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UK to help protect Belgium after suspected Russian drone incursions

Getty Images Photo shows a sign that reads 'No Drone Zone' near the Brussels-National Airport. A Brussels Airlines passenger jet can be seen coming in to land in the background.Getty Images

UK military personnel and equipment are being sent to Belgium to help it bolster its defences after drone incursions on its airspace, suspected of being carried out by Russia.

The new head of the UK military, Sir Richard Knighton, told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg that his Belgian counterpart asked for assistance earlier this week and that kit and personnel were on the way.

Belgium's main airport Zavantem was forced to close temporarily on Thursday night after drones were spotted nearby. They were also spotted in other locations, including a military base.

"The defence secretary and I agreed that we would deploy our people and our equipment to Belgium to help them," he told the BBC.

Sir Richard did not confirm if the drones were from Russia, but added it was "plausible" they had been ordered by Moscow.

Alongside Nato allies, he added that the UK would help Belgium "by providing our kit and capability" which he said was already being deployed.

It comes after Sir Richard warned in of an "increasingly certain world" in a Sunday Telegraph opinion column to mark Remembrance Sunday.

Citing Russia's invasion of Ukraine, he said: "This conflict reminds us that peace is never guaranteed. It [the UK] must be defended, and sometimes at great cost".

A screenshot showing Sir Richard Knighton - dressed in an RAF senior officers uniform and wearing a poppy - while he spoke to the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg.
Drone incursions over Western Europe could "feasibly" have been sent by the Kremlin, Sir Richard said.

About 3,000 Brussels Airlines passengers were affected by the disruption, and the carrier said it faced "considerable costs" from cancelling or diverting dozens of flights.

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius and the Belgian security services have said they suspect Russia, but Belgian Defence Minister Theo Francken has previously admitted there is no accompanying evidence.

"At first, drones flying over our military bases were seen as our problem," Francken said earlier this week.

"Now it has become a serious threat affecting civilian infrastructure across multiple European countries."

A number of drone sightings have caused major flight disruptions across Europe in recent months, including in Sweden, Norway and Denmark.

Despite some officials blaming "hybrid warfare" by Russia, the Kremlin has denied any involvement.

Pistorious has suggested the latest sightings could be linked to European Union discussions to use frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine in the form of a €140bn loan.

While there is no public proof of Russia's involvement, suspicions have been fuelled by more serious airspace incursions by Russia in Eastern Europe over recent months, involving fighter jets and larger attack drones.

The UK has recently sent RAF Typhoon jets to take part in defence missions over Poland as part of Nato's mission to bolster the eastern flank in response to incursions.

BBC bosses treating 'systemic bias' allegations seriously, culture secretary says

PA Media Exterior general view of BBC Broadcasting HousePA Media

The BBC's leadership is treating allegations over "systemic bias" with "the seriousness that this demands", the culture secretary has said.

Lisa Nandy's comments to the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme came after reports a Panorama documentary misled viewers by editing a speech by US President Donald Trump.

The Telegraph published details of a leaked internal BBC memo suggesting the programme edited two parts of Trump's speech together so he appeared to explicitly encourage the Capitol Hill riots of January 2021.

BBC chair Samir Shah will provide a response to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Monday. The BBC is expected to apologise for the way the speech was edited.

The leaked memo came from Michael Prescott, a former independent external adviser to the broadcaster's editorial standards committee. He left the role in June.

Nandy said the Panorama issue was "very serious" but there were a series of "very serious allegations" that had been made about the broadcaster, "the most serious of which is that there is systemic bias in the way that difficult issues are reported at the BBC".

She added she had "complete confidence" Shah and BBC director general Tim Davie were treating allegations seriously.

Mr Prescott raised concerns over the documentary 'Trump: A Second Chance?' which was broadcast last year and made for the BBC by independent production company October Films Ltd, which was also approached for comment.

In his speech in Washington DC on 6 January 2024, Trump said: "We're going to walk down to the Capitol, and we're going to cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women."

However, in the Panorama edit he was shown saying: "We're going to walk down to the Capitol... and I'll be there with you. And we fight. We fight like hell."

The two sections of the speech that were edited together were more than 50 minutes apart.

The "fight like hell" comment was taken from a section where President Trump discussed how "corrupt" US elections were. In total, he used the words "fight" or "fighting" 20 times in the speech.

The culture secretary added: "I do want to see [Shah's] response to the select committee, and I will, of course, consider it and have further conversations with them about the action that they're taking."

Nandy said she had two primary concerns in relation to the BBC, including the use of "inconsistent" language when reporting.

She said: "What tends to happen at the BBC is that decisions about editorial standards, editorial guidelines, the sort of language that is used in reporting is entirely inconsistent.

"It doesn't always meet the highest standards, it's not always well thought through, and often it's left to individual journalists or newsreaders to make decisions.

"That's something I have discussed at length with the director general and the chair, and it's something I expect them to grip.

"My second concern about the BBC is that increasingly, they're operating in a news media environment where news and fact is often blurred with polemic and opinion, and I think that is creating a very, very dangerous environment in this country where people can't trust what they see."

As well as the Panorama documentary, the BBC has come under scrutiny over a number of different issues in recent weeks.

The Telegraph also reported that Mr Prescott raised concerns about a lack of action to address "systemic problems" of bias in BBC Arabic's coverage of the Israel-Gaza war.

In response, a BBC spokesperson said "where mistakes have been made or errors have occurred we have acknowledged them at the time and taken action".

And added: "We have also previously acknowledged that certain contributors should not have been used and have improved our processes to avoid a repeat of this."

Reports also said Mr Prescott raised concerns about the BBC's coverage around trans issues.

On Thursday, the BBC upheld 20 impartiality complaints over the way presenter Martine Croxall altered a script she was reading live on the BBC News Channel, which referred to "pregnant people" earlier this year.

The presenter changed her script to instead say "women", and the BBC's Executive Complaints Unit said it considered her facial expression as she said this gave the "strong impression of expressing a personal view on a controversial matter."

Super typhoon makes landfall in Philippines as nearly a million evacuated

AFP via Getty Images Residents evacuate from their flooded homes due to heavy rain brought by Typhoon Fung-wong in Remedios T Romualdez, on the southern island of Mindanao on November 8, 2025AFP via Getty Images
Dozens of families in Remedios T Romualde, on the island of Mindanao, are among those who have been evacuated ahead of the typhoon's arrival

The Philippines is bracing for the arrival of another potentially devastating typhoon, less than a week after a different storm killed at least 200 people and left a trail of destruction.

Fung-wong, known locally as Uwan, is forecast to intensify to a super typhoon - with sustained winds of at least 185km/h (115mph) - before making landfall on the island of Luzon on Sunday evening local time at the earliest.

The Philippine meteorological service (Pagasa) says the storm will also bring heavy rain and the risk of life-threatening storm surges.

Several schools have either cancelled classes on Monday or moved them online, while Philippine Airlines has cancelled a number of local flights.

Typhoon Fung-wong is expected to weaken rapidly once it makes landfall but will likely remain a typhoon as it travels over Luzon.

Eastern parts of the Philippines have already begun experiencing heavy rains and winds, a Pagasa official said in a briefing on Saturday evening local time.

While much of the country is expected to be impacted, there are particular concerns about those areas that could take a direct hit - including the small island of Catanduanes, which lies off the coast of southern Luzon.

Residents there, as well as in other low-lying and coastal areas, have been urged to move to higher ground ahead of the storm's arrival.

A civil defence spokesman said evacuations had to be carried out by Sunday morning at the latest and should not be attempted during heavy rain and strong winds.

Typhoon Fung-wong has also forced the suspension of rescue operations following the passage of Kalmaegi, one of the strongest typhoons this year.

Heavy rainfall sent torrents of mud down hillsides and into residential areas. Some poorer neighbourhoods were obliterated by the fast-moving flash floods.

At least 204 people are now known to have died in the Philippines as a result of the earlier storm, while more than 100 are still missing.

Five people also died in Vietnam, where strong winds uprooted trees, tore off roofs, and smashed large windows.

Watch: Cars pile up on Philippines streets after major flooding from Typhoon Kalmaegi

The Philippines government declared a state of calamity across the country after Typhoon Kalmaegi and in preparation for the coming storm.

It has given government agencies more power to access emergency funds and fast-track the procurement and delivery of essential goods and services to those in need.

For some Filipinos, the devastation wrought by Typhoon Kalmaegi earlier this week has left them even more anxious about the storm to come.

"We decided to evacuate because the recent typhoon brought floods in our area, and now I just want to keep my family safe," Norlito Dugan told the AFP news agency.

He is among those who have taken shelter in a church in the city of Sorsogon in Luzon.

Another resident, Maxine Dugan said: "I'm here because the waves near my house are now huge, I live near the shore. The winds there are now very strong, and the waves are huge."

The Philippines is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world to tropical cyclones, due to its location on the Pacific Ocean where such weather systems form.

About 20 tropical cyclones form in that region every year, half of which impact the country directly.

Climate change is not thought to increase the number of hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones worldwide.

However, warmer oceans coupled with a warmer atmosphere - fuelled by climate change - have the potential to make those that do form even more intense. That can potentially lead to higher wind speeds, heavier rainfall, and a greater risk of coastal flooding.

King leads two-minute silence at Remembrance Sunday service

PA Media King Charles the Royal Navy uniform of the Admiral of the Fleet, with a red poppy brooch on his coat, during last year's Remembrance Sunday service at the Cenotaph in LondonPA Media
King Charles at last year's service at the Cenotaph in London

King Charles III will lead the nation in a two-minute silence at 11:00 GMT on Sunday during the National Service of Remembrance at the Cenotaph..

He is set to lay a wreath at the monument in central London as part of the service to remember those who died in conflict.

He will be joined by other senior royals and political leaders, including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer at the ceremony in Whitehall.

Some 10,000 armed forces veterans will take part in the Royal British Legion's march-past, alongside around 20 World War Two veterans.

Events will take place around the country to mark Remembrance Sunday, which is observed on the closest Sunday to Armistice Day on 11 November - when World War One ended in 1918.

The prime minister said the nation would pause "to honour all those who have served our country".

"We reflect on the extraordinary courage of our armed forces in the world wars and subsequent conflicts, whose service secured the freedoms we cherish today."

The senior royals attended the annual event organised by the Royal British Legion

On Saturday evening, the King was joined by Prince George, Queen Camilla and Catherine, Princess of Wales, at this year's Festival of Remembrance in London's Royal Albert Hall.

The audience stood and a fanfare played as the royals entered the concert hall to commemorate those who lost their lives in service, on the eve of Remembrance Sunday.

Sir Keir and his wife Victoria also attended the annual event, which this year marked the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two.

It also came 25 years after the end of a decades-long ban on gay people serving in the armed forces, and the event reflected on the discrimination faced by LGBT personnel.

It was believed to be 12-year-old George's first time attending the annual concert. He sat next to his mother, Catherine, who wore a handmade poppy made of silk, glass and other natural materials.

PA Media George and Catherine greet a short woman with red hair as they arrive at the concert hall.PA Media
Princess Catherine was joined by her eldest son George, 12

At the Festival of Remembrance, the Royal Family stood and applauded as the Chelsea Pensioners - retired British Army veterans - entered the auditorium and marched across the stage, while an orchestra performed the Boys Of The Old Brigade.

The Prince of Wales was not present as he was travelling back from Brazil, where he gave a speech to world leaders gathering for the COP30 UN climate change summit and visited a remote island.

Lisa Nandy apologises for breaking rules on football regulator appointment

BBC Lisa Nandy in the Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg studio. She is dressed is in black and wearing a remembrance poppy. BBC

The culture secretary has apologised for breaking rules by failing to declare she had received donations from the man she picked to be England's new football regulator.

On Thursday, the commissioner for public appointments published a report which found that David Kogan had made two separate donations of £1,450 to Lisa Nandy, when she was running to be Labour leader in 2020.

Speaking to the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Nandy said: "We didn't meet the highest standards - that is on me."

The Conservatives have said Nandy's actions were "a serious breach of public trust" and called for a further investigation into Sir Keir Starmer, who also received donations from Mr Kogan.

Mr Kogan, a sports rights executive, was initially longlisted for the football regulator role under the previous Conservative government.

Nandy became involved in the process after Labour won the 2024 general election and she took on the role of culture secretary.

In April, she announced that Mr Kogan would be her preferred pick to fill the vacancy.

However, a month later she removed herself from the appointment process after Mr Kogan revealed to a parliamentary committee that he had donated "very small sums" to Nandy in 2020.

HMRC to review suspending 23,500 child benefit payments

Eve Craven Eve Craven wearing sunglasses looking into the camera with sun shining on the water in the backgroundEve Craven
Eve Craven had her child benefit halted after she went on a five-day trip to New York with her son

The UK's tax body is reviewing its decisions to strip child benefit from about 23,500 claimants after it used travel data to conclude they had left the country permanently.

Normally the benefit runs out after eight weeks living outside the UK, but many people affected complained that HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) had stopped their money after they went on holiday for just a short time.

The move came after MPs on the Treasury Select Committee demanded answers from the tax authority.

HMRC has apologised for any errors and says anyone who thinks their benefits have been stopped incorrectly should contact them.

In September, the government began a crackdown on child benefit fraud which it believes could save £350m over five years.

The new system allows HMRC records to be compared with Home Office international travel data, and the tax authority had used this data to stop payments to thousands of families.

But it is now reviewing all of the cases following a growing number of complaints from people affected who said they had been on holiday, and had returned to the UK after a short time.

Eve Craven went on a five-day break with her son to New York. She told the BBC's Money Box programme that about 18 months after the trip she received a letter saying the child benefit for her son had been stopped.

The letter cited her trip to the US, saying it had no record of her return.

"It gave me a month basically to give them all the requested information to prove that I'd come back to the UK," she said.

"It's just a very big ask for something that they've messed up on, and they should have been able to sort out themselves."

Eve's child benefit has now been reinstated with missing payments backdated.

The issue was first identified in Northern Ireland, where some families had flown out of the UK from Belfast, but then returned to Dublin – which is in the EU - before driving home over the border.

UK and Irish citizens can travel freely into each other's countries under the Common Travel Area arrangement.

There are no routine passport checks when travelling through the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, meaning the UK government has no data to show that someone may have returned to Northern Ireland.

It is not clear how many errors have been made in total, or how.

HMRC told Money Box it would be reviewing all past cases "using PAYE data and where continued UK employment is found, will be reinstating payments and making any back payments necessary".

It is aiming to complete its review by the end of next week.

MPs on the Treasury Select Committee are also now investigating.

Additional reporting by Nick Edser

New flu virus mutation could see 'worst season in a decade'

Getty Images A woman blowing her nose and sneezing into a handkerchief during a rainy autumn day. She is wearing a yellow rain coat and a red umbrella Getty Images

Flu strikes every winter, but something seems to be different this year.

A seasonal flu virus suddenly mutated in the summer; it appears to evade some of our immunity; has kick-started a flu season more than a month early and is a type of flu that history suggests is more severe.

The NHS has now issued a "flu jab SOS" as fears grow that this will add up to a brutal winter.

There is a lot of nuance and uncertainty, but leading flu experts have told me they would not be shocked if this was the worst flu season for a decade.

"We haven't seen a virus like this for a while, these dynamics are unusual," says Prof Nicola Lewis, the director of the World Influenza Centre at the Francis Crick Institute.

"It does concern me, absolutely," she says. "I'm not panicking, but I am worried."

So what's going on? And what can we do?

Scientists track the evolution of influenza viruses because they mutate constantly and the seasonal flu vaccine has to be updated each year to keep up.

This evolution happens in a rhythm known as "shift and drift".

Most of the time the virus drifts along making minor changes and then every so often there is a sudden abrupt shift as the virus mutates substantially.

That happened in June this year.

Seven mutations appeared in a strain of H3N2 seasonal flu and led to a "fast increase" in reports of the mutated virus, says Prof Derek Smith, the director of the centre for pathogen evolution at the University of Cambridge.

Getty Images 3D illustration showing spherical object representing the virus. It is covered in green and orange spikes which represent the two key proteins on the surface of a flu virus. There is one flu virus in focus in the bottom right and more in varying degrees of blur in the background. Getty Images
H3N2 strain of influenza

Unusually, this happened outside flu season in the middle of the northern hemisphere's summer.

"It almost certainly will sweep the world, so from that standpoint, it's something that will come up quickly," says Prof Smith.

By September, as children went back to school, the nights drew in and the temperatures started to drop, there was an uptick in cases.

Exactly what the mutations are doing is still being explored, but they are probably helping the virus to evade some of the immunity we have built up over years of flu infections and vaccines.

The result is the virus is finding it easier to infect people and spread – that is why the flu season is so early in the UK and other countries including Japan.

Line chart showing that positive test for flu have started climbing this year and are almost at 12% compared to the previous bad flu seasons in 2022 and 2024 when they were at around 6% and 3% respectively at the same time. The chart shows that in 2023 and 2024 flu cases didn’t begin to climb steeply until mid-November whereas this year the climb started in September.

If the virus can spread more easily then it does not have to wait for more favourable wintery conditions – when we spend more time indoors with the heating on and the windows shut – to start the flu season.

"We're miles ahead," says Prof Lewis, "I think it's going to be a strong flu season".

If you remember your R numbers from the pandemic (that is the number of people each infected person passes the virus on to), they suggest the new mutant has an edge.

Seasonal flu usually has an R number of around 1.2, while the early estimate for this year is 1.4, said Prof Lewis.

So very roughly, if 100 people had flu, they would pass it to 120 in a typical year and 140 this year.

Worst flu season for a decade?

"It's highly likely it's going to be a bad flu season and it's going to happen quite soon, we're already well into it," says Prof Christophe Fraser, from the Pandemic Sciences Institute at the University of Oxford.

"There are indicators that this could be worse than some of the flu seasons we've seen in the last 10 years."

In a typical flu season around one-in-five of us get infected, but that could be higher this year, he warns.

But all these predictions are still clouded in uncertainty.

Some look to Australia for clues as it had the worst flu season on record this year, although it did not face the same mutated H3N2 we have.

We know the virus is spreading very well in children in the germ-fest that is the school playground.

But the immunity a 10-year-old has developed will be very different from that of their grandparents whose immune defences may have been shaped by six times as many flu seasons.

So, experts will be watching closely as the virus starts infecting older age groups in the coming weeks.

'It's a nastier virus'

History suggests that the form of influenza we are facing this year is more severe, particularly for older people.

There are multiple types of flu and you may have heard some of the names like H1N1 swine flu, which caused a pandemic in 2009, or H5N1 which is the current flu killing birds around the world.

The fresh mutations have happened in a group of H3N2 influenzas.

"H3 is always a hotter virus, it's a nastier virus, it's more impactful on the population," said Prof Lewis.

It is worth remembering that some of us will get flu and develop no symptoms at all, while others get a sudden fever, body aches and exhaustion, but the virus can be deadly in older and more vulnerable groups.

Last year, nearly 8,000 people died from flu, and in the 2022-23 flu season there were nearly 16,000 deaths. The NHS is already anticipating a tough flu season.

So what can we do about it?

The clear advice is to get the seasonal flu vaccine – the NHS in England issued a "flu jab SOS" saying there were 2.4 million vaccine slots available in the next week.

Getty Images Two people in a bland, white clinic room. One is an older man with grey hair, an incredibly intense grin on his face and his left arm is rolled up. A young woman with shoulder length brown hair, wearing a rich blue set of scrubs is standing over him. She holds a shot of flu vaccine in her medical gloved hands. Getty Images

Prof Lewis argues this is "absolutely the most important year" to get vaccinated and that "if you have been called by your GP, please get your flu vaccine as soon as possible".

However, this year's vaccine is not a perfect match to the mutated virus.

The decision on the design of the vaccine was made in February to give enough time to produce the millions of doses necessary - and then the new mutant emerged in June.

"Some protection is better than no protection, but this year is likely to be one of the years where the amount of protection is less than it is in years when the match is better, it's not an ideal situation," said Prof Fraser.

The vaccine will still trigger the body to produce antibodies that can recognise and stick to flu.

But the biggest benefits are anticipated to be in lessening the severity of the disease rather than stopping you get ill or slowing the spread of the virus.

Meanwhile, doctors have been sent advice reminding them that early antiviral treatment reduces the risk of complications from flu.

Japan is also going through an early flu season and has closed schools to help contain outbreaks.

These are not Covid-style lockdowns, but short-term measures the country uses to disrupt the spread of the virus.

Nobody knows for certain what will happen in the coming months.

"It might all go away by next week," says Prof Lewis, "but I don't think it will."

UK military to help protect Belgium after drone incursions

Getty Images Photo shows a sign that reads 'No Drone Zone' near the Brussels-National Airport. A Brussels Airlines passenger jet can be seen coming in to land in the background.Getty Images

UK military personnel and equipment are being sent to Belgium to help it bolster its defences after drone incursions on its airspace, suspected of being carried out by Russia.

The new head of the UK military, Sir Richard Knighton, told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg that his Belgian counterpart asked for assistance earlier this week and that kit and personnel were on the way.

Belgium's main airport Zavantem was forced to close temporarily on Thursday night after drones were spotted nearby. They were also spotted in other locations, including a military base.

"The defence secretary and I agreed that we would deploy our people and our equipment to Belgium to help them," he told the BBC.

Sir Richard did not confirm if the drones were from Russia, but added it was "plausible" they had been ordered by Moscow.

Alongside Nato allies, he added that the UK would help Belgium "by providing our kit and capability" which he said was already being deployed.

It comes after Sir Richard warned in of an "increasingly certain world" in a Sunday Telegraph opinion column to mark Remembrance Sunday.

Citing Russia's invasion of Ukraine, he said: "This conflict reminds us that peace is never guaranteed. It [the UK] must be defended, and sometimes at great cost".

A screenshot showing Sir Richard Knighton - dressed in an RAF senior officers uniform and wearing a poppy - while he spoke to the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg.
Drone incursions over Western Europe could "feasibly" have been sent by the Kremlin, Sir Richard said.

About 3,000 Brussels Airlines passengers were affected by the disruption, and the carrier said it faced "considerable costs" from cancelling or diverting dozens of flights.

German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius and the Belgian security services have said they suspect Russia, but Belgian Defence Minister Theo Francken has previously admitted there is no accompanying evidence.

"At first, drones flying over our military bases were seen as our problem," Francken said earlier this week.

"Now it has become a serious threat affecting civilian infrastructure across multiple European countries."

A number of drone sightings have caused major flight disruptions across Europe in recent months, including in Sweden, Norway and Denmark.

Despite some officials blaming "hybrid warfare" by Russia, the Kremlin has denied any involvement.

Pistorious has suggested the latest sightings could be linked to European Union discussions to use frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine in the form of a €140bn loan.

While there is no public proof of Russia's involvement, suspicions have been fuelled by more serious airspace incursions by Russia in Eastern Europe over recent months, involving fighter jets and larger attack drones.

The UK has recently sent RAF Typhoon jets to take part in defence missions over Poland as part of Nato's mission to bolster the eastern flank in response to incursions.

Lisa Nandy apologises for breaking rules on football regulator

BBC Lisa Nandy in the Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg studio. She is dressed is in black and wearing a remembrance poppy. BBC

The culture secretary has apologised for breaking rules by failing to declare she had received donations from the man she picked to be England's new football regulator.

On Thursday, the commissioner for public appointments published a report which found that David Kogan had made two separate donations of £1,450 to Lisa Nandy, when she was running to be Labour leader in 2020.

Speaking to the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, Nandy said: "We didn't meet the highest standards - that is on me."

The Conservatives have said Nandy's actions were "a serious breach of public trust" and called for a further investigation into Sir Keir Starmer, who also received donations from Mr Kogan.

Mr Kogan, a sports rights executive, was initially longlisted for the football regulator role under the previous Conservative government.

Nandy became involved in the process after Labour won the 2024 general election and she took on the role of culture secretary.

In April, she announced that Mr Kogan would be her preferred pick to fill the vacancy.

However, a month later she removed herself from the appointment process after Mr Kogan revealed to a parliamentary committee that he had donated "very small sums" to Nandy in 2020.

'The number one presenter in the country right now': Claudia Winkleman's unstoppable rise

BBC Claudia Winkleman portrait by Matt MonfrediBBC

There's a famous motto in the cut-throat world of television that many presenters live by: "Don't quit a hit."

It's one of the reasons Claudia Winkleman's departure from Strictly Come Dancing, along with Tess Daly, took many by surprise when it was announced last month.

But in Winkleman's case, the huge Saturday night hit she'd co-hosted for 15 years had actually been eclipsed by an even bigger one.

The Traitors, which Winkleman began fronting in 2022, has become the jewel in the BBC's crown, with its recent celebrity spin-off attracting more than 13 million viewers.

The show has proven a perfect vehicle for Winkleman to showcase her range. She's stern and severe, with a dark side viewers hadn't previously seen, but also silly, camp and warm - always seeming to be genuinely on the side of the contestants.

"It'd be hard to argue against her being the number one presenter in the country right now," says Alex Segal, managing director of talent agency InterTalent.

"Yes, you can of course still make a case for Ant and Dec, but in terms of the number of great shows, her trajectory, the love for her... people watch a show for her as much as they watch it for the format, I think she's in that moment now."

In an average year, viewers see Winkleman bouncing between a Scottish castle, a Hertfordshire ballroom and a train station piano (the latter, for Channel 4’s The Piano, which she also fronts). But another place the 53-year-old might soon be popping up is on her own chat show.

BBC/Ray Burmiston Claudia WinklemanBBC/Ray Burmiston

Industry reports suggest Winkleman is in advanced talks to host her own talk series - with Graham Norton's own production company So Television, which also makes his chat show for the BBC, said to be potentially producing it.

"It's an endorsement of Claudia's meteoric rise over the last few years," says Deadline’s Jake Kanter, who reported the negotiations. "She will be very keen to do this, I'm told it's a personal ambition of hers as well."

Although Winkleman is seemingly being positioned as Norton's successor, there would be no direct clash. Her show would be broadcast in the months The Graham Norton Show - still a huge draw for audiences on TV and socials - is off air.

Kanter notes that Winkleman stepped in for Norton on an episode of his chat show earlier this year. "I'm sure that would've been either a catalyst or starting point for some of these discussions," he says.

"They would've seen what she did, the BBC would've liked it, and I'm sure they have done other work behind the scenes to make sure the format is right with her."

The BBC declined to comment on reports of the chat show when asked by BBC News, which is editorially independent from the corporation. So Television were also approached for a response.

A chat show would, however, be a logical next step given Winkleman's current hot streak, which comes after her three-decade rise through television.

Fringe benefits

Winkleman is the daughter of newspaper editor Eve Pollard and book publisher Barry Winkleman. She studied art history at Cambridge, before launching a TV career in her twenties.

Willing to turn her hand to anything, she became a familiar face in the 1990s on BBC travel series Holiday, and her CV expanded with gameshows, dating formats and children's programmes.

But in typically self-deprecating fashion, Winkleman suggested her haircut had more to do with her success than her on-screen ability.

"You may loathe my fringe, but, and I'm being perfectly serious here, it's given me a career," she wrote in her 2020 memoir, Quite.

"I'm sure I got work because all those times producers were in a room ruminating on the next TV show, handing round digestives and they couldn't remember names, they said, 'We could always get the orange one with the fringe'.

"Believe me, it's not because I read out loud better than anyone else... It's because I have a thing, an epithet, a focus."

Alan Davidson/Shutterstock Eve Pollard and Claudia Winkleman pictured together at The Victoria and Albert Museum Summer Party, London, 21 June 2017Alan Davidson/Shutterstock

Early in her career, Winkleman was also used as a pundit on daytime TV shows. In 1996, for example, she was billed as a "chat-up connoisseur" during a dating segment on Good Morning with Anne and Nick.

It is a fascinating clip. Aged 24, Winkleman's voice is higher than it is today, and her cut-glass English accent more refined. But she was comfortable on camera, and, three decades later, her appeal remains the same now as it was then.

"First and foremost, she's funny," says Frances Taylor, TV previews editor at Radio Times. "She has that natural comic timing and ability to be entertaining.

"And an extra layer on top of that is how self-deprecating that sense of humour is, that's her secret weapon to me, she's always willing to make herself the butt of the joke."

She's also "incredibly authentic", Kanter adds. "When you see her at industry events, she is her TV persona. She's the best friend you'd love to have. She's fun, empathetic, understanding, sharp, and those qualities exude from the screen."

Guy Levy/BBC Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly, Strictly Come Dancing 2025 Episode Number 4 - LIVE SHOWGuy Levy/BBC
Winkleman and Tess Daly will leave Strictly at the end of the current series

Although her salary is no longer published by the BBC, Winkleman is among the corporation's top earners. She was listed as making more than £450,000 in 2017.

But not everything she's done has been a hit.

Britain's Best Home Cook on BBC One, for instance, achieved relatively middling ratings despite the combined star power of Winkleman and Mary Berry.

Meanwhile, some felt she was less successful in Radio 2's Saturday morning slot than Norton, her predecessor. The Spectator described the show as "brainless", suggesting Winkleman "gushed" over her guests and asked obvious questions.

She also hosts Channel 4 quiz show One Question, notes Taylor. "But not many people have heard of it, and not many people watched it."

Away from the screen, London-based Winkleman shares three children with her husband of 25 years, film producer Kris Thykier. She has often spoken of her close-knit family life, including a desire to spend more time at home with her children.

The family have also faced personal struggles. Her daughter Matilda was seriously injured in 2014 when, aged eight, the witch's costume she was wearing for Halloween caught fire while she was out trick-or-treating.

Winkleman, who put out the flames with another parent, took a short break from Strictly, and later campaigned for tougher fire safety laws on fancy dress costumes. Matilda, now 19, has gone on to study at the University of Bath.

'Whatever you do, don't have an opinion'

Unlike some of her peers such as Gary Lineker or Rylan Clark, Winkleman is almost never involved in controversy. She doesn't share her political views and rarely grants interviews with news outlets.

"I do have opinions, but opinions are never a good idea, are they?" she told Gabby Logan's podcast The Mid Point. "Whatever you do, don't have an opinion, is my general view.

"And also, I don't think I've got anything that interesting to say. So I'm happy to talk about napping and my love of eyeliner. I have nothing to add, I really don't."

She has, however, still had to navigate the occasional tricky situation, such as when she was a presenter on the BBC's entertainment bulletin Liquid News.

During a 2003 interview with S Club 7 about their impending break-up, Winkleman asked a delicate question about reports they were unhappy with their earnings. The group's publicist walked into the studio and halted the interview.

Euan Cherry/BBC Alan Carr, sitting in an armchair, speaking to Claudia Winkleman on the Celebrity TraitorsEuan Cherry/BBC
Winkleman (pictured with Alan Carr) has helped make The Traitors one of the BBC's biggest hits

But despite her rise, audiences could be seeing less of Winkleman in the future, and not just because Strictly is losing its Clauditorium.

"The more successful you become, the less work you do, for a variety of reasons," says Segal.

"If you get to a certain level, you become above a lot of stuff. Your rates go up financially. Also, the more work you take on, the more risk you have of failing. And sometimes, the way you limit that risk is to do less."

Segal suspects there are "a lot of shows out there hosted by other people that Claudia was first choice for", adding that Winkleman is "probably inundated daily with new ideas, and she will have to say no to 99% of them" - chat show or not.

Peak Claudia?

Of course, Winkleman's popularity doesn't guarantee she will make a successful chat show host. Norton makes it look easy, but he is a master of his craft.

Even Davina McCall, a highly capable and popular presenter, struggled with her own chat show in 2006 - saying later it was the career move she most regretted.

"Davina was as hot then as Claudia is now, but her chat show didn't work for the audience," said former BBC One controller Peter Fincham on his podcast Insiders.

"Chat shows hosted by people who are currently riding high on television in other sorts of shows, don't necessarily work."

And as Claudia's stardom continues to rise, doing less may help save her from something else - the risk of public fatigue - which Kanter cautions "is a thing" for presenters at her level.

"Are we getting to the point of peak Claudia? Possibly," he says.

"So that is something that I'm sure she and her agent are giving some thought to."

Man City and Liverpool become hunters - how key is Etihad meeting?

Man City and Liverpool become hunters - how key is Etihad meeting?

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot and Manchester City counterpart Pep Guardiola are trying to chase down Arsenal at the top of the Premier League.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Liverpool head coach Arne Slot and Manchester City counterpart Pep Guardiola are trying to chase down Arsenal at the top of the Premier League table

  • Published

Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola described meeting Liverpool in his 1,000th game as a manager as "the destiny of the universe" after their shared domination of English football in recent years.

The past eight Premier League titles have gone to the two superpowers, with City claiming the crown six times in that period, including a historic sequence of four in a row.

City and Liverpool meet at Etihad Stadium on Sunday (16:30 GMT) with the possibility that their Premier League destiny this season will be heavily shaped by the outcome.

To add a twist to the tale, these two long-time Premier League pacesetters now form part of a chasing pack.

Arsenal have had their noses pressed against the window in the face of City and Liverpool's superiority in recent years but, for now at least, the Gunners are the hunted rather than the hunters.

Mikel Arteta's league leaders would have been nine points clear of Guardiola's side and 10 ahead of Liverpool had they not dropped two late points at Sunderland on Saturday - Brian Brobbey's stoppage-time equaliser giving the Black Cats a 2-2 draw.

Title margins in most recent seasons have been so fine that had Arsenal won, the losing team on Sunday - if there is one - may have been left to reflect that the race was starting to get away from them, even after only 11 games.

Now, the door is ajar.

Do Man City & Liverpool have fresh hope?

Arsenal's advantage was starting to look highly significant until the 94th minute at Sunderland, because anything more than a 10-point lead in the Premier League has only been lost three times.

It would have been too early to dismiss teams of the quality of Manchester City and Liverpool, especially as both are showing signs of returning to their formidable best after stumbles earlier this season.

Now, if anything, Arsenal's late concession at the Stadium of Light has upped the ante even further before this latest meeting between City and Liverpool.

In Liverpool, Guardiola has the one opponent he has found it difficult to master - first under Jurgen Klopp and then Arne Slot, whose title winners did the double over him last season.

Guardiola has managed City in 18 Premier League games against Liverpool, winning only five, drawing seven and losing six. In all competitions he has played 24, won six, drawn eight and lost 10.

The former Barcelona and Bayern Munich boss knows what is riding on the latest confrontation, with Arsenal's excellence adding to the pressure.

Guardiola reflected on the chase that City face, saying: "Always you expect that you can be better and they will drop points. All we can do is win our games and get closer."

Dominik Szoboszlai has been outstanding as Liverpool's form has picked up with wins against Aston Villa and Real MadridImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

Dominik Szoboszlai has been outstanding as Liverpool's form has picked up with wins against Aston Villa and Real Madrid

Guardiola knew Arsenal were building a team capable of chasing a championship. He is waiting to see whether they have the stamina to keep up their fast start.

"The last two or three years, after the process to rebuild the club and the team, Arsenal are there. It is exceptional what they are doing for two or three seasons," Guardiola said.

"But it is early November. Nobody wins the title in early November. You can lose it - but nobody wins it.

"I know how quickly things change. One week ago it was Liverpool 'disaster, disaster' and now they win two and it's 'are they back to their best?'

"I'm sure the managers take a little bit more perspective of the situation.

"Always in a season there are ups and down."

Liverpool head coach Slot is equally convinced there can be twists and turns in the title race, but the significance of this game cannot be escaped or underestimated.

Slot said: "At the moment, it's not about looking at the league table. It's just trying to win as many games as you can and give yourself the best position you can.

"But definitely two very good teams are going to play against each other and what the future will bring, we will see.

"Our only focus is ourselves. We have to get consistent improvement, get players fit and then see where it leads to.

"City is a game on its own. Playing away from home against them is one of the most difficult challenges we have throughout the season. These are the games everyone looks forward to."

Slot's return to his title-winning midfield of Ryan Gravenberch, Alexis Mac Allister and Dominik Szoboszlai has given Liverpool a more familiar, winning look in their past two games against Aston Villa and Real Madrid, with Hungarian Szoboszlai a key figure.

"Dominik has been outstanding throughout the season," said Slot, "but the last two games brought even more out of the team and him. I really like his work without the ball, but in these games it was probably even above his own high standards."

If Liverpool can win the midfield battle at Etihad Stadium, they will believe they can flourish - but an improving Manchester City will feel equally confident.

The stage is set for the latest titanic tussle.

Can Haaland finally dominate Van Dijk?

Erling Haaland scored his 27th goal of the season for club and country in City's 4-1 win against his former club Borussia Dortmund in the Champions League on Wednesday.

It has been a remarkable run of form, even by the standards of arguably the most deadly striker in world football.

The irresistible force meets the immovable object when Haaland comes up against Virgil van Dijk on Sunday. This is the personal duel that will go a long way to deciding the destiny of the points.

Norwegian Haaland will be determined to finally end his uncharacteristically indifferent record against Liverpool's Dutch captain.

Since joining City in July 2022, Haaland has started five games against Van Dijk and is still seeking his first win, with three defeats and two draws. The Norwegian's only victory against Liverpool came in the League Cup fourth round in December 2022, when he scored in a 3-2 triumph, but Van Dijk did not play.

Former Liverpool and England defender Stephen Warnock told BBC Sport: "If you look for key areas where the game will be won and lost, from Liverpool's point of view it will be stopping Haaland, but the key to that will all come from the midfield area, and stopping the balls through to him.

"It will be about whether Liverpool's midfield can press City as hard as they did Aston Villa and Real Madrid."

Manchester City's Erling Haaland has been in unstoppable form this season but has yet to dominate Liverpool captain Virgil van DijkImage source, Reuters
Image caption,

Manchester City's Erling Haaland has been in unstoppable form this season but has yet to dominate Liverpool captain Virgil van Dijk.

Warnock added: "Much of any battle between Van Dijk and Haaland will depend on the service Haaland gets, and then it will be between Van Dijk and [Ibrahima] Konate to stop him. It is up to Haaland who his main opponent will be, anyway. If he plays on Konate then there is nothing Van Dijk can do, and vice versa.

"The main thing Liverpool have to do is try to stop the passes at source and prevent the balls being played into him. It will be down to Liverpool's midfielders to prevent City's creative players picking their heads up, like Phil Foden and Rayan Cherki were doing against Bournemouth last weekend, and playing those passes."

Former England striker Chris Sutton believes personal pride will also fuel the confrontation between Haaland and Van Dijk.

"It will be fascinating," says Sutton. "Van Dijk will have that kind of pride where he will be determined to get the better of Haaland, because Liverpool's backline has come in for a lot of criticism.

"Of course, Liverpool are capable of keeping Haaland quiet - they just did the same to a Real Madrid frontline including Kylian Mbappe and Vinicius Junior - but I would take Haaland over any of their attackers at the moment, so this is the ultimate test for Van Dijk."

Inquiry to review rise in young people not working or studying

Getty Images A green sign hangs outside a Job Centre Plus office.Getty Images

An independent review into rising levels of youth inactivity is being launched by the government.

Former Labour Health Secretary Alan Milburn will lead the inquiry into "Neets" - the acronym for one in eight young people who are not in education, employment or training.

According to Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden, the persistently high number of 16-24 year olds falling out of education or work is a "crisis of opportunity" requiring urgent action.

It is not a new problem but the number of young people who are Neet has been rising in recent years and is approaching one million.

A quarter cite long-term sickness or disability as a barrier and the number claiming health and disability benefits is rising too.

The government says Alan Milburn's review will dig into the reasons behind the rise and examine ways of cutting the long-term costs of youth inactivity and getting young people off benefits and into work.

Its conclusions will be published next summer.

The Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, has called the broader benefits system unsustainable and unfair but so far selling welfare reform to Labour backbenchers has proved a political minefield for Number 10.

According to the Department of Work and Pensions, the number of young people claiming UC Health and Employment Support Allowance has risen by more than 50% over the past five years.

Some 80% of young people on the UC Health element currently cite mental health reasons or a neurodevelopmental condition.

Asked whether he thought over-diagnosis was fuelling a mental health crisis among young people, McFadden was quoted by the Sunday Times as saying: "I don't want to play amateur doctor. I want to approach this with sensitivity.

"The question I'm asking is, given the higher reported number of these conditions among young people, what is the best policy response? I don't believe there should be an automatic link between diagnosis and benefits. "

"If we get this right," he added, "the prize is huge: transforming lives and life chances, with the pent-up potential of the next generation firing our economy and building a better future for all.

"We cannot afford to lose a generation of young people to a life on benefits, with no work prospects and not enough hope."

Milburn said his review would be "uncompromising", and expose any failings in employment support, education, skills, health and welfare.

"We cannot stand by and let a generation of young people be consigned to a life without employment or prospects," he said. "It's clear urgent action is needed."

Nearly a million evacuated as Philippines braces for 'super typhoon'

AFP via Getty Images Residents evacuate from their flooded homes due to heavy rain brought by Typhoon Fung-wong in Remedios T Romualdez, on the southern island of Mindanao on November 8, 2025AFP via Getty Images
Dozens of families in Remedios T Romualde, on the island of Mindanao, are among those who have been evacuated ahead of the typhoon's arrival

The Philippines is bracing for the arrival of another potentially devastating typhoon, less than a week after a different storm killed at least 200 people and left a trail of destruction.

Fung-wong, known locally as Uwan, is forecast to intensify to a super typhoon - with sustained winds of at least 185km/h (115mph) - before making landfall on the island of Luzon on Sunday evening local time at the earliest.

The Philippine meteorological service (Pagasa) says the storm will also bring heavy rain and the risk of life-threatening storm surges.

Several schools have either cancelled classes on Monday or moved them online, while Philippine Airlines has cancelled a number of local flights.

Typhoon Fung-wong is expected to weaken rapidly once it makes landfall but will likely remain a typhoon as it travels over Luzon.

Eastern parts of the Philippines have already begun experiencing heavy rains and winds, a Pagasa official said in a briefing on Saturday evening local time.

While much of the country is expected to be impacted, there are particular concerns about those areas that could take a direct hit - including the small island of Catanduanes, which lies off the coast of southern Luzon.

Residents there, as well as in other low-lying and coastal areas, have been urged to move to higher ground ahead of the storm's arrival.

A civil defence spokesman said evacuations had to be carried out by Sunday morning at the latest and should not be attempted during heavy rain and strong winds.

Typhoon Fung-wong has also forced the suspension of rescue operations following the passage of Kalmaegi, one of the strongest typhoons this year.

Heavy rainfall sent torrents of mud down hillsides and into residential areas. Some poorer neighbourhoods were obliterated by the fast-moving flash floods.

At least 204 people are now known to have died in the Philippines as a result of the earlier storm, while more than 100 are still missing.

Five people also died in Vietnam, where strong winds uprooted trees, tore off roofs, and smashed large windows.

Watch: Cars pile up on Philippines streets after major flooding from Typhoon Kalmaegi

The Philippines government declared a state of calamity across the country after Typhoon Kalmaegi and in preparation for the coming storm.

It has given government agencies more power to access emergency funds and fast-track the procurement and delivery of essential goods and services to those in need.

For some Filipinos, the devastation wrought by Typhoon Kalmaegi earlier this week has left them even more anxious about the storm to come.

"We decided to evacuate because the recent typhoon brought floods in our area, and now I just want to keep my family safe," Norlito Dugan told the AFP news agency.

He is among those who have taken shelter in a church in the city of Sorsogon in Luzon.

Another resident, Maxine Dugan said: "I'm here because the waves near my house are now huge, I live near the shore. The winds there are now very strong, and the waves are huge."

The Philippines is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world to tropical cyclones, due to its location on the Pacific Ocean where such weather systems form.

About 20 tropical cyclones form in that region every year, half of which impact the country directly.

Climate change is not thought to increase the number of hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones worldwide.

However, warmer oceans coupled with a warmer atmosphere - fuelled by climate change - have the potential to make those that do form even more intense. That can potentially lead to higher wind speeds, heavier rainfall, and a greater risk of coastal flooding.

Thousands of Chinese lured abroad and forced to be scammers - now Beijing is cracking down

CCTV Rows of security personnel in black clothes and helmets escorting suspects from a plane. Each suspect, wearing bright blue attire and a black mask over their heads, is flanked by two guards.CCTV
Chinese state media offers a rare inside look at the crackdown on scam operations that have entrapped thousands of Chinese nationals and others

"Should I feel anything?" asks the beady-eyed man, sitting in a padded cell with handcuffs around his wrists.

He's being grilled by Chinese investigators about the time he allegedly ordered a stranger to be killed - a human offering to celebrate his sworn brotherhood with a business partner.

"Wasn't he a living, breathing person?" an investigator asks.

"I didn't feel much," the man maintains.

The scene may sound like it came straight out of a crime drama. In fact, it is part of a documentary on Chinese state media - a look inside the workings of the justice system almost unheard of in a country where court proceedings are largely kept out the public eye.

The handcuffed man answering questions is Chen Dawei, a member of the infamous Wei family, one of several powerful mafia groups that for years operated with impunity in Myanmar's border town of Laukkaing.

His confession forms just one part of a months-long propaganda push by Chinese officials. It both warns Chinese people of South East Asia's billion-dollar scam industry, and highlights the Chinese government's crackdown on the men behind an industry which has trapped thousands, and stolen billions.

The message China wants to send, as one investigator puts it, is clear: "It's to warn other people, no matter who you are, where you are, as long as you commit such heinous crimes against Chinese people, you will pay the price."

Or, to use a Chinese idiom: kill the chicken to scare the monkey.

Paying the price

There are few chickens bigger than the Weis, Lius, Mings and Bais - Godfather-esque families who rose to power in Laukkaing in the early 2000s.

Under their rule, the impoverished backwater was transformed into a flashy hub of casinos and red-light districts.

More recent are the scam farms - which hold people against their will, forcing them to defraud strangers online, or face brutal punishment or even death. Many of those trapped were Chinese and targeted people in China.

But the families' empires came crashing down in 2023, when Myanmar authorities arrested them and handed them to China. Since then, Chinese courts have tried them for crimes ranging from fraud to human trafficking to homicide.

CCTV Chen Dawei wearing a blue prison vest, with his wrists in handcuffs and sitting on a chair behind bars. There are Chinese subtitles at the bottom of the screen and the CCTV logo on top corners.CCTV
Chen Dawei, from the Wei family mafia, confesses to his crimes on national television

Examples are now being made out of the families: 11 members of the Ming clan and five of the Bais have been sentenced to death, while dozens have been given lengthy jail terms. Prosecution is under way for the Lius and the Weis.

Their ignominious falls from grace are clear in the documentaries they feature in, from the glint of their handcuffs to the colour of their prison uniforms.

It is a far cry from the lives they were living just two years ago.

The rise of Myanmar's scam clans

The godfathers of Laukkaing rose to power after Min Aung Hlaing, who now heads Myanmar's military government, led an operation to oust the town's then-dominant warlord.

The military leader had been looking for co-operative allies, and Bai Suocheng - then a deputy of the warlord - fitted the bill.

Bai was appointed the chairman of Laukkaing district and his family came to command a 2,000-strong militia, Chinese media reported.

In the power vacuum left by these changes, a handful of families swooped in, securing military and political power.

According to Chinese investigators, the Wei family had one member of parliament and another military camp commander. Meanwhile, the Lius controlled key infrastructure like water and electricity and exerted strong influence over local security forces.

CCTV Bai Suocheng wearing a blue flannel shirt, speaking into a microphone. Sitting around him are rows of people. CCTV
Bai Suocheng became the chairman of the Laukkaing district in 2010

For years they made their money through gambling and prostitution.

But more recently they expanded to cyberscam operations, with each family controlling dozens of scam compounds and casinos that raked in billions of dollars.

While the families lived large with grand banquets and luxury cars, a culture of abominable violence thrived behind the walls of their scam compounds, Chinese authorities said.

Testimonies collected from freed workers point to a common pattern of abuse: fingers chopped off with knives, zaps of electric batons and regular beatings. Unco-operative workers were locked in small dark rooms and starved or beaten until they gave in.

China's war on the 'scamdemic'

Many of the Chinese workers had been lured there with lucrative job offers - no doubt tempting amid China's economic slowdown and high youth unemployment.

Horror stories of such scam centres have seeped into daily chatter in China, from taxi rides to social media and pop culture.

No More Bets, a 2023 blockbuster about Chinese people trafficked to a foreign scam farm, kept millions of Chinese tourists away from Thailand - which has gained a reputation for being a transit hub to scam centres in Myanmar and Cambodia.

Getty Images A viewer walks by a poster of movie "No More Bets" Getty Images
No More Bets, a blockbuster about Chinese nationals being lured to scam centres abroad, swept box offices in 2023

In January this year, the national spotlight was on Wang Xing, a small-time Chinese actor who had flown to Thailand for an acting gig, only to be taken to a scam centre across the border in Myanmar.

His family's search for him went viral and he was ultimately rescued.

But Wang is in the lucky minority. Many Chinese people are still looking for their loved ones who have disappeared into South East Asia's scam centres.

"My cousin was lured there four or five years ago. We haven't heard from him at all. My aunt is in tears every day, it's hard to describe her current condition," a Weibo user wrote last month.

Selina Ho, associate professor specialising in Chinese politics at the National University of Singapore, tells the BBC that "by publicising the most recent crackdown, Chinese authorities are aiming to calm domestic sentiments and reassure the families of victims".

EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock Wang Xing sitting on the right of a table in a white sweater and shaved head. Beside him is a person in navy uniform. Sitting behind are police officers in their uniforms.EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock
In January Chinese actor Wang Xing had flown to Thailand for what he had thought was an acting gig, only to be taken to a scam centre in Myanmar

The UN estimates that hundreds of thousands of people are still trapped in scam centres worldwide.

Much to Beijing's chagrin, those running many such scam centres are often Chinese themselves.

This is common knowledge among Chinese citizens. "Once you're abroad, the people you should least trust are your own countrymen," reads a comment on Weibo.

"The fact that Chinese nationals are the masterminds behind many of these operations has been deeply damaging to China's image on the international stage," Ivan Franceschini, co-author of Scam: Inside Southeast Asia's Cybercrime Compounds, tells the BBC.

As anxieties rise at home, Chinese authorities are eager to show their resolve in eradicating these massive scam networks.

Since 2023, Chinese and Myanmar authorities have arrested more than 57,000 Chinese nationals for their role in cyberscams, state media reported.

CCTV Screenshot from a CCTV documentary showing security camera footage of a scam centre, with workers sitting at rows of chairs, each looking at their computer screens.CCTV
In the Bai family's scam centres, like many others in South East Asia, workers are trapped and forced to defraud victims online

And they've made it clear that it's not just the Godfathers they're after.

In October, China announced the prosecution of another syndicate which they described as a "new generation of power" in Laukkaing that's "no less violent" than the infamous families.

In - yet another - state media documentary, a Chinese official investigating this syndicate recalled what his team leader had told him: "If this case can't be solved, there will be a permanent stain on your career."

For all the effort that China is putting into its crackdown and the ensuing publicity, the numbers offer some optimism: cyberscams reported in China have declined steadily over the past year, and authorities say such crimes have been "effectively curbed".

As one official told documentary viewers, investigating scam gangs in Myanmar has made him realise "how happy we are in China, and how important a sense of security is to Chinese people".

Additional reporting by Kelly Ng

King to lead two-minute silence at Remembrance Sunday service

PA Media King Charles the Royal Navy uniform of the Admiral of the Fleet, with a red poppy brooch on his coat, during last year's Remembrance Sunday service at the Cenotaph in LondonPA Media
King Charles at last year's service at the Cenotaph in London

King Charles III will lead the nation in a two-minute silence at 11:00 GMT on Sunday during the National Service of Remembrance at the Cenotaph..

He is set to lay a wreath at the monument in central London as part of the service to remember those who died in conflict.

He will be joined by other senior royals and political leaders, including Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer at the ceremony in Whitehall.

Some 10,000 armed forces veterans will take part in the Royal British Legion's march-past, alongside around 20 World War Two veterans.

Events will take place around the country to mark Remembrance Sunday, which is observed on the closest Sunday to Armistice Day on 11 November - when World War One ended in 1918.

The prime minister said the nation would pause "to honour all those who have served our country".

"We reflect on the extraordinary courage of our armed forces in the world wars and subsequent conflicts, whose service secured the freedoms we cherish today."

The senior royals attended the annual event organised by the Royal British Legion

On Saturday evening, the King was joined by Prince George, Queen Camilla and Catherine, Princess of Wales, at this year's Festival of Remembrance in London's Royal Albert Hall.

The audience stood and a fanfare played as the royals entered the concert hall to commemorate those who lost their lives in service, on the eve of Remembrance Sunday.

Sir Keir and his wife Victoria also attended the annual event, which this year marked the 80th anniversary of the end of World War Two.

It also came 25 years after the end of a decades-long ban on gay people serving in the armed forces, and the event reflected on the discrimination faced by LGBT personnel.

It was believed to be 12-year-old George's first time attending the annual concert. He sat next to his mother, Catherine, who wore a handmade poppy made of silk, glass and other natural materials.

PA Media George and Catherine greet a short woman with red hair as they arrive at the concert hall.PA Media
Princess Catherine was joined by her eldest son George, 12

At the Festival of Remembrance, the Royal Family stood and applauded as the Chelsea Pensioners - retired British Army veterans - entered the auditorium and marched across the stage, while an orchestra performed the Boys Of The Old Brigade.

The Prince of Wales was not present as he was travelling back from Brazil, where he gave a speech to world leaders gathering for the COP30 UN climate change summit and visited a remote island.

Experts say flu season could be worst for a decade

Getty Images A woman blowing her nose and sneezing into a handkerchief during a rainy autumn day. She is wearing a yellow rain coat and a red umbrella Getty Images

Flu strikes every winter, but something seems to be different this year.

A seasonal flu virus suddenly mutated in the summer; it appears to evade some of our immunity; has kick-started a flu season more than a month early and is a type of flu that history suggests is more severe.

The NHS has now issued a "flu jab SOS" as fears grow that this will add up to a brutal winter.

There is a lot of nuance and uncertainty, but leading flu experts have told me they would not be shocked if this was the worst flu season for a decade.

"We haven't seen a virus like this for a while, these dynamics are unusual," says Prof Nicola Lewis, the director of the World Influenza Centre at the Francis Crick Institute.

"It does concern me, absolutely," she says. "I'm not panicking, but I am worried."

So what's going on? And what can we do?

Scientists track the evolution of influenza viruses because they mutate constantly and the seasonal flu vaccine has to be updated each year to keep up.

This evolution happens in a rhythm known as "shift and drift".

Most of the time the virus drifts along making minor changes and then every so often there is a sudden abrupt shift as the virus mutates substantially.

That happened in June this year.

Seven mutations appeared in a strain of H3N2 seasonal flu and led to a "fast increase" in reports of the mutated virus, says Prof Derek Smith, the director of the centre for pathogen evolution at the University of Cambridge.

Getty Images 3D illustration showing spherical object representing the virus. It is covered in green and orange spikes which represent the two key proteins on the surface of a flu virus. There is one flu virus in focus in the bottom right and more in varying degrees of blur in the background. Getty Images
H3N2 strain of influenza

Unusually, this happened outside flu season in the middle of the northern hemisphere's summer.

"It almost certainly will sweep the world, so from that standpoint, it's something that will come up quickly," says Prof Smith.

By September, as children went back to school, the nights drew in and the temperatures started to drop, there was an uptick in cases.

Exactly what the mutations are doing is still being explored, but they are probably helping the virus to evade some of the immunity we have built up over years of flu infections and vaccines.

The result is the virus is finding it easier to infect people and spread – that is why the flu season is so early in the UK and other countries including Japan.

Line chart showing that positive test for flu have started climbing this year and are almost at 12% compared to the previous bad flu seasons in 2022 and 2024 when they were at around 6% and 3% respectively at the same time. The chart shows that in 2023 and 2024 flu cases didn’t begin to climb steeply until mid-November whereas this year the climb started in September.

If the virus can spread more easily then it does not have to wait for more favourable wintery conditions – when we spend more time indoors with the heating on and the windows shut – to start the flu season.

"We're miles ahead," says Prof Lewis, "I think it's going to be a strong flu season".

If you remember your R numbers from the pandemic (that is the number of people each infected person passes the virus on to), they suggest the new mutant has an edge.

Seasonal flu usually has an R number of around 1.2, while the early estimate for this year is 1.4, said Prof Lewis.

So very roughly, if 100 people had flu, they would pass it to 120 in a typical year and 140 this year.

Worst flu season for a decade?

"It's highly likely it's going to be a bad flu season and it's going to happen quite soon, we're already well into it," says Prof Christophe Fraser, from the Pandemic Sciences Institute at the University of Oxford.

"There are indicators that this could be worse than some of the flu seasons we've seen in the last 10 years."

In a typical flu season around one-in-five of us get infected, but that could be higher this year, he warns.

But all these predictions are still clouded in uncertainty.

Some look to Australia for clues as it had the worst flu season on record this year, although it did not face the same mutated H3N2 we have.

We know the virus is spreading very well in children in the germ-fest that is the school playground.

But the immunity a 10-year-old has developed will be very different from that of their grandparents whose immune defences may have been shaped by six times as many flu seasons.

So, experts will be watching closely as the virus starts infecting older age groups in the coming weeks.

'It's a nastier virus'

History suggests that the form of influenza we are facing this year is more severe, particularly for older people.

There are multiple types of flu and you may have heard some of the names like H1N1 swine flu, which caused a pandemic in 2009, or H5N1 which is the current flu killing birds around the world.

The fresh mutations have happened in a group of H3N2 influenzas.

"H3 is always a hotter virus, it's a nastier virus, it's more impactful on the population," said Prof Lewis.

It is worth remembering that some of us will get flu and develop no symptoms at all, while others get a sudden fever, body aches and exhaustion, but the virus can be deadly in older and more vulnerable groups.

Last year, nearly 8,000 people died from flu, and in the 2022-23 flu season there were nearly 16,000 deaths. The NHS is already anticipating a tough flu season.

So what can we do about it?

The clear advice is to get the seasonal flu vaccine – the NHS in England issued a "flu jab SOS" saying there were 2.4 million vaccine slots available in the next week.

Getty Images Two people in a bland, white clinic room. One is an older man with grey hair, an incredibly intense grin on his face and his left arm is rolled up. A young woman with shoulder length brown hair, wearing a rich blue set of scrubs is standing over him. She holds a shot of flu vaccine in her medical gloved hands. Getty Images

Prof Lewis argues this is "absolutely the most important year" to get vaccinated and that "if you have been called by your GP, please get your flu vaccine as soon as possible".

However, this year's vaccine is not a perfect match to the mutated virus.

The decision on the design of the vaccine was made in February to give enough time to produce the millions of doses necessary - and then the new mutant emerged in June.

"Some protection is better than no protection, but this year is likely to be one of the years where the amount of protection is less than it is in years when the match is better, it's not an ideal situation," said Prof Fraser.

The vaccine will still trigger the body to produce antibodies that can recognise and stick to flu.

But the biggest benefits are anticipated to be in lessening the severity of the disease rather than stopping you get ill or slowing the spread of the virus.

Meanwhile, doctors have been sent advice reminding them that early antiviral treatment reduces the risk of complications from flu.

Japan is also going through an early flu season and has closed schools to help contain outbreaks.

These are not Covid-style lockdowns, but short-term measures the country uses to disrupt the spread of the virus.

Nobody knows for certain what will happen in the coming months.

"It might all go away by next week," says Prof Lewis, "but I don't think it will."

Inquiry to review rising levels of youth inactivity

Getty Images A green sign hangs outside a Job Centre Plus office.Getty Images

An independent review into rising levels of youth inactivity is being launched by the government.

Former Labour Health Secretary Alan Milburn will lead the inquiry into "Neets" - the acronym for one in eight young people who are not in education, employment or training.

According to Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden, the persistently high number of 16-24 year olds falling out of education or work is a "crisis of opportunity" requiring urgent action.

It is not a new problem but the number of young people who are Neet has been rising in recent years and is approaching one million.

A quarter cite long-term sickness or disability as a barrier and the number claiming health and disability benefits is rising too.

The government says Alan Milburn's review will dig into the reasons behind the rise and examine ways of cutting the long-term costs of youth inactivity and getting young people off benefits and into work.

Its conclusions will be published next summer.

The Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, has called the broader benefits system unsustainable and unfair but so far selling welfare reform to Labour backbenchers has proved a political minefield for Number 10.

According to the Department of Work and Pensions, the number of young people claiming UC Health and Employment Support Allowance has risen by more than 50% over the past five years.

Some 80% of young people on the UC Health element currently cite mental health reasons or a neurodevelopmental condition.

Asked whether he thought over-diagnosis was fuelling a mental health crisis among young people, McFadden was quoted by the Sunday Times as saying: "I don't want to play amateur doctor. I want to approach this with sensitivity.

"The question I'm asking is, given the higher reported number of these conditions among young people, what is the best policy response? I don't believe there should be an automatic link between diagnosis and benefits. "

"If we get this right," he added, "the prize is huge: transforming lives and life chances, with the pent-up potential of the next generation firing our economy and building a better future for all.

"We cannot afford to lose a generation of young people to a life on benefits, with no work prospects and not enough hope."

Milburn said his review would be "uncompromising", and expose any failings in employment support, education, skills, health and welfare.

"We cannot stand by and let a generation of young people be consigned to a life without employment or prospects," he said. "It's clear urgent action is needed."

Storm declared 'super typhoon' as it hits Philippines

AFP via Getty Images Residents evacuate from their flooded homes due to heavy rain brought by Typhoon Fung-wong in Remedios T Romualdez, on the southern island of Mindanao on November 8, 2025AFP via Getty Images
Dozens of families in Remedios T Romualde, on the island of Mindanao, are among those who have been evacuated ahead of the typhoon's arrival

The Philippines is bracing for the arrival of another potentially devastating typhoon, less than a week after a different storm killed at least 200 people and left a trail of destruction.

Fung-wong, known locally as Uwan, is forecast to intensify to a super typhoon - with sustained winds of at least 185km/h (115mph) - before making landfall on the island of Luzon on Sunday evening local time at the earliest.

The Philippine meteorological service (Pagasa) says the storm will also bring heavy rain and the risk of life-threatening storm surges.

Several schools have either cancelled classes on Monday or moved them online, while Philippine Airlines has cancelled a number of local flights.

Typhoon Fung-wong is expected to weaken rapidly once it makes landfall but will likely remain a typhoon as it travels over Luzon.

Eastern parts of the Philippines have already begun experiencing heavy rains and winds, a Pagasa official said in a briefing on Saturday evening local time.

While much of the country is expected to be impacted, there are particular concerns about those areas that could take a direct hit - including the small island of Catanduanes, which lies off the coast of southern Luzon.

Residents there, as well as in other low-lying and coastal areas, have been urged to move to higher ground ahead of the storm's arrival.

A civil defence spokesman said evacuations had to be carried out by Sunday morning at the latest and should not be attempted during heavy rain and strong winds.

Typhoon Fung-wong has also forced the suspension of rescue operations following the passage of Kalmaegi, one of the strongest typhoons this year.

Heavy rainfall sent torrents of mud down hillsides and into residential areas. Some poorer neighbourhoods were obliterated by the fast-moving flash floods.

At least 204 people are now known to have died in the Philippines as a result of the earlier storm, while more than 100 are still missing.

Five people also died in Vietnam, where strong winds uprooted trees, tore off roofs, and smashed large windows.

Watch: Cars pile up on Philippines streets after major flooding from Typhoon Kalmaegi

The Philippines government declared a state of calamity across the country after Typhoon Kalmaegi and in preparation for the coming storm.

It has given government agencies more power to access emergency funds and fast-track the procurement and delivery of essential goods and services to those in need.

For some Filipinos, the devastation wrought by Typhoon Kalmaegi earlier this week has left them even more anxious about the storm to come.

"We decided to evacuate because the recent typhoon brought floods in our area, and now I just want to keep my family safe," Norlito Dugan told the AFP news agency.

He is among those who have taken shelter in a church in the city of Sorsogon in Luzon.

Another resident, Maxine Dugan said: "I'm here because the waves near my house are now huge, I live near the shore. The winds there are now very strong, and the waves are huge."

The Philippines is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world to tropical cyclones, due to its location on the Pacific Ocean where such weather systems form.

About 20 tropical cyclones form in that region every year, half of which impact the country directly.

Climate change is not thought to increase the number of hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones worldwide.

However, warmer oceans coupled with a warmer atmosphere - fuelled by climate change - have the potential to make those that do form even more intense. That can potentially lead to higher wind speeds, heavier rainfall, and a greater risk of coastal flooding.

Ever feel the need to switch off? Your vagus nerve might hold the key

Alamy Illustration showing brain and active vagus nerve (tenth cranial nerve or CN X) und human organs of a human adult femaleAlamy

It's the body's superhighway that carries information from your brain to your major organs. You might not have a clue it exists - let alone that you might need to train it.

But a quick scroll through my social media and there's a whole array of tips on how to heal it, stimulate it, even reset it - all to apparently reduce stress and anxiety levels.

Poking your ear with what looks like a rubber toothbrush, moving your eyes from side to side, tapping your body or gargling water while wearing a weighted vest - these are just some of the techniques being recommended to train that nerve and improve your wellbeing.

With our stress levels sky-high, and burnout on the rise among under-35s, it's no wonder many of the posts on socials have gone viral with millions of hits.

Some of these methods might seem a bit absurd. But is it really possible to train your mighty internal messenger, and could that actually bring quick relief to life's stresses?

@cariad.connection Eirian Collinge sitting outside in a park@cariad.connection
Yoga therapist Eirian Collinge uses breathwork, eye movements, and tapping in her practice

I decided to find out by coming to small candle-lit studio in Stockport town centre - where I find myself in a small group, humming loudly.

Humming, I am told, can help stimulate our vagus nerve and slow down our heart rate. And I do start to feel a bit more relaxed. I can feel the low hum vibrating in my body and my brain seems a bit less busy.

At this somatics class, yoga therapist Eirian Collinge guides us through a session of gentle moves combining deep breathing, rocking and swaying.

While she doesn't buy into all the techniques on socials, Eirian says there are parts of her practice that use breathwork, eye movements and tapping.

But, she says, "it's a process" and there's no quick fix. It is rooted in a theory that suggests we can calm down our nervous system by connecting with our bodies.

Some scientists say this is an over-simplification of our complex internal systems. But others say it can be effective in helping us find a snippet of calm in a busy, intense world.

Sarah, who is lying down just a few mats away from me, started coming to this class about a year ago. She says the practice has been life-changing.

"I actually cried after the first session," she says. "It felt like the first time my brain has ever switched off."

The 35-year-old, who struggles with her mental health, says it feels like she is "flossing her brain".

Xander Xander, a 37 year old man is sat on a on a sofa in shorts and a running top. He's laughing and he's got a muddy legXander
Xander says he now knows what to do when he is overwhelmed, like going for a run in the muddy hills

Sarah's partner, Xander, agrees. It's made him more aware of his feelings.

"As a man," he explains, "We are not really programmed to do that.

"I've struggled with depression for most of my adult life, but now, instead of trying to fix my thoughts I can sit with my emotions and accept them.

"If things get a bit much for me I can peel back a little from work. Go for a run, get out in the hills, for example.

"Understanding my nervous system is a huge part of that."

The vagus - Latin for "wandering" - starts in the brain as two main branches - left and right - that connect to every major organ, constantly relaying vital information back and forth.

It's part of the autonomic nervous system, which controls things we don't think about, like breathing, heart rate and digestion.

Illustration show how vagus nerve runs from brain to organs and the processes it helps with, heart rate, breathing and digestion.

The system, in part, is made up of:

  • the sympathetic nervous system - which triggers "fight or flight", preparing us for anything from being chased by a wild animal to that all important job interview, and
  • the parasympathetic nervous system - which relies on the vagus nerve to help put the brakes on and brings the body back into a state of calm

If one of these is out of sync we start to see problems. But can we really reset the balance ourselves, by attempting to activate the vagus nerve?

Consultant psychiatrist Prof Hamish McAllister-Williams is sceptical.

"We have good evidence vagus nerve stimulation can help with neurological disorders like epilepsy and mental illnesses like treatment-resistant depression," he says, "but that comes from a device that is fitted in the body - a bit like a pacemaker which sends pulses of electrical energy to the vagus nerve."

That device sends mild electrical stimulations through the vagus nerve to the brain, sparking a release of chemicals like serotonin and dopamine which help us regulate our mood.

While vagus nerve stimulation inside the body requires invasive surgery and is available for a small cohort of patients on the NHS, there is now a growing market for wearable - non-invasive - technology.

These devices, which cost anything from £200 to more than £1,000, tend to be clipped on the ear, worn round the neck or placed on the chest.

@lucylambertco Lucy Lambert wearing stimulation device on her neck@lucylambertco
Lucy was burnt out and felt she had nowhere to turn before discovering these devices

"The are some credible studies that suggest these external stimulators can potentially impact on brain activity," Prof McAllister-Williams explains. "But there is a lot less evidence than for the internal devices."

With external devices, the electrical impulses need to travel through skin, tissue, muscle and fat so it's not as simple and direct as a stimulator in the body.

After she experienced burnout, Lucy Lambert says such non-invasive vagus nerve stimulators helped her.

The mother-of-three left her job as a primary school teacher because she was so completely "stressed, tired and anxious".

"I had been running on empty for so long - I didn't realise," Lucy says. "Then it hit. The to-do list of life became too much.

"The mental load was so huge I couldn't get out of bed."

After exhausting various medical routes and feeling like she was getting nowhere, Lisa's brother recommended one of these devices which vibrates, claiming to send low-level electrical pulses to the vagus nerve, often through the skin in the neck or ear area.

"I noticed that when I started to feel overwhelmed, I would get a headache first.

"I would then wear a device for 10 minutes twice a day; the pain from the headache would go, and my whole body would calm down.

"The vibrations, they really do something."

She says the devices didn't fix burnout but they helped her create "conditions where real healing can happen".

@lucylambertco Vagus nerve stimulators@lucylambertco
Lucy has a range of non-invasive vagus nerve stimulators which she uses along with taking time out and slowing down her pace of life

Dr Chris Barker, who works in pain management, says this area of medicine is still developing.

He says there is a growing understanding of the importance of the vagus nerve, but while there is "clear evidence" around the impact an unbalanced nervous system can have on everything from our mental health to our heart rate and our ability to digest food, it does not mean we have the all the answers - yet - on how to correct the problems.

"It's really rational to focus on something that's problematic - and try to fix it.

"Our bodies are, of course, really complex, and sometimes the problem we see may be part of an imbalance in a wider system."

It's not about going to extremes, he says. It's "about figuring out what works for you" - and that can often take time.

It's worth noting if you have underlying heart or respiratory conditions you should seek medical advice before trying to rebalance or stimulate your nervous system.

Now, several years after experiencing burnout, Lucy, 47, is launching her own business helping others to build emotional resilience and confidence.

She still uses her devices daily, meditates, and regularly checks in with how she is feeling. "The devices make me rest and switch off."

But she agrees it is difficult to know whether it's the devices making the difference or the fact she is taking some much-needed time out.

There is a lack of robust scientific evidence behind these devices but for Lucy, they've played an important part in her recovery. Understanding her nervous system and the importance of the vagus nerve has empowered her, she says.

"It's helped me take ownership of my own mental health and wellbeing, and that's massive."

How this year’s Christmas ads ‘let real life in,’ from cost of living to masculinity

John Lewis A son and father looking at each other and smiling in the John Lewis advertJohn Lewis
This year’s John Lewis Christmas advert centres a father-son relationship for the first time

It's still only early November, but Christmas adverts are already coming thick and fast.

While they feature the usual sprinkle of festive cheer, experts say this year’s ads have also been tapping into some of 2025’s biggest themes, from the cost of living to masculinity.

The idea of hardworking families trying to get by is at the centre of Asda’s advert, which depicts the Grinch trying to do his Christmas shopping.

Meanwhile, John Lewis’s festive advert explores masculinity and emotion, leading some analysts to suggest it has undertones of one the year's biggest TV shows, Netflix drama Adolescence.

“What's striking this year is how the Christmas adverts are letting real life in,” said retail expert Kate Hardcastle.

TV historian Dr Richard Wallace adds that if retailers can find a way to “incorporate a topical social issue in a careful way”, it can lead to an advert “really cutting through”.

The BBC has looked at the Christmas adverts that are out so far - and asked experts what they tell us about the past year.

John Lewis ‘responds to the crisis of masculinity’

The John Lewis Christmas advert - seen by many as marking the start of the festive season - was beamed into our homes on Tuesday.

Set to Alison Limerick's 1990s track Where Love Lives, reimagined by British artist Labrinth, it's the first time the retailer has centred an ad around a father-son relationship.

The ad depicts a teenage boy, who struggles to express his emotions for his dad, using music as a way to connect with him.

We see the dad discovering an unopened Christmas present with his name on it - a vinyl record of Where Love Lies - which he immediately puts on.

As the song fills the room, he's transported back to a 90s club, dancing with his friends, before seeing flashbacks of his son as a baby.

John Lewis A father opening a present under a Christmas tree, with his son watchingJohn Lewis
Family and memories feature heavily in this year's John Lewis advert

When we return to the present day, the teenage son and dad share a slightly embarrassed hug and laugh together.

Reacting to the ad, retail expert Catherine Shuttleworth said it has "Adolescence written all over it".

"Especially with its focus on the lack of communication between father and son," she told BBC News.

Dr Wallace agreed, saying the advert had given a classic Christmas message of togetherness "a 2025 twist".

"There is clearly a desire to incorporate topical issues into this year's adverts," he said.

"John Lewis has responded to the crisis of masculinity, so evocatively addressed in one of this year's standout TV dramas Adolescence, to make a touching piece that speaks to the challenges of navigating inter-generational male relationships."

John Lewis's director of brand Rosie Hanley told BBC News that the script had been planned in January, before Adolescence came out.

But the drama's huge success "gave us reassurance that we were telling a story that was really relevant in 2025," she said.

'An affordable Christmas'

Asda The Grinch featured in Asda's advertAsda
Asda has enlisted The Grinch for its festive campaign

Other retailers appear to have nodded to the cost of living.

The Asda advert, set to the song Let it Snow, follows The Grinch reluctantly doing his festive shop.

But the green cynic changes his tune once he's wowed by some of the low price products on offer.

For Dr Wallace, the ad sends a message that "an affordable Christmas" is possible, by "placating the cash-strapped 'Grinch' that threatens to spoil everyone's Christmas".

This message is echoed in Lidl's Christmas advert, which focuses on generosity and small acts of kindness rather than abundance and excess.

The ad also has a real-world action point, by pointing viewers towards Lidl's Toy Bank scheme.

According to Lidl, the nationwide scheme has seen over 250,000 gifts donated since launch.

M&S Dawn French in the M&S Christmas advertM&S
Dawn French and her fairy character are back for M&S's Christmas advert

The theme of community and affordable, practical cheer, is also present in the M&S food advert.

The ad sees the return of Dawn French as a festive fairy, and she also appears as herself.

We see the actress and comedian stuck in gridlocked traffic, but with a wave of the fairy's wand, a delivery truck is converted into a Christmas party.

The festive snacks served at the party are modest and a far cry from the tables of food that we've seen in past adverts.

But not all of the retailers have toned it down this year.

Beauty retailer Sephora's advert stars none other than Mariah Carey as an angel.

She later transforms into a Santa Claus bodysuit, and takes off in a sleigh filled with bags of shiny gifts.

Experts say that as a whole, this year's adverts are reflecting the fact many shoppers will be worrying about costs this Christmas.

“Value framing is part of the campaign this year,” said Shuttleworth. “And of course that’s relevant this Christmas.”

"We're seeing themes that reflect the world as we actually live it," agrees Hardcastle.

"Audiences don't want fantasy; they want recognition. It's proof that even at Christmas, the stories that move us most are the ones that see us."

Sainsbury's The BFG in Sainsbury's Christmas advertSainsbury's
Sainsbury's Christmas advert brings back the BFG

Elsewhere, a number of retailers have gone for fictional characters. Again, this is being seen as a deliberate move given the economic backdrop.

"If you're struggling and someone's showing you a glossy life on screen, it's not going to make you feel particularly great," Hardcastle said.

In the Aldi advert, its mascot Kevin the Carrot is back. This time, he is set to pull our heart strings as he pops the question to his beloved Katie the Carrot.

Not to be outdone, Sainsbury's advert also features a famous animated character - Roald Dahl's beloved Big Friendly Giant.

And Argos has also gone for the same characters as last year - cartoon duo Connie the doll and Trevor the dinosaur - who are joined this year by Inbetweeners star Simon Bird.

'The mood of the nation'

Aldi Kevin the Carrot is back holding a Marry Christmas signAldi
Kevin the Carrot is back in Aldi's Christmas advert

Advertisers are set to spend a total £12bn during this festive period, according to the latest Advertising Association and World Advertising Research Centre data.

John Lewis, for its part, doesn't disclose how much it spends on its Christmas advert, but Ms Hanley said they are "confident it pays off".

And experts say it's about more than just getting consumers through the doors.

"Fundamentally, the Christmas advert is about emphasising a sense of community and togetherness," Dr Wallace told BBC News.

Dr Wallace said that while the ads are still made for broadcast television, they are also now viral internet events, and are shared widely online.

The challenge for retailers, he said, is reflecting the "mood of the nation" when Christmas adverts are planned months in advance.

"If they can get it right, they can really become TV moments," he said.

"They can set the tone for that particular year, and shape the way you remember that Christmas."

One man's campaign for Commonwealth war graves restoration in Iraq

Ben Soppit Damaged headstones in Iraq Ben Soppit
Ben Soppitt has been raising awareness about the conditions of Iraq's war cemeteries

This Remembrance Sunday, Ben Soppitt will be honouring the sacrifice of his grandfather at Basra War Cemetery in Iraq. He'll be among the very few, honouring many.

His small service will be in stark contrast to the large, solemn ceremony at the Cenotaph in London. Nor do the monuments in Iraq bear any resemblance to the carefully maintained war memorials and manicured cemeteries all across Europe.

Ben Soppitt says the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) has "catastrophically failed" in its duty to honour the dead in Iraq. He says it "shames the men and women who gave their lives in Iraq".

More than 50,000 soldiers from the UK and Commonwealth nations lost their lives in Iraq in both World Wars. Most were casualties of the Mesopotamian Campaign during World War One, when British and Commonwealth troops fought the Ottoman empire. And most of those killed were Indian nationals.

Ben Soppitt's grandfather, Gunner Joseph Soppitt, is among those buried at Basra War Cemetery. He died in 1941 of dysentery when British forces briefly fought there during World War Two. His grave – like the rest of the nearly 3,000 men buried there – has no official marking. Others buried there include a recipient of the Victoria Cross, George Wheeler, and the grandfather of the actress Charlotte Rampling – Sapper Harris Johnson Rampling.

Ben Soppitt Ben Soppitt's grandfather Gunner Joseph SoppittBen Soppitt
Ben Soppitt's grandfather, Gunner Joseph Soppitt, is among those buried at Basra War Cemetery

The Commonwealth War Grave Commission cleared the site of all headstones after many had been vandalised or fallen into disrepair. There is a long-term plan to replace them, but the CWGC withdrew from Iraq in the 1990s for security reasons. Since then, Basra War Cemetery has become a deserted wasteland, used by the locals for football or to dispose of rubbish. Basra is not alone. There are more than a dozen such sites across the country.

Some sites have weathered the heat and dust of Iraq better than others. The giant Basra War Memorial nearby, the third largest in the world, is still largely intact. It commemorates more than 40,000 soldiers. 7,385 are individually named on panels – all the British personnel and Indian officers. But 3,256 Indian nationals who served in the ranks are only listed by unit and number.

Ben Soppitt Ben Soppitt pictured with children playing football at the war grave site Ben Soppitt
Basra War Cemetery has become a deserted wasteland with children playing football

CWGC has promised to address this "inequality in commemoration", which has favoured British nationals. Ben Soppit says "this historical wrong cannot be completed without addressing the Indian casualties in Iraq". He argues that its another compelling reason why it should resume its work there.

Over the past two weeks, Ben Soppitt has been visiting most of the CWGC sites in Iraq to honour the dead - but also to highlight what he believes is Britain's failure to do the same. He's been documenting what he's seen on social media.

He found the CWGC site in Mosul to be in a similar state to the one in Basra.

"Nothing is left but the pedestals of the memorials and a few of the stones from them," he wrote online. "If my opinion of the CWGC was low before it's reached a new depth".

Ben Soppitt A deserted war grave site in IraqBen Soppitt
Over the past two weeks, Ben Soppitt has been visiting most of the CWGC sites in Iraq

The Commonwealth War Grave Commission says it has detailed plans in place to restore its sites in Iraq. It says it has already carried out some renovation work but adds that "determining the right time to undertake full restoration is a complex judgement". One of the key determinations, it says, is safety and security in the region. It follows UK foreign office advice for Iraq which currently advises against travel to the country. It says that it keeps the public informed of its work on its website.

But there is clearly frustration at the pace of progress. Baroness Emma Nicholson too highlighted the state of the CWGC sites at Basra during one of her visits in 2007. She says she understands that as a government body the CWGC must heed the Foreign Office's travel advice. But she adds they "must do more".

For Ben Soppitt and his family, the campaign for the CWGC to do more is deeply personal. He had hoped to visit the site of his grandfather's grave in Basra with his own father. But he's now passed away.

"I don't intend to pass this on to my own sons," Ben says. "So I'm doing everything I can to have these men and women properly commemorated before I pass on too."

The Papers: 'Victory for our heroes' and 'Davina: Lorraine saved me'

The headline on the front page of the Express reads: “Victory for our heroes”.
A red poppy features on every front page this morning, with a number of the papers running special editions for Remembrance Sunday. Catherine, Princess of Wales, is front and centre of the Express, photographed wearing a poppy alongside Prince George at the Royal Albert Hall. The paper leads with an exclusive story detailing the Ministry of Defence's announcement that they will cover the costs of veterans making overseas commemoration trips.
The headline on the front page of the Mirror reads: “Medals for nuke test heroes”.
In the Sunday edition of the Mirror, the paper details its own "campaign victory", which they say will see an increased number of veterans who were "involved in H-bomb testing" rewarded with a nuclear test medal.
The headline on the front page of the Sun reads: “Davina: Lorraine saved me”.
Television presenter Davina McCall is pictured on the front page of the Sun, after she revealed on Instagram that she had been diagnosed with breast cancer. McCall, 58, said she had found a lump a few weeks ago. She was encouraged to get it examined after seeing posters from Lorraine Kelly's Change + Check campaign that urged women to "check your breasts".
The headline on the front page of the Star reads: “Davina: My breast cancer battle”.
McCall "gets 'all-clear' after shock diagnosis" says the Star, noting that the celebrity says that she will not need chemotherapy following the removal of the cancerous lump in her breast.
The headline on the front page of the Observer reads: “Generation game”.
The Observer's political editor Rachel Sylvester has commented on how Chancellor Rachel Reeves's "two up, two down" budget could affect young people in the UK, leading with the headline "Generation game".
The headline on the front page of the Telegraph reads: “BBC to say sorry for doctored Trump speech”.
"BBC to say sorry for doctored Trump speech" reads the headline on the Sunday Telegraph, referring to concerns in Parliament and elsewhere over a report by the BBC's Panorama programme on US President Donald Trump and the Capitol riot in 2021. BBC chairman Samir Shah is due to "provide a full response to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Monday", the BBC said.
The headline on the front page of the Times reads: “BBC's apology for doctoring Trump speech”.
The Times leads with a similar headline: "BBC's apology for doctoring Trump speech". Newman's cartoon pokes fun at the recent mistaken prisoner releases, depicting prison guards looking at an Advent calendar with the caption "All the doors are open".
The headline on the front page of the Mail reads: “Boris's blast at 'arrogant' Nick Robinson for claiming bias row is an anti-BBC plot”.
Former Prime Minister Boris Johnson has condemned BBC presenter Nick Robinson for "claiming bias row is an anti-BBC plot", the Mail on Sunday reports. Speaking on Radio 4's flagship Today programme on Saturday, Robinson had said there was a "genuine concern about editorial standards and mistakes" at the BBC but there was also a "political campaign by people who want to destroy the organisation". Johnson called Robinson's remarks "ridiculous" and "arrogant".
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Bend It Like Beckham director has a sequel - and a spin on a Christmas classic

Christmas Karma A picture of Gurinder Chadha in a Santa hatChristmas Karma
Gurinder Chadha has written and directed a new festive film, Christmas Karma

What does Bollywood have to do with Christmas?

I put this question to film director Gurinder Chadha and the answer, it turns out, is quite a lot.

"Bollywood is all about singing, dancing, joy," she said. "So I think that for me, the idea of making a joyful Christmas film, with singing and dancing, it comes naturally for this time of year."

And that's exactly what Chadha - best known for directing the 2002 film Bend It Like Beckham - has just done.

With a cast including Kunal Nayyar, Hugh Bonneville, Pixie Lott, Boy George, Danny Dyer, Charithra Chandran and Eva Longoria, her new musical film Christmas Karma is a Bollywood spin on Charles Dickens' classic, A Christmas Carol.

But Chadha says it's also "a British film" celebrating a wide range of musical traditions.

The 65-year-old, who wrote and directed it, has also been busy working on her sequel to Bend It Like Beckham. This summer, she confirmed to the BBC that a revival is in the works.

Speaking to me at a central London hotel earlier this week, she indicated she was feeling the pressure to get it right.

“I’m working on the characters. These are big boots to fill,” she said. “I don’t want to rush it. The last thing I want is people to go, 'it's not as good as the original'.”

Christmas Karma Kunal Nayyar as a contemporary Scrooge, called Mr Sood, in a scene from Christmas KarmaChristmas Karma
The Big Bang Theory's Kunal Nayyar stars as a contemporary Scrooge, called Mr Sood

First published in 1843, A Christmas Carol tells the story of the miserly Ebenezer Scrooge, who hates Christmas, but is transformed after a series of ghostly visits.

In Christmas Karma, we are met with a modern-day Scrooge called Mr Sood, who goes on a similar journey of redemption.

Nayyar, best known for playing Raj in The Big Bang Theory, plays Mr Sood - but says he is nothing like Scrooge in real life. "I love Christmas," he tells me. "Who doesn't love Christmas? Of course I love Christmas."

The actor said he always celebrated Christmas growing up in New Delhi. "Indians have a beautiful procurement to celebrate all festivals," he said.

Christmas Karma A picture of Hugh Bonneville as a ghost in Christmas KarmaChristmas Karma
Hugh Bonneville is barely recognisable as the ghost of Jacob Marley

The first ghost to visit Mr Sood is his former partner, Jacob Marley, played by Paddington and Downton Abbey star Hugh Bonneville.

He's also visited by American singer and actor Billy Porter, who acts as The Ghost of Christmas Present.

Porter says that up until this film, he was "definitely" more of a Scrooge.

But Bonneville professes to be a huge Christmas fan. He also rejects suggestions that November is too early for a festive film to come out in cinemas.

"I used to be Bah Humbug about it, and want Christmas decorations to go up on, frankly, Boxing Day, but I'm getting earlier and earlier," he said.

"Although I do draw the line at certain Christmas songs being played too early, I think they should be banned."

As a sidenote, I had to ask Bonneville about whether he's planning to go and see the new Paddington musical. "I'm going next week," he told me. "I'm looking forward to seeing that equally timeless story being told."

Christmas Karma Danny Dyer and Kunal Nayyar in a black cab in Christmas KarmaChristmas Karma
In the film, Danny Dyer plays a cabbie who drives around Kunal Nayyar's Scrooge

In Christmas Karma, Mr Sood is depicted as being among the 28,000 Ugandan Asian refugees who came to the UK in 1972 after being given 90 days to leave the African country by military dictator Idi Amin.

In later life, we see Mr Sood being dismissive of refugees seeking asylum in the UK. "The rich ones always forget their roots," one bystander remarks.

But after being guided by the ghosts of Christmas - played by Eva Longoria, Billy Porter, and Boy George - Mr Sood reconnects with his past.

Chadha says the inspiration for her Scrooge came from a “Grinch-like” family member who used to criticise them for celebrating Christmas. “‘I don’t know why you’re all doing this. You’re not white’,” she says he would tell them.

Later, she came to understand that, like Mr Sood, he was “carrying the trauma” of having been forced to leave his home country as a child.

But she also says she was inspired by certain politicians.

“It also made sense to me to make my Sood say slightly right-wing things, because when I was writing it [during lockdown], we did have a government that had members of the Asian community who would have a similar background,” she said.

Christmas Karma Leo Suter and Pixie Lott with a group of children in Christmas KarmaChristmas Karma
Leo Suter and Pixie Lott star as a couple celebrating Christmas with their children

For Leo Suter, who plays Mr Sood's underpaid employee Bob Crachett, there’s an important message he hopes people take away from the film.

“Dickens's work has lasted… a very long time, because of the message at the core of it. The original text is that empathy, morality, generosity is better than being a Scrooge and being miserly,” he said.

“And what the film does so well is totally bring that spirit into quite a complex and nuanced discussion of migration and racial things going on in modern Britain,” he said.

The film also has a Bhangra Christmas song, and a tribute to George Michael with Bollywood superstar Priyanka Chopra Jonas singing a desi take on Last Christmas.

“I feel like it's got all the things that you want in a Christmas film,” adds Pixie Lott, who plays Suter's on-screen wife Mary Crachett.

“It makes you cry, it makes you laugh. It's so feel good, but it also touches you in a way that makes you think about your own life.”

Christmas Karma is in cinemas from 14 November.

Honesty boxes should be dying like cash. But many are flourishing

BBC Annabelle Cox carrying a tray of cookies is standing in front of her honesty box which looks like a small, white shed. There is an open sign, a slot for cash, a digital doorbell and a garland of autumn leaves in view on the box.BBC
Annabelle says some customers travel for miles to buy her cookies from her honesty box

Honesty boxes: traditionally found on rural lay-bys, offering local produce like eggs and apples in exchange for a small donation.

With cash use falling, they might be expected to disappear - a roadside relic as we all pull onto the technology superhighway.

But, in fact, many are flourishing.

Cash payments are being replaced with online transfers via QR codes, and small traders are using honesty boxes as part of their marketing on social media.

That online marketing has a payoff. Some are finding that instead of just attracting passing trade, customers are making a special journey to buy from them.

'Part of my community'

On the side of an A-road between Canterbury and the north Kent coast is a small but colourful honesty box.

Packed inside the Blean Bakery Box are cookies for £3.50 in an assortment of unusual flavours, and tubs of dunkable cookies with dips from candyfloss to brownie - all baked by Annabelle Cox.

Tray of cookies in the Blean Bakery Box with a sign that reads: "£3.50 chunky NYC cookies; Kinder stuffed; Pistachio stuffed".

The 36-year-old founded Dunk Cookies just before the pandemic. She installed the honesty box earlier this year and it has brought in enough money to pay the rent at her bakery on a nearby industrial estate.

"The honesty box means we can be part of my community - bringing something to them, rather than the business being solely online," says the affable Annabelle.

Various food festivals gave her a following and some local custom. Now, she opens the honesty box every day at 9am until locking it back up at 8pm. Despite plans to scale back the bakery next year, to spend more time with her young son, the honesty box will remain.

It is on a school run route, can empty within hours, and is regularly refilled.

Annabelle films the re-stock and posts it on Instagram. The coverage has brought in customers from further afield. Annabelle also posts pictures of her adding up the takings, to test the honesty or dishonesty of customers.

Almost without exception, they pay. One customer who arrived during the BBC's visit filled a bag, scanned the QR code, and promised to transfer the money once she had a signal. There was no doubt she would.

Annabelle says 90% of customers pay online after scanning the QR code inside the box. Many other honesty boxes around the UK use the same technology, some even leaving a calculator inside for customers to tot up the cost of what they take.

Anyone who is confused can press the video doorbell, for a hotline to Annabelle's bakery a few miles away.

That also helps with security, as does the fact the box is placed outside the window of the local pub - The Hare at Blean.

Matthew Hayden stands behind the bar of his pub wearing a chef's top branded with The Hare pub name.
Matthew says he's keen to support a fellow local, small business

Matthew Hayden, the chef-owner of the pub, says he is happy to support another local business, and lends the space for the box free of charge. Occasionally, it brings in custom for him too.

Having spent time in Byron Bay in Australia, where he saw honesty boxes at the end of people's driveways, he says he liked the idea of seeing something similar at home.

At the box outside the window, and inside at the bar, customers are mostly, and increasingly, using their smartphones to pay.

Both take cash - the honesty box has envelopes and a letterbox for change. But Matthew says payment for food and drinks in the pub is now "almost entirely" by phone.

Half of UK adults now pay for things by tapping their phone, according to the latest data from banking trade body, UK Finance.

Graham Mott, director of strategy at Link - which oversees cash access and the UK's ATM network - says that has been a rapid change, meaning many shoppers now only go out with a phone and carry coins less.

Casual payments, such as charity donations, honesty boxes, crafts stalls and rewarding buskers, are increasingly made digitally.

"There are positives, as traders don't have to rely on customers having available change. They may also have the opportunity to upsell items at higher prices," he says.

But some charities are worried that the disappearance of cash will shut some people out of all types of retail.

Affordable food club charity The Bread-and-Butter Thing says many of its younger members use notes and coins, alongside banking apps, to make their limited budgets stretch further.

Social following

As well as phones as a method of paying, people are discovering honesty boxes by scrolling through social media. Some small businesses, like Annabelle's have spotted the opportunity.

Bakeries, in particular, seem to have taken to the idea of advertising via honesty boxes - the contents of which are filmed, pictured and posted online. A quick search on social media quickly highlights bright young bakers with bright boxes.

But the range of produce in honesty boxes goes far beyond cookies and cakes. Oysters and dog treats are among the more unusual contents for sale at these stalls.

In Scotland, where honesty boxes are commonly found, a golf course allowed people to pay for their round by dropping money into a collection box.

Kathryn Martin A selection of flowers are in a white bucket with 50p a bunch painted on the side.Kathryn Martin
When Kathryn catalogued honesty boxes, payment was in cash

Even so, the traditional honesty box lives on in many areas. Many farms and smallholdings sell eggs, seasonal vegetables and fruit for cash in collection boxes.

For the most part, this is still the image conjured up when people talk of honesty boxes they have used.

These images were literally the source of a collection by photographer Kathryn Martin, who spent a couple of years charting these quirky stalls during travels around Suffolk, Essex, Somerset and Sussex.

In her notes, she says she loves an honesty box "not just for the delight of the home grown and the childish excitement and memories of playing shop but the discovery of the simple, unpretentious, local and handmade in a world saturated with high tech, fake news and globalisation".

Kathryn Martin A small, shelved honesty box containing eggs, leeks and a cauliflower, and with a cash box fixed to the front, stands next to a footpath sign in what appears to be a rural setting.Kathryn Martin
Roadside honesty boxes often contain local produce and eggs as captured by Kathryn

She also enjoys seeing the stalls themselves, and the ice cream tubs inside them to collect customers' cash.

But she says QR codes change the dynamics of an honesty box, and the sense of trust.

Perhaps, as with other technology, it brings a loss of innocence.

"On the whole, most people are honest," she writes about the traditional honesty box.

"Maybe it's the uncertainty of being watched from behind that twitching curtain or perhaps it's the nostalgic feel-good factor from playing shop, or the untainted natural beauty of their rural locations that remind us that honesty is indeed the best policy."

Additional reporting by Connie Bowker

Experts say this could be the worst flu season for a decade - here's why

Getty Images A woman blowing her nose and sneezing into a handkerchief during a rainy autumn day. She is wearing a yellow rain coat and a red umbrella Getty Images

Flu strikes every winter, but something seems to be different this year.

A seasonal flu virus suddenly mutated in the summer; it appears to evade some of our immunity; has kick-started a flu season more than a month early and is a type of flu that history suggests is more severe.

The NHS has now issued a "flu jab SOS" as fears grow that this will add up to a brutal winter.

There is a lot of nuance and uncertainty, but leading flu experts have told me they would not be shocked if this was the worst flu season for a decade.

"We haven't seen a virus like this for a while, these dynamics are unusual," says Prof Nicola Lewis, the director of the World Influenza Centre at the Francis Crick Institute.

"It does concern me, absolutely," she says. "I'm not panicking, but I am worried."

So what's going on? And what can we do?

Scientists track the evolution of influenza viruses because they mutate constantly and the seasonal flu vaccine has to be updated each year to keep up.

This evolution happens in a rhythm known as "shift and drift".

Most of the time the virus drifts along making minor changes and then every so often there is a sudden abrupt shift as the virus mutates substantially.

That happened in June this year.

Seven mutations appeared in a strain of H3N2 seasonal flu and led to a "fast increase" in reports of the mutated virus, says Prof Derek Smith, the director of the centre for pathogen evolution at the University of Cambridge.

Getty Images 3D illustration showing spherical object representing the virus. It is covered in green and orange spikes which represent the two key proteins on the surface of a flu virus. There is one flu virus in focus in the bottom right and more in varying degrees of blur in the background. Getty Images
H3N2 strain of influenza

Unusually, this happened outside flu season in the middle of the northern hemisphere's summer.

"It almost certainly will sweep the world, so from that standpoint, it's something that will come up quickly," says Prof Smith.

By September, as children went back to school, the nights drew in and the temperatures started to drop, there was an uptick in cases.

Exactly what the mutations are doing is still being explored, but they are probably helping the virus to evade some of the immunity we have built up over years of flu infections and vaccines.

The result is the virus is finding it easier to infect people and spread – that is why the flu season is so early in the UK and other countries including Japan.

Line chart showing that positive test for flu have started climbing this year and are almost at 12% compared to the previous bad flu seasons in 2022 and 2024 when they were at around 6% and 3% respectively at the same time. The chart shows that in 2023 and 2024 flu cases didn’t begin to climb steeply until mid-November whereas this year the climb started in September.

If the virus can spread more easily then it does not have to wait for more favourable wintery conditions – when we spend more time indoors with the heating on and the windows shut – to start the flu season.

"We're miles ahead," says Prof Lewis, "I think it's going to be a strong flu season".

If you remember your R numbers from the pandemic (that is the number of people each infected person passes the virus on to), they suggest the new mutant has an edge.

Seasonal flu usually has an R number of around 1.2, while the early estimate for this year is 1.4, said Prof Lewis.

So very roughly, if 100 people had flu, they would pass it to 120 in a typical year and 140 this year.

Worst flu season for a decade?

"It's highly likely it's going to be a bad flu season and it's going to happen quite soon, we're already well into it," says Prof Christophe Fraser, from the Pandemic Sciences Institute at the University of Oxford.

"There are indicators that this could be worse than some of the flu seasons we've seen in the last 10 years."

In a typical flu season around one-in-five of us get infected, but that could be higher this year, he warns.

But all these predictions are still clouded in uncertainty.

Some look to Australia for clues as it had the worst flu season on record this year, although it did not face the same mutated H3N2 we have.

We know the virus is spreading very well in children in the germ-fest that is the school playground.

But the immunity a 10-year-old has developed will be very different from that of their grandparents whose immune defences may have been shaped by six times as many flu seasons.

So, experts will be watching closely as the virus starts infecting older age groups in the coming weeks.

'It's a nastier virus'

History suggests that the form of influenza we are facing this year is more severe, particularly for older people.

There are multiple types of flu and you may have heard some of the names like H1N1 swine flu, which caused a pandemic in 2009, or H5N1 which is the current flu killing birds around the world.

The fresh mutations have happened in a group of H3N2 influenzas.

"H3 is always a hotter virus, it's a nastier virus, it's more impactful on the population," said Prof Lewis.

It is worth remembering that some of us will get flu and develop no symptoms at all, while others get a sudden fever, body aches and exhaustion, but the virus can be deadly in older and more vulnerable groups.

Last year, nearly 8,000 people died from flu, and in the 2022-23 flu season there were nearly 16,000 deaths. The NHS is already anticipating a tough flu season.

So what can we do about it?

The clear advice is to get the seasonal flu vaccine – the NHS in England issued a "flu jab SOS" saying there were 2.4 million vaccine slots available in the next week.

Getty Images Two people in a bland, white clinic room. One is an older man with grey hair, an incredibly intense grin on his face and his left arm is rolled up. A young woman with shoulder length brown hair, wearing a rich blue set of scrubs is standing over him. She holds a shot of flu vaccine in her medical gloved hands. Getty Images

Prof Lewis argues this is "absolutely the most important year" to get vaccinated and that "if you have been called by your GP, please get your flu vaccine as soon as possible".

However, this year's vaccine is not a perfect match to the mutated virus.

The decision on the design of the vaccine was made in February to give enough time to produce the millions of doses necessary - and then the new mutant emerged in June.

"Some protection is better than no protection, but this year is likely to be one of the years where the amount of protection is less than it is in years when the match is better, it's not an ideal situation," said Prof Fraser.

The vaccine will still trigger the body to produce antibodies that can recognise and stick to flu.

But the biggest benefits are anticipated to be in lessening the severity of the disease rather than stopping you get ill or slowing the spread of the virus.

Meanwhile, doctors have been sent advice reminding them that early antiviral treatment reduces the risk of complications from flu.

Japan is also going through an early flu season and has closed schools to help contain outbreaks.

These are not Covid-style lockdowns, but short-term measures the country uses to disrupt the spread of the virus.

Nobody knows for certain what will happen in the coming months.

"It might all go away by next week," says Prof Lewis, "but I don't think it will."

'The best friend you'd love to have' - How Claudia Winkleman conquered TV

BBC Claudia Winkleman portrait by Matt MonfrediBBC

There's a famous motto in the cut-throat world of television that many presenters live by: "Don't quit a hit."

It's one of the reasons Claudia Winkleman's departure from Strictly Come Dancing, along with Tess Daly, took many by surprise when it was announced last month.

But in Winkleman's case, the huge Saturday night hit she'd co-hosted for 15 years had actually been eclipsed by an even bigger one.

The Traitors, which Winkleman began fronting in 2022, has become the jewel in the BBC's crown, with its recent celebrity spin-off attracting more than 13 million viewers.

The show has proven a perfect vehicle for Winkleman to showcase her range. She's stern and severe, with a dark side viewers hadn't previously seen, but also silly, camp and warm - always seeming to be genuinely on the side of the contestants.

"It'd be hard to argue against her being the number one presenter in the country right now," says Alex Segal, managing director of talent agency InterTalent.

"Yes, you can of course still make a case for Ant and Dec, but in terms of the number of great shows, her trajectory, the love for her... people watch a show for her as much as they watch it for the format, I think she's in that moment now."

In an average year, viewers see Winkleman bouncing between a Scottish castle, a Hertfordshire ballroom and a train station piano (the latter, for Channel 4’s The Piano, which she also fronts). But another place the 53-year-old might soon be popping up is on her own chat show.

BBC/Ray Burmiston Claudia WinklemanBBC/Ray Burmiston

Industry reports suggest Winkleman is in advanced talks to host her own talk series - with Graham Norton's own production company So Television, which also makes his chat show for the BBC, said to be potentially producing it.

"It's an endorsement of Claudia's meteoric rise over the last few years," says Deadline’s Jake Kanter, who reported the negotiations. "She will be very keen to do this, I'm told it's a personal ambition of hers as well."

Although Winkleman is seemingly being positioned as Norton's successor, there would be no direct clash. Her show would be broadcast in the months The Graham Norton Show - still a huge draw for audiences on TV and socials - is off air.

Kanter notes that Winkleman stepped in for Norton on an episode of his chat show earlier this year. "I'm sure that would've been either a catalyst or starting point for some of these discussions," he says.

"They would've seen what she did, the BBC would've liked it, and I'm sure they have done other work behind the scenes to make sure the format is right with her."

The BBC declined to comment on reports of the chat show when asked by BBC News, which is editorially independent from the corporation. So Television were also approached for a response.

A chat show would, however, be a logical next step given Winkleman's current hot streak, which comes after her three-decade rise through television.

Fringe benefits

Winkleman is the daughter of newspaper editor Eve Pollard and book publisher Barry Winkleman. She studied art history at Cambridge, before launching a TV career in her twenties.

Willing to turn her hand to anything, she became a familiar face in the 1990s on BBC travel series Holiday, and her CV expanded with gameshows, dating formats and children's programmes.

But in typically self-deprecating fashion, Winkleman suggested her haircut had more to do with her success than her on-screen ability.

"You may loathe my fringe, but, and I'm being perfectly serious here, it's given me a career," she wrote in her 2020 memoir, Quite.

"I'm sure I got work because all those times producers were in a room ruminating on the next TV show, handing round digestives and they couldn't remember names, they said, 'We could always get the orange one with the fringe'.

"Believe me, it's not because I read out loud better than anyone else... It's because I have a thing, an epithet, a focus."

Alan Davidson/Shutterstock Eve Pollard and Claudia Winkleman pictured together at The Victoria and Albert Museum Summer Party, London, 21 June 2017Alan Davidson/Shutterstock

Early in her career, Winkleman was also used as a pundit on daytime TV shows. In 1996, for example, she was billed as a "chat-up connoisseur" during a dating segment on Good Morning with Anne and Nick.

It is a fascinating clip. Aged 24, Winkleman's voice is higher than it is today, and her cut-glass English accent more refined. But she was comfortable on camera, and, three decades later, her appeal remains the same now as it was then.

"First and foremost, she's funny," says Frances Taylor, TV previews editor at Radio Times. "She has that natural comic timing and ability to be entertaining.

"And an extra layer on top of that is how self-deprecating that sense of humour is, that's her secret weapon to me, she's always willing to make herself the butt of the joke."

She's also "incredibly authentic", Kanter adds. "When you see her at industry events, she is her TV persona. She's the best friend you'd love to have. She's fun, empathetic, understanding, sharp, and those qualities exude from the screen."

Guy Levy/BBC Claudia Winkleman and Tess Daly, Strictly Come Dancing 2025 Episode Number 4 - LIVE SHOWGuy Levy/BBC
Winkleman and Tess Daly will leave Strictly at the end of the current series

Although her salary is no longer published by the BBC, Winkleman is among the corporation's top earners. She was listed as making more than £450,000 in 2017.

But not everything she's done has been a hit.

Britain's Best Home Cook on BBC One, for instance, achieved relatively middling ratings despite the combined star power of Winkleman and Mary Berry.

Meanwhile, some felt she was less successful in Radio 2's Saturday morning slot than Norton, her predecessor. The Spectator described the show as "brainless", suggesting Winkleman "gushed" over her guests and asked obvious questions.

She also hosts Channel 4 quiz show One Question, notes Taylor. "But not many people have heard of it, and not many people watched it."

Away from the screen, London-based Winkleman shares three children with her husband of 25 years, film producer Kris Thykier. She has often spoken of her close-knit family life, including a desire to spend more time at home with her children.

The family have also faced personal struggles. Her daughter Matilda was seriously injured in 2014 when, aged eight, the witch's costume she was wearing for Halloween caught fire while she was out trick-or-treating.

Winkleman, who put out the flames with another parent, took a short break from Strictly, and later campaigned for tougher fire safety laws on fancy dress costumes. Matilda, now 19, has gone on to study at the University of Bath.

'Whatever you do, don't have an opinion'

Unlike some of her peers such as Gary Lineker or Rylan Clark, Winkleman is almost never involved in controversy. She doesn't share her political views and rarely grants interviews with news outlets.

"I do have opinions, but opinions are never a good idea, are they?" she told Gabby Logan's podcast The Mid Point. "Whatever you do, don't have an opinion, is my general view.

"And also, I don't think I've got anything that interesting to say. So I'm happy to talk about napping and my love of eyeliner. I have nothing to add, I really don't."

She has, however, still had to navigate the occasional tricky situation, such as when she was a presenter on the BBC's entertainment bulletin Liquid News.

During a 2003 interview with S Club 7 about their impending break-up, Winkleman asked a delicate question about reports they were unhappy with their earnings. The group's publicist walked into the studio and halted the interview.

Euan Cherry/BBC Alan Carr, sitting in an armchair, speaking to Claudia Winkleman on the Celebrity TraitorsEuan Cherry/BBC
Winkleman (pictured with Alan Carr) has helped make The Traitors one of the BBC's biggest hits

But despite her rise, audiences could be seeing less of Winkleman in the future, and not just because Strictly is losing its Clauditorium.

"The more successful you become, the less work you do, for a variety of reasons," says Segal.

"If you get to a certain level, you become above a lot of stuff. Your rates go up financially. Also, the more work you take on, the more risk you have of failing. And sometimes, the way you limit that risk is to do less."

Segal suspects there are "a lot of shows out there hosted by other people that Claudia was first choice for", adding that Winkleman is "probably inundated daily with new ideas, and she will have to say no to 99% of them" - chat show or not.

Peak Claudia?

Of course, Winkleman's popularity doesn't guarantee she will make a successful chat show host. Norton makes it look easy, but he is a master of his craft.

Even Davina McCall, a highly capable and popular presenter, struggled with her own chat show in 2006 - saying later it was the career move she most regretted.

"Davina was as hot then as Claudia is now, but her chat show didn't work for the audience," said former BBC One controller Peter Fincham on his podcast Insiders.

"Chat shows hosted by people who are currently riding high on television in other sorts of shows, don't necessarily work."

And as Claudia's stardom continues to rise, doing less may help save her from something else - the risk of public fatigue - which Kanter cautions "is a thing" for presenters at her level.

"Are we getting to the point of peak Claudia? Possibly," he says.

"So that is something that I'm sure she and her agent are giving some thought to."

Women are hiding their boyfriends online and there's more than one reason why

Tawana Musvaburi A woman wearing a white top and has her hair down is sat enjoying a glass of Prosecco. She is clinking her glass with a mysterious male looking hand sat to the other side of her. Tawana Musvaburi
There are often signs her partner exists - like his hand in the corner of this photo - but Tawana never posts her boyfriend's face on her socials

Tawana Musvaburi's 33,000 Instagram followers may feel like they know all about her life - but most don't know what her partner looks like.

There might be subtle signs she has a boyfriend, like the back of a head, or two clinking wine glasses at dinner, but the 24-year-old says she has no intention of posting his face.

"I'm just girl-coded," Tawana says. "As a woman, you want to come across strong, like, 'I've got my stuff together'."

The influencer has curated a brand that doesn't include a boyfriend.

"You don't want any part to feel like it's been helped by a man. It brings me more pleasure to say, 'I did this myself'."

And her stance isn't changing any time soon - even if she and her boyfriend take things to the next stage she says, "a ring's still not enough for me to post my relationship".

Tawana Musvaburi A woman is sat on a sofa in a white bath robe, having a cup of tea whilst wearing a face mask and reading the newspaper. Tawana Musvaburi
Tawana works full-time as an influencer

That Vogue article

Tawana is one of many women reluctant to hard-launch their relationship online and social media users are picking up on it.

So much so that last month, British Vogue published an article titled Is Having a Boyfriend Embarrassing Now?, which inspired TikTok and Instagram posts asking the same question.

In the viral article, writer Chante Joseph suggests there has been a shift in how heterosexual women present their relationships online, writing that women want to reap the "social benefits" of having a partner, without appearing "boyfriend-obsessed".

Posting your partner frequently can come across as "cringe" and "culturally loser-ish", Joseph writes.

On a more serious note, she says having a boyfriend is no longer "considered an achievement", and isn't seen to make you any more - or less - of a woman in the way it might once have done.

She believes women are hesitating to post their partners because of the "patriarchy we live under, and how oppressive it is to women".

"A lot of women have been saying, it's cool to have a fiance. It's cool to have a husband," Joseph told BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour on Wednesday.

"It's not. We need to re-evaluate our relationship with men in this political climate."

'1,000 people unfollowed me'

Stephanie Yeboah A woman wearing her natural afro hair is smiling at the camera. She's sitting on a yellow corner armchair, slightly leaned forward. She is wearing funky 70s inspired tinted glasses, a red top, and denim trousers with lots of little animals and fruits on!Stephanie Yeboah
Yeboah received a "plethora of DMs" when she first posted her boyfriend

Stephanie Yeboah, a content creator and author from South London, told British Vogue she regretted posting her boyfriend on Instagram.

She tells BBC News she received a "plethora of DMs" from people telling her they'd unfollowed her because they could no longer relate to her content once she had a boyfriend.

"That day I think about 1,000 people unfollowed me," Yeboah recalls.

But she says she understands why people can find boyfriend-related content too much.

"A lot of relationship content is corny - I think people kind of just cringe now when they see it."

Dr Gillian Brooks A woman with brown hair and a bold red lip is smiling at the camera. There is a typical London background blurred out behind her with a red telephone box, trees, and a concrete building.Dr Gillian Brooks
Dr Brooks says influencers sell a "distinct aesthetic" to their audiences

For people who make money from social media, not posting a new partner may be a question of consistency, says Dr Gillian Brooks, associate professor of influencer and social media marketing at King's College London.

"They're selling a distinct aesthetic, a distinct taste," Dr Brooks explains. "They're catering to a very devoted and distinct audience, so if they go off brand they confuse their audience base, and people will just leave them."

'I don't want to come across as reliant'

But it's not just influencers who don't want to post their boyfriends.

Milly is engaged to her partner of nearly five years, but the 25-year-old says she is hesitant to post her fiance on social media.

"I don't want to come across as reliant on my partner, or that our relationship is my entire personality," she explains.

"Social media creates a very narrow image of a person," she adds. "When it's just pictures and stories of me and my partner, it creates an image of a little bit of obsession."

'Relationships should be more private'

Charlotte has been with her partner for two years. The 20-year-old says she chooses to not post her boyfriend on social media for a few reasons.

On an aesthetic level, she says they don't have many pictures together she would "consider Instagrammable".

But beyond this, she believes a relationship should be "more private than friendship".

She continues: "I also feel like if I posted [my relationship], it would be to say, 'Look at me and my perfect relationship', which, unfortunately, isn't the case."

Athera, not her real name, also prefers privacy. The 21-year-old says a lot of her friends are the same and reference the "evil eye" as a reason for not posting their partners.

"Evil eye" is a supernatural belief in a curse transmitted through a malicious glare, usually one inspired by envy.

"I wouldn't post him to prevent someone accidentally putting their jealousy, even if it's unintentional and subconscious, as evil eye onto my relationship," says Athera.

Anxiety behind posting

Dr Gillian Brooks A woman is smiling at the camera, wearing subtle makeup. She has short blonde  hair and is wearing a black blazer with a detailed gold necklace. Dr Gillian Brooks
Dr Seidman says people are realising social media is "eternal"

Dr Gwendolyn Seidman, a social psychologist at Michigan State University, studies how people communicate online - with a particular focus on romantic relationships.

Sharing such a personal part of your life online can sometimes come with anxiety - something Seidman believes is down to a fear of online permanency.

"People are not posting as much stuff online [now]," Dr Seidman observes, "and part of it is that people sort of realise that this stuff is eternal.

"You can't really get rid of it and so you want to be a little bit more careful."

4 dead, 13 injured after street racer slams into crowd at Tampa bar

Tampa Bay Times Image of an official standing beside a wrecked car, next to a tow truck, in front of a bar with overturned bar stoolsTampa Bay Times
A speeding driver lost control of his car and crashed into a bar, killing four and injuring over a dozen others

An early morning police chase in Tampa, Florida, ended with the "reckless" driver crashing into a bar, killing four people and injuring 13 others.

In a police pursuit, authorities were unsuccessful at stopping the speeding driver before he lost control of the car and slammed into the bar's outdoor patio, the Tampa Police Department said in a statement.

Three victims died on the spot and another died at the hospital, police said. The remaining injuries range from life-threatening to minor, police said.

The 22-year-old suspect is in custody and an investigation is underway.

The Tampa Police Department's air service first spotted a car driving recklessly on the highway just before 01:00 local time (06:00 GMT) on Saturday morning, the department said in a statement.

After the car, which had previously been seen street racing, got off the interstate, the Florida Highway Patrol began to chase after it as it continued speeding through the city streets.

The highway patrol then attempted a "PIT manoeuvre", a controversial technique law enforcement use to force a fleeing vehicle to suddenly spin sideways and stop.

PIT manoeuvres sometimes result in the deaths of innocent bystanders, the federal government wrote in a 2023 report that urged officers to consider less dangerous pursuit techniques.

When the manoeuvre failed, the highway patrol stopped their pursuit and the driver continued speeding on, police said.

He then lost control of the vehicle and crashed into a bar named Bradley's, where he hit more than a dozen people who were gathered on the patio, according to police.

The bar is a popular LGBTQ spot, but police say there is currently no evidence suggesting that the suspect was targeting any specific individuals or businesses.

Reuters The empty front of the bar, with Bradley's sign hanging above and some police tape Reuters
The driver struck the outdoor patio area of a bar called Bradley's on 7th

In addition to the four people killed, 13 were injured, including two in critical condition and seven in stable condition. Two have been discharged from the hospital and two were treated at the scene.

Authorities have not released their names.

"What happened this morning was a senseless tragedy, our hearts are with the loved ones of the victims and all those who were impacted," Tampa Police Chief Lee Bercaw said in a statement.

"Reckless driving put innocent lives in danger," he said. "The Tampa Police Department and the Florida Highway Patrol are committed to seeking justice for the victims and their families."

Tampa Mayor Jane Castor called the incident "devastating" in a statement on X.

"Families are grieving, first responders are hurting, and our city feels this loss," she wrote.

'Great bloke': Clarkson and May lead tributes to ex-Top Gear host Quentin Willson

BBC Quentin Willson in 1998 - dressed in a dark blazer, and pink shirt, and standing with his arms crossed  in front of a while vintage Jaguar car  BBC

Former Top Gear presenter Quentin Willson has died aged 68 after a short illness.

Willson was a co-host on the BBC motoring show between 1991 and 2001 - working alongside the likes of Jeremy Clarkson - before going on to present Fifth Gear on Channel 5.

He later worked as a campaigner, fronting the FairFuel campaign to lower the cost of fuel duty, and became an early advocate of electric vehicles.

The father-of-three was described as a "true national treasure" and "true consumer champion" in a statement from his family, who said he had been diagnosed with lung cancer and died on Saturday.

"Quentin brought the joy of motoring, from combustion to electric, into our living rooms," they said in a statement.

"The void he has left can never be filled. His knowledge was not just learned but lived; a library of experience now beyond our reach...

"Quentin will be deeply missed by his family, friends, and all who knew him personally and professionally.

The family statement also highlighted his championing of General Motors' EV1 electric car in the 1990s, saying it proved he was "always ahead of the curve".

They added: "More recently he had worked tirelessly to make EVs affordable for all."

Willson also appeared on Strictly Come Dancing in 2004, where his eight-point total on one dance still stands as the lowest score given by judges on the show.

On Top Gear, Wilson was known for his wry delivery and scathing reviews.

He also presented The Car's the Star for the BBC and Classic Car Show on Channel 5 and worked as a motoring journalist.

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