BALLYGALLY Castle is celebrating its 400th anniversary – and this charming castle hotel is full of surprises.
The 4-star hotel was originally built as a castle back in 1625 by Scottish laird James Shaw.
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The tower contains the tower rooms: the oldest hotel rooms in Northern IrelandCredit: Jenna StevensThe hotel sits on Ballygally Bay, just steps away from the seaCredit: Jenna Stevens
Now it’s the only 17th Century building still used as a residence in Northern Ireland today.
From Game of Thrones Afternoon Tea to braving a swim in the Irish Sea, I explored everything Ballygally Castle Hotel has to offer.
County Antrim is known for its stunning Causeway Coast and Glens, meaning that there is plenty to explore right on your doorstep.
Ballygally itself is a picturesque seaside town with a sweeping sandy beach and rugged coastline.
What is the hotel like?
Ballygally Castle hotel is half historic charm, half modern luxury.
The exterior has been refurbished, but still holds many of the castle‘s original features.
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Inside, the decor feels luxurious yet warm and welcoming.
Comfortable sofas by a cozy fireplace invite you to sit down and warm up, whilst the bar and lounge area offers stunning sea views.
There are plenty of quirky castle features inside the hotel, such as the original front door from 1625 decorated with the Shaw family coat of arms.
You can even visit the hotel’s Ghost Room, said to be haunted by Lady Isabella Shaw.
She is said to wander the hotel corridors at night, and many of the hotel staff have reported creepy happenings.
Game of Thrones fans will be pleased to notice that the door to the Garden Restaurant is No. 9 to the Door of Thrones series.
There are historical and interactive features dotted around the castle hotelCredit: Jenna StevensThe Garden Restaurant keeps on-theme with its knight in armour watching over dinersCredit: Jenna StevensThe creepy ghost room has a peculiar atmosphere when stepping insideCredit: Jenna Stevens
The ornate door is carved from trees that fell from a storm in the Dark Hedges, the iconic forest that appears in the popular program.
The ‘Doors of Thrones’ appear across Northern Ireland, giving fans a trail to explore on their visit.
You can even grab a Door of Thrones passport from the hotel to collect stamps along your journey.
Outside, the hotel boasts beautifully-kept gardens and a tranquil trout stream, where you can admire the exterior of the castle.
What are the rooms like?
There are 54 rooms to choose from at Ballygally Castle Hotel.
History fans can choose to stay in the Tower Rooms, the oldest hotel bedrooms in Northern Ireland.
Whilst those wanting something a little more luxurious can opt for the Coastal Deluxe Rooms or Antrim Suite.
The cloud beds are huge, soft and warm – perfect to jump into after a sea swimCredit: Hastings HotelsMany rooms come with sea viewsCredit: Hastings HotelsSpacious bathrooms come with cosy towel robes and slippersCredit: Jenna Stevens
I stayed in a Coastal Deluxe Room, a spacious option with calming views of Ballygally Bay.
On a clear day, you can even see the coastline of Scotland on the horizon.
The room comes with a roomy bathtub, robes, slippers, ESPA toiletries and tea and coffee amenities.
Plus the king bed with its cloud mattress and large flatscreen TV opposite made it very easy to unwind.
Superior Rooms start at £150 per night on a B&B basis.
What is there to eat and drink there?
The Garden Restaurant offers views of the castle gardens, elegant chandeliers and even a knight in armour to transport you back in time.
Here you can enjoy A La Carte dining, with mains including a local catch of the day and a delicious seafood chowder.
I opted for the slow cooked Irish beef with traditional colcannon mash, a tender dish that melted in the mouth.
I finished my evening meal with the “Taste the Island Cheese Slate” – a selection of local cheeses which paired well with a glass of house red.
The Game of Thrones-themed Afternoon Tea is a tasty treat for fans of the seriesCredit: Hastings HotelsThe hotel is popular among locals for its carveryCredit: Hastings Hotels
With delicious options in both the Garden Restaurant and the Lounge, there’s no need to stray from the hotel to find good food.
The buffet-style breakfast at Ballygally Castle doesn’t disappoint either.
There is plenty of choice, with a variety of locally-sourced ingredients.
I particularly enjoyed the local pork sausages, potato bread and porridge served with a dash of Irish whiskey.
And if you’re here as a Game of Thronesfan, you’ve got to try the themed Afternoon Tea experience.
At £36 per person, you can enjoy sandwiches with treats such as Hodor’s pulled beef brioche and Dothraki trifle with mini dragon’s egg.
What is there to do?
There is plenty to see and do around Ballygally Castle Hotel, most of which involves exploring the nearby stunning scenery.
The castle is the perfect base to explore the Causeway Coastal Route, 115 mile journey through Northern Ireland’s breathtaking coastline.
Drive 40 minutes North to reach a beautiful National Nature Reserve, Glenariff Forest Park.
Glenariff Forest Park stretches for four and a half milesCredit: Jenna StevensThe “waterfall walk” stops by a number of breath-taking viewsCredit: Jenna Stevens
Here you can tackle a number of forest trails, or simply sit at Glenariff Teahouse to soak in the spectacular views.
I recommend wandering the “waterfall walk”, a 3km circular trail leading you past a number of enchanting waterfalls.
And if the Giant’s Causeway is on your bucket list, you can reach the landmark in just over an hour’s drive.
Back at the hotel, sea-swimmers can enjoy a “Sea Dip and Hot Sip”.
Braving the sea dip was scary at first, but coming out to a warm dry robe felt amazingCredit: Jenna StevensEnjoying a hot chocolate on the beach is the perfect post-dip treatCredit: Hastings Hotels
Guests who book this package are welcomed from their sea swim with a dry robe, hot water bottle and flask of warming hot chocolate.
This package includes your overnight stay and breakfast in the morning, and starts at £155 per person.
Is the hotel family friendly?
Ballgally Castle Hotel is family friendly, offering dedicated Family rooms and a children’s menu in both restaurants.
Is there access for guests with disabilities?
Ballygally Castle Hotel is accessible throughout its grounds.
It also offers two fully accessible bedrooms with wet rooms, as well as rooms with walk-in shower facilities.
Be sure to mention any specific requests when booking.
The beach of Ballygally is worth a visit when exploring the Causeway CoastCredit: Hastings HotelsThe exterior is part modern, part 17th-century castleCredit: Jenna Stevens
One horrified passenger witnessed strict enforcement of Ryanair’s cabin bag rules at Birmingham Airport, with 12 passengers forced to pay £46 while boarding after bringing the wrong sort of suitcase
12 passengers were forced to pay £46 for oversized luggage during boarding(Image: ewg3D via Getty Images)
A woman thought everything was going swimmingly as she “breezed through” airport security, on her way to have some fun in the sun.
Then things took an unfortunate turn, with no fewer than 12 passengers forced to pay £46 while boarding, all because they’d taken the wrong sort of suitcase.
According to journalist Emily Chaplin, who was flying out from Birmingham Airport, she was travelling with Ryanair as she had done multiple times before, while noting she’d “never witnessed such strict enforcement of this rule”.
While a number of Emily’s passengers ended up having a glum start to their holidays, their all too common blunder could have been easily avoided. In a piece originally penned for Birmingham Live, here’s what Emily saw, including her advice on how you too can dodge a frustrating fine…
“We breezed through security at Birmingham Airport in a mere 45 minutes, which felt like a godsend on a May Bank Holiday Monday, especially after hearing tales of three-hour queues and passengers missing their flights. It seemed as though the travel Gods were smiling upon us, promising a seamless journey to sunny Tenerife – or so we believed.
“Our gate number had just flashed up on the board, prompting us to leave Wetherspoons immediately to grab some sun cream and a drink from Boots along the way. Upon reaching our gate, we were met with a lengthy queue, and it quickly became apparent why progress was so sluggish.
“A secondary mini queue was forming behind a blue metal box at the passport check desk, where a woman was frantically attempting to stuff her overflowing backpack into the top section of the crate. My heart dropped.
“It seemed every other passenger was being pulled aside to verify if their bag complied with the size restrictions stipulated in their booking. I was well aware of Ryanair’s stringent luggage limits – I’d even purchased a perfectly-sized backpack from Amazon to avoid shelling out extra for an upgrade, and spent considerable time rolling my clothes to fit five days’ worth into it.
“Despite having flown with Ryanair numerous times before, I’d never witnessed such strict enforcement of this rule. The lady in front of us presented her passport and boarding pass to the desk attendant, who then asked her to fit her clearly oversized suitcase into the measuring box sideways. It was a futile attempt.
“You’ll have to pay £46 to bring the bag on board,” the Ryanair employee informed her. “But I was allowed this last time I flew with Ryanair,” the passenger argued back. “It’s just Ryanair policy,” the staff member retorted, her monotone voice indicating she’d probably repeated the same line countless times that day.
“Next in line, I nervously handed over my passport and removed my bulging backpack from my shoulder for inspection. Doubts crept in as I questioned whether it would still measure up to the required 40x20x25cm, especially after packing that extra beach dress. She gave it a quick glance and let us through. Relief washed over me.
“In the ensuing 15 minutes before we were permitted to board, we observed numerous others having their luggage measured. A total of 12 (yes, we kept count) had to cough up additional fees when their bags failed to meet the size requirements. One woman, burdened with an overstuffed backpack, resorted to removing clothes from her bag and layering them onto her outfit to reduce its weight. Her strategy worked, and she was allowed to proceed without any extra charges.
“Another group donning ‘Girls’ Trip – Tenerife 2024′ t-shirts tried to dispute the fee. From our eavesdropping, it appeared they had added the baggage option to their return flight but overlooked it for the outbound one. They ended up having to fork out the money nonetheless. I sympathised with them. A simple blunder had made a significant hole in their holiday budget and cast a shadow over the start of their journey – though nothing that a few Proseccos on the plane couldn’t remedy.
“I’m uncertain if Ryanair is tightening its luggage regulations universally, or if my encounter was an isolated incident, but it’s something to bear in mind if you’re planning to fly soon. It starts from £6 to add a larger cabin bag and upgrade to Priority Boarding when booking, so if you find packing light a challenge, it might be worth considering to save yourself a cool 40 quid.”
Do you have a story to share? Email me at julia.banim@reachplc.com
Package deals, with their offer of sun, sea and all you can eat buffets were beloved by bargain loving Brits in the 1970s and ‘80s. Now they’re back with a bang for 2026, with more holidaymakers than ever choosing package breaks.
We’re all going on a package holiday! Tourists at the beach of Torremolinos, 1979 (Image: ullstein bild via Getty Images)
Package holidays are back! And truly en vogue. Sean Tipton, of the Association of British Travel Agents, says: “Packages are cool again, especially among younger travellers, There’s a big difference between the package holidays of the past and today, though. There’s a lot more flexibility in terms of length of stay and destination. You can get a package to trek through the Andes now if you want. That cheap and cheerful reputation is just a snobby attitude. If you adopt it then you’re missing out.”
Latest ABTA figures covering late 2024 to early 2025 found 62% of those travelling abroad chose a package deal, with 18-24-year-olds making up key markets. Despite the cost of living crisis, more people went on holiday during the last 12 months than in the previous year – a trend that’s expected to continue, with package deals front and centre, according to ABTA research.
Sean explains: “Package deals are about value for money, security and convenience. “You get so much more protection if you book a package. Your contract is with the tour operator, so if something goes wrong, it’s their responsibility to sort it out. I think when the internet came along people thought, ‘oh, we can do it ourselves, book separate flights and hotels and it will be cheaper.’ But that wasn’t necessarily true.”
“Then when things went wrong and they didn’t have the security of a package deal – for instance when Covid struck and people couldn’t get their money back, people paused for thought.” Nostalgia also plays a part, with Brightsun Travel, founded in the 1980s, saying more travellers yearn for holidays from a bygone era.
In a survey of 2,000 people, 20% missed postcards and film cameras, as well as physical guidebooks. Booking online was also highlighted as a negative. Mala Schneider, Head of Global Marketing at Brightsun Travel, says: “We’re surrounded by connected technology, so it’s hard to believe there was a time when you had to wait weeks for your holiday photos to be developed, or take a phrase book with you to be understood.
“There was a lot of fun to be had, though, living adventures and experiences in the moment, without worrying about missing something or capturing the day to digital perfection.” Martin Oliver, 75, a retired marine engineer and author, originally from Coventry, waxes lyrical about his 1970 package holiday with a group of mate.
He says: “We flew out of Birmingham Airport to Palma, Majorca. Flying was more comfortable back then – no security checks, more legroom, and fewer delays. But there was also a lingering smell of cigarettes, as smoking was allowed for passengers seated towards the rear of the plane. It is hard to believe now.”
And they landed in a different world. He says: “It was the first time in our lives we’d ordered a bottle of wine with a meal in a restaurant.” They also tried garlic and enjoyed siestas. Martin, who wrote a book about growing up in the 1960s called Happy Jack, says they “‘didn’t know what to do” with the olive oil on the table.
He’d only ever used it “warm for earache.” He adds: “One of the lads mentioned an item next to his toilet with a sprinkler in it for washing his feet and swimming trunks. Of course it was a bidet!”
Spain is still the top selling package destination, although Morocco and Egypt offer good value. Jo Rhodes, Senior Researcher at Which? Travel says: “Candyfloss, crazy golf and holiday camps were for decades the standard ingredients of our summer holidays. “Affordable package deals to destinations such as Majorca were on offer from the 1950s. But we were still more likely to spend a fortnight in Britain. Brits made just 4.5m trips abroad in 1950.”
Those figures had virtually doubled by 1970 – although just one in three of us had been overseas. But the travel market was growing. The basic cost of a flight was expensive, but the cost of the rest of the holiday was affordable.
Historically, Mediterranean spots like Greece and Spain were the most popular for one or two week package deals, although the more adventurous headed to Rhodes and Corfu, as well as the as-yet-undeveloped Algarve. Jo says: “Booking a package is still the best way to protect your next holiday abroad. The ATOL scheme ensures you won’t be left out of pocket, or worse, stranded if your holiday company goes bust.”
Travel agent Richard Slater, 57, who runs Henbury Travel based in Macclesfield, says business has increased five fold in recent years. He says: “I’d say 95% of those holidays are package deals. I think we’ve come full circle. Lots of people were going online to book their holiday – now they come to us. We’re like a human search engine and they value our expertise.”
Justin Gaethje survived a five-round war with a relentless Paddy Pimblett to claim the interim UFC lightweight championship by unanimous decision in a bloody and bruising fight in Las Vegas.
The experienced American’s win put an end to Pimblett’s nine-fight winning run at the UFC 324 main event on Saturday, but Gaethje paid tribute to the Liverpool fighter’s durability and heart.
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“Now that Scouser does not get knocked down,” he said after judges scored the fight 48-47, 49-46 and 49-46, which saw MMA’s rising star walk away with his head held high.
“He is very dangerous, got great timing… young kid, dangerous kid. I had to steal his momentum and his confidence,” Gaethje said.
Pimblett struck first in the opening round but the tide quickly turned when Gaethje cracked him with a heavy left-handed punch. The American followed him to the mat with punishing ground strikes before the Briton scrambled back to his feet.
A right hand dropped Pimblett to the canvas again in the second and he was lucky to survive the round as Gaethje pounded away until the horn sounded.
However, despite bleeding from the nose and cuts to his face, Pimblett strung together some clean flurries in the third round that had Gaethje wobbling, with the round briefly paused after a low blow had the 37-year-old American grimacing.
The fourth round swung back in Gaethje’s favour after he absorbed some early pressure, repeatedly finding his target with heavy right hands.
The roaring crowd were on their feet as the final round began and an early slip from Gaethje opened the door for Pimblett, who unloaded a barrage of punches.
Gaethje answered in trademark fashion with a booming right hand and both fighters pushed hard for the finish, with Pimblett closing with a strong final burst.
Pimblett showed grace in defeat.
“I know how tough I am, I don’t need to prove it to anyone. I wanted to leave with that belt, but there’s no other man I’d rather lose to than ‘The Highlight’,” Pimblett said.
“Gaethje is someone I’ve loved watching growing up, watching the UFC. It shows why he’s a legend right there. I thought 48-47 was a fair scorecard.
“You live and you learn. I’m 31. I’ll be back better, it’s as simple as that. You haven’t seen the last of me.”
Gaethje’s win gave him his second career interim lightweight championship and sets up an undisputed title fight against Ilia Topuria, who stepped away last November amidst mounting personal issues but is expected to return at some point in 2026.
The loss was Pimblett’s first in UFC since joining from his native England, snapping a nine-fight winning streak and dropping him to 23-4-0 in his career.
Sean O’Malley, one of UFC’s biggest stars, ended a two-fight losing skid in the co-main event with a controversial unanimous decision victory over Song Yadong of China.
Meanwhile, Waldo Cortes-Acosta of the Dominican Republic defeated Derrick Lewis by knockout at 3:14 in the second round.
In women’s fights, Natalia Silva of Brazil defeated Rose Namajunas by unanimous decision in a potential flyweight title eliminator, although the controversial outcome was met with unanimous dismay from a Vegas crowd that clearly believed Namajunas did enough to pull off the upset against Silva.
The performance marks Silva’s 14th straight victory and her eighth consecutive in the flyweight division to improve her overall record to 20-5-1. More importantly, it may line her up for a title shot against Valentina Shevchenko later this year.
The opening fight of the main card saw heavily favoured Brazilian fighter Jean Silva rebound from his loss against Diego Lopes in September, defeating England’s Arnold Allen in a slugfest that was decided in the third round on two of three official scorecards.
Dominick Cruz, a two-time Bantamweight champion and the division’s inaugural belt holder, was announced as the first member of UFC’s 2026 Hall of Fame class at the conclusion of the prelim show. Cruz will be inducted into the “Modern Era Wing”, which honours fighters who debuted after the first sanctioned UFC event under unified rules was held on November 17, 2000.
Although the goal of “Saturday Night Live” week after week is comedy (“Allegedly!” yells a heckler from the back row), not all guests hosts show up just to prove they can be hilarious.
Instead, some do the show to not only promote their latest project, but to introduce additional parts of themselves to what may be the biggest audience they’ve had to date.
That felt like the case with Teyana Taylor, who was nominated this week for a lead actress Oscar for “One Battle After Another” after walking away with a Golden Globe earlier this month. In her first time hosting “SNL,” the goal seemed less to make her the funniest host than to show people who only know her from the Paul Thomas Anderson film that she’s incredibly talented in more ways than just acting.
After a charming monologue that included her young children, Taylor sang with cast member Kenan Thompson in an airport terminal sketch featuring Shrimp ‘n’ Grits, two gate agents who make their flight delay announcements as R&B songs. Sure, cast member James Austin Johnson may have come in and stolen the sketch as a pilot who’s been drinking, but it was the first indication that Taylor could hold her own vocally with the longest-running cast member in “SNL” history, Thompson.
Later in the show, she dazzled in a dance performance as a surprisingly limber 87-year-old grandpa who’s brought to life by Earth, Wind & Fire songs at his grandson’s wedding. She co-hosted a news panel show in which the two Black hosts (Taylor and Thompson) wordlessly hum judgment on opinions spouted by their white panelists (Mikey Day and Chloe Fineman) and played her “One Battle” character Perfidia Beverly Hills in a pitch-perfect Mattel toy commercial parody.
Taylor played smaller supporting parts such as sideline reporter Lisa Salters in an NFL report that turns into an extended promo for a lesbian culinary show called “Quefs.” “Queer Chefs?” Sportscasters Troy Aikman (Andrew Dismukes) and Joe Buck (Johnson) were afraid to guess. She also portrayed a confused contestant who is there to make friends on a “Survivor”/”Traitors”-style reality competition show and a student in a confidence class taught by a wreck of a teacher (a fantastic Ashley Padilla).
Was Taylor the funniest host “SNL” has had this season? Not by a long shot. But she proved to be one of the most multi-talented.
Musical guests Geese performed “Au Pays du Cocaine” and “Trinidad.” Please Don’t Destroy’s Martin Herlihy wrote and directed a short film that closed the episode about techniques to get someone to break up with you.
In what may have been a missed opportunity, “SNL” wasn’t able to pivot on short notice to address the day’s biggest national news in its cold open: the killing of an ICU nurse by federal agents in Minneapolis. The incident was alluded to on “Weekend Update,” and egregiously missing from a news panel sketch that specifically talked about incidents in Minneapolis. Instead, perhaps to the show’s detriment, it was another week of Johnson’s President Trump impression, this time as host of the Trumps, an award show for the president and members of his administration. There were jokes at the expense of J.D. Vance (Jeremy Culhane) and Kristi Noem (Padilla); for the former it was a dig on his sexuality while Noem was honored for sucking up to Trump before the president stole her award, Kanye West-style. Mike Myers returned as twitchy, unfunny Elon Musk, there to introduce a memorial segment and accompanying song eulogizing the things the Trump administration has taken down including the East Wing, D.E.I., civil rights and Marjorie Taylor Greene.
Taylor’s monologue focused on the other interests and pursuits she has apart from acting in Oscar-nominated films, like directing and going to culinary school. She showed a clip of herself dancing in MTV’s “My Super Sweet 16,” a real thing that happened in her life, and mentioned winning “The Masked Singer” (also true). But the monologue ended with Taylor discussing being a mother and how her big moment at the Golden Globes was undercut by her kids playing on their phones during her speech. Cut to her kids in the “SNL” audience, looking at their phones. Any parent could relate.
Best sketch of the night: This could be better than Mattel’s ‘Boogie Nights’ playsets
You may think that the only movie kids care about at the Academy Awards this year is “KPop Demon Hunters,” but according to this ad from Mattel, it’s toys based on “One Battle After Another” that they really want. The movie’s main characters get action figures with accessories like a battle robe for Leonardo DiCaprio’s character Bob and a pregnant belly add-on for Taylor’s. The parents in the ad (Padilla and Mikey Day) don’t love their kids acting out the lives of toys with names like Junglepussy or reenacting a motel sex scene between Taylor and Sean Penn’s characters. Great conclusion to the piece: the promise of toys based on other Anderson films including “There Will Be Blood.” “I’ve abandoned my boy!” a kid cries, a clever shoutout to an all-but-forgotten Bill Hader sketch.
Also good: Grandpa Jackson probably dances so well because he has no bones
Wedding sketches are a staple on “SNL,” but there probably has never been a guest host who danced the hell out of one the way Taylor did as Grandpa Jackson, who takes to the dance floor to celebrate the bride and groom (Padilla and Kam Patterson). Even with the sketch threatening to go off the rails as Taylor’s bald cap started peeling off, she never missed a step and her dance moves were astonishing. Johnson appeared as a sort-of doctor to help the grandfather after he finally collapses to put a nice capper on the basic, but very effective sketch.
‘Weekend Update’ winner: That’s a wrap for ‘cap’
New featured cast member Culhane debuted on “Update” as Mr. On Blast, a roasting commentator with very light roasts and a lot of body language. But it was Marcello Hernández who won the week with helpful translations of Gen Z expressions including “chopped,” “fahhh” and “glo-up.” Hernández teased “Update” co-host Colin Jost for being out of the loop, declaring terms such as “cap” dead the moment Jost used them (with a gravestone for emphasis). As Hernández explained, Gen Z slang is just Black slang adopted by young people before it gets used by white people. “Once Elon Musk says it, it’s dead,” he declared.
This charming village is now a suburb of a much bigger town in Scotland, where Robert Burns was born and inspired his famous poem ‘Tam o’ Shanter’
The former village now forms part of a much bigger suburb (Image: jimmcdowall / Getty Images)
This wasn’t merely the birthplace of Robert Burns but also served as inspiration for one of his most celebrated works, attracting devotees to the region annually.
Alloway formerly existed as a picturesque village near Scotland’s west coast and was home to the legendary writer Robert Burns. The poet enjoys worldwide acclaim for his works and is honoured annually on Burns Night, yet it all started amongst these tranquil, meandering lanes.
Perhaps his most renowned work, Tam o’ Shanter, draws heavily from his birthplace and mentions the local church and mediaeval bridge, which now serve as attractions for visitors. The poem, dating from 1790, tells of a character whose drunken ways lead him on a horseback journey home one tempestuous night where he encounters witches and warlocks ‘dancing with the devil’.
His father, William Burnes, is actually buried at the Auld Kirk church, which features prominently in the poem. After dark, to generate an unsettling atmosphere and spectral ambience for visitors, the church is illuminated with green lighting.
As we mark Burns Night once more on January 25, numerous Scots and admirers of Burns’ work honour his legacy by visiting Alloway.
Though no longer a village, the location is now a suburb of a considerably larger town, Ayr, which has effectively absorbed this beautiful area.
Fortunately, the village has managed to preserve some of Burns’ heritage, as the cottage where he resided has been maintained and remains under National Trust protection.
Next to the home stands a museum, devoted entirely to displaying his early manuscripts and works for admirers to glimpse.
Also located within the village is a poignant 19th-century memorial, commemorating Burns, which stands at the village’s base, beside the church he referenced in his poetry.
It was crafted by Thomas Hamilton and now serves as a stopping point for numerous tourists seeking photographs.
In 1935, the charming little village of Alloway was merged with the Royal Burgh of Ayr, transforming the village into an official suburb rather than an independent location.
It boasts a total population of approximately 46,982 and has made several attempts to secure city status for Ayr.
A recent visitor to Alloway posted their experience on TripAdvisor: “These church remains are so atmospheric and enchanting. Often you can find yourself alone there and have a real good look at all the gravestones. You can see where Burns got his inspiration for part of the setting of Tom O Shanter.”
Meanwhile, another guest said: “Even though I have lived most of my life in Burns Country and live less than 20 minutes away, this was the first time I have visited the museum and cottage. Really enjoyed the experience, especially the museum displays, but the real highlight was the cottage. Big shout out to the guide, very friendly and informative.”
The picturesque Lancashire village is a hidden gem boasting a Grade II*-listed church and River Yarrow winding through cobbled streets
Thatched cottages populate the cobbled streets(Image: Jason Roberts /Manchester Evening News)
A charming little village close to Chorley has drawn comparisons to the picturesque tourist hotspots in the Cotswolds and boasts a rich historical heritage.
When Spring arrives, Croston bursts into life with hundreds of vibrant yellow daffodils, transforming the area with colourful blooms set against its thatched cottages.
In William Wordsworth’s birthplace, the River Yarrow meanders through cobblestone lanes, lined with planters brimming with bright pink flowers along its banks.
The town’s bridge appears on the English National Heritage List – with ‘1682’ etched into its parapet, suggesting it’s a 17th century structure connecting both riverbanks.
Located just 20 minutes’ drive from Preston, Croston offers an ideal destination for a day trip. The parish church, dedicated to St Michael and All Angels, holds Grade II* listed status and features stunning red sandstone construction topped with stone tiles, reports Lancs Live.
A Trip Advisor user said: “It’s a lovely 15th Century church which is the focal point of the village. There’s a quaint cobbled street leading up to it and the River Yarrow runs behind it.”
Strolling through the fairytale-like streets, you’ll discover one of Croston’s favourite dining spots – Out Lane Social.
One diner particularly praised Outlane Social’s steak offering. Daniel awarded the establishment five stars, saying: “Had a steak at Outlane Social in Croston and it was absolutely outstanding. Hands down the best steak I’ve had in a long time.
“The staff were genuinely lovely, the food was spot-on, and the whole experience was brilliant from start to finish. A fantastic restaurant – highly recommended.”
Croston’s heritage stretches back to the 7th century when St Aidan established a settlement along the River Yarrow. Historical records suggest that during the thirteenth century, Edward I authorised an annual fair to take place on the village green.
According to Visit Lancashire, Croston translates to “Town of the Cross”, a name derived from a cross brought to Northern England by Celtic missionaries.
This ancient Celtic cross has since vanished, believed to have been lost during Thomas Cromwell’s era. A replacement cross was erected in the village in 1950.
Historical maps even indicate the possible existence of a basic wooden fortress in Croston. The village is twinned with the French commune of Azay le Rideau, and the original Croston Hall, constructed by the De Trafford family, was knocked down in the 1960s.
A modern country house now stands on the same site.
For those wanting to explore Croston’s natural beauty, Lancashire Ramblers suggests a five-mile walk offering views of two rivers. The route begins at the village green, passes through the church grounds along New Lane, and circles the village outskirts.
Displaced mothers are forced into gruelling manual labour to feed families as new data confirm Sudan has surpassed COVID-19 records for school closures.
In the displacement camps of Ad-Damazin in southeastern Sudan’s Blue Nile State, the war is reshaping social norms and introducing new realities that are forcing Sudanese women into manual labour to survive.
Rasha is a displaced mother. She has ignored old boundaries and perceptions of what a man’s work is and started working as a woodcutter to feed her children.
“Carpentry is hard, … but the axe has become an extension of my hand,” Rasha told Al Jazeera Arabic. “There are no choices left.”
Her story is not unique. Thousands of Sudanese women have become their families’ sole breadwinners and work under harsh conditions. Rasha’s earnings after a day of back-breaking labour under the sun are often enough to buy only a packet of biscuits.
She spends the money on food and soap. “You want soap. You want to wash,” she said. “As for clothes, we have given up hope on that.”
The nearly three-year war between the Sudanese army and the Rapid Support Forces paramilitary group has had a catastrophic impact on the country and its people.
According to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), more than 30 million people from a population of 46.8 million are in need of humanitarian assistance.
The population is facing acute food shortages and a nutrition crisis, especially in the Darfur and Kordofan regions in western and central Sudan. At the same time, disease outbreaks are worsening the situation.
Moreover, Sudan is dealing with the world’s largest displacement crisis with an estimated 13.6 million people forced from their homes by the fighting.
Worse than the pandemic
The war has also destroyed many aspects of life in Sudan, and it is now threatening the future of generations to come.
Save the Children released a damning report on Thursday confirming that Sudan is enduring one of the longest school closures in the world, surpassing even the worst shutdowns of the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to the new analysis released before the International Day of Education on Saturday:
More than eight million, or nearly half of Sudan’s school-age children, have missed about 484 days of learning since the war began in April 2023.
This duration is 10 percent longer than the school closures during the pandemic in the Philippines, which was the last country to resume face-to-face learning.
Unlike during the pandemic, remote learning is impossible for most Sudanese children, leaving them vulnerable to recruitment into armed groups and sexual exploitation.
‘Total breakdown’ in conflict zones
The data reveal a system on the brink of collapse, particularly in conflict hotspots.
In North Darfur State, only 3 percent of its more than 1,100 schools remain open. The situation is similarly dire in the states of South Darfur (13 percent operational) and West Kordofan (15 percent).
“Education is not a luxury. … It is a lifeline,” Inger Ashing, CEO of Save the Children, said after a visit to Sudan. “If we fail to invest in education today, we risk condemning an entire generation to a future defined by conflict rather than by opportunity.”
Adding to the crisis, many teachers have gone unpaid for months, forcing them to abandon their posts, while countless schools have been bombed or turned into shelters.
Siege and famine conditions
The collapse of education is mirrored by the collapse of food supplies. As aid funding dries up – a reality confirmed by Blue Nile Humanitarian Aid Commissioner Qisma Abdel Karim – famine is setting in.
OCHA reported this week that:
At least 2,000 families are cut off from aid in North Darfur due to intense fighting.
“Famine conditions” have been confirmed in the besieged city of Kadugli in South Kordofan.
Significant gaps remain in the provision of aid as the UN has appealed for $2.9bn to fund its humanitarian response in Sudan this year.
‘Equal in misery’
Those statistics translate into hard reality on the ground.
“The war does not distinguish between a child, a woman or an elderly man,” Al Jazeera Arabic correspondent Taher Almardi said, reporting from Ad-Damazin. “Everyone is equal in misery.”
For Rasha and mothers like her, the choice is stark: break traditional norms and toil for a pittance or succumb to hunger.
From pro-Palestine protests in Ireland and jubilant celebrations in Dakar following Senegal’s African Cup of Nations football victory to demonstrations supporting the abducted Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and United States President Donald Trump’s signing ceremony for his Board of Peace in Davos, Switzerland, as tensions soar back in the US state of Minnesota over another deadly shooting by a federal agent, here is a look at the week in photos.
Described by film fans as a ‘slow burn’ and a hidden gem, this highly praised thriller stars Emile Hirsch, John Cusack, Déborah François and Molly McCann
‘Damn good’ hidden gem Western ‘just like Unforgiven’ on Film4 tonight(Image: )
A gritty Western starring John Cusack is ‘blowing viewers away’ with its ‘slow burn’, and it’s airing tonight (Sunday, January 25) on Film4.
Never Grow Old, released in 2019, is directed by Ivan Kavanagh. and stars Emile Hirsch, John Cusack, Déborah François and Molly McCann. The film is a gritty Western telling the story of an Irish undertaker, Patrick Tate (Emile Hirsch), living in a frontier town corrupted by outlaw Dutch Albert (John Cusack) and his gang. As the death toll skyrockets, Patrick profits from burying the dead but faces a moral crisis and threats to his family, forcing him to choose between blood money and survival in a violent world without law or religion.
The film has been praised as being a hidden gem by fans on film ratings website Rotten Tomatoes, where it holds an 86 per cent score. One review posted: “Slow burn, with plenty of understated tension. Not an action western, more of an underplayed character drama with some brutally honest killing. Very good movie!”
Another posted: “Whoa, acting blew me away. And I’m not usually one who notices THAT particular part of a film. Yeah, the story might be a trope in some ways, but the performances and mood are worthwhile.”
“Perfect feel to this 1850s’ period movie. I enjoyed it very much! A+,” said a third.
A fourth added: “Never Grow Old is a slow-burn type of western that utilises its rich subtext and visual symbolism to create a thought-provoking narrative and look into the bleak western frontier life.”
“A great plot, great actors, and a massive dose of spine-chilling action, in other words, a great movie,” said a fifth.
Another shared: “Dark, brooding and bleak would be the best 3 words to describe this film…and I use them as compliments! The dialogue between Cusack and Hirsch boils with so much tension…all leading up to a conclusion that honestly left me speechless.”
One review praised the film as it said: “I enjoyed this movie. Everything from the sets to the costumes and the demeanour of it was right on point. Every shot was spot on with the overall look.
“Emile Hirsch and John Cusack do well with the material, and it seems rooted down into its genre. But it didn’t depict what a 1850s’ settlement would be. The flags were not like that since it was before the Civil War. That I suppose is its main drawback, but it was well told and didn’t have too much violence and was a relief with some fresh air about it. Good movie and worth a look at.”
Another shared their view: “Damn good piece of filmmaking. My mother’s aunt’s brother’s nephew’s wife’s cousin was on the California trail and said this was a very accurate picture. She said Cusack did an amazing job; he looks just like Dutch Albert and got all his mannerisms down. She also said Hirsch did a great job, too, and looks just like Patrick Tate and got him down pat, too.
“Very accurate performances, almost like they knew the men. She said the story was how it happened and corroborates everything. They even filmed on location where it happened and made it look exactly like it was. Great job!
“The story is a bit dark, so be in the mood. The tension and the storytelling are great, though. Overall, it’s a great movie to watch.”
Never Grow Old airs tonight (Sunday, January 25) on Film4 at 11.40pm.
ST. LOUIS — Trevor Moore scored the deciding goal in the shootout and had a goal in regulation in his first game since being activated off injured reserve to help the Kings beat the St. Louis Blues 5-4 on Saturday night.
Jordan Kyrou scored twice, Brayden Schenn and Dalibor Dvorsky added one goal each, and Joel Hofer made 24 saves for St. Louis, which has lost four consecutive games for the first time since the opening month of the season.
Moore, who missed 11 games because of an upper-body injury, scored in the fourth round of the shootout. Then Kuemper denied Blues forward Jimmy Snuggerud to help the Kings improve to 8-13 in overtime games and shootouts.
Kyrou scored his second goal of the game with Hofer pulled to tie the score 4-4 with 2:10 remaining in regulation.
Brandt Clarke fired a shot from the point and Moore swatted the rebound past Hofer for his sixth goal of the season with 8:26 remaining in the third period. The Blues challenged the goal for offside, but a video review determined the Kings remained onside.
Laferriere scored with 9:42 remaining in the second period to tie the score 3-3 just 1:32 after Kyrou beat Kuemper on a wraparound shot to give St. Louis a 3-2 lead.
Schenn scored on a power play 6:30 into the second period to tie the score 2-2.
Dvorsky scored just 1:03 after Dumoulin logged his first goal of the season 1:11 into the second period.
The Blues announced that 6,848 fans attended the game even though St. Louis was under a winter storm warning.
Up next for the Kings: at Columbus on Monday night.
Playfulness is at the heart of the Art and Playholiday, based on a farm outside the Bay of Kotor. A family-friendly retreat designed to reignite joy and reconnect with the inner child, it’s one for solo travellers and couples as well as parents with kids. There are creative sessions on everything from dance to painting, as well as time to enjoy the farm – feeding the animals, collecting eggs or helping harvest vegetables for farm-fresh meals. Excursions include hikes to hidden beaches, kayaking and trips to Kotor and Budva, but there’s time to chill by the pool too; evenings are for board games, music and campfires. Accommodation ranges from camping and glamping to cabins, a treehouse and restored farmhouse. Seven daysfrom £695, children 5-12 £350, under-fives free, includes brunch, dinner and snacks,3 May and 23 August,responsibletravel.com
Get creative in Greece
Unlock your creativity on a week-long Exploring Ceramics retreat on the beautiful Greek island of Aegina. Led by the artist Marina Coriolano-Lykourezos, it’s a meditative, playful experience with an emphasis on self-discovery, being present and having fun. With a maximum of six participants on each retreat, it’s hands-on, with about six hours a day exploring clays and techniques in the studio – no experience is necessary. Accommodation is in the Grape House or neighbouring Lemon House, surrounded by vines and a pistachio orchard, a short walk from the studio and Aegina port. Breakfast at home and lunch from local tavernas is included, as well as excursions. Aegina Retreats runs various other workshops and holidays, including painting and creative writing. Retreats run year-round. The seven-night Exploring Ceramics retreat is €1,800 solo or €2,750 for a couple, including accommodation, all tuition and materials, aeginaretreats.com
Nature connection in Devon
Photograph: Louise Kear
Founded by Mac Macartney more than two decades ago, Embercombe is a 20-hectare (50-acre) rewilding site and educational charity on the edge of Dartmoor. Retreats and learning weeks support visitors in reconnecting with nature, purpose and community. Embercombe’s flagship retreat is the Journey, six days of guided reflection, self-discovery and nature connection designed to help participants identify and act on how they want to live their lives. Shared or private yurts dotted across the site provide basic but cosy accommodation, and hearty vegetarian meals are enjoyed feast-style in a dining tent. The retreat welcomes people of all backgrounds. There are several Journey retreats in 2026; the next is 8-13 March, £1,395, including accommodation, all meals and activities (bursary places available),embercombe.org
Restorative haven in Andalucía
A favourite with the experts at the Global Retreat Company, the Yellow House is a new luxurious sanctuary offering restorative escapes in nature, around 40 miles north of Seville. As well as yoga and meditation, there are mindful walks, sound healing, visits to rescue donkeys on an organic farm and horse-drawn carriage rides. Accommodation is the former mayor’s house in the pretty village of Higuera de la Sierra – a beautiful six-bedroom refuge with original tiles, antique furnishings and a courtyard with plunge pool. Food is a highlight, focusing on southern Spanish cuisine with dishes such as fish stew and stuffed peppers (vegetarians and vegans catered for). This is one of several options run by Iberian Wellness Retreats. Three-night retreats are €1,475, including accommodation, all meals and activities, from 30 April and 2 July, theglobalretreatcompany.com
Off-grid in Mid Wales
Spirt Horse retreat Wales Photograph: PR
Spirit Horse is an off-grid retreat centre on an 80-hectare rewilding site in a valley in Powys, with forested mountains, flower-filled meadows and tumbling waterfalls. A busy summer programme celebrates both eastern and western traditions, including meditation, storytelling, women’s and men’s circles, plus a festival-style “tribal” gathering, all held in Celtic roundhouses, yurts and temples. The signature Enlightenment Intensives, held three times a year, are for those looking to dive into self-inquiry, via exercises, silent walks and lectures. It’s a place for getting back to the wild – there are no hot showers, but there are waterfalls, natural bathing pools and a sauna. Three healthy meals a day are served in the main barn. The five-nightEnlightenment Intensive is£500, including meals, 21 May and 6 August; Cauldron of Plenty festival, £165 (bring a tent), 27-31 August, spirithorse.co.uk
Healing with horses in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Meditate With Horses was founded by Katherine Beaumont after she recovered from a traumatic accident through meditation and spending time with horses. As well as daylong sessions and three-day silent retreats in the Lake District, there are longer trips further afield, all drawing on the therapeutic benefits of spending time with animals. The week-long Healing on Horseback in Bosnia break is based at a ranch in Livno and includes yoga, meditation, hiking and equine therapy. There are daily rides, a chance to see some of the last wild horses in Europe, time for swimming in the river and evenings around the fire. A new trip to Mallorca, including meditation, shiatsu and swimming with horses, launches in November. The six-nightHealing on Horseback retreat is £1,500, 23 May and 3 October, meditatewithhorses.co.uk
Recharge in Portugal
Quinta Marugo is a wellbeing retreat centre in rural Alentejo, southern Portugal, designed to help people slow down and connect with nature. There’s a range of group retreats, from mindfulness in nature to transformational breathwork, or the option to create a bespoke retreat (solo or with friends). A personal four-day Deep Rest Retreat offers time to recharge in peaceful surroundings and relax by the pool or fire, with a massage and organic meals from the farm included. Guests can tailor their experience with optional extras, including yoga, qigong and nature connection sessions. Four-day Deep Rest Retreat from €585, quintamarugo.com
Men’s rewilding in Cornwall
Both Sides Retreats are for men only, offering space to escape the stresses of daily life and reconnect with a sense of purpose and the natural world. Held in locations in the UK and Europe, they combine a range of activities, from cold water immersion to martial arts and bushcraft. Upcoming options include the Men’s Summer Rewilding Retreat at Cabilla Cornwall on Bodmin Moor. Days include yoga, saunas, breathwork, river swims and walks in the onsite ancient temperate rainforest. Men’s Summer Rewilding Retreat, from £855, with food and all activities, 2-5 July, bothsidesretreats.com
Song and asana in Turkey
Designed to be deeply restorative, this week-long Zen Yoga, Singing and Sound Healing retreat takes place in Dalyan, close to Turkey’s south-west coast. Run by yoga teacher Jane Morgan Jones and singer Sarah Warwick, yoga sessions are complemented by singing, with a focus on uplifting chants, mantras and African and indigenous-inspired songs. The retreat is open to all levels. Sound baths, meditation, time to relax in nature, a boat trip, optional massages and hammam visits also feature. Daily Turkish brunch and two vegetarian suppers at the hotel are included. Sarah also runs singing events in the UK, from a four-day retreat in Hampshire (which also includes painting) to day workshops in London. From £995, 17-24 May, lifesong.co.uk
Digging deep in Italy
Looking for real change? The Path of Love is an intensive week-long programme of deep inner work, held at various locations in the UK and around the world. Blending western psychology and eastern spiritual practices, there’s individual and group work, active and silent meditations, writing assignments and more, all led by psychologists and counsellors. It’s a challenging journey, but participants claim genuinely life-changing results. Miasto retreat centre near Siena is one of the venue options, with pretty sandstone buildings surrounded by rolling Tuscan countryside. Various options, including Tuscany on 5-12 March and 25 November-2 December, €3,190 or an earlybird rate of £2,800 (accommodation extra, from €520),pathretreats.com
The blackout arrives as the government has encouraged citizens to be ready for a ‘disaster’ lasting up to five days.
Published On 25 Jan 202625 Jan 2026
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Greenland’s capital, Nuuk, has faced a widespread power outage after strong winds triggered a transmission problem, the state utility said, as the Arctic island contends with the fallout from the crisis fuelled by United States President Donald Trump’s territorial designs.
At about 10:30pm on Saturday (00:30 GMT, Sunday), social media users began reporting a sudden blackout that occurred at the same time, Greenlandic newspaper Sermitsiaq reported.
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The utility company posted on Facebook that gusty winds at the main Buksefjord hydroelectric power plant had caused “a line error on our transmission line” and that they were working to restore power with an emergency plant.
Water supplies were also affected in some areas, Sermitsiaq reported, as well as internet connectivity.
Power had been restored to 75 percent of the city’s population of about 20,000 by 3:30am on Sunday (5:30 GMT), the utility said in an update, calling on people to be conservative in their use of electrical devices as the utility continued to reboot.
The outage came on the heels of the government releasing a brochure with details about disaster preparedness that encouraged Greenlanders to store sufficient drinking water, food, medicine, warm clothing and alternative communication devices to last at least five days.
The government emphasised that the guidance was not an expression that a crisis was imminent. But Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory, has been thrust into the geopolitical spotlight for weeks amid United States President Donald Trump’s escalating threats to seize the island.
Trump appeared to partly back off at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, claiming he had ruled out taking Greenland by force. He and NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte had agreed on a “long-term” framework for a future deal involving Greenland and the Arctic region, the president said.
Greenlandic Prime Minister Jens-Frederik Nielsen said much of the supposed deal was murky, including whether Trump would seek control of territory near US military bases, as some reports suggested.
“I don’t know what there is in the agreement, or the deal, about my country,” Nielsen said.
WARNING: This report contains references to suicide.
Liverpool’s Paddy Pimblett suffered heartbreak against Justin Gaethje in his quest to claim a UFC interim title as he lost on points to the American in Las Vegas.
Pimblett, 31, was as brave as he was bloodied through five action-packed rounds that had both men swinging at the final bell.
Gaethje rolled back the years for a vintage performance, forcing Pimblett to raise his game to a new level and fight fire with fire.
Both men raised their arms at the end, but the judges rightly gave 37-year-old Gaethje the victory on all three scorecards.
“Paddy is right; Scousers do not get knocked out,” Gaethje said.
“My coach was definitely upset at me after the first round, but I just love this so much, it’s really hard to control myself sometimes.
“I knew I had to put him on his back foot, he is very dangerous and has great timing. I had to steal his momentum and confidence.”
With victory, Gaethje claimed the interim lightweight title for the second time and will now face absent champion Ilia Topuria once he returns from a personal hiatus.
Pimblett applauded Gaethje as the scorecards were read out, taking the fourth loss of his career with grace.
“I wanted to be walking away with that belt. I know how tough I am and I don’t need to prove that to anyone,” Pimblett said.
“I think 48-47 was a fair scorecard. I won’t lie, he hit me with a body shot in the first round and it got me. I thought I was winning the round up to that point.
“You live and you learn; I’m 31, I will be back better.”
Pimblett also used his post-fight interview to shine a light on mental health issues as he has done before in his career.
“In a few of my post-fight interviews before, I’ve mentioned men killing themselves; two lads who I know have killed themselves over the last few months,” Pimblett said.
There are many different approaches to making a tour film that captures the life of musicians on the road. Perhaps you focus on the highs of performance or the boredom of traveling, the anonymous backstage rooms and endless planes, buses and hotel rooms. But what if you made all of that seem really fun?
Directed by Tamra Davis, “The Best Summer,” which debuts at Sundance tonight in the Midnight section, is rooted in a box of videotapes that the filmmaker found early last year while evacuating from the fires near her longtime family home in Malibu. Though they are now separated, Davis still shares the compound with Michael Diamond, better known as Mike D of the group Beastie Boys. On those tapes was footage Davis shot in late 1995 and early 1996 as the band toured through Australia and Asia, sharing bills with the likes of Sonic Youth, Foo Fighters, Pavement, Beck, Rancid, the Amps and Bikini Kill.
“I just always had a camera in my hands,” Davis, 64, said in an interview conducted earlier this week. “I identify as a filmmaker. This is normal for me to have a camera in my hand. People don’t think twice about it. It’s so unobtrusive.”
A few days before Davis would drive to Park City, Utah, with her friend, neighbor and co-producer Shelby Meade, the two were sitting on the backyard patio of Davis’ Malibu home (it survived the fires just fine) as a couple of dogs ran around the yard. When she spots a hawk flying overhead, Davis calls for one of her two sons to be sure to round up the few chickens roaming around.
“The Best Summer” brings a blast of ’90s nostalgia to the festival. Bikini Kill’s Kathleen Hanna and Sonic Youth’s Kim Gordon are both expected to attend the screening as well.
A throughline for the movie is Davis and Hanna interviewing members of the bands, asking them a standard series of questions including their favorite color, what they’re reading and what their personal motto is before Hanna gets into trickier concepts about performance and persona, seemingly figuring those things out for herself in real time.
“With Mike, I filmed so much — every time I went out on the road with them,” says Davis. “So I had tons of Beastie Boys stuff. I didn’t know I had all of that other stuff. I filmed Foo Fighters and Beck and Pavement, I didn’t know I filmed any of that. I looked at it and I see, oh my gosh, I’m so diligent: Oh, I better get Pavement. Check.”
At the time of the tour, Davis had recently finished directing “Billy Madison,” which launched the movie career of Adam Sandler. Having made music videos for countless bands, including many on the tour, Davis had also directed Drew Barrymore in the 1992 noir remake “Guncrazy” and Chris Rock in the rap mockumentary “CB4.” She would go on to direct Dave Chappelle in “Half Baked” and Britney Spears in “Crossroads,” as well as work extensively on documentaries, including “Jean-Michel Basquiat: The Radiant Child,” which played Sundance in 2010.
Mike D, left, MCA and Ad-Rock of Beastie Boys as seen in the documentary “The Best Summer,” premiering at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival.
(Tamra Davis)
At the time of the Australian tour in “The Best Summer,” Davis and Diamond were newly married and there is a honeymoon vibe of sunny sweetness to the proceedings. The bands play for sprawling crowds in between lots of playful hangout time.
It was though manager John Silva, who works with a number of the bands in the movie, that Davis was able to start the process of getting permissions and untangling the tricky issues of music rights. She had to show each individual band the movie in order to get their approval.
“The only people I wanted notes from was the bands,” Davis says. “I work all the time with Netflix, Paramount, whatever, like all those things. I can’t get that note and then translate it to the band. But if Adam [Horovitz of the Beastie Boys] had a note or if Kim [Gordon of Sonic Youth] had a note, I would do those notes. And I felt so proud to do their note and be like, ‘Done, you’ve got that.’ That’s why I wanted to make sure it was self-funded because I could control it like that. It could just be between me and the artist. It’s just me doing the end credits.”
Working with editor Jessica Hernandez, Davis wanted to keep the loose feel of the original footage, including how she often would shoot entire songs in a single take, her camera moving from one musician to the next as one might naturally look at them from the audience. The raw sound comes from the built-in microphone on her camera. Some additional post-production work had to be done on the interview footage, but the audio of the concert footage is, for the most part, she says, unaltered.
“It’s like watching a memory,” said Davis. “And for me especially, to watch it again was like a ‘Black Mirror’ episode of going back and somebody being like: This is what it looked like from your point of view at this time. That was your experience.”
It’s something Davis has heard from other band members after showing them the film. “Adam said it felt like I reached into his brain and pulled out that memory,” she says. “He didn’t realize there was somebody filming it. So to him he was like: How did you know that memory existed in my head?”
Thurston Moore, Kim Gordon, Kathleen Hanna, Tobi Vail, Tamra Davis and Alfredo Ortiz in the documentary “The Best Summer.”
(Mike Diamond)
Davis had previously put Hanna in the Sonic Youth video for their 1994 song “Bull in the Heather” as well as in a short film called “No Alternative Girls,” so the two already knew each other. But they latched onto each other during the tour, taking on the informal project of the interviews and collecting candid and revealing moments with Gordon, Foo Fighters’ Dave Grohl, Sonic Youth’s Thurston Moore, Pavement’s Stephen Malkmus and others.
“It became like that friendship that you have at summer camp,” says Davis. “[Hanna] goes, I was so glad that you and I had that same energy where we were just these girls going into people’s dressing rooms, ‘OK, we’re here to interview you.’ We were just bored. We were trying to get something to do.”
It was Diamond who suggested to Davis that the end credits should say “Starring Kathleen Hanna” for the outsized role she has in the film. Another highlight of “The Best Summer” is when Hanna interviews Horovitz. The two would marry in 2006, and their moments together in the film have the energy of a rom-com meet-cute.
“She’s so bossy and she’s really forward,” said Davis. “And I’m pretty bossy too, but she’s just like, ‘Look, this is how it’s gonna go.’ And just her questions are so good. When I started to really put it together, I loved all of that. I think before I showed it to her, I texted her a couple times and I was like, ‘Kathleen, I’m making this movie and you’re all over it.’ And she was like, ‘Am I going to be embarrassed?’ And I’m like, ‘No, you’re going to love this.’”
Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon of the band Sonic Youth, as seen in the documentary “The Best Summer.”
(Tamra Davis)
One thing that jumps out watching the concert footage is the lack of cell phones, how the ubiquitous screens that one sees nowadays in the audience at shows did not yet exist.
“I think there’s an authenticity about it,” Davis says. “When I look at my female performers and the artists in this film, I love how they present themselves and how equal they seem with the men. I just feel that open acceptance of everybody. I know that my kids really like that world. When you see a whole video and they’re not cutting, there’s authenticity in that. Now we never have that experience of what that’s like, to have that connection with the band — and they’re connected to you as well.”
With a few possible feature film projects percolating, Davis has been at work on a memoir, currently scheduled to come out next year, that includes anecdotes of when she went to Italy as a teenager and found herself watching Federico Fellini shoot “City of Women” or hustled her way into shadowing Francis Ford Coppola as he made 1981’s “One From the Heart.”
As a woman working as a director in Hollywood in the 1990s, there were not a lot of choices presented to Davis and she often felt she had to make the most of whatever was available.
“Sometimes people are like, oh my God, it’s amazing you got to direct ‘Billy Madison,’ you got to direct Chris Rock in ‘CB4’ or ‘Half-Baked’ with Dave Chappelle. That’s what I was offered,” she recalls. “These were unknown comedians. They’d never done a feature film. As a girl, that’s what you get what’s offered. But then how do you turn that into something special? I thought those guys were the funniest people I’ve ever met in my life. So I direct like a fan.”
It’s a statement of purpose that’s guided Davis even as she’s ping-ponged between a huge amount of TV work, from “P-Valley” to the TV version of “High School Musical.”
“I become the best viewer for that show,” she says. “And so it’s not me imposing my style on them. It’s me appreciating how much I love that, what I’m seeing in front of me. And trying to get that best version across.”
Revisiting the ’90s while making “The Best Summer” has been a positive experience for Davis, one she hopes will resonate with others as well, not simply as a fun tour doc revisiting a very specific time, but also as a reminder the things can be small, personal and handmade.
“I’m think it’s exciting for young filmmakers to see that there’s a film in the festival that’s shot by one person,” she says. “It makes you feel like you don’t need to have a gigantic everything to make a movie. One person can make a film. I feel like that’s inspiring.
“And then I’m also excited as a woman of age that you can get a film into Sundance, that your career is not over,” she adds. “I always felt like, ‘Oh, you’re too young.’ Then it’s, ‘You’re too old.’ It was never the right time for me. But I felt like it was my time, so you just had to keep doing it.”
SACRAMENTO -In his first public appearance since returning from China last week, Gov. Jerry Brown spoke to a group of crime victims on the Capitol steps, and shared some of his own recent experiences with the state’s criminal element.
Brown said he has been the victim of two recent burglary attempts, one at his home in Oakland last year and one at his downtown Sacramento loft just a few days ago.
Speaking to a crowd of about 200 people carrying pictures of murdered family members on a warm, sunny Sacramento day, Brown said a man was apprehended “on my balcony trying to break in. Luckily I wasn’t home.”
In remarks to reporters later, the governor gave more details. “A guy got up to the roof, got on to the balcony and was trying to break in and one of my neighbors called the police,” he said. “He was arrested and I think he’s out on his own recognizance.
The Sacramento Police Department reported an incident at 9:35 p.m. Sunday night on Brown’s block when witnesses “called in a suspicious subject. Officers arrived, contacted and identified the subject. He was later arrested for prowling.”
In a separate incident, Brown recalled, “about a year ago, my wife was alone and three gentlemen show up about 1 [a.m.] trying to break in. The California Highway Patrol “came to the scene and held them for 40 minutes and they said they were looking to buy real estate in the neighborhood.”
Like Jovic, Belarusian Sabalenka is yet to drop a set at this year’s Australian Open.
She has now reached at least the quarter-finals in 13 consecutive Grand Slam appearances and is two wins away from a fourth successive final in Melbourne.
The champion in 2023 and 2024, she lost last year’s final to American Madison Keys.
The 27-year-old appeared to be cruising towards a comfortable victory against 17th seed Mboko, leading by a set and a double break.
However, she almost let a 4-1 lead slip in the second set and eventually clinched victory in a tie-break.
“She’s an amazing player, it was quite a fight and I’m super happy that I was able to close this match in straight sets,” said Sabalenka.
“The second set was a bit tricky but I’m happy with the level I played and happy to be through.”
Surrounded by the gorgeous views of the New Forest, we discovered a booze-free spa break with relaxing hydrotherapy facilities, Thai-inspired treatments and indulgent food
Hidden in the New Forest, Careys Manor offers the ultimate spa break(Image: Careys Manor)
Tucked away in the scenic landscape of the New Forest, Careys Manor offers the ultimate winter escape, and its alcohol-free Clear Head Club Spa Break is perfect for anyone wanting to detox.
It’s designed to help you reset, recharge and feel genuinely refreshed – although booze is not banned, you can still order alcoholic drinks if you wish.
The package combines calming treatments with mindfulness activities, surrounded by peaceful forest views that make switching off easy.
The spa at Careys Manor
Attached to the hotel is SenSpa, a Thai-inspired sanctuary that feels like a complete break from everyday life. Its expansive hydrotherapy facilities are the true highlight – more than just your standard steam room and sauna, the spa offers relaxing amenities that focus on the mind as well as the body, such as a crystal steam room and a herbal sauna.
For a refreshing reset in between, try the experience showers, switching between warming “tropical rainfall” and detoxing “cold sea storm”. It’s a multisensory experience unlike any spa we’d experienced before.
Top treatment at SenSpa
Guests get a 30-minute treatment with the Clear Head Club package, and we opted for SenSpa’s Anti Stress Massage, the ideal remedy for anyone carrying tension in their back, neck and shoulders. Using targeted Swedish massage techniques, the therapist worked deeply yet considerately to release tight muscles and remove built-up knots.
It’s the kind of treatment where you feel yourself drift off into a relaxed state in just a few minutes, and come out feeling noticeably looser and lighter.
What else?
With three restaurants on site, you’re not short of delicious food options after your treatment. Choose from British classics at Cambium, authentic Thai cuisine at Zen Garden and French flavours of Le Blaireau.
If you’re craving some fresh air, the beautiful scenery of the New Forest is on your doorstep – perfect for a bit of forest therapy.
How to book
The two-night Clear Head Club Spa Break starts from £445 per person and includes dinner each evening (£35per person per day allowance), four-hour SenSpa hydrotherapy pass plus 30-minute treatment of your choice and welcome smoothie, forest therapy guide and mindful walks in the New Forest National Park.
President Donald Trump, right, on Saturday said he will place 100% tariffs on all Canadian goods if Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, left, makes a trade deal to import Chinese-made electric vehicles. File Photo by Shawn Thew/UPI | License Photo
Jan. 24 (UPI) — Canadian officials might ink a trade deal with China, and U.S. President Donald Trump said that would trigger a 100% tariff on all Canadian goods sent to the United States.
Trump announced the new tariffs would take effect immediately if Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney turns Canada into a conduit for Chinese-made goods intended for the United States.
“If [Prime Minister] Carney thinks he is going to make Canada a ‘drop off port’ for China to send goods and products into the United States, he is sorely mistaken,” the president said on Saturday in a social media post.
“China will eat Canada alive, completely devour it, including the destruction of their businesses, social fabric and general way of life,” Trump said.
“If Canada makes a deal with China, it will immediately be hit with a 100% tariff against all Canadian goods and products coming into the U.S.A.”
In a subsequent post, the president said the world does not need China to “take over Canada,” and the proposed trade deal will not “even come close to happening.”
Carney met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing last week and made a deal to lower some of the tariffs imposed by one another on some of their trade goods.
China will lower its tariffs on Canadian agricultural products, while Canada will lower its tariff on up to 49,000 electric vehicles that are made in China.
The Canadian government in 2024 placed tariffs on Chinese vehicles in 2024 in a coordinated effort with the United States.
During the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Carney earlier this week told an audience that the international order led by the United States is done.
He criticized the use of tariffs by leading economic powers, which he said exploits the vulnerabilities of smaller nations and their respective economies.
Many viewed it as a thinly veiled criticism of Trump and his tariff policies.
Trade tensions arose between the United States and Canada over the past year as the president has sought to counteract tariffs on U.S. goods sent to its neighbor to the north.
Trump also has suggested making Canada the United States’ 51st state, which rankled many to the north.
Polls have opened in Myanmar for the third and final round of a controversial general election, with a military-backed party on course for a landslide win amid a raging civil war.
Voting began in 60 townships, including in the cities of Yangon and Mandalay, at 6am local time on Sunday (23:30 GMT, Saturday).
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Critics say the polls are neither free nor fair, and are designed to legitimise military rule in Myanmar, nearly five years after the country’s generals ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi, leading to a civil war that has killed thousands and displaced more than 3.5 million people.
Aung San Suu Kyi remains in detention and, like several other opposition groups, her National League for Democracy (NLD) has been dissolved, tilting the political playing field in favour of the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), which is leading in the polls.
So far, the USDP has secured 193 out of 209 seats in the lower house, and 52 out of 78 seats in the upper house, according to the election commission.
That means that along with the military, which is allocated 166 seats, the two already hold just under 400 seats, comfortably surpassing the 294 needed to come to power.
Seventeen other parties have won a small number of seats in the legislature, ranging from one to 10, according to the election commission.
Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, who heads the current military government, is widely expected by both supporters and opponents to assume the presidency when the new parliament meets.
The military has announced that the parliament will be convened in March, and the new government will take up its duties in April.
While the military has pledged that the election will return power to the people, rights monitors said the run-up was beset with coercion and the crushing of dissent, warning that the vote will only tighten the military’s grip on power.
A new Election Protection Law imposed harsh penalties for most public criticism of the polls, with the authorities charging more than 400 people recently for activities such as leafleting or online activity.
Ahead of the third round of voting, Tom Andrews, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in Myanmar, also called for the rejection of its outcome, calling it “fraudulent”.
“Only an illegitimate government can emerge from an illegitimate election,” he wrote on X on Saturday.
“As Myanmar’s election ends, the world must reject it as fraudulent while rejecting what follows as simply military rule in civilian clothing.”
Malaysian Minister of Foreign Affairs Mohamad Hasan told Parliament on Tuesday that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), of which Myanmar is a member, did not send observers and would not certify the election, citing concerns over the lack of inclusive and free participation.
His comments were the first clear statement that the 11-member regional bloc will not recognise the election results.
In Myanmar’s second city of Mandalay, Zaw Ko Ko Myint, a 53-year-old teacher, cast his vote at a high school around dawn.
“Although I do not expect much, we want to see a better country,” he told the AFP news agency. “I feel relieved after voting, as if I fulfilled my duty.”
The previous two phases of the election have been marked by low voter turnout of about 55 percent, well below the turnout of about 70 percent recorded in Myanmar’s 2020 and 2015 general elections.
Official results are expected late this week, but the USDP could claim victory as soon as Monday.
Aung San Suu Kyi’s NLD thrashed the USDP in the last elections in 2020, before the military seized power on February 1, 2021.
According to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, which monitors human rights abuses in the country, at least 7,705 people have been killed since the outbreak of the civil war, while 22,745 remain detained.
But the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project, a monitoring group that tallies media reports of violence, estimates more than 90,000 have been killed on all sides of the conflict.
Rachel Duffy, who was the first female Traitor to win the series, claimed she’d been trained by a former FBI agent prior to going on The Traitors, in order to help her sniff out the deceitful
Traitors winner Rachel shares truth about FBI training admitting ‘obvious lie’(Image: )
Rachel Duffy has come clean about the “obvious lie” she told on The Traitors. She claimed that she had “months” of FBI training but has now admitted that this was not completely true.
Whilst on The Traitors, Rachel was one of the original murderous trio who the Faithfuls were trying to catch. As she and fellow Traitor Stephen both reached the end, they took the prize pot, splitting £95,000 between the two of them.
One claim that made Rachel seem more trustworthy to the Faithfuls was that she had completed months of FBI training, helping her notice microexpressions that happen on liars’ faces. She used this claim whenever she was questioned on how she could know with such certainty that Fiona was a Traitor.
But, she has now told The Mirror that this was not the entire truth. “I did one of [the FBI agent’s] training courses, but I did… I obviously lied,” she admitted.
“And so I had said it was a four-month online course… but it was more of like a one-day course on an e-book. But it did help because it gave me something in my back pocket.”
Rachel has also shared that though she has no plans for further reality TV appearances, she is thinking of writing a book. “No immediate plans to go for reality TV. I think I’ve done enough with that one.” she said.
“I think my focus now is on the kids and potentially bringing my book to life. So I’ve written a book, taken 10 years to write it… it’s about murder and lies… a contemporary fantasy novel for young adults all about Irish redheads in a magical forest.”
Family pride in Rachel ran deep according to the proud mum: “My husband was the only one that knew, and he’d never watched the show. So when I told him… he said, ‘that’s great’, and ‘oh, good job’… My little kids watched last night with the family and they just couldn’t get over it.”
Rachel was the first female Traitor to win the series and she and Stephen were the first Traitor pair to win together. Prior winners have either been groups of Faithfuls or a single male Traitor.
The pair’s win largely came down to a pact they made early on. After they both turned on their other Traitor Hugo, they agreed not to dob each other in. That pact lasted all the way to the end.
In the tense final, Rachel repeatedly told Stephen that she would not turn on him but both of them seemed to waver, with Rachel even agreeing with Faraaz to vote Stephen out. But when it came to the roundtable, she and Stephen both got rid of Faraaz instead, whilst he voted for Stephen and Jack voted for Rachel.
Then they both teamed up to get rid of Jack, leaving them as the only two left in the game. As such, they split £95,000 between the two of them.