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How a Cambridge student group became a ‘conveyor belt of comedy genius’

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Cambridgeshire Live

The Footlights has turned out star names including Stephen Fry, John Cleese, Douglas Adams, David Baddiel and many more

For more than 50 years the Cambridge Footlights has been a conveyor belt of comic genius. A student sketch comedy troupe at the University of Cambridge which dates back to 1883, its alumni reads like a who’s who of British comedy – John Cleese, Eric Idle, Steve Punt, Hugh Dennis, all of the Goodies, Richard Osman, Jan Ravens, Nick Mohammed, Alexander Armstrong, Ben Miller, Phil Wang, Mirian Margolyes, David Baddiel and Douglas Adams are just a few of the big-name former Footlighters who have kept us entertained.

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Now a new book has offered a fascinating and entertaining deep dive into the Footlights, with more than 70 former Footlighters recalling their experiences and giving insights into why the troupe has been such a prolific comedy production line.

The Cambridge Footlights: A Very British Comedy Institution was written by Robert Sellers, the author of more than 25 books on subjects such as cinema, theatre, television, music and popular culture, and was released this month by Bloomsbury.

“You could call it a factory for churning out comedians since the 50s,” said Robert. “So I thought it was an interesting institution to examine. I’m a huge Monty Python fan so I knew that most of the Pythons went to Cambridge. I’m also a big Goodies fan and all of them went to Cambridge.

“I’ve been aware of it for a while but what interested me before I decided to pursue it properly…was it still churning out these people?

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“The high point was the 60s, 70s and early 80s – but it’s still remarkably consistent. Just look at The Inbetweeners, Richard Ayoade, David Mitchell and people like that. It’s still part of television, theatre and comedy. It’s still relevant.”

As he researched the subject and spoke to former Footlighters, it became apparent to Robert that the secret to the success of the Footlights conveyor belt of talent was the experience it gave those involved.

The opportunity to write and perform, not only in Cambridge but in the West End, theatres around the country and at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, was both unique and invaluable.

“I wanted the book to be as much as possible an oral history,” said Robert. “I didn’t want it to be a staid, academic-type book. I wanted it to follow people through the years, their personal experiences. So I’ve interviewed over 70 people who are ex-Footlighters. It’s very much a personal history of their time there.

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“A lot of people said it’s the experience that it gives you. A lot of people said it’s better than a drama school. In a drama school you’re performing to your own classmates for most of the time. With the Footlights, because of the revue and the tour they go on, and when they go up to the Edinburgh Festival, they’re performing in front of the public from a very early age.

“There’s a thing called smokers which they put on every few weeks for the college. Anyone from the college and the university can come and watch, and you have to write your own material. Someone told me that when they arrived, they were quite surprised that they had to write their own material. They thought they were given material and they’d just have to go on stage and be funny. But no, you had to write it and perform it, and a lot of people found that a real challenge. That helps enormously, that you’re writing material every three weeks.

“Someone told me that when he left the Footlights and was performing stand-up on this quite big venue, a fellow comedian said to them, ‘This is your first time here – this must be a big moment for you, performing in front of an audience’. But he had spent three years going to the Edinburgh Fringe and performing in front of 1,000 people and going on tour to theatres around the country.

“It’s a real ladder of opportunity – also for producers and directors. Some people might not necessarily want to be a performer, but a writer or a producer or a director.

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“So they’ve left university having directed a professional production. It’s a huge advantage over your contemporaries and your competitors.”

The Footlights is still a thriving institution – and still supplementary to whatever academic course its members have chosen for their studies. “It was almost a release valve for their studies,” said Robert of the former Footlighters he interviewed.

“Once a week they could just be silly and do silly jokes. It was a wonderful release from the pressures of academia. It started as a hobby because people enjoyed doing drama and theatre but they had no ambition to be a professional performer.

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“John Cleese had no ambition to be a comedian even though he was in the Footlights. He wanted to be a lawyer or a barrister. Graham Chapman wanted to be a doctor.

“It started to change in the 70s when people went to Cambridge purely to be a comedian and join the Footlights after seeing so many people come through in the 50s and 60s – Peter Cook, and people like that. So in the 80s sometimes people were taking the Footlights more seriously than their academic work.”

But while students from colleges throughout the university took advantage of the opportunity to indulge themselves in drama, women were excluded from being full members of The Footlights until 1964. “An interesting element of the book is the role of women in the Footlights,” explained Robert.

“I interviewed Graeme Garden and he wanted to introduce women during the year he was president. But one of the high principals who was on the board and had quite a lot of significance, said he would resign if women were made members.

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“So the following year when Tim Brooke-Taylor was vice-president and Eric Idle was president, they said ‘this time we’re doing it – if the guy wants to resign we’ll call his bluff – but women have to be members this time’.

“Women could perform in the Footlights but couldn’t be members. They could do smokers and occasionally, like Miriam Margolyes, be in the revue show – but were treated abominably. Someone told me she (Margolyes) wasn’t even allowed to go to the after-show party, even though she’d been in the show. She went back home and cried all night.

“When Germaine Greer did a smoker, they just thought there was no way they could say ‘no’ to her. She was very powerful and that changed everything. She was the first female member.”

Not everyone who joined the Footlights went on to pursue a career in the entertainment industry, of course. One of the alumni Robert interviewed for his book was Peter Firth, who was 97 at the time, and was president of the Footlights in 1953. He went on to become a priest.

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“He was a lovely guy and his memory was crystal clear,” said Robert. “He was president of his year and he put the revue on. It was such a success that a West End producer said, ‘Can you put it on in the West End please?’ But he knew he wanted to be a priest so he didn’t do it.

“But the following year the revue was again a success and the same producer came back and this time they said yes, and that became the first Footlights revue in the West End.

“It became a bit of an institution in the 60s and 70s that the Cambridge revue would not only do a tour round the UK and Edinburgh, but also go into the West End. It became a big deal although it doesn’t happen any more. One revue even went to Broadway.”

What became clear to Robert is that members of the Footlights fully acknowledged the privileged position that attending the University of Cambridge put them in.

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“There were lots and lots of societies – each house had its own little comedy group,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any other institution in the country where you get that much practice. These guys left Cambridge pretty much a honed comedian.”

And for a time coming from The Footlights actually worked against any would-be comic looking to make their mark. The rise of alternative comedy in the 1980s meant that talent emerging from the Footlights was viewed as ‘the Establishment’ and therefore actively sneered at.

“For quite a long period of time, coming from The Footlights was actually a negative,” said Robert. “In the 1980s because of the rise of alternative comedy, if you came from The Footlights, you were almost cancelled – certainly looked down on. If you were Cambridge you were seen as rich and coming from a well-off family – you were dismissed as a rich tw*ts.

“Matthew Holness talks about it a lot – how hostile the environment was when he went to Edinburgh. David Baddiel told me that when he left the Footlights in the mid-80s he phoned up the Comedy Store in London to ask if he could do a gig or perform in some way.

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“They said, ‘That’s fine, interesting’ and asked if he had any experience. David said he was vice-president of the Footlights and they hung up on him! For many years he never mentioned he was a Footlighter.

“Nick Hancock is from the Midlands and people assumed he was never anywhere near the Cambridge Footlights – and he never revealed he was a Footlighter.

“There was a lot of hostility, I think because of the revue called The Cellar Tapes. It was Emma Thompson, Hugh Laurie and Stephen Fry. They won the first ever Perrier Award and I think there was a lot of resentment.

“Stephen, Hugh and Emma were all from very privileged backgrounds. You’ve got the Young Ones sketch where they’re on University Challenge (Fry, Laurie and Thompson all appear as obnoxious toffs in the opposing Footlights College team). That sums up how the Footlights was seen at that time. They were ‘posh tw*ts’.

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“But I spoke to a lot of people who were in it over the last few years and it’s different now. It’s very diverse. A lot of effort has gone into making it so, which is covered in the book as well.”

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Jade Jones: Boxing debut win for Olympic taekwondo champion

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Jade Jones' arm is lifted as the winner of the boxing bout against Egypt Criss

Double Olympic taekwondo champion Jade Jones marked her boxing debut with a second-round knockout victory against Egypt Criss in Derby.

After two decades in taekwondo, Wales’ Jones traded sports at the start of last year saying she needed a fresh challenge, setting herself a bold target of becoming a world champion in two sports.

Her maiden bout came against Criss, daughter of hip-hop stars Anthony ‘Treach’ Criss from Naughty by Nature and Sandra ‘Pepa’ Denton from Salt-N-Pepa.

Jones, who won Olympic gold in London 2012 and Rio 2016, needed only two rounds to claim victory, with three successive left hooks flooring her opponent.

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The 32-year-old from Flint has been training with former professional boxer Stephen ‘Swifty’ Smith at Liverpool’s iconic 4 Corners Gym.

Jones has also taken inspiration from former room-mate, unified world boxing champion Lauren Price, who played football for Wales in addition to being a kickboxer and taekwondo player, prior to her own switch to boxing.

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‘This is a moment of grave peril’

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'This is a moment of grave peril'

UN humanitarian chief Tom Fletcher has warned that the war in Iran and wider region is having a “massive impact” on civilians, describing it as “a moment of grave, grave peril”.

He also voiced concerns about “secondary impacts” of the violence, saying the conflict risked fuelling an increase in extremism and polarisation in the Middle East and beyond.

“We’ve got to step back from the brink right now”, he told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg.

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Visual misinformation about Iran war fueled by state actors

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Visual misinformation about Iran war fueled by state actors

As attacks spread after the bombing of Iran by U.S. and Israeli forces, a video circulated widely of crowds peering up at fire, smoke and debris coming from the top of a high-rise building said to be in Bahrain.

Social media users claimed an Iranian attack had hit the skyscraper. But while buildings in Bahrain have been struck by Iranian missiles during the Iran war, this video wasn’t real. It was generated with artificial intelligence and shared by accounts associated with the Iranian government as part of an effort to amplify its successes.

There are multiple clues that the video was not authentic, including two cars on the left side of the clip that appear stuck together and a man in the bottom-right corner whose elbow seems to move straight through a backpack.

A deluge of misrepresented or fabricated videos has spread widely online since the Iran war began last weekend, fueled in part by state-linked propaganda and influence campaigns — particularly around who is winning the war and how many casualties there have been.

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“The content that’s coming from state actors tends to be a little better targeted,” said Melanie Smith, senior director of policy and research on information operations at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue. “They have a very clear kind of narrative structure and the videos are just used to support some kind of statement they want to make about the conflict and about the kind of geopolitical situation writ large.”

Pro-Iran social media accounts have adopted a narrative that exaggerates the destruction and death tolls wrought by the country’s military — a position supported by what is being reported in Iranian state media. This has led to a large number of AI-generated videos of supposed air strikes, such as the one of the Bahraini high-rise on fire.

An ongoing Russia-aligned influence operation called Operation Overload, also referred to as Matryoshka or Storm-1679, has been posting videos designed to impersonate intelligence agencies and news outlets, undermining people’s sense of safety in an effort to sway their behavior — a tactic the network has previously used during election cycles. For example, it shared a warning falsely attributed to Israeli intelligence telling Israelis in Germany and the U.S. to be cautious when in public or to not go outside at all.

Iranian censorship confuses matters further

Misrepresented and fabricated videos have been a key feature of other recent conflicts, such as the Russia-Ukraine and Israel-Hamas wars, but experts say a major difference now is the lack of information from the Iranian public due to internet shutdowns and general censorship — a loss of perspectives that could have worked both for and against the Iranian government.

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“In Ukraine, that message was so full-throated it really changed the entire dynamic of the conflict because the world really aligned with the perspective of Ukrainians facing the attacks and showing resilience in light of the attacks, but we’re sort of missing that story from Iran,” said Todd Helmus, a senior behavioral scientist at RAND who studies irregular warfare, terrorism and information operations.

In search of clicks, opportunistic social media users not affiliated with state actors have also contributed heavily to the misinformation that has spread during the first days of the Iran war, presenting old footage from other conflicts as recent, sharing video game clips as real and posting their own AI-generated content.

AI, in particular, has helped fuel misinformation in ways that weren’t possible during past conflicts, even just a few years ago. Coupled with state-linked disinformation and censorship, this creates an even wider vacuum in which the truth can get lost.

“The volume of AI content is starting to just pollute the information environment in these kinds of crisis settings to a really terrifying degree,” Smith said. “The inability to get access to verified and credible information in times like this — it’s getting harder and harder to do that.”

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Nikita Bier, X’s head of product, wrote in a Tuesday post that the platform will suspend users from its revenue-sharing program if they post AI-generated content from an armed conflict without a proper disclosure. The suspensions are 90 days for a first offense and permanent after that. Emerson Brooking, director of strategy and resident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Digital Forensic Research Lab, warns that social media platforms are now frontlines in war, and that users should be aware of their potential to be used by state actors, even if they are located thousands of miles away from on-the-ground action.

“If you’re in these spaces, just understand that this is an extension of the physical battle space,” he said. “That there are actors on all sides of the conflict that are actively trying to spread propaganda and disinformation to convince you that certain things are true that aren’t. That your eyeballs and your attention are an asset.”

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Residents feel unsafe cycling on Darlington roads, council warned

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Residents feel unsafe cycling on Darlington roads, council warned

Councillors shared concerns from residents across the borough and questioned the usage of the current cycle paths. 

Work is ongoing to create a safe walking and cycling route from the town centre to West Park and Faverdale.

The first phase included making improvements to Duke Street and creating a cycle route along part of Woodland Road. A further phase to continue the active travel route through Cockerton to the Brinkburn Road junction will be developed later in 2026. 

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Councillor Paul Walters, Conservative member for Hurworth, said: “I think it’s a great initiative – but my concern is, how are you going to get people out of their cars and onto their bikes? I have been on Duke Street many times and have not seen a bike on that cycle path. 

“It’s a great idea and wonderful initiative, but getting the public to use them is something that needs to be looked into.”

The comments were made during a debate on how active travel measures are being implemented across the town to encourage people to be less reliant on car travel.

Conservative councillor Pauline Culley, of Mowden ward, spoke of her previous experience cycling around Europe and said Darlington roads are not suitable for cycling. 

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“We seem to be spending a lot of money on something people are not going to use,” she told the committee. 

Matthew Snedker, Green councillor for College ward, said Culley’s testimony was a “damning indictment” for Darlington’s infrastructure. He added: “The fact that many people in Darlington do not feel safe doing a completely normal thing cuts to the heart of why our low network isn’t serving more people.”

Darlington Borough Council said it aims to create a safe route for pedestrians and cyclists as part of the Tees Valley Combined Authority’s (TVCA) Tees Valley local cycling and walking infrastructure plan.

But Cllr James Coe, Independent for North Road, reported how the current cycle paths take people “to a dead end” and not where they want to go. 

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He added: “Once we start connecting these areas up, it will encourage more people to use it.”

Anthony Hewitt, assistant director of highways and capital projects, admitted the council needs to improve the public’s perception of cycling throughout the borough. 

He told the committee: “We agree we need to do a lot more work to promote the cycle lanes. Hopefully, as active travel neighbourhoods and our network builds out, people can see more connectivity.”

Monitors are in place along Duke Street and Woodland Road to track the number of cyclists, the council said. 

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Cambridgeshire fly-tipping costs taxpayers thousands as hotspots revealed

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Cambridgeshire fly-tipping costs taxpayers thousands as hotspots revealed

One area of Cambridgeshire saw fly-tips that cost the taxpayer £65,800 in clean-up costs

Cambridgeshire’s fly-tipping hotspots have been revealed by a new map showing the parts of England with the worst rubbish problems. In the year ending March 2025, local authorities in England dealt with 1.25 million flytipping incidents, a 9% rise on the previous year.

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That included 777,000 collections of household waste ranging from bin bags to old furniture and carpets, 7,000 of animal carcasses, 70,000 dumps of commercial waste, and 3,000 involving asbestos.

There were 19,224 separate illegal dumps in Cambridgeshire alone. In our area, fly-tippers dumped more rubbish in Peterborough than anywhere else, with a total of 10,474 separate fly-tipping incidents.

That included 188 large-scale incidents in which at least a tipper lorry-sized load of waste was dumped, costing taxpayers £65,800 in clean-up costs. That’s the equivalent of 29p from the pockets of everyone who lives in Peterborough on large-scale clean-ups alone. Defra has not published the clean-up costs for overall fly-tipping incidents, only the large-scale dumps.

In Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire had the next-largest rubbish problem, with 3,560 illegal dumps, followed by Cambridge with 2,166 fly-tipping incidents. Last year, councils in Cambridgeshire made a total of 9,392 enforcement actions, including issuing 482 fixed penalties and collecting £11,669 in fines.

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You can see how badly your area is affected by fly-tipping and how it compares to the rest of England, using our interactive map.

Nearly two thirds of fly-tipping (62%) involved household waste, which ranges from black bags of day-to-day rubbish to old furniture, carpets, and bric-a-brac from loft and shed clearances.

Fly-tipping most commonly occurs on pavements and roads, accounting for more than a third of cases (37%), according to the figures. Almost a third of incidents (31%) were the size of a small van load, while 27% were the equivalent to a car boot or less.

However, 52,000 cases involved an amount of rubbish that was equivalent to a tipper lorry load or more, an 11% increase, costing councils in England £19.26 million to clear up.

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In addition to the figures from local authorities, the Environment Agency dealt with 98 incidents of large-scale illegal dumping last year, Defra said. In response, councils issued 572,000 enforcement actions, an 8% increase on the previous year, and 69,000 fixed penalty notices, a 9% rise.

However, the number of court fines fell by 9% to 1,250, and the combined value of those fines dropped from £730,000 to £673,000. Councils also seized 139 vehicles last year.

New guidance has been published by Defra to help councils seize and crush more vehicles used for fly-tipping, or repurpose them for clean-up operations, along with advice on how to take cases to court. Councils are also being urged to name and shame fly-tippers on social media.

Defra Minister Mary Creagh said: “We are empowering local authorities to clamp down on waste cowboys and restore pride in our local areas. I share the public’s fury at seeing our streets, parks and fields used as dumping grounds.

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“Fly-tippers should know – if you use your van to trash our countryside, don’t be surprised when it ends up on the scrapheap.”

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Coronation Street legend catches Megan flirting with Will | Soaps

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Coronation Street legend catches Megan flirting with Will | Soaps
Megan slips up (Picture: ITV)

Megan Walsh (Beth Nixon) thinks she’s God’s gift in Coronation Street, and because of that, it’s made her a woman who doesn’t believe anyone will suspect she’s got something to hide.

The newcomer, introduced to us towards the end of last year, currently works at Weatherfield High. She’s in a relationship with colleague Daniel Osbourne (Rob Mallard), and lets everyone believe she’s spending extra time with Will Driscoll (Lucas Hodgson-Wale) so he can reach his full potential as a young athlete.

In reality, Megan is only with Daniel to cover up her abuse of teenager Will. She has been grooming him for months and is now carrying his baby.

The only person on the cobbles who has worked out that Megan isn’t as nice as she says is Sam Blakeman (Jude Riordan). After reaching the conclusion that Megan had lied about a tracksuit top she had among her belongings, Sam suspected the teacher was having an inappropriate relationship with Will.

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Proving this has been extremely difficult for Sam, as Megan has tried to be a step ahead of him at all times. This, and she’s also targeting Sam with manipulation and threats, which is now having a serious impact on his mental health.

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Next week, Leanne Battersby (Jane Danson) picks the wrong person to open up to as she tells Megan that she’s concerned for Sam and thinks something is bothering him.

Megan assures her that she’s worrying over nothing and later, assuming that she’s alone, Megan takes a call and flirts with Will.

When Leanne emerges from the bathroom, Megan is horrified.

The next day, Sam appears at the flat for his school books and Megan takes the opportunity to have another dig at him.

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Megan, Daniel and Leanne in the Bistro in Corrie
Leanne grows curious (Picture: ITV)
Megan Walsh and Daniel Osbourne speaking to Sam Blakeman in the cafe in Coronation Street.
Sam’s mental health is being impacted as a result of Megan constantly trying to keep him quiet (Picture: ITV)

Meanwhile, Leanne shares her concerns about Sam with Daniel, and apologises for interrupting his call with Megan the night before.

Leanne’s curiosity starts to grow when Megan ends up cancelling her date with Daniel. It’s clear that she’s picking up on Sam and Megan’s changes in behaviour, but will she make the connection and realise Megan is the reason Sam is becoming withdrawn?

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Or will Megan act fast and silence Leanne once she realises she’s becoming suspicious of her?

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Russian missile hits residential building in Kharkiv, killing 10

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Russian missile hits residential building in Kharkiv, killing 10

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Two children were among at least 10 people killed on Saturday in a Russian missile that hit a five-story residential building in Ukraine’s second-largest city, Kharkiv, officials said. Sixteen others were wounded.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy condemned the attack and called for an international response. He said that Russia struck Ukraine overnight with 29 missiles and 480 drones, targeting energy facilities in Kyiv and other central regions and with damage reported in at least seven other locations across the country.

According to preliminary data, air defense systems downed 19 missiles and 453 drones with hits from 9 missiles and 26 strike drones recorded at 22 locations.

In Kharkiv, in Ukraine’s northeast, emergency workers were combing the rubble, looking for survivors. Among the dead was a primary schoolteacher and her son, a second-grade student, who were killed in their home and an eighth-grader who also died with her mother, according to the city’s mayor, Ihor Terekhov.

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The regional Prosecutors’s Office said the building was hit by a new Russian cruise missile, known as Izdeliye-30. Ukrainian reports said that the new subsonic air-launched weapon that Russia has recently started to use against Ukraine has a range of 1,500 kilometers (930 miles) and is equipped with a new satellite navigation system more resistant to jamming.

In the Kyiv region, damage from debris was reported in three districts, according to local authorities. In the southern Odesa region, 80 firefighters were called in to help battle massive fires at infrastructure facilities following an attack with multiple drones. Ukraine’s state rail operator Ukrzaliznytsia said damage to the rail infrastructure forced changes to a number of routes in the center-west of the country.

Russia’s Defense Ministry said the overnight strike targeted Ukrainian military factories, energy facilities and air bases.

“There must be a response from partners to these savage strikes against life,” Zelenskyy said in a post on X. “Russia has not abandoned its attempts to destroy Ukraine’s residential and critical infrastructure, and therefore support must continue. We count on active work with the European Union to guarantee greater protection for our people. I am grateful to everyone who helps strengthen our protection.”

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Russia has fired tens of thousands of Iranian-designed drones at Ukraine since it invaded its neighbor just over four years. It has launched a large-scale domestic production of them and battered Ukraine with hundreds of drones in a single night — more than were used during some entire months in 2024.

Iran has responded to joint U.S.-Israeli strikes by launching the same type of Shahed drones at countries in the Middle East.

Zelenskyy said he had received a U.S. request for support to defend against the Iranian drones in the Middle East and had given the order for equipment to be provided along with Ukrainian experts.

The war in the Middle East has drawn international attention away from Europe’s biggest conflict since World War II, and forced the postponement of a new round of U. S.-brokered talks between Russia and Ukraine planned for this week.

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Dusk’s discounted all-seasons goose down quilts help ‘with sleep and night sweats’

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Dusk's discounted all-seasons goose down quilts help 'with sleep and night sweats'

‘A solid investment that’s worth every penny for a great night’s sleep,’ said one shopper

With the warmer weather approaching, many shoppers might be out the look out for new bedding. One duvet in particular has garnered praise for helping with ‘sleep and night sweats’, and it has also seen a price cut on the Dusk website.

The Supreme 80% Goose Down Duvet Collection is now available for £48 down from £60 on the Dusk website for the 4.5 tog double size, saving buyers £12. It is also available in other sizes: single (£40), king size (£56) and super king (£64), so there should be a choice for everyone. Plus shoppers can get an extra 15% off with the code EXTRA15.

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Buyers can also choose between a range of togs for different prices. All of the duvets are described as being ‘sumptuously soft, lightweight and warm’, and are filled with 80% cosy and plump goose down and 20% light goose feather. The duvet is encased in 100% cotton and is said to ‘ensure ultimate breathability from season to season’.

Dunelm also has a wide selection of all-seasons duvets, including the half-price Duck Feather Duo 7.5 + 10.5 Tog All Seasons Duvet for £45, down from £90. That’s a 50% saving for a duvet that is described as the ‘ultimate seasonal comfort’.

Trending in the M&S homeware sale is the Deluxe Hungarian Goose Feather and Down 10.5-tog Duvet which is currently 50% off, priced between £79.50 to £109.50. This one comes in single, double, king size and super king size, with prices varying.

The Supreme 80% Goose Down Duvet Collection is available from Dusk

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The duvet collection is available for single, double, king size and super king.

The Supreme 80% Goose Down Duvet Collection has got 885 five-star reviews on the Dusk website. One shopper was particularly enthusiastic about their purchase.

They said: “I bought two of the 13.5 All Season quilts, one for myself and one for my daughter who struggles with sleep and night sweats. The quality of the quilts is extremely high and the performance superb. The cotton casing is very high quality. Using both quilts, 4.5 & 9, they are lightweight but warm and snug, but not too warm.

“My daughter says it’s the most comfortable quilt she has used and her sleep has improved significantly. I have no doubt that the 4.5 tog will be just as pleasing in the warmer months. I did a lot of research before buying and for quality and price I don’t think Dusk can be beaten.”

Another added: “Great service and great product. Our duvet was delivered promptly and we love it. Lovely item, we would highly recommend Dusk.”

A third said: “Crisp, fluffy and amazing value. Proper ‘crisp’ cotton casing with that satisfying rustle, paired with a super fluffy filling – it’s the perfect combination! The fabric feels high-quality and down-proof, and it breathes brilliantly so you never overheat. A solid investment that’s worth every penny for a great night’s sleep.”

And a fourth added: “Purchased this but was a bit sceptical as it was expensive but I’m so glad I got it. Worth the money. You get what you pay for.”

One shopper was disappointed, saying: “Received order very quickly. However despite being a 13.5 tog it doesn’t feel as warm as I expected.”

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The Supreme 80% Goose Down Duvet Collection is available from Dusk. Prices are correct at the time of writing.

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Kerry Katona’s plans to move abroad with beau Paolo as daughter DJ’s school closes down

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Kerry Katona's plans to move abroad with beau Paolo as daughter DJ's school closes down

Kerry Katona has candidly revealed her plans to move out of UK may come sooner rather than later as she revealed her daughter Dylan-Jorge’s school is set to close later this year

Kerry Katona has revealed the closure of her daughter Dylan-Jorge’s school could be a ‘sign’ for her to fast-track her plans to move abroad with her beau Paolo and their children.

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The 45 year old, who is a proud mum to her five children, revealed in her first joint interview with Paolo Margaglione with OK! magazine last month that the couple plan on moving their blended family to sunnier climates within the next year. And now, it seems that move may come sooner as Kerry has revealed the news that her daughter Dylan-Jorge’s school is closing down might be a “sign”.

Writing in her latest column for new! magazine, Kerry revealed: “I recently got a message announcing they are shutting DJ’s school down in July. Molly, Lilly and Heidi all went to that school, so I am truly gutted. Now we’re running around trying to get her into a different school, but they favour pupils who already have siblings who attend, so DJ’s been put on a waiting list.”

READ MORE: Kerry Katona’s huge fears for major pop star – ‘I’m so worried’READ MORE: Kerry Katona makes cheeky confession about sex life with boyfriend Paolo, 34

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The mum added: “I’m in touch with another school but we keep missing each other, so I’m wondering if this is a sign to up and leave to Spain and start fresh…” It comes after Kerry and Paolo shared their plans to move out of the UK within the next year as she opened up about their romance in their first joint interview.

When asked where they see themselves in a year’s time, Paolo spilled to OK!, “Hopefully somewhere hot and sunny. The idea is, at some point, to potentially move away from the UK. It’s something I wanted to do and something Kerry’s wanted, too.” Meanwhile, Kerry revealed: “We do have a plan”.

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Kerry is a proud mum to Molly, Lilly-Sue, Heidi, Max and DJ while her businessman beau Paolo has two daughters, Milani and Nola, from a previous relationship. Kerry even teased a move to Dubai after her trip to the UAE city last month.

Writing in her column at the time, she gushed: “I can see why so many celebrities move to Dubai. It’s definitely somewhere I’d consider moving to. It’s safe, clean, it’s lovely, everyone looks after each other – in fact I could probably see myself living there this time next year. And my children would come with me. Kate and Rio Ferdinand moved there last August and I can see why she might be struggling like she mentioned last week – sometimes it does take time to adapt.” However, in her latest column it appears she’s now got her sights set on Spain…

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The Reservation review: Read it for the delicious people, not the prose

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The Reservation review: Read it for the delicious people, not the prose

It did feel cruel, and not a little unfair, to give up all hope of good prose as early as page four, but that’s where it happened. It was right there in capital letters: “IT’S GRISHAM DAY, PEOPLE.” As in John Grisham, whose looming visit to Aunt Orsa’s — the fine-dining restaurant in a Midwestern university town in which the novel is set — gives the book the tension that propels it along. Grisham’s books are a great holiday read, but the man is not known as a stylist. If he is one of Rebecca Kauffman’s literary heroes — and, given she’s framed a book around him, it feels fair to conclude he must be — then, you think, anyone who reads seeking beauty in words is in trouble.

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