Rising Country music star Ty Myers will be a long way from home after swapping cattle ranches for the big stadium stages in a huge breakthrough year for the teen
As the Country music bug continues to sweep the UK, one rising star has promised a show to remember during his debut set in Europe. Ty Myers might only be 18, but the musician’s meteoric rise sees him head to Blighty for the Country 2 Country festival this month labelled as the artist to watch by Grammy and Spotify.
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He’ll quickly follow up his festival feature with a return to these shores to support the legendary Luke Combs. It’s all a far cry from his early years when the Ends of the Earth singer spent his childhood on a cattle ranch.
But it’s this upbringing that Ty says is helping to mould him into the next big thing in the genre. Speaking exclusively to the Mirror, the teen said: “I mean, there are many lessons you learn growing up. Everybody you see around you, in this, and in that industry, is hard working.
“You just put your head down and do it. And that’s just a great way to live life. And really, I take that over into the music industry and the music business, and it’s been a great, great help to me, for sure.”
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Known for his ability to blend traditional country storytelling with blues, soul and rock influences, Ty believes his success comes from being able to relate to the younger audience. “I feel like the most logical reasoning [as to why he is already so successful] is I’m writing all my own songs.
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“I’m writing to my generation from where I get it, you know? We all think the same. We’re all very emotional. We’re all trying to figure it out, and it’s such a strange world to navigate right now, especially at our age.
“And I feel I maybe connecting because of that, because I get them, because I deal with the same problems as them.”
Following his shows in London, Glasgow and Belfast as part of the C2C: Country to Country festival ensemble, Ty will join Luke on his massive My Kinda Saturday Night Tour.
After playing in stadiums in the US, he will returning to the UK and Ireland with the hitmaker later in the year where he will perform at Slane Castle in Dublin, Murrayfield Stadium in Edinburgh, and Wembley Stadium in London.
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And he’s told his fans to expect a show that is “all about the music”. Admitting there’s “not a whole lot of pyrotechnics or flaming rings and jumping bicycles,” Ty said he lives for making music on stage.
And in a message to his UK and Irish fans, Ty said: “I’ve heard nothing but amazing things about European crowds. So I’m, I’m, I’m expecting a lot of energy and a lot of love for music, because that’s all I’ve heard. So I have big expectations.”
Satellite images have revealed the scale of damage at Iranian military sites following US and Israeli strikes, but civilian infrastructure has also been hit, including schools and hospitals.
There has been an internet blackout since the start of the war on 28 February. Satellite imagery has become one of the few ways to find out what is happening on the ground.
Zoom in to explore strike locations in satellite maps
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Missile bases
The US and Israel are targeting Iran‘s missile bases to reduce the regime’s ability to launch ballistic missiles.
A base in the northwest of Isfahan, located near the ‘Ahmad Kazemi barracks’, named after IRGC general Ahmad Kazemi, was targeted.
Images from 1 March show initial damage to a building at the site and then on 3 March show the same building flattened.
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The building on the left-hand side was previously targeted in June by Israel and has been targeted again.
It’s one of several missile bases that have been targeted. Another close to Kermanshah in northwest Iran was also hit.
It’s one of Iran’s extensive underground “missile cities”, which are deep tunnel complexes built into mountains to house and shield large parts of the country’s missile arsenal from detection and attack.
In imagery from 4 March provided by Planet Labs, Sky News has identified at least 10 buildings that have been destroyed. Alongside the buildings, there are craters left from strikes at the front of tunnel entrances. This tactic may be being used to collapse the tunnels.
Iran’s missile capabilities are a threat to the US and Israel. They produce multiple different missile types. The longest-range missile, the Sajjil, has a maximum range of up to 2,000km (1,242 miles). That’s far enough to hit Moscow or Athens – making any missile base a key target.
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US Central Command (CENTCOM) said on 4 March that the number of Iran’s missile launches has dropped 86% in four days.
Admiral Brad Cooper, commander of CENTCOM, said that hundreds of air defence sites, ballistic missiles and drones had been destroyed by US strikes.
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Naval ports
Ports have also been targeted by the US and Israel. They are being targeted as this is where Iran’s navy operates from, launching missiles and attacks.
Imagery from satellite provider Vantor and European Space Imaging show Konarak naval port in southern Iran was badly damaged.
Image: Satellite image from 4 March 2026. Pic: Vantor provided by European Space Imaging
Satellite images from 4 March show two destroyed buildings at the port and a sunken Iranian ship.
The head of US Central Command, which oversees American military operations in the Middle East, claimed that 17 Iranian vessels, including its “most operational” submarine, have been destroyed.
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The naval base is significant because it sits very close to the Strait of Hormuz, a key commercial shipping route being controlled by Iran. The base is used by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards (IRGC) and is said to launch patrols and exercises in the Gulf of Oman and Indian Ocean, staging missile and naval training operations.
Konarak also supports the port of Chabahar, one of Iran’s only deep-water ports with direct access to the Indian Ocean.
Another port targeted was the military harbour at Bandar Abbas, which is the main headquarters of the Iranian Navy, and provides access to the Strait of Hormuz.
The imagery shows the Iranian vessel, IRIS Makran, with a plume of smoke after a strike on 2 March.
Although unclear how much damage the vessel sustained, the ship is Iran’s largest naval vessel and serves as a floating base, if out of operation this will be a blow to the naval capabilities of the regime.
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In more recent imagery from 4 March, it appears a building can be seen with major damage to the roof.
Image: Satellite image from 4 March 2026, shows a hole in the roof of a building at Bandar Abbas port. Pic: Planet Labs PBC
Nuclear facilities
Nuclear facilities have been targeted as the West believes Iran is building a nuclear weapon.
One of the locations targeted was Natanz Fuel Enrichment Plant in western Iran.
Natanz Fuel Enrichment Plant is Iran’s primary uranium-enrichment plant that is known to be operating after US and Israeli strikes in June 2025. According to Rafael Grossi, of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), the centrifuges were “severely damaged if not destroyed altogether after this strike”.
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Additional strikes appear to have taken place on 2 March.
Imagery from 3 March shows three buildings destroyed at the site.
The IAEA confirmed damage to the entrance on the site on 3 March.
The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS) confirmed the buildings were damaged as personnel and vehicle entrances.
The dispute over Iran’s nuclear programme is ongoing. The regime in Tehran has long insisted it has no intention of making a nuclear weapon.
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Civilian infrastructure
Civilian infrastructure has been hit in the airstrikes. Some of the sites are near Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) facilities, including police stations.
Iranian officials said more than 150 people were killed when a girls’ school was hit in the city of Minab on 28 February.
The school was located near an IRGC base.
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Imagery from 4 March appears to show six locations where missiles or shrapnel likely fell on the school.
US secretary of state Marco Rubio said in an interview that “the United States would not deliberately target a school. Our objectives are missiles”.
Israel also said it had not found any connection to their operations.
More satellite imagery shows Gandhi Hospital in Tehran.
Images from 1 March and 3 March show a television tower directly next to the hospital in ruins. Videos verified by Sky News show it wasn’t just the television tower affected; the hospital was also hit.
The Data x Forensics team is a multi-skilled unit dedicated to providing transparent journalism from Sky News. We gather, analyse and visualise data to tell data-driven stories. We combine traditional reporting skills with advanced analysis of satellite images, social media and other open source information. Through multimedia storytelling we aim to better explain the world while also showing how our journalism is done.
A petition is calling for the UK Government to stop the State Pension age rising from 66 to 67 starting in April
Linda Howard Money and Consumer Writer
20:00, 05 Mar 2026
The State Pension age is set to begin increasing from 66 to 67 in April, with the change due to be implemented for all men and women across the UK by 2028. The scheduled adjustment to the official retirement age has been enshrined in law since 2014, with a subsequent rise from 67 to 68 planned for the mid-2040s.
The Pensions Act 2014 brought forward the increase in the State Pension age from 66 to 67 by eight years. The UK Government also altered the manner in which the increase in State Pension age is phased.
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This means that rather than reaching State Pension age on a particular date, individuals born between March 6, 1961 and April 5, 1977 will be eligible to claim the State Pension upon turning 67.
Nevertheless, a new online petition is urging the UK Government to “stop the State Pension age rising to 67”. It goes further by suggesting it should be reduced to 65.
Petition creator Lynne Calder says: “Let people have the choice whether to retire or keep working. Many people have been working since they were 16. We think a state pension retirement age of 65 for all is ample enough.”
At 10,000 signatures of support the petition would be entitled to a written response from the UK Government. At 100,000, the Petitions Committee would consider it for debate in Parliament, reports the Daily Record.
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Under the Pensions Act 2007 the State Pension age for men and women will increase from 67 to 68 between 2044 and 2046. The Pensions Act 2014 mandates a regular review of the State Pension age, at least once every five years.
The review is centred on the principle that individuals should be able to spend a certain proportion of their adult life drawing a State Pension.
The UK Government recently launched a new Pension Commission to investigate how to boost pension saving with its findings due to be published in 2027. Areas for consideration will include auto-enrolment saving rates, boosting saving among groups such as the self-employed and a review of the State Pension age.
Dr Suzy Morrissey will report on factors the UK Government should consider relating to State Pension age and the Government Actuary’s Department will prepare a report on the proportion of adult life in retirement.
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The review of the State Pension age will take into account life expectancy along with a range of other factors relevant to setting the State Pension age. Following the review’s completion, the UK Government may then choose to bring forward changes to the State Pension age.
However, any proposals would have to go through Parliament before becoming law.
Defence secretary John Healey has twice declined to rule out Britain joining strikes on Iran, when asked by Sky News.
He also said he’d had the option of deploying HMS Dragon to the Mediterranean for weeks.
Interviewed at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, the minister was asked by Sky’s Europe correspondent Ali Bunkall if he could rule out Britain joining the conflict in an offensive capacity.
Image: Defence Secretary John Healey interviewed at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus.
He responded: “As circumstances in any conflict change, you’ve got to be willing to adapt the action you take.”
Mr Healey then listed defensive measures that were being taken, including the use of anti-drone helicopters, deploying HMS Dragon to the eastern Mediterranean, and bringing in planners to co-ordinate an international response.
Pressed on whether he would rule out British aircraft taking part in offensive operations over Iran, Mr Healey again demurred.
“Everything that we have done is defensive, is legal, and is coordinated with other allies,” he said.
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Image: HMS Dragon in Portsmouth gearing up for deployment. Pic: Reuters
The minister’s visit to the island comes after a drone attack on RAF Akrotiri on Monday, with two more UAVs intercepted en-route to the base later that day.
During his visit, Mr Healey met with his Cypriot counterpart Vasilis Palmas “to discuss how the UK is further reinforcing our air defences to support our shared security”, a government spokesman said.
Iran has been unleashing rocket and drone attacks across the Middle East after the US and Israel launched a joint-attack on the country on Saturday.
Image: RAF Akrotiri, a British sovereign base in Cyprus that was hit by a drone early Monday, causing limited damage, in Cyprus March 4, 2026. REUT
In the aftermath of Monday’s drone attack, the decision was made to deploy HMS Dragon, an air-defence warship, to the Mediterranean.
But Sky News revealed on Wednesday that the ship was not ready to depart and would not sail until next week.
Asked when the option of deploying HMS Dragon first crossed his desk, Mr Healey deflected.
Image: An unexploded Iranian projectile that landed in near Qamishli, eastern Syria. Pic: AP
He said it was one of the options he’d had available when he made decisions weeks before the start of the conflict to strengthen British defences in the region.
He added that the decision to deploy the warship had been taken because the government was “now in a position to judge better the nature of the Iranian response”.
The Metropolitan Police said three men – aged 39, 43 and 68 – were arrested by counter-terrorism officers in London and Wales after being accused of assisting a foreign intelligence service. On Thursday morning, officers said all three had been released on bail.
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Reid, who said she is not under police investigation and has denied any wrongdoing, has faced questions about her business ties to her husband.
In a statement she said: “This week has been the worst of my life. The shock of recent days has been difficult for me and my family. I want to reiterate something very important: I am not under investigation by the police and no accusations have been against me. I have done nothing wrong.
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“I love my country. To serve the people of East Kilbride and Strathaven as their MP and the Labour Party has been – and continues to be – the privilege of my life.
“I understand that speculation and gossip is fevered at a time like this. I do not want the circumstances that I and my family find ourselves in to be a distraction for this government, of which I am proud and in whom I believe.
“I also do not want my children – who have nothing to answer for and who deserve privacy and compassion – to find themselves subject to intrusion.
“Following discussions with the Chief Whip, I am voluntarily suspending myself from the whip this evening and will not sit as a Labour MP until internal investigations are concluded. I will welcome and cooperate with any questions and worries the party may have.
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“I, and my team, will continue to serve my constituents in the normal way as their Member of Parliament.”
Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar said of Reid on Thursday afternoon: “We are considering all these matters because they are serious questions that you are putting to me.
“As you know, we have an independent Governance and Legal Unit that’s considering many of these matters and we will have judgements to make today.”
In a statement on Wednesday, Reid strongly rejected any claims of wrongdoing: “I have never been to China. I have never spoken on China or China-related matters in the Commons. I have never asked a question on China-related matters.
“As far as I am aware, I have never met any Chinese businesses whilst I have been an MP, any Chinese diplomats or government employees, nor raised any concern with ministers or anyone else on behalf of, even coincidentally, Chinese interests. I am a social democrat who believes in freedom of expression, free trade unions and free elections.
“I am not any sort of admirer or apologist for the Chinese Communist Party’s dictatorship. I have never seen anything to make me suspect my husband has broken any law. I am not part of my husband’s business activities and neither I nor my children are part of this investigation, and we should not be treated by media organisations as though we are. Above all I expect media organisations to respect my children’s privacy.”
Taylor, 39, is listed as a “lobbyist” on Reid’s MP registered interests.
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Companies House names him as the director of Earthcott Limited, a public relations and communications firm. The Herald reported on Thursday that Reid’s consultancy received more than £20,000 in interest free loans from two of her husband’s businesses before she was elected to Parliament.
Security minister Dan Jarvis said there will be “severe consequences” if it is proven that China attempted to interfere with UK sovereign affairs.
Jarvis said the investigation “relates to China” and “foreign interference targeting UK democracy”.
He told MPs: “Let me be clear, if there is proven evidence of attempts by China to interfere with UK sovereign affairs, we will impose severe consequences and hold all actors involved to account.”
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Greenhalgh’s Craft Bakery in Horwich welcomed the Bolton-born television and radio presenter on March 4, as he stopped by his local shop for a quick catch-up and no doubt a tasty treat or two.
The Bolton-born star, who grew up in Horwich, made the day of staff members Jackie and Natalie, the shop’s mother-and-daughter team, who were “all smiles” as they grabbed a quick selfie with the presenter.
The Greenhalgh’s bakery said: “It was a brilliant surprise to see Vernon pop into our Chorley New Road shop!
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“As a proud Boltonian, he clearly knows best where to come for his pie fix.”
Sharing the moment on social media, the bakery added: “Look who popped into our Horwich shop yesterday!
“Thanks for stopping by, Vernon!”
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Vernon Kay is best known for presenting popular television shows, including All Star Family Fortunes and Beat the Star, as well as hosting programmes on BBC Radio 2.
Greenhalgh’s is a favourite across the borough, offering a wide range of award-winning and freshly baked goods, from multi-portion pies and bespoke celebration cakes to fan-favourite pasties.
The family-run business has grown into one of the largest employers in the Bolton area, with around 950 staff and 59 retail shops.
The number of 12-hour trolley waits at the York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust has increased for a second month in a row.
Updated figures show that 930 patients had to wait on trolleys for more than 12 hours after attending emergency departments in January. In December, there were 759 trolley waits that lasted longer than 12 hours, which was an increase of 453 from November.
A spokesperson for the York and Scarborough Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said that factors impacting flow through its hospitals included high demand, patients presenting with more complex needs, and delays in discharging people who are well enough to leave hospital.
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“Like hospitals across the country, we are experiencing sustained pressure in our urgent and emergency care services, which can at times lead to an increase in longer trolley waits,” the spokesperson said.
They added: “We are sorry for the impact this has on patients and families.
“We are working closely with our health and care partners to improve patient flow, including supporting earlier discharge, making best use of available beds, and strengthening same-day emergency care.”
Readers had their say in the comments section of The Press website.
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Teddy Duchamp said: “I wish it had been 12 hours, for me it took 17 hours, and most of that time was spent on a bed in the corridor right next to the doors that people are brought into in A&E.
“But I was lucky. I saw two dead bodies wheeled by whilst in there. The poor nurses and staff are rushed off their feet.”
Tiny toes said: “Free care is available, how lucky we all are.
“Why, oh why, did the powers that be close the rehab units across the city? They alleviated beds in the hospital wards and got people back home faster and safer.”
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Pinza-C55 said: “I thought Labour was going to sort all the NHS problems out?”
Cricket70 said: “At least you’re getting free health care.”
Readers also shared their thoughts on social media.
Commenting on Facebook, one reader said: “I went to Scarborough A&E last week and the staff were amazing.
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“I was in for five hours from arriving, being seen, and going home. I was even offered food and drink – great service.”
Another reader commented: “I was also seen by A&E doctors two months ago with suspected sepsis following a dental treatment. Once again they were prompt and I was transferred to York within a few hours.
“All the staff in A&E have been amazing recently. We are very fortunate to have this hospital in [Scarborough] and I for one am extremely grateful.”
Everyone’s been in a debate when someone says: “You’re taking that out of context.” But what does it actually mean to understand something “in context”?
Appeals to context feel irrefutable. Of course we need context. But “context” is one of those ideas that seems obvious until you actually try to define it. What counts as context? Where does context end and the thing itself begin? And whose context matters?
Take a typical example: a quote from a politician surfaces that seems damning. Condemnation ensues. But a defence is mounted: the quote has been taken out of context – the politician was being sarcastic, as you’ll see when you look at what else they said at the same time.
But the assault continues when it’s pointed out that the quote fits with other remarks the politician has made. Meanwhile, still further defences are mounted on the basis of the wider political debates around the subject of the quote. Everyone’s invoking context, but nobody’s agreeing.
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“Context” isn’t one thing, though the way we use the word often suggests it is. It’s dozens of different things we’ve given different names to over centuries. Social context. Historical context. Cultural context. Political context. Economic context. Linguistic context. Biographical context. Institutional context. Each of these emerged as distinct ways of thinking about how to situate meaning, and each implies a different kind of explanation.
We haven’t always been as concerned about context as we are now – and we haven’t always understood it in the same way. The historian Peter Burke dates “context” in roughly its current (and quite capacious) senses to the counter-enlightenment romanticism of the 19th century.
This same counter-enlightenment romanticism is partly the context in which my own discipline of anthropology emerged – and people started insisting we understand human practices “in their total social context”. They meant something specific: that you can’t understand a ritual or belief by isolating it, and you have to see how it fits into an entire way of life.
When historians talk about “historical context”, they often mean the sequence of events and conditions that preceded something – the causal chain. When literary critics invoke “textual context”, they often mean the surrounding words that shape meaning. These are all genuinely different intellectual operations, and they often pull in opposite directions.
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The philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein spent much of his life thinking about this problem. In his early work, he thought meaning depended on logical context – how a statement fits into a formal structure.
Later, he abandoned this for something messier: meaning depends on what he called “form of life” – the shared practices and assumptions that make our words intelligible to one other. There’s no algorithm for context, there’s just the hard work of making explicit what we normally take for granted. This helps to explain why political arguments can sometimes be so frustrating. We think we’re disagreeing about facts when we’re actually disagreeing about which kind of context is relevant.
Things are going great! And also absolutely terribly. Shutterstock/Maya Lab
Take recent debates about crime statistics. In 2024, the then Conservative government of the UK argued that crime had fallen by 56% since 2010, yet it also claimed that knife crime had risen dramatically in London since the arrival of Labour mayor Sadiq Khan.
More recently, meanwhile, Reform’s Nigel Farage argues that crime has skyrocketed since the 1990s in ways that records fail to make clear because people aren’t reporting crimes. Still others point to the economic context of austerity and cuts to policing that have hit deprived areas the hardest.
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Who’s right? They all might be, in a sense. But they’re playing different games with context. The Conservative government used temporal context (crime down since 2010) and regional context (but up in London). Farage invokes methodological context (the problem of unreported crime skewing the data). Critics of austerity point to economic and structural context (resource distribution and its effects). Each context tells you to look at different things, weigh different factors, draw different conclusions.
There’s no neutral context, no view from nowhere. Every context is itself a choice: a decision about what matters, what explains what, which background is relevant. When we invoke context, we’re not just adding information, we’re making a claim about what kind of thing the world is. These aren’t just different amounts of context, they’re different ideas about what makes things meaningful.
What do we do with this?
Choosing a context is itself an argumentative move. When you invoke historical context, you’re claiming – probably – that temporal sequence and precedent matter most. When you invoke social context, you’re claiming that group membership or structural position matter most. These are substantial commitments, not neutral framings.
It’s also helpful to recognise that contexts can conflict. The immediate linguistic context (x was being ironic) might point one way, while the historical context (but x voted for similar measures) points to another. Both can be “true” while supporting opposite conclusions.
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None of this means context doesn’t matter. It means it’s helpful to be honest about what we’re doing when we invoke it. We’re not just adding background information. We’re making claims about what kind of background matters, which in turn depend on deeper assumptions about how the world works.
It’s helpful to be explicit about which context we’re operating in, and why we think it’s the relevant one. That certainly won’t resolve all arguments. But it might help us see that we’re not always arguing about the same thing.
Understanding context isn’t an invitation to add more and more information until everyone agrees. It’s an acknowledgement that meaning is situated, and that different situations generate different meanings. The hard part is figuring out which situation we’re actually in.
This article contains references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and this may include links to bookshop.org. If you click on one of the links and go on to buy something from bookshop.org The Conversation UK may earn a commission.
One guest said they loved the room so much they could have stayed for a week
A Cambridgeshire bed and breakfast has featured on a popular Channel 4 TV show this week. The Red House, in the picturesque village of Longstowe, appeared on Channel 4’s Four in a Bed.
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The competition began this week on March 2, seeing four B&B owners battle it out to be crowned the best of the bunch. The B&B owners take it in turns to stay at each other’s place before reviewing them across different categories.
Carl and Liz, owners of The Red House, have competed with the Three Horseshoes in Warham, Norfolk, run by married couple Fiona and Michael, and Holly Lodge Boutique run by Barbara and Elizabeth in Thursford, also in Norfolk. The final stay of the competiton will be with Helen and Carl at Peacock lake in Gunthorpe, Nottinghamshire.
The Cambridgeshire B&B featured in Tuesday night’s episode (March 3), as the second visit of the competition. The guests were shown to their rooms where they got straight to judging the cleanliness of the room and the facilities on offer.
Barbara and Elizabeth were fans of the chandelier, saying: “Not a single cobweb, and that is a difficult thing to keep clean.” Fiona and Michael were fans of the “nice fat pillows”, with Michael adding: “My head is going to enjoy being on that.” Helen and Carl said: “This is really high quality flooring, it looks stunning.”
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But Helen and Carl were disappointed to find some dust in the drawers and on the back of the TV. Not every guest seemed to find dust though, as Barbara said: “I’m not sure anyone has stayed here before.”
One facility in the room which proved to be a crowd pleaser was the mini fridge, which the guests said was a nice touch. All of the guests then headed out to a Highland cow experience at Highland Cow Cottage. Here, farm manager Charlie introduced everyone to the cows and allowed them to give the cows some afternoon snacks. The guests then got an afternoon snack of their own in the form of a Highland cow themed afternoon tea.
Guests then headed back to the B&B for the night. In the morning, the breakfast received rave reviews. The eggs were described as “perfection” and Carl and Liz were praised for their homemade hash browns and other “really good quality ingredients”.
When it came to the final verdicts of their stays overall, Barbara and Elizabeth said: “We’ve loved the stay here, it’s a very charming coaching inn that’s been restored beautifully.”
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Fional and Michael added; “We loved our room, we could have stayed for a week.”
Carl and Helen were not quite as thrilled, saying: “There were some quite distinct cleaning issues. A five minute checkover could have cured it.” Overall, all of the guests said that they would stay at The Red House again.
Carl and Liz said: “We had a fantastic experience filming with Channel 4 for their series Four in a Bed. We’re very grateful for the opportunity to showcase our business and share what we do with a wider audience.
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“It was a memorable experience for our team, and we hope that appearing on the show encourages more guests to discover and book with us.”
The Red House is set in three acres of grounds on the outskirts of Longstowe, and according to its website, it is an old coaching inn built in 1799. The traditional English restaurant offers a main menu alongside its Sunday menu.
This series is set to continue with more visits to other B&Bs this week. The winner will be announced on Friday’s episode (March 6) for the big payday reveal.
Ross Lynch was spotted acting suspiciously on St Barnabas Road in Middlesbrough by police hunting dealers operating in the area.
Teesside Crown Court heard how police recovered a mobile phone and a set of keys from the defendant before they searched his property.
Elisha Marsay, prosecuting, said officers discovered a block of cocaine weighing 43.2g inside his home alongside weighing scales, grip seal bags and almost £1,000 in cash.
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She said specialist officers estimated the cocaine was worth about £4,300 in the streets.
The 34-year-old pleaded guilty to possession with intent to supply a controlled drug of Class A – cocaine – following his arrest on October 3 last year.
Kate Clark, mitigating, said her client turned to selling drugs to fund his own cocaine habit.
She added: “He was dealing cocaine for only a matter of weeks, very foolishly, while he was using cocaine.
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“He was using it so much so that he wanted to manage to keep out of debt and decided to deal to a small number of friends and people he worked with.”
Recorder Mark McKone KC said: “I accept that you were a Class A drug addict and the motivation was to fund your own habit rather than make a significant amount of money.
“I also accept that you were only doing it for a short period of time.”
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Lynch, of St Barnabas Road, Middlesbrough, was sentenced to 32 months in custody.
It isn’t the first time I’ve seen a modular phone, and it likely won’t be the last, but this concept device from Chinese smartphone maker Tecno caught my eye. It’s an exceptionally thin Android smartphone with a couple of connectors on the back that’s used to attach various gadgets.
One module turns the phone into a complete camera system with a massive lens. The display acts as a viewfinder, though the weight distribution didn’t feel quite right when I tried it – I almost dropped it when I picked it up. Other smaller, less unwieldy modules can attach to the phone, including a smaller camera lens, a speaker, a vanity mirror, a wallet and a wireless microphone.
A Bluetooth tracker that’s compatible with both Apple and Google
Apple recently announced a new AirTag, but at MWC, Chinese company Xiaomi announced its first-ever tracker, and it works with both Apple’s ‘Find My’ app and Google’s ‘Find Hub’.
A coin cell battery powers the Xiaomi Tag, which it says with last for around a year like Apple’s AirTag, but there’s no need to buy separate accessories to clip this onto your keys or backpack. Instead, the Xiaomi Tag has a pill-shaped design with an integrated metal loop, making it easy to attach to your keys or bag. It’s also IP67 fully waterproof, and it weighs just 10g, which is ever so slightly less than the AirTag.