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David Walliams denies inappropriate behaviour after publisher drops him

Getty Images David WalliamsGetty Images

Best-selling children's author and comedian David Walliams has been dropped by his publisher HarperCollins, the company has said.

A spokesman for the publisher said: "After careful consideration, and under the leadership of its new CEO, HarperCollins UK has decided not to publish any new titles by David Walliams."

The Telegraph reported that the decision was made after an investigation into allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards young women.

HarperCollins did not confirm the reasons for its decision, adding: "We do not comment on internal matters." Walliams has not yet responded to the decision or the Telegraph report.

Walliams is one of the UK's most successful children's authors, having sold more than 60 million copies worldwide in 55 languages.

Some of his books, including Gangsta Granny and Billionaire Boy, have also been adapted into television films.

He rose to fame on TV sketch series Little Britain and has also won National Television Awards for his work as a judge on Britain's Got Talent.

He was made an OBE in 2017 his services to charity and the arts.

Kylie is Christmas number one - she'll do a jigsaw to celebrate

Official Charts Company Kylie Minogue smiling and holding her Official Charts number one trophyOfficial Charts Company
Kylie is the first female artist to have UK number one hits in four separate decades

Kylie Minogue has scored this year's Christmas number one, deposing Wham!'s Last Christmas, which topped the chart in 2023 and 2024.

The pop star achieved the feat with her single XMAS, an irrepressibly jaunty anthem about "the presents underneath the tree" and kissing someone special "out in the snow".

Arriving 37 years after her first UK number one hit, I Should Be So Lucky in 1988, it makes Kylie the first female artist to top the charts in four different decades.

"It's hard to put into words how special this feels," said the singer, adding that she'd be celebrating Christmas by "obsessing over a jigsaw" with her family in Australia.

Getty Images Kylie Minogue in a festive outfitGetty Images
Kylie wrote the first draft of XMAS in 2015, but only got around to finishing and recording it earlier this year

XMAS is taken from a new, expanded edition of her 2015 album Kylie Christmas, and was available exclusively through Amazon.

You could argue that gave her a slight advantage because XMAS was prominently positioned on Amazon Music's Christmas playlist. But it also meant her song was unavailable on rival streaming sites like Spotify and Apple Music.

But the combination of her plays on Amazon and YouTube, and the availability of limited edition vinyl and CD singles, ultimately gave her the Christmas crown.

"Kylie really, really targeted this particular race. Her record label pulled out all the stops," said Martin Talbot, head of the Official Charts Company.

"When you have a superstar of her status really going for it, she's always going to be in with a chance."

According to chart data, Kylie's Christmas charm offensive gave the star her biggest sales week in 23 years, since 2002's Love At First Sight.

Close race

Despite that, Talbot said the competition for this year's Christmas number one was "tight right the way through the week".

At one point, only 10,000 copies separated the top five songs.

Mariah Carey and Brenda Lee were also in contention for the top spot as people pumped Christmas classics into their playlists.

The Christmas Top 10 in full:

  1. Kylie Minogue - XMAS
  2. Wham! - Last Christmas
  3. Mariah Carey - All I Want For Christmas Is You
  4. Brenda Lee - Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree
  5. Together For Palestine - Lullaby
  6. Pogues ft Kirsty MacColl - Fairytale of New York
  7. Dave ft Tems - Raindance
  8. Kelly Clarkson - Underneath The Tree
  9. Elton John - Step Into Christmas
  10. Bobby Helms - Jingle Bell Rock

It wasn't Kylie's first attempt to scale the festive summit.

Her duet with Jason Donovan, Especially For You, was a major contender for Christmas number one in 1988, but ultimately took the runners-up position behind Cliff Richard's Mistletoe and Wine.

Despite finally triumphing in the seasonal chart, she said she was planning a quiet Christmas after completing her massive, 66-date Tension World Tour.

That means settling down to watch the Boxing Day cricket Test match between Australia and England while chipping away at a jigsaw.

"We're not long-term puzzlers, but somehow a jigsaw puzzle was on the end of the dining table in the family house last Christmas," she explained.

"So all Christmas, you'd float past and, if someone else was working on it, you'd be like, 'Is now the right time? Are we on the same page? Should we work on separate zones?'

"But as time went by, we were getting nowhere. There were all these trouble zones - a bit of blue sky and a big patch of grass - and nobody could get them. No-one.

"Then, maybe about a month ago, my brother sent me a video of the moment the last piece of the puzzle went in.

"I was like, 'Oh my God! Hallelujah that he happened to be filming!'

"So this year, I know there's a new jigsaw puzzle with a $1 sticker on the box from our local op shop [charity shop]. It's another 1,000-piecer and we'll start all over."

Getty Images WhamGetty Images
Wham!'s Last Christmas has charted every year since 2007

Wham! had been hoping to become the first act to top the Christmas chart three times with the same song.

Last Christmas was famously denied the top spot when it was first released in 1984, due to the phenomenal success of Band Aid's charity single Do They Know It's Christmas?

It finally reached the summit in 2023, thanks to a wave of goodwill and strong streaming numbers. It topped the chart again last year with a massive 12.6 million streams in Christmas week alone.

Although Wham! were beaten by Kylie in the UK, Last Christmas has just topped Billboard's global 200 for the first time - meaning it's the number one song in the world.

BBC Radio 1's Jack Saunders, who presents the UK chart show, attributed the song's enduring popularity to its message.

"It's a fantastic pop song," he said, "but it also captures the true heart and soul of what Christmas means to people. It's family coming together, it's reigniting friendships, it's community.

"When you hear Wham! on the radio, you think, oh yeah we are all in this together, this is our song."

Other songs in the running for this year's Christmas number one included Together For Palestine's charity single, Lullaby, which is raising funds for aid for people in Gaza.

Based on the traditional Palestinian folk song Yamma Mwel El Hawa (Mama, Sing to the Wind), it features new lyrics by Peter Gabriel and was recorded by a group of Palestinian artists alongside British stars like Neneh Cherry, Celeste and Dan from Bastille.

"To me, the Lullaby will always be number one," said Nai Barghouti, who features on the track.

"I am beyond proud of and humbled by the overwhelming support that we have received globally. Thank you to each and every one of you."

Millions head off for Christmas on busiest day of festive getaway

Getty Images A man and a woman sitting in a car. Both are wearing Christmas hats. The man is driving and smiling at the womanGetty Images
Drivers are being advised to allow extra time to travel

Britain's roads, railways and airports are set to be thronged by festive travellers on what is is anticipated to be the busiest day for Christmas trips.

The AA has warned of gridlock on Friday as 24.4 million cars are expected to hit the roads.

It is also expected to be the busiest day of the Christmas period for airports, with 460,000 journeys planned.

Network Rail has also advised travellers to check their journeys and book a seat if possible.

Drivers told to allow extra time

The AA said this Christmas could be the busiest on record for UK roads, and advised drivers to allow extra time to complete their journeys.

The insurance company said most people driving during the festive period travelled less than 100 miles, meaning congestion is likely around motorway interchanges and retail destinations.

AA patrol expert Shaun Jones said patience behind the wheel "will be your best present this year".

"Plan ahead, check your route, and allow extra time," he said.

  • The M27 will be closed between Junction 9 (Whiteley/Park Gate) and Junction 11 (Fareham East/Gosport) from Christmas Eve to 4 January, so anyone travelling in Hampshire should plan alternative routes.

Rail closures

Network Rail also encouraged passengers to allow extra time for train travel. Improvement works taking place over the Christmas period mean several routes will be closed or restricted.

Information on what routes will be closed for repairs can be found on the Network Rail website.

National Rail trains do not run on Christmas Day and only a small number will run on Boxing Day.

Daniel Mann, Director of Industry Operations at the Rail Delivery Group, said: "We encourage customers to reserve seats where possible, bring only luggage that is easy to carry and fits in designated storage areas, and allow extra time for their journeys."

Flights

Friday is expected to be the busiest day of the festive season for airports, but the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) said flying on Christmas Day was becoming more popular.

It advised customers to know their rights in case their flight is cancelled or delayed.

If this happens, airlines are required to support passengers. This can include:

  • Providing food and drink during extended delays
  • Covering accommodation if passengers are delayed overnight
  • Offering a refund or alternative travel if a flight is cancelled

If your flight is cancelled, and it is covered by UK law, your airline must let you choose between either getting a refund or being booked on to an alternative flight.

You can check if your flight is covered under UK law here.

The CAA also said that travellers can minimise their risk of delays by ensuring their cases are packed correctly.

This includes leaving presents unwrapped as they may need to be inspected.

Kylie beats Wham! to Christmas number one

Official Charts Company Kylie Minogue smiling and holding her Official Charts number one trophyOfficial Charts Company
Kylie is the first female artist to have UK number one hits in four separate decades

Kylie Minogue has scored this year's Christmas number one, deposing Wham!'s Last Christmas, which topped the chart in 2023 and 2024.

The pop star achieved the feat with her single XMAS, an irrepressibly jaunty anthem about "the presents underneath the tree" and kissing someone special "out in the snow".

Arriving 37 years after her first UK number one hit, I Should Be So Lucky in 1988, it makes Kylie the first female artist to top the charts in four different decades.

"It's hard to put into words how special this feels," said the singer, adding that she'd be celebrating Christmas by "obsessing over a jigsaw" with her family in Australia.

Getty Images Kylie Minogue in a festive outfitGetty Images
Kylie wrote the first draft of XMAS in 2015, but only got around to finishing and recording it earlier this year

XMAS is taken from a new, expanded edition of her 2015 album Kylie Christmas, and was available exclusively through Amazon.

You could argue that gave her a slight advantage because XMAS was prominently positioned on Amazon Music's Christmas playlist. But it also meant her song was unavailable on rival streaming sites like Spotify and Apple Music.

But the combination of her plays on Amazon and YouTube, and the availability of limited edition vinyl and CD singles, ultimately gave her the Christmas crown.

"Kylie really, really targeted this particular race. Her record label pulled out all the stops," said Martin Talbot, head of the Official Charts Company.

"When you have a superstar of her status really going for it, she's always going to be in with a chance."

According to chart data, Kylie's Christmas charm offensive gave the star her biggest sales week in 23 years, since 2002's Love At First Sight.

Close race

Despite that, Talbot said the competition for this year's Christmas number one was "tight right the way through the week".

At one point, only 10,000 copies separated the top five songs.

Mariah Carey and Brenda Lee were also in contention for the top spot as people pumped Christmas classics into their playlists.

The Christmas Top 10 in full:

  1. Kylie Minogue - XMAS
  2. Wham! - Last Christmas
  3. Mariah Carey - All I Want For Christmas Is You
  4. Brenda Lee - Rockin' Around The Christmas Tree
  5. Together For Palestine - Lullaby
  6. Pogues ft Kirsty MacColl - Fairytale of New York
  7. Dave ft Tems - Raindance
  8. Kelly Clarkson - Underneath The Tree
  9. Elton John - Step Into Christmas
  10. Bobby Helms - Jingle Bell Rock

It wasn't Kylie's first attempt to scale the festive summit.

Her duet with Jason Donovan, Especially For You, was a major contender for Christmas number one in 1988, but ultimately took the runners-up position behind Cliff Richard's Mistletoe and Wine.

Despite finally triumphing in the seasonal chart, she said she was planning a quiet Christmas after completing her massive, 66-date Tension World Tour.

That means settling down to watch the Boxing Day cricket Test match between Australia and England while chipping away at a jigsaw.

"We're not long-term puzzlers, but somehow a jigsaw puzzle was on the end of the dining table in the family house last Christmas," she explained.

"So all Christmas, you'd float past and, if someone else was working on it, you'd be like, 'Is now the right time? Are we on the same page? Should we work on separate zones?'

"But as time went by, we were getting nowhere. There were all these trouble zones - a bit of blue sky and a big patch of grass - and nobody could get them. No-one.

"Then, maybe about a month ago, my brother sent me a video of the moment the last piece of the puzzle went in.

"I was like, 'Oh my God! Hallelujah that he happened to be filming!'

"So this year, I know there's a new jigsaw puzzle with a $1 sticker on the box from our local op shop [charity shop]. It's another 1,000-piecer and we'll start all over."

Getty Images WhamGetty Images
Wham!'s Last Christmas has charted every year since 2007

Wham! had been hoping to become the first act to top the Christmas chart three times with the same song.

Last Christmas was famously denied the top spot when it was first released in 1984, due to the phenomenal success of Band Aid's charity single Do They Know It's Christmas?

It finally reached the summit in 2023, thanks to a wave of goodwill and strong streaming numbers. It topped the chart again last year with a massive 12.6 million streams in Christmas week alone.

Although Wham! were beaten by Kylie in the UK, Last Christmas has just topped Billboard's global 200 for the first time - meaning it's the number one song in the world.

BBC Radio 1's Jack Saunders, who presents the UK chart show, attributed the song's enduring popularity to its message.

"It's a fantastic pop song," he said, "but it also captures the true heart and soul of what Christmas means to people. It's family coming together, it's reigniting friendships, it's community.

"When you hear Wham! on the radio, you think, oh yeah we are all in this together, this is our song."

Other songs in the running for this year's Christmas number one included Together For Palestine's charity single, Lullaby, which is raising funds for aid for people in Gaza.

Based on the traditional Palestinian folk song Yamma Mwel El Hawa (Mama, Sing to the Wind), it features new lyrics by Peter Gabriel and was recorded by a group of Palestinian artists alongside British stars like Neneh Cherry, Celeste and Dan from Bastille.

"To me, the Lullaby will always be number one," said Nai Barghouti, who features on the track.

"I am beyond proud of and humbled by the overwhelming support that we have received globally. Thank you to each and every one of you."

French court rejects Shein website suspension over childlike sex dolls

Getty Images A smart phone sitting on top of a French tricolour flag, with the Shein logo on the smart phone device - it's an illustrative image Getty Images

A Paris court has rejected an effort by the French government to suspend the website of fast-fashion giant Shein in response to it selling childlike sex dolls on its platform.

The court said the request for a three-month suspension was "disproportionate" - but did order age verification for the sale of adult products.

The action against Shein was taken after France's consumer watchdog last month reported it to authorities for selling "sex dolls with a childlike appearance" and weapons.

Shein said its priority remained protecting French consumers and ensuring compliance.

In its judgement, the court acknowledged the seriousness of selling the childlike sex dolls and weapons, but said these had been isolated incidents.

It noted that the Chinese company had taken action to remove the offending items once they were made aware of them, and that the issues related to a small number of the hundreds of thousands of products on sale on its site.

In response to the initial controversy, Shein announced it would be banning the sale of all sex dolls on its site internationally.

A request by the French government for Shein to be forced to suspend the sale of third-party items on its website - the source of the initial offending items - was also rejected.

In ordering age verification measures to be put in place for the sale of adult items, the court said the fine for each breach would be €10,000 (£8,700; $11,700).

The decision to suspend Shein's website in early November coincided with the company opening its first physical store in the French capital.

Its launch drew both shoppers and protesters, with opposition related to the sale of childlike sex dolls, and also its profile as a fast fashion retailer.

In a statement, Shein said: "We remain committed to continuously improving our control processes, in close collaboration with the French authorities, with the aim of establishing some of the most stringent standards in the industry.

"Our priority remains protecting French consumers and ensuring compliance with local laws and regulations."

Putin vows no more wars if West treats Russia with respect

Alexander NEMENOV/AFP Vladimir Putin holds his annual end-of-year press conference in Moscow on December 19, 2025Alexander NEMENOV/AFP
Putin has offered little sign of compromise to end the war, although talks are set to continue in the US

Russia's President Vladimir Putin has said there will be no more wars after Ukraine if Russia is treated with respect - and claims that Moscow is planning to attack European countries are "nonsense".

In a marathon televised event lasting almost four and a half hours, he was asked by the BBC's Steve Rosenberg whether there would be new "special military operations" - Putin's term for the full-scale war.

"There won't be any operations if you treat us with respect, if you respect our interests just as we've always tried to respect yours," he asserted.

His remarks were in line with a recent comment in which he said Russia was not planning to go to war, but was ready "right now" if Europe wanted to.

He also added the condition,"if you don't cheat us like you cheated us with Nato's eastward expansion".

He has long accused Nato of going back on an alleged 1990 Western promise before the fall of the Soviet Union. It was denied years afterwards by late Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev.

The "Direct Line" marathon combined questions from the public at large and journalists from across Russia in a Moscow hall, with Putin sitting beneath an enormous map of Russia that encompassed occupied areas of Ukraine, including Crimea.

Russian state TV claimed more than three million questions had been submitted.

EPA Russian President Vladimir Putin (C) attends his annual live broadcast press conference with Russian federal, regional, and foreign media at the Gostiny Dvor forum hall in Moscow, Russia, 19 December 2025EPA
Organisers of the event said three million questions had been submitted to Putin

Although it was largely choreographed, some critical comments from the public appeared on a big screen, including one that referred to the event as a "circus", another bemoaning internet outages and one that highlighted poor-quality tap water. Mobile internet outages have been blamed by authorities on Ukrainian drone attacks.

Putin also addressed Russia's faltering economy, with prices rising, growth on the slide and VAT going up from 20 to 22% on 1 January. One message to the president read: "Stop the crazy rise in prices on everything!"

The Kremlin regularly uses the end-of-year event to highlight the resilience of the economy and, as Putin spoke, Russia's central bank announced it was lowering interest rates to 16%.

Foreign policy issues were mixed with musings about the motherland, praise for local businesses, fish prices and the importance of looking after veterans.

But the issue of almost four years of full-scale war in Ukraine was never far away and it was often in the background of many of the questions.

Putin again claimed to be "ready and willing" to end the war in Ukraine "peacefully" but offered little sign of compromise.

He repeated his insistence on principles he had outlined in a June 2024 speech, when he demanded that Ukrainian forces leave four regions Russia partially occupies and that Kyiv gives up its efforts to join Nato.

Chief among Russia's demands is full control of Ukraine's eastern Donbas, including about 23% of Donetsk region which Russia has not been able to occupy.

Map of Ukraine

Putin argued Russian forces were making advances across the front line in Ukraine and he ridiculed Volodymyr Zelensky's visit to the front line at Kupiansk last week, when the Ukrainian leader was able to refute Russia claims that it had captured the town.

Putin has also demanded new elections in Ukraine to be included in the peace proposals that US President Donald Trump has submitted as part of his efforts to bring the conflict to an end. At his news conference, Putin offered to stop bombing Ukraine when voting took place.

Ukraine's SBU security service said on Friday it had for the first time hit an oil tanker operating as part of Russia's "shadow fleet" in the Mediterranean. Putin said it would not lead to the result that Kyiv wanted and would not disrupt Russian exports.

Most of the questions from Russian media or from the public made little attempt to challenge Putin, but two were allowed from Western correspondents, Keir Simmons of US network NBC and the BBC's Steve Rosenberg.

When Simmons asked if Putin would feel responsible for the deaths of Ukrainians and Russians if he rejected the Trump peace plan, Putin praised the US president's "sincere" efforts to end the war, but said it was the West not Russia that was blocking a deal.

"The ball is in the hands of our Western opponents," he said, "primarily the leaders of the Kyiv regime, and in this case, first and foremost, their European sponsors."

Trump has said a peace deal is closer than ever and, despite Putin's apparent refusal to compromise, the US president has said he hopes "Ukraine moves quickly because Russia is there".

A Ukrainian delegation is holding talks in Miami on Friday with Trump envoy Steve Witkoff and Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner. German, French and British officials are also there, days after they met the US officials in Berlin.

Kremlin envoy Kirill Dmitriev is also expected in Miami over the weekend, according to reports.

Putin told the BBC's Russia Editor: "We are ready to work with you - with the UK and with Europe in general and with the United States, but as equals, with mutual respect to each other.

"We are ready to cease these hostilities immediately, provided that Russia's medium- and long-term security is ensured, and we are ready to cooperate with you."

He accused the West of creating an enemy out of Russia. Skating over his decision to mount a full-scale invasion in February 2022, he said: "You are waging a war against us with the hands of Ukrainian neo-Nazis," he added, repeating his regular diatribe against Ukraine's democratically elected leaders.

European intelligence agencies have warned that Russia is only a few years away from attacking Nato. The Western defensive alliance's chief Mark Rutte said this month that Russia was already escalating a covert campaign and the West had to be prepared for war.

While many of the questions were benign, including several from children, from a one reporter from Yakutia in north-eastern Siberia highlighted a tenfold increase in energy prices in the past four years. Putin told her that his team would look into alternative sources of energy and "keep Yakutia in mind".

Towards the end of the TV marathon, Putin was asked a series of quickfire questions, touching on his views on friendship, religion, the motherland and love at first sight. He said he believed in love at first sight - then added that he himself was in love, without divulging any more details.

Family of stabbed girl say 'our hearts are broken'

Family photograph Aria Thorpe standing in a white party dress, and wearing a pink rosette. She also has a silver tiara on her head, and has long brown hairFamily photograph
Aria Thorpe's family said her death had left them "devastated"

The family of nine-year-old Aria Thorpe, who died from a single stab wound in Weston-super-Mare on Monday, have described her as "the most beautiful little soul".

In a statement, they added: "Our hearts are broken in a way we never imagined possible."

Aria's father, Tom Thorpe, said her death was "devastating" and added: "You will be greatly missed, you special little angel. A life gone far too early but I hope a life lived well. We all love you dearly. Goodnight darling."

A 15-year-old boy appeared at Bristol Crown Court on Friday charged with her murder.

This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly. Please refresh the page for the fullest version.

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Resident doctors in Scotland to go on strike for first time

Getty Images Three medics in blue scrubs, two men and a woman, walk along a hospital corridor. One of the men is holding a clipboard, the other some papers and the woman has a stethoscope around her neck. They are walking side by side, engaged in conversation. In the foreground, there is woman sitting on a black cushioned chair. She is turned away from the camera, looking towards the medics.Getty Images

Scotland's resident doctors are to go on strike in a dispute over pay - the first time a national walkout has been staged by NHS workers.

Their union BMA Scotland had accused the government of reneging on a commitment to restore pay to 2008 levels.

With 92% voting in favour, strike dates have been set for 07:00 on Tuesday 13 January to 07:00 on Saturday 17 January 2026.

However, BMA Scotland said it still believed a resolution could be found and called for the Scottish government to get back to the negotiating table and present a "credible offer".

The Scottish government has been contacted for comment.

Resident doctors - who used to be called junior doctors - make up almost half of the medical workforce in Scotland.

They range from newly qualified doctors to those with up to 10 years experience.

Scotland had been the only part of the UK to have avoided strike action by NHS workers.

With 5,185 resident doctors in Scotland eligible to vote, turnout was 58% with a total of 3,008 votes cast.

A strike in the summer of 2023 was called off at the last minute after a deal was agreed.

As part of that, BMA Scotland said the government committed to making "credible progress" towards restoring pay to 2008 levels in each of the three following financial years.

Dr Chris Smith, chairman of the BMA resident doctors committee, said: "The result of this ballot shows that resident doctors in Scotland are united in anger over the Scottish government breaking the deal they agreed over pay just two years ago.

"This is not where we wanted to be. However, we have sent a message loud and clear – the government cannot brazenly renege on its commitments without expecting to be held to account.

"Instead of negotiating with resident doctors to make credible progress towards pay restoration, as they agreed to do, they have imposed a pay uplift that is the lowest average award received by resident doctors anywhere in the UK."

He said the deal the Scottish government agreed to in 2023 was the only reason strike action had been avoided.

"It was working for doctors and the health service," he said. "By turning their backs on this deal, the Scottish government is forcing a dispute and knowingly putting the NHS in Scotland at risk of disruptive strike action."

Dr Smith said there was still time to avoid strikes.

"BMA Scotland resident doctors remain committed to the deal when it is being upheld in its entirety," he said.

"If we don't take a stand now when the government have broken a commitment agreed to in good faith, they will take this as licence to do it again and again, including on issues such as contract negotiations and more training jobs for resident doctors as part of future medical workforce planning.

"This matters not just for doctors, but for patients and for the future of the entire NHS in Scotland, which relies on today's resident doctors to stay here and become the GPs, specialist doctors and consultants of tomorrow."

What was the Scottish government's offer?

The two-year offer from the Scottish government was for a 4.25% increase in 2026/26 and 3.75% in 26/27.

It is the same offer that nurses, paramedics and other NHS workers accepted earlier this year.

BMA Scotland said it would have been the lowest in the UK and was less than was recommended by the independent pay review body.

The current offer would see the basic pay for a newly qualified doctor rise from £34,500 to £37,345 for 2026/27 and for a doctor with 10 years experience rise from £71,549 to £77,387.

Medics will often be expected to work night shifts, weekend or longer hours for which they will receive extra payments.

PA Media A group of junior (now called resident) doctors holding placards outside a hospital in London last year. They are holding signs saying "£15 an hour is not a fair wage for a junior doctor" and wearing orange hats with the BMA logo on them. They look like they are singing or chanting.PA Media
Resident doctors have been taking part in a series of strikes in England

A series of strikes by resident doctors in England has led to thousands of operations and procedures being cancelled.

An ongoing five-day walkout is causing further disruption and has been described as "dangerous and utterly irresponsible" by Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

Any strike in Scotland would be a major blow to the Scottish government's promise to end long waits for procedures and appointments by March 2026 and would put even more pressure on an overstretched NHS in an election year.

So far, Scotland is the only part of the UK to have avoided strike action by NHS workers.

David Walliams dropped by book publisher

Getty Images David WalliamsGetty Images

Best-selling children's author and comedian David Walliams has been dropped by his publisher HarperCollins, the company has said.

A spokesman for the publisher said: "After careful consideration, and under the leadership of its new CEO, HarperCollins UK has decided not to publish any new titles by David Walliams."

The Telegraph reported that the decision was made after an investigation into allegations of inappropriate behaviour towards young women.

HarperCollins did not confirm the reasons for its decision, adding: "We do not comment on internal matters." Walliams has not yet responded to the decision or the Telegraph report.

Walliams is one of the UK's most successful children's authors, having sold more than 60 million copies worldwide in 55 languages.

Some of his books, including Gangsta Granny and Billionaire Boy, have also been adapted into television films.

He rose to fame on TV sketch series Little Britain and has also won National Television Awards for his work as a judge on Britain's Got Talent.

He was made an OBE in 2017 his services to charity and the arts.

Harry and Meghan embrace their children in Christmas message

Instagram/Meghan, Duchess of Sussex Archie is hugging his father, Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, while Meghan is bent to eye-level and holding hands with Lilibet, as they all stand on what appears to be carved mini wooden bridge over a brook among trees.Instagram/Meghan, Duchess of Sussex
"Happy Holidays! From our family to yours," the Duchess of Sussex's message reads

The Duchess of Sussex has shared a family photo taken with the Duke of Sussex and their two children alongside a Christmas message.

In the photo shared on Instagram, Prince Archie is seen hugging his father, while Meghan is bending down and holding hands with Princess Lilibet. They are standing on a small, wooden bridge in a woodland.

"Happy Holidays! From our family to yours," her message reads.

Separately, the duke and duchess have also released a Christmas card and end-of-year video highlighting their charitable endeavours.

Duke and Duchess of Sussex A dark green card with gold lettering and a photo of harry and meghan linking arms as they walk on snow. They are wearing coats and sunglasses and are laughing. there are people behind them also walking and it is sunny. Duke and Duchess of Sussex

Six-year-old Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet, four, also feature in the nearly two-minute long video, helping their parents bake cookies ahead of Thanksgiving with a local charity.

The video depicts work the duke and duchess have done under their Archewell Foundation, which has now changed its name to Archewell Philanthropies.

Announcing the rebrand on the Archewell website on Friday, Prince Harry and Meghan said the charity allowed the couple and their children to "expand upon their global philanthropic endeavours as a family".

The charity was established in 2020 after the couple stepped down from royal duties and moved to the US.

Meanwhile, the couple's Christmas card message reads: "On behalf of the Office of Prince Harry and Meghan, Duke and Duchess of Sussex, and Archewell, we wish you a very happy holiday season and a joyful new year."

It comes a day after the Prince and Princess of Wales released a new family portrait which featured on their Christmas card this year.

The image shows Prince William and Catherine surrounded by daffodils, alongside their children Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis.

Earlier this month, King Charles III and Queen Camilla released their own Christmas card with a photo of them in Rome, Italy.

US justice department to release thousands of Epstein files later, top official says

Reuters Close up of Jeffrey Epstein, who has grey hair, a beard, and is wearing a grey t-shirtReuters

The US justice department says it will begin releasing long-awaited files related to Jeffrey Epstein as mandated by a new law, though not all documents would be made public on Friday.

Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said the department expects to publish "several hundred thousand pages" initially, followed by more over the coming weeks.

The Friday deadline was mandated by a bill that got near-unanimous support in Congress, and was later signed into law by President Donald Trump, after he reversed his earlier opposition to its release.

The files relate to investigations into the disgraced late sex offender, but it's likely that much of the content will be heavily redacted.

"Today is the 30 days when I expect that we're going to release several hundred thousand documents today," Blanche told Fox & Friends. "And those documents will come in in all different forms, photographs and other materials associated with, with all of the investigations into, into Mr. Epstein."

Under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the DOJ was given until 19 December to release the files.

The bill specifically mentions the government must release all unclassified records, documents, communications, and investigative materials in the DOJ's possession that relate to the investigation and prosecution of Jeffrey Epstein.

Leading up to its release, Democrats in the House have been releasing batches of documents and photos from Epstein's estate without context.

Lawmakers say they have been sorting through a trove of 20,000 documents and 95,000 photos from Epstein's estate.

Democratic Congressman Robert Garcia said in a press release that most of the documents arrived without context, and they have been working to redact potential victims.

The documents and images have featured several high-profile figures, including Trump, former US President Bill Clinton, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, and others.

But appearing in the photos or documents is not evidence of any wrongdoing, and many of the pictured men have said they were never involved in Epstein's illegal activity.

Woman's shock as goose smashes through front door

Ian Bullock A stunned goose wedged in the glass window of a front doorIan Bullock
A Canada goose became wedged in Lynne Sewell's front porch door in Countesthorpe

A woman said she was left "terrified" after a goose crashed through her front door as she watched television.

Lynne Sewell said she initially thought a loud bang was someone trying to kick the door in - before she went to have a gander and found the bird wedged in the door at her home in Countesthorpe, Leicestershire, on Wednesday.

"I was scared by the loud bang to start with, and it was enormous," she said.

Wildlife rescuers, who believe the in-flight Canada goose may have become tired and misjudged its landing, said it suffered just a few cuts and was set to make a swift return to the wild.

Lynne, who was watching Manchester City take on Brentford with her friend Ian Bullock, said she initially thought it was human vandals behind the bang and did not expect fowl play.

She said: "I thought it was probably someone trying to kick the door or something.

"My friend went out first because I was scared - and he shouted 'there's a bird with its head through the glass'."

Ian Bullock A bird next to a doormat with broken glass strewn nearby, with a bowl of water and some food in a tray next to itIan Bullock
Goose bump: The bird was stunned and spent the night in Lynne's porch

After a short time, the goose managed to finish its breaking and entering and drop into the porch.

"We didn't know if it was alive or dead," said Lynne. "I was so scared. I was scared by the loud bang to start with, and it was enormous."

Ian, who suspected a traffic accident had happened outside at first, tried to call the RSPCA and police but without any offer of support late at night, the pair decided to wait and see if the goose survived until the morning.

Lynne said: "We opened the door a bit and pushed a little small blanket in there for it, just in case, and a bowl of water, some porridge oats, because we didn't know what else to give him.

"I was thinking about it all night in bed, wondering what to expect the next morning."

'Wrapped him up'

Ian then managed to arrange for Leicestershire Wildlife Hospital in Kibworth Harcourt to collect the goose.

He said: "In the morning, I came downstairs, looked out, and yes, he was still alive.

"A lady called Amy came and wrapped him up and took him off.

"We spent around an hour getting all the glass out and the porch smelt a bit, but you can imagine."

Ian Bullock A woman wearing a face mask holding a swaddled Canada gooseIan Bullock
Amy Blower, from Leicestershire Wildlife Hospital, collected the stricken fowl

Amy Blower, team leader at Leicestershire Wildlife Hospital, said it was "a shock" to hear about the crash landing and believed the bird might have been tired and misjudged its descent.

"It's very unusual to be in the middle of a housing estate and flying that late at night.

"Surprisingly, he's just come off with a few minor scrapes and wounds from the glass he's smashed through.

"He had a small laceration to his beak and one just on the left side of his body - but other than that, he was pretty much absolutely fine," she said.

The goose is expected to be released back into the wild after a course of pain medication and antibiotics.

Lynne said she had now boarded up her front door and was arranging a repair through her insurance company.

She said: "I really don't know how it could have gone through that glass and survived.

"The chances of that happening, it's just not what you expect, is it?"

Follow BBC Leicester on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@bbc.co.uk or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210.

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The world of boxing gives predictions for Paul v Joshua fight

One-way traffic... and one draw - Paul v Joshua predictions

Jake Paul and Anthony JoshuaImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Jake Paul and Anthony Joshua will meet in an eight-round heavyweight context

  • Published

Anthony Joshua returns to the ring for the first time in 15 months to face Jake Paul on Friday at Kaseya Center in Miami.

In the most unlikeliest of fights, the British two-time heavyweight world champion faces YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul in an eight-round heavyweight bout.

Can Joshua, 36, mark his return in style with a knockout success? Or will 28-year-old American Paul pull off one of the biggest upsets in boxing history?

BBC Sport asks the world of boxing for their predictions.

Lennox Lewis - retired heavyweight world champion

"The bell rings, Joshua goes out there and throws a jab. Paul is going to be running around, trying to stay away from Joshua's power.

"Joshua's going to catch up to him, throw a couple body punches and hard jabs, hard right hands and soften him up.

"Second round, Paul is gone."

Prediction - Joshua

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How the world reacted to Paul v Joshua fight announcement

Natasha Jonas - former two-weight world champion

"If Jake Paul survives the fight, it looks bad for boxing. But if Joshua goes out and does what we hope and think he will, maybe it puts an end to this mockery.

"But there's no way Jake can run around the ring for eight rounds and not get caught. You are going to get hit, that's a guarantee in boxing. Can he withstand any type of meaningful shot from Joshua? No.

"Hopefully Joshua just knocks him out within the 10 seconds and everyone who has bought a ticket or ordered the fight will realise that top-level boxing is just a different kettle."

Prediction - Joshua

Frazer Clarke - British heavyweight

"I was shocked at Jake Paul taking this fight - he's crazy.

"I know AJ well and if he chooses to - you know in a PlayStation game you would hit people and they would disappear? He could disintegrate Jake Paul.

"I have felt AJ's force, I have felt the power - he's different level."

Prediction - Joshua

Carl Frampton - retired two-weight world champion

"I think it might be a bit harder for Joshua to hit Paul clean early on than people think. It should be a one or two round fight.

"If AJ doesn't hit him clean then I think he chases Paul into the corner and beats him up until the referee jumps in."

Prediction - Joshua

Eddie Hearn - Matchroom promoter

"A devastating knockout inside two rounds, but it depends how it comes.

"He could hit him to the body and he would break his ribs and he wouldn't be able to get up. Or if he hits him clean, he's going to knock him spark out. Or the ref can jump in.

"You just don't know how that's going to play out, but the way AJ punches - with the speed of the punches and the destruction he punches with - as soon as Jake Paul is hit on the chin, it's over."

Prediction - Joshua

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Paul is 'massively deluded' if he thinks he can beat AJ - Hearn

Joe Gallagher - boxing trainer

"I think there will be a searching out process in round one, and then I think round two or three Joshua letting his hands go. If Joshua comes out fighting Jake Paul in the same way that he came out against [Francis] Ngannou, then I expect Jake Paul to get knocked out within the first three rounds."

Prediction - Joshua

Richie Woodhall - retired world champion

"This is like Telford United taking on Manchester United. It's really dangerous, which far outweighs the rewards.

"Anthony Joshua isn't the fighter he was, age affects us all, but he's still among the best in the world and is looking to become a world champion. He can punch like you wouldn't believe.

"AJ will not hold back and play along and hold him up - no chance. It's not in his make-up. He'll be looking to punch a hole in him. AJ is a lovely bloke outside the ring but he can be a nasty person in the ring.

"Jake just best throw the kitchen sink and have a good go, but blimey, this match-up is not good."

Prediction - Joshua

Anthony Crolla - retired former lightweight world champion

"If it's not staged or anything like that, I think we see AJ win in round two by stoppage."

Prediction - Joshua

Troy Williamson - British super-middleweight

"AJ on points, but it shouldn't be points. He should clean it out in a few minutes or maybe the second round at the latest. But I can just see it going to points, I don't know why."

Prediction - Joshua

Cassius Chaney - American heavyweight

"I'm into conspiracy theories a little bit. I might have to go with a draw. I just feel like Jake could move around the ring and make it frustrating. He could do that for five or six rounds easy. I don't think Joshua wants to chase him around the ring. So I think he might give up some rounds and then Jake only then has to make it through two."

Prediction - draw

Izzy Asif - GBM promoter

"I think Joshua gets him out there in rounds three or four. I don't think it's going to be a knock-over job straight away. I don't think Paul is going to fall to the ground as soon as he gets hit. I think he'll come prepared. But the second Joshua gets the chance and he sees the vulnerability of Paul, he'll finish him off. I expect a clinical domination job in the end."

Prediction - Joshua

Chris Billam-Smith - former cruiserweight world champion

"What we see [from Paul] is delusion, but I admire the confidence. It's one of the most absurd fights. If it went five rounds, I would feel the need to criticise Joshua."

Prediction - Joshua

Caroline Dubois - lightweight world champion

"I don't think anyone could tell you, I honestly cannot say. It's such an intriguing fight. Anything can happen."

Prediction: On the fence

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More boxing from the BBC

Why the cost of Christmas dinner is higher this year

Getty Images A mother and her two daughters set the Christmas dinner table. There is a Christmas tree in their kitchenGetty Images
A typical Christmas dinner with all the trimmings will cost slightly more than last year

Turkey and sprouts are synonymous with Christmas dinner and this year a rise in the price of both means the festive feast will cost you slightly more at the supermarket.

A typical turkey dinner with all the trimmings will cost about £32.45, according to research done for the BBC - a £1.24 or nearly 4% rise on last year.

It comes after bird flu led to large numbers of turkeys being culled early, while a drier spring and summer hit sprout harvests.

However, the humble but golden potato and parsnip have gone down in price, along with - if you have any room - Christmas pudding and mince pies. Our seasonal snapshot reflects that overall food price rises are beginning to slow down.

The centre piece to the traditional family feast - the turkey - costs £20, for a standard 10lb (4.55kg) frozen one. The same bird was £18.62 last year - that's a 7.37% rise, according to the research from retail tracking platform Assosia.

The ever-divisive Brussels sprouts went up by more than 9% to 94p a bag, it found.

The data is based on prices on 6 December 2025 and the same date in 2024, across own-brand products from Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Morrisons, Aldi and Lidl.

However, every year as supermarkets compete for our Christmas custom many slash the prices of their bags of veg as low as 8p so there are bargains to be had.

The cost of a supermarket shop is now rising much slower than when food prices spiked sharply following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Turkey prices up after bird flu outbreaks

In Potterspury, near Milton Keynes, hundreds of free-range turkeys usually amble around farmer Susan Gorst, pecking at the grass.

But in November, all bird farmers in England were ordered to keep their flocks indoors and many were culled early to limit the spread of bird flu.

She says turkeys eat more feed when they can't graze outdoors so this pushed up her costs. But she says her customers understand she has to pass this on.

"I think people are now generally expecting an increase on most things year on year," she says.

Susan Gorst Susan, a woman in her 50s or 60s, and her son Freddie, probably 20s or 30s. sitting on hay bales. Susan is holding a live turkey and Freddie has his arms wrapped around two more turkeys and there are about 30 more turkeys on and around the hay bales.Susan Gorst
Susan Gorst and her son Freddie on their turkey farm

The rising price of turkey "could have been a lot worse," according to John Muff, co-owner of Muff's Butchers in Wirral. He estimates it's up by £1-2 per kilo since last Christmas.

"All year round we've seen price increases, almost on a weekly basis, 5p here, 10p there," he says.

Pork has also gone up in price, with pigs in blankets now £2.59, or 5.3% higher than last year.

John says this didn't surprise him. The cost of making their sausages from scratch has seen a "steady increase throughout the year," he says.

John Muff, a butcher, stands at the counter of his shop. He is wearing a grey chef's uniform and a dark apron. He is also wearing a cap. There are Christmas decorations hung above the butcher counter.
Butcher John Muff said the price of turkey has crept up all year

He says "every aspect is going up," from animal feed, energy, transport and wages.

But he thinks higher supermarket prices might be tempting shoppers into a trip to the butchers.

"They're thinking to themselves: If I'm going to pay that sort of price, I may as well come in here and get the proper stuff," he says.

Sprout prices

Whether you celebrate or shun the sprouts at Christmas, the success of this little green veg is highly dependent on the weather.

Alan Steven, a sprout farmer in Fife, says this spring the ground was so dry he had to water his fields before he could plant his seeds - for the first time in 10 years.

He had the cost of irrigating twice more over the summer due to prolonged hot weather.

And so far the winter has been milder which means the sprout plants are more prone to disease, he says.

Alan Steven, a sprout farmer, standing in his field. He is holding two sprouts which he just picked and is showing them to the cameraman. He is wearing green overalls over a black jumper. He is also wearing a hat.
Alan Steven said he had to irrigate his sprout seeds as they were being planted because the ground was so dry

Spud prices hold steady

The price of root vegetables has remained firmly planted - with no change to the cost of carrots - and potatoes and parsnips just a penny cheaper than last year.

Scott Walker, chief executive of GB Potatoes, said planting and harvesting conditions were favourable this year, but the middle of the season, was "one of the driest in modern memory". The summer was the hottest on record in the UK.

Farmers who didn't have irrigation systems would have suffered and those who could water their crops would have had higher electricity and fuel costs, he says.

"We've had more modest rises than we've had over the past couple of years, but costs have still gone up," he says.

Lucy Munns Lucy, a young woman with blonde hair and blue eyes, sitting in a tractor. A wheat field is visible in the backgroundLucy Munns
Lucy Munns grows potatoes, sugar beet, wheat and barley

The trouble with potato prices is you never know what you're going to get, says Lucy Munns, a potato farmer in Cambridgeshire.

She said a good price for her potatoes would be £200 a tonne, but she was anticipating prices as low as £80 in December.

Hot spells while potatoes are growing causes them to be oddly shaped and they can be rejected by supermarkets and fish and chip shops, she says.

Lucy Munns A photo of oddly shaped potatoes fresh out of the ground. One potato looks like three potatoes stuck togetherLucy Munns
Hot weather can cause potatoes to grow in odd shapes

Pudding and mince pies fall in price

Another side dish which saw a slight dip in price was stuffing mix - dropping 1.32% to 50p for 170g.

And lashings of gravy will also be cheaper this year, with gravy granules dropping 7.35% to 91p for 200-300g.

If after the Christmas feast you still have appetite for a sweet treat you'll be glad to hear that Christmas pudding and mince pies are cheaper this year.

A pack of six iced mince pies will cost £1.77, which is 2.75% cheaper than in 2024. A standard 400g pudding comes in at £2.35, or a drop of 7.42%.

It's down to falling flour and sugar prices - there is currently a global sugar surplus.

In the UK, falling sugar, jam and chocolate prices contributed to lower inflation rates in December.

Cost of Living: Tackling it together banner

How to keep costs down

  • Start with a budget: Plan ahead and add up hidden expenses, like tin foil for roasting a turkey.
  • Write a food list: Decide on your must haves and what you might not miss.
  • Plan your leftovers: A next day meal plan will mean less goes to waste
  • Bargain hunt: Look out for online offers as well as yellow sticker items which have been reduced.
  • Use your freezer: Christmas foods that freeze well include butter, meat joints and some cheeses like cheddar.
  • Join up with friends and family: This means you can buy bigger pack sizes, which are often better value.

Read more from the BBC Food team here

Young people will feel burden of UK's ageing society, report suggests

Getty Images A woman looking at documents while holding her head in her handGetty Images

Young people will be hit hardest by successive governments' failure to focus on financial and societal challenges caused by an ageing population, a House of Lords report has suggested.

They will need to plan and prepare to work longer and save more from a much earlier age, the economic affairs committee said.

The report also found that the crisis in adult social care "remains a scandal" which needs to be addressed urgently.

Committee chair Lord Wood of Anfield told the BBC it was a "struggle to find where in government" there was a focus on ageing and the "transformational effects" it was going to have on people.

"Ageing is something that we're just watching happening", he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme, adding: "We know that adaptation is the way forward".

Policies governments have used to address the impact of declining fertility and rising life expectancy in the UK - raising the state pension age or increasing immigration for example - were not adequate solutions on their own, the report said.

Getting more people in their 50s and 60s to stay in or return to work "is key", the committee said, and the government must prioritise incentives to do so.

It also said an ageing population will need more care workers, leaving fewer workers for other parts of the economy.

There is "widespread ignorance" of how much it costs to retire, it said, and the government should consider an education campaign - as well as finding out if the UK's financial services sector is equipped to provide for the population as it ages.

Lord Wood said that the government and financial services industry needs to devise "more innovative ways of getting younger people to think about lives frankly they can't conceive of at the moment - when they're in their eighties and early nineties."

"There's a long time for them to be financially planning for at a time when we know young people are doing less financial planning," he added.

"Raising the state pension age, which saves the government money, but increases pensioner poverty as many people have already stopped working by their sixties, is a red herring.

"To successfully confront this challenge, the approach to financial management of today's and tomorrow's young people will need to change."

Will the US TikTok deal make it safer but less relevant?

Getty Images Smartphone displays the logo of TikTok with the national flags of China and the United States in the background.Getty Images

TikTok's Chinese owner ByteDance has signed a deal with investors to run its business in the US.

But what does this mean for the over 170 million Americans (or so the social media platform claims) who use the app?

The key may lie in how TikTok's recommendation algorithm - the powerful system that curates the platform's For You Page to predict content you might watch - is managed when it changes hands.

Social media industry expert Matt Navarra told the BBC the question will not be whether TikTok survives, but "what version of TikTok survives".

'Safer' but 'less relevant'

Currently, TikTok's system depends on huge amounts of global data and feedback loops, which can change recommendations in an instant.

Under the terms of the deal TikTok's algorithm, which will be licensed by investor Oracle, is set to be retrained on American user data.

Mr Navarra said this could leave the app feeling "safer and sturdier" but also leaving it at a risk of "becoming less culturally essential" as a result.

"TikTok's power has always come from feeling slightly out of control - weird, niche, uncomfortable, sometimes politically sharp content for anyone else or before it goes anywhere else," he said.

"If you start smoothing those edges, you don't just change moderation. I think you change its relevance."

Matching ByteDance's algorithm

Whether the US version will differ from the TikTok so many know and use already may also depend on if it gets "all the new features, security updates and platform improvements" as soon as the international version does, tech journalist Will Guyatt told the BBC.

And computing expert Kokil Jaidka from the National University of Singapore said she expected the things that make the platform popular - such as its short videos and shopping - are likely to "stay intact" as these features are not dependent on the algorithm.

She said the changes might be more subtle and gradual, depending on if the narrower data inputs of the "siloed" US version can match the app's global reach.

"If TikTok is operating with a licensed or partially diluted version of its recommendation algorithm, some of the system's blind spots may start to matter more," she said.

For users, she said this means in practice the US algorithm may "lag in personalisation" and take longer to adapt to viral content.

To experiment or behave?

Oracle is TikTok's longtime cloud computing partner in the United States, and is chaired by Larry Ellison, an ally of President Trump.

Another foreign entity, MGX - an Abu-Dhabi government investment fund - will join it along with private equity firm Silver Lake as the main incoming investors.

Pressure from these investors may also add to the US app feeling "blander" said Mr Navarra.

"I think the real test won't be whether the users leave," he said.

"It will be whether TikTok still feels the place the internet goes to experiment - or if it becomes the place it goes to behave."

Additional reporting by Peter Hoskins.

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BBC replaced by TNT Sports as Commonwealth Games live broadcaster

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TNT Sports has been confirmed as live UK broadcast partner for the Glasgow 2026 Commonwealth Games.

The subscription channel takes over from the BBC which had been the principal partner since 1954 and provided free-to-air coverage for 18 games in a row.

TNT Sports is part of Warner Bros Discovery and is best known for screening Uefa Champions League matches as well as selected English Premier League fixtures.

The Glasgow Commonwealth Games will take place from 23 July to 2 August and feature 10 sports and six para sports.

TNT Sports said it would provide more than 600 hours of coverage in a "re-imagining" of the games.

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Are viral band Boy Throb the real deal or a TikTok gag?

Boy Throb The members of Boy Throb are posing for a selfie photo. They are all dressed in a pink velour tracksuit with white detailing.  Darshan is photoshopped in to the top of the photo and he is holding his hands in a heart. Boy Throb
Boy Throb have been campaigning to get one million TikTok followers to help one member's US visa application

There's a new boy band on the scene, but there's just one problem - they've never all performed together in person.

Boy Throb have been campaigning to get one million followers on TikTok so fourth member Darshan Magdum can secure a US visa.

He's currently, in his words, "stuck in India".

They've been building up a worldwide fan base with their videos, including a viral recording of their first gig at a Hollywood retirement home last month.

Maybe it was the group's choreography in their signature pink velour tracksuits and bright yellow trainers.

Or maybe it was Darshan, hitting the high notes via a Zoom call from a laptop beside his bandmates.

Whatever it was, it stopped people in their tracks, and Boy Throb smashed their follower target in just one month.

Now, they tell BBC Newsbeat, their two main goals are to win a Grammy and "get Darshan his visa".

But they can't escape the comments asking if it's all one big joke.

Boy Throb Three members of Boy Throb are standing in front of a Beverly Hills sign. They are all dressed in a pink velour tracksuit with white detailing. Darshan is photoshopped in to the bottom of the photo and he is holding his hands in a heart. Boy Throb
The boy band have become known for their baby pink uniform and quick cut videos

Boy Throb's members - Evan Papier, Darshan, Anthony Key and Zachary Sobania - met online, but Evan and Anthony first connected after unsuccessful auditions for US singing competition American Idol.

Anthony tried to impress judges Luke Bryan, Katy Perry and Lionel Richie with his cover of Dynamite by K-pop band BTS in 2021, during season 19 of the show.

And Evan, who auditioned a year later, failed to win Katy over with a rendition of her own song, ET, but the tape never aired.

Refusing to let rejection hold him back, Evan gathered a dedicated TikTok following before joining forces with the rest of Boy Throb.

"We all wanted to get a band together that wasn't just a carbon copy, everybody looks the same, they sound the same," Anthony tells Newsbeat.

"We're all different, very different backgrounds, you can never confuse us."

There's certainly no mistaking Boy Throb for any other acts.

Between their baby pink uniform and quick cut videos - usually featuring Darshan superimposed via green screen - their style is definitely unique.

And then there's the lyrics, which often re-work hit pop songs so the lyrics describe the band's visa battle.

Their version of Manchild, by Sabrina Carpenter, goes: "Oh I'd like Darshan in the USA, oh I need him here by New Year's Day."

Oh, and their fans, who encouraged the group to change their name from @boyband2026, are known as "Throbbers" or, collectively, the "Throb Mob".

When you add it all together it could feel a bit... unserious.

But when Newsbeat asks if Boy Throb are sincere, band member Evan insists they are.

"People love to say something is satirical and people are just having fun, people love to just throw that word around," he says.

The band have also uploaded posts pushing back at "haters", something Evan says only makes them more determined to succeed.

"Honestly, I'm not even fazed because it's just people's opinions. We're doing it seriously," he says.

He recognises that their approach is an unusual route to breaking through, but says: "If parody is what people love, then we'll keep them coming".

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Throbbers are asking what is next now that the group has reached their one million follower target.

At the moment it's Darshan and his green screen against the world, but Evan says they hope he will join them in the US in the spring if his visa application is approved.

He is applying for a O-1 US visa which is reserved for individuals with "extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business, or athletics".

The group have said an immigration lawyer advised them that securing one million followers will help their application.

"Our number one goal is to get Darshan's visa and get him into America so he can perform with us, and to get all those accolades that all these artists we love and know have," Evan says.

The pop-star hopefuls are staying tight-lipped, but Evan says they hope to give their fans "something to smile about".

"We also just want to spread joy," he says.

"I think that's something that has been really hard in the times we're in right now.

"And I think if we're able to spread the joy that we have through TikTok and Instagram and social the way we have the past few months, that feels like we're doing something right."

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Wife and lover who plotted husband's caravan murder jailed for 19 years

Dyfed-Powys Police A woman with her hands on her heads - she is wearing a black and white topDyfed-Powys Police
Michelle Mills met her lover, a former Royal Marine, at a homeless charity for veterans - and within weeks they were sharing murderous thoughts about her husband

A woman and her ex-marine secret lover have both been jailed for 19 years for plotting to kill her husband in a caravan in south-west Wales.

Christopher Mills was attacked by two masked men with guns, gloves and cable ties at the caravan he shared with his wife in Cenarth, Carmarthenshire, on 20 September 2024.

Ethel Mills, 46, known as Michelle, looked straight ahead - avoiding her husband in the public gallery - as the judge handed down her sentence at Swansea Crown Court after she was found guilty at an earlier trial of conspiracy to murder Mr Mills.

One of the masked men, her lover of three months Geraint Berry, 46, of Clydach, Swansea, was also found guilty of conspiracy to murder.

Athena Picture Agency Close-up of Christopher Mills outside court. He wears a blue suit, a white shirt and black-rimmed glasses. He has short grey hair and a grey beard.Athena Picture Agency
Christopher Mills was attacked in his caravan in September 2024 and fought off two masked men

The other masked man, Steven Thomas, 47, who was recruited by Berry, was cleared of conspiracy to murder at the trial.

However, he was jailed for 12 months after previously admitting to possessing a firearm that was used to attack Mr Mills. He will be released once formalities have been completed due to the length of time he has already spent on remand.

During the sentencing hearing, the court was told by 55-year-old Mr Mills' barrister that the attack had "pretty much ruined his life" and that he suffered with flashbacks.

During sentencing, judge Mr Justice Nicklin said there had been "significant planning and premeditation" despite the plot to kill Mr Mills being "poorly executed".

He said there was an element of "coercion or exploitation" by Berry on Thomas, who "bitterly regrets his actions".

Christopher and Michelle Mills had been married for six years when she began having an affair with Berry, a 46-year-old former marine. They were both working at a homeless charity for veterans but, within weeks, they were sharing murderous thoughts about her husband.

Watch as police approach and arrest Geraint Berry and Steven Thomas

The pair hatched a plan to kill Mr Mills and make it look like suicide. The first two attempts in late August 2024 ended in failure after Berry fell and injured himself.

How lovers plotted a murder

The third and final attempt would end in disaster - but only after Mr Mills managed to fight off the two masked men he thought had burst into his caravan intent on attacking him and his wife.

Recalling the night of the attack while giving evidence during the murder trial, Mr Mills said he and his wife were listening to music at about 23:30 after sharing a meal together.

"Michelle had been on her phone," he told the court. "I assumed she was playing a game. Apparently not."

Crown Prosecution Service Two guns on a kitchen side unit in a caravan.Crown Prosecution Service
Christopher Mills fought off the attackers and took both their guns off them

He told the court: "As I opened the door, he literally hit me right in the face with a pistol, 'Get back, get down' he was saying.

"I punched him in his face. I pulled his pistol off of him. He was dressed in overalls, with balaclavas. He was a lot bigger than me," Mr Mills added.

Berry and Thomas fled the caravan after Mr Mills wrestled both their guns from them, but their car had been blocked and they had to escape on foot, eventually finding refuge in some undergrowth in a nearby quarry.

Back in the caravan, his wife was trying to cover her tracks. She dialled 999 and told police two masked men wielding guns had attacked her husband.

She said her husband had sustained a head injury in the attack, and claimed the two men, who were dressed all in black with their faces covered, were unknown to her.

Within minutes, armed officers along with a dog unit and the force helicopter were racing to the scene in Cenarth, near Newcastle Emlyn.

Dyfed-Powys Police Police helicopter footage of two men Geraint Berry, 46, from Swansea, and Steven Thomas, 47, from Blaengwynfi, Neath Port Talbot. Who were hiding in undergrowth near a caravan site in Cenarth, Wales. Dyfed-Powys Police
Police helicopter footage of Geraint Berry and Steven Thomas who were found hiding in undergrowth

Berry and Thomas were located by heat-seeking helicopter cameras cowering in a hedge. They were both arrested on suspicion of aggravated burglary.

However, the police investigation quickly uncovered a more sinister intent, finding gas masks, balaclavas, cable ties and a fake suicide note purporting to be written by Mr Mills to his wife.

Mills was soon linked to a criminal plot to kill her husband and incriminating text messages were found on her and Berry's mobile phones.

They had made several references about killing Mr Mills, including one message written on 7 August that year, just over a month after their affair had begun, saying simply that Mr Mills "should just die".

Two days later they were planning different ways of achieving their fantasy.

There was talk of poisoning her husband with sleeping pills, while Berry brought up the idea of shooting Mr Mills.

The jury in their trial heard how Berry had asked an army and navy stall holder at Swansea market if he had guns and ammunition, only to be told this was not something they sold.

Picture shows a static caravan in a rural park in Cenarth near Newcastle Emlyn
The caravan park in rural south-west Wales where the murder plot took place

Berry also asked people how to make a Mini Cooper S - the car Mr Mills drove at that time - explode on starting.

Police found a message from Berry to Michelle Mills saying he was going to meet with some "boys" to plan "what they are going to do with him".

Michelle Mills, whose only concern, say police, was that she would not get caught, replied: "Yes, lovely, thank you."

Police recovered two handguns following the incident

With her husband injured and still reeling from the attack, Mills sent her final, damning text message to her lover.

Almost immediately after the men had fled the scene, Mills wrote to him: "Police have been called get away, delete all communications … please on both phones … I love you."

Dyfed-Powys Police Police body camera footage of a man with his arms behind his back in a police vehicle. There's a white grille behind him and the back doors are open. he is dressed all in black. He has his head looking down at his feet. he is bald and clean shaven. Dyfed-Powys Police
Geraint Berry, during his arrest - from police video

Eventually, the police were convinced not only about her guilt but also her central role in the plot to kill her husband.

When she was charged with conspiracy to murder, Mills asked officers: "I'm going to prison for this, aren't I?"

The jury at her trial also convicted her of perverting the course of justice, for which she was jailed for 18 months - to be served concurrently with her 19-year term.

Berry was also convicted of possessing an imitation firearm and handed an 18-month jail term that he must serve alongside his 19-year sentence.

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What's pushing up the cost of Christmas dinner this year?

Getty Images A mother and her two daughters set the Christmas dinner table. There is a Christmas tree in their kitchenGetty Images
A typical Christmas dinner with all the trimmings will cost slightly more than last year

Turkey and sprouts are synonymous with Christmas dinner and this year a rise in the price of both means the festive feast will cost you slightly more at the supermarket.

A typical turkey dinner with all the trimmings will cost about £32.45, according to research done for the BBC - a £1.24 or nearly 4% rise on last year.

It comes after bird flu led to large numbers of turkeys being culled early, while a drier spring and summer hit sprout harvests.

However, the humble but golden potato and parsnip have gone down in price, along with - if you have any room - Christmas pudding and mince pies. Our seasonal snapshot reflects that overall food price rises are beginning to slow down.

The centre piece to the traditional family feast - the turkey - costs £20, for a standard 10lb (4.55kg) frozen one. The same bird was £18.62 last year - that's a 7.37% rise, according to the research from retail tracking platform Assosia.

The ever-divisive Brussels sprouts went up by more than 9% to 94p a bag, it found.

The data is based on prices on 6 December 2025 and the same date in 2024, across own-brand products from Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Morrisons, Aldi and Lidl.

However, every year as supermarkets compete for our Christmas custom many slash the prices of their bags of veg as low as 8p so there are bargains to be had.

The cost of a supermarket shop is now rising much slower than when food prices spiked sharply following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Turkey prices up after bird flu outbreaks

In Potterspury, near Milton Keynes, hundreds of free-range turkeys usually amble around farmer Susan Gorst, pecking at the grass.

But in November, all bird farmers in England were ordered to keep their flocks indoors and many were culled early to limit the spread of bird flu.

She says turkeys eat more feed when they can't graze outdoors so this pushed up her costs. But she says her customers understand she has to pass this on.

"I think people are now generally expecting an increase on most things year on year," she says.

Susan Gorst Susan, a woman in her 50s or 60s, and her son Freddie, probably 20s or 30s. sitting on hay bales. Susan is holding a live turkey and Freddie has his arms wrapped around two more turkeys and there are about 30 more turkeys on and around the hay bales.Susan Gorst
Susan Gorst and her son Freddie on their turkey farm

The rising price of turkey "could have been a lot worse," according to John Muff, co-owner of Muff's Butchers in Wirral. He estimates it's up by £1-2 per kilo since last Christmas.

"All year round we've seen price increases, almost on a weekly basis, 5p here, 10p there," he says.

Pork has also gone up in price, with pigs in blankets now £2.59, or 5.3% higher than last year.

John says this didn't surprise him. The cost of making their sausages from scratch has seen a "steady increase throughout the year," he says.

John Muff, a butcher, stands at the counter of his shop. He is wearing a grey chef's uniform and a dark apron. He is also wearing a cap. There are Christmas decorations hung above the butcher counter.
Butcher John Muff said the price of turkey has crept up all year

He says "every aspect is going up," from animal feed, energy, transport and wages.

But he thinks higher supermarket prices might be tempting shoppers into a trip to the butchers.

"They're thinking to themselves: If I'm going to pay that sort of price, I may as well come in here and get the proper stuff," he says.

Sprout prices

Whether you celebrate or shun the sprouts at Christmas, the success of this little green veg is highly dependent on the weather.

Alan Steven, a sprout farmer in Fife, says this spring the ground was so dry he had to water his fields before he could plant his seeds - for the first time in 10 years.

He had the cost of irrigating twice more over the summer due to prolonged hot weather.

And so far the winter has been milder which means the sprout plants are more prone to disease, he says.

Alan Steven, a sprout farmer, standing in his field. He is holding two sprouts which he just picked and is showing them to the cameraman. He is wearing green overalls over a black jumper. He is also wearing a hat.
Alan Steven said he had to irrigate his sprout seeds as they were being planted because the ground was so dry

Spud prices hold steady

The price of root vegetables has remained firmly planted - with no change to the cost of carrots - and potatoes and parsnips just a penny cheaper than last year.

Scott Walker, chief executive of GB Potatoes, said planting and harvesting conditions were favourable this year, but the middle of the season, was "one of the driest in modern memory". The summer was the hottest on record in the UK.

Farmers who didn't have irrigation systems would have suffered and those who could water their crops would have had higher electricity and fuel costs, he says.

"We've had more modest rises than we've had over the past couple of years, but costs have still gone up," he says.

Lucy Munns Lucy, a young woman with blonde hair and blue eyes, sitting in a tractor. A wheat field is visible in the backgroundLucy Munns
Lucy Munns grows potatoes, sugar beet, wheat and barley

The trouble with potato prices is you never know what you're going to get, says Lucy Munns, a potato farmer in Cambridgeshire.

She said a good price for her potatoes would be £200 a tonne, but she was anticipating prices as low as £80 in December.

Hot spells while potatoes are growing causes them to be oddly shaped and they can be rejected by supermarkets and fish and chip shops, she says.

Lucy Munns A photo of oddly shaped potatoes fresh out of the ground. One potato looks like three potatoes stuck togetherLucy Munns
Hot weather can cause potatoes to grow in odd shapes

Pudding and mince pies fall in price

Another side dish which saw a slight dip in price was stuffing mix - dropping 1.32% to 50p for 170g.

And lashings of gravy will also be cheaper this year, with gravy granules dropping 7.35% to 91p for 200-300g.

If after the Christmas feast you still have appetite for a sweet treat you'll be glad to hear that Christmas pudding and mince pies are cheaper this year.

A pack of six iced mince pies will cost £1.77, which is 2.75% cheaper than in 2024. A standard 400g pudding comes in at £2.35, or a drop of 7.42%.

It's down to falling flour and sugar prices - there is currently a global sugar surplus.

In the UK, falling sugar, jam and chocolate prices contributed to lower inflation rates in December.

Cost of Living: Tackling it together banner

How to keep costs down

  • Start with a budget: Plan ahead and add up hidden expenses, like tin foil for roasting a turkey.
  • Write a food list: Decide on your must haves and what you might not miss.
  • Plan your leftovers: A next day meal plan will mean less goes to waste
  • Bargain hunt: Look out for online offers as well as yellow sticker items which have been reduced.
  • Use your freezer: Christmas foods that freeze well include butter, meat joints and some cheeses like cheddar.
  • Join up with friends and family: This means you can buy bigger pack sizes, which are often better value.

Read more from the BBC Food team here

Fraught EU summit backs Ukraine but divisions are clear

OLIVIER HOSLET/EPA/Shutterstock Volodomyr Zelensky, a man with short dark hair and beard who is wearing a black shirt, stands at a lectern in front of a blue background with an EU flag on it.OLIVIER HOSLET/EPA/Shutterstock

After 17 hours of at times heated debate, EU leaders agreed in the early hours of Friday morning to jointly raise €90bn (£79bn; $105bn) in zero-interest loans to keep Ukraine financially afloat for the next two years.

Kyiv had been clear: the money wasn't a nice-to-have; it was a must-have.

With the US under Donald Trump no longer looking to provide new direct military aid to Ukraine, the war-torn country has turned to Europe.

Without the cash, Volodymyr Zelensky told EU leaders he wouldn't have enough money to pay Ukrainian soldiers or buy the weapons he needed to counter Russian aggression.

The now agreed EU loan will be guaranteed by the bloc's common budget.

But in a blow to Brussels' desire to demonstrate decisive European unity over Ukraine to EU sceptics in Washington and Moscow, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic only agreed to support the plan - it required unanimity to be passed - if they were exempt from it individually.

Yet another indication of the divisions in Europe over attitudes to Ukraine and to Moscow.

Hungary and Slovakia are known to be closer to the Kremlin.

This brings them into direct confrontation with EU countries geographically nearer to Russia such as Poland and the Baltic States.

They view Ukraine's survival against Russia as existential.

If Kyiv were to lose to Moscow on the battlefield because it was cash or weapons-strapped, they believe that would embolden Russia and would be a disaster for European security and stability more broadly.

Arriving at the start of Thursday's fraught summit, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said EU leaders had a clear decision to make: pay money today, he said, or pay in blood tomorrow.

He said he wasn't talking about Ukraine. He was talking about Europe.

The new EU joint-loan plan for Ukraine replaces a much-debated EU proposal to raise the €90bn using frozen Russian state assets held in the bloc (€210bn euros' worth in total), mostly in Belgium.

Kyiv had described that idea as morally justified, considering the billions of dollars' worth of destruction wreaked by Moscow on Ukraine.

But a number of EU countries feared legal retribution by Russia. They worried too that the eurozone's international reputation as a safe destination for global assets could be damaged.

Brussels said on Friday it was considering using the frozen Russian assets eventually, to repay the EU loan to Ukraine. But that would be something to be worked out in the future - if a peace deal is signed.

For now, on top of the new EU loan, it's estimated Ukraine will need another €45bn euros to cover all its costs for 2026/2027.

Brussels hopes non-EU allies of Ukraine like the UK, Japan and Canada might pick up some of that tab. Not going bankrupt now also opens the door for Kyiv to receive loans from banks like the IMF.

Pope appoints new leader of Catholic Church in England and Wales

BBC Westminster Cathedral in LondonBBC

The Vatican has announced that Richard Moth will be the new Archbishop of Westminster, making him the head of the Catholic Church in England and Wales.

He succeeds Cardinal Vincent Nichols, who has held the role since 2009 and has stepped down aged 80.

For the past 10 years Richard Moth has been Bishop of Arundel and Brighton, and before that served as Bishop to the Forces.

As Archbishop of Westminster he will become president of the Bishops' Conference of England and Wales and lead an estimated six million Catholics.

Cardinal Nichols reached retirement age when he was 75, but was asked to stay on by Pope Francis. In May he took part in the conclave that elected Pope Leo XIV.

The search for a replacement for Cardinal Nichols was led by the Apostolic Nuncio, or papal ambassador to the UK, who presented a list of potential candidates to Pope Leo.

Earlier this week, Archbishop Moth released a joint statement calling for empathy for "those who come to this country for their safety", reminding Catholics that Jesus's family fled to Egypt as refugees.

He has been one of the bishops leading the Church's response to social justice issues in the UK, including praising the scrapping of the two-child benefit cap.

Archbishop Moth will face the challenge of declining numbers of people attending churches nationally, though there is growth in some churches with immigrant Catholics.

In response to the growing use of Christian symbols at, for example, rallies organised by the far-right activist Tommy Robinson, Bishop Moth has talked of his concern.

Last weekend, Robinson held an event in London saying he wanted to "reclaim" the country's heritage and Christian identity.

"We are concerned about the tensions that are growing in society and the desire by some groups to sow seeds of division within our communities. This does not reflect the spirit or message of Christmas," Bishop Moth said in a statement with the Archbishop of Birmingham.

The Catholic Church has been heavily involved in providing assistance to those who have suffered in the cost of living crisis.

PA Media Cardinal Vincent Nichols speaking at a press conference PA Media
Cardinal Vincent Nichols is stepping down having held the role since 2009

As archbishop, Richard Moth will also lead the Church's constant challenge of dealing with safeguarding issues.

In 2020, a wide-ranging inquiry into child sexual abuse found that between 1970 and 2015 the Catholic Church in England and Wales received more than 3,000 complaints of child sexual abuse against more than 900 individuals connected to the Church.

In fact, the leadership of Archbishop Moth's predecessor, Cardinal Nichols, was criticised in the inquiry report, which said he cared more about the impact of abuse on the Church's reputation than on the victims.

At the time, Cardinal Nichols apologised and said he accepted the report, adding: "That so many suffered is a terrible shame with which I must live and from which I must learn."

Cardinal Nichols retires having led the Church in England and Wales for 16 years, during which it faced enormous change.

He is the son of two teachers and was born in Crosby. The lifelong Liverpool FC fan took up his first role as a priest in Wigan.

In 2010, he welcomed Pope Benedict XVI to England on an official visit.

What Paul and Joshua have to gain - and lose - from their fight this weekend

'No fear' but spectacle and serious risk looms large over Paul v Joshua

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Media caption,

I won't carry Jake Paul for one second - Anthony Joshua

When Anthony Joshua made his professional debut against Emmanuel Leo in 2013, fresh from Olympic gold in London, the boxing world treated it like the start of a coronation.

At roughly the same time, a 16-year-old prankster from Ohio named Jake Paul was posting six-second Vine videos - chatting to pineapples in supermarkets and climbing into strangers' shopping trolleys for a laugh.

More than a decade later, through wildly different routes, the pair have arrived at the same place.

This Friday, in Miami, they will share a ring in a professional heavyweight contest that still feels faintly unreal.

"I'm not worried about what people think about the integrity side, I'm more worried about are they talking?" Joshua says.

"That's the whole point of this fight. It creates conversation."

Paul says he has no fear and will "shock the world" to become the "king of boxing".

They will fight eight three-minute rounds at the Kaseya Center, in standard 10oz gloves, under professional rules. Joshua wasn't allowed to weigh more than 17st 7lb (111kg).

Otherwise, there are no concessions.

BBC Sport explores how this unlikely fight came together, what both men have to gain and lose and why many within the sport are uneasy about the risk it represents.

The risks beneath the spectacle

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Paul ready to 'shock the world' by beating Joshua

Joshua and Paul were filmed racing speedboats along the Miami River on Sunday, laughing and waving as the skyline slid past behind them. It looked more like spring break than heavyweight boxing.

Two days later, Joshua changed the tone entirely by saying "if I can kill you, I will kill you".

Joshua doubled down on those remarks a day later. His comments landed as heavily as his trademark right, a reminder that beneath the Instagram gloss, this is still a professional contest where knockouts are allowed.

His power is not a matter of debate, 25 knockouts in 28 wins. Joshua's stoppage of Robert Helenius was a violent, unsettling finish. Francis Ngannou, a former UFC heavyweight champion, was knocked unconscious by a single punch.

Asked directly about safety, Joshua sidestepped the question.

"He's got his groin guard on and his gum shield," Joshua says. "That's the only safety he is allowed."

Joshua has promised fans will see the "full" version of himself against Paul - and that is precisely where the concern lies.

"I've never gone in there and knocked someone out within 10 seconds," he adds.

"There's a methodical process to knocking someone out. But if the opportunity presents itself, I'm not planning on carrying Jake for one second more than I have to."

Money and notoriety - what does Joshua have to gain?

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'Unthinkable' that Jake Paul can win - Lennox Lewis

It starts, inevitably, with money.

Paul has quickly become boxing's golden ticket - a measure of where the sport's power now sits. The introduction of Netflix has supercharged his power.

The Ohio fighter claimed on social media there is a combined purse of £210m.

Joshua has been out of the ring since his defeat by Daniel Dubois in September 2024. He was expected to return in a low-key tune-up.

In prizefighting terms, few blame him for fighting Paul for incredible money, but there is more to it.

Joshua remains a popular figure in Britain, a star transcended beyond boxing, but the United States is different. He has boxed in America only once - a shock loss to Andy Ruiz Jr in 2019.

When BBC Sport asked fans along South Beach who Joshua was, many shrugged. Most knew exactly who Paul was.

With a long-awaited fight against Tyson Fury once again being talked up, Paul may be a useful conduit.

The attention he brings could help widen Joshua's global reach and reignite interest in a bout that no longer sells itself quite as effortlessly as it once did.

MVP chief executive Nakisa Bidarian describes it as Joshua's "re-entrance into the biggest market in the world".

He added: "[America] is where the most money is made and where the most eyeballs are. This is a smart move."

Jake Paul v Anthony Joshua

Friday, 19 December

Live text commentary begins at 03:00 GMT on Saturday, 20 December on BBC Sport website & app.

Boxing hierachy to be restored or remade

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Paul is 'massively deluded' if he thinks he can beat AJ - Hearn

Paul is clear-eyed about the reality of Friday. "This is the hardest opponent, hardest challenge, most crazy thing I've ever done in my career," he says.

But the discomfort this fight has generated is familiar territory.

Controversy has always been his fuel. He did not flinch at the backlash when he fought a near-pension age Mike Tyson, and he does not appear to care now.

"Who even are these boxing purists?" he jokes. "How pure are they? Do they go to church or something?"

Paul's confidence appears unshakeable. For heavyweight great Lennox Lewis, however, that confidence edges into "delusion".

"Anthony Joshua doesn't have two left feet, and he can punch very hard," Lewis says.

"He's going to find out as soon as he gets hit."

And there has been some unease within the Paul's camp. Bidarian thought his business partner "was crazy" when it was first raised in March.

"Jake and I are constantly thinking about two, three, four years down the road and how we roadmap his rise to the top of the sport and that completely caught me out of left field," Bidarian says.

Paul's fights are frequently accompanied by unsubstantiated claims they are "scripted".

Fans on Miami's beachfront described the fight as "fake" but Paul, as ever, spins the suspicion into his favour.

"I take it as a compliment that I am doing something so outrageous and so crazy that people have to write it off," he said.

Paul has felt like the A-side this week. In public workouts, Joshua walked out before him.

At media events, Joshua hadn't finished speaking before Paul was ushered in.

For some hardcore boxing fans, that inversion is part of the problem.

They want the Paul experiment to end. They want the hierarchy restored. They want proof that boxing still has levels you cannot skip, no matter how many followers you bring with you.

"I'm carrying boxing on my back," has been Joshua's mantra all week.

Friday night will decide whether that hierarchy can be restored.

Related topics

More boxing from the BBC

Retail sales fall as Black Friday deals fail to lure shoppers

Getty Images A man and two women are standing outside in what looks to be London, it is at a time when the sun is going down - they sare standing close together and having a conversation. They appear to be business people on a break - they are all drinking coffee and holding cups Getty Images

UK government borrowing was higher than expected last month, according to the latest official figures.

Borrowing - the difference between public spending and tax income - was £11.7bn in November, whereas analysts had been expecting about £10bn.

However, the figure was £1.9bn lower than in the same month a year earlier and was the lowest November borrowing for four years.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said the fall was mainly due to higher receipts from taxes and National Insurance contributions.

Borrowing for the financial year to November has now reached £132.3bn, which is £10bn ahead of where it was at the same point last year.

Suspect in shootings of Brown University and MIT professor found dead

Getty Images Members of the FBI Evidence Response Team work at the scene of a mass shooting at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island on 16 December 2025Getty Images
Members of the FBI Evidence Response Team work at the scene of a mass shooting at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island on 16 December 2025

Police have issued an arrest warrant for the suspect in a mass shooting at Brown University that killed two people and injured nine others, sources close to the investigation told the BBC's US partner, CBS News.

Authorities are now searching for the person and a car the suspect is believed to have rented, according to CBS. They have not publicly identified the suspect.

They also are looking into a possible link between the shooting at Brown and the killing of a professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology two days later.

The search is now in its sixth day, with investigators knocking on doors, asking for home-security videos, and appealing to the public for tips to find the gunman.

A news conference that police in Providence, Rhode Island, had planned for Thursday afternoon was abruptly cancelled, but they said they expected to give an update later in the day.

On Thursday, authorities told CBS sources that they are investigating possible connections between the shooting and the killing of an Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) nuclear science and engineering professor two days later.

Nuno F Gomes Loureiro, 47, from Portugal, was shot "multiple times" on Monday at his home in Brookline, Massachusetts, which is about 50 miles (80km) from Providence.

Police have obtained an arrest warrant for a suspect, sources told CBS. The sources said a rental car matching the same description was seen at both crime scenes.

Federal authorities had previously said there was no link between the two murders.

On Wednesday, authorities released a photo of an individual they believe was in close proximity to their primary person of interest.

Providence Police Chief Oscar Perez said they wanted to speak with the person, "who may have information relevant to the investigation".

The chief also said the killer "could be anywhere", adding that "we don't know where the person is or who he is".

A day earlier, police had shown footage of a person of interest where a man was seen walking around the university campus with a black mask over his mouth, possibly "casing" the area before the crime, Perez said.

Members of the public have expressed frustration that the mass shooting investigation has appeared to yield little progress so far.

In response, Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha said he believed the killer would be caught "and it is just a matter of time before we catch him".

The FBI has offered a $50,000 (£37,350) reward for information leading to the identification, arrest and conviction of the person responsible for the attack.

The shooting occurred at Brown University's Barus & Holley engineering building during final exams.

Authorities identified the two students killed as Ella Cook, a sophomore from Alabama, and Mukhammad Aziz Umurzokov, an Uzbek-American freshman student.

Turkey up, spuds down - how the cost of this year's Christmas dinner has changed

Getty Images A mother and her two daughters set the Christmas dinner table. There is a Christmas tree in their kitchenGetty Images
A typical Christmas dinner with all the trimmings will cost slightly more than last year

Turkey and sprouts are synonymous with Christmas dinner and this year a rise in the price of both means the festive feast will cost you slightly more at the supermarket.

A typical turkey dinner with all the trimmings will cost about £32.45, according to research done for the BBC - a £1.24 or nearly 4% rise on last year.

It comes after bird flu led to large numbers of turkeys being culled early, while a drier spring and summer hit sprout harvests.

However, the humble but golden potato and parsnip have gone down in price, along with - if you have any room - Christmas pudding and mince pies. Our seasonal snapshot reflects that overall food price rises are beginning to slow down.

The centre piece to the traditional family feast - the turkey - costs £20, for a standard 10lb (4.55kg) frozen one. The same bird was £18.62 last year - that's a 7.37% rise, according to the research from retail tracking platform Assosia.

The ever-divisive Brussels sprouts went up by more than 9% to 94p a bag, it found.

The data is based on prices on 6 December 2025 and the same date in 2024, across own-brand products from Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda, Morrisons, Aldi and Lidl.

However, every year as supermarkets compete for our Christmas custom many slash the prices of their bags of veg as low as 8p so there are bargains to be had.

The cost of a supermarket shop is now rising much slower than when food prices spiked sharply following Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Turkey prices up after bird flu outbreaks

In Potterspury, near Milton Keynes, hundreds of free-range turkeys usually amble around farmer Susan Gorst, pecking at the grass.

But in November, all bird farmers in England were ordered to keep their flocks indoors and many were culled early to limit the spread of bird flu.

She says turkeys eat more feed when they can't graze outdoors so this pushed up her costs. But she says her customers understand she has to pass this on.

"I think people are now generally expecting an increase on most things year on year," she says.

Susan Gorst Susan, a woman in her 50s or 60s, and her son Freddie, probably 20s or 30s. sitting on hay bales. Susan is holding a live turkey and Freddie has his arms wrapped around two more turkeys and there are about 30 more turkeys on and around the hay bales.Susan Gorst
Susan Gorst and her son Freddie on their turkey farm

The rising price of turkey "could have been a lot worse," according to John Muff, co-owner of Muff's Butchers in Wirral. He estimates it's up by £1-2 per kilo since last Christmas.

"All year round we've seen price increases, almost on a weekly basis, 5p here, 10p there," he says.

Pork has also gone up in price, with pigs in blankets now £2.59, or 5.3% higher than last year.

John says this didn't surprise him. The cost of making their sausages from scratch has seen a "steady increase throughout the year," he says.

John Muff, a butcher, stands at the counter of his shop. He is wearing a grey chef's uniform and a dark apron. He is also wearing a cap. There are Christmas decorations hung above the butcher counter.
Butcher John Muff said the price of turkey has crept up all year

He says "every aspect is going up," from animal feed, energy, transport and wages.

But he thinks higher supermarket prices might be tempting shoppers into a trip to the butchers.

"They're thinking to themselves: If I'm going to pay that sort of price, I may as well come in here and get the proper stuff," he says.

Sprout prices

Whether you celebrate or shun the sprouts at Christmas, the success of this little green veg is highly dependent on the weather.

Alan Steven, a sprout farmer in Fife, says this spring the ground was so dry he had to water his fields before he could plant his seeds - for the first time in 10 years.

He had the cost of irrigating twice more over the summer due to prolonged hot weather.

And so far the winter has been milder which means the sprout plants are more prone to disease, he says.

Alan Steven, a sprout farmer, standing in his field. He is holding two sprouts which he just picked and is showing them to the cameraman. He is wearing green overalls over a black jumper. He is also wearing a hat.
Alan Steven said he had to irrigate his sprout seeds as they were being planted because the ground was so dry

Spud prices hold steady

The price of root vegetables has remained firmly planted - with no change to the cost of carrots - and potatoes and parsnips just a penny cheaper than last year.

Scott Walker, chief executive of GB Potatoes, said planting and harvesting conditions were favourable this year, but the middle of the season, was "one of the driest in modern memory". The summer was the hottest on record in the UK.

Farmers who didn't have irrigation systems would have suffered and those who could water their crops would have had higher electricity and fuel costs, he says.

"We've had more modest rises than we've had over the past couple of years, but costs have still gone up," he says.

Lucy Munns Lucy, a young woman with blonde hair and blue eyes, sitting in a tractor. A wheat field is visible in the backgroundLucy Munns
Lucy Munns grows potatoes, sugar beet, wheat and barley

The trouble with potato prices is you never know what you're going to get, says Lucy Munns, a potato farmer in Cambridgeshire.

She said a good price for her potatoes would be £200 a tonne, but she was anticipating prices as low as £80 in December.

Hot spells while potatoes are growing causes them to be oddly shaped and they can be rejected by supermarkets and fish and chip shops, she says.

Lucy Munns A photo of oddly shaped potatoes fresh out of the ground. One potato looks like three potatoes stuck togetherLucy Munns
Hot weather can cause potatoes to grow in odd shapes

Pudding and mince pies fall in price

Another side dish which saw a slight dip in price was stuffing mix - dropping 1.32% to 50p for 170g.

And lashings of gravy will also be cheaper this year, with gravy granules dropping 7.35% to 91p for 200-300g.

If after the Christmas feast you still have appetite for a sweet treat you'll be glad to hear that Christmas pudding and mince pies are cheaper this year.

A pack of six iced mince pies will cost £1.77, which is 2.75% cheaper than in 2024. A standard 400g pudding comes in at £2.35, or a drop of 7.42%.

It's down to falling flour and sugar prices - there is currently a global sugar surplus.

In the UK, falling sugar, jam and chocolate prices contributed to lower inflation rates in December.

Cost of Living: Tackling it together banner

How to keep costs down

  • Start with a budget: Plan ahead and add up hidden expenses, like tin foil for roasting a turkey.
  • Write a food list: Decide on your must haves and what you might not miss.
  • Plan your leftovers: A next day meal plan will mean less goes to waste
  • Bargain hunt: Look out for online offers as well as yellow sticker items which have been reduced.
  • Use your freezer: Christmas foods that freeze well include butter, meat joints and some cheeses like cheddar.
  • Join up with friends and family: This means you can buy bigger pack sizes, which are often better value.

Read more from the BBC Food team here

The masterstroke that defined the Ashes series

The masterstroke that defined the Ashes series

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Head hits 'wonderful' century to put Australia firmly in control

England may well have lost this Ashes anyway. They have barely done anything to suggest otherwise over the past month.

But rather than English preparation decisions or selection meetings, was it a conversation in the Australia dressing room at tea on day two of the first Test that first set the course of this series?

Australia needed an opener in Perth when Usman Khawaja was struck down by back spasms and up went Travis Head's hand.

"It can't be that hard, let's get after them," he said.

Promoted from the middle order, he proceeded to thrash one of the great Ashes centuries and there began England's death by a thousand Travis Head cuts.

In striking his second hundred of this series on day three of the third Test in Adelaide, Head all-but confirmed the home of the urn until the next Ashes in 2027.

He has surely also ended any debate about his batting position for the remainder of this series and beyond.

The solution to Australia's problem of replacing David Warner was sitting in plain sight with a mullet and bristly Australian moustache.

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'Wonderful effort from this fine player' - Head reaches second century of the series

Head's struggles before this series - only one score of 40 or more in 20 innings going back to June - are now a distant memory.

Four days training before the series - something the most laidback of 31-year-old's said was "unprecedented" for him - helped find his rhythm and surely banish any doubts.

"When you have a big gap in Test cricket and you're lying in bed a couple of nights before, you're like, 'Can I do it?'" he said.

"Can you still produce it? Can you, as a cricketer each year, keep rolling out good scores in big moments? It's not going to get much bigger than this."

That last point is the most relevant when it comes to Head.

The ultimate big game player, he now has four Ashes hundreds to go with another in the 2023 World Cup final and the World Test Championship final earlier that year.

When Australia battled desperately to win back the Border-Gavaskar Trophy from India last year, Head made scores of 89, 140 and 159 in the first three Tests.

Former India coach Ravi Shastri once gave the South Australian the nickname 'Head-ache' and England's players must be at the point of wishing they could draw the curtains, lie down and close their eyes in a cool room.

They witnessed the birth of Head's reinvention as an uber aggressive batter in 2021 when he crashed a 148-ball 152 in the first Test of the last Ashes series down under.

Since then Head strikes at 80.20 runs per 100 balls, compared to 49.65 in the first part of his career, in a switch in style almost unprecedented across Test cricket's history.

An unintended consequence of Head's move to the top in this series has been England having to alter their plans to the left-hander.

In 2023 they had a clear plan, with 52% of deliveries bowled to Head by pacemen pitched 10m or shorter to target Head's weakness of balls fizzing around his helmet.

This time, because they now have the new ball in hand, England have been forced to push the ball up but have only fed his strength on the cut, not helped by their inability to hold a line.

For much of the afternoon they resorted to trying to bore Head out with a field spread far and wide - a tactic that must have hurt Ben Stokes to the core.

"I used to coach against Travis Head for Western Australia and you do not bowl to his cut shot," Head's former Australia coach Justin Langer said on TNT Sports.

"His wagonwheel is completely behind point. It was either England couldn't execute their plan or the plans were poor."

Two wagon wheels showing Travis Head's increased scoring on the off sideImage source, CricViz
Image caption,

Left-handed Travis Head's scoring behind square on the off side has doubled in this series (right) compared to the rest of his Ashes career (left)

Friday's innings at Adelaide was almost this issue in microcosm.

When England denied Head width, he was kept quiet. When they lost their line outside off stump he cashed in. One of his few false shots came when Brydon Carse lifted a bouncer towards his grille and Head miscued narrowly over fine leg.

Those well-directed balls were all too few.

As a result Head strolled to his hundred on day three - sometimes walking between the wickets to complete singles in an ultimate display of his ease - as his home crowd grew in anticipation.

He has batted his way to cult hero status in Australia but in the city of his birth, where some bowed to him after reaching three figures and others wore TravBall T-shirts, they love him more than anywhere else.

On reaching his hundred, Head saluted the crowd and then knelt to kiss a batting surface that treats him so well.

Only all-time Australian greats Ricky Ponting and Michael Clarke have scored more centuries at the Adelaide Oval than Head's four, while he now averages 87.33 on this ground, putting him fourth on the all-time list of those who have played five or more matches - a list topped by the greatest of them all, Sir Don Bradman.

There is already a statue of Bradman by Adelaide's eastern gates and the head of South Australia's local government has already put forward the idea of erecting one of Head beside it.

"I like to get out in the middle, feel the crowd and expectation," he said.

"I just like playing the game and I have a good time doing it."

Whether Australians remember this series as the summer of Mitchell Starc, Travis Head or someone else will be decided by proceedings remaining in Adelaide, plus what follows in Melbourne and Sydney.

Starc's 19 wickets already make a compelling case but do not forget England felt their bowlers had a good chance of securing victory before Head's century in Perth - a win that would have put this series on an entirely different course.

Head made that view look folly and, with his second century, he has now landed a definitive blow.

Australia may well have won either way but Head's promotion was the masterstroke from which England have been unable to respond.

Government data stolen in hack, minister confirms

Getty Images Whitehall street in London a cloudy day with cenotaph war memorial and Foreign and Commonwealth OfficeGetty Images

Government data has been stolen in a hack though officials believe the risk to individuals is "low", a minister has said.

Trade Minister Chris Bryant told BBC Breakfast "an investigation is ongoing" into the hack, adding that the security gap was "closed pretty quickly".

A Chinese affiliated group is suspected of being behind the attack, but Bryant said investigators "simply don't know as yet" who is responsible.

"We think that it's a fairly low-risk that individuals will have been compromised or affected," Bryant said.

It comes after the Sun newspaper reported that the hack took place in October with information possibly including visa details targeted.

It said in its report that hackers affiliated to the Chinese state were thought to be involved.

The incident has been referred to the Information Commissioners Office.

UK intelligence agencies have warned about increasing, large-scale espionage from China, using cyber and other means, and targeting commercial and political information.

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Head century drives England closer to Ashes defeat

Head century drives England closer to Ashes defeat

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Head hits 'wonderful' century to put Australia firmly in control

Third Ashes Test, Adelaide Oval (day two of five)

Australia 371: Carey 106, Archer 5-53 & 271-4: Head 142*, Carey 52*

England 286: Stokes 83, Archer 51; Boland 3-45

Australia lead by 356 runs

Scorecard

England were pushed towards the precipice of the fastest Ashes series defeat in more than 100 years as a Travis Head century maintained Australia's grip on the third Test in Adelaide.

Head was dropped on 99 by Harry Brook and spent eight balls one run short of a hundred before belting Joe Root down the ground for four to draw a deafening roar from his home-town crowd at the Adelaide Oval.

The left-hander moved Australia's second innings to 271-4 and their overall lead to 356 at the end of the third day.

If England's third loss in as many Tests is completed on Saturday, it would mean the Ashes have been decided in 10 days of cricket.

Not since 1921, when Australia needed only eight days of play to win in England, has the destination of the urn been settled so swiftly.

Head's inevitable ton snuffed out brief England hope that was raised when captain Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer added 73 runs in the morning session.

Stokes made 83 and Archer 51 in a stand of 106, the highest by an England ninth-wicket pair in Australia since 1924.

By creeping to 286 all out, 85 behind on first innings, England could have left themselves an outside chance by dismissing Australia for a total below 240 in their second innings.

At 53-2 and 149-4, England clung on before being cut adrift by Head. At some point, England will be tasked with pulling off the highest successful chase on this ground in order to keep the Ashes alive.

Of further concern to the visitors is the fitness of all-rounder Stokes, who is yet to bowl in the 66 overs of Australia's second innings.

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Brook drops Head at gully on 99

Slow death for England

Realistically, England's fate in this match and the series was sealed by their batting on the second day.

It needed a trademark Stokes miracle to keep his team from their destiny and, despite how well the captain and Archer have personally performed in this match, Stokes might have exhausted his escape acts.

There will be questions over all-rounder Stokes' physical state for the rest of the series. Never one to avoid work when his team need him, there were times when he was bent double in the field.

Bar the 90 minutes of resistance England mustered in the morning session, this day went as expected – Australia batting under minimal pressure, grinding England into the dirt.

England's effort cannot be faulted, they are simply being outclassed. They are suffering a slow death in the City of Churches, a prolonged post-mortem of the Bazball project.

A team aim will be to extend the match to Sunday, to at least avoid a historically swift series defeat. Individuals like Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope and Jamie Smith need runs to alleviate growing pressure on their international futures.

Head boy

Head's elevation to open the batting on the second day of the first Test will go down as one of the defining moments of the series. His match-winning century in Perth gave Australia a momentum they have never looked like relinquishing.

This ton was memorable for different reasons. Like Alex Carey on day one, Head is another South Australian enjoying an Ashes moment on home turf. This was his fourth successive century in Tests at the Adelaide Oval.

He had to endure a lively England burst with the new ball, particularly from Brydon Carse. With the storm weathered, Stokes absent from the attack and Will Jacks unable to hold an end, Head cashed in.

England tried different plans, at one point packing the off side with seven fielders, but Head still found ways to score. He added 84 for the fourth wicket with Usman Khawaja, who made 40 to further his case to be retained for the fourth Test.

The chance to Brook, off the bowling off Archer, was a powerful slash to gully. It would have been a smart catch, though should have been taken. In the next over, Head lofted Root's off-spin down the ground to complete his 11th Test ton.

It was fitting that Carey was Head's partner when he reached three figures. Their partnership stood at 122 by the close, with Carey unbeaten on 52 and eyeing a second hundred in the match.

Stokes and Archer stand up for England

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'What a shot that is!' - Archer smashes Lyon over long on for six

Stokes and Archer are among the few England players to have performed so far on this tour. Their tight relationship goes back to the 2019 World Cup final.

When Stokes was captured on camera on the second morning giving Archer a tounge-lashing for his bowling, it was an example of how Stokes knows he can get the best from his paceman.

From 213-8 overnight, and with 12 overs in the morning before the second new ball, the ninth-wicket pair were more expansive than the previous evening.

Stokes drove Scott Boland for four from the third ball of the day, Archer swiped Nathan Lyon over long-on for six.

Stokes' 50, from 159 balls, was his slowest in Test cricket and the slowest by any England batter in the Bazball era. Archer, who took five wickets in Australia's first innings, made his maiden half-century in Tests and the second-highest score by an England number 10 in Australia.

Stokes deserved a hundred only for Mitchell Starc to hit the stumps through the gate. Stokes roared in frustration, while Archer chased the captain all the way to the boundary to pat him on the back.

By the time Archer edged Boland to become the last wicket to fall, his batting average of 33 was England's second-highest behind Root. He has more Ashes half-centuries than Pope.

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