Abuse I received for TikTok video after Women’s Six Nations defeat was crazy | Jaz Joyce-Butchers
Scottish Water staff to strike for two days as pay standoff continues
Scottish Water staff will strike for two days from the early hours of Tuesday as a standoff over pay continues at the state-owned company.The striking workers’ union warned that emergency repairs and quality checks to water supplied to 5 million people across Scotland would not be carried out during the action on Tuesday and Wednesday.More than 1,000 workers in the Unison union will go on strike for the second time in a month in the pay dispute, after rejecting a deal that the union said was 2.6% and followed years of real-terms cuts to wages.The Unison Scottish Water branch secretary, Tricia McArthur, said: “Scottish Water workers are simply asking to be paid fairly for the essential services upon which everyone in Scotland relies
The Guardian view on City deregulation: a recipe for recklessness
In its desire to ensure the City of London remains attractive after Brexit, the Treasury seems to have forgotten one of the major lessons of the 2008 financial crisis: when regulation is lax, risks accumulate. This month, it launched a consultation about whether it was time to lighten the rules governing alternative asset managers, including private equity and hedge funds, in the belief that doing so will boost growth. There is little evidence to support this idea, and every reason to think it could exacerbate systemic risks.The proposal is consistent with Rachel Reeves’s belief that expanding the financial sector will deliver economic prosperity. The chancellor has suggested that post-crisis regulations went “too far”
Australians pay $84 a month for their internet. Why so expensive, and what can be done to lower the cost?
Australians are paying an average of $84 per month for internet access on the NBN – and in a cost-of-living crisis, questions are being raised about why cheaper internet is not available for people on lower incomes.What could be done to lower NBN pricing plans, and can we learn from overseas?According to the latest report, about 8.6m of the 12.5m premises able to connect to the NBN are now using the service in Australia.Consumer advocacy group Australian Communications Consumer Action Network (Accan’s) latest survey conducted by Essential, of 1,065 people, found Australians are paying $84 per month on average for their home internet connection, with 31% paying between $81 and $100, 30% paying between $61 and $80, 20% paying over $100, and just 13% paying $60 or under (with the rest unsure)
Views of TikTok posts with electronic music outgrow those using indie
It is another example of the parallel worlds in the music industry. The Gallagher brothers may be taking over the world’s stadiums this summer, but over on TikTok users are moving to a different beat.Views of posts using electronic music as a soundtrack, including techno and house, outgrew those tagged for indie and alternative for the first time in 2024, according to the social media app.There were more than 13bn views of videos tagged #ElectronicMusic worldwide last year, an increase of 45% on 2023, representing faster growth than the “indie and alternative” and “rap and hip-hop” genres. Videos created with the electronic music tag grew by more than 100% over the same period
Gout Gout and Lachie Kennedy miss out on final as Stawell Gift favourites upset
Sprint stars Gout Gout and Lachie Kennedy have been eliminated from the Stawell Gift in the semi-finals after being unable to make up sizeable handicaps.Gout ran a strong race to finish the 120m in 12.34s but couldn’t quite catch front-marker John Evans who had almost nine metres head start on the 17-year-old and won by almost a quarter of a second.“I thought I was coming pretty hard, and when we had like 20, 10 [metres] left he was pretty ahead of me,” Gout said. “I tried my hardest but he got me at the end
‘It’s better not to talk’: Max Verstappen claims criticism is impossible in F1
Max Verstappen has implied it is all but impossible to express an opinion for risk of censure by Formula One’s governing body the FIA, when he refused to air his clear displeasure at the penalty he was given during the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.Verstappen declined to discuss the race after the top three drivers climbed from their cars in parc ferme. He was fined by the FIA for swearing in a press conference at the Singapore GP last year and this season has been far more guarded and short in answering questions. Speaking to the media in Jeddah he suggested he felt constrained by the rulebook.“The problem is I cannot share my opinion about it because I might get penalised so it’s better not to talk about,” he said
‘We just go to the park’: making the most of Easter in a child-poverty hotspot
‘The whole policy is wrong’: rebellion among Labour MPs grows over £5bn benefits cut
Doncaster prisoners could sue government over exposure to radon gas
‘One hell of a turnout’: trans activists rally in London against gender ruling
‘There were no warning signs’: what happens when your partner falls into the ‘manosphere’?
Microplastics found in human ovary follicular fluid for the first time