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6 pointsI'm aware of the smaller text bit. Not having a maths brain, economic theory is knackering. (Mind you, I have never sought to be Chancellor, and understand economic theory better than some who have, but that's not a good thing!) Many years ago now, I did have to read a lot of stuff on the economy of 2007-2010 in the lead up to the financial crash and the levers which prevented another Great Depression, for a project, and I came away from it with far greater respect for Gordon Brown. And considerably less respect for George Osborne. The best bit incidentally was the memoirs of Alan Greenspan, followed by the memoirs of George Soros. Greenspan somewhat whitewashed his role in events, and Soros, who wrote his book after Greenspans, takes a chapter out to trounce Greenspans version of events. Dignified, no, but rather amusing! In rough order of your podcast. Wolf is correct about the constraints of modern capitalism, which is very far from the meritocracy we are taught to believe in, but I would say that as a socialist. He's correct about the demagogues. Unfortunately, even with his recent setback (setback in the "still in power" definition of the term), Modi is a model for that sort of leader. If you focus on infrastructure, or even speak about infrastructure while achieving little of it, you can gain a huge coalition of poorer voters who will look the other way if that comes with victimising minorities, and hell, many of them might see that as a joyful bonus. Boris Johnson saw this, hence the Levelling Up talk, but managed to damage his own brand before people noticed it was all talk and no action. Donald Trump in 2020 was an odd case in which while he had spoken loudly about everything he was going to do, on popularist localism he actually ceded the ground to Joe Biden, who made great political capital out of it in the Rust Belt. (This is something Biden also did successfully in campaigning in 2012 and a reason you can't count out his ground game, even if he is 82 and slow.) People put a lot of belief into Farage as being our version of this, and he's not got the tools (he has however overachieved for his position*), but the French political establishment knew Jean Marie le Pen wasn't a real threat, and so continued sleepwalking for decades until we are at the position we are now. Worse, they conceded ground, until the difference wasn't as scary to voters. Macron's probably surrendered the French parliament for reasons that bamboozle me, dreadful politician. What France is, is a lesson to the UK and Germany, but primarily us. If Labour get into power, the Macron route leads to an empowered far right. *The late Tony Benn said of Neil Kinnock once (and I paraphrase as its been years now), "he gave up every principle to get a good headline, and instead of public appraisal, he just lost every swing voter he began with". This reminds me of the Conservative party in recent years. In terms of the post-war settlement (which is mythologised more than it was), that was ripped up by Reagonomics and Thatcher. Wolf is correct in that the rise of Donald Trump is linked to the rise of Reagan (in fact, Ronnie came up with the Make America Great Again slogan!), as the economic vulture capitalists allowed to grow unregulated in the eighties gave Trump his position of power. However, I don't think it was an inevitable Point A to Point B route. The rise of right wing demagogues was aided by the financial crash, which was aided by the consensus Reagan set up and Clinton and the Bushes followed, but this wasn't a necessary chain of cause and effect, it was a political expedience of dealing with it when you had to. We should have seen this coming, as Calvin Coolidge cut taxes and regulation and led to a vast Wall Street boom all through the 1920s, which led to a speculation disaster and the Wall Street Crash. Coolidge had the smart idea of retiring from the Presidency less than a year before, and so ahistorical politicians look at the cuts and economic boom under his reign and don't connect it to the vast bust that happened after. This also happened under Andrew Jackson, and in the 1870s. Economic history repeats. This is a lot of American economics, but in 1840, 1878, 1929 and 2007, the American system shock helped bugger up the rest of the world. Financially, a bit like the Mount Tambora explosion, which led to the UK having no summer in 1816! In terms of the "need the votes, pander to the masses, newsspeak", I dislike it too. Unfortunately, we are but two voters in a sea of thirty million, and the vast majority of them are... structurally challenged to hearing the truth. The evidence is in the last century of voting. Enough voters to swing an election will vote against their own best interests if they fear a tax rise on themselves. Even in a situation like now, certain parties might fear it could be election changing, because they have the race memory of 1992 and the Poll Tax and economic decline being forgiven. Labour in general are always fighting the last election, and what the lessons the public taught them or they think the public taught them. Hence, Harriet Harman's idiotic decision to put the whips on the abstention of the Welfare bill in 2015, the decision that directly led to the election of Jeremy Corbyn as party leader, because as interim leader, that was the lesson she took from the 2015 election. That we needed to be harsher on benefits and immigration. Now in 2024, they are still adhering to the lessons of 2019: don't promise too much, don't let anyone think you are even slightly anti-semitic, don't both sides Putin. No, hang on, the last one is easy enough. I'm actually surprised how much the Labour manifesto has snuck in (its quite similar to the Corbyn manifesto, but with most of the headline stuff removed) but yeah, they're timid because voters have taught them to be timid. And probably for the best, as even now, in this climate, for every person online I see bemoaning the lack of progressive policies spouted by Kier Starmer, I've heard scared people with actual bloody votes worried that Starmer speaks far too revolutionary for their liking. It's an annoying internet truism to say we get the politicians we vote for, but the country certain does*. *"The country needs more Alan Milburns and far less Dennis Skinners" as a ranking campaigner under Blair told me. Alan Milburn incidentally fucked off at the first bit of bother. The housing issues stem from the slum clearances. Not because the slum clearances were bad. Far from it. In clearing the slums, as political expediency, the major cities cleaned house. So they didn't get rid of the rotten stock, they got rid of everything: the good stock tenements, the town houses, the churches, the shops, the cinemas, the public loos, the community centres, everything. Vast chunks of which, had they been restored at the time (or in thousands of cases, any time in the decades leading including this Tory government), would have saved this country billions. The problems with creating the new areas like Easterhouse for example are a different topic in themselves, though adding mental health issues and a lack of anything to do to the working poor is creating a vacuum for health woes, addiction and crime. However, this is specifically about the housing numbers. The houses in Glasgow, and London and other places were replaced with high rise towers. Now, I dislike high rises for many good reasons, like the fact they were badly maintained (damp often got into the roots), and poorly policed, and they tend to look ugly as shit. But in specific housing numbers, the number of flats you can get in a high rise, with UK planning permission rules, and health and safety laws, is considerably FEWER than what you can get from tenements or flats built on the same area! In fact, in Glasgow (sorry, most of my knowledge comes from my homeland, but the same thing happened across Britain), the clearances and building of the high rises led to a DEFICIT of 100, 000 homes. A deficit which we have been fighting ever since, with increased birth rates! Governments know we need housing, but they also like to be praised by the NIMBYs of the Mail, Telegraph and so on. Meanwhile, the opposition to this (so called Lib Dem and Green councillors*) revert to NIMBYism on housing in their own area. *Don't let this dissuade anyone voting Lib Dem in a Tory/Lib Dem seat next week. I'd say the same about the Greens, but I can't think of any seat where voting Green would be of use. And I speak as someone very into renewable energy! We built huge numbers of houses in the 1890s, the 1920s and the 1950s. And not as many since. He's correct that developers and landlords gain a lot of power, but again, this is the vacuum of power. Where you leave a hole, someone finds a way to take advantage or fill that hole. Luckily, we have a lot of ground on which you could build houses, and its not the green belt. There are also things the government could do to persuade restoration of homes which exist but which are empty. For example, by removing the VAT on restoration building to make it equal with other building taxes, as the current system disencetivises doing anything to solve the crisis. (UKIP pointed this out in 2015, and lord knows I hate having to admit they were ever right about anything.) I think the government which solves this would be in power for a generation. The Tories surrendered the ground. If Labour surrender the ground in the next decade, they leave the ground open to the British Modi and can't assume they won't show up. I have to admit a blind spot on inheritance tax as it involves sums way beyond my life experience. It kicks in after the first £325k. It's a bit like George Harrison writing Taxman. The 95% rate (which was intended to make NHS prescriptions free, but the backlash led to it being abandoned) only kicked in well above the normal level of pay, so the Beatles were already richer than Croesus before those tax bands kicked in. His issue is that the people they hung out with where siphoning off every little bit of money and blaming the tax system for their philandering! (The fact that the Beatles were so shit with their money, incidentally, means its staggering to me that somehow Paul McCartney wound up with 100% of the royalties for Yesterday, one of the most ludicrously successful royalties decisions in music history. People around the Fab Four were so greedy they didn't notice the actual money tree right there in front of them.) I'm sure it sucks if you have to pay a huge tax bill when you inherit shitloads, but I'm afraid that's someone elses who is far richer than me and their problem. Unsatisfying but honest! I will say I am open to hearing about land taxing, given the amount of landbanking profiteers due in the UK, which directly leads to the housing problem mentioned above. Everything is connected! In short (err, what, msc?), I tend to agree with the general points. However, I would note that Gordon Brown spoke nothing but caution as Shadow Chancellor, yet his first act was Bank of England independence, and child poverty was all but eradicated through his time in office, as were NHS waiting times. But he also said that Labour needed a few years in office to prove they wouldn't wreck the economy (thanks to media and Tory propaganda) so they could be trusted to actually fix things. I suspect (or hope) that time period will be a lot shorter for Starmer and co, and that once the fears of not being elected are (hopefully) removed, they get on with the job we all want them to do, without an electorate to box them in. I'll be judging them on the things they do in office (should they get there) rather than the mealmouthed stuff they need to say to get elected. Blair/Brown and Wilson and MacMillan said much the same much ado about nothing and were transformative. David Cameron did the same, and was a complete and utter David Cameron. The alternative is the route to the demagogues outlined by Wolf, but so often they prove they can talk of solutions but provide none of them, and hurt the very people who need them most. So for all of that, and a few historical injustices I'm sore on (see housing above), I'm hoping Starmer realises the task ahead. Because bloody hell, to quote one former Prime Minster, there is no alternative!
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4 pointsThe endurance game of Westminster returns with Shaun once again as your host carrying on the idea started and brought to life by Bibliogryphon back in 2015. Back for its fourth parliament in 9 years the game will likely take us to near the end of the decade? How big will Starmer`s majority be? Will the Tory collapse result in some of the most popular picks in the last game lose their seat.Only time will tell. The rules are the same as before except extra points for criminal behaviour that results in a criminal conviction being added however politicians rarely seem to get convicted these days! No bets allowed especially for inside trading. On to the rules: Pick 65 (1/10) of the 650 members of parliament elected on the 4th July 2024 During the next parliament you will score the following for: -Death while in seat_ 30 points _Resignation for criminal activity - 20 points which will increase to 25 if the resigning matter results in a criminal conviction -Non criminal resignations -10 points (Reduced to 5 if the candidate stands in the by election and wins) -Correctly predicted by elections that wipe out a government majority 25 (Increased to 50 if the government collapses as a result) -Unique picks :10 points Entries open from 07:00 am BST on the 5th July 2024 and entries close on 23:59 on 14th July 2024 Good luck everyone. By election Bingo 2024-2029 masterlist: Sean: 1)Sir Roger Gale 2)Sir Christopher Chope 3)Marie Rimmer 4)Jeremy Corbyn 5)Graham Stringer 6)Jon Trickett 7)John McDonnell 8)Martin Vickers 9)Diane Abbott 10)Sammy Wilson 11)Gregory Campbell 12)Jim Allister 13)Jim Shannon 14)Sir Iain Duncan Smith 15)Sir Edward Leigh 16)Ed Miliband 17) Sir Keir Starmer 18)Emily Thornberry 19)Jamie Stone 20)Alastair Carmichael 21)Sir Ed Davey 22) Sir Lindsay Hoyle 23)Wera Hobhouse 24) Sir John Whittingdale 25)Christine Jardine 26) Hilary Benn 27)Julian Lewis 28)Mark Francois 29)Grahame Morris 30)Mark Pritchard 31)Clive Betts 32)Barry Gardiner 33)Sir Stephen Timms 34)Sir Geoffrey Clifton_Brown 35)Valerie Vaz 36)Ian Lavery 37)Ruth Cadbury 38) Sir David Davis 39)Sir Bernard Jenkin 40)Andy McDonald 41) Dame Nia Griffith 42)Nigel Farage 43) Sir Nic Dakin 44)Daniel Zeichner 45)Liz Twist 46)Mary Glindon 47)Gill Furniss 48)John Healey 49) Dame Harriett Baldwin 50)Rupert Lowe 51)Fabian Hamilton 52) Sir Alan Campbell 53)Peter Dowd 54)Dan Norris 55)Nick Smith 56)Andy Slaughter 57)Sir Geoffrey Cox 58)Bob Blackman 59) Sir Chris Bryant 60)Wes Streeting 61) Dame Siobhan McDonagh 62)Kit Malthouse 63)Carolyn Harris 64)Sir Desmond Swayne 65)Neil Coyle TQR: Lee Anderson Nigel Farage Rupert Lowe James McMurdock Richard Tice Bob Blackman Suella Braverman Christopher Chope James Cleverly Geoffrey Clifton-Brown Geoffrey Cox David Davis Oliver Dowden Iain Duncan Smith Mark Francois Roger Gale John Hayes Jeremy Hunt Richard Holden Bernard Jenkin Edward Leigh Julian Lewis Esther McVey Andrew Mitchell David Mundell Priti Patel Chris Philp Andrew Rosindell Mel Stride Graham Stuart Rishi Sunak Desmond Swayne Nick Timothy Tom Tugendhat Martin Vickers Gavin Williamson Layla Moran Jamie Stone Diane Abbott Chris Bryant Liam Byrne Bambos Charalambous Rosie Duffield Barry Gardiner Nia Griffith John Healey Andy McDonald John McDonnell Wes Streeting Graham Stringer Valerie Vaz Christian Wakeford Lindsay Hoyle Shockat Adam Jeremy Corbyn Alex Easton Adnan Hussain Ayoub Khan Iqbal Mohamed Kirsty Blackman Stephen Flynn Pete Wishart Jim Shannon Sammy Wilson Jim Allister Brad252 1) Roger Gale 2) Rishi Sunak 3) Nigel Farage 4) Lee Anderson 5) Richard Tice 6) Richard Holden 7) Ayoub Khan 8) Graham Stringer 9) Peter Dowd 10) Barry Gardiner 11) Christian Wakeford 12) Jamie Stone 13) Rosie Duffield 14) Iain Duncan Smith 15) Christopher Chope 16) Liz Saville-Roberts 17) Sammy Wilson 18) Claire Coutinho 19) Danny Kruger 20) Edward Leigh 21) David Davis 22) Diane Abbott 23) Bob Blackman 24) Bernard Jenkin 25) John McDonnell 26) Jeremy Corbyn 27) Rupert Lowe 28) Hilary Benn 29) Liz Kendall 30) Andy McDonald 31) Julian Lewis 32) Desmond Swayne 33) Robert Jenrick 34) Jon Trickett 35) Sir Geoffrey Clinton-Brown 36) Simon Hoare 37) Shockat Adam 38) Louie French 39) Pete Wishart 40) Aspana Begum 41) Mark Francois 42) Chris Bryant 43) Andrew Rosindell 44) Rebecca Long-Bailey 45) Julian Smith 46) James McMurdock 47) Gavin Williamson 48) Jim Shannon 49) Andrew Mitchell 50) Geoffrey Cox 51) Stella Creasey 52) Adrian Ramsay 53) Andrew Bowie 54) Iqbal Mohamed 55) Adnan Hussein 56) Shivani Ravja 57) Stephen Flynn 58) Seamus Logan 59) Graham Leadbitter 60) Jim Allister 61) Nick Timothy 62) Jack Rankin 63) John Hayes 64) Helen Grant 65) Helen Whately The Old Crem: Sam Carlin Roger Gale Marie Rimmer Rishi Sunak Nigel Farage Keir Starmer Jim Allister Christopher Chope David Davis Jeremy Corbyn Diane Abbot John McDonnell Bob Blackman Edward Leigh Lee Anderson Nesil Caliskan John Hayes Neil Coyle Graham Stuart Ayoub Khan Adnan Hussain Graham Stringer Liz Twist Mary Glindon Ian Lavery Peter Dowd Barry Gardiner Wera Hobhouse Bambos Charalambous Martin Vickers Jamie Stone Daniel Zeichner Rosie Duffield Iain Duncan Smith Lindsay Hoyle Iqbal Mohamed Grahame Morris Sammy Wilson Stephen Timms Gregory Campbell Suella Braverman Clive Efford Patricia Ferguson Jeremy Hunt Rupert Lowe Bernard Jenkin Fabian Hamilton Hilary Benn Shockat Adam Kate Osamor John Whittingdale Afzal Khan Andy McDonald Julian Lewis Desmond Swayne Jon Trickett Geoffrey Clifton - Brown Apsana Begum Mark Hendrick Nic Dakin Gill Furniss Clive Betts Jim Shannon Andrew Mitchell Derek Twigg Father Brown 1 Nigel Farage 2 Lee Anderson 3 Richard Tice 4 Christopher Chope 5 Suella Braverman 6 Mark Francois 7 Priti Patel 8 Iain Duncan Smith 9 Kemi Badenoch 10 Roger Gale 11 Richard Holden 12 Jeremy Hunt 13 Mel Stride 14 Oliver Dowden 15 Geoffrey Clifton-Brown 16 James Cleverly 17 Diane Abbott 18 Rishi Sunak 19 Esther McVey 20 Bob Blackman 21 Mims Davies 22 Robert Jenrick 23 Chris Philp 24 Claire Coutinho 25 Liz Twist 26 Victoria Atkins 27 Desmond Swayne 28 Julian Lewis 29 Steve Barclay 30 David Davis 31 Shockat Adam 32 John Hayes 33 Emily Thornberry 34 Graham Stringer 35 Gavin Williamson 36 Jeremy Corbyn 37 Andrew Mitchell 38 Lewis Cocking 39 Wera Hobhouse 40 Geoffrey Cox 41 Peter Dowd 42 Bambos Charalambous 43 Richard Burgon 44 Keir Mather 45 Rebecca Long-Bailey 46 Hilary Benn 47 John McDonnell 48 John Lamont 49 Graham Stuart 50 Yvette Cooper 51 Ann Davies 52 Rosie Duffield 53 Chris Bryant 54 Valerie Vaz 55 Nia Griffith 56 Kate Osamor 57 Mark Tami 58 Wes Streeting 59 Anneliese Dodds 60 Ed Miliband 61 Angela Rayner 62 Tonia Antoniazzi 63 Keir Starmer 64 Rachel Reeves 65 Lindsay Hoyle Liz Lemon 1- Rishi Sunak 2- Diane Abbott 3- Edward Leigh 4- Suella Braverman 5- Sam Carling 6- Martin Vickers 7- Bambos Charalambous 8- Liz Twist 9- Hilary Benn 10- Nigel Farage 11- Richard Tice 12- Rupert Lowe 13- James McMurdock 14- Lee Anderson 15- Iqbal Mohamed 16- Ayoub Khan 17- Adnan Hussain 18- Alex Easton 19- Jeremy Corbyn 20- Shockat Adam 21- Lindsay Hoyle 22- Rosie Duffield 23- Jamie Stone 24- Charlotte Cane 25- Keir Starmer 26- Angela Rayner 27- Wendy Morton 28- Ruth Cadbury 29- Shabana Mahmood 30- Ed Davey 31- Jess Phillips 32- James Cleverly 33- Yasmin Qureshi 34- Barry Gardiner 35- Sian Berry 36- Rebecca Harris 37- Kemi Badenoch 38- Samantha Dixon 39- Iain Duncan Smith 40- Christopher Chope 41- David Mundell 42- Sammy Wilson 43- Marie Rimmer 44- Jim Allister 45- David Davis 46- Tulip Siddiq 47- John McDonnell 48- Nia Griffith 49- Helen Grant 50- Carolyn Harris 51- Siobhain McDonagh 52- Julian Lewis 53- Jon Trickett 54- Mary Glindon 55- Apsana Begum 56- Laura Trott 57- John Hayes 58- Jim Shannon 59- Andrew Mitchell 60- Esther McVey 61- Alan Campbell 62- Valerie Vaz 63- Sharon Hodgson 64- Andrew Bowie 65- Rachael Maskell Summer In Transylvania: 1. Diane Abbott 2. Rishi Sunak 3. Rupert Lowe 4. Edward Leigh 5. Jeremy Corbyn 6. Suella Braverman 7. Sam Carling 8. Andrew Bowie 9. Nigel Farage 10. Richard Tice 11. Wes Streeting 12. Roger Gale 13. Bambos Charalambous 14. Shockat Adam 15. Baggy Shanker 16. Esther McVey 17. Priti Patel 18. Robert Jenrick 19. Bob Blackman 20. Iain Duncan Smith 21. Mark Francois 22. Kemi Badenoch 23. Aphra Brandreth 24. Oliver Dowden 25. James Cleverly 26. Chris Philp 27. Richard Holden 28. Lindsay Hoyle 29. Jeremy Hunt 30. Shivani Raja 31. David Davis 32. Geoffrey Clifton-Brown 33. Ed Davey 34. Keir Starmer 35. Angela Rayner 36. Yvette Cooper 37. David Lammy 38. Georgia Gould 39. Kit Malthouse 40. Rachel Reeves 41. Mims Davies 42. Desmond Swayne 43. Valerie Vaz 44. Ed Milliband 45. Daisy Cooper 46. Peter Prinsley 47. Hilary Benn 48. Carla Denyer 49. Adrian Ramsay 50. Tim Farron 51. Andy Slaughter 52. Geoffrey Cox 53. Wera Hobhouse 54. Shabana Mahmood 55. Tom Tugendhat 56. Kate Osamor 57. Jess Phillips 58. Bridget Phillipson 59. Heidi Alexander 60. Gavin Williamson 61. Mel Stride 62. Iqbal Mohamed 63. Jas Athwal 64. Steve Darling 65. James McMurdock wannamaker 1 Diane Abbott 2 Bayo Alaba 3 Heidi Alexander 4 Tahir Ali 5 Jim Allister 6 Steffan Aquarone 7 Alex Barros-Curtis 8 Peter Bedford 9 Apsana Begum 10 Alison Bennett 11 Jade Botterill 12 Alex Burghart 13 Charlotte Cane 14 Sam Carling 15 James Cartlidge 16 Geoffrey Clifton-Brown 17 Andrew Cooper 18 Harriet Cross 19 Pat Cullen 20 Nicholas Dakin 21 David Davis 22 Caroline Dinenage 23 Dave Doogan 24 Nigel Farage 25 Allison Gardner 26 Mark Garnier 27 Andrew George 28 Sarah Gibson 29 Becky Gittins 30 Tom Gordon 31 Lilian Greenwood 32 Chris Hazzard 33 Neil Hudson 34 Jeremy Hunt 35 Rupa Huq 36 Natasha Irons 37 Clive Jones 38 Sarah Jones 39 Chris Kane 40 Mike Kane 41 Gen Kitchen 42 Kim Leadbeater 43 Rupert Lowe 44 Paul Maskey 45 Brian Mathew 46 Perran Moon 47 Lisa Nandy 48 Josh Newbury 49 Dan Norris 50 Sarah Olney 51 Stephanie Peacock 52 David Pinto-Duschinsky 53 Mark Pritchard 54 Shivani Raja 55 Marie Rimmer 56 Ian Sollom 57 Will Stone 58 Kirsteen Sullivan 59 Harpreet Uppal 60 Tony Vaughan 61 Valerie Vaz 62 Christian Wakeford 63 Michelle Welsh 64 Helen Whately 65 Gavin Williamson machotrouts LABOUR: 1. Sir Keir Starmer 2. Diane Abbott 3. John McDonnell 4. David Lammy 5. Sir Chris Bryant 6. Mary Foy 7. Clive Efford 8. Clive Betts 9. Clive Lewis 10. Jon Trickett 11. Nadia Whittome 12. Marie Rimmer 13. Graham Stringer 14. Wes Streeting 15. Jess Phillips 16. Rushanara Ali 17. Rosie Duffield 18. Apsana Begum 19. Valerie Vaz 20. Gill Furniss 21. Dame Nia Griffith 22. Debbie Abrahams 23. Neil Coyle 24. Liam Byrne 25. Dawn Butler 26. Charlotte Nichols 27. Kate Osamor 28. Sam Carling 29. Chris Bloore 30. Luke Akehurst CONSERVATIVE: 31. Rishi Sunak 32. Richard Holden 33. Kemi Badenoch 34. Suella Braverman 35. Robert Jenrick 36. Dame Priti Patel 37. Sir Roger Gale 38. Sir David Davis 39. Sir Christopher Chope 40. Sir Edward Leigh 41. Sir Julian Lewis 42. Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown 43. Sir Geoffrey Cox 44. Sir John Hayes 45. Mark Pritchard 46. Mark Garnier 47. Martin Vickers 48. Mark Francois 49. Andrew Mitchell 50. Andrew Bowie LIB DEM: 51. Sir Ed Davey INDEPENDENT: 52. Jeremy Corbyn 53. Shockat Adam 54. Iqbal Mohamed 55. Adnan Hussain 56. Ayoub Khan REFORM: 57. Nigel Farage 58. Richard Tice 59. Lee Anderson 60. Rupert Lowe 61. James McMurdock DUP: 62. Gregory Campbell 63. Sammy Wilson GREEN: 64. Siân Berry TUV: 65. Jim Allister Rover and Out 1. Lee Anderson (Reform, Ashfield) 2. Richard Holden (Conservative, Basildon and Billericay) 3. Ayoub Khan (Independent, Birmingham Perry Barr) 4. Adnan Hussain (Independent, Blackburn) 5. Graham Stringer (Labour, Blackley and Broughton) 6. Richard Tice (Reform, Boston and Skegness) 7. Martin Vickers (Conservative, Cleethorpes) 8. Jamie Stone (Liberal Democrat, Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross) 9. Mel Stride (Conservative, Central Devon) 10. Lindsey Hoyle (Speaker, Chorley) 11. Christopher Chope (Conservative, Christchurch) 12. Nigel Farage (Reform, Clacton) 13. Iqbal Mohamed (Independent, Dewsbury and Batley) 14. Sammy Wilson (DUP, East Antrim) 15. Suella Braverman (Conservative, Fareham and Waterlooville) 16. Edward Leigh (Conservative, Gainsborough) 17. Rupert Lowe (Reform, Great Yarmouth) 18. Diane Abbott (Labour, Hackney North and Stoke Newington) 19. Bob Blackman (Conservative, Harrow East) 20. John McDonnell (Labour, Hayes and Harlington) 21. Roger Gale (Conservative, Herne Bay and Sandwich) 22. Jeremy Corbyn (Independent, Islington North) 23. Emily Thornberry (Labour, Islington, South and Finsbury) 24. Richard Burgon (Labour, Leeds East) 25. Fabian Hamilton (Labour, Leeds North East) 26. Shockat Adam (Independent, Leicester South) 27. Julian Lewis (Conservative, New Forest East) 28. Robert Jenrick (Conservative, Newark) 29. Jon Trickett (Labour, Normanton and Hemsworth) 30. Jim Allister (TUV, North Antrim) 31. Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Conservative, North Cotswolds) 32. Kemi Badenoch (Conservative, North West Essex) 33. Rishi Sunak (Conservative, Richmond and Northallerton) 34. Caroline Nokes (Conservative, Romsey and Southampton North) 35. Nic Dakin (Conservative, Scunthorpe) 36. Clive Betts (Labour, Sheffield South East) 37. James McMurdock (Reform, South Basildon and East Thurrock) 38. John Hayes (Conservative, South Holland and The Deepings) 39. Gavin Williamson (Conservative, Stone, Great Wyrley and Penkridge) 40. Jim Shannon (DUP, Strangford) 41. Esther McVey (Conservative, Tatton) 42. Geoffrey Cox (Conservative, Torridge and Tavistock) 43. Pete Wishart (SNP, Perth and Kinross-shire) 44. Alistair Carmichael (Liberal Democrat, Orkney and Shetland) 45. Derek Twigg (Labour, Widnes and Halewood) 46. Uma Kumaran (Labour, Stratford and Bow) 47. Terry Jermy (Labour, South West Norfolk) 48. Abtisam Mohamed (Labour, Sheffield Central) 49. Chris Bryant (Labour, Rhondda and Ogmore) 50. Clive Lewis (Labour, Norwich South) 51. Sam Carling (Labour, North West Cambridgeshire) 52. Naushabah Khan (Labour, Gillingham and Rainham) 53. Christian Wakeford (Labour, Bury South) 54. Naz Shah (Labour, Bradford West) 55. Angela Rayner (Labour, Ashton-under-Lyne) 56. Gavin Robinson (DUP, Belfast East) 57. Mark Francois (Conservative, Rayleigh and Wickford) 58. Desmond Swayne (Conservative, New Forest West) 59. John Whittingdale (Conservative, Maldon) 60. Danny Kruger (Conservative, East Wiltshire) 61. Rosie Duffield (Labour, Canterbury) 62. Melanie Ward (Labour, Cowdenbeath and Kirkcaldy) 63. Yuan Yang (Labour, Earley and Woodley) 64. Scott Arthur (Labour, Edinburgh South West) 65. Wes Streeting (Labour, Ilford North) Sleepiestpeep: Gareth Bacon 2 Steve Barclay 3 Aphra Brandreth 4 Suella Braverman 5 Christopher Chope 6 James Cleverly 7 Geoffrey Clifton-Brown 8 David Davis 9 Iain Duncan Smith 10 Mark Francois 11 Roger Gale 12 Mark Garnier 13 Helen Grant 14 John Hayes 15 Richard Holden 16 Edward Leigh 17 Julian Lewis 18 Esther McVey 19 Andrew Mitchell 20 Priti Patel 21 Chris Philp 22 Mel Stride 23 Graham Stuart 24 Rishi Sunak 25 Desmond Swayne 26 Laura Trott 27 Tom Tugendhat 28 Martin Vickers 29 Gavin Williamson 30 Jim Shannon 31 Sammy Wilson 32 Shockat Adam 33 Jeremy Corbyn 34 Adnan Hussain 35 Ayoub Khan 36 Iqbal Mohamed 37 Diane Abbott 38 Luke Akehurst 39 Apsana Begum 40 Clive Betts 41 Sam Carling 42 Bambos Charalambous 43 Rosie Duffield 44 John McDonnell 45 Dan Norris 46 Kate Osamor 47 Matthew Pennycook 48 Naz Shah 49 Karin Smyth 50 Wes Streeting 51 Graham Stringer 52 Zarah Sultana 53 Mark Tami 54 Daniel Zeichner 55 Sarah Olney 56 Jamie Stone 57 Lee Anderson 58 Nigel Farage 59 Rupert Lowe 60 James McMurdock 61 Richard Tice 62 Dave Doogan 63 Stephen Flynn 64 Chris Law 65 Lindsay Hoyle diego 1 Fabian Hamilton 2 Nigel Farage 3 Lee Anderson 4 Iain Duncan Smith 5 Suella Braverman 6 Rishi Sunak 7 Diane Abbott 8 Ayoub Khan 9 James Cleverly 10 Gavin Williamson 11 Valerie Vaz 12 Jeremy Corbyn 13 Marie Rimmer 14 Jeremy Hunt 15 John Healey 16 Peter Dowd 17 Adnan Hussain 18 Lindsay Hoyle 19 Terry Jermy 20 Gregory Campbell 21 Sarah Olney 22 Hilary Benn 23 Ed Davey 24 Wes Streeting 25 Derek Twigg 26 Geoffrey Clinton-Brown 27 Rebecca Long-Bailey 28 Sammy Wilson 29 Richard Tice 30 Christopher Chope 31 Martin Vickers 32 Andrew Bowie 33 Apsana Begum 34 Clive Efford 35 Nic Dakin 36 Gareth Bacon 37 Layla Moran 38 David Davis 39 Sam Carlin 40 Alastair Carmichael 41 Neil Coyle 42 Priti Patel 43 John Whittingdale 44 Siân Berry 45 Kim Leadbeater 46 James McMurdock 47 Julian Lewis 48 Rosie Duffield 49 Dan Norris 50 Nick Timothy 51 Seamus Logan 52 Patricia Ferguson 53 Bambos Charalambous 54 Rachael Maskell 55 Carla Denyer 56 Rupa Huq 57 Jim Allister 58 Kemi Badenoch 59 John McDonnell 60 Afzal Khan 61 Helen Whately 62 Christian Wakeford 63 Nia Griffith 64 Daniel Zeichner 65 Rupert Lowe Lady Fiona Alex Davies-Jones (Lab) Alex Easton (Ind Unionist) Andrew Mitchell (Con) Andy McDonald (Lab) Angela Rayner (Lab) Apsana Begum (Lab) Bambos Charalambous (Lab) Ben Obese-Jecty (Con) Carolyn Harris (Lab) Chi Onwurah (Lab) Dame Caroline Dinenage (Con) Dame Karen Bradley (Con) David Davis (Con) David Simmonds (Con) Derek Twigg (Lab) Desmond Swayne (Con) Diane Abbot (Lab – mother of the house) Edward Argar (Con) Esther McVey (Con) Fabian Hamilton (Lab) Geoffrey Clifton-Brown (Con) Graham Leadbitter (SNP) Hilary Benn (Lab) James McMurdock (Reform) James Wild (Con) Jeremy Corbyn (Ind) Jeremy Hunt (Con) Jess Phillips (Lab) Jessica Morden (Lab) Jim Allister (DUP) John McDonnell (Lab) Jon Trickett (Lab) Julian Lewis (Con) Karl Turner (Lab) Kevin Hollinrake (Con) Kit Malthouse (Con) Laura Trott (Con) Layla Moran (Lib Dem) Lee Anderson (Reform) Louie French (Con) Mark Francois (Con) Mark Garnier (Con) Mark Hendrick (Lab Co-Op) Mark Pritchard (Con) Nic Dakin (Lab) Nigel Farage (Reform) Pat McFadden (Lab) Patricia Ferguson (Lab) Pete Wishart (SNP) Richard Fuller (Con) Rishi Sunak (Con) Robin Swann (UUP) Rupert Lowe (Reform) Shockat Adam (Ind) Simon Hoare (Con) Sir Christopher Chope (Con) Sir Ed Davey (Lib Dem) Sir Edward Leigh (Con – father of the house) Sir Geoffrey Cox (Con) Sir Lindsay Hoyle (Speaker) Sir Roger Gale (Con) Suella Braverman (Con) Tim Farron (Lib Dem) Tom Tugendhat (Con) Yvette Cooper (Lab) nantonian2013 Adam Dance Adnan Hussain Alicia Kearns Andrew Bowie Andy McDonald Antonia Bance Apsana Begum Ayoub Khan Barry Gardiner Blake Stephenson Caroline Nokes Carolyn Harris Christine Jardine Christopher Chope Clive Jones Daniel Zeichner Diane Abbott Ed Davey Ed Miliband Edward Leigh Fleur Anderson Geoffrey Cox Graham Stringer Grahame Morris Gregory Campbell Helen Grant Ian Roome Iqbal Mohamed Jess Phillips Jim Allister John Cooper John Lamont John McDonnell Jon Trickett Keir Starmer Kerry McCarthy Lee Dillon Lindsay Hoyle Lisa Smart Liz Saville Roberts Liz Twist Marie Rimmer Mark Francois Mark Garnier Martin Vickers Naushabah Khan Naz Shah Neil Duncan-Jordan Nigel Farage Paulette Hamilton Pippa Heylings Richard Tice Rishi Sunak Roger Gale Rosie Duffield Rupert Lowe Sadik Al-Hassan Sammy Wilson Sharon Hodgson Shockat Adam Siobhain McDonagh Stephen Kinnock Suella Braverman Tan Dhesi Tom Tugendhat
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4 points
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3 pointsSo, England scrape through to the Quarterfinals, the election happens and suddenly England click like they're 1970 Brazil, 1997 Blair or a weekend with Karen Gillan, and smash the opposition. Got it.
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3 pointsAnd dead: https://www.abc.net.au/news/2024-06-26/bicycle-bandit-kym-allen-parsons-dies/104022818
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2 pointsjune 25 2024 29 Ella Henderson — Ghost 29 Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars — Uptown Funk 29 Kiesza — Hideaway 28 Years & Years — King 27 Pitbull ft. Kesha — Timber 26 Justin Bieber - Love Yourself 26 Calvin Harris — Summer 26 Adele — Hello 25 Pharrel Williams — Happy 25 Little Mix — Black Magic 24 Magic — Rude 23 Clean Bandit ft. Jess Glynne — Rather Be 22 Lilly Wood & The Prick — Prayer In C 22 Nico & Vinz — Am I Wrong 21 David Guetta ft. Sam Martin — Lovers On The Sun 21 Sigma ft. Paloma Faith — Changing 21 Ellie Goulding — Love Me Like You Do 21 Sam Smith — Stay With Me 21 Mr Probz — Waves 21 Oliver Heldens & Becky Hill — Gecko (Overdrive) 21 Justin Bieber — What Do You Mean? 21 KDA ft. Tinie Tempah & Katy B — Turn The Music Louder 21 Cheryl Cole ft. Tinie Tempah — Crazy Stupid Love 21 Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj — Bang Bang 21 Omi — Cheerleader 21 Duke Dumont ft. Jax Jones — I Got U 21 Sigma — Nobody To Love 21 Tinie Tempah ft. Jess Glynne — Not Letting Go 20 Sam Smith — Money On My Mind 20 Route 94 ft. Jess Glynne — My Love 20 Dvbbs & Borgeous ft. Tinie Tempah — Tsunami 20 5 Seconds Of Summer — She Looks So Perfect 20 Aloe Blacc — The Man 20 Rita Ora — I Will Never Let You Down 20 Secondcity — I Wanna Feel 20 Ariana Grande ft. Iggy Azalea — Problem 20 Calvin Harris ft. John Newman — Blame 20 Take That — These Days 20 Ben Haenow — Something I Need 20 Sam Smith ft. John Legend — Lay Me Down 20 Jason Derulo — Want To Want Me 20 Lost Frequencies — Are You With Me 20 David Zowie — House Every Weekend 20 Jess Glynne — Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself 20 Rachel Platten — Fight Song 20 Sigala — Easy Love 20 Meghan Trainor — All About That Bass +4 19 Jess Glynne — Hold My Hand 18 Rixton — Me And My Broken Heart 17 One Direction — Drag Me Down 17 Will.I.Am ft. Cody Wise — It’s My Birthday 17 Cheryl Cole — I Don’t Care -3 12 Ed Sheeran — Thinking Out Loud 11 Justin Bieber — Sorry 06 Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth — See You Again 06 Charlie Puth ft. Meghan Trainor —Marvin Gaye 00 The Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Choir — A Pile of Earth Over You -3
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2 pointsjune 25 2024 AD 29 Ella Henderson — Ghost 29 Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars — Uptown Funk 29 Kiesza — Hideaway +1 28 Years & Years — King 27 Pitbull ft. Kesha — Timber 26 Justin Bieber - Love Yourself 26 Calvin Harris — Summer 26 Adele — Hello 25 Pharrel Williams — Happy -2 25 Little Mix — Black Magic 24 Magic — Rude 23 Clean Bandit ft. Jess Glynne — Rather Be+2 22 Lilly Wood & The Prick — Prayer In C 22 Nico & Vinz — Am I Wrong+1 21 David Guetta ft. Sam Martin — Lovers On The Sun 21 Sigma ft. Paloma Faith — Changing 21 Ellie Goulding — Love Me Like You Do 21 Sam Smith — Stay With Me 21 Mr Probz — Waves 21 Oliver Heldens & Becky Hill — Gecko (Overdrive) 21 Justin Bieber — What Do You Mean? 21 KDA ft. Tinie Tempah & Katy B — Turn The Music Louder 21 Cheryl Cole ft. Tinie Tempah — Crazy Stupid Love 21 Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj — Bang Bang 21 Omi — Cheerleader 21 Duke Dumont ft. Jax Jones — I Got U 21 Sigma — Nobody To Love 21 Tinie Tempah ft. Jess Glynne — Not Letting Go 20 Sam Smith — Money On My Mind 20 Route 94 ft. Jess Glynne — My Love 20 Dvbbs & Borgeous ft. Tinie Tempah — Tsunami 20 5 Seconds Of Summer — She Looks So Perfect 20 Aloe Blacc — The Man 20 Rita Ora — I Will Never Let You Down 20 Secondcity — I Wanna Feel 20 Ariana Grande ft. Iggy Azalea — Problem 20 Calvin Harris ft. John Newman — Blame 20 Cheryl Cole — I Don’t Care 20 Take That — These Days 20 Ben Haenow — Something I Need 20 Sam Smith ft. John Legend — Lay Me Down 20 Jason Derulo — Want To Want Me 20 Lost Frequencies — Are You With Me 20 David Zowie — House Every Weekend 20 Jess Glynne — Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself 20 Rachel Platten — Fight Song 20 Sigala — Easy Love 19 Jess Glynne — Hold My Hand 18 Rixton — Me And My Broken Heart 17 One Direction — Drag Me Down 17 Will.I.Am ft. Cody Wise — It’s My Birthday 16 Meghan Trainor — All About That Bass -4 12 Ed Sheeran — Thinking Out Loud 11 Justin Bieber — Sorry 06 Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth — See You Again 06 Charlie Puth ft. Meghan Trainor —Marvin Gaye 03 The Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Choir — A Bridge Over You
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2 pointsPerhaps it should be noted that England have only ever won a men's international tournament under Labour. And the UK has won the Eurovision 4 times out of 5 under Labour. Coincidence? Yes.
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2 pointsRita Süssmuth has breast cancer: https://m.bild.de/unterhaltung/stars-und-leute/rita-suessmuth-brustkrebs-sitze-nicht-herum-und-warte-auf-den-tod-667a98abc4e7213818669551 So, if we get bored of our current names, we have a good future no. 1.
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2 pointsDo you think it is intelligent to suggest there's a 20% possibility fucking Gena Rowlands does not QO?
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2 pointsFrank Duckworth reportedly dead: Awaiting the usual confirmations.
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1 pointSCAVENGER HUNT BINGO DEADPOOL RULES Each player picks five selections (and one sub) in each of five categories (for categories see below). There are three ways to win 1. You get at least one hit in each of the five categories 2. You get all five hits in one category 3. You get three unique hits across the whole game. There is no fixed duration you play until there is a winner. In the event of a tie the total number of hits across all categories and after that the number of unique hits. Obits will not be stringent but must be in English and from a News source (not social media). The Game Controller will be checking that picks meet the category criteria at the start of the game but challenges will be accepted during the first two weeks after the full list of entries are published on the forum. In order to ensure that there are no issues with selected names that have died prior to the game beginning each team will need a substitute in each category. This will come into play if the death of a pick was found to be before the start of the game. Once the game has begun a substitute will not invalidate a unique pick but will not count as a unique pick for the player whose substitute it was. A unique pick is considered unique in category. For example if two categories were Conservative MPs and Contestants on Strictly Come Dancing/Dancing with the Stars and three players picked Edwina Curry in the first category and the fourth player picked her in the second category. If she eggspired then Player 4 would get a unique bonus. When a winner is declared the selection of the next categories passes to the victor and they get to select the new categories. The Categories for the sixth game are: 1) Anyone who has provided a credited voice for The Simpsons This also includes people who have played themselves as long as they are credited 2) Anyone who has been a spouse of a Head Of State For the purposes of this game HoS will include President, Monarch or Head of Government (PM) (so both Mary Wilson and Prince Philip would have counted) 3) Anyone who has won an Ivor Novello award (including band members as long as they were members at the time of the win) This is limited to the six main competitive categories and the two commercial awards as listed below Nominated annual awards Best Song Musically and Lyrically Best Contemporary Song Album Award Best Original Film Score Best Television Soundtrack Best Original Video Game Score Other annual awards Songwriter of the Year Most Performed Work 4) Any footballer (male or female) who has won a senior international cap for England, Scotland, Northern Ireland or Wales 5) Anyone credited in a movie featuring Batman (from "Batman" (1943) to "The Flash" (2023)) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batman_in_film Teams must be PM’d to avoid revealing those unique picks. There will be a two-week period after the lists are published for disputes to be settled people whose picks are removed at this point will be allowed replacements but will not be allowed to select another person's unique pick. Entries close a midnight on 31st July 2024 (BST)
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1 pointjune 25 2024 32 Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars — Uptown Funk +3 29 Ella Henderson — Ghost 29 Kiesza — Hideaway 28 Years & Years — King 28 Pitbull ft. Kesha — Timber +1 26 Justin Bieber - Love Yourself 26 Calvin Harris — Summer 26 Adele — Hello 25 Little Mix — Black Magic 24 Magic — Rude 23 Clean Bandit ft. Jess Glynne — Rather Be 22 Lilly Wood & The Prick — Prayer In C 22 Nico & Vinz — Am I Wrong 21 David Guetta ft. Sam Martin — Lovers On The Sun 21 Sigma ft. Paloma Faith — Changing 21 Ellie Goulding — Love Me Like You Do 21 Sam Smith — Stay With Me 21 Mr Probz — Waves 21 Oliver Heldens & Becky Hill — Gecko (Overdrive) 21 Justin Bieber — What Do You Mean? 21 KDA ft. Tinie Tempah & Katy B — Turn The Music Louder 21 Cheryl Cole ft. Tinie Tempah — Crazy Stupid Love 21 Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj — Bang Bang 21 Omi — Cheerleader 21 Duke Dumont ft. Jax Jones — I Got U 21 Sigma — Nobody To Love 21 Tinie Tempah ft. Jess Glynne — Not Letting Go 20 Sam Smith — Money On My Mind 20 Route 94 ft. Jess Glynne — My Love 20 Dvbbs & Borgeous ft. Tinie Tempah — Tsunami 20 5 Seconds Of Summer — She Looks So Perfect 20 Aloe Blacc — The Man 20 Rita Ora — I Will Never Let You Down 20 Secondcity — I Wanna Feel 20 Ariana Grande ft. Iggy Azalea — Problem 20 Calvin Harris ft. John Newman — Blame 20 Take That — These Days 20 Ben Haenow — Something I Need 20 Sam Smith ft. John Legend — Lay Me Down 20 Jason Derulo — Want To Want Me 20 Lost Frequencies — Are You With Me 20 David Zowie — House Every Weekend 20 Jess Glynne — Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself 20 Rachel Platten — Fight Song 20 Sigala — Easy Love 20 Meghan Trainor — All About That Bass 19 Jess Glynne — Hold My Hand 19 Pharrel Williams — Happy -6 18 Rixton — Me And My Broken Heart 17 One Direction — Drag Me Down 17 Will.I.Am ft. Cody Wise — It’s My Birthday 17 Cheryl Cole — I Don’t Care 12 Ed Sheeran — Thinking Out Loud 11 Justin Bieber — Sorry 06 Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth — See You Again 06 Charlie Puth ft. Meghan Trainor —Marvin Gaye
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1 pointFor my sins I'm a football secretary for my local step 5 non league side. It's a tough gig with all the paperwork but I got recognised as a making the club the most friendly to visit and I've got some brilliant friends as a result as far as Bristol out of it. With the players - sometimes I have to be tough and it can be like herding ferrets around an assault course but it's mostly good. I don't sack the managers - leave that to our chairlady who can be brutal if needed!
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1 pointAbout animated films... only The Lego Movie and The Lego Batman Movie?
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1 pointWed 26 Jun 60 Mott the Hoople - All The Young Dudes +4 58 David Bowie - Life on Mars? 50 Gerry Rafferty - Baker Street 40 Electric Light Orchestra - Don’t Bring Me Down 22 The Jam - The Eton Rifles 22 R. Dean Taylor— There’s A Ghost In My House 14 Suzi Quatro - 48 Crash 13 ABBA - Money, Money, Money 13 David Bowie - Sound and Vision -6 00 ABBA - Gimme! Gimme! Gimme! (the drop for Abba's worst single) -6
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1 pointSergeant Cecil was a British thoroughbred racehorse who died at the age of 25. Sold very cheaply as a foal, he was a slow-maturing player who showed normal form in his first four seasons and took fourteen attempts to win his first race. As a six-year-old in 2005 he improved rapidly and completed a unique treble in handicap racing by winning the Northumberland Plate, Ebor Handicap and Cesarewitch Handicap. The following year he made a successful transition to weight-for-age racing, winning the Lonsdale Cup, Doncaster Cup and Prix du Cadran. He was never as good again, but recorded a great final victory in the 2007 Yorkshire Cup https://www.racingpost.com/news/britain/he-was-one-of-the-toughest-horses-ive-ever-been-involved-with-staying-star-sergeant-cecil-dies-at-25-a4VRp9C7s2Cy/ Second right
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1 pointRight, this better be the right thread.... Much as I've lately moaned about The Guardian. This gem is gleaned from a commenter BTL with his finger on the pulse.
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1 point25/Jun/2024 26 Pharrell Williams — Happy 25 Mark Ronson ft. Bruno Mars — Uptown Funk 24 Kiesza — Hideaway 24 Years & Years — King 23 Pitbull ft. Kesha — Timber 22 Meghan Trainor — All About That Bass +2 21 Ellie Goulding — Love Me Like You Do +1 21 Little Mix — Black Magic +1 21 Sam Smith — Stay With Me 21 Ella Henderson — Ghost 21 Mr Probz — Waves 21 Oliver Heldens & Becky Hill — Gecko (Overdrive) 21 Justin Bieber — What Do You Mean? 21 KDA ft. Tinie Tempah & Katy B — Turn The Music Louder 21 Cheryl Cole ft. Tinie Tempah — Crazy Stupid Love 21 Jessie J, Ariana Grande & Nicki Minaj — Bang Bang 20 Clean Bandit ft. Jess Glynne — Rather Be 20 Sam Smith — Money On My Mind 20 Route 94 ft. Jess Glynne — My Love 20 Dvbbs & Borgeous ft. Tinie Tempah — Tsunami 20 Duke Dumont ft. Jax Jones — I Got U 20 5 Seconds Of Summer — She Looks So Perfect 20 Aloe Blacc — The Man 20 Sigma — Nobody To Love 20 Calvin Harris — Summer 20 Rita Ora — I Will Never Let You Down 20 Secondcity — I Wanna Feel 20 Ariana Grande ft. Iggy Azalea — Problem 20 Rixton — Me And My Broken Heart 20 Magic — Rude 20 Nico & Vinz — Am I Wrong 20 David Guetta ft. Sam Martin — Lovers On The Sun 20 Lilly Wood & The Prick — Prayer In C 20 Calvin Harris ft. John Newman — Blame 20 Sigma ft. Paloma Faith — Changing 20 Cheryl Cole — I Don’t Care 20 Gareth Malone’s All Star Choir — Wake Me Up 20 Take That — These Days 20 Ben Haenow — Something I Need 20 Sam Smith ft. John Legend — Lay Me Down 20 Omi — Cheerleader 20 Jason Derulo — Want To Want Me 20 Tinie Tempah ft. Jess Glynne — Not Letting Go 20 Lost Frequencies — Are You With Me 20 David Zowie — House Every Weekend 20 One Direction — Drag Me Down 20 Jess Glynne — Don’t Be So Hard On Yourself 20 Rachel Platten — Fight Song 20 Sigala — Easy Love 20 Adele — Hello 20 Justin Bieber — Sorry 20 Justin Bieber — Love Yourself 20 The Lewisham & Greenwich NHS Choir — A Bridge Over You 19 Jess Glynne — Hold My Hand 17 Will.I.Am ft. Cody Wise — It’s My Birthday 14 Ed Sheeran — Sing 14 Sam Smith — Writing’s On The Wall 12 Ed Sheeran — Thinking Out Loud 12 Wiz Khalifa ft. Charlie Puth — See You Again 12 Charlie Puth ft. Meghan Trainor — Marvin Gaye 08 Band Aid 30 — Do They Know It’s Christmas? -6
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1 point
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1 pointI remember when Peter Schmeichel was one of the top goalkeepers and Kasper Schmeichel was only a few years old. Now Kasper Schmeichel is playing for Denmark like his dad for his country.
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1 pointCochell was still alive in 2019 when this photo of his wife's gravestone was taken. Either that or he died in such obscurity that they forgot to bury him with her, which I suppose could be feasible.
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1 point
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