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Trump talks MMA and golf in podcast push for young male voters

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Trump talks MMA and golf in podcast push for young male voters
Theo Von / YouTube Theo Von sat on chair oppposite a seated TrumpTheo Von / YouTube

Theo Von in conversation with Trump

Donald Trump has appeared on a slew of shows with huge audiences of young men, sitting for interviews with influencers, comedians and podcasters outside the usual political media. What’s his strategy?

About 15 minutes into Donald Trump’s conversation with comedian Theo Von, the chat veered into territory not usually heard in a stump speech.

“I had a great brother who taught me a lesson, don’t drink. Don’t drink, and don’t smoke,” the former president said. “I admired so much about him… And he had a problem with alcohol.”

“I’ve been in recovery for most of the past 10 years,” Von replied. “Drugs and alcohol.”

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Trump seemed genuinely interested.

“Which is worse?” he asked. The pair went on to chat at length about addiction and the drugs industry.

Politics wasn’t entirely absent – within a few minutes Trump was back alluding to his grievances against the “deep state” and the voting system – but the friendly chat was a prime example of a larger campaign strategy.

Trump has done a series of interviews with podcasters and alternative media that together comprise a concerted effort to reach young men.

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Although the tactic isn’t new – for months, stretching back to last year, Trump has been appearing on alternative, male-dominated media outlets with big audiences – it’s taken on a greater importance in the final stages of this election.

In August the Trump campaign told reporters that they are targeting a key group of voters that makes up just over a tenth of the electorate in swing states. They’re mostly younger men, and mostly white, but the group includes more Latinos and Asian-Americans than the general population.

And they believe they can reach these often fickle voters by putting Trump on shows hosted by people like Von, internet pranksters Nelk Boys, YouTuber Logan Paul and Adin Ross, a livestreaming gamer who has repeatedly been banned from sites for violating rules on offensive language.

The Nelk Boys are reportedly spearheading a voter registration drive on behalf of Trump which they hope will reach like-minded audiences.

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Getty Images A head-and-shoulders shot of Logan Paul, with scruffy blonde hair and a beard.Getty Images

YouTuber and wrestler Logan Paul is one of the young male podcasters who had Trump on his show

Although they may not exactly be household names in the world of mainstream media, these podcasts have audiences of millions. Von’s Trump interview has nearly 14 million views on YouTube.

Polls indicate the political gender gap among young people has widened since Kamala Harris became the Democratic nominee in July. Overall the vice-president seems to be pulling more young people into her camp – but her support among young women has risen faster than her support among young men.

Recent research by the Harvard Youth Poll indicates 70% of women under age 30 support Harris, while 23% plan to vote for Trump. Among men in the same age group, 53% back Harris and 36% support Trump.

Daniel Cox, director of the Survey Center on American Life, part of the conservative American Enterprise Institute think tank, says that the political gender gap mirrors larger social divisions which have left many young men feeling like few politicians are looking out for them.

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“Trump is very good at turning things into zero-sum games,” Mr Cox says. “Young men are trying to understand their place in society that is rapidly evolving, as a group they are struggling more academically, they have mental health challenges and rising rates of suicide.

“These are very real concerns and there’s a sense in the political realm that nobody’s advocating for them,” he said.

But Trump’s podcast tour is not so much a question of policy, Mr Cox says, and more about “showing up” and talking with a different style to a different crowd.

Banner saying 'More on US election' on the left with faces of Harris and Trump on the right

The attempt to switch up the vibe is apparent in his recent podcast interviews, where the mostly relaxed former president leads with chat about golf and mixed martial arts and Maga-world policies – Trump’s Make America Great Again slogan that often refers to an America-first approach – are assumed to be good common sense rather than controversial topics to be picked apart and debated.

Before the addiction chat on Von’s show, Trump praised Ultimate Fighting Championship competitors including Dustin Poirier, displaying more than a casual knowledge of the sport.

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“Boy, I’ll tell you, he’s a warrior,” Trump said, “The man he was fighting was tough… as that fight went along, he just got stronger and stronger.”

Von did not push back – and in fact eagerly agreed – when Trump made a host of unsubstantiated and erroneous statements about voting, immigration and the border, including claiming that “hundreds of thousands of murderers” had entered the country.

On the podcast circuit, there’s plenty of messing around, but sometimes the hosts seem awestruck, deferential or even nervous. Before one chat, the Nelk Boys videoed themselves chugging cans of their own-brand boozy seltzer to calm themselves down before Trump walked into the room.

But their audiences aren’t demanding tough questioning or detailed policy positions.

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“A lot of young people are not looking for hard news,” says Mr Cox. “Their first interests might be crypto or video games, and the politics comes later – through the side door, not the front door.”

Getty Images Four men standing in a lineGetty Images

Trump recently called several of the Nelk Boys – pictured here at a movie premiere – on stage at a rally in Nevada

There are other signs that Trump is making a hard pivot towards male voters – for instance filling the Republican National Convention stage with the likes of Kid Rock, Hulk Hogan and UFC chief executive Dana White, instead of being introduced – like he was at previous conventions – by his daughter, Ivanka.

Judging from the comments on the podcast interviews, many viewers and listeners already back the former president, but getting them out to the polls may be the real challenge.

Voting rates among young people lag behind overall, and young men tend to vote at slightly lower rates than young women.

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The Harris campaign is also making a podcast play of its own, aimed at young women. The vice-president recently appeared on the popular sex-and-relationships pod Call Her Daddy, where she too faced less-than-aggressive questioning.

Reuters The vice president sitting across from a podcast host with a large sign "Call her Daddy" in the backgroundReuters

Kamala Harris on the Call Her Daddy podcast

Garrett, a Logan Paul fan from Houston in his early 20s, runs his own YouTube channel under the name Spy Jay.

He said he finds Paul’s brand – “being a Maverick” – appealing, and before watching the interview he had an overall positive view of Trump, calling him “a patriotic nationalist who wants to restore the country back to an improved state from before”.

“But the persecution he’s facing, while there’s a relentless intention in the media to rewrite who he is and what he stands for, implies a greater evil at play,” he said. “And that makes me feel more inclined to be open-minded about voting for him.”

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Watching Trump on Paul’s podcast – the internet star asked Trump if he’d ever been in a fight – and Trump’s interview with Adin Ross, only confirmed his views, Garrett told the BBC.

Garrett said he thought young Americans were increasingly tuning into politics, and that Trump is tapping into alt-media spaces “like no other candidate has before”.

“So whether it’s a good strategy or bad, it is going to reach quite a few of the young folks,” he said.

Responses online to the video have been broadly positive. “No one can convince me Trump isn’t just a bro when it comes down to it” said one, while another read “Love or hate Trump, but he definitely knows how to make an interview entertaining”.

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But some experts question whether Trump has much room to grow his voting base among heavily male subcultures, where he has long had support.

“Trump already seems to have captured the manospheric and hypermasculine over-25s, so this is a late stage and rather desperate attempt to become relevant,” said Jack Bratich, a media professor at Rutgers University who studies the male-heavy online spaces known as the “manosphere”.

Extremely online young men were very active during the 2016 election campaign, when political memes and extreme message boards like 4chan burst into prominence, says Bratich.

The situation is very different eight years later, he says, with “no identifiable right-wing youth-based online political movement” getting heavily involved in this year’s contest.

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However, he notes there is little risk and potentially large rewards for Trump.

Whether it pays off will depend on convincing young men who don’t tend to get involved in politics to log off and head to the polls.

Like so many other things in this election, plays for younger voters are full of unknowns.

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Body parts found in Colorado freezer are those of 16-year-old girl last seen in 2005

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Body parts found in Colorado freezer are those of 16-year-old girl last seen in 2005

Body parts found in a freezer earlier this year after a Colorado home was sold have been identified as those of the 16-year-old daughter of the home’s previous owner, authorities said Friday.

The death of Amanda Leariel Overstreet is being investigated as a homicide and an investigation is ongoing, the Mesa County Sheriff’s Office said.

The grim discovery was made in January, after the home near Grand Junction had been sold to a new owner, and after that owner offered a freezer that had been left behind for free, the sheriff’s office said.

Inside the freezer there was a head and forearms with hands attached. Deputies were called on Jan. 12 after the person who claimed the freezer made the discovery.

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The last time Amanda had been seen or heard from was in April 2005, the sheriff’s office said.

“The circumstances surrounding her disappearance remain under investigation, as well as ongoing forensic testing of evidence,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement about the case. “There is no record that Amanda Overstreet was ever reported missing.”

The Mesa County coroner’s office said Friday that the remains had been identified and that the manner of death was being investigated as homicide. The rest of the her body has not been found.

The coroner’s office did not list a cause of death but said there is an active investigation and no further details would be released. DNA analysis helped to confirm the identification, the office said.

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Amanda lived in the Grand Junction and Harris County, Texas, areas, the coroner’s office said.

The sheriff’s office stressed again Friday that the home is under new ownership, and the current owner of the home is “completely unrelated to the previous case.”

“The house was purchased, fully remodeled, and sold to the current owner,” the sheriff’s office said.

This article was originally published on NBCNews.com

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Lore Segal, Austrian-American novelist, 1928-2024

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In the winter of 1938, Lore Segal said goodbye to her parents at the train station in Vienna and boarded a train that would whisk her away from the burgeoning Nazi occupation. She was one of the lucky 10,000 children selected for Kindertransport, a humanitarian initiative to foster endangered Jewish children in Nazi territories into British homes. Arriving in England, Segal felt safe, but not known. “My foster parents did not understand what was happening in Vienna,” the writer, who died this week at the age of 96, said in an interview in 2007. “The questions they asked me were not relevant”. And so the ten-year-old child began to write about what had happened, filling 36 pages of a school book with what she called “Hitler stories”.

It was at that moment that Segal discovered something she not only wanted, but needed to say. “It was the novelist’s impulse not to explain or persuade but to force the reader’s vision: see what I saw, feel what it felt like,” she wrote in the preface to her first novel, Other People’s Houses, a fictionalised account of the time she spent in foster homes. That impulse drove her through eight decades of writing: five novels, children’s books, essays and a steady stream of short stories for the New Yorker. The first of these was published in 1961, when she was 33; the last was in an edition of the New Yorker that appeared on newsstands the day she died.

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Leaving Vienna gave Segal both the impetus to write and one of the necessary tools. Sitting on a tram, the protagonist in Other People’s Houses spots “another little Jewish girl with a rucksack and suitcase” and tries to catch her eye, “to flirt up a new friend for myself”. The girl ignores her, too busy crying. In their different aspects, Segal recognised that she had transposed her own grief into excitement. This was, she later said, “a form, surely, of denial”.

Children wave from the deck of a ship
German children arrive at Harwich in England in December 1938 under the Kindertransport programme © Fred Morley/Fox Photos/Getty Images

That detachment, however, is what allowed Segal to “stand back, not judge and just see what was happening,” says Natania Jansz of Sort of Books, which published Segal’s writing in the UK. “She was able to investigate what was happening around her.”

In England, Segal was eventually joined by her parents, and in her early twenties she moved to New York, where she began writing in earnest. What started as a series of short stories about refugees were stitched into Other People’s Houses in 1964. Twelve years later (“I’m slow,” she once explained) a novella called Lucinella traced the story of a poet living among the New York literati. Twenty-two years later, in 2007, she published Shakespeare’s Kitchen, a collection of stories set in a think-tank in Connecticut which was nominated for the Pulitzer. 

Segal wrote from 8am until 1pm every day of her adult life. As she grew older, her characters did too. Last year she published Ladies’ Lunch, a collection of stories which follow a group of ninety-year-old women who periodically meet to laugh and lament their ageing. In one story, Lotte, infuriated at her diminishing freedoms, continually asks her friend Ruth if they could “rent a car together”; in another, Colin is “the only one of the husbands still living” and also the one the friends “could not stand”. The collection was a hit, “splashed all over Manhattan shop windows”, Jansz says. Segal “absolutely loved it”.

Her continued output revealed the depth of her love for the activity of writing. She was a prodigious editor of her own work, known to tweak stories even after publication when a stronger word or image came to her. Her tendency to write novels as a series of stories was born in part from this minute focus.

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“I put down a sentence, and that sentence makes it possible to make the next one. I don’t have a usable plan,” she said. “I don’t experience my life as a plot and am not good at plotting my novel.”

As well as being an author of consummate craft she was a writer of joy. “Charm is a word I have never used,” her friend, the writer Vivian Gornick, said over email. “But a few weeks ago I realised that when I think of Lore, the word comes into my head. What I mean by that is this: she loved being alive, she found the world attractive, as a result she found something attractive in almost every person who came her way. This quality irradiated her personality. Not a person to whom I introduced her failed to fall in love with her. This, I think, is the essence of charm.” 

Segal greeted old age with characteristic frankness and curiosity. Jansz recalls the moment Segal informed her that she was losing her sight, saying “I’ve emigrated a lot in my life, and not always by choice. Maybe I could think of this as another emigration and, maybe, like the others, I’ll also find this interesting.”

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I reveal the £5 discount card that save families HUNDREDS on days out and holidays

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I've been using my Blue Light Card to save hundreds on family holidays since it launched in 2008

EARLIER this year, social media was abuzz with news that teachers can now sign up for the popular Blue Light Card – a discount scheme that’s saved my family hundreds of pounds over the years.

It’s no wonder that so many teachers were trying to take advantage of their newfound eligibility that the website crashed and the company had to introduce a waiting list to join. 

I've been using my Blue Light Card to save hundreds on family holidays since it launched in 2008

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I’ve been using my Blue Light Card to save hundreds on family holidays since it launched in 2008Credit: Catherine Lofthouse
My family and I use the Blue Light Card to save on holidays and days out

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My family and I use the Blue Light Card to save on holidays and days outCredit: Catherine Lofthouse

We’ve been using our Blue Light Card, launched in 2008, since its very early days as my husband’s in the emergency services.

Over the years, the savings have really added up, especially when it comes to booking holidays and days out.

It’s my go-to app when I’m looking at whether I can get a discount on tickets, hotel rooms or even breaks away. 

It’s now second nature for me to use it when I book a UK holiday park, as both Butlin’s and Haven are the among those covered.

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We’ve been visiting Butlin’s at least once a year since my eldest son, aged 12, was born.

Every time we’ve used our Blue Light Card privilege, it’s saved us £20, adding up to more than £200 over the last decade.

And our Haven savings probably add up to about the same amount over the years too.

It’s certainly not bad for a discount scheme that only costs £5 to join. 

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When my husband first became a member, it was free if you just joined online or £5 for five years if you wanted a card to keep in your wallet.

Now it costs £5 for two years, but there’s lots of people still waiting for their application to be processed as the company works its way through the backlog from the summer rush.

Exciting Family Day Out: Get Your Tickets Now!

We’ve also had some great deals on days out over the years with our Blue Light Card.

Sometimes the card holder can get in for free, with other friends and family members bagging a discounted rate.

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We’ve done that before at attractions like the Legoland Discovery Centre in Birmingham.

I’ve noticed that lots of circuses have been offering free Blue Light Card tickets this year.

The big theme parks like Alton Towers and Legoland even host exclusive members-only days out, with tickets that can only be bought through the Blue Light Card site.

These usually run at the start and end of the season and often include discounted prices for the on-site hotels as well.

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Where can I use a Blue Light Card?

The attractions that participate in the Blue Light Card scheme can change regularly, meaning there isn’t a comprehensive list of places.

It’s worth checking whether the discount is valid before planning a day out.

Some of the current participating attractions include:

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  • Alton Towers Resort
  • The Blackpool Tower
  • Cadbury World
  • Thorpe Park Resort
  • Drayton Manor Park
  • Legoland Windsor Resort
  • Shrek’s Adventure London
  • Chessington World of Adventures

Blue light cardholders can also make big savings on their holidays with the following websites:

  • Booking.com
  • EasyJet Holidays
  • Eurocamp
  • Expedia
  • Hotels.com
  • Jet2 Holidays

But you’ll need to be quick if you want to bag a bargain as these member-only days often sell out on the day they go on sale.

Whether it’s taking £20 off a stay at Butlin’s or bagging a bargain theme park ticket, it’s worth taking your time to trawl through the website, or the app, to see what appeals to you.

There’s so many partner companies signed up that there’s bound to be stuff you’re already buying that you could save on.

You can even use your card in the least likely places and sometimes those small wins are the best of all.

We had an excellent takeaway meal from My Plaice in Gorleston while we were on holiday in Great Yarmouth and the owner knocked 10 per cent off the price of our fish and chips when my husband showed our Blue Light Card. 

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I think the deals to be had with the Blue Light Card beat those on offer with other discount cards like Kids Pass, which I’ve also been using this year.

If you’ve heard about Blue Light and thought it wasn’t for you, maybe it’s time to take another look and see if your job qualifies for membership, now the categories covered have been extended beyond the emergency services, military and healthcare professionals.

I’ve shared other money-saving hacks on days out in the UK, including a kid’s pass.

Earlier this year, we revealed some of the best free kids’ attractions in London for families to visit.

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The Blue Light Card costs £5 but is only eligible for certain professions

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The Blue Light Card costs £5 but is only eligible for certain professionsCredit: Catherine Lofthouse

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Russian Commanders Exposed for Faking Victories in Ukraine Conflict

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Russian Commanders Exposed for Faking Victories in Ukraine Conflict

Debunked Official Claims

In a recent example, pro-Russian channels announced “significant advances” near Siversk, claiming the villages of Hrihovrika and Verhnokamianske were under Russian control, with forces pushing into Serebrianka.

These reports, however, were later debunked. Rybar revealed that the supposed “victory” involved a small group of soldiers planting flags near the area before retreating to their original positions. Despite the official claims, no lasting control had been established.

These misleading reports are causing unnecessary casualties, as Russian troops are being ordered to secure areas already declared as captured, resulting in further losses.

The false claims not only inflate the perception of progress but also jeopardize military operations, leaving soldiers without essential support.

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What cities owe the provinces

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A friend calls it, with some distaste, the “ring of fire”. He is referring to the counties that encircle London and that have a tense relationship with the place. They are everything the capital isn’t: conservative if not Conservative, full of families, car-oriented, perhaps not swarming with cultural treasures. While far from homogenous — many an Asian household ends up moving out there — the ambient street chatter is not the omnilingual serenade it is within the M25.

The quarrel between the two worlds goes like this. People in the counties can’t believe that urbanites pay a premium to live in a Babel of cramped apartments and phone theft. We in turn view them as rubes who might at any moment order a Sauvignon Blanc that isn’t Dagueneau. Most big cities have an equivalent hinterland: the San Fernando Valley, the bridge-and-tunnel crowd, and so on. If relations are this strained with the commuter fringe, imagine the antagonism between cities and the deep interior of the nation. Except we don’t need to imagine. Brexit and the election of Donald Trump made clear what the heartlands think about us.

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Yet we can’t do without them. I don’t mean something woo-woo here: something about the value of human difference and learning from one another. I literally mean that great cities wouldn’t work as an economic proposition without lots of mildly conservative voters in the rest of the country. What does a global city need? Competitive (though not necessarily super-low) taxes. Non-burdensome regulation. A business-friendly atmosphere. Which way do they vote? Left.

In 2019, it was the Home Counties and the post-industrial regions that averted a Jeremy Corbyn premiership, with all that would have entailed for the City. London, including much of affluent London, voted for him. A decade ago, Paris was entering a rut of ossified cuisine and entrepreneurial torpor. Its current dynamism, its finance and tech boom, owes at least something to the reversal of François Hollande-era costs on business. Who had Paris voted for in 2012? Hollande.

In essence, the provinces bail the metropolis out of its self-defeating politics. They also hold it back in some ways: by supporting Brexit, by opposing immigration. But the trade-off is worthwhile. Cities can withstand these nuisances in a way they couldn’t withstand eternal one-party dominion, as some Californians might attest. The governing climate in which urban life flourishes is a blend of progressive ideas (liberal immigration rules, infrastructure spending) and conservative ones (market incentives, toughness on crime). To the extent that big cities have this balance, it is increasingly because the wider nation provides the second half.

Put it another way: why do so few city states exist? As a mode of government, it has centuries more pedigree than the nation state. A greater share of humanity is urban-dwelling now than in the time of Medici Florence or Hanseatic Hamburg. With cities subsidising the heartlands, there is a casus belli ready to go. Beyond Monaco and Singapore, though, the list of sovereign cities in the modern world thins out. And the clamour for more to secede from their countries is near zero.

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Granted, national feeling goes deeper than liberals as arid me will credit. And defence relies on scale. (Monaco has to look to France for much of that.) But I wonder if another snag is that the politics of an independent London or New York would never work. The demos needs balancing out with a flintier conservatism, at least if the current business model of these places is to survive. This is truer now than when cities had lots of right-of-centre voters, before the partisan “sorting” of people into like-minded communities.

So yes, on a night out, when the city starts to glow, one’s thoughts turn naturally to secession. There could be visa checks at the M25. There could be universal conscription to defend our 9mn-strong republic. And imagine the fiscal surplus. But then I’ll meet another rent-control enthusiast with a Yanis Varoufakis book on their shelf, and wonder. Since the Elizabeth Line was built, there has been a new edge to the snobbery about the ring of fire. The rap is that it brings in too many overdressed outsiders for a night at Hakkasan or wherever. But they don’t just have a right to be here. They have been, when London’s own judgment lapsed, the city’s ultimate guardians.

Email Janan at janan.ganesh@ft.com

Find out about our latest stories first — follow FTWeekend on Instagram and X, and subscribe to our podcast Life and Art wherever you listen

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Full list of supermarket Christmas delivery slots – and exact dates to order by revealed

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Full list of supermarket Christmas delivery slots – and exact dates to order by revealed

THE high street supermarkets have got their Christmas delivery slots open for bookings already – and here’s all the key information you need to get your festive food sorted.

While the big day is more than 70 days away many households will want to get their preparations underway to avoid disappointment.

Shoppers can already book their Christmas food delivery slot with their favourite high street supermarket

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Shoppers can already book their Christmas food delivery slot with their favourite high street supermarketCredit: Getty

Demand for a festive food delivery straight to your door has surged in recent years as it saves time, allowing people to get on with other necessary tasks.

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But many are aware that bagging a slot during the festive period is notoriously difficult.

So it is worth being aware of the key dates of your favourite grocer so you are not disappointed.

Asda

The UK’s third-largest grocer has also announced when shoppers could secure their booking.

Asda is giving its delivery pass customers a head start to book their slot.

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Customers who pay for this feature can book their slots for Christmas from October 15.

Meanwhile, non-pass holders can book their slot from October 22.

The supermarket said that over one million home delivery and click-and-collect slots will be available in the week leading up to Christmas.

The minimum online spend at Asda is £40 for delivery and £25 for click and collect.

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Shoppers can also make changes or additions to their basket up until 11pm the night before their delivery or collection.

How to find the best bargains at the supermarket

Iceland

The major retailer’s service enables shoppers to pre-book and pay for their Christmas dinner and other festive treats in advance, which will then be delivered to their door five days later.

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Unfortunately for shoppers, the budget supermarket chain will not be offering its click-and-collect service for Christmas bookings.

And Iceland has unveiled its Christmas 2024 range which comes with a pigs in blankets Yorkshire pudding.

Morrisons

Delivery Pass customers were be able to book their slots from October 2.

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Customers without a Delivery Pass can book slots from October 9.

Morrisons Delivery Pass allows you to shop online as often as you like without having to pay for delivery every time you checkout.

All shoppers need to spend at least £25 before they can check out an online order.

Those without a delivery pass will be charged between £1.50 and £6 to secure a one-hour delivery time slot.

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People are advised they shouldn’t get a delivery pass unless they think it will save them money in the long term – not just to get a Christmas slot.

Morrisons has also unveiled its Christmas food range.

Sainsbury’s

Sainsbury’s has today confirmed when customers can book a slot for their Christmas shop to be delivered.

Loyal customers who have the supermarket’s “Delivery Pass” get first dips and will be allowed to book home delivery and click and collect from Wednesday, October 16.

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Delivery Pass holders pay a flat rate to Sainsbury’s to get their orders for free at all times of the year.

Meanwhile, non-pass holders will be allowed to book slots from the following week, October 23.

Both can schedule deliveries for between December 18 – 24.

Christmas delivery slots open on October 16 for Delivery Pass customers and 23rd October for all customers.

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Customers can amend their baskets until 11pm the day before their order is due.

Tesco

Those already thinking about Christmas preparations can pre-book their Christmas food delivery from the beginning of next month.

However, Tesco is giving customers who pay for an annual delivery pass first dibs.

The supermarket’s delivery plan and click and collect delivery plan customers can book their slots from 6am on Tuesday, November 5.

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This gives customers a one-week head start on regular shoppers, who will have to wait until November 12 to nab a slot.

But if you also want to get ahead of the game, you can still sign up to the relevant delivery plan by Monday, November 4.

Tesco delivery plans range from £3.99 a month to £7.99 a month, depending on what level of service you want.

You could save on each plan by paying for 12-months up front.

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The click and collect plan costs £2.49 a month.

Waitrose

The posh grocer has already allowed its customers to start booking slots for Christmas.

It costs £4 to book a slot and orders must be over £40.

But if shoppers are keen to get their Waitrose shop delivered to their home they should act fast.

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Most of the slots from Sunday, December 22 to Tuesday, December 24 are fully booked.

Dates are still available for Friday, December 20 and Saturday, December 21.

Do you have a money problem that needs sorting? Get in touch by emailing money-sm@news.co.uk.

Plus, you can join our Sun Money Chats and Tips Facebook group to share your tips and stories

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