Chesney Hawkes exposed as twin, contradicting ‘one and only’ claim.
By Our Norfolk Reporter: Ian Bred
PERTH, AUSTRALIA – A long-standing claim at the heart of early-1990s pop has been quietly overturned this week, as new evidence suggests that singer Chesney Hawkes was not, in fact, “the one and only.”
Researchers investigating hospital records from Windsor have uncovered documents indicating that Hawkes was born as one of a pair of identical twins. The second child, named Brian, was reported missing less than 24 hours after birth under suspicious circumstances.
The missing infant, it now appears, did not vanish entirely but was taken abroad and raised in rural Australia by a community of Aboriginal Australians. Now 54, Brian Hawkes works as a bricklayer in the outskirts of Perth and, according to those who know him, has never shown the slightest inclination toward music.
Double trouble
“He can’t hold a tune, and he doesn’t try,” said a colleague, who added that Brian’s interests are largely confined to masonry, barbecues, and occasional darts. “Nice bloke, though.”
The revelation has prompted renewed scrutiny of Chesney Hawkes’ 1991 hit, which spent five weeks at number one and was widely interpreted as a bold statement of singular identity. Critics now suggest the lyrics may have been, at best, misguided.
Music historian Elaine Porter described the development as “a rare case where pop mythology has been undermined by basic genealogy,” noting that the industry has long traded on carefully constructed personas. “In this instance, the branding appears to have outpaced the facts.”
Hawkes has yet to issue a detailed statement but is understood to be “re-evaluating his entire existence” Sources close to the singer say a reunion has not been ruled out, although early indications suggest Brian remains indifferent.
“I’ve heard Ches’s song,” he reportedly said. “It’s alright. Bit repetitive.”
The cost of living now occupies the same place in British conversation once reserved for weather, football referees and whether Norfolk counts as abroad. It comes up in the queue, in the pub, at the school gate and during that intimate modern ritual in which two adults stare at an energy bill as if it might confess to a crime.
In Suffolk and beyond, people have developed a thousand-yard stare usually associated with war films and trying to understand council tax. Nobody says they are “doing well” any more. They say things like, “We’re managing,” which in Britain translates loosely as, “I have compared the price of butter in four shops and briefly considered taking up turnips.”
What the cost of living actually means
Strictly speaking, the cost of living is the amount it takes to keep a person fed, housed, warm, mobile and faintly willing to continue. In practice, it is a rolling national drama in which rent rises, food shops become philosophical exercises and a round of drinks requires either inheritance or a small business loan.
Economists will tell you it covers essentials such as housing, energy, transport and groceries. Ordinary people will tell you it also includes the psychological damage caused by paying £2.75 for a sad sandwich in a petrol station because all normal planning has collapsed. Both are correct.
The phrase has become so broad because it touches nearly every corner of life. If your rent goes up, your food budget shrinks. If your electricity bill rises, the car gets less petrol. If the train fare climbs again, suddenly your social life is reduced to sending voice notes and promising to “sort something soon”. The issue is not merely that things cost more. It is that all costs now seem to move in quiet coordination, like a jazz trio formed purely to ruin your week.
Why the cost of living feels worse than the numbers suggest
Official figures can explain a lot, but they rarely capture the full spiritual experience of watching a supermarket loyalty price presented as if the shop is doing you a personal favour. Inflation tells one story. The sensation of spending £48 and coming home with ingredients for discouragement tells another.
Part of the strain is cumulative. A single expensive shop, one painful direct debit or a brutal heating bill can be absorbed with grumbling. When it is all of them, month after month, it starts to feel less like budgeting and more like trench warfare. Families become amateur procurement officers. Pensioners turn the thermostat down with the calm precision of bomb disposal experts. Students discover a level of culinary improvisation that ought to be recognised by Michelin, or perhaps social services.
There is also the minor issue that wages have not always kept pace with reality. Being told your pay has gone up is hard to celebrate when the increase covers three yoghurts and half a bus fare. On paper, things may appear to be stabilising. In the kitchen, however, a parent is quietly Googling whether soup can count as a personality.
Housing, the nation’s favourite practical joke
Nothing distorts the cost of living quite like housing. Rent and mortgages have a special ability to consume money before the month has had the courtesy to begin. The dream of a decent home with enough space for a table has, for many, become an exotic fantasy on a par with owning a vineyard or seeing a GP at short notice.
In towns across East Anglia, the arithmetic has become theatrical. A modest flat now carries the sort of monthly price tag once associated with luxury. Estate agents continue to write descriptions with admirable optimism, calling things “compact” when they mean “your toaster will know your pillow”.
Homeowners, meanwhile, are not all sipping cocoa in a fortress of smugness. Mortgage increases have introduced many to the thrilling concept that the bank can, in fact, alter your life through a letter. Fixed deals end. Payments jump. People who once discussed paint samples now speak in dark terms about interest rates and the possibility of taking in a lodger named Clive.
Food shopping as extreme sport
The weekly food shop used to be dull. That was its charm. Now it has the tension of a hostage negotiation. You enter with a list and leave with fewer items, vague resentment and one accidental luxury yoghurt that has somehow cost the same as scaffolding.
There is a particular British heartbreak in realising your “big shop” has become a “fairly small shop plus some biscuits to stop me crying”. Shoppers have adapted with admirable ingenuity. Own-brand products are no longer a compromise but a way of life. Yellow sticker timing is discussed with the gravity of military intelligence. Entire friendships have been built on knowing which branch has the decent reduced bread section.
And yet there is only so much optimisation a person can do before they start asking difficult questions, such as why a bag of grapes now appears to have been priced by Sotheby’s.
The quiet theatre of energy bills
Energy bills have changed behaviour more effectively than any government campaign ever could. Lights are turned off with evangelical fervour. Heating is treated as a strategic reserve. The tumble dryer is now spoken of in the same tone one might use for a speedboat – lovely, obviously, but not for everyday use.
The national home has become a place of layered knitwear and low-level suspicion. People patrol radiators. They boil only the amount of water they need, then boast about it like wartime heroes. Households have developed complex internal constitutions governing thermostat use, usually ending with one person saying, “Put another jumper on,” and another replying, “I’m wearing six.”
This is where the cost of living stops being abstract. It enters the body. Cold homes, stress and constant penny-counting are not merely annoying. They wear people down. Humour helps because Britain will joke in a queue even while structurally furious, but comedy does not make a freezing sitting room less freezing.
Why everyone suddenly has a side hustle and a points card
One of the stranger side effects of the current era is that ordinary life now requires a level of tactical sophistication once seen only in espionage. People compare cashback apps, supermarket schemes, railcards and broadband packages with the forensic detail of intelligence analysts. Saving £1.80 is discussed not as a small victory but as moral excellence.
There is, to be fair, something admirable in this national spirit. Britain remains a world leader in cheerful adaptation. If forced, the public can turn leftovers into a feast, communal misery into banter and a failing high street into a place where at least the charity shops still have decent mugs.
But adaptation has limits. You cannot voucher-code your way out of structural pressure forever. There comes a point when no amount of skipping takeaways explains why staples are expensive, housing is punishing and every household bill arrives with the emotional charge of a court summons.
The class question nobody needs explained
The cost of living hits unevenly, which everybody knows even when official language tries to smooth it out. For affluent households, higher costs may mean fewer weekends away and more muttering about artisan olive oil. For low-income families, it can mean genuine deprivation, debt and impossible choices between essentials.
That unevenness matters because broad national conversation often pretends everyone is tightening belts from the same starting line. They are not. Some belts were already on the last hole. Some people do not own belts. Some are being advised by think-tank fellows to make prudent choices while staring into an empty fridge and wondering if prudence can be fried.
A satirical publication can only do so much, though it helps to point out the obvious: being told to budget better by someone whose lunch expenses could fund a village fête does test the national temperament.
Living with the cost of living without losing the plot
The difficult truth is that there is no single clever fix at household level. Small savings matter, yes. Shopping around helps. Using less energy where possible is sensible. Cooking at home is cheaper, assuming the ingredients have not become ceremonial objects. But personal discipline cannot fully solve public problems.
What people can do is hold on to perspective and each other. Shared lifts, swapped childcare, community pantries, checking in on older neighbours, being honest with friends about money – these are not glamorous solutions, but they are real ones. Britain gets through hard patches partly through policy and partly through the ancient system of someone saying, “We made extra, do you want some?”
If there is any comfort to be found, it is that the cost of living has at least stripped away some pretence. It has shown what matters, what is fragile and which parts of modern life were always hanging together with promotional codes and denial. So if your budget feels tight, your patience feels thin and your heating schedule now resembles a monastic rulebook, you are not failing. You are simply living in Britain, where resilience remains free, for now.
Man sues Bejam after two-hour defrost pie explosion mishap.
By Our Norfolk Reporter: Ian Bred
A Suffolk man has launched legal action against frozen food retailer Bejam after a lemon meringue pie allegedly exploded in his face during what he described as a “routine defrosting procedure”.
Kevin Scragg, 32, of Ipswich, who works as a playground swing tester, claims he suffered “emotional distress and light cream-related injuries” when the dessert erupted moments after being removed from his microwave. The pie had been purchased earlier that day from Bejam’s Ipswich branch.
Mr Scragg told reporters he had followed what he believed to be standard practice when defrosting frozen goods. “I put it on the defrost setting and then set the timer to two hours, just to be safe,” he said. “Next thing I know, it’s like a citrus volcano.”
Egg on his face
Experts have long warned that microwave defrosting can be a complex process requiring careful timing, rotation, and constant monitoring. Consumer groups note that extended defrost cycles can lead to uneven heating, structural instability, and, in rare cases, “catastrophic pudding failure”.
In a statement, Bejam said it was “robustly contesting” the claim, citing what it described as “clear user error”. A spokesperson added: “Our products are designed to be defrosted responsibly. Two hours in a microwave exceeds both recommended guidelines and, arguably, common sense.”
Legal representatives for Mr Scragg argue that instructions on frozen desserts are “insufficiently explicit” about the upper limits of defrosting times and fail to account for “the very hungry”.
The case has drawn attention to the broader issue of microwave literacy, with some calling for clearer guidance on packaging, while others suggest that consumers might benefit from fresh cream cakes
Clive from Stowmarket had already described a pale ale as “having the emotional depth of a parish council row” and asked for another half “for verification purposes”. This, he insists, is the life of the professional beer tester – a role that sounds invented by an uncle in a fleece but is, annoyingly, close to a real thing.
For anyone who has ever stared into a pint and thought, I could absolutely do this for money, there is both good news and administratively disappointing news. Yes, breweries, pubs, distributors and competitions do need people who can assess beer properly. No, this does not mean turning up to The King’s Arms on a Tuesday, ordering six pints and calling it research while your mates applaud your commitment to industry standards.
What a professional beer tester actually does
A professional beer tester, at least in the sober daylight definition, evaluates beer for flavour, aroma, appearance, texture and consistency. That might happen in a brewery quality control lab, at a tasting panel, during product development, or in judging at organised competitions where men named Graham say things like “slight diacetyl issue” with the gravity of a defence briefing.
The job is less about drinking and more about noticing. Can you detect oxidation? Is the carbonation right for the style? Does that porter taste beautifully roasted, or like someone has rinsed a bonfire through a sock? A good tester is trained to spot faults as quickly as they spot strengths.
This is why the fantasy of endless pub-based employment tends to collide with the reality of small pours, note-taking and the occasional need to spit. That last bit causes the most heartbreak. Many a hopeful applicant has been enthusiastic until the moment they learn that a professional environment does not always reward necking an entire pint and then announcing, “Very nice, that.”
How one becomes a professional beer tester
There is no Hogwarts for lager, although parts of Norfolk have come close after cider festivals. Most people move into beer tasting through brewing, hospitality, food and drink judging, or specialist training in beer styles and sensory analysis. Some start as brewers and learn to assess quality because that is part of making anything drinkable. Others come from pubs, bottle shops or distribution and build expertise the slow way, by tasting widely and remembering what they tasted.
There are courses, certifications and judging pathways, and they all sound far less glamorous than they should. Sensory training often involves blind tastings, identifying off-flavours and learning the technical language of beer without sounding like someone who has just discovered a beard comb. If you want to be taken seriously, you need a decent palate, discipline and a tolerance for discussing yeast behaviour before lunch.
It also helps to understand style guidelines. A hazy IPA is not judged like a bitter, and a stout is not meant to behave like a sunny continental pilsner. The professional beer tester who cannot tell the difference will eventually be found out, usually by somebody in corduroy who owns at least one branded tasting glass and considers himself a public service.
The skills nobody mentions in pub chat
Memory matters. So does honesty. If the beer is poor, someone has to say so, ideally without starting a diplomatic incident in the taproom. You also need consistency. A beer that tastes brilliant one week and oddly cabbage-like the next is not a characterful artisan flourish. It is a problem.
Communication matters too. In a proper role, you are not merely saying whether you like a beer. You are explaining why it works, why it fails, and what should change. That makes the job closer to analysis than indulgence, which is a tragic sentence for anyone who hoped the nation’s breweries were staffed entirely by cheerful wasters with foam on their upper lip.
Is there money in professional beer tester work?
There can be, but nobody should buy a speedboat on the strength of a tasting paddle. Full-time jobs exist in brewing and quality assurance, and those roles may include tasting as part of broader responsibilities. Beer judges may be paid in some settings, though many do it for prestige, passion or the deeply British satisfaction of being officially allowed to complain.
The pure fantasy version – salaried employee, all day in a pub, occasional nodding – is rarer than a quiet bank holiday garden centre. Most paid work sits inside a larger drinks career. You might work in production, product development, education, retail, writing or events, with tasting folded in rather than presented as a golden throne of hops.
That said, if your talents include a refined palate, good writing and the ability to remain coherent after discussing saison fermentation with strangers, there are ways to build a niche. The trade likes specialists. It is just less keen on people whose main qualification is having once declared a supermarket lager “surprisingly moreish” during a barbecue in Ipswich.
The biggest myth about the professional beer tester
The biggest myth is that loving beer is enough. It is not. Plenty of people love beer. Plenty of people also love chips, and that does not make them senior potato auditors.
Professional tasting relies on structure. You taste with purpose. You compare. You record. You identify patterns. You keep your senses sharp, which can mean limiting what you drink, when you drink it and how much. It is, frankly, rude news for anybody treating this as an excuse to become a legend at the local.
Another myth is that the role is all craft taps and cheerful brewery tours. Sometimes it is. Other times it is repeated testing of the same beer batch, calibration exercises, paperwork, sanitation protocols and the deeply humbling discovery that your favourite brew contains a flaw once somebody points it out. After that, you can never untaste it. It is the drinks equivalent of noticing a crack in the living room ceiling and then seeing nothing else for months.
Why breweries need proper tasters
Beer is agricultural, chemical and a tiny bit theatrical. Ingredients vary. Storage matters. Packaging matters. Temperature matters. Human error definitely matters. A brewery cannot rely solely on machinery and wishful thinking. It needs people who can catch issues before customers do.
That is where trained tasting panels earn their keep. They protect consistency, help refine recipes and stop expensive mistakes escaping into pubs where Barry from Bury St Edmunds will immediately take one sip, frown like a man spotting suspicious roadworks, and tell everyone within earshot that standards have slipped.
Tasting also helps with innovation. New beers need feedback before launch. Is that mango sour refreshing or simply confusing? Has the brewer created complexity or committed a fruit-based offence? These are not questions to be settled by vibes alone.
The local pub fantasy versus the real trade
The romantic image remains powerful because Britain likes jobs that sound implausibly pleasant. Professional dog walker. Island caretaker. Crisp consultant. The professional beer tester sits proudly in that category, somewhere between national treasure and obvious nonsense.
Yet the real version is better, in its own way. It rewards curiosity. It values skill over swagger. And unlike the pub boaster’s version, it can lead somewhere tangible if you are willing to learn the craft. You do not need to be snobbish. You do need to pay attention.
That may be the most surprising part. Good beer testing is democratic. It is not about reciting tasting notes like a haunted menu. It is about understanding what is in the glass and whether it is what it ought to be. Sometimes the answer is a glorious yes. Sometimes it is “this tastes like a radiator has become sentient”. Both responses have value.
Should you try to become a professional beer tester?
If you genuinely enjoy beer, have a careful palate and like learning the difference between preference and quality, then yes, it is worth exploring. Taste widely. Read up on styles. Visit breweries. Attend guided tastings. Practise describing what you notice without resorting to “nice” or “bit hoppy”. Those words have their place, but not if you want anyone to trust you with a clipboard.
If, on the other hand, the appeal is mostly telling your mates you are basically in the trade because you once reviewed a stout on social media, you may want to lower expectations and raise a sensible half instead.
A professional beer tester is not a pub superhero. He is usually somebody with a trained nose, a decent notebook and the self-control to stop after saying “sample three shows estery imbalance”. That may sound less thrilling than the dream, but it is still one of the better ways to turn good taste into proper work. If you fancy it, start by taking beer seriously enough to ruin it slightly for yourself – that is often how a hobby becomes a craft.
A man from Bury St Edmunds says he joined the NHS waiting lists shortly after the London Olympics and now regards them as “more of a lifestyle commitment than a medical pathway”.
By Our Political Correspondent: Polly Ticks
Speaking from a folding chair he brought to an outpatient department in 2017 and has refused to leave ever since, he told reporters he has “made peace with the process” and now receives birthday cards from three receptionists, a vending machine engineer, and what he believes may be a ghost in Facilities.
Health officials, in the tone usually reserved for flood warnings and rail replacement bus services, have insisted that pressure on services remains “challenging”. Patients, by contrast, have begun using more technical language such as “absolutely ridiculous”, “how is this still happening”, and the ever-reliable “it’s one rule for them”.
Why NHS waiting lists now qualify as a national pastime
There was a time when queues in Britain meant something dignified: a shop opening, a ferry to France, perhaps a Gregg’s with one member of staff and a nation’s worth of lunchtime regret. But NHS waiting lists have evolved beyond ordinary queueing. They are now a form of civic participation, like voting or pretending to understand the offside rule.
In Suffolk and Norfolk, where local stoicism remains stronger than mobile signal, residents have reportedly taken to preparing for referrals the way previous generations prepared for winter. Households are said to be laying in supplies, charging power banks, and selecting a “good cardigan for consultants”. One family in Lowestoft has allegedly drawn up a five-year rota for who will ring the hospital, who will sigh meaningfully, and who will say “we do understand they’re under pressure” before quietly losing the will to continue.
This is, of course, where the genius of British bureaucracy reveals itself. No system on earth can make people simultaneously furious, apologetic and faintly guilty for existing quite like this one. You can be in pain, waiting months for a letter, and still feel bad for asking where the letter is. It is an administrative miracle, if not a clinical one.
The official response to NHS waiting lists
Authorities have unveiled the traditional package of measures, including fresh targets, stern language, and a laminated chart somewhere. A spokesperson described the situation as “a priority”, which in government dialect broadly means someone has used a yellow highlighter on it.
Hospitals are said to be tackling backlogs with a blend of innovation and ritual theatre. New initiatives reportedly include triage by horoscope, consultants appearing briefly in village halls, and one pilot scheme in Ipswich where patients can move up the queue by proving they know what PALS stands for without sounding sarcastic. Early data suggests no one can.
There is, to be fair, a trade-off that even satirists have to admit. Demand is high, staffing is stretched, estates are ageing, and every winter arrives with the air of a sequel no one asked for. The problem with NHS waiting lists is not that there is one simple villain twirling a moustache beside a broken MRI scanner. It is that Britain has spent years building a healthcare system expected to function flawlessly while held together by overstretched staff, goodwill, and the nation’s deep emotional attachment to saying “mustn’t grumble”.
That said, it does become harder to maintain perspective when your first referral was made on a fax machine and your follow-up text arrives asking you to rate the experience out of ten.
Patients adapting to life on the list
As with any prolonged national event, people have started to adjust. Local support groups now reportedly help first-time waiters settle in. Sessions cover the basics: how to interpret a letter that says almost nothing, how to remain calm when an appointment is moved from Thursday to a concept, and whether bringing a flask counts as preparedness or surrender.
One woman from Sudbury says the waiting changed her as a person. “At first I was angry,” she said. “Then I became philosophical. Now I can identify the exact species of mould in hospital ceiling tiles and I’ve accepted that time itself is an administrative opinion.” Friends say she has become respected in the community and may soon chair a parish subcommittee on delayed correspondence.
In some areas, patients on the same pathway have formed surprisingly close bonds. One orthopaedics group in Norfolk is believed to have held two weddings, a christening and a strongly attended quiz night while waiting for updates. Team names included Scan Me Maybe, Meniscus to Society and The Unbearable Tightness of Being. Organisers said morale was high despite concerns the grand prize hamper might be clinically indicated.
What the experts say, or at least what they say on local radio
Analysts continue to debate whether the current state of affairs is a temporary bulge, a structural crisis, or simply the final form of the British state. One school of thought argues that recovery requires investment, workforce planning and realistic capacity. Another suggests turning every empty retail unit into a diagnostic hub and seeing whether any former Wilko can support minor surgery.
It depends, as these things often do, on whether leaders want headlines or outcomes. Announcing a plan is quick. Training staff, replacing kit and fixing the plumbing takes longer and has the fatal disadvantage of being real. The public can tell the difference, even if they remain far too polite about it.
There are also regional quirks. Rural counties face longer travel times, patchier transport and the sort of local roadworks that appear to have hereditary titles. If your treatment pathway involves two buses, a lift from your cousin Darren and crossing an A-road that was clearly designed by someone with a grudge, access becomes its own waiting list.
A breakthrough in queue management
In a development being hailed by nobody sensible, an unnamed trust has reportedly tested a new approach in which patients are informed of their likely waiting time using the familiar language of takeaway apps. Cases are labelled with updates such as “consultant is preparing your order”, “your referral has been delayed by traffic” and “you are number 84 in the queue, but remain very important to us”.
Meanwhile, a village near Framlingham claims to have solved the problem entirely by appointing one retired headmistress to stand outside the hospital and sort everyone into sensible lines. Witnesses say waiting times immediately fell, tempers cooled, and one junior administrator burst into tears after hearing the phrase “come along now, this won’t do” delivered with proper East Anglian authority.
Policy thinkers are expected to ignore this finding because it does not involve a dashboard.
The strange emotional weather around NHS waiting lists
What makes the whole business peculiarly British is not simply the delay. Plenty of countries have shortages, backlogs and systems under strain. What we bring to it is ceremony. We add etiquette. We turn practical frustration into an elaborate dance of apology, understatement and muttering in car parks.
People do not merely endure the wait. They narrate it. They compare referral dates the way older generations compared mortgage rates. They develop folklore around departments, rumours about mythical cancellation slots, and firm views on which receptionist “actually gets things done”. Entire social ecosystems now depend on one person knowing someone whose neighbour once got seen early in Cambridge because of a form no one else has heard of.
Even the language is revealing. Nobody says, “I have been abandoned by an overloaded system shaped by years of political caution and operational strain.” They say, “I’m still waiting, actually,” with the haunted brightness of someone who has already made tea for the district nurse in their imagination.
And yet, for all the jokes, people still care deeply because the NHS still matters deeply. That is the awkward truth sitting underneath the punchlines. People complain because they want it to work, not because they want to see it fail. Staff are not the butt of the joke here. The joke is the national habit of asking exhausted people to perform miracles while ministers unveil another slogan and the photocopier emits the sound of constitutional decline.
If there is any hope in all this, it lies in honesty. Not the theatrical sort, with a podium and a borrowed hard hat, but the kind that admits what capacity exists, what it would take to improve it, and how long that really means. Britons can cope with bad news. We’ve managed drizzle, service stations and James Corden. What we struggle with is being told a queue is moving when we can still see the same biscuit wrapper on the same waiting room floor six months later.
So if you are currently on NHS waiting lists, take heart. Not in the official sense, as that may require referral, but in the broader human one. Bring a book. Charge your mobile phone. Be kind to the staff. And if a retired headmistress offers to organise things, stand back and let Britain heal.
Patrick Grant scales cliffs while ironing, blending tailoring with extreme sport.
SNOWDONIA, WALES – Television tailor Patrick Grant has been revealed to be an enthusiastic participant in the niche pursuit of extreme ironing, combining his professional commitment to crisp garments with a preference for unusually hazardous environments.
Grant, best known for his role on The Great British Sewing Bee, confirmed that he regularly travels with a portable ironing setup, seeking out cliffs, mountains and other impractical locations in which to press shirts and trousers to what he describes as “a respectable standard.”
“It’s about discipline,” Grant said. “Just because one is halfway up a rock face doesn’t mean one should tolerate a crease.”
The pastime, which involves ironing clothes in remote or physically demanding settings, has existed for several decades but has largely remained on the fringes of both sport and domestic routine. Grant’s involvement is expected to raise its profile, though possibly not its practicality.
Sheer drop
Fellow climbers have reported encountering Grant mid-ascent, pausing not for rest but to address “pattern matching and uneven hems.”
Grant insists the activity allows him to balance leisure with professional integrity while on holiday. “You can’t simply switch off from tailoring,” he said. “Wrinkles don’t take a break, and neither do I.”
Industry observers note that while the approach may be unconventional, it aligns with Grant’s longstanding reputation for precision and composure under pressure.
At the time of writing, there are no plans to introduce an extreme ironing segment to The Great British Sewing Bee, though sources suggest it has not been entirely ruled out.
Archaeologists working at a coastal site along the Jurassic Coast have reported an unexpected and faintly awkward discovery. A series of 2,500-year-old carvings that appear to depict explicit and enthusiastically rendered scenes of what experts are cautiously terming “erotic interaction”.
By Our Aldeburgh Reporter: Peter Grimes
The team, initially searching for evidence of early trade activity. Instead uncovered what one researcher described as “the ancient equivalent of bathroom wall graffiti, but with considerably more commitment.”
Among the carvings are several crude figures engaged in what has been diplomatically referred to as “phallic gobbling,”. Alongside inscriptions that have been translated from ancient Greek. One such engraving is signed simply “Dion,” leaving experts uncertain whether this was the artist’s name or an early example of tagging.
A second inscription reads: “Brian was here mounting Sharon,” a statement that has cast some doubt on the precise age of the discovery.
Artistic merit
Dr Elaine Porter, a spokesperson for the excavation, said the discovery highlights “the enduring human instinct to leave one’s mark, regardless of artistic merit or social appropriateness.”
While the carvings are now being catalogued and preserved, their interpretation has posed challenges. “We are trained to handle significant cultural artefacts,” Dr Porter said. “Less so… this.”
The find has sparked interest among historians, who note that such informal inscriptions provide a rare glimpse into the everyday lives—and preoccupations—of ancient people.
Despite initial embarrassment, the team has acknowledged the importance of the discovery. “It’s history,” Dr Porter added. “Just… not the sort you necessarily put on a postcard to your gran.”
Woman attacks husband over loud breathing during radio drama.
By Our Security Correspondent: Ben Twarters
SUFFOLK, UK – A 74-year-old woman from Lowestoft has been charged with assault after allegedly attacking her husband with household tools, reportedly triggered by what she described as “excessive breathing.”
Maureen Crabbe is accused of striking her husband, Jim Crabbe, 76, with a sledgehammer before pinching his ears with a pair of pliers while he slept in his armchair. The incident is said to have occurred shortly after 7:15pm, during a broadcast of The Archers on BBC Radio 4.
According to police reports, Mrs Crabbe had been attempting to follow a particularly dialogue-heavy episode when she became increasingly frustrated by what she later described as her husband’s “industrial-grade wheezing.”
Psycho Granny
“She said it was like trying to listen to a tractor idle through a hedge,” a spokesperson noted.
Mrs Crabbe allegedly retrieved the tools from a cupboard under the stairs before approaching her husband, who was asleep in his La-Z-Boy chair. The initial blow missed its intended force, with Mr Crabbe sustaining only minor injuries, though he later reported “significant annoyance” at the ear-pinching.
Mr Crabbe was treated at the scene by emergency services and did not require hospitalisation. He is understood to be recovering and has since resumed breathing at what he described as a “more considerate volume.”
Mrs Crabbe remains in custody and is expected to appear before magistrates later this week. Authorities have not confirmed whether The Archers will be available behind bars.