Author: BBC

Swiss singer Nemo was greeted by hundreds of fans at Zurich airport after winning the Eurovision Song Contest in Sweden with the song The Code.Speaking to the press, Nemo described the moment the trophy was accidentally broken: “I lift it and when I put it down, it just shattered.”‘Nemo was later seen wearing bandages on stage after sustaining deep cuts to the thumb.This year’s champion is the first non-binary singer to win Eurovision with a song explaining coming to terms with the identity.Read more on this story here. Source link

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More than 200 people attended the European Mullet Festival in Quievrain, Belgium. The festival has been running since 2019, and hosts a mullet contest, conga dancing and a range of hairdressers on site.Festival spokesman Edgar Funkel said the festival inspired people to try it for the first time and that it helped people show their individuality.Video by Gabriela Pomeroy, Source link

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Johnny Ryan, a former advertising executive who now challenges the industry as a senior fellow at the Irish Council for Civil Liberties, says that in some ways advertisers are easier pay lords to please than subscribers.”The advertiser in general doesn’t give a damn about what the content is,” he says. “Every now and then there’s a scandal, but in general they’re not that political.” There is an old adage “if you’re not paying for the product, you ARE the product” – meaning, if you are using something for free, then the company which owns it is taking the data you…

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Billionaire philanthropist Melinda French Gates has said she will resign as a co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.”This is not a decision I came to lightly,” Ms Gates wrote in a statement posted to X on Monday. Her last day of work will be 7 June. Ms Gates started the foundation – the largest private body of its kind – in 2000 with her then-husband Bill Gates, the Microsoft co-founder.In 2021, after 27 years of marriage, the pair announced their separation, but pledged to carry on with their joint philanthropic work. At the time of their split, the…

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In the early 1980s, the UK could not keep up with demand for Factor VIII, which was made by pooling – or mixing – the blood plasma of thousands of individual donors.Instead the treatment was shipped from the US.In the UK, blood donations have always been voluntary, but in the US, drug companies were allowed to pay cash for plasma.High risk groups, from prisoners to drug users, had a clear financial incentive to give blood and potentially lie about their medical history.Evidence uncovered by campaigners and seen by the ongoing public inquiry into the wider contaminated blood scandal shows that,…

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