Tucked away in the Lincolnshire countryside sits a charming town that feels plucked straight from the pages of a novel. Boasting stunning architecture, bustling rows of independent shops and the famous Kinema in the Woods, Woodhall Spa stands in a league of its own.
The delightful town is rich in heritage, with one resident remarking, “It feels like going back in time.” The settlement once served as a crucial RAF station, housing the renowned 617 Dambusters Squadron throughout the Second World War. This remarkable past draws visitors from across the nation to the town, which also boasts an impressive array of independent shops and cafés.
Senior reporter Laycie Beck explored the town on foot to determine whether it lived up to its glowing reputation, and it certainly exceeded expectations.
She shared: “Despite going on a random Wednesday, I felt lucky to find a parking spot as the town was bustling and full of people. With a large car park tucked away behind the high street with two hours of free parking, I can see why so many people would make the most of this.
“Walking through the town was peaceful, everyone was friendly and smiling, and I had two people say hello to me just passing by. The sort of thing you would not have in places like Lincoln or most large towns.
“There was so much to look at, from houses with stunning architecture—one even had turrets—to long stretches of family-run and independent businesses.
“Plenty of people sat outside enjoying drinks or lunches, and people queued out of the door at Ronde Des Paris Bakery. Nevertheless, given how remarkable their puddings appeared through the window, this came as no shock.”
Joanne Creasey operates two enterprises in the town, Molly and Me Lifestyle and Sixteen Interiors. She remarked, “A lot of people travel here, and they come because they love that there are so many independents and that we have so much stuff.”
Joanne reveals she has patrons who regularly journey from London, Manchester and even Cardiff. She continued: “They will make a weekend out of it, or they will even come for the day, as they can go and have a nice lunch. People say it feels like going back in time.”
Nevertheless, the enterprise also garners “an awful lot of support” from local residents. Contemplating life in the town, she declared, “Everyone will say hello to each other, even people who have come from far away. I don’t have to know the person on the street to say hello to them. It’s just a really friendly environment and I love working here.”
Woodhall Spa boasts its own museum celebrating the town’s heritage, but it’s equally renowned for the Kinema in the Woods, situated just a stone’s throw from the town centre, reported Lincolnshire Live.
The cherished cinema remains family-operated and has been screening films since the 1920s, consistently showcasing both the latest blockbusters and timeless classics.
Back in the town centre, there’s an abundance of fascinating sights – from the diminutive police station to the traditional library and post office, plus Britain’s smallest shoe shop. This establishment sits mere doors away from Enchanted Bloom, where shop assistants Terri Richardson and Sarah McMahon describe the town as “really friendly.”
Sarah said, “I always just feel safe and in a little bubble here. It feels like everyone is looking out for each other.” The duo explain that the business receives “well supported by the locals year-round” backing and that there’s a robust community spirit throughout the town.
Terri added, “The locals are good to us, but we also get a lot of tourists, holidaymakers, and relatives of families who live here.” Unlike most town centres, everything in Woodhall Spa feels unique. There aren’t countless major chain outlets, merely a modest Co-op, Morrisons Daily, and a Boots store.
A recent addition to the town is the Sweet Emporium, a traditional-style sweet shop that also sells ice cream and bubble waffles, named after iconic planes like The Dambuster or The Spitfire. The business, managed by Tracy Walters and Sharron Tonge, officially opened its doors in February this year.
Sharron stated: “It’s been brilliant, we feel like we are very established now and I think the local people have taken us under their wing and accepted us. They are very supportive and they have become our regulars.”
She revealed that the town attracts visitors from all corners due to its rich history. Sharron further added: “There are things here that are no where else in the world.”
The Self-Invested Personal Pension (SIPP) is a powerful weapon I believe every Briton should consider opening. Thanks to the benefits of juicy tax breaks — and the boost this provides to the compounding process — even someone late to the investing party stands a decent chance of retiring with an abundant income.
Here’s how even someone with less than 20 years to retirement can target a decent income in later life.
Compound benefits
There are some drawbacks to the SIPP compared with, say, the Stocks and Shares ISA, another popular product among long-term savers and investors.
Both of these tax wrappers shield savers and investors from capital gains and dividend tax. But with the ISA, no income tax is due when drawdowns are made. SIPP users pay a penalty if they make withdrawals before the age of 55 (rising to 57 in 2028). ISA users face no such penalties
Please note that tax treatment depends on the individual circumstances of each client and may be subject to change in future. The content in this article is provided for information purposes only. It is not intended to be, neither does it constitute, any form of tax advice. Readers are responsible for carrying out their own due diligence and for obtaining professional advice before making any investment decisions.
However, such age restrictions may not be problematic for those not looking to withdraw before State Pension age. What’s more, the benefit of tax relief on SIPPs — which ranges from 20% to 45% — may still make this route more financially advantageous over the long term.
A £25k+ retirement income
This is because tax relief accelerates the rate of compound growth, giving pension contributions more time to grow exponentially.
Let’s say we have a 50-year-old who invests £500 a month. They are a higher-rate taxpayer, giving them 40% tax relief. They also manage to secure a 9% average annual return.
Based on this, they’d have a retirement fund of £335,243 by the time they reach their State Pension age of 67. Without this tax relief and the boost to monthly compounding growth, they’d have a far lower £239,459.
That’s a difference of £95,784.
Combined with the State Pension, they’d have a total annual retirement income of at least £25,383. That’s based on a 4% annual drawdown rate on their SIPP, combined with the current full state benefit of £11,973 a year.
A FTSE 100 wealth builder
This is a realistic target, in my opinion, given that a 9% annual average rate of return is between the 8%-10% long-term average that share investing’s historically provided.
Such returns are never guaranteed. After all, stock markets can go down as well as up. But investors can harness the wealth-growing power of share investing with a diversified portfolio of stocks.
Investment trusts like the F&C Investment Trust (LSE:FCIT) can provide this diversification simply, cheaply and effectively. Indeed, this FTSE 100 trust has delivered an average annual return of 11.7% over the last decade.
F&C has been in existence since 1868, and holds approximately 400 global shares in its portfolio. This wide geographical footprint, added to broad sector exposure, means the fund spreads risk while simultaneously providing investors access to many different investment opportunities. This makes it worth serious consideration in my view.
Major holdings range from semiconductor manufacturer Nvidia and e-retailer Amazon, to credit card provider Visa and insurance AIG. Its high weighting of US tech shares makes it vulnerable to rising sector competition from China. But it still creates significant long-term growth potential as the digital economy rapidly expands.
Trusts like this mean even investors who are late to the party still have a great chance of building a healthy retirement fund.
The Fast & Furiousfranchise has certainly grown in scope and tone since it began in 2001, but one moment stretched the bounds of the franchise’s believeability so much that even a top Universal executive admits it was a mistake. The Fast & Furious is one of Universal Pictures’ biggest brands, with the ten films and the spin-off Hobbs & Shaw having grossed a combined total of $7.4 billion. The series is seemingly set to conclude with the long-awaited and delayed Fast & Furious 11. Part of the delay is attributed to how Fast X underperformed at the box office, a trend that may be traced back to a controversial moment in F9.
Speaking at the Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF) via Variety, NBCUniversal Studio Group and Chief Content Officer, Donna Langley, mentioned her one big regret for the Fast & Furious franchise was the rocket car going to the International Space Station in F9. “I’m sorry that we sent them into space. We can never get that genie back,” said Langley in a discussion with TIFF’s festival director, Cameron Bailey. However, she did say the decision to send the team to space in F9 was rooted in the franchise’s long-running tradition to adapt and evolve over the years, and cited star Vin Diesel’s engagement with the fan community to help influence what direction to take the series, including bringing back Michelle Rodriguez’s Letty. Langely said:
“We knew that we had to figure out how to grow it. We made a conscious decision to pivot to a sort of a globe-trotting heist scenario. Vin was an early adopter of talking to his fans directly. As we saw that growing, and we saw where the conversation was going. We’ve always been very fan first on the ‘Fast’ franchise. [People would] sort of throw out little things about, ‘Oh God, don’t kill Letty’ OK, we’ll bring her back. ‘She never died. Don’t worry. Nothing to see here.’ But that’s all led by fan engagement.”
What is Too Far For ‘Fast & Furious’
Fast & Furious Rocket Car in F9Universal Pictures
The controversial scene from F9 sees Roman (Tyrese Gibson) and Ted (Ludacris) fly a rocket car into space to destroy a satellite containing the weapon of mass destruction, Project Ares. The scene concludes with the duo being rescued from being stranded by a Chinese satellite, which comments on how their yellow space suit looks like Minions, another Universal property. Even though the Fast & Furious franchise had plenty of ridiculous moments, with F9 also retconning a major death by bringing Han back, it was the rocket car that was a stretch too far.
Yet if much of the creative decision for the film is informed by Vin Diesel engaging with the fans, it is clear why F9 took the team to space. As the franchise got more over the top with each entry, including resurrections, amnesia subplots, and even throwing a missile across the ice in The Fate of the Furious, a common joke among fans was that the series was getting so ridiculous that Dom and his team of former street racers turned criminals turned superspies would go to space. What was once a joke for many, that nobody really wanted, became a serious element of the franchise, revealing that some individuals were unable to distinguish between what was a joke and what fans actually wanted to see.
Fast X also brought things to an extreme, and it seems that after so many over-the-top moments, the series was losing some of its audience. Even with $714 million worldwide, the film underperformed at the box office compared to the five films that preceded it, and domestically, it was the lowest-grossing film in the franchise since the series pivoted following Tokyo Drift. This has seemingly been one of the many factors holding up Fast and Furious 11, which was originally set to open in 2025. The movie appears to have undergone multiple changes behind the scenes, with Vin Diesel hinting that it would return to the grounded roots of the first film. The movie is projected to hit theaters in 2027, leaving a four-year gap to resolve the cliffhanger at the end of Fast X, if indeed it is resolved.
While the Avengers franchise is known for its galaxy-spanning action, the franchise also has a lot of romance. Superhero stories have a huge soap opera element, with team books like Avengers and X-Men putting an increased focus on who’s seeing who. And with over 60 years of stories, it’s pretty easy to tell which Avengers heroes have the most rizz.
Here are the 10 Avengers members with the most romantic charisma, as well as their most high-profile love interests across the franchise. For the purpose of this list, we’re excluding any Avengers who can make people attracted to them with their powers, such as Spider-Woman and Starfox.
10
Luke Cage, aka Power Man
Love Interests Include: Jessica Jones, She-Hulk, Claire Temple
LUKE CAGE PUNCHING THROUGH A WALL
In modern comics, Luke Cage is happily married to Jessica Jones, however his self-assured, straight-talking attitude makes him one of Marvel’s most desired heroes. As a man who lives by unbending morals, Luke exudes confidence, maturity and heroism, never backing down no matter who he’s up against.
LUKE CAGE AND SHE-HULK FLIRTING IN AVENGERS COMICS
Major past relationships include Claire Temple and She-Hulk. Currently the mayor of New York in Marvel’s mainstream canon, Luke is consistently depicted as his wife’s biggest fan.
luke cage and jessica jones’ date night from new avengers
9
Hawkeye, aka Clint Barton
Love Interests Include: Mockingbird, Moonstone, the Wasp
Contrary to the MCU, Hawkeye has long been the bad boy of the Avengers. Thanks to a rocky childhood, Clint hates any form of authority, and has a habit of breaking rules and picking fights with anyone who gives him orders, especially Steve Rogers’ Captain America. Consequently, Clint has a lot of rebel rizz, and often gets together with his fellow superheroes.
This has led to relationships with fellow superspies Mockingbird and Black Widow and Avengers teammate Spider-Woman, but Clint has also gotten together with villains including Thunderbolts teammate Moonstone and the Mafia-associated Cherry. At the same time, Clint tends to have a commitment problem, with former girlfriend Spider-Woman noting that he doesn’t take his relationships seriously enough for them to last.
8
The Human Torch, aka Johnny Storm
Love Interests Include: Crystal, Nova, Medusa
fantastic four’s human torch
Human Torch is a major playboy in the Marvel Universe, dating many different superheroes and supervillains over the years. Johnny has totally embraced the lifestyle of a young celebrity superhero, and is prone to truly disastrous one-night stands. These include a member of a cult who used him to open a portal to the Negative Zone and being seduced by Doctor Doom’s fiancé the night before their wedding.
human torch having so much rizz, he turned a spy
At the same time, Johnny has had serious relationships. He was truly in love with the Inhuman hero Crystal and future herald of Galactus Nova, and seemed to have a genuine bond with alien hero Sky, but destroyed their relationship as he couldn’t handle the idea that she was his ‘destined’ soul mate.
7
Black Widow, aka Natasha Romanova
Love Interests Include: The Winter Soldier, Daredevil, Hercules
avengers hero black widow
As the world’s greatest spy, sexuality is just another weapon in Black Widow’s arsenal, and her rizz game is so advanced, it can literally save lives. Natasha even has a sultry French alter ego – ‘Babette’ – she slips into when she wants to throw her enemies off their game.
black widow and winter soldier romance
While Black Widow was in a relationship with Bruce Banner in the MCU, her main comic love interests are Bucky Barnes’ Winter Soldier and Daredevil. Most recently, Natasha fell in love with James Grey, but had to abandon him and their son Stevie to avoid them being assassinated by her enemies.
6
Hercules Panhellenios, the God of Heroes
Love Interests Include: Marvel Boy, Namora, Snowbird
marvel hero hercules
A superhero since the days of Ancient Greece, Hercules doesn’t take life too seriously, treating the modern day as the equivalent of a gap year. For most of Marvel history, Hercules loved drinking, fighting and getting together with his fellow heroes, generally developing casual relationships in the heat of battle. While he’s recently sworn off alcohol and tried to curtail his ego, Herc is still a major romantic.
marvel heroes who have dated hercules
Most recently, Hercules dated Marvel Boy, aka the alien hero Noh-Varr, confirming his bisexuality in Marvel’s mainstream stories – something fans had debated since a variant of the hero was shown in a relationship with Wolverine in the pages of Astonishing X-Men, and which Marvel handled poorly in the interim.
5
Rogue, aka Anna Marie LeBeau
Love Interests Include: Gambit, Magneto, the Sentry
x-men’s rogue with a glowing fist
Rogue has long been a sex symbol in Marvel Comics, with her inability to touch others leading to plenty of fraught romantic drama. However, she appears so high on this list because of her real-world sex appeal. Scores of fans consider Rogue’s Marvel’s ultimate sex symbol, to the point that even Marvel has started referencing this fact – most recently in Uncanny X-Men #19.
Uncanny X-Men #19 by Simone and Marquez – the Mayor tells the team what demographics they appeal to
4
Daredevil, aka Matt Murdock
Love Interests Include: Elektra, Black Cat, Typhoid Mary
Daredevil standing atop a building in his red suit.
As attractive, confident people with six decades of dating under their belts, it’s not surprising that a lot of Avengers have exciting love lives, however Daredevil’s rizz is a matter of canon. Handsome laywer Matt Murdock is known in Marvel Comics for his prolific dating life, though Matt generally dates civilians rather than fellow heroes, including love interests Kirsten McDuffie, Karen Page, Milla Donovan, Heather Glenn, Glorianna O’Breen, Dakota North and Nyla Skin.
Indeed, Daredevil has so much rizz that even Wolverine is canonically jealous of his love life – albeit only admitting it when the Hand’s brainwashing pushed his darkest thoughts to the surface.
wolverine is jealous of daredevil
3
She-Hulk, aka Jennifer Walters
marvel art of she-hulk in civilian outfit
In Hulk lore, gamma powers unlock the deepest parts of a person. For Bruce Banner, all his repressed rage and self-hatred resulted in the Hulk. However for his cousin Jennifer Walters, gamma created the confident, adventurous She-Hulk. While being one of the world’s foremost lawyers, She-Hulk also makes the most of being a young, successful hero, even getting kicked out of Avengers mansion because her constant partying created a security risk.
she-hulk flirting with wolverine
She-Hulk has a longstanding no-strings relationship with Iron Man, and briefly dated fellow Avenger Thor and secret agent Clay Quartermain. However, she has had more serious romantic connections with fellow Avenger Jack of Hearts and Fantastic Four associate Wyatt Wingfoot. She also married John Jameson (the son of Spider-Man rival J. Jonah Jameson), however they annulled their marriage after they realized that the hero Starfox had used his powers to paper over the issues in their relationship.
She-Hulk also has a somewhat unusual history of dating villains, with Marvel ultimately retconning a one-night stand with the Juggernaut out of continuity.
2
Iron Man, aka Tony Stark
Love Interests Include: The Wasp, Emma Frost, Gamora
tony stark looking suave-1
As an international playboy, you’d be forgiven for thinking that Tony Stark has the most rizz of any Avenger, and he’s certainly romanced a lot of heroes. Tony has had casual relationships with X-Men’s Emma Frost (who he later married for non-romantic reasons), SHIELD agent Maria Hill and Guardians of the Galaxy’s Gamora. He even managed to stop the superhero Civil War by marrying Captain America, albeit in an alternate dimension where Tony is a woman.
Tony also has a habit of falling for villains, including corporate saboteur Indries Moomji, stalker Kathy Dare and Russian spy the Black Widow, back before she joined the Avengers. While the MCU cemented Pepper Potts as Tony’s one true love, the comics actually had her choose Tony’s friend Happy Hogan over him, with the two ultimately marrying.
In the comics, Tony is arguably most hung-up on the villainous Madame Masque, though he dulls the pain with a host of no-strings arrangements.
1
Deadpool, aka Wade Wilson
Love Interests Include: Rogue, Siryn, Shiklah
Wade Wilson at #1 will be shocking for a lot of fans, but the facts are the facts – Deadpool is seriously successful when it comes to romance, at least in the short term. Despite having a sophomoric sense of humor and a face that canonically looks like “Ryan Reynolds crossed with a shar-pei,” Deadpool’s deep sense of tragedy and his heroism in the face of a world that will never accept him makes him a surprisingly popular love interest.
Deadpool has had romantic connections with heroes including Siryn, Rogue, Satana, Outlaw, Elsa Bloodstone and Jennifer Kale, villains including Valentine Vuong, Broken Blade, Sanction, Copycat and Typhoid Mary, and the literal cosmic god Lady Death, who chose him over Thanos.
Wade has been married more than any other Avengers hero, with wives including the shapeshifter Mystique, alien Orksa, and queen of the monsters Shiklah, with their wedding in Deadpool #27 setting a record for the most characters on a comic cover.
Deadpool’s relationships with regular humans have been a lot more tragic, including his first wife Mercedes and the mother of his daughter Ellie, Carmelita Camacho, who were both tragically murdered. While DP has a lot of unappealing traits, he goes into every relationship with his heart open and is a genuinely wounded character who still finds a way to laugh and do good. Apparently, the only thing more powerful than Deadpool’s healing factor is his rizz.
Those are the 10 Avengers with the most rizz – let us know below who else belongs on this list, and whether you agree with our #1 pick.
Fujii Kaze comes across a bit shy at first, but after he gets comfortable, his quirky sense of humor and high cheekbones evoke a slightly subdued Jack Sparrow.
The relaxed tone in his voice matches his comfy clothing, punctuated by cool accessories — a chic pair of third-eye sunglasses and sandals. For the cover photo of his latest album, Kaze wears a long head covering draped over his bleached blond locks. The one he came in today was sewn by his mom.
Last month, the 28-year-old Japanese singer-songwriter sold out his show at the Greek Theatre ahead of the launch of his long-awaited new album, the nine-track “Prema,” which was released Friday, his first full-length release since signing to Republic Records last year.
He seems happy to return to a place where he feels a strong connection, having spent five months recording and touring in L.A. from late 2023 to the summer of 2024. He also spent some time in the city about three years ago during a creative lull.
“Lyrically and musically, I did everything I could do,” he specifies. “ I was kind of burned out at the time. And that’s when they took me to Los Angeles. I don’t know why, but this place was so inspiring.”
First taking off in his home country, Kaze (he follows the traditional Japanese order of using family name first) rose to worldwide fame when “Shinunoga E-wa,” a B-side release from his debut album, “Help Ever, Hurt Never,” went viral on TikTok.
“I basically love all generations of people, I love kids, and I really love my parents,” Kaze said, mulling over his cross-generational appeal.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
It has since racked up more than 253 million views on YouTube and over 287 million Spotify streams. Last year, he became the first artist to launch NPR’s inaugural Tiny Desk Concerts Japan, a performance that received over 21 million views. His solo headlining show at Nissan Stadium last year drew over 100,000 people over two days.
Unlike most of Japan’s current global artists, Kaze’s popularity is not primarily drawn from anime tie-ins, notes J-pop YouTuber Kushun in his minidocumentary on the artist, drawing a parallel between his success with “Shinunoga E-wa” and “Ue o Muite Arukō,” also known as “Sukiyaki,” by Kyu Sakamoto, the only Japanese song to top the American Billboard charts back in 1963.
You wouldn’t know all this from his unassuming demeanor. Valuing in-person connection he has a love-hate relationship with social media, despite rising to fame fueled by Gen Z platforms.
And while plenty of 20-somethings were in attendance, the audience at the Greek was also filled with people who remember record stores and big album rollouts, and some even brought their kids.
“I basically love all generations of people, I love kids, and I really love my parents,” he said, mulling over his cross-generational appeal.
His parents, in particular his father who was an aspiring jazz musician, loom large as inspiration. “My older brother is 13 years older than me, so, basically, I grew up with people across a wide generation, and I always want to please my parents.”
Part of his appeal lies in his ability to take from his multigenerational upbringing and balance it with a current sensibility. His voice has an on-trend soothing quality, lending itself to music that is iconoclastic yet classic — rooted in his early influences, especially American R&B and soul, and interspersed with Japanese elements.
“I think he’s a really incredible musician,” said Meredith Edmonds, a 20-something entertainment exec who attended Kaze’s Greek Theatre performance. “It’s not just about his lyrics but also the fact that he plays multiple instruments. You can tell that he loves it … he is just kind of silly and fun and is not afraid to be completely himself.”
“American festivals, [they] kind of liberated me,” Kaze said. “There are people who don’t know about me, and that makes me feel free … which makes me want to fight to get them to notice me.”
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
After releasing a series of standalone singles, he embarked on a 2025 summer tour playing European jazz festivals at Montreux and North Sea, and a North American tour bigger than his first. He also made his debut at landmark U.S. summer festivals. He returns to the U.S. in October for a series of dates to close out the American leg of his 2025 tour.
The North Sea Jazz Festival was intimidating. (He blames Erykah Badu for this.) “I saw her on YouTube or something, and she was mind-blowing, oh, otherworldly. She made me nervous,” he said. Montreux was slightly less so and felt like a “one-man show,” while Lollapalooza and Outside Lands were stimulating.
“I think I can be more aggressive, kind of wild, especially on the festival stage, rather than my own show or something. Because … especially American festivals, [they] kind of liberated me. There are people who don’t know about me, and that makes me feel free. They can just pass me by or something, which makes me want to fight to get them to notice me.”
His career trajectory reads like a fairy tale as he first came to public attention with YouTube piano performances recorded at his childhood home in Satoshō, a small rural town in Okayama prefecture. Among his oldest videos still online is one of a precocious 12-year-old Kaze playing his electric piano. Only the dark shades he sports and a wry half-smile hint at the performer to come.
In fact, he has no memories without the piano, a constant companion since he was 3. “I remember, the score, the musical score, was turning black because of all the pencils from my teacher … he [the piano] has been there all my life,” Kaze said. “I don’t know why he’s there, but one thing’s for sure: I’m very thankful for him. Because without him, I couldn’t make music.”
“I want it to be simple and clean … it purifies me, writing in English. It makes my vision and feelings clearer. So I really love the process,” Kaze said.
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
He has sung in English for years, covering a head-spinning array of American and British artists from the Carpenters to Lizzo. However, “Prema” marks his first attempt at writing songs of his own in English, his second language, a challenge he has taken head-on.
It’s a bold but hard-earned move considering he is known for his lyricism in Japanese, tackling themes as deep and broad as mortality, forms of love, greater meaning and gratitude.
“My lyrics have never been very poetic,” he counters. “I would say they’re kind of straightforward, especially recently, my Japanese lyrics are getting simpler. I want it to be simple and clean … it purifies me, writing in English. It makes my vision and feelings clearer. So I really love the process.”
Two songs from the nine-track “Prema,” which means “all-encompassing love” in Sanskrit, were released earlier this year: the bouncy, Jamiroquai-like “Hāchiko,” rooted in Japanese folklore, and the soaring yacht-rock love ballad “Love Like This.” The accompanying videos are characteristically visually stunning. He has often collaborated with Mesudayuma (MESS), but on the French Riviera-themed “Love Like This” (his first as a romantic lead), he turned to L.A.-based director Aerin Moreno.
Faith is a recurring theme in his work, and it surfaces particularly in older songs like “Hana” and “Grace,” but when pressed, he doesn’t elaborate on a particular dogma, and his manager politely intervened before he could get too far on the subject. The new album continues referencing his spirituality.
“Prema,” a lightly funky uptempo ballad a la Michael McDonald, is perhaps his most direct expression as he declares in the chorus: “Prema, don’t you know you are love itself / Can’t you see that you are God itself.” “Prema is 100% me,” he said. “Because I finished writing the song all by myself. And the lyrics are kind of hip-hop-influenced, like I’m boasting, but in a spiritual way.”
“I want to thank Los Angeles overall, because when I was burned out and had no inspiration, L.A. vibes, the weather, the air, the people helped me a lot to move on as a musician,” Kaze said. “So, I’m very thankful for Los Angeles.”
(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)
Kaze further challenged himself on this project by working with an array of producers: Americans Shy Carter, Dan Wilson and Rob Bisel (he’s worked with Bisel before), Nolan Lambroza (a.k.a. Sir Nolan) and Greg Kurstin, as well as Canadian Tobias Jesso Jr. Aiming for a classic 1980s through early-2000s sound, he cites Michael and Janet Jackson as influences for the type of impact he was aiming for.
A fan of albums, he wanted every song to be a potential hit single. Helping with this goal was noted Korean DJ/producer 250, the only producer to work on all nine tracks. “I wanted to show the world the power of Asia as well,” Kaze said of 250, who is Korean.
Reached by email, 250 — best known for his work with the girl group New Jeans — talked about his goal for “Prema.” “I wanted to give a sense of consistency, a narrative thread that runs naturally from the first track all the way to the last,” the producer said. They worked closely together on initial production at House of Refuge on Jeju Island, sharing meals as they laid out ideas.
Overall, the album leans heavily toward the late ’80s, like in the guitar riff intro of the synth-heavy “I Need U Back,” while the quirky breakup song “Casket Girl” sounds like a slinky backdrop to a hot L.A. summer night.
That might be just fine with Kaze. “I want to thank Los Angeles overall, because when I was burned out and had no inspiration, L.A. vibes, the weather, the air, the people helped me a lot to move on as a musician. So, I’m very thankful for Los Angeles.”
Oasis’ management and label teams have co-signed a unique networking opportunity as part of Beyond The Music’s Inspire program in Manchester.
The Beyond The Band event, to be held on Oct. 2 at the city’s Co-op Live, will give hopeful professionals aged 16-25 an opportunity to gain insights from local industry leaders and politicians on panels and conversations, and a speed networking event.
Beyond The Music was first held in 2023 and co-founded by Sarah Pearson, Rose Marley and Oli Wilson, son of local legend Tony Wilson (co-founder of Factory Records). The conference hosts an array of live performances and industry panels with a goal to promote and champion the local Manchester scene. The Inspire program focuses on generating opportunities for rising professionals looking to get into the industry.
Related
This year’s Beyond the Band event has been co-signed by Ignition Records, Oasis’ longtime management and record company; the Co-op Live arena; Abbey Road Studios; Adidas Originals; Andy Burnham, mayor of Greater Manchester; and Bev Craig, leader of Manchester City Council. Marcus Russell and Claire Byrne of Ignition will attend the event, as will the management team of local rapper Aitch – who boasts twenty top 10 singles on the U.K. charts – as well as representatives of SJM Concerts, Heavenly Records and more.
Speaking to Billboard U.K. Wilson and Marley wanted to capitalize on a spectacular summer of music in Manchester. In July, Oasis performed five homecoming gigs at the city’s Heaton Park, and concerts have also been held by Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, Fontaines D.C., Sam Fender and more.
Marley says that the city has been “bouncing” as a result, and that events and focus on music is part of a longterm commitment from council leaders and politicians to the scene’s heritage and their potential future. Over £250,000 of the proceeds from Oasis’ Heaton Park shows were invested into the grassroots scene in the city.
Those mammoth Oasis shows, Wilson says, gave the city so much hope that working class musicians can make a viable career and should feel inspired by the Gallagher brothers’ journey. “It showed why the government needs to take music much more seriously as a career prospect for young people.”
The event is the latest step in Manchester’s driven campaign to be known as the music capital of the world. Civic leaders like Burnham and Craig are leading the charge, and in 2025 The BRITs will be held outside of London for the first time at Manchester’s Co-op Live arena.
“Greater Manchester has always led the way when it comes to music — from venues and festivals to the artists who’ve made their mark across the world,” Burnham tells Billboard U.K. “Our future depends on inspiring the next generation and making sure they have the access and opportunities to take it even further. Beyond The Band is about opening those doors and giving young people the chance to carry our story forward.”
Marley says that she hopes the event will embolden young people who have struggled to find consistent work, and lost key socializing years of their youth to COVID lockdowns. The “gig economy” — which involves holding multiple jobs and employers at any one time — can be a viable career, she adds. “These are formidable careers that can earn a good income, but might not be ‘a job’ like they’re expecting it to be.”
Attendees aged 16-25 can apply for access here. Marley says the event is a great opportunity to hustle and get valuable face-to-face time with industry “movers and shakers” and build confidence. She adds, “Our advice would be that we can open the door, but you need to step into it.”
Exposing years-old concerns about California’s resilience to wildfires, a government whistleblower and other witnesses in a recent state trial alleged that cleanup operations after some of the largest fires in state history were plagued by mismanagement and overspending — and that toxic contamination was at times left behind in local communities.
Steven Larson, a former state debris operations manager in the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, failed to convince a jury that he was wrongly fired by the agency for flagging those and other issues to his supervisors. After a three-week trial in Sacramento, the jury found Larson was retaliated against, but also that the agency had other, legitimate reasons for dismissing him from his post, according to court records.
Still, the little-discussed trial provided a rare window into a billion-dollar public-private industry that is rapidly expanding — and becoming increasingly expensive for taxpayers and lucrative for contractors — given the increased threat of fires from climate change.
It raised serious questions about the state’s fire response and management capabilities at a time when the Trump administration says it is aggressively searching for “waste, fraud and abuse” in government spending, proposing cuts to the Federal Emergency Management Agency and clashing with state leaders over the best way to respond to future wildfires in California.
The allegations raised in the trial also come as FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers are overseeing similar debris removal work — by some of the same contractors — following the wildfires that destroyed much of Pacific Palisades and parts of Altadena in January, and as fresh complaints arise around that work, as The Times recently reported.
Steve Larson poses for a portrait at Elk Grove Park on Sept. 1. Larson, who was a former state debris operations manager in the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, is a whistleblower alleging widespread problems in California fire cleanups.
(Andri Tambunan / For The Times)
During the trial, Larson and other witnesses with direct knowledge of state fire contracts raised allegations of poor oversight and sloppy hiring and purchasing practices by CalRecycle, the state agency that oversaw multiple major cleanup contracts for CalOES; overcharging and poor record-keeping by contractors; toxic contamination being left behind on properties meant to have been cleared; and insufficient responses to those problems from both CalOES and FEMA officials.
The claims were buttressed at trial by the introduction into evidence of a previously unpublished audit of cleanup operations for several large fires in 2018. They were mostly rejected by attorneys for the state, who acknowledged some problems — which they said are common in fast-paced emergency responses operations. They broadly denied Larson’s allegations as baseless, saying he was an inexperienced and disgruntled former employee who was fired for poor performance.
The allegations were also dismissed by CalOES and by Burlingame-based Environmental Chemical Corp., which was the state’s lead contractor on the 2018 fires and is now the Army Corps of Engineer’s lead contractor on cleanup work for the Palisades and Eaton fires, which is nearing completion.
Anita Gore, a spokeswoman for CalOES, defended the agency’s work in a statement to The Times. While acknowledging some problems in the past, she said the agency is “committed to protecting the health and safety of all Californians, including in the aftermath of disasters, and is unwavering in its desire to maintain a safe and inclusive workplace where everyone can feel respected and thrive.”
In its own statement to The Times, ECC said it followed the directives and oversight of state and federal agencies at all times, and “is proud of its work helping communities recover from devastating disasters.”
“We approach each project with professionalism, transparency, and a commitment to delivering results under extraordinarily challenging conditions,” the company said.
Maria Bourn, one of Larson’s attorneys, told The Times that while her client lost at trial — which they are appealing — his case marked a “win for government accountability and the public at-large” by revealing “massive irregularities by wildfire debris removal contractors” who continue to work in the state.
“The state’s continued partnership with these companies when such widespread irregularities were identified by one of its own should alarm every taxpayer,” Bourn said.
A Malibu home lies in ruins after the Woolsey fire. Many questions were raised about the response.
(Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)
Camp, Woolsey and Hill fires
The allegations centered in large part around the state-run cleanup efforts following the Camp fire in Northern California, which killed 85 people and all but erased the town of Paradise in November 2018, and the contemporaneous Woolsey and Hill fires in Southern California, which ripped through Malibu and other parts of Los Angeles and Ventura counties.
FEMA has reimbursed the state more than $1 billion for costs associated with those cleanup efforts.
In a July 28, 2019, email entered as evidence in the trial, Larson wrote to CalOES chief of internal audits Ralph Zavala that he wanted to talk to him about “potential fraud” by Camp fire contractors, including ECC.
“I cannot say for sure, but something sure smells fishy,” Larson wrote in the email. “Either their contract was not in fact the lowest bid or they are creating fraud in the way they collect debris.”
Larson wrote in the same email that ECC was “supposedly the lowest bidder” but was “costing more” than the lower bids, which he wrote “doesn’t make sense.” At trial, Larson and his attorneys repeatedly claimed that instead of properly investigating his claims, his supervisors turned against him.
Other current and former state officials testified that they had raised similar concerns.
Todd Thalhamer, a former Camp fire area commander and operations chief who still works for CalRecycle, testified during the trial that he’d told Larson he believed ECC had low-balled its bid to win the work, then overcharged the state by millions of dollars. He said he had “dug very deep into the tonnage cost that they were charging, how they were charging, how they were cleaning it up,” and believed that ECC had been able to “game the system” by reporting that it was hauling out more of the debris types for which it could charge the most.
ECC denied manipulating bids or overcharging the state, and said that “all debris types and volumes are 100% inspected by and determined by CalRecycle and its monitoring representatives and systems, not by ECC or its subcontractors.”
Thalhamer testified that he’d sent an “email blast” out to top CalOES and CalRecycle officials telling them of his findings. He said that led to internal discussions and some but not all issues being resolved.
Further concerns were raised in records obtained by Larson’s attorneys from the prominent accounting firm EY, formerly known as Ernst & Young, which the state paid nearly $4 million to audit the Camp, Woolsey and Hill fire cleanup work.
According to those records, which were cited at trial, EY found that CalRecycle was “unable to produce documentation that fully supports how the proposed costs were determined to be reasonable when evaluating contractor proposals,” and didn’t appear to have “appropriate controls or oversight over the contractor’s performance.”
EY flagged $457 million charged by the contractors through 89 separate “change orders” — or additional charges not contemplated in their initial bids. It said the state lacked an adequate approval process for determining whether to accept such orders, couldn’t substantiate them and risked FEMA rescinding its funding if it didn’t take “immediate corrective action.”
EY specifically flagged $181 million in change orders for the construction of two “base camps” near the burn areas, from which the contractors would operate. It said the state only had invoices for $91 million of that spending, and that even those invoices were not itemized. EY executive Jill Powell testified that the firm believed such large contract changes were likely to be flagged as questionable by FEMA.
ECC — one of two contractors EY noted as having made the base camp change orders — defended its work.
The company said change orders are a necessary part of any cleanup operation, where the final cost “depends on the final quantities of debris that the Government directs the Contractors to remove and how far the material has to be transported for recycling or disposal.”
Such quantities can change over the course of a contract, which leads to changes in cost, it said.
As for the base camps, ECC said the state had explicitly stated in its initial request for proposals that it would “develop the requirements” and negotiate their cost through change orders, because details about their likely location and size were still being worked out when the bids were being accepted.
“Bidders could not know at the time of bid, which area of Paradise they would be assigned, how many properties would be assigned to the bidder, and therefore the exact size of the workforce that the Government would want housed in a Base Camp,” ECC said.
ECC said it “submitted invoices with supporting documentation in the format requested” by CalRecycle for all expenditures, and was “not aware of any missing invoices.”
“We cannot speak to what EY was provided from the State’s files or how the State provided those materials for EY’s review,” the company said. “Any gap in what EY reviewed should not be interpreted as meaning ECC failed to submit documentation.”
ECC said state officials only ever complimented the company for its work on the 2018 fires. And it said it continues to work in Southern California “with the same professionalism and care we bring to every project.”
SPSG, the second contractor EY flagged as being involved in the base camp change orders, did not respond to a request for comment.
Attorney James F. Curran, who represented the state at trial, said in his closing arguments that the work was not “running perfect” but was coming in on schedule and under budget. He said state officials were not ignoring problems, just cataloging non-pressing issues in order to address them when the dust cleared, as is common in emergency operations.
Curran said many of Larson’s complaints were based on his unfamiliarity with such work and his refusal to trust more experienced colleagues. He said Larson was fired not for flagging concerns, but because of “misconduct, arrogance, communication style problems, and performance problems.”
Gore, the CalOES spokeswoman, said CalRecycle awarded the contracts “through an open, competitive procurement process with oversight from CalOES and FEMA,” and that CalOES worked to address problems with contractors before Larson ever voiced any concerns.
Gore said CalOES hired EY to identify any potential improvements in the contracting and reimbursement process, and changed its policy to pay contractors per parcel of land cleared rather than by volume of debris removed in part to address concerns about potential load manipulation.
She said the agency could not answer other, detailed questions from The Times about the debris removal process and concerns about mismanagement and alleged overcharging because the Larson case “remains pending and subject to appeal,” and because CalOES faces “other, active litigation” as well.
The EY audit also flagged issues with several other contractors, including Tetra Tech and Arcadis, according to draft records obtained from EY by Larson’s attorneys and submitted as evidence at trial.
The EY records said Tetra Tech filed time sheets for unapproved costs, without sufficient supporting information, with questionable or excessive hours, with digital alterations that increased hourly rates, and without proper supervisor approvals. It said it also charged for work without providing any supporting time sheets.
The EY records said the company also used inconsistent procedures for sampling soil and testing for asbestos, used billing rates that were inconsistent between its contract and its invoices, charged for “after hours” work without supporting documentation, filed questionable, per-hour lodging costs, appeared to have digitally edited change orders after they were signed and dated, and relied inappropriately on questionable digital signatures for approving change orders.
Tetra Tech did not respond to a request for comment.
The EY records said Arcadis filed change orders for costs that appeared to be part of the “normal course of business,” filed invoices for work that began before the company’s state contract was signed, and relied inappropriately on digital signatures.
Arcadis referred all questions to CalRecycle. CalRecycle provided a copy of its own “targeted” audit of Arcadis’ work, which found the company had complied with the requirements of its nearly $29-million contract with the state. CalRecycle otherwise referred The Times back to CalOES.
A recovery team searches for human remains after the Camp fire.
(Marcus Yam / Los Angeles Times)
North Bay fires
Concerns about cleanup work following major fires in Sonoma, Santa Rosa and other North Bay counties in 2017 — under both CalOES and the Army Corps of Engineers — also arose at the trial.
Sean Smith, a former 20-year veteran of CalOES and a prominent figure in California debris removal operations to this day, alleged in an email submitted at trial that ECC and other contractors hired to clear contaminated debris and soil from those fires over-excavated sites in order “to boost loads to get more tonnage and money.”
ECC denied Smith’s claims, saying it “does not perform excessive soil removal” and that it followed “the detailed debris removal operations plan requirements” of the Army Corps of Engineers, which had its own quality assurance representatives monitoring the work.
In a deposition, Smith also testified that, in the midst of spending more than $50 million to repair that over-excavation, state officials identified lingering contamination at “what would be considered hazardous waste levels.”
“They hadn’t finished the cleanup in all spots, and we found it, and we recorded it,” he said.
Smith testified that those findings were presented to high-ranking CalOES and FEMA officials during a meeting in San Francisco in October 2018. At that meeting, CalOES regional manager Eric Lamoureux laid out all the state’s contamination findings in detail, “but nobody wanted to hear it,” Smith said.
During his deposition, Smith alleged that the “exact words” of one FEMA attorney in attendance were, “We have to find out how to debunk the state’s testing” — which he said he found surprising, given the testing was based on federal environmental standards.
“I don’t know how you’d debunk such a thing,” Smith said.
FEMA officials did not respond to requests for comment. CalOES also did not answer questions about the alleged meeting.
ECC said that Smith, who managed and signed its contracts with CalOES, gave ECC “a very positive performance review” when it completed the Sonoma and Santa Rosa work — describing its work as “exceptional.”
Smith said he quit his post working on those fires after the San Francisco meeting, though he continued working for the agency in other roles for a couple more years. Smith more recently formed his own debris removal consulting firm — which has been involved in soil testing for the state after other recent fires.
CalOES did not respond to questions about Smith’s claims or separation from the agency.
President Trump on Sunday responded to the immigration raid that was conducted on a Hyundai battery construction plant in Georgia last week, calling on foreign companies to respect American laws.
“We encourage you to LEGALLY bring your very smart people, with great technical talent, to build World Class products, and we will make it quickly and legally possible for you to do so,” The President said. “What we ask in return is that you hire and train American Workers. Together, we will all work hard to make our Nation not only productive, but closer in unity than ever before.”
8 U.S.C. § 1324 makes it “unlawful for any person or other entity to hire, recruit, or refer for a fee, for employment in the United States an alien knowing the alien is an unauthorized alien.” One would think that Hyundai would face fines or some sort of consequence for violating our laws.
As The Gateway Pundit reported, 475 workers were arrested at the plant near Savanna, Georgia, for being in the US illegally or violating the terms of their immigrant visas. The majority of the illegal workers arrested, over 300, were South Korean.
The factory was previously touted by Joe Biden as an economic win after he announced the opening of the plant during a 2022 trip to South Korea.
US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) released video footage from the operation over the weekend, showing a large caravan moving in on the plant, lining the illegals up, chasing down attempted escapees, and loading them all onto immigration buses to be detained.
WATCH:
President Trump previously secured a deal with the South Korean auto manufacturer, which pledged a more than $20 billion investment in American manufacturing to build its first-ever steel mill in the US, which President Trump said will produce “more than 2.7 million metric tons of steel per year” and create more than 1,400 steel jobs. The investment included $5.8 billion for a steel mill in Donaldsonville, Louisiana.
Trump has secured more than $5 trillion in private and foreign investments in US manufacturing and infrastructure.
He announced on Sunday in response to the Hyundai plant raid that “I am hereby calling on all Foreign Companies investing in the United States to please respect our Nation’s Immigration Laws.”
Full statement below:
Following the Immigration Enforcement Operation on the Hyundai Battery Plant in Georgia, I am hereby calling on all Foreign Companies investing in the United States to please respect our Nation’s Immigration Laws. Your Investments are welcome, and we encourage you to LEGALLY bring your very smart people, with great technical talent, to build World Class products, and we will make it quickly and legally possible for you to do so. What we ask in return is that you hire and train American Workers. Together, we will all work hard to make our Nation not only productive, but closer in unity than ever before. Thank you for your attention to this matter! DONALD J. TRUMP, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
The Gateway Pundit reported earlier that South Korea and the United States have negotiated the release of the more than 300 illegals. South Korea reportedly agreed to send a plane to facilitate the return of the illegals to their country.
The prospect of developing dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, can be frightening, and, understandably, Brits may want to do as much as they can to limit the chance of developing it. It is thought that one common garden herb may hold therapeutic potential due to its active compounds, which show antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties. Carnosic acid in rosemary, for example, activates enzymes that part of the body’s natural defence system.
American experts highlighted in 2022 that Rosmarinus officinalis has “long been known as the herb of remembrance and can be a potential cognition enhancer” for Alzheimer’s disease. A study using animals concluded that the administration of the herb “improved cognitive function” in organisms with cognitive deficit, as well as in “normal intact” animals. Researchers added: “The outcomes may be used in the planning of clinical studies provided the included studies are robust enough to account for the heterogeneity observed.
“The cognitive benefits provided by R. officinalis and its mechanisms of action are in synchrony with the fundamental pathophysiology of cognitive deficit and the herb could be a potential treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.”
Further research, published in Antioxidants in February, showed that when diAcCA – a new, stabilised form of carnosic acid – was used to treat mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease, it achieved therapeutic doses of the chemical in the brain, and led to enhanced memory and synaptic density, or more synapses, in the brain, according to News Medical Life Sciences.
Stuart Lipton, MD, PhD, senior author, professor, the Step Family Foundation Endowed Chair at Scripps Research and clinical neurologist in La Jolla, California, said: “By combating inflammation and oxidative stress with this diAcCA compound, we actually increased the number of synapses in the brain.
“We also took down other misfolded or aggregated proteins such as phosphorylated-tau and amyloid-β, which are thought to trigger Alzheimer’s disease and serve as biomarkers of the disease process.”
He added: “We did multiple different tests of memory, and they were all improved with the drug.
“And it didn’t just slow down the decline; it improved virtually back to normal.”
It is unclear as to the exact effects rosemary could have on humans with regards to staving off Alzheimer’s disease, but research so far suggests that it could hold promise.
A large Roman burial chamber from the third to fourth century AD has been unearthed by archaeologists in Albania.
The discovery is the first of its kind found in the Balkan country that was once part of the Roman Empire.
Locals had tipped off staff from the Institute of Archaeology after noticing some unusual stones on a plateau near the border with North Macedonia.
They began excavating in early August and found the underground structure. Its large limestone slabs were inscribed with Greek lettering.
Erikson Nikolli, the project’s lead archaeologist, said: “The inscription tells us that the person buried here was named Gelliano, a name typical of the Roman period.
Image: Tourists have flocked to the site after hearing news of the discovery
“We are uncertain about the identity of the second individual, but it is likely a family member.”
The tomb measures 9m (29ft) by 6m (19ft).
It is believed to be a wealthy person’s resting place and is grander than other burial sites found in the area.
Authorities in Albania are already planning to develop the site into a tourist attraction.
Mr Nikolli’s team last week used brushes to reveal the intricately carved edges of the tomb’s white roof stone and walls.
He said: “We also uncovered a piece of fabric embroidered with gold thread, which confirms our belief that we are dealing with a member of the upper class.”
The team also found glass plates and knives.
Image: Albania is already planning to turn the site into a tourist destination
Nikolli said the tomb had been looted at least twice, once in antiquity and later with heavy machinery to move a huge rock on top of the chamber.
He added the occupant’s name was inscribed in Greek letters but carried a Latin meaning, and a second inscription shows the tomb was dedicated to the god Jupiter.
Experts have not yet speculated on inscriptions on stones found nearby, which are believed to have belonged to another monument now surrounded by cornfields and a quarry.