Flipz Unicornz & 100 Calorie Mr. Kipling Angel Slices with 30% Less Sugar Review
This is a taste test/review of the limited edition Flipz Unicornz and the new 100 Calorie Mr. Kipling Angel Slices with 30% Less Sugar. These were mailed to us from Dr J in the UK!
Music Credit: “Fearless First Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
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Dunn Family Bloopers
Dunn Family Bloopers Part II
Dunn Family Bloopers Part III
Dunn Family Bloopers Part IV
Dunn Family Bloopers Part V
Dunn Family Bloopers Part VI
Bake Off's Prue Leith says 'my generation didn't complain if men wolf-whistled' - News 247
As a judge on The Great British Bake Off, Prue Leith is famous for her jolly, no-nonsense attitude, and firm but fair comments about the elaborate cakes painstakingly created on the show. And off screen she’s no different. Within a few minutes of talking to her, it’s clear she knows exactly what she likes – and what she doesn’t. Take the state of the nation’s wardrobe, for instance. “I do think older women aren’t brave enough,” says Prue. “They seem to think in the winter they have to wear boring colours. Everybody is in a black or grey coat.” Not Prue. At 79 with her brightly coloured dresses, bold jewellery and funky glasses, she’s become a bit of a style icon since she started presenting the hugely popular Channel 4 show. “I always dress brightly. I’m sitting here in a lime green jersey and a multi-coloured cardi, with a big necklace and earrings,” she says. “When I’m signing books, a lot of women say to me they admire what I wear. “I look at them and they’re all in beige. I say, ‘take a chance – buy a red jumper’.” Prue is just as opinionated about wolf-whistling, which hit the headlines last year after there were calls for it to be classified as a hate crime. “I’m of the generation that would not have complained about being whistled at,” she says briskly. “My generation didn’t take offence easily. If a workman on a building site whistled at you, you just thought it was funny. You didn’t think it was insulting,” she adds. “We had a different attitude, I suppose we were a bit more resilient. I don’t want men to become so frightened they can’t tell a woman she’s looking great. That’s crazy.” Prue says she misses the attention she used to get in her younger days. “I remember when I turned 50 or 60, nobody ever whistled at me. I thought, ‘Oh dear, I’m now the famous invisible woman you become after the menopause.’” Although she says she has never experienced any serious harassment in her career (which she puts down to being “quite large and quite bossy”), she is clearly horrified by the serious allegations in recent months that came to light as part of the #MeToo movement. “Some of the things that have come out are horrific. That women had to put up with it is awful,” she says. “They had to as otherwise they wouldn’t get the job, or would get sacked. And it’s not just harassment, it’s also the bullying and using power to coerce people.” Prue believes shining a light on this sort of behaviour isn’t the only change for the better for women. She is hopeful the ageism that has ended the careers of many older women on TV may also be coming to an end. “It’s always been possible to stay on TV longer if you’re a man, but now it’s better,” says Prue. “There’s Joan Bakewell [85] doing the Artist of the Year, and Sandi Toksvig isn’t as old as me, but she’s 60 and she’s never off telly.” She hopes TV executives have finally learnt the value of the “grey pound”. “I think what’s finally happening is that producers have realised the p
Bangers & Mash
Rebecca Sutton from Foody & The Winemaker demonstrates how to cook the perfect Bangers and Mash
The Rainbow Audiobook by D. H. Lawrence | Audiobook with subtitles | Part 1
Briefly appearing in 1915, then banned and taken out of circulation for its adult treatment of sexuality, Lawrence's visionary novel The Rainbow attempts to situate the lives of three generations of the Brangwen family within the continuous social change marking the Victorian transformation of Britain. Farmer Tom and his Polish wife Lydia, whose peaceful rural existence re-enacts the potent myths of Genesis; artisan Will and the matriarch Anna, who go to live among the industrial and mining communities so rapidly sprung up around Nottingham; finally the restless Ursula who, moving to the city, seeks sexual and emotional fulfilment with the Polish-descended Skrebensky - the three couples are not merely illustrative of the changing times, but allow the author to study in depth the conflict between the outer 'social' selves of those individuals and what he curiously calls the 'inhuman' essential being, the 'is-ness' at the core of their psychical life.
Lawrence evokes this dark, unconscious 'vital core' through a language of breathtaking poetic beauty; a rhythmic incantatory prose which listeners to this recording will find perfectly rendered by Tony Foster, in all its nuances. Like Paul Morel, the hero of the earlier Sons and Lovers, Ursula survives her losses to face a future of uncertain but radiant hope: She saw in the rainbow the earth's new architecture, the old, brittle corruption of houses and factories swept away, the world built up in a living fabric of Truth, fitting to the over-arching heaven. (Summary by Martin Geeson)
Genre(s): Published 1900 onward
The Rainbow (Version 2)
D. H. LAWRENCE
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The Queer Inhumanisms Panel with Dana Luciano
“Has the queer ever been human?”. This panel explores the question from the special issue of GLQ: A Journal of Gay and Lesbian Studies of the same name. The panelists, each contributors to the special issue, will interrogate the centrality of the human to the past, present and future of queer theory. The panel will examine the queer dimensions of recent moves to think through the encounter between queerness and the inhuman in affect theory, disability studies, ecocriticism, critical race theory and new materialisms.
Speakers
Dana Luciano – Associate Professor in Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Georgetown University
Tavia Nyong’o – Professor in African-American, American Studies & Theatre Studies, Yale University
Mel Y. Chen – Associate Professor in Gender & Women’s Studies and the Director of the Centre for the Study of Sexual Culture, University of California, Berkeley
Eunjung Kim – Assistant Professor in Women’s and Gender Studies, Syracuse University
The Queer Inhumanisms panel is the launch of the new Queer Directions annual symposium at the Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies. Each year, Queer Directions will feature innovative developments in queer theory, focusing on emerging themes and critiques.
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