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Jet2 passenger reveals exact moment flight descended into chaos as footage shows brawl

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Daily Mirror

The horror brawl erupted aboard a Jet2 plane flying between Turkey and Manchester last week, and one passenger has now revealed how the chaotic scenes took shape

Brawl breaks out on Jet2 flight from Turkey to Manchester

A “shocking and frightening” brawl that broke out aboard a Jet2 flight started when a bald man asked passengers a bizarre question, one person on the plane has claimed.

In a now viral video shared last week, people were seen trading punches in an all-out brawl aboard a flight travelling from Antalya, Turkey to Manchester, with one passenger seen allegedly hurling racist insults at someone recording the altercation on their phone. The dramatic exchange, during which two people were seen grabbing at the phone and another passenger’s face culminated in airline bans for two of the people involved.

Another passenger has explained what the scuffle – which eventually drew in an entire crowd, including a woman who rose from her seat, and shouts of “get back” from others – began with one man’s drunken question.

READ MORE: Teen girls brawl outside McDonald’s as locals fear notorious ‘Bra Boys’ style gangsREAD MORE: Mass 50 people brawl outside Bristol pub ‘involving groups with differing views’

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An insider told the Daily Mail the chaos was started by a bald man, who appeared to have recently undergone a hair transplant. The 21-year-old said he had loudly started asking passengers whether they wanted to listen to music, describing both his and a fellow traveller’s behaviour as not “normal” as it appeared they had been drinking.

They said: “Some people said yes because he was already being so loud. I think him and another bloke had definitely been drinking before or on the flight because their behaviour just wasn’t normal.”

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The source, who preferred to remain anonymous, said the man eventually became so disruptive that cabin crew were forced to step in and ask him to turn the music down. They added the man failed to stop when asked however, and shouted back at the Jet2 staffer.

They said he ended up “swearing and shouting”, adding: “She went and got her supervisor but he was being so rude, just swearing and shouting at her, I’ve not seen anything like it.”

A taste of the foul language can be seen in the video, which shows the man calling someone behind a phone camera a “Muslim mug” and a “f***ing mug” some time after the initial incident, when the same man allegedly swore at the cameraman’s mum. He told the Mail the disruptive passenger had “kept on asking me if I wanted to fight”, adding: “But then he called me a Muslim mug.”

The insider added the fighting started soon after, with fellow passengers accusing the man of “being racist” as others pulled out their own phones to film the chaos.

He said: “This is when everyone began shouting and fighting, some more people were filming now and people were just asking him: ‘Why are you being racist?’” The video captures other passengers intervening, with one pushing the man away, and and another placing his companion in a headlock.

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The disruption only ended, he said, when the plane was forced to divert and land in Brussels, with police taking 20 minutes to board and detain the man and another male passenger.

The Daily Mirror has approached Jet2 for comment.

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Oscar-winning actor Robert Duvall dies at 95

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Oscar-winning actor Robert Duvall dies at 95

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Robert Duvall, the Oscar-winning actor of matchless versatility and dedication whose classic roles included the intrepid consigliere of the first two “Godfather” movies and the over-the-hill country music singer in “Tender Mercies,” has died at age 95.

Duvall died “peacefully” at his home Sunday in Middleburg, Virginia, according to an announcement from his publicist and from a statement posted on his Facebook page by his wife, Luciana Duvall.

“To the world, he was an Academy Award-winning actor, a director, a storyteller. To me, he was simply everything,” Luciana Duvall wrote. “His passion for his craft was matched only by his deep love for characters, a great meal, and holding court. For each of his many roles, Bob gave everything to his characters and to the truth of the human spirit they represented.”

The bald, wiry Duvall didn’t have leading man looks, but few “character actors” enjoyed such a long, rewarding and unpredictable career, in leading and supporting roles, from an itinerant preacher to Josef Stalin. Beginning with his 1962 film debut as Boo Radley, the reclusive neighbor in “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Duvall created a gallery of unforgettable portrayals. They earned him seven Academy Award nominations and the best actor prize for “Tender Mercies,” which came out in 1983. He also won four Golden Globes, including one for playing the philosophical cattle-drive boss in the 1989 miniseries “Lonesome Dove,” a role he often cited as his favorite.

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In 2005, Duvall was awarded a National Medal of Arts.

He had been acting for some 20 years when “The Godfather,” released in 1972, established him as one of the most in-demand performers of Hollywood. He had made a previous film, “The Rain People,” with Francis Coppola, and the director chose him to play Tom Hagen in the mafia epic that featured Al Pacino and Marlon Brando among others. Duvall was a master of subtlety as an Irishman among Italians, rarely at the center of a scene, but often listening and advising in the background, an irreplaceable thread through the saga of the Corleone crime family.

“Stars and Italians alike depend on his efficiency, his tidying up around their grand gestures, his being the perfect shortstop on a team of personality sluggers,” wrote the critic David Thomson. “Was there ever a role better designed for its actor than that of Tom Hagen in both parts of ‘The Godfather?’”

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In another Coppola film, “Apocalypse Now,” Duvall was wildly out front, the embodiment of deranged masculinity as Lieutenant Colonel Bill Kilgore, who with equal vigor enjoyed surfing and bombing raids on the Viet Cong. Duvall required few takes for one of the most famous passages in movie history, barked out on the battlefield by a bare-chested, cavalry-hatted Kilgore: “I love the smell of napalm in the morning. You know, one time we had a hill bombed, for 12 hours. When it was all over, I walked up. We didn’t find one of ‘em, not one stinkin’ dink body.

“The smell, you know that gasoline smell, the whole hill. Smelled like — victory.”

Coppola once commented about Duvall: “Actors click into character at different times — the first week, third week. Bobby’s hot after one or two takes.”

Honored, but still hungry

He was Oscar-nominated as supporting actor for “The Godfather” and “Apocalypse Now,” but a dispute over money led him to turn down the third Godfather epic, a loss deeply felt by critics, fans and “Godfather” colleagues. Duvall would complain publicly about being offered less than his co-stars.

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Fellow actors marveled at Duvall’s studious research and planning, and his coiled energy. Michael Caine, who co-starred with him in the 2003 “Secondhand Lions,” once told The Associated Press: “Before a big scene, Bobby just sits there, absolutely quiet; you know when not to talk to him.” Anyone who disturbed him would suffer the well-known Duvall temper, famously on display during the filming of the John Wayne Western “True Grit,” when Duvall seethed at director Henry Hathaway’s advice to “tense up” before a scene.

Duvall was awarded an Oscar in 1984 for his leading role as the troubled singer and songwriter Mac Sledge in “Tender Mercies,” a prize he accepted while clad in a cowboy tuxedo with Western tie. In 1998, he was nominated for best actor in “The Apostle,” a drama about a wayward Southern evangelist which he wrote, directed, starred in, produced and largely financed. With customary thoroughness, he visited dozens of country churches and spent 12 years writing the script and trying to get it made.

Among other notable roles: the outlaw gang leader who gets ambushed by John Wayne in “True Grit”; Jesse James in “The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid”; the pious and beleaguered Frank Burns in “M-A-S-H”; the TV hatchet man in “Network”; Dr. Watson in “The Seven-Per-Cent Solution”; and the sadistic father in “The Great Santini.”

“When I was doing ‘Colors’ in 1988 with Sean Penn, someone asked me how I do it all these years, keep it fresh. Well, if you don’t overwork, have some hobbies, you can do it and stay hungry even if you’re not really hungry,” Duvall told The Associated Press in 1990.

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In his mid-80s, he received a supporting Oscar nomination as the title character of the 2014 release “The Judge,” in which he is accused of causing a death in a hit-and-run accident. More recent films included “Widows” and “12 Mighty Orphans.”

Ungifted in school, gifted on stage

Robert Selden Duvall grew up in the Navy towns of Annapolis and the San Diego area, where he was born in 1931. He spent time in other cities as his father, who rose to be an admiral, was assigned to various duties.

The boy’s experience helped in his adult profession as he learned the nuances of regional speech and observed the psyche of military men, which he would portray in several films.

Duvall reportedly used his Navy officer father as the basis for his portrayal of the explosive militarist in “The Great Santini,” based on the Pat Conroy novel. He commented in 2003: “My dad was a gentleman but a seether, a stern, blustery guy, and away a lot of the time.” Bobby took after his mother, an amateur actress, in playing a guitar and performing. He was a wrestler like his father and enjoyed besting kids older than himself.

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He lacked the concentration for schoolwork and nearly flunked out of Principia College in Elsah, Illinois. His despairing parents decided he needed something to keep him in college so he wouldn’t be drafted for the Korean War. “They recommended acting as an expedient thing to get through,” he recalled. “I’m glad they did.” He flourished in drama classes.

“Way back when I was in college,” Duvall told the AP in 1990, “there was a wonderful man named Frank Parker, who had been a dancer in World War I. We did a full-length mime play and I played a Harlequin clown. I really liked that.

“Then, I played an older guy in ‘All My Sons,’ and at one point I had this emotional moment, where this emotion was pouring out. Parker said at that moment he didn’t think acting can be carried any further than that. And this guy was a very critical guy. So I thought, at that moment at least, this is what I wanted to do.”

After two years in the Army, he used the G.I. Bill to finance his studies at the Neighborhood Playhouse in New York, hanging out with such other young hopefuls as Robert Morse, Gene Hackman and Dustin Hoffman. After a one-night performance in “A View From the Bridge,” Duvall began getting offers for work in TV series, among them “The Naked City” and “The Defenders.”

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Between his high-paying jobs in major productions, Duvall devoted himself to directing personal projects: a documentary about a prairie family, “We’re Not the Jet Set”; a film about gypsies, “Angelo, My Love”; and “Assassination Tango,” in which he also starred.

Duvall had been a tango dancer since seeing the musical “Tango Argentina” in the 1980s and visited in Argentina dozens of times to study the dance and the culture. The result was the 2003 release about a hit man with a passion for tango.

His co-star was Luciana Pedraza, 42 years his junior, whom he married in 2005. Duvall’s three previous marriages — to Barbara Benjamin, Gail Youngs and Sharon Brophy — ended in divorce.

—-

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Former Associated Press Hollywood correspondent Bob Thomas, who died in 2014, was the primary writer of this obituary

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FA Cup fifth-round draw: League One Mansfield host Arsenal as Man City head to Newcastle

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Eras: Phil Collins

League One side Mansfield Town will host 14-time winners Arsenal in the FA Cup fifth round.

The Stags defeated Premier League stragglers Burnley 2-1 on Saturday afternoon, producing a remarkable second-half comeback at Turf Moor.

Elsewhere, Manchester City will visit Newcastle in one of two all-Premier League ties, in a repeat of one of this season’s League Cup semi-finals.

Non-league Macclesfield could be in line to face a third top-flight opponent in a row – either the Silkmen or Brentford will head to West Ham in round five after Monday night’s tie.

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Sunderland face a second successive away trip in the competition as they were drawn against Port Vale or Bristol City – that fourth-round tie was postponed until Tuesday, 3 March (19:45 GMT) because of a waterlogged pitch.

Meanwhile Championship promotion chasers Wrexham welcome eight-time winners Chelsea.

The matches will be played across the weekend of 7-8 March.

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FA Cup draw LIVE: Arsenal FC, Chelsea and Liverpool discover fifth-round fate

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FA Cup draw LIVE: Arsenal FC, Chelsea and Liverpool discover fifth-round fate

The fifth-round draw of the FA Cup has taken place, with 18 teams discovering their fates for the round of 16. Arsenal, Chelsea and Liverpool were among those in the hat, and were joined by the likes of Premier League rivals West Ham, Fulham, Newcastle, Sunderland, Wolves and Leeds.

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Dramatic car fire breaks out as street smothered in smoke

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Manchester Evening News

Emergency services raced to the scene

Moment smoke fills street after car fire

A dramatic car fire broke out and left a street smothered in smoke in Oldham on Monday afternoon (February 16). Emergency crews were called to the blaze on Milnrow Road at around 4.25pm.

The red vehicle, parked beside an off licence, became engulfed in flames. Fire engines arrived on blue lights and cordoned off the area and part of the road, causing significant traffic throughout the afternoon.

Dramatic videos shared on social media show thick smoke plumes smothering the street. The blaze took around 45 minutes to get under control, the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service confirmed in a statement.

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It is thought that no injuries were reported in the incident. The cause of the blaze has also not yet been confirmed.

A spokesperson for Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service (GMFRS) said: “At around 4.25pm this afternoon (Monday 16 February), one fire engine from Oldham Community Fire Station was called to attend a car fire on Milnrow Road in Oldham.

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“Crews arrived quickly and used one hose reel and one breathing apparatus to extinguish the fire. Firefighters worked to make the area safe before departing after approximately 45 minutes at the scene.”

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Building work starts at new Thornaby leisure centre

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Building work starts at new Thornaby leisure centre

The two-storey Thornaby facility, which will include a five-lane swimming pool, gym, and sauna, forms part of the £23.9 million Thornaby Town Deal, set to bring long-term change and investment to the town.

Councillor Richard Eglington, cabinet member for regeneration and housing at StocktonCouncil, said: “A new leisure centre in Thornaby Town Centre will not only provide state-of-the-art sports facilities on people’s doorsteps, it will also bring footfall and add vibrancy to the town centre.

“With this addition and the removal of the Golden Eagle, we’re bringing life to a site that has been vacant for a number of years, a key priority for the Town Deal Board.

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“The improvements to Thornaby’s cycle network will also help connect the town centre with other key assets in the area, making it easier to commute, get around and support healthier lifestyles.”

The centre will be connected to the existing Thornaby Pavilion by a first-floor link bridge and will include a new entrance and car park with 46 additional spaces.

Improvements will also be made to the internal layout and fitness areas of the current pavilion.

The swimming pool, to be operated by Tees Active, will expand learn-to-swim opportunities and support school swimming partnerships.

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The centre is being built on the former Phoenix House site, which was purchased and demolished using Town Deal funding after standing vacant for several years.

Additional funding for the project has been provided by Stockton Council and Sport England.

The centre is expected to open in summer 2027, with construction set to take around a year.

Work to demolish the nearby Golden Eagle building, including asbestos removal, is also underway and will continue over the coming months.

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Meanwhile, a connected network of new and improved cycle routes across Thornaby is set to be built.

The project will enhance access to the town centre and link with existing cycling infrastructure to the north and south.

Cycle route improvements will include Redcar Road (Humber Road to Baysdale Road), Millbank Lane (Fullerton Way to Trenchard Avenue), Mitchell Avenue (Trenchard Avenue to Chadderton Drive), Thornaby Road (A174 to Kintyre Drive), and Trenchard Avenue (Mitchell Avenue to Thornaby Road).

A segment covering Allison Trainer Park, east of Clarendon Road and west of Baysdale Road, is still subject to planning approval.

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The cycle network will feature segregated lanes, shared walking and cycling paths, on-road routes, safer crossings, and additional signage.

All elements of the project are being delivered with the support of the Thornaby Town Deal Board, which includes local councillors and MPs.

Mark White CBE DL, chair of the Thornaby Town Deal Board, said: “Thornaby’s new leisure centre is an exciting project for the Town Deal Board and one we were very passionate about bringing forward.

“The benefits of an improved cycle network are also significant as it better connects the area with employment sites and helps to support sustainable and active travel.

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“When these projects are complete, they will be amazing assets for Thornaby, and I am looking forward to seeing the work progress.”

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Trial gets underway for a man whose son is accused in high school shooting

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Trial gets underway for a man whose son is accused in high school shooting

A man whose teenage son is accused of killing two students and two teachers at a Georgia high school should be held responsible for providing the weapon despite warnings about alleged threats his son made, a prosecutor said Monday.

The trial of Colin Gray began Monday in one of several cases around the country where prosecutors are trying to hold parents responsible after their children are accused in fatal shootings.

Gray faces 29 counts, including two counts of second-degree murder, two counts of involuntary manslaughter and numerous counts of second-degree cruelty to children related to the September 2024 shooting at Apalachee High School in Winder.

“This is not a case about holding parents accountable for what their children do,” Barrow County District Attorney Brad Smith said in his opening statement. “This case is about this defendant and his actions in allowing a child that he has custody over access to a firearm and ammunition after being warned that that child was going to harm others.”

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Prosecutors argue that amounts to cruelty to children, and second-degree murder is defined in Georgia law as causing the death of a child by committing the crime of cruelty to children.

Investigators have said Colt Gray, who was 14 at the time, carefully planned the Sept. 4, 2024, shooting at the school northeast of Atlanta that is attended by 1,900 students.

But Brian Hobbs, an attorney for Colin Gray, said the shooting’s planning and timing “were hidden by Colt Gray from his father. That’s the difference between tragedy and criminal liability. You cannot hold someone criminally responsible for failing to predict what was intentionally hidden from them.”

With a semiautomatic rifle in his book bag, the barrel sticking out and wrapped in poster board, Colt Gray boarded the school bus, investigators said. He left his second-period class and emerged from a bathroom with the gun and then shot people in a classroom and hallways, they said.

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Smith told the jury that Colin Gray’s daughter was in lockdown at her middle school and texted her father that there had been a shooting at the high school. When law enforcement arrived at Gray’s home, he met them in the garage and “without any prompting, he blurts out, ‘I knew it,’” Smith said.

Smith said that in September 2021, Colt Gray used a school computer to search the phrase, “how to kill your dad.” School resource officers were then sent to the home, but it was determined to be a “misunderstanding,” Smith said.

Sixteen months before the shooting, in May 2023, law enforcement acted on a tip from the FBI after a shooting threat was made online concerning an elementary school. The threat was traced to a computer at Gray’s home, Smith said.

Colin Gray was told about the threat and was asked whether his son had access to guns. Gray replied that he and his son “take this school shooting stuff very seriously,” according to Smith. Colt Gray denied that he made the threat and said that his online account had been hacked, Smith said.

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That Christmas, Colin Gray gave his son the gun as a gift and continued to buy accessories after that, including “a lot of ammunition,” Smith said.

Colin Gray knew his son was obsessed with school shooters, even having a shrine in his bedroom to Nikolas Cruz, the shooter in the 2018 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, prosecutors have said. A Georgia Bureau of Investigation agent had testified that the teen’s parents had discussed their son’s fascination with school shooters but decided that it was in a joking context and not a serious issue.

Three weeks before the shooting, Gray received a chilling text from his son: “Whenever something happens, just know the blood is on your hands,” according to Smith.

Colin Gray was also aware his son’s mental health had deteriorated and had sought help from a counseling service weeks before the shooting, an investigator testified.

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“We have had a very difficult past couple of years and he needs help. Anger, anxiety, quick to be volatile. I don’t know what to do,” Colin Gray wrote about his son.

But Smith said Colin Gray never followed through on concerns about getting his son admitted to an in-patient facility.

The trial is being held in Winder, in Barrow County, where the shooting happened. The defense asked for a change of venue because of pretrial publicity, and prosecutors agreed. The judge kept the trial in Winder but decided to bring in jurors from nearby Hall County to hear the case. Jurors were selected last week.

___

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Raby reported from Charleston, West Virginia.

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Distressed Kate Middleton issued ‘ultimatum’ to Prince William after ’embarrassing’ incident before 2007 breakup

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The pair briefly split in 2007

Kate Middleton issued an ‘ultimatum’ to Prince William after an ’embarrassing’ incident before their brief breakup, it has been revealed in a new book.

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The couple met at St Andrews University in 2001 while they were studying history of art. They moved into a shared house with two other friends in 2002 and reportedly became a couple around Christmas 2003.

However, four years later the pair briefly split, reportedly because of the strain caused by William’s military career, but also came amid intense media pressure since they met.

The Mirror’s Royal Editor, Russell Myers writes in his new book, William and Catherine: The Intimate Inside Story, which is being serialised by the Mirror, has opened up about the split, with sources claiming that at the time, William and Kate’s relationship had ‘soured beyond repair’.

He writes: “In March 2007, William and Catherine who had barely seen each other since Christmas, were pictured decked out in matching tweed, appearing frosty with each other at the Cheltenham horse racing festival. Sources claimed the relationship had ‘soured beyond repair’.

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“Days later, William heaped further embarrassment on Catherine when he was pictured appearing to grope an 18-year-old Brazilian student he met on the dancefloor of Elements nightclub in Bournemouth. Looking wide-eyed, sweaty and clutching a pint of beer as he stood between two young women, William seemed to have temporarily abandoned his senses. Was this the normality he craved?

“Or was he simply a young man letting off some steam after finishing a tank commander course, while continuing to exist in a pressure-cooker situation? Catherine was upset and admonished him for his behaviour, questioning whether the light of their four-year relationship was about to be extinguished forever.”

And this is where her ‘ultimatum’ came in. Russell writes: “In the days after the Cheltenham Festival, deeply unhappy and at a loss to describe how their relationship had faltered, Catherine delivered an ultimatum to William. While she did not explicitly demand an engagement or even a promise of marriage, she did break free from the gentle and arguably submissive persona that had typified her relationship with the future king.

“A long-standing friend who she confided in at the time said, ‘Catherine was distressed. She was miserable, but she certainly wasn’t desperate. She felt as though she had nothing to lose and for the first time she probably relayed her true feelings to William. She wasn’t demanding an engagement, but she wanted a commitment, and if he couldn’t deliver that, well, then she left him in no doubt that it was best they go their separate ways.’

“On many levels, the conversation was the clearest sign of the changing dynamic of their relationship. Catherine was no longer a shy student finding her way in the world, nor was she willing to be portrayed as the long-suffering girlfriend of a prince who had other priorities. Either they were a team, or they weren’t.”

But, things didn’t seem to better from there. “In a shock move, William personally instructed Clarence House to confirm the news that he and Catherine were no longer together,” Russell continues. “But, behind the scenes, there was much going on that suggested this was more than just a difference of opinion. It’s telling that William confided to one senior courtier that, ‘at least she is free.’

“This was perhaps the most significant moment in his life since his mother had passed. William revealed a deep distress and anxiety over what a relationship with him represented in the real world. The attention, the constant pressure and expectation. He held these things responsible for contributing to the breakdown of his previous relationships, but now, when it mattered the most, he wondered if he was taking the right course of action, for Catherine or himself.”

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In the end, it appears the late Queen Elizabeth II was the one who had a role in bringing the couple, who have now been married for more than 10 years and share three children, back together. “The Queen had witnessed at first hand the toxicity that spilled over from Charles and Diana’s relationship and the devastating effect of the Princess of Wales’s tragic death on both William and Harry,” Russell writes.

“And she knew that William was hurting from the attempt to reconcile so many competing expectations, demands and desires. During those initial days of hopelessness after the tragedy of Diana’s death, Elizabeth’s first reaction had been that of a grandmother, not a monarch. She refused to bow to pressure from the press and instead dedicated herself to comforting her suffering grandchildren. Now she would do the same.

“Sensing William was struggling, the Queen invited him to Sunday lunch to judge his mood. William was more than just crestfallen and worried about whether he was throwing away the one constant in his life. He was, according to one well-placed source, ‘completely broken’.

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“‘In that moment, the Queen advised her grandson that the only certain path is the one supported by faith. It was all she had to say,’ they said.”

William and Catherine: The Intimate Inside Story, published on 26 February by Ebury, Penguin Random House, is available to pre-order now

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Tyson Fury vs Arslanbek Makhmudov: Briton says he will ‘make boxing great again’ with return

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Eras: Phil Collins

An air-raid siren accompanied 36-year-old Makhmudov’s arrival before a suited-up Fury strolled to the stage, smiling broadly.

“He’s back,” announced Fury, who flew in overnight from a training camp in Thailand.

“I feel fresh. I feel good,” he said. “If I was on the decline I would say it. I’d be the first to say.”

Fury has not fought in Britain since December 2022, when he stopped Derek Chisora at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium to retain the WBC title.

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He boasts 34 wins from 37 fights, including 24 knockouts, alongside two defeats by Usyk and a draw with Deontay Wilder.

“I bring a circus. I bring an entourage. I bring entertainment. I bring action. I bring cameras,” Fury added, insisting he was still in his “prime”.

Asked for a prediction, the Gypsy King forecast a sixth-round knockout with his “right hand”.

Makhmudov, meanwhile, kept it respectful and would not be drawn into insults or predictions.

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He has won 21 of his 23 professional contests, with 19 victories by knockout. His most recent outing was a win over Briton Dave Allen in October 2025.

Nicknamed The Lion, Makhmudov recalled meeting Fury in Canada about a decade ago and described him as a “legend”, but said he is now focused on building his own “legacy”.

The face-off was good-natured. “You’re a big boy, aren’t you?” Fury said with a grin, and the pair closed it out with a handshake.

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In his Munich speech, Marco Rubio balanced loyalty to Trump with reassurances to Europe

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In his Munich speech, Marco Rubio balanced loyalty to Trump with reassurances to Europe

When the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, delivered a speech at Europe’s biggest security conference in the German city of Munich on February 14, leaders from across the continent were relieved by its content. In contrast to the previous year, when US vice-president J.D. Vance had launched a scathing attack on European-style democracy, Rubio’s tone was far more friendly and conciliatory.

He described the US as a “child of Europe”, assuring European leaders that his country was intent on building a new world order together with what he called “our cherished allies and our oldest friends”. The president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, said she was “very much reassured” by these remarks.

However, Rubio also repeated several of the Trump administration’s familiar criticisms of Europe’s approach to immigration and climate action, cautioning that the US is prepared to chart its new path alone. And while he claimed his country wants to reinvigorate the transtlantic alliance, Rubio questioned Europe’s will and capacity to do so.

The speech underscored the balance Rubio must strike between aligning himself with the political priorities of Donald Trump and reassuring European partners. Unlike much of the Trump administration, the secretary of state understands that the US needs to be more diplomatic with Europe to achieve its foreign policy objectives.

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Vance’s 2025 speech to the Munich Security Conference was widely criticised by European leaders.
Ronald Wittek / EPA

This isn’t the case with Vance. One year ago, he chastised Europe for its migration policies and accused its governments of suppressing free speech and populist parties. He claimed that the greatest threat to Europe’s security came “from within”, rather than Russia. According to Vance, Europe had become too politically correct, abandoning fundamental values in the process.

Vance’s speech came as a shock to European leaders in the audience. They were not completely prepared for such a blistering attack, having thought he would focus his address largely on the war in Ukraine. The speech drew praise from Moscow, including from former Russian president and prime minister Dmitry Medvedev, and triggered a year of turmoil in transatlantic relations.

In his speech, Vance echoed Trump’s view of Europe – but it’s a view that matches his own. The vice-president has never really respected Europe. This was made clear in a series of leaked messages between Vance and other US national security officials in March 2025.

When Vance discussed plans for a military strike against Houthi forces in Yemen, which he noted posed a larger threat to European shipping than American trade, he lamented: “I hate bailing out Europe again.” Though he wrote in his 2016 memoir that visiting the UK was a childhood dream, Vance had become a Euro sceptic.

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This contrasts with Rubio, who has traditionally been a strong supporter of Europe and the transatlantic alliance. Although ideologically hawkish in foreign policy, he has never been an isolationist – and has consistently backed traditional collective security institutions such as Nato.

In 2015, Rubio declared that the US must make a tough response to any Russian aggression against its Nato ally Turkey. And in 2019, he was part of a bi-partisan effort to prevent any US president from leaving the Nato alliance. He said: “It is critical to our national security and the security of our allies in Europe that the United States remain engaged and play an active role in Nato.”

This stance initially put Rubio at odds with Trump. But after Trump’s election defeat in 2020, Rubio recalibrated and slowly gained his trust. And since entering Trump’s inner circle, he has thrived. Rubio now serves as the president’s national security advisor as well as secretary of state, and has gained tremendous influence in foreign affairs.

Marco Rubio sits next to Donald Trump during a meeting.
Rubio has become the Trump administration’s most senior diplomat.
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Rubio’s delicate balance

To gain so much power, Rubio has had to be ideologically flexible. In Latin America, where his hardline stance against socialist regimes strongly aligns with Trump’s foreign policy goals, Rubio is in the driver’s seat and has largely determined what the US’s interests are. This has included pressing for the ouster of Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro, taking a tough stance on Cuba, and pressuring Panama to push out Chinese influence.

But outside of Latin America, Rubio has adopted a more measured communication style. He has engaged in damage control while ultimately clarifying and reinforcing Trump’s positions.

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Trump prefers a world where the US acts unilaterally and ignores the rules-based international order. This has been illustrated by the US attacks on Iranian nuclear sites in 2025, as well as the more recent capture of Maduro and threats to take control of Greenland from Denmark.

Rubio tried to defuse tensions with Denmark in January, claiming the US merely wanted to purchase Greenland rather than intervene militarily. He has also toned down his hawkishness on Russia, a country Trump has sought to forge closer relations with. In 2016, Rubio had stated that the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, posed the biggest threat to global security.

As recently as 2024, Rubio praised the bravery of Ukrainians in their fight against Russia. But in his Munich address, he barely mentioned Ukraine, on which Trump has been applying pressure to end the war. Rubio also did not appear at a gathering with European allies immediately before the conference to discuss the conflict in Ukraine, claiming there was a scheduling issue.

Later, he reportedly offered Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky some assurances of US commitment. Despite also warning that Ukraine would need to accept hard concessions to end the war, this was an improvement from Vance’s past questioning of why the US was spending millions of dollars defending a “few miles of territory”.

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Ultimately, while Rubio’s speech in Munich was less divisive and shocking than Vance’s a year earlier, it does not resemble any significant change in US foreign policy under Trump. The US has some shared interests with Europe, but not shared values.

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The top 50 things that push Brits to boiling point

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The top 50 things that push Brits to boiling point

The new survey, commissioned by Samsung Electronics to celebrate its Galaxy Book6 Series which comes complete with a newly optimised vapour chamber and long-lasting battery, found people who listen to music or videos loudly in public also ranked high in the list of everyday annoyances, while people who are rude to waiters (35%) and loud chewers (33%) were also listed as common gripes.

According to the research, four in 10 Brits say it can take just one small thing to push them over the edge, while 38% say it is often technology that pushes them to their limits. Slow Wi-Fi (51%), spam emails (43%) and battery that runs out quickly (37%) are all adding to the heat for Brits, while online forms that don’t submit and internet pop-ups also feature.

Public behaviour tends to be a source of constant irritation for Brits. Slow walkers, people who don’t say thank you when you let them past, and people who stop right in front of you in the street all rank higher than more traditional gripes, such as snoring or public displays of affection. Even individual habits aren’t safe – from incessant sniffing or repeatedly saying “what?” to people who run topless making their way onto the list.

When Brits do hit boiling point, most react in a classically British way by keeping things subtle. Heavily sighing (25%) and stewing internally (23%) are more common responses than public outbursts such as raising voices (23%) or snapping (13%). Despite this, 70% say they’re aware they’re nearing boiling point – they just can’t always stop it.

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A new study has pinpointed the top 50 things that push Brits to boiling point, with dog walkers who leave waste bags hanging on tree branches topping the list. A new study has pinpointed the top 50 things that push Brits to boiling point, with dog walkers who leave waste bags hanging on tree branches topping the list. (Image: Getty Images/iStockphoto)

The research also suggests frustration is often kept quiet. 59% believe people are nervous to admit when they’ve been pushed to boiling point, particularly when the trigger feels small or trivial.

Annika Bizon, Mobile Experience VP of Product and Marketing at Samsung UK & Ireland said: “Modern life throws enough daily frustrations at us without technology adding to the pressure. Whether it’s device performance or running out of battery, those small interruptions can tip people over the edge.

“The enhanced Vapour chamber in the Galaxy Book6 Series distributes heat more evenly, helping to keep performance smooth and temperatures down, so devices can handle everyday demands without becoming another source of irritation.”

The research also found that once Brits hit boiling point, the irritation can linger. 38% say it takes at least 10 minutes to cool down, while less than one in ten admit it can ruin most of their day. For a smaller but significant group, frustration doesn’t pass quickly at all, lingering for hours or longer.

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Travel experiences were a common pressure point, with a third of the population saying that delays or waiting for transport often pushes them to boiling point. Further, half the population say tiredness has a major impact on how easily they get irritated, making small issues feel far bigger than they should.

Despite the long list of shared gripes, frustration isn’t always expressed openly. Many Brits admit they’re more likely to stew internally than confront someone, particularly when the annoyance comes from strangers. Over half of Brits (51%) agree that it bothers them less when friends do irritating things than when strangers do, while only a small minority of 10% say they’d actually challenge someone they don’t know.

When it comes to ranking themselves against peers, 32% of Brits admit to feeling like they have a lower annoyance threshold than other people.

New cooling technology in the Samsung Galaxy Book6 Ultra and Pro laptops has been designed to deliver efficient and consistent operation, without the trade-off of excess noise. The newly optimised vapour chamber and airflow system enhance heat dissipation while maintaining quiet operation.

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THE 50 THINGS THAT PUSH US TO BOILING POINT

  1. Dog walkers who hang waste bags on tree branches
  2. People who don’t pick up after their dogs
  3. People who put phone calls on loud speaker in public
  4. People who are rude to waiters
  5. People who listen to music or videos on loud in public
  6. Loud chewers
  7. People that blow snot onto the pavement
  8. Bar or waiting staff who ignore you
  9. People who bury their heads in their phones whilst walking
  10. Being put on hold
  11. Slow walkers – particularly during commute time
  12. People who slurp while eating or drinking
  13. When you let someone past you and they don’t say thank you
  14. People who stop when they are walking right in front of you
  15. Forgetting your password
  16. People who recline their seat on an aeroplane
  17. People who stop in annoying/inconvenient places
  18. When your device runs out of charge
  19. Snoring
  20. People who sniff a lot
  21. People who play games/videos on their phones out loud
  22. Unsolicited advice
  23. Persistent throat-clearing
  24. People who don’t open the door for others
  25. People who fart in public spaces
  26. People who keep saying ‘what?’
  27. Captcha
  28. Encroaching on people’s space on public transport
  29. People who stand on the wrong side of the escalator
  30. People who don’t have their cards ready at the check out
  31. QR codes for menus
  32. People who run topless
  33. Ads on podcasts
  34. People who clap when the plane lands
  35. People who pop bubbles with chewing gum
  36. People who refer to themselves in the third person
  37. When the card reader makes you enter your pin number
  38. People who don’t have their boarding passes out at security
  39. Group chats blowing up with “thanks!” and thumbs-up reactions
  40. People biting their nails
  41. Autocorrect
  42. Whistling indoors
  43. People who audibly eat apples in public
  44. The price of olive oil
  45. Two-factor authentication
  46. Push notifications
  47. Public displays of affection
  48. People who say “Per my last email”
  49. Getting overtaken in a cycle lane by an electric scooter
  50. People who stand up on the train or the tube before it’s their stop

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