Tings N Wings, based in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, is a small, family-run fast food retailer that first opened back in 2021.
It is known for its “epic” wing flavours, smashed Angus burgers, and buttermilk chicken burgers and tenders.
At one point, the fast food retailer had three sites across the UK in Welwyn Garden City, St Albans, and Clacton-on-Sea.
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Tings N Wings said it is focused on “dedication to quality” when it comes to food.
Its website continues: “We pride ourselves on serving our customers a menu completely free of preservatives and artificial flavourings.
“Each and every sauce is made entirely from scratch. We use only the best available real ingredients.
“Our quality is our identity – it’s who we are as a company. It’s what guides us and it’s what sets us apart. We will never change.”
Tings N Wings has received rave reviews from customers across the UK, since opening five years ago, being described as “THE BEST”.
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Others have said they make the “best fried chicken about” and the “best wings in town”.
Tings N Wings set to close after entering liquidation
Tings N Wings launched a petition in October 2025, requesting support to help keep its final store in Welwyn Garden City open.
In January, the company was handed notice that it was to be struck off the Companies House Register and dissolved in less than two months.
In February, this strike-off action was suspended, according to Companies House .
However, Tings N Wings has now voluntarily entered liquidation.
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Giles McCarthy of Netchwood Finance Ltd was appointed as liquidator on March 5, according to the London Gazette.
Turbulent start to 2026 for UK high street
It has been a rough start to 2026 for the UK high street, with several retailers entering administration and others announcing widespread store closures.
Major high street retailers, including River Island, Primark, and Poundland, have already been forced to close stores in 2026, while Revolution and BrewDog have shut the doors to 21 and 38 pubs, respectively.
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Several other retailers have fallen into administration recently, including:
Meanwhile, four UK travel companies have closed in the opening weeks of 2026:
EcoJet Airlines, billed as “the world’s first Electric Airline”, has also entered liquidation after just three years, resulting in the cancellation of all planned flights.
Tesco also recently revealed plans to cut 380 jobs in stores across the UK, while it’s been reported that Morrisons is looking to sell some of its in-store pharmacies as it continues to cut costs.
It’s not been all bad news for the UK high street, with several major brands announcing new store openings for 2026, including Aldi, M&S, Superdrug, and Lidl.
Which recent shop closure has affected you the most? Let us know in the comments below.
Steve Clarke will lead Scotland at their first World Cup since 1998 but is likely to go into this summer’s tournament in North America with only a few months left on his contract
Scotland manager Steve Clarke has revealed that he’s yet to be offered a new contract, despite guiding them to their first World Cup in 28 years. Clarke’s current deal with the Scottish FA will expire after this simmer’s tournament, where his side have been drawn to face Haiti, Morocco and Brazil in Group C.
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The 62-year-old has guided Scotland to three major tournaments since taking charge in 2019. But his position came under scrutiny before the World Cup qualifying campaign, having finished bottom of their group at Euro 2024 and suffering relegation in the Nations League.
Ahead of their friendlies against Japan and the Ivory Coast during the upcoming international window, the former Kilmarnock and West Brom boss says that the ball is in the SFA’s court. Quizzed on his future, Clarke said: “Obviously the thing in my head is what do I do next, where do I go next, what’s next for me?
“I’ve qualified for three tournaments out of four. I think that’s a pretty decent record.” The Scot added: “Obviously, I’d like to do a little bit better at the tournament this summer, but that’s something that we can address when we get out there.
“Do the Scottish FA think that I’m the guy that can go forward and progress the squad into the next tournament and hopefully set us up for a further World Cup qualification in four years’ time? That’s what they have to decide.
“At the moment I don’t really have a choice to make because they haven’t put an offer in front of me and none of the club sides have put an offer in front of me either. I’m just sitting here talking to you guys, having a good time.
Should Steve Clarke be offered a new contract? Have your say in the comments section.
“I’ve just got to sit and see if any club approaches me between now and the end of the season, and then I’ll have a decision to make.”
Clarke went on to confirm that he’s had a ‘very brief conversation’ with SFA chief executive Ian Maxwell regarding their future plans. As for the next step, the ex-Chelsea and St Mirren right-back explained: “I think I’m waiting on the Scottish FA now coming to me and saying, ‘look, this is what we see as the future’ and if I’m part of that then we can have that discussion.”
Last month, Clarke was present at the draw for the 2026-27 Nations League. Having been relegated to League B, Scotland will face Switzerland, Slovenia and North Macedonia, but the question of who’ll be in the dugout at Hampden Park when the competition begins in September remains unanswered.
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Networking is so often presented as a kind of performance – confident handshakes and quick conversations in crowded rooms. But for many people, particularly introverts, these situations feel more draining than energising.
Building contacts and generating opportunities in this way may sound like something that extroverts are naturally better at. But this assumption, and the idea that introverts must therefore be at a disadvantage, is misleading.
Networking does not have to mean being the most visible person in the room. It can simply be about building relationships in a way that feels genuine and sustainable. In my research on women entrepreneurs, including interviews for my new book, Permission Granted, I have seen introverts thrive when they lean into their natural strengths rather than trying to put on an outgoing persona.
Of course men can be introverts too, and face the same misconceptions. Whoever you are, and wherever you are on your career ladder, here are my top tips for succeeding at work as an introvert.
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1. Understand your introverted strengths
Introversion is not shyness or a lack of confidence. It is about how you process energy and information. Many introverts are deep thinkers, strong listeners and thoughtful communicators; qualities that can help to build meaningful professional relationships.
You do not need to work the room. Focusing on one or two deeper conversations is often more powerful than spreading your energy too thinly. When introverts approach networking with curiosity rather than performance, it often becomes more natural and far more effective.
2. Understand why networking feels harder for introverts
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Across my research and developed further in my book, I emphasise that networking is work. It uses cognitive and emotional energy, after all. Busy rooms can be overstimulating and small talk can be draining. And the expectation to perform socially can create pressure long before an event even begins.
3. Redefine what networking is
At its core, networking is about connection. When you think of it as an opportunity to learn from others rather than to impress them, the pressure lifts. A single sincere exchange might be remembered far longer than a flurry of rushed introductions. People respond to warmth, attentiveness and genuine interest.
4. Prepare in ways that suit your temperament
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Preparation is one of the great advantages introverts bring to networking. Being clear about why you are attending an event can help shape the experience and reduce the sense of overwhelm. Identifying a couple of people you would like to meet can help you feel more anchored. And having a few conversation-openers ready (perhaps about the topic of the event or shared interests) can create a sense of ease. A simple, one-sentence introduction is often all you need to start a conversation without forcing anything.
Smaller, more structured work events can feel more comfortable for introverts. PeopleImages/Shutterstock
5. Choose environments that work for you
Not every setting suits every temperament. Introverts often thrive in more structured or intimate settings: roundtables, smaller workshops, breakfast events or even one-to-one coffee chats. Large, unstructured rooms can feel overwhelming, and choosing alternatives is not avoidance, it is strategy.
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6. Follow up in your own way
Introverts often shine in the quiet, reflective stage of relationship-building: the follow-up. A personalised LinkedIn note or a brief invitation to continue the conversation can go a long way. This deliberate, thoughtful style of nurturing professional relationships is something introverts often do better than they realise.
7. Protect your energy
Networking uses real energy. Feeling drained afterwards is not a flaw; it is biology. Planning downtime before and after events, limiting the number of events per week, and taking breaks during busy sessions helps to maintain balance. Introverts need energy management. Building in recovery time, protecting your quiet and giving yourself permission to rest is essential for maintaining any kind of sustainable networking practice.
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8. Depth over volume
Professional culture often celebrates the loudest voice in the room. But long-term relationships grow from listening, curiosity and your presence – all qualities that introverts naturally bring. That is a core theme I return to in my research: you do not need to dominate a room to make meaningful connections. You just need to network in a way that works for you.
Start small. Protect your energy. Trust your quieter strengths. Depth, not volume, is where introverts shine.
National Car Parks manages around 340 car parks across the country, including in major towns and city centres, airports and at hospitals
Britain’s largest car park operator has entered administration, sparking concerns over potential site closures. National Car Parks (NCP) has 682 staff and operates approximately 340 car parks nationwide, including locations in major urban centres, airports, and hospitals.
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The firm’s financial results have deteriorated in recent years following the Covid pandemic as demand for parking has not returned to pre-pandemic levels, especially in city centre and commuter areas. This, combined with changes to working habits, has left its car parks with excessive vacant spaces.
However, many of its locations are tied to long-term, inflexible leases which has prevented the company from cutting costs or disposing of them, leading to continued trading losses. Administrators say NCP now has “insufficient cash available to meet its financial obligations”.
Zelf Hussain, Rachael Wilkinson, and Toby Banfield of PwC have been appointed as Joint Administrators. Their immediate priority will be to “stabilise the business while assessing options for its future”, reports the Mirror.
During this period, they will be engaging with site owners and stakeholders to evaluate potential cost-reduction measures. A sale of the entire business or parts of it will also be considered.
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PwC said they would be examining the viability of each site, but noted that “there may need to be site closures as part of the process”.
Zelf Hussain, Joint Administrator and PwC partner, said: “NCP has faced a challenging trading environment over several years, with changing consumer behaviours impacting volumes, and a high fixed cost-base leading to trading losses. Our priority on appointment is to ensure continuity of service while we undertake a detailed review of the business.
“All sites are open, staff remain in post, and trading continues as normal. We will be engaging with landlords, employees and other stakeholders as we explore all options, including the potential sale of all or part of the business, to secure the best possible outcome for creditors.”
Established in London in 1931, NCP is owned by Japanese company Park24. In confirming the administration, the firm revealed NCP had accumulated nearly £44million in net losses over the previous three years and held net liabilities of £352million.
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Explaining the circumstances, the company stated: “Since joining our group in 2017, NCP has been positioned as an important operating subsidiary supporting our group’s long‐term growth. From 2020 onwards, however, NCP experienced a decline in demand due to the impact of the COVID‐19pandemic, and the subsequent recovery in utilization remained subdued.
“In addition, operating costs continued to increase as a result of elevated energy prices following the situation in Ukraine and persistently high inflation in the UK, leading to rising inflation‐linked rent payment obligations.
“To address the slower post‐pandemic recovery in demand, NCP pursued new car park developments to support revenue growth, while also implementing cost‐reduction measures such as workforce restructuring. Notwithstanding these efforts, structural losses continued.
” Furthermore, with significant rent payments falling due at the end of March 2026, its cash‐flow position tightened and it became increasingly difficult to secure the necessary funding. In light of these circumstances, and after considering various financing options including potential asset disposals, NCP determined that no prospect of improvement in its cash‐flow position could be identified.
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“Accordingly, with the aim of protecting creditors’ economic interests through the preservation of the value of the business and its assets, NCP’s Board of Directors resolved to place NCP into Administration, an insolvency procedure under the laws of England and Wales. Park24 will continue to cooperate in good faith regarding the orderly conduct of the administration.”
Charlotte Tilbury has slashed 20% off everything on its site including Magic Cream now £63.20, Airbrush Bronzer £37.60, and the foundation stick that left our beauty editor looking ’10 years younger’
Eve Rowlands Senior Shopping Writer and Sarah Tulloch
09:15, 17 Mar 2026Updated 09:17, 17 Mar 2026
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With spring just around the corner, it’s the perfect time to replenish your beauty essentials that give your skin that summer glow and help achieve a radiant, healthy look. This is especially true as several leading retailers have launched sales to compete with Amazon’s Spring Deal Days, including the Oscar-favoured brand Charlotte Tilbury, which has cut prices by 20% across its entire site.
This rare sale offers discounts on all of the brand’s bestsellers, with Charlotte Tilbury reducing prices on skincare products – such as its newly enhanced Magic Cream, now priced at £63.20 down from £79 for a 50ml jar – bronzing items like its Airbrush Bronzer (now £37.60), and glamorous makeup from the Pillow Talk range to its Unreal skin products.
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For instance, the brand’s acclaimed Blush Healthy Glow Stick and Unreal Skin Sheer Glow Tint Hydrating Foundation Stick, praised for making skin ‘look so youthful’ are now available for £25.60 and £29.60 respectively, reports the Mirror.
The Unreal Blush Healthy Glow Stick, typically priced at £32, is available in six sunset-inspired shades and has been described as a ‘summer glow-up in a stick’. Featuring a balm-like consistency and smooth application, its enduring formula contains skincare ingredients, including ‘Colour Light Mapping Mesh Tech’, designed to retexturise, blur and enhance the skin’s appearance.
Like its companion product, the blush incorporates the Skin Barrier Defence Matrix, featuring ‘Collageneer’ and hyaluronic acid for a hydrated, smoother, plumper complexion.
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Providing a ‘dream-sheen, luminous pop of colour’, the blush can be applied straight onto the skin and smoothed out using a brush or fingertips – perfect for busy lifestyles as it guarantees a fuss-free ‘mistake-proof’ application. Suitable for use on both cheeks and lips, this versatile product can be conveniently tucked into a handbag for frequent touch-ups and has earned an impressive 4.7 star-rating on Charlotte Tilbury’s website.
One beauty enthusiast praised it as a ‘makeup bag must have’ and commented: “I love these blush sticks. I have 3 different colours. Easy to apply and gives a nice healthy glow. Feels light to wear.”
Another customer stated: “Amazing product. Makes you look instantly healthy and glowing! I love it.”
A third reviewer observed: “Slides on like butter, stays on like a stain blush! A little goes a long way so well worth the money. Lovely packaging and such a gorgeous colour.”
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Whilst numerous users praised its relatively impressive staying power, others were less convinced, reporting how it ‘faded quickly on my skin’, requiring frequent reapplication. For those seeking a blush stain offering a natural-looking flush with superior longevity, Benefit’s Benetint Rose Tinted Lip and Cheek Stain consistently garners rave reviews and is currently reduced by 20% at Lookfantastic, bringing the price down to £18.
Another option is the Milk Makeup Cooling Water Jelly Tint, £23, which promises ‘all day colour’ and serves as a buildable blush and lip product delivering a ‘watercolour-like finish’.
As for Charlotte Tilbury’s Unreal Skint Tint, now reduced to £29.60 from £37, this summer essential has earned endorsements from celebrity makeup artists alongside our beauty team for its featherlight texture and effortless application – plus the stunning radiance it provides throughout the year.
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The formulation, enriched with ‘light mapping mesh tech’, hyaluronic acid, daikon radish seed oil, antioxidant-packed vitamin E, collageneer and ultra-fine ‘pearlescent filters’, is designed to blur and refine skin whilst supporting the skin barrier’s resilience. With a selection of 20 shades, customers who have purchased this product have lauded its ‘dewy’ finish and ‘natural looking radiance’.
One satisfied customer shared: “I love this makeup. It is ideal for the days when my skin is tired and I just want to brighten up without anything too heavy. Suits fair skin, just gives a natural glow.”
Another user commented: “As someone with extremely sensitive skin, aged 40 and who never wore facial make-up growing up, I have been looking for a light foundation that can give me some coverage mainly on my cheeks and nose, just to cover the natural blemish red I get across my cheeks and having purchased the flawless filter i decided to try this foundation as well and it is by far the best I’ve probably ever tried! It gives a lovely light but buildable cover, the texture is velvety smooth and the colour match is perfect. It doesn’t feel like I’m wearing anything on my skin, which I love, and yet blurs my cheeks to look like I’m juuusst in soft focus.”
Meanwhile, a third customer enthused: “This is honestly the makeup buy of the summer for me. This foundation glided onto my skin making my skin look so youthful and radiant. My husband commented ‘You look radiant.’ Really natural looking. I was thrilled. Highly recommend this product for a ten years younger looking face.”
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Whilst numerous customers have praised its ‘glowy’ effect, others discovered it wasn’t quite right for them, with one person commenting: “I have oilier skin, so this being a hydrating/glowy product was a little too much glow for my skin, so I had to set it with a little more powder.” Bear this in mind when considering the product.
For those seeking luminosity without excessive shimmer on oilier skin types, bareMinerals has just introduced its Complexion Rescue Luminious Skin Tint Stick, priced at £33. The product promises a gentle, dewy appearance that conceals blemishes whilst enhancing radiance.
The messaging platform began as a paid app upon its launch in 2009 before becoming free to use in 2016.
Along with Netflix, Disney+, and Spotify, an increasing number of apps are turning to paid subscription services, giving users access to extra content at a cost.
Some of these major apps include TikTok, Snapchat, Strava, Calm, Tinder, and Instagram.
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WhatsApp to launch new ‘Premium’ subscription
It appears WhatsApp is now set to join these major apps in launching an optional premium subscription that will offer users extra features in exchange for a monthly fee.
WhatsApp Plus is under development for Android and iOS, according to WABetaInfo.
It appears WhatsApp will remain free to use, with the upcoming Plus tier being an optional subscription offering extra perks.
WhatsApp will remain free to use, with the new Plus subscription completely optional, WABetaInfo explains.
It continues: “This means that users are not required to subscribe in order to continue using WhatsApp.
“Again, all of the app’s essential tools (including sending and receiving messages, making voice and video calls, sharing media, participating in group chats, privacy and security features) will remain fully accessible to everyone at no cost.
“The introduction of the paid tier is designed to offer additional customization and convenience features for users who want them, without restricting or limiting the free experience.”
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WhatsApp has not yet confirmed pricing or an official launch date for its new premium subscription.
Features included in WhatsApp Plus
WhatsApp Plus will include a range of exclusive features, which is expected to be added to over time.
Some of the features included in the new subscription, according to WABetaInfo, include:
Several customisation options to change the app theme, app icon, and accent colors, including a selection of 14 new icons and multiple color choices for interface elements.
The ability to pin up to 20 chats (instead of the standard limit of three)
Exclusive ringtones
Will you be buying the new WhatsApp Plus subscription when it comes out? Let us know in the poll above or in the comments below.
Science in the modern era is increasingly reliant on enormous datasets and automated analysis. In astronomy, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory’s Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) – a ten-year survey covering the entire southern sky almost a thousand times over the next decade – will test the limits of this reliance.
The Rubin observatory, located on a mountaintop called Cerro Pachón in Chile, is expected to catalogue the night sky in exquisite detail. The observatory aims to answer a number of questions about the universe by studying different phenomena in the sky, including supernovae (exploding stars), asteroids, dark matter and the properties of our own galaxy.
What it will also answer is a question dominating all areas of science in the 21st century: how is discovery viewed in the age of big data?
Although primarily funded by the US Department of Energy and National Science Foundation (NSF), the Rubin telescope is the product of a collaborative effort by astronomers spanning six continents and over a dozen countries.
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Assistance in setting up its data processing systems was provided by the UK, France, Spain, Italy, Japan, Brazil, Australia, South Africa and Canada, among others. These in-kind contributions provide researchers from these countries with data rights for the LSST.
Alerts providing scientific data are forwarded to seven “brokers” scattered around the world. The brokers are websites or software that astronomers use to access the data from LSST.
The alerts provide information on a new astronomical object, such as its likelihood of being real, its type, the galaxy it belongs to and how its brightness has changed over time. With this data, astronomers are able to select the best candidates for follow-up research.
However, even with the efforts of the software teams and brokers, there is still too much transient data for any research team to sift through. The final stage of data processing from the Rubin telescope will involve scientists using machine learning and AI techniques to identify the best data.
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These techniques may be for identifying real cosmic objects among the terabytes of false alerts received, or for classifying the ones most interesting to scientists.
The Rubin observatory will generate huge amounts of data, requiring large numbers of personnel to analyse it. NOIRLab/NSF/AURA/T. Slovinský
Astronomy is increasingly code-heavy and focused on in-house development. Given the huge amounts of data generated with every night of telescope observations, it is, unsurprisingly, one of the first sciences to turn to machine learning as a solution.
Astronomy has led the charge in regard to big data, with funding provided by companies such as Amazon and Microsoft for a number of major projects. Indeed, the namesake of the 8.4-metre Simonyi Survey Telescope at the Rubin observatory, Charles Simonyi, is known for software development in the early days of Microsoft, as well as his philanthropic work.
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The volume of data produced by the observatory will not only produce opportunities for scientists, software developers and tech workers, but also for volunteers with an interest in astronomy via citizen science projects.
LSST’s partnership with the citizen science platform Zooniverse will ask volunteers to look through data and provide additional context to what they’re shown – identifying interesting objects, discarding garbage data and classifying various types of phenomena.
Future lessons
What does the Rubin observatory tell us about modern astronomy? The 20th century saw a greater push for international collaboration in exploring the skies. The increased sophistication of the resulting observatories means that more and more astronomers are working in the service of enabling science, rather than making discoveries themselves.
The huge amounts of data generated by the survey, and the huge number of personnel required to analyse it, is not novel to Rubin. Other contemporary surveys such as Euclid and the Ligo-Virgo-Kagra collaboration, as well as the next decade’s even larger Square Kilometer Array, each consist of thousands of collaborators worldwide leveraging huge amounts of data.
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What is clear is that AI will dominate the scientific discovery space of the Rubin observatory to meet these big data challenges. With more funding from industry to develop AI tools to analyse astronomy data, astronomy is becoming deeply embedded within the tech-sphere that dominates modern life.
Rubin will produce 10 terabytes of data every night, with the aim of a final database size of 15 petabytes at the end of its ten-year survey. With the majority of the 10 million alerts produced each night expected to be false, advanced machine learning and AI tools are required to filter out all but the most promising candidates for follow-up.
By reducing the amount of time spent by astronomers reviewing this data, more time can be spent carrying out new and exciting astrophysics research.
Ownership of both the tools of discovery and the discovery itself is now disseminated among scientists, big tech and the citizens who label data. The unresolved question is whether the cosmos will remain a shared public frontier, or become a domain shaped by the priorities of Silicon Valley.
Around 6pm on Tuesday, 25 February, a property near the B739, between Tarbolton and Monkton, was broken into.
Jewellery and clothes worth approximately £300,000 were stolen during a housebreaking and theft in Ayrshire.
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Around 6pm on Tuesday, 25 February, a property near the B739, between Tarbolton and Monkton, was broken into.
Police have since confirmed that jewellery and clothing worth approximately £300,000 were taken.
It is believed two males were involved in the break-in and they would have needed access to a vehicle.
A team of detectives has reviewed CCTV and carried out extensive enquiries in the local area.
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Police Scotland Detective Sergeant Davie Gillies, Ayr CID, said: “We are now appealing for the help of the public.
“We believe this house was targeted specifically for its remote location and with the intention of stealing high-value items.
“Our enquiries remain ongoing and I am appealing to anyone who witnessed the incident, who may have seen a car or people acting suspiciously in the area on the day the property was broken into or in the days leading up to it or who may have information which could assist to contact us.
“I would also ask any motorists who were in the area of the B739, between Tarbolton and Monkton, around the time and who may have dash cam footage which could help to get in touch.”
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Anyone with any information is asked to contact 101 quoting reference 3693 of 24 February, 2026.
BANGKOK (AP) — The escalating war with Iran is pushing parts of the world into energy triage, forcing governments to choose where to cut demand or absorb costs, while prioritizing dwindling supplies.
Governments in the region are scrambling to adjust — tallying oil reserves, conserving energy, competing for supplies and trying to blunt prices. That brings difficult trade-offs: saving power may slow business activity. Prioritizing cooking gas for households can hurt restaurants and other businesses.
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Cooks at a restaurant prepare meals over a charcoal stove following a shortage of liquefied petroleum gas in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
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Cooks at a restaurant prepare meals over a charcoal stove following a shortage of liquefied petroleum gas in Mumbai, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool)
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Motorists wait behind a rope for their turn to get fuel at a pump, fearing a possible fuel shortage due to the Iran war, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu, File)
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Motorists wait behind a rope for their turn to get fuel at a pump, fearing a possible fuel shortage due to the Iran war, in Dhaka, Bangladesh, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu, File)
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Tricycle drivers prepare their documents to receive their cash assistance from the government to help in their livelihood as oil prices continue to rise on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
Tricycle drivers prepare their documents to receive their cash assistance from the government to help in their livelihood as oil prices continue to rise on Tuesday, March 17, 2026, in Manila, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favila)
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“Even relatively modest constraints on energy use can create a drag on industrial activity,” said Linh Nguyen, with the consultancy Control Risks. She pointed to Vietnam’s energy-intensive export industries and warned that higher fuel costs or conservation measures could quickly raise production costs or slow factory output.
Analysts warn the same hard choices could soon spread beyond Asia to fuel-importing economies in Africa and elsewhere as countries compete for scarce supplies.
“The situation is common across the board,” said Putra Adhiguna of the Jakarta-based Energy Shift Institute. “There is no easy decision for the short term.”
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Southeast Asia is rationing scarce energy
With oil prices surging despite releases of some reserves, Southeast Asia is stretching dwindling energy reserves by urging households, businesses and government agencies to slash power use.
In the Philippines, officials have switched to a four-day workweek to cut back on fuel consumption and reduce the government’s energy use by a fifth. Office have been told to switch off computers during lunch breaks and keep air conditioning no lower than 24°C (75°F). Vietnam has urged people to work from home. While in Thailand, the prime minister has even asked officials to take the stairs instead of elevators.
A security guard walks along offices at the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority closed due to the implementation of four-day work week on March 13, 2026 in Pasig, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favilal)
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A security guard walks along offices at the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority closed due to the implementation of four-day work week on March 13, 2026 in Pasig, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favilal)
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Desks remain at an empty office at the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority closed due to the implementation of four-day work week on Friday, March 13, 2026 in Pasig, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favilal)
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Desks remain at an empty office at the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority closed due to the implementation of four-day work week on Friday, March 13, 2026 in Pasig, Philippines. (AP Photo/Aaron Favilal)
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But this comes at a cost.
Dieu Linh, a vegetable seller in Hanoi, said even a 10% rise in fuel costs will eat into her thin margins. “If my costs go up by even a little, the profit is almost gone,” she said.
At the same time, countries in the region are competing for limited supplies at higher costs.
Vietnam has asked refineries and fuel distributors to keep fuel supplies high, while Thailand is stretching its roughly two-month oil reserve and seeking other domestic energy sources. Both are using price supports to shield households from rising costs.
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Thailand halted exports to protect its limited reserves, contributing to shortages that have closed nearly a third of Cambodia’s roughly 6,000 gas stations.
East Asia searches for new energy suppliers and sources
More than 80% of the liquefied natural gas, or LNG, that passed the Strait of Hormuz in 2024 went to Asia, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, and much of it to Japan, South Korea and Taiwan.
Japan’s first line of defense is its vast strategic oil stockpile, amounting to around 254 days’ worth of supplies. This system was set up after the shocks from the 1970s Arab oil crisis.
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Part of Eneos group’s Kashima oil refinery is seen as local residents try to catch fish at a wharf in Kamisu, east of Tokyo, Sunday, March 15, 2026.(AP Photo/Hiro Komae)
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Part of Eneos group’s Kashima oil refinery is seen as local residents try to catch fish at a wharf in Kamisu, east of Tokyo, Sunday, March 15, 2026.(AP Photo/Hiro Komae)
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Japan began releasing about 45 days’ worth of oil reserves this week to prevent fuel prices from surging as crude oil imports slow. It last released reserves after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
This will help keep Japan’s energy-intensive industries running, from automobiles to steel manufacturing and heavy machinery. Companies like Toyota, Mitsubishi and Nippon Steel depend on steady fuel supplies.
But analysts said that tapping reserves isn’t a longterm solution.
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A protester holds a sign against Donald Trump’s demands to multiple countries to send warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, near the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)
A protester holds a sign against Donald Trump’s demands to multiple countries to send warships to keep the Strait of Hormuz open, near the U.S. Embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Lee Jin-man)
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It will give refineries “some buffer” against disruptions. But this does not increase a country’s overall supply unless it can buy oil released by other nations, said Muyu Xu of the energy consultancy Kpler.
If the crisis drags on, crude oil shortages could return. The releases may keep refineries running for another few weeks, but companies may need to slow production if disruptions continue, she added.
“The fundamental difficulties will not be solved by this action,” said Mika Ohbayashi of the Renewable Energy Institute in Japan, adding that renewable energy was a long-term solution but the Japanese government was uninterested.
India is prioritizing household needs for its limited supply of liquefied petroleum gas or LPG, which is used for cooking and to power cars.
It has absorbed more than half of the increase driven by global market disruptions under a federal scheme to keep prices low for poor households, said Indian Petroleum Minister Hardeep Singh Puri.
But shortages are already seeping into restaurants and hotels in the world’s second-largest LPG importer, as eateries shorten hours, close temporarily or trim long-simmered curries and deep-fried snacks from their menus.
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An empty liquefied petroleum gas cylinder is seen beside a temple while a customer waits at a depot for the cylinder to be refilled in Hyderabad, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.)
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A woman talks on mobile as she waits to collect household cylinder of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)
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A worker distributes household liquefied petroleum gas cylinders to customers in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
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A worker inspects liquefied petroleum gas cylinders, arranged for customer delivery at a distribution centre on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, Friday, March 13, 2026. (AP Photo/Prabhjot Gill)
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A staff writes on a ledger as workers unload cylinders of liquified natural gas for households at a distribution point, in Kolkata, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)
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Women wait to collect household cylinders of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)
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People queue to collect household cylinders of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer on a roadside in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
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An empty liquefied petroleum gas cylinder is seen beside a temple while a customer waits at a depot for the cylinder to be refilled in Hyderabad, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.)
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An empty liquefied petroleum gas cylinder is seen beside a temple while a customer waits at a depot for the cylinder to be refilled in Hyderabad, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.)
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A woman talks on mobile as she waits to collect household cylinder of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)
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A woman talks on mobile as she waits to collect household cylinder of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)
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A worker distributes household liquefied petroleum gas cylinders to customers in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
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A worker distributes household liquefied petroleum gas cylinders to customers in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
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A worker inspects liquefied petroleum gas cylinders, arranged for customer delivery at a distribution centre on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, Friday, March 13, 2026. (AP Photo/Prabhjot Gill)
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A worker inspects liquefied petroleum gas cylinders, arranged for customer delivery at a distribution centre on the outskirts of Amritsar, India, Friday, March 13, 2026. (AP Photo/Prabhjot Gill)
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A staff writes on a ledger as workers unload cylinders of liquified natural gas for households at a distribution point, in Kolkata, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)
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A staff writes on a ledger as workers unload cylinders of liquified natural gas for households at a distribution point, in Kolkata, India, Wednesday, March 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)
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Women wait to collect household cylinders of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)
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Women wait to collect household cylinders of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer in Ahmedabad, India, Monday, March 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)
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People queue to collect household cylinders of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer on a roadside in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
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People queue to collect household cylinders of liquefied natural gas from an authorized dealer on a roadside in Srinagar, Indian controlled Kashmir, Saturday, March 14, 2026. (AP Photo/Dar Yasin)
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The scale of demand in India, the world’s most populous nation, limits how long it can cap prices to shield consumers. The situation could worsen within a week if government subsidies lapse, said Duttatreya Das of the think tank Ember, noting gas supplies were the most immediate concern.
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“You can’t store a lot of gas,” Das said, adding that fertilizer factories and small industries will feel the pinch first.
Liberia-flagged tanker Shenlong Suezmax, carrying crude oil from Saudi Arabia, that arrived clearing the Strait of Hormuz, is seen at the Mumbai Port in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool, File)
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Liberia-flagged tanker Shenlong Suezmax, carrying crude oil from Saudi Arabia, that arrived clearing the Strait of Hormuz, is seen at the Mumbai Port in Mumbai, India, Thursday, March 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Rafiq Maqbool, File)
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Indonesia, a country of 287 million people and Southeast Asia’s most populous nation, also faces hard choices.
While the government has promised to maintain fuel prices throughout Eid al-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of the fasting month of Ramadan, Adhiguna of the Energy Shift Institute said there is “no clarity about what will happen after that,” adding that this implies fuel prices could increase.
People carry their belongings as they arrive for a free bus trip to their hometowns to celebrate Eid-al Fitr, organized by the Jakarta provincial government in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)
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People carry their belongings as they arrive for a free bus trip to their hometowns to celebrate Eid-al Fitr, organized by the Jakarta provincial government in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)
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Bus crew wait for passengers as the mass exodus out of Jakarta and other major cities is underway ahead of Eid al-Fitr in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)
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Bus crew wait for passengers as the mass exodus out of Jakarta and other major cities is underway ahead of Eid al-Fitr in Jakarta, Indonesia, Tuesday, March 17, 2026. (AP Photo/Dita Alangkara)
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Thailand is also caught in a dilemma. If it ends subsidies that keep prices low, living costs will jump and that could spark a panic if reserves fall further, said Areeporn Asawinpongphan of the Thailand Development Research Institute.
If the conflict continues, Indonesia will have to choose between keeping the subsides that protect customers or cutting funding to keep to budgetary limits. However, this could fuel inflation. Given Indonesia’s limited 20-day reserve, Adhiguna warned that price fluctuations in Indonesia’s fuel market will be swift.
“It will eventually reach a breaking point,” Adhiguna said.
Europe feels the squeeze, too
The European Union is doubling down on its long-term clean energy strategy to cut consumption and rein in prices across the 27-nation bloc that have risen sharply since the war’s start. Officials met in Brussel this week, where they considered ways to improve the region’s energy security.
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“We are looking at how we can reduce people’s energy bills,” said European Commissioner for Energy Dan Jørgensen. “We are working on immediate measures to help businesses and our most vulnerable citizens.”
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Ghosal reported from Hanoi, Vietnam. Associated Press writers Elaine Kurtenbach in Bangkok, Thailand, Sam McNeil in Brussels and Piyush Nagpal in New Delhi, India contributed to this report.
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The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Amid the debate over the new rules, what is more important, the entertainment spectacle or driver satisfaction? And with changes being considered, what sort of things are likely to be changed? – Kevin and Tim
For this answer, I have combined two separate questions that came in. I hope Kevin and Tim don’t mind.
F1 is a sport first and entertainment second. The hope is that it should be entertaining, and effort is made to make sure that’s the case, but sport can’t be entertaining all the time. You get 0-0 draws in football as much as 5-4 thrillers. Not all rugby matches are as compelling as that between France and England on Saturday evening.
Most of the stakeholders in F1 recognise that as a truism.
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The new rules were not arrived at from an entertainment-first standpoint, at least not initially. The engine rules were changed to attract new manufacturers – successfully – and only afterwards was it realised that the chassis rules would be problematic.
Primarily, issues revolve around the fact that with such powerful electrical systems, a nominal 50-50 split between internal combustion and electrical power, batteries of the current size, and front-axle recovery not allowed, the cars are energy starved.
It’s fair to say that many people in F1 recognise the chassis rules are a mish-mash of compromises arrived at as a sticking plaster for the engine rules, while at the same time trying to align a series of competing political positions.
It’s hardly a surprise that, in those circumstances, the rules are less than perfect, to say the least.
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The fundamentals of the rules won’t change, but it’s recognised that some areas could be tweaked to reduce some of the bigger compromises.
It’s clear from some remarks Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff made after the race in China that certain changes that have come with the new rules are considered welcome.
“From an entertainment perspective, what we’ve seen today between Ferrari and Mercedes was good racing,” Wolff said.
“Many overtakes. We were all part of Formula 1 where there was no overtake, literally. Sometimes we’re too nostalgic about the good old years. But I think the product is good in itself. We saw quite some racing in the midfield also. And that is, I think, the positive.
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“Qualifying flat-out would be nice. But when you look at the fans and the excitement that is there, live, the cheering when there’s overtakes and also on social media, the younger fans, the vast majority, through all the demographics, like the sport at the moment.
“We can always look at how we’re improving it. But at the moment, all the indicators say and all the data say people love it. And I spoke with Stefano (Domenicali, the F1 president). He says that, too. So, it is driving the car that, for some, is not most pleasant.”
That sounds a bit like Wolff is saying the drivers can lump it if they don’t like it.
That being said, there is widespread unease at the way the need for energy management has compromised the purity of not only the driving experience but also the essence of the sport – especially in qualifying, and especially in fast corners, many of which some drivers say are now being used for energy recovery and are no longer taken at the limit of grip.
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At the moment, there are two levels of energy recovery. When flat out, a maximum of 250kw, in what is known in F1 jargon as ‘super-clipping’. But 350kw once the driver has lifted and/or braked.
One obvious change would be to allow the cars to super-clip – the most efficient way of recovery – at 350kw. That feels like it could happen pretty soon, perhaps even for the Miami Grand Prix in early May.
Another proposal has been to reduce the power from the electrical components from the current 350kw, to 300kw or 250kw. Then deployment would last longer.
More extensive changes, such as changing the split between internal combustion and electrical power so it was more in favour of the engine, or increasing the fuel-energy limit, would require significant changes to the power-units. So that could not happen before next year at the earliest.
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It remains to be seen whether there is appetite for that – especially as people are already beginning to wonder what the next engine regulations will be, and exactly when they will come in.
The Doc Martin star has opened up on how he prepared to play the disgraced BBC newsreader
Doc Martin star Martin Clunes has opened up about the challenges of playing disgraced former BBC newsreader Huw Edwards. Edwards, who was born in Bridgend, was one of the highest-paid newsreaders at the public service broadcaster.
Clunes said he hasn’t “judged” the disgraced newsreader in his performance. “I never get into whether I like or dislike a character I’m playing,” he explained.
Having never met Edwards however, Clunes admits he spoke to people who worked with him and “didn’t hear any compliments”, he told The Times.
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The 64-year-old, who recently appeared in the new adaption of Wuthering Heights, said he knew portraying Edwards would be a challenge from the beginning.
Power: The Downfall Of Huw Edwards, focuses on how a young vulnerable man, played by Welsh actor Osian Morgan, came into contact with one of the most powerful figures in television.
“Beyond the salacious curiosity around this story, I really thought there was another story worth telling, that of ‘Ryan’ and his family,” the London-born actor said.
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“Obviously the press and the media have focussed on the fallen big man, Huw Edwards, which, of course, is a big story. But behind that, there’s this lad and his family whose lives got turned upside down and rather spoiled. I’m not on any social media and I had no idea that this sort of thing went on, I really didn’t.”
Edwards’ downfall came after a report by the Sun in July 2023 alleged that a “top BBC star” had paid a 17-year-old for sexual pictures. Days later his wife named him as the presenter at the centre of the scandal and the newsreader resigned the following April.
Edwards was charged with making indecent images of children in June 2024 following a Metropolitan Police investigation. A month later the former presenter and father of five admitted three offences of making indecent images of children at Westminster Magistrates’ Court. He was sentenced to a six-month jail sentence, suspended for two years.
Clunes said that while preparing for the role, he looked through archive clips of Edwards in an attempt to understand the man behind the newsreader. “I was familiar with Huw Edwards, the newsreader, and how he presented himself when he was reading the news,” he explained.
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“But I’ve seen other actors make the mistake of just inhabiting that projected face of a famous person or politician, I knew that we needed the other side of him too.
“Finding archive clips of Edwards away from the news was less easy, but I wanted to make sure I did. I noticed from looking at that archive that he was different when he wasn’t reading the news, and I wanted to make that distinction. If you listen to his rhythms, he’s far more Welsh when he’s not newsreading.”
But even for Clunes, Edwards remains something of a mystery. “The circularity of it is something I’ve thought about. Because he was on the telly in all those homes, every night, and he would have reported on somebody else’s fall from grace. And I wonder how he would have felt.”
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Clunes, who is known more for his comedy roles, said it can be uncomfortable dealing with sensitive subject material, but dealt with it by being a “little facetious”, despite taking his work seriously.
“Sometimes it’s harder when a role is more nebulous and you can’t pin your performance on something, but we had transcripts of text messages between Huw Edwards and ‘Ryan’, and they do appear in the script, so we breathed life into them,” he said.
“It was hard towards the end of the story, hearing Osian’s vulnerable voice when Edwards was bullying him, and the hurt of this boy reaching out in a sensitive way. I didn’t feel very nice at the end of those scenes, so again it was definitely good to have Osian in the room to talk to afterwards.
“I’m not a very heavy person, so my way of dealing with things is generally to be a little facetious and sort of lighthearted, even though I take the work very seriously.”
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Speaking about filming the phone scenes, he says they always made sure to be in the same room. “Luckily, I did have Osian there with me, who plays Ryan, and he was terrific,” said Clunes.
“A lot of our scenes are seemingly in isolation on phone calls, so we decided to both be there in the room for the other actor. Usually, if you film a phone call, the director or assistant director will read out the other lines, and you have to act to that. But because of the intimate nature of so many of these phone calls, we felt we couldn’t do that.
“There’s an intimacy on the phone. Having us both in the room for filming really helped to create that feeling. There was only one time it wasn’t possible to be in the same place, and I phoned Osian directly for that scene. He’s a brilliant young actor, I was just bowled over by him and really enjoyed working with him.”
When asked how he feels fans will react to seeing him in this role, Clunes says: “I’ve played a murderer before and I’m vile in Wuthering Heights, so this isn’t my first dark role, but I always just take work from what’s on offer, and I’ve never had a plan.
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“I’ve always been lucky enough to balance light-hearted jobs like Doc Martin with dramas in-between. I’m not desperate to reshape myself – I’d play someone like Doc Martin again in a heartbeat.”
Power: The Downfall Of Huw Edwards airs on Channel 5 on Tuesday, March 24 at 9pm.
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