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Hand Luggage Size Rules easyJet Explained

Hand Luggage Size Rules easyJet Explained

Anyone who has ever tried stuffing a fortnight’s worth of optimism into one wheelie case will know that hand luggage size rules easyJet are less a guideline and more a blood sport conducted beside Gate 12. One minute you are feeling smug with a clever packing cube system, the next you are trying to zip up a bag while a stranger from Bury St Edmunds sits on it like a nightclub bouncer.

By Our Entertainment Editor: Arthur Pint

To be fair to easyJet, the rules are not mysterious. They are just the sort of thing people glance at once, ignore completely, and then blame on modern society when their bag is judged to be the size of a modest orangery. If you want to avoid that little moment of public humiliation at the airport, it helps to know what the airline actually allows, what it means in practice, and where people usually come unstuck.

What are the hand luggage size rules easyJet uses?

At the basic level, every passenger can bring one small cabin bag on board. That bag must fit under the seat in front of you, which is the key detail people hear and then immediately challenge with a rucksack the size of a garden shed. The commonly stated maximum size for that free small bag is 45 x 36 x 20 cm, including handles and wheels.

That last bit matters. Wheels count. Handles count. The little bulging front pocket packed with emergency crisps also counts, no matter how emotionally attached you are to it.

If you want to bring a larger cabin bag as well, that usually depends on the fare you have bought, the seat you have selected, or whether you have added the relevant baggage option. In plain English, if you have paid a bit more, easyJet is generally far more enthusiastic about your luggage ambitions.

The free bag everyone focuses on

The free under-seat bag is the rule that catches most people out, partly because the phrase “small personal item” has convinced half the nation that they are starring in a legal drama and can argue the definition. You cannot, sadly, persuade airline staff that your expanded gym holdall is technically a handbag because it contains a cardigan and a packet of Percy Pigs.

A genuinely suitable free bag is usually a small backpack, compact holdall or laptop bag. If it is soft-sided, you have a little bit of wiggle room because it can squash into the sizing gauge more easily. If it is hard-sided and built like a filing cabinet, you need to be far more precise.

This is where many travellers make life harder for themselves. They buy a cabin case labelled “approved” by some mysterious online seller, only to discover that “approved” appears to mean approved by no airline operating anywhere in Europe.

When you can take a larger cabin bag

easyJet does allow a larger cabin bag for some passengers, but this is where the detail matters. A larger cabin bag is typically allowed if you book an Up Front or Extra Legroom seat, or if your fare or add-on specifically includes it. The size usually given for that larger bag is up to 56 x 45 x 25 cm, including wheels and handles.

That sounds generous, and often it is enough for a short break without checked luggage. It is the classic Friday-to-Monday case, the kind of bag full of two jumpers, one pair of shoes you will regret packing, and toiletries decanted into tiny bottles with the optimism of a chemistry teacher.

But there is a catch, because there is always a catch. Overhead locker space is limited, and larger cabin bags are typically managed in line with boarding arrangements and availability. So while the allowance may be valid, that does not mean the process will feel spiritually uplifting.

Why people still get caught out

The main reason is not that the rules are impossible. It is that people rely on vibes. They stand in the kitchen, look at a bag, and decide it feels “about right”, which is exactly how British DIY projects, coalition governments and barbecue weather forecasts also begin.

The second problem is expansion. Bags are sold with zips that promise extra capacity, as if this were a charming bonus rather than a trap laid by capitalism. The moment you expand the bag, you are no longer travelling with a neat cabin case. You are transporting a fabric warning sign.

Then there is shopping. A bag that fitted perfectly on the outbound journey can become suspiciously pregnant on the way home after a spree involving airport Toblerone, duty free aftershave, and a jacket you insisted was a bargain in Milan even though it now makes you look like a regional magician.

Measuring properly, which nobody enjoys

If you are serious about getting this right, measure the bag when it is packed, not when it is sitting empty and behaving itself in the hallway. Use a tape measure and check height, width and depth, including protruding bits.

That means wheels, rigid corners, chunky handles and overstuffed pockets. Airlines are not measuring the spiritual essence of your luggage. They are measuring the actual object that will be wedged into a metal frame while you mutter that it fitted last time.

Soft bags do offer a practical advantage because they can compress. That said, there is a difference between a bag that can squash a bit and one that requires the strength of three departing stag-do attendees to force it into place.

Seat choice and baggage – the bit people skip reading

A lot of easyJet confusion comes from the relationship between seating and baggage. People focus on the flight price, then click through the booking screens with the urgency of someone trying to skip online terms and conditions for a kettle. Later, they are amazed to learn that seat selection and luggage allowances are linked in certain cases.

If you have booked a standard fare with no extras, assume the free small under-seat bag is your allowance unless your booking clearly says otherwise. If you have selected one of the seat categories that includes a larger cabin bag, check the confirmation carefully and save it somewhere easy to access. Airport arguments are rarely improved by scrolling through seventeen screenshots while standing next to a Pret.

What happens if your bag is too big?

Usually, this is where the cheerful economy of budget travel becomes noticeably less cheerful. If your bag does not meet the allowance you have paid for, you may be charged to put it in the hold. That tends to cost more at the airport than if you had sorted it in advance, which is the aviation equivalent of paying six quid for a bottle of water because you forgot one at home.

It is not just the money either. It is the ceremony of it. The public inspection. The brief queue-side theatre in which fellow passengers pretend not to watch while absolutely watching.

No one wants to be the person redistributing socks, chargers and a paperback into coat pockets like a smuggler at Stansted.

Liquids, laptops and the rest of the faff

Bag size is only part of the story. Even if your luggage meets the dimensions, you still need to think about what is inside it. Airport security rules on liquids and electronics can make a perfectly compliant bag feel far less practical if you have packed it like a chaotic raffle hamper.

Keep liquids where you can reach them without unpacking half your wardrobe. Put electronics in a sensible place. If your bag opens like an intricate Victorian puzzle box, you may save two centimetres of space but lose ten minutes of dignity at security.

For shorter trips, a well-packed under-seat bag can genuinely be enough. For anything longer, the decision becomes more personal. Do you want to travel light and wash things away, or do you want the comfort of options? There is no moral victory in wearing the same emergency black T-shirt for four consecutive evenings just to avoid paying for a bigger bag.

The sensible way to avoid airport melodrama

The best approach is mildly boring, which is why so few people do it. Check the allowance attached to your specific booking. Measure your bag while packed. Leave a little spare room rather than treating the zip like the final boss in an action film.

If you know you are a chronic overpacker, be honest early. Paying for the right baggage option in advance is usually cheaper than discovering at the gate that your “minimalist” packing strategy has somehow produced enough luggage for a touring theatre company.

It also helps to remember that airline staff did not personally invent geometry to ruin your city break. They are enforcing a system designed to keep boarding moving and stop overhead lockers becoming a live-action episode of Gladiators.

So, are the rules unreasonable?

Mostly, no. They are strict, but not absurd if you understand what you are buying. The real issue is that travellers often compare what they wish the rules were with what the rules actually are. That gap – between fantasy and dimensions – is where the trouble starts.

For most passengers, the easiest win is choosing the right bag rather than trying to outwit the policy. A compact backpack that fits the free allowance will save hassle. A proper cabin case that fits the larger allowance will save guesswork. A mystery bag bought online because the reviews said “worked for me x” is how legends of airport misery begin.

If you treat easyJet baggage like a game of technicalities, the airport will usually win. If you treat it like a simple bit of planning, you can get through with your dignity, your toiletries and perhaps even enough room left for a sandwich from Boots.

Soho Eatery Faces Legal Action Over Controversial ‘Octopus’ Pasta

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Soho restaurant sued after charging £45 for hot dog “octopus”.

By Our Consumer Correspondent: Colin Allcabs

LONDON — Funghi’s, a high-end Italian establishment in Soho known for its minimalist decor and maximalist pricing, has been served with a lawsuit following a dinner service that a local family describes as “an eight-legged hot dog.”

The Johnson family, led by patriarch Derek Johnson, filed the claim after being billed £45 per head for a “Seafood Fusilli Special” that allegedly contained zero seafood. Instead, the family was presented with a single frankfurter sausage, expertly sliced at the base to mimic octopus tentacles, balanced atop a bed of tri-color grocery-store fusilli.

“Mugged-Off” Mollusk

“We were looking for an authentic Mediterranean experience,” Mr. Johnson stated, noting the family felt “thoroughly mugged-off” by the arrival of the processed meat creature. “I’ve seen better plating at a four-year-old’s birthday party, and usually, that doesn’t come with a mandatory 12.5% service charge.”

The dish, which has since gone viral as the “Weenie-Octopus,” reportedly featured two small mustard dots for eyes, a detail the family claims did little to justify the premium price tag.

Proprietor Giuseppe Funghi has dismissed allegations of intentional deception, citing a “high-pressure kitchen environment” and a logistical error. According to Mr. Funghi, the dish was a bespoke order intended for a toddler at a neighbouring table who “suffers from a deep-seated fear of actual mollusks.”

“It was a simple mix-up between the Frutti di Mare and the Bambino Sausage Surprise,” Funghi explained in a press release. “In the heat of the dinner rush, the ‘octopus’ was misrouted. We pride ourselves on our craft, whether that craft involves hand-dived scallops or the precision slicing of a jumbo frank.”

The Johnson family is seeking a full refund and damages for emotional distress. Legal experts suggest the case may hinge on whether a hot dog can legally be classified as “seafood” if it is shaped like a friend from the deep.

Have you ever had a “premium” meal that turned out to be a total kitchen nightmare?

Social Media Ban UK Under 16? Suffolk Reacts

Three parents in Woodbridge had already announced that a social media ban UK under 16 was “common sense”, while simultaneously posting their views into six local Facebook groups, two WhatsApp chains, and the comments beneath a photo of a missing tortoise. In Bungay, a Year 10 pupil described the proposal as “literally fascism”, before asking if that should be spelt with one s or two. Westminster may still be weighing the policy, but Suffolk has done what Suffolk does best – turned a national argument into a village-level blood sport.

What a social media ban UK under 16 could actually mean

The phrase sounds satisfyingly tidy, which is usually a warning sign. A social media ban UK under 16 could mean an outright legal prohibition on children holding accounts, a requirement for stronger age checks, liability for tech firms that look the other way, or the sort of compromise British governments adore – a very stern consultation followed by a new logo and no discernible change.

That has not stopped local residents from responding as though ministers are personally arriving to confiscate ring lights from fourteen-year-olds in Stowmarket. At least one parish councillor has called for “urgent clarity” on whether BeReal counts as social media, a phrase he pronounced as if it were a minor Roman god.

The practical problem is obvious enough. Teenagers are online already. They are not waiting politely for Parliament to catch up. Any ban would depend on age verification, and age verification tends to mean one of two things. Either it is so flimsy that a reasonably bright spaniel could bypass it, or it is so intrusive that half the country starts worrying the Government now has access to their passport, driving licence, and a photograph taken at an angle no human should have to submit.

Parents back it, until it affects the family iPad

Among adults, support is easy to find in theory. The words “protecting children” have a magical effect in British politics. They cause MPs to nod gravely, breakfast presenters to widen their eyes, and people from Leiston to Lowestoft to say, “Well yes, obviously,” right up until they realise enforcement may require them to do actual parenting.

Several Suffolk mothers told this newspaper they would welcome restrictions on TikTok, Snapchat and Instagram, especially after seeing the effect of algorithm-fed beauty standards, endless comparisons and the growing belief among teenage boys that shouting into a microphone in a leased BMW is a career path. One father in Felixstowe said he favoured a ban provided it did not extend to YouTube, gaming chats, football clips, podcasts, educational creators, nor “that lad who explains history while making a bacon sandwich”.

This is the trade-off no one enjoys admitting. Social media can be poisonous, compulsive and bizarrely good at making a child feel excluded before breakfast. It can also be where teenagers socialise, joke, flirt, learn, organise lifts, share school notes, follow interests, discover communities and, occasionally, encounter a useful fact between videos of ferrets wearing hats.

A ban sounds clean. Childhood is not.

Teenagers point out adults invented the problem

Young people, meanwhile, have responded with the sort of withering contempt usually reserved for school assemblies and adults who say “doggo”. In Ipswich, pupils reportedly met the news by observing that the same generation now calling for restraint spent the last decade uploading every school play, sports day and pasta bake onto social platforms with the zeal of minor royals launching a hospital wing.

They are not entirely wrong. Britain has constructed a national culture in which adults complain about screen time while conducting entire relationships via voice note, losing afternoons to neighbourhood Facebook disputes, and turning local planning objections into sixty-comment civil wars. To tell a fifteen-year-old that social media is unhealthy while your uncle is on his fourth all-caps post about wheelie bins requires a certain brass neck.

That does not mean the teenagers have won the argument. Only that they have noticed the hypocrisy and are enjoying it enormously.

Ministers want safety. Platforms want plausible innocence

If the Government ever did pursue a proper social media ban UK under 16, the real contest would not be between parents and children. It would be between ministers eager to look decisive and technology firms suddenly rediscovering the complexity of age.

Platforms are very keen on saying they support young people, wellbeing and safer online experiences. They are marginally less keen on any reform that slows user growth, reduces engagement, or requires them to admit that their current systems can identify a teenager’s taste in trainers within six seconds but somehow cannot tell whether the account holder is twelve.

There is also the question of unintended consequences. Push children off mainstream platforms and they may simply migrate to smaller, murkier corners of the internet where moderation is thinner and adult oversight practically non-existent. British public policy has a rich history of closing one obvious loophole only to create three more feral ones round the back.

Suffolk schools prepare for the next moral panic

Headteachers across the county are, unofficially, bracing for another wave of meetings in which everyone agrees phones are causing havoc but no one can agree whether the answer is stricter discipline, better digital education, or hurling all devices into the North Sea. A deputy head in Mid Suffolk, speaking with the haunted tone of a man who has broken up three lunchtime disputes over deleted streaks, said any ban would be welcome if it reduced the amount of “online fallout arriving physically at the school gates”.

Teachers have a point. Much of what gets described as online life is simply playground life with receipts. Rows no longer stay in the corridor. They metastasise overnight, develop factions, pick up an audience and reappear the next morning with screenshots.

Still, schools are also aware that bans can become theatre. It is entirely possible to outlaw one app and leave untouched the wider pressures driving children online in the first place – boredom, loneliness, status anxiety, social expectation and the simple fact that everybody else is there.

One councillor still thinks Bebo can be saved

No modern British issue is complete without a local official proposing something gloriously unhelpful. Enter a veteran councillor from near Hadleigh, who has reportedly called for a return to “approved internet hours”, stronger youth club provision, and the immediate reinstatement of Bebo because it was, in his words, “friendlier and had less posing”. He is understood to believe algorithms are a kind of imported biscuit.

Yet buried in the nonsense is an awkward truth. Children do need places to be that are not monetised, performative and relentlessly tracked. Previous generations had parks, leisure centres, record shops, youth clubs, arcades, fields, bus shelters and the occasional deeply suspect snooker hall. Today’s teenagers have a handset and a feed designed by people whose commercial objective is not their serenity.

That is why this debate keeps returning. It is not really about whether an app should ask for ID. It is about whether adults are finally prepared to admit that handing children over to profit-driven attention machines was perhaps not one of our finer national ideas.

So should there be a ban?

Probably not in the blunt, thunderous form imagined on phone-ins, where a presenter asks if Britain has “simply lost control” and a caller from Diss blames influencers, oat milk and modern architecture. A sweeping ban would be hard to enforce, easy to dodge and likely to trigger a black market in older cousins willing to verify accounts for the price of a chicken wrap.

But stronger age checks, real penalties for platforms, better default protections for younger users and far less tolerance for the industry’s usual fog of excuses would be harder to mock and easier to justify. It is less dramatic than a ban, which is precisely why it might work.

The difficulty, as ever, is that sensible policy lacks the thrill of a crackdown. It does not fit neatly on a front page. It does not let anyone declare victory by teatime. It just chips away at a problem without pretending Parliament can abolish adolescence.

And that may be the only grown-up answer available. If ministers want to help children, they should start by resisting the fantasy that one grand gesture will tidy up a mess built over fifteen years, several platforms and an entire national addiction to staring at glowing rectangles. Until then, the under-16s will keep finding ways around the rules, the adults will keep posting furious takes about it, and somewhere in Suffolk a parish meeting will still be trying to establish whether MSN Messenger can make a comeback.

A helpful place to start is this: less panic, more honesty, and a basic acceptance that if we want children to spend less time online, we may need to build them a more interesting world offline.

Meal Deal Price Increase 2026: Panic at Lunch

By 12.14pm in Ipswich, the signs of civic strain were already visible. Office workers stood motionless in supermarket aisles, clutching chicken salad sandwiches like wartime ration books, after fresh whispers of a meal deal price increase 2026 sent lunchgoers into a familiar British state of emotional collapse disguised as queueing.

The meal deal, for years the thin triangular membrane holding the nation together, has now become the latest battlefield in the struggle between inflation, shrinkflation and the public’s absolute refusal to pay £6.10 for a wrap, a bottle of lurid blue liquid and a packet of salt-and-vinegar air. Analysts, retail experts and one man in Bury St Edmunds who still refers to a baguette as “foreign bread” all agree that if the meal deal goes up again in 2026, Britain may finally have to look itself in the mirror.

Why the meal deal price increase 2026 matters more than most budgets

There are, of course, bigger issues in national life. But few are consumed at 1pm next to a branch of Boots while pretending a yoghurt drink counts as balance. The meal deal occupies a sacred position in British economic thought. It is not merely lunch. It is a benchmark, a social contract, and for many junior office staff the only remaining evidence that civilisation has not entirely packed up and moved to Dubai.

When utility bills rise, people sigh. When rail fares go up, they mutter darkly and continue boarding delayed trains. But suggest a meal deal price increase 2026 and suddenly the nation rediscovers political consciousness. Men who have not read a policy document since the coalition years begin speaking passionately about value. Women who successfully remortgaged during three prime ministers in a fortnight can nevertheless be pushed to the brink by an extra 40p on pasta and a drink.

Retail insiders, using the sort of language usually reserved for flood defences or foot-and-mouth, say suppliers face difficult choices. Bread costs more. Packaging costs more. Refrigeration costs more. The chicken has, in some cases, started behaving as though it knows its market worth. Yet shoppers remain unmoved by industry realities, having spent the past decade being told that paying more for less is either innovation or an exciting customer journey.

Suffolk reacts with the customary level of restraint

Across the county, residents responded calmly, in the sense that nobody set fire to a garden centre. In Lowestoft, one commuter described the prospect of a 2026 increase as “the final insult”, though he admitted he had not yet seen any official figures and was operating entirely on vibes. In Stowmarket, a woman buying two reduced sausage rolls and a can of questionable energy drink insisted she had “seen this coming” ever since the premium sandwich category began getting ideas above its station.

A hastily convened focus group outside a supermarket in Felixstowe found broad concern that any new pricing would further erode the already fragile mathematics of lunch. If the meal deal rises but the components remain suspiciously small, shoppers fear they will enter a spiritually dangerous zone in which a so-called deal is simply three unrelated disappointments sold together.

One participant, a teaching assistant from Woodbridge, said she could tolerate higher prices if supermarkets restored honesty to the system. “If you’re charging more,” she said, “I want a proper drink, not one of these 250ml bottles that looks like it belongs in a doll’s house. And I don’t want to be tricked into feeling triumphant because I picked the expensive smoothie. That’s not value. That’s tactical grief.” She was immediately nominated by onlookers for a peerage.

What could push a meal deal price increase in 2026

The official reasons are the usual grim parade of modern retail life. Food inflation remains annoyingly committed to the bit. Labour costs are up. Energy costs continue to do whatever they like. Packaging rules, supply chains and the cost of ingredients all combine to create the kind of spreadsheet suffering that eventually lands on the shelf in the form of a £5.75 lunch and a little yellow sign calling it great news.

Then there is the premiumisation problem, one of the great public scams of our age. Somewhere along the line, supermarkets decided the answer to economic pressure was not simply to charge more, but to gently imply that customers had been living like peasants all this time. Suddenly your ordinary ham sandwich was no longer enough. What you needed, apparently, was oak-smoked this, fire-roasted that, aioli made by monks, and a side marketed with the soft menace of a lifestyle upgrade.

That creates a trade-off. Some shoppers want the cheapest possible lunch and would happily accept a sandwich called Plain Beige if it cost £3.50. Others insist the meal deal must still feel like a tiny treat, especially if the rest of the week involves staring at emails and hearing phrases like “touch base”. If prices rise in 2026, supermarkets will have to decide whether the meal deal remains a democratic staple or becomes an aspirational snack for middle managers and people who own reusable coffee cups on purpose.

The psychology of the British meal deal shopper

What makes this all so delicate is that the meal deal was never really about saving money. It was about winning. The shopper enters the fridge section with a mission, assesses the field, and emerges having extracted the maximum possible value from an institution far larger than themselves. It is one of the last arenas in British life where people still believe cunning selection can alter destiny.

That is why a price rise lands differently from other increases. The customer does not just feel poorer. They feel personally outmanoeuvred. If the baseline price climbs while the premium items become harder to find, the game starts to feel rigged. Nobody wants to spend their lunch break discovering that the only eligible snack is a dry flapjack and the interesting crisps have been quietly moved into a non-participating range.

Economists might describe this as perceived consumer value. Normal people describe it as being mugged off.

Winners, losers and the black market baguette economy

If the meal deal price increase 2026 becomes reality, some sectors may benefit. Independent cafés will briefly enjoy a burst of hopeful custom from workers declaring they are “done with supermarkets” before returning three days later after paying £8.20 for a toastie with ambitions. Greggs may acquire further status as a parallel government. Corner shops could thrive if they master the dark art of making a can, crisps and sandwich feel less extortionate than a branded chain.

The clear losers will be those caught between convenience and principle – students, commuters, NHS staff, tradies and anyone whose lunch choices are governed by time, budget and a low tolerance for quinoa. There is also concern for the nation’s office kitchens, which may see a sharp rise in desperate homemade alternatives. Britain is not ready for the return of tuna carried in warm Tupperware.

Sources close to local commerce say some businesses are already preparing for behavioural changes. In Norwich, a rumoured workplace support group has allegedly been formed for employees transitioning away from premium meal deals. Members are said to meet weekly to discuss grief, loyalty cards and the emotional betrayal of discovering that sushi is no longer included.

Can supermarkets get away with it?

Probably, but not gracefully. British shoppers have a remarkable capacity to complain theatrically while continuing to participate. That said, there is a limit. The meal deal survives because it still feels like an arrangement rather than an insult. Push the price too high and the whole spell breaks.

There are ways retailers might soften the blow. They could improve the range, make pricing clearer and stop pretending bottled water is an exciting inclusion. They could also avoid the usual corporate line that customers are asking for greater flexibility, when what customers are usually asking for is a sandwich that doesn’t cost the same as a modest car repair.

It also depends on what happens elsewhere. If inflation cools and wages stop behaving like Victorian street urchins, shoppers may begrudgingly accept a small increase. But if 2026 brings another round of everyday costs rising while portions shrink and quality drifts, the meal deal may become a symbol of something wider – the sense that even lunch now requires financial planning and emotional resilience.

For now, Suffolk waits. Clerks straighten shelf labels. Meal prep evangelists grow briefly insufferable. And across the county, decent people continue to stand in front of refrigerated sandwiches, trying to work out whether this is still a deal or just a very British form of hostage negotiation.

If prices do rise next year, the smartest response may not be panic but attention. Watch what gets smaller, what gets excluded and what suddenly becomes “premium” after years of sitting quietly in the same fridge. A higher price is irritating. Being taken for a fool with a snack in your hand is the part that really sticks in the throat.

Aussie backpacker unpacks hammock to sit out M25 traffic jam

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Aussie backpacker unpacks hammock to sit out M25 traffic jam

M25 bottleneck didn’t defeat chilled-out Aussie bloke.

By Our Angling Correspondent: Courtney Pike

An Australian tourist was found relaxing in a hammock suspended between his car and a roadside barrier while stuck in a three-hour traffic jam on the M25 near London.

The man, identified as Tom Balderdash, 24 from Woolloomooloolloomoo, Sydney, had been travelling from Heathrow Airport to Suffolk when the congestion brought traffic to a standstill, leaving thousands of motorists stationary under grey skies and intermittent frustration.

Rather than remain in his vehicle like most drivers, Mr Balderdash retrieved a compact travel hammock from his boot and ingeniously secured it between the car and the safety barrier, creating what he described as a ‘mobile hangout’.

Other motorists reportedly watched in disbelief as he lay back wearing sunglasses, swaying gently in the breeze created by passing lorries, seemingly unaffected by the gridlock around him.

Having a swinging time

When asked how he was coping, Tom said he was taking the situation in his stride, adding that the only improvement would have been ‘a few tinnies of Fosters Lager’ to complete the experience. He added that traffic jams in Australia had prepared him well for such moments of enforced leisure.

Highways authorities reminded drivers that stopping in live lanes or attaching hammocks to roadside infrastructure is strongly discouraged, regardless of personal philosophy or beverage preference.

Despite the unusual scene, no injuries were reported, and traffic eventually resumed its slow crawl toward Suffolk once the incident cleared. Some commuters later suggested the display was the most relaxed they had ever seen anyone appear on the UK’s busiest motorway, with one describing it as ‘a masterclass in rage suppression’.

Mr Balderdash was later seen packing away his hammock and continuing his journey west. No further comment was made today.

How the FIFA world rankings have changed since 2016

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How the FIFA world rankings have changed since 2016

In April 2016, the FIFA world rankings told a story of South American dominance, with the continent taking three of the top four places. Many of today’s favourites in the FIFA 2026 World Cup odds were further down the order than you may expect 10 years ago.

A decade on, the order looks almost unrecognisable. Several nations that defined the 2016 top four have since fallen sharply, while others have risen from well outside the upper reaches of the table.

April 2016 rankings:

1.     Argentina

2.     Belgium

3.     Chile

4.     Colombia

5.     Germany

6.     Spain

7.     Brazil

8.     Portugal

9.     Uruguay

10.  England

April 2026 rankings:

1.     France

2.     Spain

3.     Argentina

4.     England

5.     Portugal

6.     Brazil

7.     Netherlands

8.     Morocco

9.     Belgium

10.  Germany

Argentina: still elite, no longer top

Argentina’s position in 2016 was built on Lionel Messi’s peak years and a squad that had reached the 2014 World Cup final and back-to-back Copa America finals. They were the most complete international side in the world at that point. Since then, they have added the 2021 Copa America and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, with Messi’s performances in the final against France settling the debate about his international legacy.

Despite all of that, Argentina currently sit third rather than first in the current standings, having just fallen from second in the most recent standings update. The Elo-based system FIFA now uses rewards consistent competitive activity, and Argentina have played fewer qualifying fixtures in recent months than France or Spain.

Belgium and Chile: rapid falls from the top

Belgium held top spot for much of 2015 and 2016, built around Kevin De Bruyne, Eden Hazard, and Romelu Lukaku. That generation reached the 2018 World Cup semi-finals, finishing third, but never won a major tournament. As the squad aged and results became less consistent, the rankings followed suit. They are now ninth.

Chile’s decline was sharper. The back-to-back Copa America winners of 2015 and 2016, built around Arturo Vidal and Alexis Sanchez, failed to qualify for the 2018 or 2022 World Cups. That generation had no successors of equivalent quality, and Chile now sit outside the top 30, having failed to qualify for this year’s tournament.

England: from the edge of the top 10 to fourth

England’s 10th-place ranking in April 2016 was already fragile, and after the Iceland defeat at the Euros they slipped out of the top 10, reaching as low as 13th. The recovery since has been built on consistent tournament progression, with semi-finals at the 2018 World Cup, finals at Euro 2020 and Euro 2024, and a 2026 qualifying campaign in which they won all eight games without conceding a goal.

France and Morocco: the decade’s biggest risers

The current favourites, France, were 21st in April 2016. They went on to win the 2018 World Cup, reach the final again in 2022, and reclaim top spot in April 2026 following a 2-1 friendly win over Brazil in March, which pushed them ahead of Spain on 1,877 points.

Morocco’s rise is the most striking of any nation in this period. They were 64th in April 2016, but their 2022 World Cup run to the semi-finals, which included wins over Spain and Portugal, transformed their standing in the rankings. A 2025 Africa Cup of Nations title consolidated it, though not without controversy. Senegal initially won the final 1-0, but a default win was handed to Morocco months later following an investigation into Senegal’s 15-minute pitch-walk protest. They are now eighth in the world, the first African nation to break into the top 10, though for many observers, how much credit they deserve for that particular honour remains an open question.

The Pringles Plunge: Ipswich Woman Bathes in Savoury Snack Crisps

Ipswich Woman Bathes in Savoury Snack Crisps

Ipswich woman bathes in blended Pringles for skincare benefits.

By Our Consumer Correspondent: Colin Allcabs

IPSWICH, SUFFOLK — A local woman has sparked intense debate within the culinary and skincare communities after revealing her daily routine of bathing entirely in Pringles potato crisps.

Brenda Crisp, 27, of Ipswich, claims the practice has significantly improved both her mental well-being and her skin texture, despite a complete lack of endorsement from medical professionals or the product’s manufacturer.

Ms Crisp’s bathroom is dedicated to dry-snack immersion. Rather than using water, she fills her tub with an estimated 45 to 50 standard-sized canisters per session. A self-described “crisp mixologist”, she blends various seasoned varieties to achieve specific aromatic profiles.

“The sour cream and onion provides deep, savoury, comforting base notes,” Crisp stated in a press interview. “But if I am feeling sluggish on a Tuesday morning, I will toss in two cans of Texas BBQ sauce flavour to really invigorate the senses and provide a smoky, wood-fired aura for the rest of the day.”

Bath salt

In addition to full-body immersion, Crisp has integrated the hyper-processed potato snack into her facial regimen. To combat morning puffiness and dark circles, she places two unbroken, hyperbolic paraboloid-shaped crisps over her eyes, substituting them for traditional cucumber slices. According to Crisp, the unique curvature of the snack conforms perfectly to the human orbital socket, while the light dusting of salt and monosodium glutamate provides an “unmatched tingling exfoliation”.

Local dermatologists have largely condemned the routine, citing risks of severe dehydration and acute sodium buildup on the epidermis. However, Crisp remains undeterred, noting that the hardest part of the routine is resisting the urge to eat the bath contents. She is currently campaigning for the snack brand to release a line of bath-salt-scented crisps ahead of the summer season.

Must Read: Claudia Schiffer baths in Adnams beer to keep young

Premier League Standings Cause Suffolk Panic

At 8.14am, as the first kettle clicked on in a semi-detached home somewhere between Ipswich and a lingering sense of disappointment, the Premier League standings were checked with the sort of grim ceremonial dread usually reserved for council tax letters and school WhatsApp groups. By 8.17am, three men in replica shirts had declared the table “a disgrace”, one pub had blamed VAR, and a woman in Stowmarket had asked whether 14th still qualified a club for “Europe or, failing that, a nice caravan break”.

Officials have since confirmed that the latest movement in the table has had a measurable effect on public mood across East Anglia, with one local authority briefly considering whether to lower flags to half-mast whenever a mid-table side slides beneath Brentford. The proposal was dropped after councillors realised nobody could agree whether Brentford were still a novelty or had become annoyingly competent.

Why the Premier League standings feel personal

The great power of the Premier League table is that it turns grown adults into amateur mathematicians, prophets and small-scale constitutional reformers. It is not just a list. It is a weekly instrument of emotional vandalism, updated in real time to inform millions that their club is either “back” or “finished” based entirely on whether a left-back mishit a clearance at 4.36pm on a Sunday.

For Suffolk readers, many of whom support clubs with the loyalty of a medieval oath and the emotional resilience of a flake in a heatwave, the standings carry extra weight. The table is discussed in offices, on market squares, at bus stops and in pubs where someone will always say, with unjustified authority, that “you can tell more after ten games”, before saying the same thing after twenty-two games and again in April.

There is also the annual confusion over what counts as success. First place is easy enough. Bottom three is less glamorous. Everything in between becomes a fog of delusion. Eighth is either a tremendous achievement or an insult to the club’s heritage, depending on wage bill, expectations and whether Talksport has had a pop at the manager that morning.

How people actually read the Premier League standings

On paper, the table is straightforward. Played, won, drawn, lost, goals for, goals against, goal difference, points. In practice, nobody reads it like that. Supporters read vertically, horizontally and spiritually.

Vertically, they look for their own club first, then the nearest rival, then whichever big six side has had an unusually silly week. Horizontally, they examine goal difference as if it were DNA evidence. Spiritually, they decide whether the whole thing “looks wrong” and react accordingly.

This helps explain why two clubs separated by one point can experience completely different atmospheres. One fanbase sees momentum, character and an exciting project. The other sees drift, collapse and the likely return of Sam Allardyce in a consultancy role. The standings are objective, but football supporters remain gloriously committed to treating them as a personal attack.

One man in Felixstowe, who asked to be identified only as Darren because his family are tired, said his club were “basically top” if you ignored away form, injuries, referees, the Christmas fixtures and matches against teams “with too much money or accents”. Experts believe this is now the leading method of table analysis in England.

The annual race for fourth, fifth and moral victory

The title race gets the headlines, but the true English art lies in pretending not to care about the race for European places while caring about it so intensely that sleep becomes optional. Modern Premier League standings have made this worse by introducing enough qualification permutations to confuse a Treasury select committee.

Fourth used to mean Champions League and closure. Then fifth started meaning maybe Champions League, maybe Europa League, maybe a play-off in a country your supporters cannot place on a map without help from an auntie who watches Eurovision. Add cup winners, coefficient places and one continental competition that sounds faintly invented, and the table starts to resemble a codebreaker’s worksheet.

This is fertile ground for false hope. A side can sit seventh in February and somehow have supporters discussing flights to Milan, despite losing 3-0 to Wolves the previous evening. Equally, a club in fifth can behave like it has been condemned to a life sentence. Football, unlike most areas of life, allows people to call a season a disaster while remaining two points off the top four.

Relegation math is now a public health issue

If the upper half of the table inspires delusion, the lower half brings spreadsheets, bargaining and odd superstition. By March, supporters of struggling clubs can often be found calculating survival scenarios on phones with the concentration of hostage negotiators.

The Premier League standings become especially dangerous here because they tempt people into the phrase “winnable run”, one of football’s oldest and least reliable narcotics. Every fixture looks manageable until kick-off. Then an already relegated side from nowhere suddenly starts playing like 1970 Brazil because your centre-half slipped near the penalty spot.

In Lowestoft, a landlord reportedly introduced a house rule banning the sentence “we only need four wins” after two customers nearly came to blows over whether a draw at home to Bournemouth counted as “a point gained” or “two dropped and perhaps all joy”. Police did not comment, though one constable was heard saying goal difference should be “illegal at this time of year”.

There is also the uncomfortable truth that not all 17th-place finishes feel equal. Staying up by one point can be sold as resilience, togetherness and belief. Staying up by one point after spending £140 million and sacking two managers tends to be sold as “a platform to build on”, which is newspaper language for everyone involved looking tired in expensive knitwear.

The television graphics have made it worse

Once upon a time, people checked the table in the paper and got on with the roast. Now the standings arrive live, glowing and accusatory, every few minutes, with arrows, shaded zones and commentary designed to suggest that a club moving from 11th to 10th at 2.58pm has altered the destiny of the nation.

This has trained supporters to experience football as a sequence of miniature constitutional crises. A goal in the late kick-off no longer affects just the teams playing. It somehow ruins Sunday for people in Bury St Edmunds who had no previous opinion on Fulham until 6.12pm.

Broadcasters know exactly what they are doing. They flash up “as it stands” tables with all the menace of an Ofsted report. They mention “pressure mounting” after three matches. They invite former players to say things like “this club should never be 9th”, as though league position ought to be inherited like silverware and gout.

To be fair, the drama works because supporters want it to work. If the table were treated sensibly, football would lose half its pub debate and most of its radio phone-ins. The standings are not just information. They are kindling.

Suffolk reacts in the usual calm and measured way

Across the county, readers have continued to process the latest table with admirable restraint. In Ipswich, a man stared at the standings for so long his tea went cold and his dog reportedly learned two swear words. In Sudbury, a couple postponed a christening argument to discuss whether goal difference “means confidence”. In Woodbridge, a retired geography teacher produced a hand-drawn chart proving that his team always dips in November because “the earth tilts against us”.

Meanwhile, one village hall is understood to be hosting a support group for those trapped between irrational optimism and the memory of previous seasons. Attendees are encouraged to speak openly, avoid saying “game in hand” unless medically supervised, and acknowledge that being 12th in October is not, in itself, evidence of civilisation’s collapse.

This publication understands the public appetite for clarity, so let us provide some. The standings matter because they are the cleanest lie in sport. They look precise, rational and final, but every supporter sees in them whatever they were already afraid of. A good team can look vulnerable. A bad team can look plucky. A perfectly normal season can feel like a Shakespearean curse if your nearest rival wins on Monday night.

That is why people keep checking. Not for facts, exactly, but for permission to feel either superior, doomed or cautiously smug for an hour and a half.

And if your club is currently lower than your dignity can bear, there is still comfort to be found. The table changes, panic fades, and somewhere this weekend another manager will describe a 2-1 defeat as “pleasing in spells”, giving the rest of us the strength to carry on.