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Different strokes: Channel 4 steps up for debut as Boat Races get makeover

3 days ago
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Channel 4 has screened plenty of elite sport since launching in 1982.Test cricket, the Tour de France, the Paralympics and even, for those with long memories, Masters golf in the mid-80s.Traditionally regarded as the most progressive and forward-thinking terrestrial TV channel, on Saturday a new string will be added to its sporting bow: the Boat Races, part of the English calendar since 1829.The plan is for an old event, famously and often controversially contested by Oxford and Cambridge universities, to acquire a new look.Clare Balding, previously the face of the BBC’s longstanding coverage, will again be the presenter but Jamie Laing – reality TV star, Radio 1 DJ and podcaster – arrives alongside.

Ade Adepitan, TV presenter and “bona fide Londoner” (according to the production company), is also part of the on-screen team.The BBC’s decision to drop the event and Channel 4’s acquisition of it, announced last October, led some to wonder if it is drifting into irrelevance.Naturally the organisers and Channel 4 maintain the opposite is true; that the switch will widen the event’s appeal and attract a new audience.“It’s about coming in with a new set of eyes,” said Pete Andrews, the head of sport at Channel 4.“As a public service broadcaster we’re free-to-air and we can showcase it for everyone.

We’re really excited.”The production company FilmNova brings four years’ experience from the BBC broadcasts, and has numerous innovations planned.“Expect lots of relatable comparisons,” said the managing director, Phil Sibson.“For example if this was boxing, it would be an 18-minute round, with no break.“We’re putting together a fantasy boat with well-known sportspeople.

Unfortunately they won’t be here – but for instance at No 5, you might have Serena Williams in the engine room.“The stroke might be Paula Radcliffe, for consistency and rhythm.Frankie Dettori might be the best cox … We’ve also really tried to humanise the rowers.We’ve taken them away from their colleges and done some fun things.”Whether Laing, who built his reputation via E4’s Made in Chelsea, is likely to attract younger viewers from a wider demographic is debatable.

But the athletes are obviously key if the battle to increase popularity is to be won.Siobhan Cassidy, chair of the Boat Race company, said: “They’re young people who are working really hard.Everyone will have earned their place at Oxford or Cambridge on academic ability.They just happen to be incredibly hard-working, dedicated rowers.”In recent times perhaps the most relatable of all factors, for ordinary people, is the ability of the Boat Races to shine a light on the scandal of mismanagement at Thames Water, and the political issues at play when sewage is routinely pumped into Britain’s waterways.

Politics aside, for anyone with a strong work ethic, there is much to admire.Carys Earl, competing for Cambridge, is studying medicine and spoke this week of working in a hospital to deliver babies until 3am before heading for 5am training.“Sleep is not something you get to do very often,” Earl said.After eight consecutive Cambridge wins, the Oxford women’s president, Heidi Long, seemingly has the qualities to end their long wait for victory.The 29-year-old Long won a bronze medal in the women’s eight at Paris 2024 and is striving for gold at Los Angeles 2028.

The plan is to train full-time towards that after graduation this year.What Long calls “micro-studying” has been essential in her punishing schedule since last summer.“That is what I rely on,” she said.“It’s surprising how much work you can get done in 10 minutes.”Long’s father, Keith, died before the Paris Olympics and his memory remains stronger than ever as motivation.

“He believed in me from a very young age,” Long says.“To have parents that love you that much, it just kind of sets you free.As a child I did not appreciate the sacrifices he made.“I’d get in the car sometimes and he’d be like: ‘How was rowing?’ and I’d just give a two-word answer, probably like most teenagers.And honestly right now, what I would do for him to just pick me up, and just chat about rowing.

“I love being able to talk about him because he was such an incredible man.So much positive energy.He cared about so many people and he fought so hard through his disease.I can do 10 more strokes in a rowing race.That’s nothing compared to what he did.

”“Heidi is an incredible leader,” says Oxford’s Annie Anezakis, president last year and back for a fourth shot at victory.“She has a real sense of how people on the team are feeling: always knows when to check in, when to push, when to hold back.I think she’s built a real sense of belief.She’s great fun to be around as well.”“She’s got bucketloads of experience,” says Oxford’s Sarah Marshall, who is also back for a fourth attempt.

“The great thing is she’s really able to pass that on in a really useful way.To be able to translate that I think is a real skill.”Channel 4 will start the fight for a new, bigger, younger audience, while the athletes can focus on a more straightforward but no less difficult goal.Win or lose, Long has already achieved something meaningful with Oxford.
politicsSee all
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Starmer’s cost of living adviser urges him to extend fuel duty cut in light of Iran war

A cut to fuel duty should be extended to reflect the rise in petrol prices, the government’s cost of living champion has said.Richard Walker, the executive chair of the supermarket chain Iceland, urged Keir Starmer not to raise the levy in September, in light of the conflict in the Middle East.The strait of Hormuz, a crucial trading artery between the Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, has been blockaded since the US and Israel launched attacks on Iran at the end of February.A fifth of the world’s oil passes through the strait, and its closure has sent global prices soaring, putting pressure on the world economy.Fuel duty is frozen until September, when the government will review any rise

3 days ago
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Labour challenges Farage over cost of private jet trip to Maldives

Labour has queried Nigel Farage’s claim that a return trip to the Maldives on a private jet linked to a billionaire donor cost as little as £25,000 as the Reform leader attempted to reach the Chagos Islands.Farage initially recorded his two-day trip to the Maldives as costing £12,500 funded by Thailand-based Reform megadonor Christopher Harborne, before upgrading this to £25,000 in the latest register of interests.The Guardian reported that ownership of the private jet was linked to Harborne, who has given the party more than £12m.However, Anna Turley, the chair of the Labour party, wrote to Farage on Thursday arguing that chartering a private jet of a similar size would cost many times more than the sum declared.“According to publicly available flight logs, this was an 11,000-mile round trip, lasting just over 23 hours, using a model of plane that is currently advertised on multiple private jet websites as costing at least $11,500 (£8,500) per hour to charter,” she said

3 days ago
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Starmer must call energy summit akin to 2008 crisis response, Labour MP says

Keir Starmer should convene a global energy summit of the same order as Gordon Brown’s response to the 2008 financial crisis and put Britain on a “war footing” to reduce its exposure to fossil fuels, a Labour MP and former government adviser has said.Polly Billington, who was an aide in Brown’s government, warned that economic pain was “hurtling down the tracks” and a bigger response was needed to protect the British people from the consequences of the US-Israeli war on Iran.The MP for East Thanet said the impending energy crisis caused by the war was “as big as the financial crash” and required “a response of equal magnitude”. She said the increase in prices would not be temporary or regional, and that “economic pain, falling living standards and social anger create fertile ground for extremist politics”.While she said the government’s convening of 35 countries to discuss the reopening of the strait of Hormuz was a good step, a bigger global response was needed on energy

4 days ago
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Drip-feed of Reform UK controversies puts party’s policy drive in shade

It was a week that started with a candid admission from Nigel Farage. When asked if Reform UK’s vetting process was finally up to scratch, the party leader said: “I accept that at the last general election basically there was no vetting really.” He was speaking after the latest of what a senior colleague had described as a “series of abhorrent incidents”.That latest incident had involved a Welsh Senedd candidate, Corey Edwards, who was forced to step down last Friday after a picture of him appearing to do a Nazi salute surfaced online.Yet while Farage went on to tell reporters at a Heathrow press conference on Tuesday that they would find Reform was “doing pretty well now”, just two days later another frontline party member was in hot water

4 days ago
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UK politics Q&A, as it happened: Andrew Sparrow answers your questions on Starmer, Reform and more

Reform UK’s housing spokesperson has been sacked from his role after he described the Grenfell Tower fire as a “tragedy” but said that “everyone dies in the end”.The NHS is bracing for the longest strike yet by resident doctors after last-ditch talks failed, prompting Wes Streeting to accuse the medics of suffering from “delusion”.Nick Candy, the honorary treasurer of Reform UK and a major donor, has sold his mansion in the Chelsea district of London for a reported £275m.Thank you for the questions everone. Happy Easter

4 days ago
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Reform donor Nick Candy sells Chelsea mansion for reported £275m

Nick Candy, the honorary treasurer of Reform UK and a major donor, has sold his mansion in the Chelsea district of London for a reported £275m.The property developer declined to comment on the transaction, which was first reported by Bloomberg, but it is believed to be the most expensive on record in London and one of the biggest in the world.Providence House was the location of a fundraising event for Donald Trump in 2024, attended by the US president’s son Donald Trump Jr.The buyer of the Grade II-listed mansion, located in the grounds of Royal Chelsea Hospital with a lake and a swimming pool, has not been made public.The Land Registry records its current owner as Providence House LLP, a partnership controlled by Candy

4 days ago
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Post your questions for DJ Shadow

3 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump attending birthright citizenship hearing: ‘That’s mob-boss-level intimidation’

4 days ago
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Colbert on Trump’s shifting tone on Iran: ‘It’s a military strategy known as starting a 1,000-piece jigsaw puzzle’

5 days ago
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Jon Stewart on Trump: less war leader, more ‘grandpa who’s lost his filter’

6 days ago
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Chatting dating, jazz and the Harlem Renaissance: the exclusive supper clubs where Black women nourish community

6 days ago
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Smiley Face: finally, a stoner comedy for the girls who get overstimulated at the supermarket

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