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Major quantum computing company moves headquarters from Silicon Valley to Boca Raton

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Major quantum computing company moves headquarters from Silicon Valley to Boca Raton

As states compete for the next generation of high-tech and innovation-driven jobs, Florida has scored another major win.

D-Wave Quantum Inc., a publicly traded pioneer in quantum computing, announced it will relocate its corporate headquarters from Silicon Valley to Boca Raton, Florida, betting on the state’s rapidly expanding technology ecosystem.

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“Florida represents one of the fastest growing technology ecosystems in the United States, and as such it was the ideal choice for our new corporate headquarters and U.S. R&D facility,” D-Wave CEO Dr. Alan Baratz said in a company press release. “The state offers a rich scientific and educational environment, a growing pool of highly skilled tech talent, and a vibrant spirit of innovation that made it attractive to D-Wave.”

The company plans to complete its transition to the new headquarters by the end of 2026 and is expected to create hundreds of high-paying technology and research-and-development jobs in the area. D-Wave said demand for its quantum technology continues to rise, and the new headquarters will help accelerate innovation and product development.

CRUISE INDUSTRY GIANT MAKES $100M STRATEGIC BET ON FLORIDA WITH MASSIVE MIAMI HEADQUARTERS

It joins a growing list of technology executives and companies relocating from California’s Golden State to Florida’s Sunshine State in recent months, as tensions mount over a proposed one-time 5% wealth tax in California.

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Aerial view of downtown Boca Raton, Florida

A wide-angle aerial view shows Boca Raton’s downtown neighborhood. (Getty Images)

D-Wave develops two types of custom quantum computers designed to solve complex problems much faster than traditional systems. Its customers include government agencies, Fortune 500 enterprises and leading research institutions.

The Boca Raton headquarters will include the company’s main research-and-development facility spanning 25,000 square feet inside the Boca Raton Innovation Campus (BRiC)—the same site where IBM developed the first personal computer in 1981.

The city has also been bullish on D-Wave’s move, with Florida Atlantic University committing $20 million to a partnership that will install one of the company’s Advantage2 quantum computers at the school’s Boca Raton campus.

Located between West Palm Beach and Miami, Boca Raton city officials launched a campaign last year urging business leaders to relocate their families and companies south—an effort that appears to have resonated with corporations such as D-Wave.

“The threat of people leaving high-tax, high-crime jurisdictions like New York and other places is real,” Boca Raton Mayor and U.S. congressional candidate Scott Singer told Fox News Digital in October.

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“It’s been happening for years, and Boca Raton has been the beneficiary of a lot of businesses bringing their corporate headquarters and high-paying jobs here. I think the threat is even more real. People are already preparing to leave… we’re going to see a lot more people looking to bring their businesses here and create jobs in Boca Raton.”

“By welcoming D-Wave’s flagship U.S. R&D operations and its global headquarters to the Boca Raton Innovation Center,” Singer said in the company’s press release, “we are strengthening our position as a destination for advanced innovation, attracting top-tier technology talent and laying the foundation for long-term economic growth.”

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Darwin’s Paradox review – octopus’s common or garden platformer

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Darwin’s Paradox review - octopus’s common or garden platformer
Darwin’s Paradox – seagulls are a bigger danger than aliens (Konami)

In the tradition of indie classics such as Limbo and Inside, comes a new action adventure starring a cartoon octopus caught up in an alien invasion.

We don’t actually play that many video games that are truly awful, since there’s usually nothing of note about them to make a review worthwhile. There’re occasional exceptions, like the mind-bogglingly terrible Code Violet and the baffling MindsEye, but most of the worst games are just worthless slop of the sort Sony is currently trying to clear out from the PlayStation Store.

The majority of video games aren’t unusually good or bad, they’re somewhere in the middle. And so it can be difficult to know which are worthy of further investigation, given there are dozens of new indie games released every week, even at quiet times of the year.

We’re not familiar with French developer ZDT Studio, since this seems to be their debut game, but since the graphics for Darwin’s Paradox looked good, the publisher is Konami, and octopuses are cool we decided to give it a go. In the end we wish we hadn’t, not because it’s terrible but because it’s so deeply average.

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Maybe average isn’t entirely fair. The graphics are really good for an indie game and on paper your octopus powers are all very neat, including the ability to camouflage yourself; shoot out ink to cover your escape; and walk along any surface, including the ceiling, like a spider (which we’re pretty sure octopuses can’t do, but whatever).

Darwin’s Paradox is, rather randomly, named after Charles Darwin’s discovery that tropical seas don’t seem to contain enough nutrients to sustain coral reefs, despite the fact they’re teeming with life. That has nothing to do with the game, other than the octopus you control is called Darwin, whose friend is captured by secret aliens running a food processing company and planning to invade Earth.

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What this translates to in gameplay terms is a 2D platformer influenced by the likes of Limbo and Inside, but swapping melancholic mystery for cartoon silliness. Darwin spends a surprising amount of time on dry land but whether he’s hiding from guards or trying not to get eaten by a moray eel everything works in the same general way.

His camouflage ability is basically a cloak of invisibility and as long as you activate it in time you become completely invisible to enemies. Although it does take a while to complete, so you spend a lot of time slowly inching your way across the screen, spending more time going into camouflage than moving or hiding.

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Spraying ink is only good for masking your movement underwater but the gob of liquid you shoot out can be aimed quite precisely and so ends up getting used to activate switches and machinery when you’re on land. Although you don’t have any offensive abilities at all.

Darwin's Paradox screenshot of an octopus
The game doesn’t press our buttons (Konami)

The climbing on any surface gimmick is used a surprising amount and while it seems quite clever at first it’s fiddly and inconsistent. Not enough to be a total wash but certainly enough to irritate, with sticky and slow movement that makes you constantly wish you could just get back in the water, where you’re much more mobile. The worst thing, though, is the game is filled with trial and error traps that often cannot be foreseen.

The checkpointing is generous enough that you don’t usually have to repeat too much but it’s still frustrating getting caught out by something you couldn’t have anticipated, especially as it happens so often. Even without this, the puzzles just aren’t interesting enough to engage you, as the solution is usually instantly obvious but pushing items where you want them or getting a pixel perfect jump just right is frequently more difficult than it should be.

As the scope of indie gaming begins to grow wider, from tiny games made by a single person to those whose scale begins to rival low-end games from traditional publishers, it’s becoming increasingly difficult to judge how fair their price tags are.

Darwin’s Paradox is relatively expensive and it’s only around six hours long and yet you can see where all the money went, as the cartoonish visuals are excellent and mixed in with almost photorealistic backdrops. That said, it’s never actually funny, no matter how often Darwin’s googly eyes try to emote as he’s being pecked to death by birds or squished by alien machinery.

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Despite its attempts to provoke a reaction we found it impossible to hold any strong feelings about Darwin’s Paradox. It’s competently made, very pretty, and almost completely uninteresting. The dull and long-winded puzzles are the biggest problem and give the impression that the whole game was designed around the visuals, with everything seemingly having been worked back from there.

That’s never been a good way to make a video game and while this is an acceptable enough way to waste away a rainy Sunday afternoon, that’s about as positive as we can be about it.

Darwin’s Paradox review summary

In Short: A more family friendly attempt to mimic the likes of Limbo and Inside but while the graphics are impressive the gameplay feels stolid and poorly paced.

Pros: The visuals are fantastic, in terms of both the main characters and the backdrops. Interesting array of abilities, especially the wall-crawling and ink-spitting.

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Cons: Everything in the game has been seen and done better before, with dull and long-winded puzzles and tedious stealth sections. The graphics are cute but there’s no real jokes and a weak ending.

Score: 5/10

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Formats: PlayStation 5 (reviewed), Xbox Series X/S, Nintendo Switch 2, and PC
Price: £19.99
Publisher: Konami
Developer: ZDT Studio
Release Date: 2nd April 2026
Age Rating: 7

Darwin's Paradox screenshot of an octopus hiding under a box
Being published by Konami means free Metal Gear references (Konami)

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Coventry City edge towards Premier League promotion – who will join them?

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Frank Lampard

Middlesbrough, who went into the Easter weekend in the top two, still had the opportunity to end it there with victory at Swansea City in the 17:30 BST game.

Alex Bangura set them on their way with a 12th-minute goal but, after two Zan Vipotnik penalties put the Swans in front, Boro needed a Tommy Conway spot-kick to rescue a point.

Boro are floundering with two wins in their past 10 matches and while they scored more than once for the first time in five games, the feeling remains they are a frustrating and inconsistent proposition in front of goal.

Manager Kim Hellberg said after the match there would be more “twists and turns” to come in the fight for promotion – after a day of such similar rollercoaster emotions.

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“You’ve got three teams on 72 points – Ipswich have some games in hand, so they’re in a better position than the other two, but we are in a better position than Millwall because of our better goal difference,” he told BBC Radio Tees.

“There will be twists and turns. No team will just go and win games. It’s difficult and you need to just try in this period to get those points and wins.

“We have to keep fighting. It’s tough we didn’t win, because we thought we were good enough in the game to win, but then you have to do it.

“The easy answer at the moment is that we’re not being clinical enough or smart enough in different ways.”

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With a four-point deficit to Ipswich, and a vastly inferior goal difference, plus the games in hand the Tractor Boys hold, Hull can be considered the outsiders in this race.

But the Tigers showed against Coventry they can match anyone in the division and once again reaffirmed the fantastic job Sergej Jakirovic has done in his first season in English football under a transfer embargo.

Although when asked about what that point means in terms of the wider context of Hull’s season, Jakirovic was talking more play-offs than automatic promotion.

“Somebody said it is 73, 74, 75 [to reach the play-offs] but God knows how many. Until we are in this position we will just look at ourselves and try to take points in every game,” Jakirovic told BBC Radio Humberside.

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“Norwich are coming, Derby is there, Southampton… but, no matter, we must look at ourselves.”

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Ragin’ Ramen opening new Belfast City Centre location

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Belfast Live

“New venue opening soon”

A popular Japanese restaurant has secured a new Belfast City Centre location.

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Ragin’ Ramen currently specialises in “Japanese ramen with a Belfast twist”. On top of ramen on the menu, there are sides like Twister Fries, plus a selection of cocktails and beers.

Signage for the new restaurant has been spotted on Ann Street in the former Trespass store, which relocated to Castlecourt Shopping Centre in 2025.

Ragin’ Ramen already has a Belfast City Centre location on Church Lane, which opened in December 2022. There is no confirmation yet on whether this location will close once the new one opens.

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Their menu currently has 6 different types of ramen with quirky names like ‘Astro Boy’ and ‘Sailor Moon’. Customers can also choose between ramen noodles, udon noodles and flat rice noodles.

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

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Disruption expected as six-day doctors’ strike begins

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Disruption expected as six-day doctors' strike begins

The first tranche of these – 1,000 of them – were meant to be created this summer. But the government has now withdrawn those after the BMA announced it was taking strike action. It comes after 30,000 applicants applied for 10,000 jobs last summer, although some of these were foreign doctors.

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Bread and Butter Thing’s second anniversary in Stockton

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Bread and Butter Thing’s second anniversary in Stockton

They greet volunteers and buy bags of food, as well as fresh loaves of bread, bagels and flowers. A four-year-old boy tucks into a doughnut from a bistro offering hot and cold drinks.

His mum, who runs her own business, says: “I can only speak for me. I’m struggling. I need it.

“I don’t manage to come every week, but as often as we can. It helps.”

Bags of food ready for collection at the Bread and Butter Thing food hub at the Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton. Picture: LDR/suitable for all partners.Bags of food ready for collection at the Bread and Butter Thing food hub at the Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton. Picture: LDR/suitable for all partners.

Members of the Bread and Butter Thing, a food club which has celebrated its second anniversary at this Stockton hub, pay £8.50 for three bags, £17 for six, stuffed with groceries worth four times the price. And in increasingly tough times, the need for support is universal.

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One member says: “It’s very useful, especially because of the cost of living crisis. Everybody’s struggling.

“It just depends on what expenses you have coming out each week. Obviously the price of gas and electric go up and you want a warm house, don’t you? Before anything else you need your bills paying. But coming here, it helps you at least get a meal.”

Another member says she came to the “marvellous” affordable food hub every week to pick up food for her family: “Everybody has a short week, if they’ve had a big bill or the car tax is due. It does serve everybody.

“I’m on a limited income, my mam’s a pensioner and my son’s got three kids. He’s self-employed but he hasn’t always got work in.

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“It’s such a brilliant place. The volunteers can’t do enough for you.”

Food ready for collection at the Bread and Butter Thing food hub at the Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton. Picture: LDR/suitable for all partners.Food ready for collection at the Bread and Butter Thing food hub at the Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton. Picture: LDR/suitable for all partners.

Hub manager Gary Izomor says: “I think in these trying times the need has been very, very high. Especially nowadays, it’s increasingly so.

“What we’ve seen is people like doctors or school teachers or anybody with a quote unquote really good or decent job coming to need our services. They would go to us first then go to supermarkets and save a bit of money.

“You just tend to find everybody’s struggling, it could be for a little bit, it could be for a lot longer. But everybody’s going through the same troubles. The problem still doesn’t change that the cost of living is far too high for a lot of people.

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“We find a lot of people who come and they’ve had no food at all for a week or so or they’ve got limited food and they don’t know where the next meal’s going to come from. They’re just regular people who work full-time, who earn money month to month, and they still can’t afford food, lights or heating.”

He said a sense of pride might stop people from coming: “They see it as a sense of failure when it’s not. Everybody needs a hand once in a while, it doesn’t matter where you come from.

“I would say, put your pride aside and come down. You will save a lot than you realise and that will go towards activities you would like or help you pay off a bill.

“It just gives you a safety line. You don’t have to panic.”

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He says it also helps promote healthy eating, with bags of fruit and veg, chilled food and canned goods from supermarkets, suppliers and retailers. They currently sell more than 50 parcels at a time.

The borough’s five hubs, launched with funding from Stockton Council and Thirteen Housing, are among 156 nationally for the country’s largest food redistribution charity, which provides food to 100,000 members in low-income communities. Members save up to £25 a week and more than 70% report cooking more and eating more fruit and veg.

The Bread and Butter Thing van. Picture: The Bread and Butter Thing.The Bread and Butter Thing van. Picture: The Bread and Butter Thing.

Gary says it brings out the best in people: “I really enjoy it. It can be really challenging on a morning, we’re always expanding so the deadlines get shorter. Once you get to the hub and help people out, it’s all worth it.

“It’s been very, very well received. It’s taken on a life of its own, evolved to more of a community. You see the community come together and help each other out.

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“A lot of people know about it but don’t constantly use it, which is good for us because it seems like we’ve achieved what we set out to achieve – gave them a safety net, gave them the helping hand they needed and they’re back on their feet. And if they’re ever struggling again, we’re always going to be here to help them out.”

Salvation Army volunteers, mostly retired, make up the team hosting Bread and Butter as part of the church’s ethos to serve and help the local community. Its leader at the hub, Major Ian Davis, says: “We were approached by the council and asked if we would consider hosting the Bread and Butter Thing in our building. We’re happy to do that.

“It seems to be very busy most weeks. You see the same faces regularly so we know people are appreciating the service.”

Diane Bartle, a former specialist teacher who organises more than 20 volunteers, says: “It is quite a mix of society. It’s a cross-section that come through, a range of people.

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“We are finding a lot of people locally are struggling. I think the need has grown, they’ve found a real big need in Stockton.

“There are increasingly families finding it difficult to stretch the budget, so it does help ease their budget a little bit. They’ll get a lot more for their money and it’s usually good-quality food.

“Some are saying their diet has altered because they’re getting fruit and veg they wouldn’t normally buy themselves.”

Volunteer Trevor Watson, 71, a former European supply chain manager for the chemical industry, says: “It goes very well, the people that came in are appreciative. Regulars come in and you get a rapport.

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Salvation Army volunteer Trevor Watson, 71, at the Bread and Butter Thing food hub at the Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton. Picture: LDR/suitable for all partners.Salvation Army volunteer Trevor Watson, 71, at the Bread and Butter Thing food hub at the Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton. Picture: LDR/suitable for all partners.

“They find somebody to talk to, some people are opening up. I just think people are struggling with their budgets overall, with all the different rises.

“People who are earners come to Bread and Butter. Some people are proud and they don’t want handouts, whereas the Bread and Butter is something they pay for, £8.50 for £35 worth of groceries. People are trying to balance it so they can spend the money they have on essentials, maybe heating, maybe travel.

“I think when it started people were reluctant, but as they’ve come week on week they get more relaxed in the knowledge they’re doing their bit because they’re paying for the food.”

The Salvation Army also run a separate food bank, community meals and community space on the same premises, and Ian says the Bread and Butter Thing offers an opportunity for people to move to a different service.

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Vic Harper, chief executive of the Bread and Butter Thing, said: “We’ve seen how access to affordable, healthy food can bring people together, reduce waste and strengthen neighbourhoods. None of this would be possible without our brilliant volunteers, whose commitment and care sit at the heart of everything we do.”

The Bread and Butter Thing is free to join and volunteers are welcome. Text 07507 237311 with your name, postcode, and where you would like to collect food – Salvation Army on Palmerston Street, Stockton; Teesside Vineyard Church, Acklam Road, Thornaby; New Life Family Centre, Low Grange Avenue, Billingham; Newtown Community Resource Centre, Durham Road, Newtown; or Redhill Family Hub, Redhill Road, Roseworth.

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I’m A Celebrity South Africa fans brand Beverley Callard their ‘winner’ as potential feud emerges

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Manchester Evening News

The Coronation Street icon made a big impression on the ITV reality show

I’m A Celebrity South Africa fans branded Beverley Callard their ‘winner’ as a potential feud emerged between the Coronation Street legend and one of her new campmates.

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The Liz McDonald actress initially appeared on the Ant and Dec ITV reality in 2020, when the show relocated to a Welsh castle due to the Covid pandemic. She was the fourth celebrity eliminated in the series which was won by Giovanna Fletcher.

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Viewers are finally getting to see how Beverley fares in the jungle, with the 69-year-old among the stars featured in the return of I’m A Celebrity South Africa on Monday night (April 6). The All Stars series was recorded prior to her telling fans she was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer.

Early on in the episode, Beverley was paired with Emmerdale actor Adam Thomas for a challenge titled Tipped Over The Edge They were strapped back to back and had to collect puzzle pieces from the ledge to build a star.

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Going up against Pussycat Dolls singer Ashley Roberts and Olympian Sir Mo Farah, the team who completed the star in the fastest time would be the winners. With the cliff’s ledge tipping like a see-saw the closer they got to it, they would be sent over the edge hurtling into the drop below if they went too far too soon.

Adam and Beverly proved to be a good team as they made light work of collecting the puzzle pieces. However, disaster struck towards the end of the challenge when not only did they fall off the ledge when trying to get the last piece, but that some of the ones they had collected fell with them.

Despite still having time to finish the challenge, it took Adam a staggering ten minutes to figure out where to place the jigsaw pieces and led to him and Beverley losing the challenge. After this the stars met boxer David Haye and Gogglebox’s Scarlett Moffatt outside two remote lodges.

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With David eventually finding the right key hidden among 50 wrong ones, he said that Beverley should be sent to Savannah Scrub, a camp with basic rations, instead of Scarlett. “It’s survival, we’ve got to eat,” he said.

While she insisted there was ‘no hard feelings’, Beverley replied: “David you are going to pay for that decision… up yours.”

Those watching the episode at home rushed to X, previously known as Twitter, to express why they think Beverley was hard done by and why she may just end up winning the series.

@fansvfavourites said: “oh beverley! this is what all stars is all about! our winner #ImACeleb.” @lmfaoitsjoeyy added: “i won’t accept ANYONE coming for my bev callard #ImACeleb.”

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@RyanSoapKing25 wrote: “Poor Bev being sent to be bad camp #ImaCeleb.” @FattyFudge4 posted: “Bev ROBBED being sent away #ImACeleb.”

@RyanJL commented: “Love that Bev Callard is getting this experience after missing out on Australia for her series #ImACeleb.” @ThornhillNina stated: “Loving Bev #ImACeleb.”

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I’m A Celebrity viewers reel ‘enough is enough’ as star ‘disappears’ from show

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Wales Online

ITV viewers saw some familiar faces head back into the jungle as I’m A Celebrity South Africa returned to screens.

I’m a Celebrity viewers were less than impressed during the first episode of the South Africa series as one fan-favourite didn’t appear in the episode despite being shown in the teasers all week.

Fan-favourites from past I’m A Celebrity…Get Me Out of Here! series are back in a bid to claim the title of jungle legend. On Monday night, ITV viewers saw hosts Ant and Dec welcome some familiar faces to South Africa as the former campmates were thrown straight into the deep end.

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Actor Adam Thomas, Ashley Roberts, Sir Mo Farah and Beverley Callard were the first stars to arrive and meet the Geordie duo on the top of a high cliff ledge.

Split into two teams, they had to battle it out by collecting puzzle pieces from the ledge to build a star while strapped back-to-back with their teammate. The team that completes the star in the fastest time wins.

However, when they got closer to the cliff’s ledge, the ledge would tip like a see-saw, meaning if they went too far, they’d be sent over the edge, hurtling into the drop below. In the end, it was Mo and Ashley who won, sending Adam to Savannah Scrub, the smaller basic camp.

READ MORE: ITV I’m A Celebrity viewers ‘freaked out’ minutes into all-star show with twistREAD MORE: I’m A Celebrity fans voice concern as star tackles trial after sharing painful condition

Although the remainder of the stars joined the campmates later on in the episode, including Scarlett Moffatt, Seann Walsh, David Haye, and Sinitta, two famous faces were noticeably absent.

People were quick to notice Gemma Collins’ absence before she made an appearance at the end of the show alongside Craig Charles. The pair were shown in a preview for Tuesday night’s episode where they will go head-to-head in an eating trial with Craig.

She could be heard admitting: “This is a far cry from Essex! I’m ready for you.”

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Viewers were less than impressed by their late arrival, as many issued the same complaint, as one person said: “I’m bored WHERE IS GEMMA COLLINS!?!?!?!? #ImACeleb”

Someone else added: “We’ve sat through 90 minutes with no sign of our Gemma.”

One viewer commented: “Just bring the GC in already I’m getting bored.” Another person added: “The producers gate keeping the GC until tomorrows episode #imaceleb.”

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Someone else shared: “Where is the GC?? Are you telling me I waited the whole ep for nothing?#imaceleb.” While another person reeled: “I’m watching this sh**e for the GC and the GC only. What’s going on.”

Ahead of her return, Gemma, who starred in the series back in 2014 and lasted a mere 72 hours, confessed her comeback is her redemption.

She said: “Going on All Stars is a real moment for me in my career – it’s redemption. To be able to do this again is the greatest honour ever.

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“I am going to be the best campmate and get those stars. None of us will be starving under my watch.”

I’m a Celebrity… South Africa which airs every weeknight at 9pm on ITV1, ITVX, STV Player & STV.

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Man dies after BMW collision in Chorley as police launch appeal

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Man dies after BMW collision in Chorley as police launch appeal

Officers were called to Lyons Lane at around 12.20pm on March 20 after reports that a BMW 320d had been involved in a collision with a pedestrian.

The pedestrian, a man in his 70s, was taken to hospital with a head injury but has since died. Police said their thoughts are with his loved ones at this time.

The driver of the BMW was not arrested and is being treated as a witness.

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Sergeant Laura Kendall, from Lancashire Police’s Serious Collision Investigation Unit, said: “As a result of this collision, a man has lost his life and my thoughts are very much with his loved ones at this distressing time.

“A number of enquiries have been carried out since the initial collision; however, work is still ongoing to establish the full circumstances which led to it.

“As such, I would ask any witnesses, or anybody who has dashcam or CCTV footage which would assist us with our enquiries, to contact the police as soon as possible.”

Anyone with information is asked to email sciu@lancashire.police.uk or call 101, quoting log 648 of March 20, 2026.

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Daily horoscope April 7, 2026: Predictions for your star sign

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Daily horoscope April 7, 2026: Predictions for your star sign
What’s in store for you today? (Picture: Metro.co.uk)

The Sagittarius Moon works in tandem with Mercury in Pisces, bringing relationships into the forefront. Make meaningful connections.

Aquarius, Sagittarius, and Libra, this placement heightens your awareness and deepens your emotions. You have much to give your bonds with others today, so be generous.

Make sure you are looking outwards, rather than inward, as this placement is all about your external reality. Delve into the complex nature of friendships today.

Ahead, you’ll find all star signs’ horoscopes for today: Tuesday April 7, 2026

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Like checking your horoscope every morning? You can now sign up to our free daily newsletter to get a personalised reading for your star sign delivered straight to your inbox.

To download your free Unique Personal Horoscope based on your time, date and place of birth, visit patrickarundell.com/free-birth-chart/.

Aries

March 21 to April 20

Your horizon widens the moment you question it. Beliefs that once felt protective may now feel restrictive, so notice the stories you tell yourself about what is possible. Are they brave or merely familiar? Intuition whispers that you are capable of more, so listen to it closely and let go of narratives that keep you small. By expanding your mindset, actions follow naturally.

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Head here for everything you need to know about being an Aries

Today’s celestial guidance for Aries

Taurus

April 21 to May 21

Feel that someone is holding something back? Your sixth sense is rarely wrong, but instead of being polite, try being direct. Ask questions that can’t be brushed aside, as you always value transparency and you deserve it in return. Trust that truth strengthens bonds rather than weakening them. When you speak openly yet kindly, you create space for real understanding.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Taurus

Today’s planetary forecast for Taurus

Gemini

May 22 to June 21

You might want to branch out, yet your thoughts can drift toward quieter activities. Someone may show up with guidelines about what your next career move should be. Listen to what they have to say, as their insights can be a real gift right now. Test their advice against your inner knowing. If it rings true, just get on with it. Say a bold yes or a tactful no, then go for it.

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Head here for everything you need to know about being a Gemini

How the stars aligned for Gemini today

Cancer

June 22 to July 23

Cancer 22 June – 23 July

You may feel tempted to ponder, improve and prepare endlessly, but the stars are waving the starting flag. There is no prize for hesitation, so choose the plan, open the file or send the email. Movement is your ally and action will ensure progress. A small brave step today becomes a sturdy bridge tomorrow. It’s time for action, so start now and keep it very simple.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Cancer

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Celestial energies for Cancer today

Leo

The Moon in Sagittarius can boost you while its angle with Mercury in Pisces can encourages empathy. If you want someone’s help, skip any drama and be honest. Say what you need and why it matters. People trust those who tell the truth quietly without fuss. Be direct and fair, and leave room for their response, Leo. Honesty now builds loyal alliances later.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Leo

Your daily zodiac insight for Leo

Virgo

August 24 to September 23

You’re able to see the big picture and intuit the subtle issues going on beneath the surface. You’re also brilliant at spotting patterns yet today asks for kinder detective work. Instead of correcting bad habits, study their roots. What fear, hope or past experience is steering the wheel? Curiosity helps a lot, as when you understand the why, the what becomes doable.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Virgo

Cosmic messages for Cosmic messages for Virgo today

Libra

September 24 to October 23

You are gifted at keeping the peace, yet calm built on silence may not seem right. What do you actually want? Say it clearly, as you don’t need to stage manage everyone’s comfort zone. The right people will appreciate your openness, and the wrong expectations will quietly fall away. Choose yourself first and watch as your relationships recalibrate around your truth.

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Head here for everything you need to know about being a Libra

Your daily stellar guidance for Libra

Scorpio

October 24 to November 22

You enjoy quality, but before buying any luxuries ask if they will enhance your life or act as temporary distractions. Your instincts are sharp, so use them to invest in tools, skills or experiences that benefit you. Skip fleeting thrills and remember that money really is concentrated energy. You wield it well when you spend with intention rather than on impulse.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Scorpio

Star alignments for Scorpio today

Sagittarius

November 23 to December 21

The Moon in your sign sees your instincts sharpened. Yet an angle with Mercury in Pisces adds a gentle undertow of empathy. A family matter calls for subtlety, not drama, and you don’t need all the answers, just the right questions. Curiosity opens doors that pride can shut. Your natural honesty softened with kindness can untangle knots that have lingered too long.

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Head here for everything you need to know about being a Sagittarius

Today’s astral messages for Sagittarius

Capricorn

December 22 to January 20

Facts may be vague and information could arrive half baked. Your instinct is to demand solid data but today invites a subtler skill. Notice what your sixth sense says when things aren’t as they should be. You can sense truth even when details are blurred, so pause before judging others. Focus on the good, release the negatives and trust that feeling that lingers within.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Capricorn

Your zodiac forecast for Capricorn today

Aquarius

January 21 to February 19

You may be happy in good company, but you’ll want to be generous too. A social outing sparkles like a neon promise, even so mind the bill. Fun need not result in a financial hangover. Choose happy experiences over extravagance and share laughter, not unlimited excess. Your presence is the main attraction, not money. Giving is best when it’s sustainable.

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Head here for everything you need to know about being an Aquarius

Daily cosmic update for Aquarius

Pisces

February 20 to March 20

The Moon’s angle with Mercury in your sign encourages honesty about your direction. You often sense what is expected and quietly shape shift to fit it. Today asks for something braver. What do you truly want, not what sounds sensible or impressive? Speak that dream aloud, as desire is not selfish, it’s like your compass. Choose the story that feels alive, then act on it.

Head here for everything you need to know about being a Pisces

Your cosmic energy update for Pisces

Your daily Metro.co.uk horoscope is here every morning, seven days a week (yes, including weekends!). To check your forecast, head to our dedicated horoscopes page.

Head here for this week’s tarot horoscope reading, and see what the cards have in store for you!

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“It is still Tyrone” – Armagh coach Conleith Gilligan wary of wounded Red Hands ahead of Ulster SFC battle

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Tyrone failed to challenge for promotion from Division Two this season, but Conleith Gilligan knows they are always capable of raising a gallop against their Ulster rivals

Ulster SFC preliminary round: Armagh v Tyrone (Sunday, 4.15pm, Box-It Athletic Grounds, live on RTE2 and BBC)

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“It is still Tyrone.”

Conleith Gilligan isn’t buying the narrative that Tyrone are up against it when it comes to Sunday’s Ulster SFC preliminary round clash with Armagh at the Box-It Athletic Grounds.

One of Ballinderry’s most famous sons, his home parish crosses into County Tyrone.

While he is acutely aware that the Red Hands have endured a lacklustre League campaign, he is fearful of a potential backlash from a team that gave Armagh their fill in the provincial semi-final last season.

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When it was put to Gilligan at the recent Ulster SFC launch event that Tyrone are dangerous opposition when their backs are against the wall, he concurred: “Massively. Tyrone’s League campaign was very similar to our own, you’d (Niall) Morgan, (Darren) McCurry, (Michael) McKernan and Darragh Canavan missing a few games.

“They were the same and trying to get up with new and untested players. Similar points, they’d be disappointed in some of the games they lost that they might have won.

“It makes it very dangerous – it’s still Tyrone, it’s still a derby game and the winning and losing of it is massive.

“You’re in the preliminary round, earlier than you’d have wanted to be out but that’s where we’re at. It’s a huge game for both teams in terms of kick-starting their summer.”

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Despite the fact that Armagh are 2/5 favourites to progress to a quarter-final meeting with Fermanagh, Gilligan stressed keeping the players grounded wasn’t an issue.

“I don’t think so, I think players are cute enough now to know and the proximity of Armagh to Tyrone… even our younger players would have looked at their younger players winning Hogan Cups and All-Ireland U20s, so there’s no illusion with the younger players as to the quality Tyrone have,” added Gilligan.

“The older players, they’ve been through the mill before and been stung in big games before where they were supposed to be favourites.

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“Last year’s Kerry game was the prime example, where the expectation was that Kerry wouldn’t beat Armagh, and look how that turned out.

“The fact that the League is done now, every team’s looking for that one big win to ignite their summer. From a Tyrone perspective, going to Armagh to do that would be high on their list of priorities.”

Armagh’s head-to-head win over Tyrone sent the Red Hands down last season alongside Derry with the duo failing to gain promotion from Division Two this term.

Kieran McGeeney’s side claimed five points in Division One this year – two less than Tyrone in 2025, but stayed in the top flight.

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Although Armagh were in Division Two in 2024 when they won the All-Ireland later that summer, Gilligan feels retaining their Division One status was hugely important.

“It was very, very important to stay up,” said Gilligan.

“It’s not the end of the world if you don’t but if you go into Division Two and something happens, you lose players through injuries, you get a couple of bad results and all of a sudden Sam Maguire and Tailteann Cup becomes a question midway through the league.

“At least when you’re in Division One, if you have a bad start there’s a bit of protection in that.

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For ourselves, a lot of those players playing those games, you learn an awful lot even from the ones you lose. Even that day in Mayo, we’d some very good performances. The Dublin game, Tomás McCormack came in and was excellent. That’s where the learning happens, he plays the Kerry game in a very similar vein. For younger players, it’s way more important than for the experienced players because you’re just getting way more exposure to better teams and bigger games and crowds, and it gives you slightly better preparation ahead of the Championship.”

Armagh are hoping to have close to a full strength panel to select from with Gilligan reporting that Joe McElroy, Andrew Murnin and Barry McCambridge are “close” to full fitness.

Meanwhile, Gilligan says he doesn’t understand why the hooter rule was changed for the 2026 season, arguing that there was little wrong with the ruling as it was last year.

Seemingly in response to a passage of play at the end of the first half of last year’s All-Ireland final when David Clifford kicked a two-pointer after a prolonged spell of possession for Kerry, the half now ends when the hooter sounds.

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However, further issues have arisen, especially in the wake of the League finals.

Meath’s James Conlon cynically dragged down Cork’s Maurice Shanley to stop the rebels launching one last attack in the Division Two final.

In the Division Three decider, Down held possession for over three minutes before trying to engineer a winner over Wexford in normal time.

Gilligan said he is in favour of the hooter being used in some guise, but prefers last year’s version.

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“I think the fact it’s definitive is good from the point of view of previously the referee might have had two minutes go up on the board but finds another three, so you don’t really know what you have to do,” stated Gilligan.

“I like that it’s definitive but I still think the way it was previously was better, last year – the final play.

“I still think the hooter is better than not knowing but I don’t see why they wanted to change that.

“Scoring on the buzzer or after the hooter brought great excitement and you could tell what every team was trying to do.

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I thought it was good, I don’t understand why they thought changing that rule would add to the game at all, because it didn’t and doesn’t.

“Meath and Cork was probably proof that it’s not a good way when the game was as tight as it is there.”

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