call_end

    • Th chevron_right

      Nine in ten honey samples from UK retailers fail authenticity test

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    Call for industry reform as latest results support belief that products are being bulked out with cheaper sugar syrup

    The honey industry faces new demands to overhaul its supply chain after more than 90% of sampled products bought from large British ­retailers failed pioneering authenticity tests.

    The UK branch of the Honey Authenticity Network sent 30 samples last month from Britain for a novel commercial test based on the DNA profiles of genuine honey. Five were from UK beekeepers and 25 from big retailers, including supermarkets.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      England v Australia: Autumn Nations Series rugby union – live

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    • Updates from the 3.10pm GMT start at Twickenham
    • Get in touch! Share your thoughts with Lee

    We are often told to keep things in perspective, in particular that things are never quite as bad as they feel. There’s been a lot of that recently for people with their attention focused on US politics, the relaunch of the Ford Capri, or the men’s Australia rugby union team.

    Wins this year have been scarce and against the likes of Georgia, Portugal and the much troubled Wales, while the defeats have been plentiful and often humiliating; including shipping 67 points vs Argentina in the Rugby Championship and coupled with dwindling crowds. No surprise the vibe around the squad and the sport is poor as they commence this tour and look forward to welcoming the British & Irish Lions next summer. Is it all as bad as it feels?

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      ‘They say Democrats look down on me’: Trump win spurred by populist backlash

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    The president-elect tapped into a fierce anti-establishment sentiment – and the Democrats didn’t have enough to say

    The party was buzzing, the confidence was surging and Kenneth Stewart was riding the Trump train. “He’s masculine,” explained Stewart, an African American man from Chicago. “He brings a lot of energy. He talks about things that we can understand. He talks about building. He talks about the auto industry. He talks about a lot of stuff that people in the Rust Belt care about.”

    Stewart was a guest at Donald Trump’s election watch event in West Palm Beach, Florida, on Tuesday night and celebrated his victory over Democratic vice-president Kamala Harris. The result said much about gender, race and the new media landscape. It also represented a populist backlash against America’s perceived elites.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Children taken away from parents due to misreporting of drug tests, say experts

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    Process for interpreting hair-strand tests can be misleading and carries a risk of racial bias, according to campaigners in England and Wales

    Children are at risk of being wrongly removed from their parents’ care by the family courts because drug tests are being misinterpreted, experts have warned.

    Life-changing decisions about whether a child should be placed in the care of a local authority can sometimes hinge on the outcome of hair-strand tests, designed to show whether a parent has consumed drugs or excessive alcohol.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Frankie Bridge: ‘I was anxious from the womb. It’s who I am’

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    The singer, 35, opens up about fame before social media, psychiatric support, and the one thing she’d change about her wedding

    I was anxious from the womb. It’s who I am. As a child, my thoughts would happen at night-time: I’d struggle to breathe and have stomach aches. Depression came in my late teens. The doctor suggested therapy and I was outraged. “I’m British. We don’t do that.” Then I realised anxiety had spilled over into something else.

    My nan called me “Sunshine and Showers”. I was either happy or low, without much in between. It wasn’t until I was older I realised she was right. I got a “Sunshine and Showers” tattoo but she had dementia by then and didn’t remember that’s what she called me. Instead, she told me off for having a tattoo.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds review – up close and existential with rock’s great everyman

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    AO Arena, Manchester
    In an expansive, transporting show that draws on his diverse decades and a world of pain, the singer-songwriter turned guru to all sets his sights on the stars – and anyone within touching distance

    “YEAHYEAHYEAHYEAHYEAH!” barks Nick Cave, crouched face to face with the first few rows of an audience who are having, at a conservative estimate, the time of their lives. Four-and-a-half decades into an already serpentine career, the Australian singer-songwriter’s recent history has thrown up a great many surprise developments, not least a radical rapprochement between this often forbidding artist and the rest of humanity.

    On his Red Hand Files – a kind of open-source life coaching website – Cave now makes himself publicly available, answering existential dilemmas and basic factchecks with candour and no little humour. Since the death of his teenage son Arthur in 2015 and the outpouring of fellow feeling it provoked, Cave’s worldview has undergone a tectonic shift. Previously, his output most often saw mankind – and it was most often man kind – as bad to the bone.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Brahms for the soul on the night the US election results came in | Rachel Cooke

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024 • 1 minute

    A stirring performance by Víkingur Ólafsson of a piano concerto written amid a period of great sorrow. I think we could relate

    On Wednesday evening, I went to the Royal Festival Hall on London’s Southbank Centre to hear the Icelandic pianist, Víkingur Ólafsson, play Brahms’ Piano Concerto No 1 , the tickets for which I’d booked aeons ago, in ignorance of the future significance of the date. Ólafsson’s marvellous name conjures someone ruggedly bearded, a tame puffin or guillemot perhaps sitting on the shoulder of his tufty jumper, when in fact he looks more like one of the cast of Mad Men . But either way, to see him on stage is incredibly exciting. He plays with such fervour, leaning into the orchestra whenever his fingers are idle, his body like a flag in high wind.

    Ólafsson’s encore was immaculately well judged. “This is a prayer for the world,” he said, before giving the crowd his version of Ave Maria, composed by his countryman Sigvaldi Kaldalóns. Don’t worry: this isn’t one of those awful hopey, joy-is-a-strategy columns. We’re where we are now because one lot of people is wholly unable to imagine how another lot of people thinks; it would be sensible of me not to make any assumptions about how you felt last Wednesday.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Bipolar disorder: how lithium as a treatment fell out of favour

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    As UK diagnoses have doubled, prescriptions of the treatment have halved. While experts feud over its use, many patients feel it is an effective way of managing their condition

    Occupational stress is a trigger for Rebecca Wilde, a 32-year-old tech worker in Buckinghamshire. Four years ago, work pressures combined with family issues affected her sleep, leading to a severe manic episode. She was hospitalised for a month and a half, and diagnosed with type 1 bipolar disorder , also known as bipolar 1, a mood condition that can have devastating consequences if not managed well. Mania, and sometimes psychosis, is present in type 1.

    Wilde was experiencing both: at one point, she thought she could talk to dogs. She was put on the antipsychotic drug olanzapine and another mood stabiliser, lithium. She has now been taking lithium alone for a year, and it has been transformative. “On the lithium, I definitely feel like me,” she says.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      ‘I had a full-blown relapse’: problem gambler allowed into Victorian pokies clubs despite self-exclusion

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 9 November, 2024

    Bree Hughes says state’s safeguards to curb gambling are a ‘joke’ after she realised very few venues checked if she was on the self-excluding list

    After Bree Hughes signed herself up to Victoria’s pubs and clubs pokies self-exclusion program, she didn’t go into any venues for several months.

    “I was worried about what might happen if I tried to enter,” she says. “So I didn’t even attempt it.”

    Sign up for a weekly email featuring our best reads

    Continue reading...