Letters from Lord Byron, Elizabeth I and Benjamin Franklin among collection discovered in British stately home
‘It’s absolutely open to abuse’: web awash with weight-loss drug offers
After Andy King was told he was not eligible to receive weight-loss jabs on the NHS, he turned to the internet to order them privately. But before long, he was inundated with promotions.“Every other advert on my social media feed is an offer to have a Black Friday deal on the drugs,” he said.In a video call with the Guardian, King, a 59-year-old leisure management consultant and coach, demonstrated what happens when he looks for such medications.Opening a search engine, he typed three words: “Weight loss drugs
Bouncing back: UK soft play centres recover after Covid closures
“It will go all the way up there, with four floors, and a net maze,” says Jonathan Laznik, the owner of Gambado, pointing to the 10-metre-high ceiling in Forest Hill’s Capitol theatre, which is the venue for the company’s newest soft play venture.Built as a silent cinema in 1929, the Grade II-listed art deco building, which once sat 1,600 cinemagoers, has also served as a bingo hall and, until last year, a Wetherspoon’s pub.Novelty Guinness hats emblazoned with “Happy St Patrick’s Day!” still hang behind the bar, which Laznik says will be demolished to make way for children’s party rooms next year, if he secures planning permission.With three other sites in Brent Cross, Chelsea and Finchley, Laznik is one of a growing number of entrepreneurs who have entered the soft play market in recent years.After 10% of operators went out of business during the coronavirus pandemic, there are signs of recovery, with some providers including Laznik buying multiple sites
The rise and rise of Maye Musk: China’s love affair with Elon Musk’s mother
Maye Musk is a busy woman. As well as being the mother of the world’s richest man, she has been jetting between various glamorous events – many of them in China. In December alone, she attended a gala dinner in Hangzhou, walked the red carpet for a cosmetics company in Wuhan and signed copies of the Chinese edition of her book, A Woman Makes a Plan, which she described as “a bestseller” in China.In fact, the only Musk-related book on the Chinese bestseller lists in October was a biography of her son Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson. Elon Musk is popular in China, and is thought to have the potential to wield pro-Beijing influence in the otherwise hawkish incoming administration of Donald Trump
How 2024 made Elon Musk the world’s most powerful unelected man
Hello, and welcome to Techscape. I’ve been pondering screen-time and isolation after I suffered through a recent bout of Covid. Even a few days of seclusion coupled with lengthy, uninterrupted spates of staring at screens were enough to return me to the state of mind in which I spent most of 2020. I hope all of you reading have a wonderful winter and new year, filled with the opposite of that experience: family, friends, and cheery, in-person parties.Today in Techscape: We look back at the biggest tech story of 2024, Elon Musk, and at the Amazon workers strike in the US
Banbridge wins King George VI Chase while Constitution Hill takes Christmas Hurdle – as it happened
Well that was a great day’s racing highlighted not by the King George as is normally the case at Kempton on Boxing Day but the return of Constitution Hill in the Christmas Hurdle. The winner is the greatest hurdler we’ve seen since the peerless Istabraq and has the potential to become the greatest of all time and so it was a bit special to see him come back fit and fighting. One of the leaps on the far side was outstanding and he was always travelling well unlike his main opponent Lossiemouth. Let’s hope he gets to the Cheltenham festival for the Champion Hurdle and struts his stuff in March too. See you tomorrow for the Welsh Grand National and the clash between Sir Gino and Ballyburn at Kempton
The men’s Test cricket team of the year: from Atkinson to Jaiswal
Our special board of selectors announce the picks for the best men’s Test XI of the past 12 monthsGo fetch a cup of tea and your best arguments, it’s time for the Guardian’s 10th annual men’s Test XI of the Year. This year’s selection panel comprised Vic Marks, Ali Martin, Emma John, Rob Smyth, Jonathan Liew, Adam Collins, Geoff Lemon, Daniel Gallan, Tim de Lisle, Taha Hashim, Tanya Aldred, Jim Wallace, and myself, Andy Bull. It’s been an intriguing 12 months, in which every team was able to beat someone but no team was able to beat everyone, and at the end of it, everyone picked their own XI and, when we added up the votes, this is how it all came out (and yes, we were surprised so many Englishmen ended up in it, too) …14 matches, 1,312 runs at 52. Votes: 13 out of 13Over the course of England’s tour of India, Jaiswal established himself as one of the brightest batters of the next generation of Test cricketers, a point he proved when he ended the year by taking 161 off Australia in Perth. It wasn’t just the number of runs he scored, although they came by the hundred-weight, with back-to-back double centuries in Vizag and Rajkot, it was the irresistible ferocity of his batting
‘Wild west’: experts concerned by illegal promotion of weight-loss jabs in UK
Shrinking waistlines and growing profits: the weight-loss drug boom
Blind people excluded from benefits of AI, says charity
Latin America’s rise in tuberculosis linked to imprisonment rates
Labour will tackle ‘scourge of femicide’ to hit manifesto target, says minister
Guardian and Observer charity appeal donations pass £1m