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6 votes
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Road World Championship – Denmark's Mads Pedersen claims shock elite men's road race title in Yorkshire
4 votes -
Alex Stamos on legal issues for US tech companies sharing with foreign governments
5 votes -
The life and work of Lady Hale
4 votes -
Crime and Punishment is an interesting, hard to watch, docu about the UK prison system
Channel 4 describe the programme "Series that captures the work of police, probation, prison, prosecution and parole". Here's a link to the first episode:...
Channel 4 describe the programme "Series that captures the work of police, probation, prison, prosecution and parole".
Here's a link to the first episode: https://www.channel4.com/programmes/crime-and-punishment/on-demand/64655-001
Crime and punishment is a documentary series that looks inside prison to tell the stories of the criminal justice system from the viewpoint of those involved.
The first episode spends some time talking about the unjust "Imprisonment for Public Protection"[1] sentences (these are no longer given by the courts but there are thousands of prisoners still imprisoned on them), how they went wrong, and the awful effect they have upon prisoners. It's a difficult watch. It shows how severely the mental health of prisoners is when they're on this type of sentence, including their serious self harm.
Episode two talks about pressure inside prisons and how that results in "riots", about how prisoners use the only power they have available to them.
I like the programme because it avoids judgmentalism. The prisoners are not reduced to the bad guys; the officers are not simplified to the good guys. You hear a little bit about some of the offences committed by the prisoners
Here's a Twitter thread from someone working in the English NHS. She works in forensic services as a psychologist. https://twitter.com/SarahE_Davidson/status/1173707912981700608
I guess Channel 4 On Demand have geo-blocking. I don't know if it's available on other services, or on torrent.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imprisonment_for_public_protection
7 votes -
'Ban kids from loot box gambling in games,' MPs say
11 votes -
British travel firm Thomas Cook collapses, stranding hundreds of thousands
16 votes -
LGBT+ women face “significant barriers” when it comes to accessing healthcare, according to a pioneering new report.
11 votes -
We replaced sixty-eight Tube adverts with cats
13 votes -
The Chefs' Brigade
This is a British cookery show. They take a bunch of people who cook for a living but who have basic skills. These people are paired with a chef who has four Michelin stars and eighteen...
This is a British cookery show. They take a bunch of people who cook for a living but who have basic skills. These people are paired with a chef who has four Michelin stars and eighteen restaurants. They visit different restaurants around Europe to have competitions to cook that restaurant's own food.
Things I enjoy about it: it does a good job of showing that people who have somewhat fucked up lives will always find a place in cheffing. They could have stayed in the UK but they decided to go around Europe.[1] There's a couple of incidents of poor behaviour being corrected (some of the women chefs are ignored and spoken over by some men, the women stand up for themselves and get an apology).
Things I don't like: there's some cheffy bollocks around the pressure and discipline of a brigade; it's still a reality-show competition and that introduces some artificiallity; they send people home each week and I always hate that aspect of programmes.
It's available on Pirate Bay.
Here are some reviews which I think are fair.
https://inews.co.uk/culture/television/the-chefs-brigade-bbc2-episode-1-review-jason-atherton/
[1] I can't describe how pathologically awful Brexit has been for the UK. :-(
7 votes -
The UK government Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport publishes its report on immersive and addictive technologies, including recommending loot boxes be regulated under gambling law
11 votes -
When feminism supports trans rights everybody wins – just like in Iceland
12 votes -
Ren - Jenny's Tale (2019)
2 votes -
What's it like to have conversion therapy?
9 votes -
Portishead - Roads (1994)
7 votes -
The Leisure Society - Fight for Everyone (2013)
3 votes -
Sakuraburst - Harpsinger (2019)
3 votes -
Hans Rausing, head of the family that became Britain's richest thanks to his father's invention of Tetra Pak food containers, has died aged 93
4 votes -
Surge of measles cases results in Albania, Czechia, Greece and the United Kingdom losing their measles elimination status
8 votes -
Van der Graaf Generator - Wondering (1976)
3 votes -
DragonForce - Heart Demolition (2019)
3 votes -
Celtic thumped AIK to reach the Europa League group stage and alleviate some of the pain of their Champions League exit
4 votes -
Northern Ireland's ex-Rangers striker Kyle Lafferty joins Sarpsborg 08 in Norway
3 votes -
Sweden receives indications Iran is ready to release British tanker Stena Impero
4 votes -
The sound systems of Notting Hill carnival: 'I'll stop when I can't walk'
5 votes -
Qantas 'research flights' to test nineteen hour non-stop London, New York to Sydney routes
8 votes -
Cavetown - Taking Care of Things (2018)
3 votes -
The inclusive languages used by the English NHS
10 votes -
How the Daguerreotype started a Victorian black market for pornography in London
7 votes -
A Welsh town will install anti-sex toilets that could spray users with water
12 votes -
The Guardian newspaper has lost two trans employees over its reporting on trans issues
19 votes -
Data regulator probes King's Cross facial recognition tech
6 votes -
Yield curves invert in US, UK as ‘doom and gloom’ spreads
25 votes -
FKA Twigs - Cellophane (2019)
6 votes -
In this era of astronomical transfer fees and sky-high wages has there been a better bargain in recent times than Teemu Pukki?
4 votes -
Women Between the Wars: In Jean Rhys’s novels, women exhibit a particular kind of English suffering, a perfect illustration of the female condition in the interwar years
7 votes -
Ancient technology: Saxon glass-working experiment
5 votes -
Rangers beat FC Midtjylland 4-2 in Denmark in the first leg of their third qualifying round
5 votes -
Despite being a best-selling author, Jane Austen was paid very little
6 votes -
Is fair trade finished? Fairtrade changed the way we shop. But major companies have started to abandon it and set up their own in-house imitations – threatening the very idea of fair trade.
8 votes -
Tax Watch UK report: Grand Theft Auto developer Rockstar has paid no UK corporate tax in ten years and claimed £42m in subsidies
6 votes -
British trophy hunters paying to shoot 100 puffins at a time during trips to Iceland
7 votes -
How Manchester United's pre-season friendly with Norwegian football team Kristiansund BK came about is scarcely believable
5 votes -
Britain's deadliest path
8 votes -
Passenger in clown suit prompted mass cruise ship brawl, say witnesses
12 votes -
Gay artist devastated by removal of artwork from Llandudno gallery after complaints of homophobia
News article: Gay artist 'devastated' to have THIS artwork 'censored' by Llandudno gallery after 'homophobia' complaint to police Direct link to the artwork on Paul Yore's Instagram:...
News article: Gay artist 'devastated' to have THIS artwork 'censored' by Llandudno gallery after 'homophobia' complaint to police
Direct link to the artwork on Paul Yore's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/p/Bz2OF2EA4mR/
Is it homophobic to depict homophobia in art?
11 votes -
Greta Thunberg writes climate essay for the The 1975's new album
4 votes -
How the Goth pubs of Sweden transformed drinking in Scotland's industrial heartlands
8 votes -
Stena Impero – Sweden makes first contact with ship captured in Iran
5 votes -
Boris Johnson will be the UK's new prime minister
38 votes