter Hill

The increased presence follows a spell of warm and dry weather, raising the risk of wildfires.

Officers are urging visitors not to light barbecues, campfires or disposable grills.

They also reminded people to fully extinguish cigarettes and matches, take litter home, and report any signs of fire immediately by calling 999.

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Glass bottles, in particular, pose a significant risk if left behind.

A police spokesperson, via social media, said: “Neighbourhood officers have increased patrols around the Smithills Estate moorland area of Winter Hill during the recent spell of dry weather.

“We want everyone to come and enjoy this beautiful area responsibly, but with the warm and dry conditions, there is an increased risk of moorland fires.

“Even a small spark can have devastating consequences for wildlife, the landscape and nearby communities.

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“If you’re visiting, please remember:
Do not light BBQs, campfires or disposable grills
Ensure cigarettes and matches are fully extinguished
Take all litter home with you, especially glass bottles
Follow local signage and keep to designated paths
Report any signs of fire immediately by calling 999

“Thank you for helping to protect Winter Hill and the surrounding moorland.

“Please come and enjoy the area, take in the fantastic views and help keep it safe for everyone.”

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Jennifer Hudson stuns World Cup final crowd with emotional national anthem performance in front of Trump

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Jennifer Hudson performs the Star-Spangled Banner ahead of the World Cup final at MetLife

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Jennifer Hudson wowed the World Cup final crowd with a rousing rendition of the American national anthem in front of president Donald Trump.

The singer – who is an EGOT having scooped an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony Award in her remarkable career – took to the stage ahead of the action between Argentina and Spain at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

There was some confusion from fans as to why the Star-Spangled Banner was performed, given the United States was dumped out of the tournament almost a fortnight ago. 

But regardless of the national team’s failures on the pitch, Hudson herself was widely praised for the emotional performance, which left many at home misty-eyed.

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She was an impressive booking from FIFA, given her A-list career as an actress, singer and daytime TV presenter. In fact, TIME have previously named her among the 100 most influential people in the world.

Her vocals were a far cry from the pregame ‘closing ceremony’ performances, in which the likes of IShowSpeed were panned by fans for their apparent lip-syncing on the World Cup final stage.

Jennifer Hudson performs the Star-Spangled Banner ahead of the World Cup final at MetLife

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Post Malone and Swae Lee also performed ahead of the game, before the controversial halftime show will feature the likes of Madonna, Shakira and Justin Bieber.

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For her performance, Hudson wore an all-white suit, with red, white and blue America-themed stitching down the back. 

She stood on a plinth in the middle of the field, with a series of flags blowing in the wind behind her.

On social media, fans praised the impressive vocals she showed off in front of more than a billion fans watching around the world.

‘If the goal was to hit a high note and a high score, she just nailed both,’ one said, while another fan added: ‘Such a beautiful voice!’

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A third wrote: ‘A powerful performance to set the stage for football’s biggest night.’

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ALISON BOSHOFF: Why Claudia Winkleman’s post-Strictly career WASN’T hurt by quitting BBC chat show while former co-star Tess Daly suffers crises on all fronts

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Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly on Strictly... Tess joined on the first series in 2004, while Claudia began her stint in 2010

On television on a Saturday and Sunday night, they were always rather an odd couple.

Claudia Winkleman – quicksilver, effortlessly funny, gifted at reading people and situations – and former model Tess Daly, her Strictly co-presenter who, despite her undisputed beauty was none of those things.

Daly was hired from the first series of Strictly Come Dancing in 2004 as the ‘straight woman’ to Bruce Forsyth, seemingly to bring glamour, in the way that Bruce’s female sidekicks had done decades before in his family show The Generation Game.

But even devoted Strictly viewers found her manner stiff and her mini-interviews with contestants repetitive. On fan sites she was routinely known as ‘the Tess-bot’ – woundingly, this went on for more than two decades.

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While Claudia made the role her own, the ringmaster of hilarity, tinged with hysteria in the upstairs holding pen which became known as the Clauditorium, unfortunate Tess was left looking decorative but deadly dull.

Claudia even came to outshine Tess in the style stakes. While Claudia liked to joke that she was naturally scruffy and with her iconic heavy fringe and eyeliner looked: ‘like a mature physics student who has been caught in the rain and slept in a skip’, with the help of stylist Sinead McKeefry she became a style icon for her trouser suits on Strictly and goth-tweed ensembles in The Traitors.

Tess’s look never evolved beyond a big bouncy blonde blow dry, good teeth and a tan.

And while Claudia’s career has never been in stronger shape since she left Strictly last October, Tess has been suffering from reverses and crises on all fronts.

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Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly on Strictly… Tess joined on the first series in 2004, while Claudia began her stint in 2010

Tess started as the ¿straight woman¿ to Strictly's first presenter Bruce Forsyth

Tess started as the ‘straight woman’ to Strictly’s first presenter Bruce Forsyth

Claudia waltzed from Strictly straight into presenting Crufts on Channel 4, her own chat show on BBC1 and more iterations of the smash hit The Traitors; Tess is apparently weighing an offer of a show on Magic Radio and contemplating losses at her bikini firm, Naia Beach.

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Even the news yesterday that Claudia is walking away from the option of a second series of The Claudia Winkleman Show on BBC1 simply confirms that she is at the peak of her professional powers.

As a source explained to me, she only does the shows she wants to do, and she didn’t enjoy this high-profile plum of a project, so that was that.

Claudia herself explained: ‘Sometimes you have to try something to see how it fits, and I realised I was just too nervous to enjoy it.’

Jeff Foulser, chair of the production and media company Sunset and Vine, who hired Claudia to present Crufts on Channel 4, said that her achievement in launching and fronting her own chat show remains considerable.

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‘It takes journalistic understanding to be able to get the best out of people like the doyen Michael Parkinson. The whole of Crufts was in awe of her and she was fantastic… but you can never legislate for how people feel in front of a live audience,’ he said.

David Sumnall, who made the Channel 5 documentary Claudia Winkleman: Behind the Fringe, said: ‘If Claudia feels that she can’t make it work, then who can?’ He added: ‘The reason people like her is because she is so human: admitting she wasn’t enjoying it is something few would do, and is so refreshing.’

It’s also a move which can be made only by someone who has nothing to prove: saying that you are leaving the highest profile job of your career because it doesn’t suit you.

Claudia's first job on TV was as a reporter for the BBC1's long-running travel series Holiday in the 1990s

Claudia’s first job on TV was as a reporter for the BBC1’s long-running travel series Holiday in the 1990s

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Claudia outside Windsor Castle with her MBE last year, alongside her father Barry, mother Eve Pollard and husband Kris Thykier

Claudia outside Windsor Castle with her MBE last year, alongside her father Barry, mother Eve Pollard and husband Kris Thykier

Claudia’s agent, Holly Bott, is one of the best in the business and has (along with Claudia) left the agency YMU and set up on her own, running a new talent business alongside Claudia’s film producer husband Kris Thykier.

Poor Tess, whose marriage to DJ and fellow TV presenter Vernon Kay ended this year, remains with YMU who don’t seem to have been able to pull off any magic strokes for her.

She and Vernon announced their split in May ‘with a deep sense of care and respect for one another’ and say that they have stayed friends. They have opted to settle their divorce cleanly and cheaply via online lawyers.

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However, it’s notable that while Vernon always posts likes and loving comments on his wife’s Instagram, Tess does not return the favour.

She has apparently struggled to overcome lingering memories of the scandal in 2010 when he was caught out sending saucy texts to lingerie model Rhian Sugden, but they have also grown apart, as people can in 23 years. Their daughters Phoebe and Amber are 21 and 16.

Friend Vanessa Feltz said: ‘Not a soul in showbusiness is anything but gutted at the news Tess Daly and Vernon Kay are calling time on their marriage. They are likeable, cheerful and generous.’

Claudia, by contrast, remains happily married to film producer Thykier.

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They tied the knot in a beautiful wedding in the South of France in 2000. They have three children: Jake, Matilda and Arthur, a dog Skip on whom Claudia dotes, and a starry group of friends on both sides of the Atlantic thanks to Kris’s contacts.

Tess was left looking decorative but deadly dull on Strictly, and she was routinely known as ‘the Tess-bot’ on fan sites

Tess was left looking decorative but deadly dull on Strictly, and she was routinely known as ‘the Tess-bot’ on fan sites

Tess's marriage to DJ and fellow TV presenter Vernon Kay ended earlier this year

Tess’s marriage to DJ and fellow TV presenter Vernon Kay ended earlier this year

Home is a town house in central London and there is a country pad in the Cotswolds for weekends. Kris goes shooting with film producer Guy Ritchie (he and Claudia attended Ritchie’s wedding to Madonna) and Kris and Claudia are apparently red-hot bridge players.

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There were few signs that Claudia would make it so big in her early years in television.

I used to bump into her a lot on the party circuit in the late 1990s. At the time Claudia was working on shows like the barely watched Liquid News and the truly awful gameshow Talking Telephone Numbers with Phillip Schofield.

In 1999 she fronted Trading Up, a car-based game show for Channel 4. She said: ‘If I tell you that while I was actually filming it, I had a small nap, does that give you an idea of how interesting it was? I don’t even like cars, I can’t even drive a car, I can’t spell car.’

She was always exactly the person you see on screen now – sharp, hilarious and entirely herself.

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Winkleman is the daughter of Eve Pollard, the trailblazing journalist and newspaper editor, and Barry Winkleman, the book publisher. Her stepfather Sir Nicholas Lloyd was also a newspaper editor.

She once said that the family motto was: ‘Don’t worry about being interesting. Be interested.’

Claudia read art history at New Hall, Cambridge, and got her first job in an art gallery but left after four days, complaining of boredom.

Her first job on TV was a cushy one – reporting for Holiday, the long-running BBC travel series, in the early 1990s.

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She also appeared on This Morning on ITV, once being sawn in half by a magician. She even appeared as a ‘dating expert’ on Good Morning with Anne and Nick in 1996. Her stint on the BBC’s Film show previously presented by Barry Norman and Jonathan Ross was not considered a great success.

Claudia waltzed from Strictly straight into presenting Crufts on Channel 4...

Claudia waltzed from Strictly straight into presenting Crufts on Channel 4…

... and her own chat show on BBC1, for which she recently turned down a second series

… and her own chat show on BBC1, for which she recently turned down a second series

It seemed she would do anything to try to establish herself.

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And yet, after a good two decades of toil, she was made into a huge star by Strictly, the crown jewel of the BBC’s entertainment output.

She started out on the companion show It Takes Two, in 2004, and after six years became the co-presenter of the Sunday results show. Then, when Bruce Forsyth decided to move on in 2010, she stepped lightly into his loafers.

It helped that she was already friends with all the dancers, and knew the show inside out but she became a powerful factor in the continued popularity of the programme because she helped to make it fun to watch.

Danny Cohen was the BBC’s director of television at the time and says that the decision to promote her was easy.

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He said: ‘She’s brilliantly talented but she doesn’t show off about it. She has that quality which the very, very best presenters have, which is you like being in their company, and you want to spend time with them.’

From 2022 she added another massive hit show, The Traitors, to her resume. Initially she was hesitant.

‘When the BBC asked me to go to Scotland for three weeks I was like, “Oh, thanks for asking…” I said, “No. I don’t want to do that.” They sent me the Dutch version and I was told to take a risk. I watched it and after three episodes I said I would get on the train and I am in.’

There were still doubts. Claudia said: ‘I remember phoning my husband and I said, “I think it is over. I have had a good run but I am standing in a field holding a ceremonial pouch with red pleather gloves which I got from Amazon. Put the kettle on. I will be back and we will not mention it.”’

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Winkleman jokes that the reason for her success is simple.

‘I don’t think I’d have a career if I didn’t have a fringe. When producers can’t remember the names of potential presenters, they say: ‘Get the orange one with the fringe!’’

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