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Camra cancels Britain’s biggest beer festival next year amid ‘budget shortfalls’

3 days ago
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Camra, the real ale enthusiasts’ group, has cancelled Britain’s biggest beer festival amid an existential crisis as it launched a cost-cutting drive to address “budget shortfalls”.In an email to members of the Campaign for Real Ale, seen by the Guardian, the embattled organisation said it was responding to a “stark picture” of its finances, caused by rising costs and stagnant membership numbers.Next year’s Great British Beer Festival, an event that has been running since 1977, will be cancelled along with a counterpart festival held in winter, according to the organisation’s chair, Ash Corbett-Collins.The decision comes after this year’s events failed to attract enough visitors to cover the rising cost of running Camra, accommodating the volunteers who run the event, and hiring venues, resulting in a “substantial loss”.“We are exploring why these events made a loss and identifying lessons learned,” Corbett-Collins wrote.

“Other Camra festivals will continue to be assessed through our usual processes to minimise the risk of loss.Doing nothing is not an option.If we do not act now, the stark reality is we will not exist in the future.”Camra, which is dedicated to the promotion of cask ale and has 145,000 members, said it would launch a three-year strategy and review its internal budgets to ensure its financial viability.“Our activities will be leaner,” said Corbett-Collins.

“We must sadly stop supporting the ‘nice to haves’ and instead focus on our key objectives,”Camra, a not-for-profit organisation founded in 1971, usually holds the GBBF in August, as well as a sister event in February,The festival is a key moment in the beer and brewing industry’s calendar, allowing tens of thousands of beer fans to sample about 900 brews, as well as hosting the Champion Beer of Britain awards,This year’s iteration was held at the NEC Birmingham,Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotionThe festival is thought to have been called off only four times in nearly 50 years, two of which were in 2020 and 2021 due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The 1984 event was cancelled due to a fire and the 2024 version was called off after Camra’s chosen venue, Olympia in London, was unavailable.Camra has been keen to move with the times over the years, including cracking down on sexist beer names in 2019 and issuing a rallying call to recruit more female beer lovers.Corbett-Collins told members on Wednesday that the organisation would need to “remember our roots but also evolve if we are going to grow in our collective strength and voice”.He told the Guardian on Wednesday evening: “It has been an incredibly difficult announcement to make.The Great British Beer Festival has a rich 50-year history, but we simply did not get the numbers through the door to make it viable.

I had to take decisive action to safeguard Camra’s future, but we will not slow our campaigning efforts,“The chancellor must use the autumn budget to support our pubs,We want a cut in VAT and beer duty for pubs, grossly unfair business rates addressed and national insurance contributions eased,Pubs are closing at an alarming rate as the whole beer and pub trade grapples with rising costs and changing trends,Without meaningful government action, our communities risk losing more of their social hubs for good.

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Stephen Colbert on Charlie Kirk shooting: ‘Political violence only leads to more political violence’

Late-night hosts respond to the shooting of Charlie Kirk and assess Donald Trump’s denials of a sexually suggestive birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein from 2003.Stephen Colbert opened his show on Wednesday with an acknowledgement of the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the rightwing activist and Trump adviser who was shot and killed at age 31 during an event in Utah on Wednesday afternoon. “Our condolences go out to his family, and all of his loved ones,” said Colbert.“I’m old enough to personally remember the political violence of the 1960s,” the Late Show host added. “And I hope it is obvious to everyone in America that political violence does not solve any of our political differences

2 days ago
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Jerry Seinfeld compares Free Palestine movement to Ku Klux Klan

Jerry Seinfeld denounced the Free Palestine movement as antisemitic and likened its rhetoric to that of the Ku Klux Klan during a surprise appearance at Duke University.“Free Palestine is, to me, just … you’re free to say you don’t like Jews. Just say you don’t like Jews,” the 71-year-old comedian said on stage, according to the Duke University Chronicle.“By saying ‘Free Palestine’, you’re not admitting what you really think,” he continued. “So it’s actually – compared to the Ku Klux Klan, I’m actually thinking the Klan is actually a little better here, because they can come right out and say, ‘We don’t like Blacks, we don’t like Jews

3 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s Epstein letter: ‘A Picasso of pervitude’

Late-night hosts reacted to Donald Trump’s birthday drawing for Jeffrey Epstein in 2003, and his visit on Monday to the Museum of the Bible.Stephen Colbert has kept close tabs on the US president’s never-ending Jeffrey Epstein scandal, and on Tuesday, he noted: “The story of his disturbing friendship with Jeffrey Epstein keeps getting more.”Earlier this summer, the Wall Street Journal reported that back in 2003, Trump provided a lewd letter and cartoon to a book celebrating Epstein’s birthday – a “Picasso of pervitude”, as the Late Show host put it. The Journal reported that the note was framed by a doodle of a naked woman, and featured Trump’s squiggly signature “below her waist, mimicking pubic hair”.The note read, in part: “Happy birthday – and may every day be another wonderful secret

3 days ago
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Jon Stewart on Donald Trump: ‘Something is up with his health’

Late-night hosts react to speculation over Donald Trump’s health and the newly released screenshot of Trump’s alleged lewd birthday letter to Jeffrey Epstein.Jon Stewart returned to his Monday perch for The Daily Show’s new season amid rampant speculation over the president’s health, after he wasn’t seen in public for several days over Labor Day weekend. “You people, you reporters, have no chill!” Stewart mock-scolded after several clips of talking heads wondering if Trump had died. “Guy can’t take a few days for some R&R and a non-surgical breast reduction without everybody suddenly pulling out the toe tags? It does say something about the ubiquity of Donald Trump in our lives that we don’t hear from him for 20 minutes and we’re like: ‘He’s dead!’”“Of course Trump didn’t die in office,” he added. “But I wouldn’t put it past him, trying once again to take credit for something Biden had already accomplished

4 days ago
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Before Knives Out, there was Brick: Rian Johnson’s alluring, hard-boiled debut

Before Benoit Blanc, there was Brendan Frye.At first glance, the teenaged gumshoe at the heart of Brick doesn’t share much with the gentleman sleuth from Knives Out, Glass Onion and the upcoming Wake Up Dead Man. Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) styles himself as a lost Agatha Christie character, while Brendan (Joseph Gordon-Levitt) is a jaded teen who spits Dashiell Hammett dialogue before starting fights he can’t win.But dig deeper and you’ll find two detectives caught in cases that contort around their own genre conventions. Both, of course, are creations of Rian Johnson – the writer/director who induces either delight or unspeakable rage, depending on what type of nerd you are

4 days ago
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Billy Porter recovering from ‘serious case of sepsis’ as Broadway show closes early

Billy Porter is “recovering from a serious case of sepsis”, forcing the early closure of Broadway’s revival of Cabaret in which he played a leading role.The show’s producers announced on Sunday that Porter “is recovering from a serious case of sepsis” that will prevent him from returning to the stage.“His doctors are confident that he will make a full recovery,” they added, “but have advised him to maintain a restful schedule these next couple of weeks”.Porter has yet to issue a statement on his health.The 55-year-old actor had been playing the role of Emcee since July, when he and Marisha Wallace took over from Orville Peck and Eva Noblezada as Emcee and Sally Bowles respectively

4 days ago
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AstraZeneca pauses £200m investment in Cambridge research site

about 17 hours ago
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Pound dips after UK economy doesn’t grow in July; Ocado shares slide 20% amid robotic warehouses demand fears – as it happened

about 20 hours ago
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AI content needs to be labelled to protect us | Letters

2 days ago
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ChatGPT may start alerting authorities about youngsters considering suicide, says CEO

2 days ago
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Records tumble as England thrash South Africa by 146 runs: second men’s T20 international – as it happened

about 14 hours ago
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Records tumble as Phil Salt’s stunning ton leads England to T20 rout of South Africa

about 15 hours ago