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UK junk food ad ban so diluted it may be largely ineffective, experts say

2 days ago
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The junk food ad ban intended to curb childhood obesity will affect only 1% of the £2.4bn spent annually on advertising food and drink, and may prove a “paper tiger”, ministers have been told.The government has hailed the ban on advertising foods high in fat, salt and sugar before 9pm on TV and completely online, which came into force on 5 January, as a decisive and world-leading move that will remove 7.2bn calories from UK children’s diets every year.But it has been delayed, watered down and narrowed in scope so much after food industry lobbying that it will be “mostly ineffective”, research by the innovation agency Nesta has found.

The policy has been weakened by so many gaps and loopholes that it will have much less impact than expected, it claims,It estimates that the new advertising regulations cover only £190m, or 8%, of the £2,4bn annual spend,As firms respond to the TV and online ban, this is likely to fall to just £20m – barely 1% of overall advertising spend,In particular, food producers will switch much of their advertising spend from pre-watershed TV and online, which are covered by the ban, to outdoor sites and advertisers’ own social media accounts, which are not.

The director of Nesta’s healthy life mission, John Barber, said: “This policy was first announced eight years ago and in that time there have been eight consultations and four delays.“Partly due to pressure from the industry, these delays and adjustments mean that the restrictions intended to keep us healthy are operating at a fraction of their potential.This policy is at risk of being a paper tiger.”Governments need to balance public health requirements with those of business, but the much-amended version of the restrictions “appear to strongly favour the latter”, he said.Nesta said loopholes in the ban include it covering too few types of unhealthy food, ministers agreeing with the industry’s demand that brand advertising should still be allowed, and it not covering outdoor advertising such as billboards.

Exemptions ministers granted mean that foods generally considered unhealthy, such as chocolate spread and toffee-covered nuts, can still be advertised,More than 60% of consumer spending on products high in fat, salt or sugar are not covered by the ban,Dr Kawther Hashem, a nutritionist and head of research and impact at Action on Sugar, said: “It is shocking that after nearly a decade of promises, eight consultations, four delays and constant lobbying, the UK could be left with unhealthy food advertising rules that affect as little as 1% of ad spend,“While 1% of total ad spend is still a substantial amount in absolute terms, it falls far short of the bold action needed, and originally promised, to truly protect children from relentless unhealthy food marketing,”Nesta’s findings follow a warning last week by Prof Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer for England, that certain industries – including food – have used “very strong lobbyists” to persuade successive UK governments not to adopt policies that would improve the population’s health.

Tactics such as portraying policies in the media as “nanny state” help to deter ministers from pushing through measures that are cheap, popular with the public and likely to prove effective, Whitty said in the Medical Journalists Association annual lecture,He said this helped to explain why “we are so slow” in the UK to boost public health,The claim on a newspaper front page that a proposed new approach by ministers is “nanny state … kills off a lot of the things that we can move forward on”, he said,The chief executive of the food campaign group Bite Back, D’Arcy Williams, said: “Junk food companies are as incredibly adept as they are sinister at finding loopholes [and] shifting their marketing into places where the rules don’t apply, while young people continue to be surrounded by unhealthy food advertising every day,”A Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson said: “We’re delivering on our pledge to restrict junk food advertising and are already seeing change – with up to 7.

2bn calories set to be removed from UK children’s diets each year as a result.“These restrictions are part of a wider package of action under our 10-year health plan, including limiting volume price promotions on less healthy foods and introducing mandatory reporting on healthy food sales.“We’re committed to monitoring the impact of these measures and expect industry to continue to adapt.”
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Womadelaide 2026 review: Grace Jones embraces the compulsion for dancing in the dark times

Botanic Park, AdelaideNo matter the music, no matter the mood, the festival crowd moved and moved – in a celebration embodied by the liberated, messy and sexual stylings of the 77-year-old headlinerGet our weekend culture and lifestyle emailStraight away, the atmosphere at Womadelaide is calmer this year. On opening night, it is only 25C – the warmest it is forecast to be all weekend. After two years of temperatures in the 40s, this will be a festival to ease into. Even the bat colony at the entrance feels decidedly more settled. “I hear we missed a really hot one last year,” says Beoga’s Niamh Dunne later that night

2 days ago
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‘Kitty karma’? Jessie Buckley tries to claw back approval after enraging cat-lovers

If Jessie Buckley fails to win the Oscar for best actress next week it will be a sign that cat lovers have got their claws out.The Irish actor is the runaway favourite for her performance in Hamnet, but in recent days has stumbled into a controversy over a stated antipathy to cats.She has said she once gave her husband an ultimatum to banish his two cats because they would defecate on pillows, telling a podcast: “I was like, ‘it’s me or the cats.’”Cat-lovers have responded with indignation and condemnation, sparking a wave of headlines and warnings that “kitty karma” could deny Buckley, 36, her first Academy award.She attempted to repair the damage on Jimmy Fallon’s chatshow on Thursday, saying it was a “misconception” that she loathed cats

5 days ago
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From The Bride! to Harry Styles: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Maggie Gyllenhaal gives us a new take on The Bride of Frankenstein, and the stadium-conquering pop prince is back with a new albumThe Bride!Out now Maggie Gyllenhaal directs this Chicago-set gothic romance starring Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale. Per James Whale’s 1935 classic Bride of Frankenstein, on which it is loosely based, a lonely monster wants a mate and taps up a scientist, Dr Euphronious (Annette Bening), to create her.Peaky Blinders: The Immortal ManOut now As The Rachel was to women who watched Friends in the 90s, so the Peaky Blinders mop chop was to male fans. Will the return of the Birmingham gang drama in feature film form prompt another wave of ill-advised dos? Only time will tell. Just remember, Cillian Murphy looking amazing with that haircut doesn’t mean it’s a good idea for absolutely everyone

5 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Republican double-speak for war in Iran: ‘A war that got a thesaurus for Christmas’

Late-night hosts unpacked the Orwellian double-speak of congressional Republicans trying to justify the Trump administration’s military strikes in Iran.“Folks, I really didn’t want to start the monologue by talking about the war, but in honor of this administration, I went into this without a plan,” said Stephen Colbert on Wednesday, five days after the US military, in conjunction with Israel, bombed Iran and killed its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.“I say ‘war’,” he continued, “because it sure looks like a war, and Trump keeps calling it a war, but Congress never declared it a war, and Maga was promised no new wars, so the White House sent out a list of talking points to all the congressional Republicans telling them in no uncertain terms that if a reporter asked ‘Can you promise the American people this will not be a long-drawn out war?’, the answer to give is ‘These are targeted, major combat operations.’”“So … it’s worse than a war,” said Colbert. “It’s a war that got a thesaurus for Christmas

7 days ago
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Nothing beats the smell of oil and steam | Brief letters

Re your article (T rex breath and Queen Elizabeth’s car: scientists creating ‘time machine for the nose’, 28 February), one of the great attractions about working steam museums is the whole sensory experience, including the smell of hot oil and steam, which is often mentioned by visitors. Non-working steam engines are, by comparison, lifeless, however well they are polished.John Freeman Trustee, Claymills Victorian Pumping Station My tried and trusted method of getting back to sleep (Letters, 25 February) involves me making the mental journey from my home in Kent to Lewis, including stocking up with groceries in Stornoway. I’m looking forward to making the trip for real in November. Out the door, turn right, right again…Ralph JonesRochester, Kent My twin sister and I shared a bed from the early 1950s

8 days ago
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Jon Stewart on US attacks in Iran: ‘A war with no clear purpose, no end in sight’

Late-night hosts delved into the new US regime-change war in the Middle East, after Donald Trump directed the US military to bomb Iran in conjunction with Israel.Jon Stewart opened The Daily Show on Monday in a daze, after Iran state media confirmed that US and Israeli forces killed its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, over the weekend. The host joked that, for the surprise occasion and chaos that followed, he needed to bring back “a 20-year recurring segment” titled “Mess O’Potamia”.“America, apparently, had to start an entire war to kill an 86-year-old man in ill health and not wait – I don’t know – three weeks to let saturated fat do its thing,” he joked.He then played a clip of Trump, wearing his USA hat, announcing the so-called “Operation Epic Fury” against Iran from his luxury golf course in Florida

9 days ago
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Kit clash farce looms as France set to wear special pale blue shirt against England

about 22 hours ago
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For many of us, the Covid pandemic still isn’t over | Brief letters

about 23 hours ago
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UK companies struggling to hire young people amid cost pressures, MPs told

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Oil price tops $100 again as Iran strikes economic targets across Middle East

about 11 hours ago
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How will Australians’ flights to Europe be affected, and at what cost, as the Iran war rages on?

about 15 hours ago
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Binance sues Wall Street Journal over reporting on Iranian sanctions

about 22 hours ago