Archive May 10, 2025

GBBO’s Prue Leith shuts down husband’s fear of being outlived with blunt response

Great British Bake Off judge Dame Prue Leith has been married to John Playfair since 2016, following the death of her first husband Rayne Kruger

Dame Prue Leith gave a defiant two-word reply to John Playfair’s fear about a dog outliving him

Dame Prue Leith, the culinary legend from Great British Bake Off, has shared her husband’s fears of adopting a new dog that might outlive him. The restaurateur and baking sensation has become a familiar face on our screens through her various TV stints.

The 85-year-old is perhaps best known for her stint as a judge on Channel 4’s Great British Bake Off, where she joins Paul Hollywood at the judging table. In her personal life, Dame Prue is married to John Playfair, whom she met at a dinner party in Yorkshire, following the death of her first husband Rayne Kruger.

The couple tied the knot in 2016, and while they share a loving home with their two Cavalier King Charles spaniels, they’re in discussions about whether or not they should add another furry friend to the mix.

Dame Prue Leith and John Playfair
Dame Prue and John have been married since 2016(Image: Getty Images)

John voiced his concern that any new pet might outlive him, but Dame Prue has been having none of it, reportedly dismissing his apprehension with a firm: “What nonsense”, when she spoke to the Times.

In addition to this, the expert baker has been frank about her own age, expressing on the Travel Diaries podcast: “I haven’t got much longer, I’m 85, I want to spend as much time as I can with him.”

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The Bake Off judge has also discussed the dynamics of her relationship, praising her husband’s down-to-earth nature.

She said: “One of the wonderful things about him is that he is totally without ego, he doesn’t feel threatened by the fact that I have a higher profile than he does, when I introduce him (to people) he always just says, ‘I’m the handbag carrier, I’m her chauffeur’.”

Her journey in the culinary world began at the age of just 20 when she trained at the Cordon Bleu Cookery School. This led to an impressive career that includes launching her own restaurant.

Dame Prue later joined The Great British Bake Off in 2017, when she replaced Dame Mary Berry. Eight years on, and she’s started to talk about life after the popular baking programme.

LONDON, ENGLAND - JUNE 20: Prue Leith and John Playfair attend the National Portrait Gallery's reopening in front of
Dame Prue Leith gave a defiant two-word reply to John Playfair’s fear about a dog outliving him(Image: Dave Benett, Dave Benett/Getty Images for The National Portrait Gallery)

Speaking to the Mail On Sunday earlier this year, she admitted that she would take part in the 2025 edition, but didn’t know if she would be around in future seasons.

She explained: “I’m doing this year’s Bake Off, and I don’t know if this will be my last. I’ve got to stop some time, so I might stop next year. I thought I’d just see how I go this year, because I definitely feel a bit older this year than I did last year.

“Things like getting out of a chair takes me longer than it used to. I don’t like big steps without a handrail. None of these things worried me two years ago – I could run upstairs – and so I’m very keen to leave Bake Off before I’m asked to leave.”

Dame Prue has also graced screens on some of the nation’s most cherished shows, including The Great British Menu and Prue’s Cotswold Kitchen.

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Yungblud says he’s ‘calmer than ever’ after confronting his demons and taking up boxing

EXCLUSIVE: The singer, 27, is coming out fighting with his new music – and he’s not shying away from the hard topics to climb the charts either

Yungblud is releasing new music amid of confronting his demons

Yungblud is coming out fighting with his new music. He’s confronted his demons, taken up boxing and is battling against toxic masculinity. And what he delivers with album Idols really packs a punch.

“I really had to face myself… figure it out and face it,” he tells. And Yungblud, 27, reckons he has really grown in the process. “I would use food and alcohol to distract myself and push things down,” he says.

“The album is a mirror to that. I have singing lessons. I don’t drink as much and I’ve been getting better at sleeping. I’ve been getting better at being able to navigate this whole thing better – that’s been epic.”

Yungblud
Yungblud says his album is a mirror to his demons

Idols is Yungblud’s fourth studio release, the first coming out in 2018. He filmed the music video for single Hello Heaven shirtless during a -14C blizzard in Bulgaria – and is enjoying flashing the flesh.

Having previously opened up about his battle with body dysmorphia, the Doncaster rocker – real name Dominic Harrison – tells how he has now “cut out people that were not good” for him, and that posing topless for his album promo is a “kickback against those people”.

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Yungblud is not shying away from hard topics to climb the charts either. He says: “Me and my friends were talking about sexuality. It was what young people were talking about but it wasn’t being represented in music at all. It was kind of like, ‘Oh, don’t sing about that. It’s too political to go on Radio One.’

“I was like, ‘This is what people want to hear, this is what I want to say, this is what I want to sing about’.” After his last album, Yungblud opened up about the fear of being predictable – but that is one thing you can’t accuse him of with this record.

YungBlud
Yungblud wants to be a positive role model for other men

“People knew exactly what I would sing, wear and say,” he says. “I was repeating myself and I was starting to not tell the truth.

“The past two years has been a real reset for me to provide a new outlet and a new journey. I feel calmer than I’ve ever felt because it’s truly written. If it’s not real, people can smell it”.

Describing the creative process, he said: “It’s like crying or having an orgasm… it just comes out of you without f***ing responsibility or consequence”. And Yungblud, who recently took up boxing with a trainer in LA, wants to be a positive role model for other men.

Previously addressing the issue on Jamie Laing’s podcast Great Company, and referencing hit Netflix series Adolescence, he says: “What I see are these psychos like Andrew Tate and this toxically poisonous stuff that young men are consuming.

Yungblud
Yungblud will be heading on tour soon

“I really feel like there needs to be people who embrace masculinity and embrace this element of physical activity, but also do it like me – from a place of law, respect and equality.

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“I want to portray that it’s cool to embrace masculinity in a new way that highlights emotions but respects that there isn’t just this kind of old school idea that’s being peddled.”

Idols is out on June 20 and Yungblud’s world tour starts in LA on August 23. Bludfest in Milton Keynes on June 21 is his only UK date this year.

Tom Cruise makes rare comment about ex-wife Nicole Kidman as he reflects on career

Hollywood stars Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman were married from 1990 until 2001 – and while “irreconcilable differences” were cited as the reason for the divorce, the pair still have good things to say about each other

Tom Cruise has reflected warmly on his ex-wife, Nicole Kidman(Image: Time & Life Pictures/Getty Images)

Hollywood legend Tom Cruise has showered his ex-wife, Nicole Kidman, with praise – hailing her abilities as an actress. The 62-year-old action star was married to 57-year-old Australian actress Nicole from 1990 until 2001 and shares two children with the Oscar winner.

The couple met on the set of the Tony Scott directed sports drama Days of Thunder which was released in 1990 and they later appeared in the romantic drama Far and Away in 1992. The duo also stunned film fans when they appeared in the erotically charged drama Eyes Wide Shut in 1999.

The pair announced their separation in February 2001, with Tom citing “irreconcilable differences” when he filed for divorce two days later. While some Hollywood divorces have been filled with drama, the split between Tom and Nicole was regarded as amicable.

And it seems the pair still hold each other in high regard all these years later. In an interview with Sight and Sound magazine, the Mission: Impossible star reflected on working with iconic director Stanley Kubrick, Eyes Wide Shut – and revealed he petitioned for Nicole to be cast in her role as Alice Harford due to her exceptional acting abilities.

He explained: “I flew out to [Kubrick’s] house and I landed in his backyard. I read the script the day before and we spent the day talking about it. I knew all of his films.

Tom Cruise has reflected warmly on his ex-wife, Nicole Kidman
The couple caused a stir when they appeared in the 1999 erotic drama Eyes Wide Shut(Image: Warner Bros/Kobal/REX/Shutterstock)
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“Then it was basically he and I getting to know each other. And when we were doing that, I suggested Nicole play the role [of Alice]. Because obviously she’s a great actress.”

Eyes Wide Shut famously demanded more from its cast than they expected. Filming was initially tipped to last three or four months – but ended up taking 15 months due to Kubrick being a perfectionist.

Casting his mind back on the film, Tom said: “I thought the film was very interesting, and I wanted to have that experience. When I go to make a movie, I do a lot of detailed investigation and a lot of time with the people before I commit so that I understand what they need and want and they understand me and how we can work together and really create something very special.”

The film arguably helped put Nicole on the map as a serious actress as she was nominated for a string of Best Actress awards following the film’s release – including the prestigious Satellite Awards.

She went on to receive her first Best Actress nomination at the Oscars in 2002 for the 2001 film Moulin Rouge! – and later won the top gong at the 2003 ceremony for her role in The Hours. Nicole has also been nominated for the Best Actress award for Rabbit Hole in 2011 and Being the Ricardos in 2022.

She has been nominated for the Best Supporting Actress award once – for playing Sue Brierley in the 2016 Australian biographical drama Lion, which was directed by Garth Davis and with the cast led by British star Dev Patel.

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Tom has been Oscar nominated four times over the course of his career – three times for Best Actor and once for Best Supporting Actor, but he has not scooped any of the coveted golden statuettes so far.

Next year, Nicole will be reprising one of her most beloved roles, returning as charming witch Gillian Owens in Practical Magic 2 – alongside Sandra Bullock who returns as on-screen sister Sally Owens. And this year, Tom is set to play Ethan Hunt yet again in the latest Mission: Impossible film, titled The Final Reckoning.

At least 33 people killed in suspected RSF attacks in Sudan

At least 33 people have been killed in Sudan in attacks suspected to have been carried out by the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) as the brutal two-year war claims its latest victims.

An RSF strike on a prison on Saturday in el-Obeid killed at least 19 people, while on Friday evening, at least 14 members of the same family were killed in an air attack in Darfur, local sources said.

The attacks – part of the RSF’s ongoing war with the military-led government’s Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) since 2023 – came after six straight days of the paramilitary group’s drone attacks on the army-led government’s wartime capital of Port Sudan.

These attacks damaged key infrastructure, including a power grid and the country’s last operational civilian airport, which was a key gateway for aid into the war-ravaged nation.

The war has left tens of thousands dead, displaced 13 million people and triggered what the United Nations calls the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

The attack on the prison on Saturday also wounded 45 people, a medical source told the AFP news agency. The source said the jail in the army-controlled city in the North Kordofan state capital was hit by an RSF drone.

The night before, 14 people were killed at the Abu Shouk displacement camp near el-Fasher in Darfur, a rescue group said, blaming the paramilitary.

The camp “was the target of intense bombardment by the Rapid Support Forces on Friday evening”, said the group of volunteer aid workers.

The camp near el-Fasher, the last state capital in Darfur still out of the RSF’s control, is plagued by famine, according to the UN.

It is home to tens of thousands of people who fled the violence of successive conflicts in Darfur and the conflict that has been ripping Africa’s third-largest country asunder since 2023.

The RSF has shelled the camp several times in recent weeks.

Abu Shouk is located near the Zamzam camp, which the RSF seized in April after a devastating offensive that virtually emptied it.

RSF escalation

Elsewhere on Saturday, SAF warplanes struck RSF positions in the Darfur cities of Nyala and el-Geneina, destroying arms depots and military equipment, a military source told AFP.

The RSF has recently said it had taken the strategic town of al-Nahud in West Kordofan, a key army supply line to Darfur.

The RSF’s escalation in Port Sudan earlier this month came after the military struck the Nyala airport in South Darfur, where the RSF receives foreign military assistance, including drones. Local media stated that dozens of RSF officers were killed in the attack.

Sudan’s army-aligned authorities accuse the United Arab Emirates of supplying those drones to the RSF, which has no air force of its own.

The war began as a power struggle between SAF chief Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and his former deputy, RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo. It has effectively divided the country into two, with the army controlling the north, east and centre, while the RSF and its allies dominate nearly all of Darfur in the west and parts of the south.

India and Pakistan agree ceasefire: What does it mean?

India and Pakistan have reached a ceasefire agreement following a brief period of hostilities over the past few days, United States President Donald Trump announced on Saturday.

Earlier on Saturday, the two neighbours targeted each other’s military sites as Pakistan launched “Operation Bunyan Marsoos” after three of its own airbases were hit by India’s air-to-surface missiles. Both sides claimed to have intercepted most projectiles, but also admitted that some strikes caused damage.

More than 60 people have been reported killed since India launched missiles under “Operation Sindoor” on Wednesday, which it said targeted “terrorist camps” in Pakistan and Pakistan-administered Kashmir. Pakistan has confirmed the killing of 13 people on its side of the Line of Control (LoC), the de facto border between the two countries dividing the disputed Kashmir region.

The strikes had raised fears of a wider conflict between the two nuclear-armed neighbours. While international mediation has resolved disputes between India and Pakistan before, it remains to be seen if this ceasefire will hold and whether people will be able to relax.

What has been agreed upon by India and Pakistan?

“After a long night of talks mediated by the United States, I am pleased to announce that India and Pakistan have agreed to a full and immediate ceasefire,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform on Saturday.

“Congratulations to both Countries on using Common Sense and Great Intelligence. Thank you for your attention to this matter!” Multiple countries are understood to have been involved in these talks.

Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar and Indian Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri confirmed the ceasefire shortly after.

“It was agreed between them that both sides would stop all fighting and military action on land, air and sea with effect from 17:00 Indian Standard Time today [11:30 GMT],” Misri said in a short statement.

“Instructions have been given on both sides to give effect to this understanding. The directors general of military operations will talk again on May 12 at 12:00.”

India and Pakistan have also activated military channels and hotlines following the deal, according to Dar.

Will the two countries engage in further talks now?

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio also said India and Pakistan had agreed to start talks on a “broad set of issues at a neutral site”.

However, in a statement on social media, India’s Ministry of Information and Broadcasting partially denied this, stating: “There is no decision to hold talks on any other issue at any other place.”

Subir Sinha, director of the South Asian Institute at SOAS University of London, told Al Jazeera that broader bilateral talks would be a very challenging process as India had previously rejected such a development.

“One of the arguments about this so-called robust policy towards Pakistan that Modi’s government had adopted was that it was no longer possible to sit down and discuss a broad and long-term commitment to resolve issues,” Sinha said.

Therefore, this would mark a reversal of the Indian government’s position and could play out poorly with the right wing in India, whose members have been calling for an attack on Pakistan.

Sinha said both the Indus Waters Treaty, which India suspended its participation of and the Simla Agreement, which Pakistan threatened to pull out of, will need to be fully resumed and “to be looked [at] perhaps as bases for moving forward”.

Were India and Pakistan actually at war?

Officially, no. Despite intense military exchanges, including missile strikes, drone attacks, and artillery shelling, neither government made an official declaration of war.

India and Pakistan instead characterised their military actions as specific coordinated “military operations”.

Pakistan on Saturday launched a retaliatory assault it named “Bunyan Marsoos”, Arabic for “Wall of Lead”, just days after India initiated “Operation Sindoor“, responding to a deadly attack on tourists in Pahalgam on April 22, which it blamed on Pakistan-based armed groups.

However, that is not unusual for these two countries. They have not officially declared war in previous major conflicts, even as thousands of soldiers and civilians died.

Has third-party intervention solved disputes between India and Pakistan before?

Yes. Third-party mediation has resolved disputes since 1947, when the subcontinent split through partition and India and Pakistan fought their first war. After a yearlong war over ownership of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, a United Nations-brokered ceasefire effectively split Kashmir between Indian- and Pakistan-administered regions in 1948.

The 1965 Indo-Pakistani War ended with the Tashkent Declaration in January 1966, following mediation by the erstwhile Soviet Union. The accord saw Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri and Pakistani President Ayub Khan agree to pull back to pre-war positions and restore diplomatic and economic ties.

During the 1999 Kargil War, Pakistani troops crossed the LoC and seized Indian positions. Then-US President Bill Clinton convinced Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif to withdraw, warning of international isolation.

In 2002, then-US Secretary of State Colin Powell claimed he and his team had mediated the end of a tense stand-off along the LoC following an attack on the Indian Parliament in December 2001. The following June, Powell said that through negotiations, he had received assurances from President Pervez Musharraf of Pakistan that “infiltration activity” across the LoC would cease and that armed groups would be dismantled on Pakistani territory.

What constitutes a war?

There is no single definition. International humanitarian law, such as the Geneva Conventions, uses the term “international armed conflict” instead of “war”, defining it more broadly as any use of armed forces between states, regardless of whether either side calls it a “war”.

In modern international law, all uses of force are categorised as “armed conflict” regardless of justifications such as self-defence, according to Ahmer Bilal Soofi, an advocate in the Supreme Court of Pakistan who also specialises in international law.

The suspension of a treaty can also signal the start of war, he added. India suspended its participation in the landmark Indus Waters Treaty with Pakistan on April 23, a move Pakistan described as a “hostile act”.

“Political scientists normally say a war only exists after fighting becomes quite intense – normally 1,000 battle deaths,” said Christopher Clary, assistant professor of political science at the University at Albany. “For governments, though, wars exist whenever they say so.”

Experts argue the recent escalation in military actions by India and Pakistan was as much about signalling strength as they were about military objectives, and was also part of a broader effort to manage domestic and international perception.

Sean Bell, a United Kingdom-based military analyst, said much of the current rhetoric from both India and Pakistan is deliberately aimed at domestic audiences. Each side is “trying to make clear to their own populations that there is a robust military response, and that they’re retaliating for any actions”, he told Al Jazeera. But this tit-for-tat dynamic, Bell warned, risks becoming difficult to stop once it starts.

Why are countries reluctant to formally announce a war?

Following the adoption of the UN Charter in 1945, “no country claims ‘war’ or declares ‘war’ as, legally speaking, it is viewed as unlawful use of force”, Soofi told Al Jazeera.

Officially, being in a state of armed conflict triggers international legal obligations, such as following the rules of armed conflict and being accountable for war crimes.

In the latest India-Pakistan standoff, both sides portrayed the other as the aggressor, insisting it should be the one to de-escalate.

The absence of a formal, universally accepted definition of war means countries can engage in sustained military operations without ever officially declaring war. Ambiguity also allows governments to frame military actions in ways that suit their political or diplomatic goals.

Iran’s FM visits Saudi Arabia, Qatar before nuclear talks with US in Oman

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has visited Saudi Arabia and is due to visit Qatar for consultations in the run-up to the fourth round of indirect nuclear talks with the United States, which will take place in Oman on Sunday.

The future direction of Iran’s nuclear programme, its enrichment of uranium, and sanctions relief remain the key issues.

Araqhchi’s Gulf tour on Saturday comes after Tehran confirmed the latest round Friday: “The negotiations are moving forward, and naturally, the further we go, the more consultations and reviews are needed,” Araghchi said in remarks carried by Iranian state media.

Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Albusaidi said on Friday that, after “coordination with both Iran and the US”, the delayed talks would go ahead in Muscat. The fourth round, initially scheduled for May 3 in Rome, was postponed for what Oman described as “logistical reasons.”

A source familiar with the matter said on Friday that US President Donald Trump’s special envoy, Steve Witkoff, plans to attend the meeting in Oman.

Ongoing dispute over nuclear programme

The talks come against the backdrop of a long-running dispute over Iran’s nuclear ambitions. The meeting is the latest effort to revive diplomacy after years of rising tensions.

Successive US administrations have sought to prevent Iran from acquiring a nuclear weapon. A sustained effort by world powers during the Barack Obama administration culminated with a 2015 agreement called the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA).

The multilateral agreement created a framework for Iran to receive much-needed relief from international sanctions, in exchange for reducing its uranium enrichment and submitting to inspections of its nuclear facilities.

But when Trump succeeded Obama as US president, he unilaterally withdrew the US from the nuclear agreement in 2018, causing the deal to crumble.

Some Western countries argue that Iran’s programme, accelerated after the US walkout from the 2015 accord, is aimed at developing weapons. Tehran maintains that its nuclear activity is entirely civilian.

Trump himself has acknowledged tensions in his policy on Iran, saying at the start of his second term that hawkish advisors were pushing him to step up pressure reluctantly.

In an interview on Thursday, Trump said he wanted “total verification” that Iran’s contested nuclear work is shut down, but through diplomacy.

“I’d much rather make a deal” than see military action, Trump told the conservative radio talk show host Hugh Hewitt.

“There are only two alternatives – blow ’em up nicely or blow ’em up viciously,” Trump said.

In an interview with Breitbart News on Friday, Witkoff said the US would “take [Iran] at their word” that they do not want nuclear weapons, but set out specific conditions for verifying such a position.

“If that’s how they feel, then their enrichment facilities have to be dismantled. They cannot have centrifuges. They have to downblend all of their fuel that they have there and send it to a faraway place — and they have to convert to a civil programme if they want to run a civil programme,” he said.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio earlier raised the possibility of Iran importing enriched uranium for any civilian energy.

Iran’s Gulf outreach

Araqchi’s trips to Saudi Arabia and Qatar on Saturday are part of what he describes as “continuous consultations” with neighbouring states.

He said the visits aimed to address “concerns and mutual interests” regarding the nuclear issue.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei confirmed the presence of a technical delegation in the talks in Oman on Saturday.