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Bridal bucket is the best wedding gift

Bridal bucket is the best wedding gift

Yahoo26-05-2025

Re wedding lists (The toilet roll wedding list – is this the least romantic gift request ever?, 20 May), when my parents announced their engagement in 1951, one of my mother's sisters, then on a low wage, bought a bucket. Each week on payday, she added some household item to it – a scrubbing brush, a mop, a floor cloth, shoe polish and brushes, cleaning products. It was the most useful wedding gift they received, according to my mother. Cliodhna Dempsey Bereldange, Luxembourg
• 'We have created incentives to try to retain our most precious resource, which is our management team,' the chair of Thames Water is quoted as saying in your article (23 May). I would suggest their most precious resource is clean water. Their management is pretty inept if they don't realise people reckon their track record warrants no bonus. If anything, they should be paying fines for the leaks.Catherine DunnSt Andrews, Fife
• I wholeheartedly agree with Lucy Mangan in her defence of the semicolon (Digested week, 23 May); however, I note with regret that she has not seen fit to use this valuable punctuation mark in her column.Paul CopasBrentwood, Essex
• At school in the 1950s, we were told that, if in doubt, we should read a sentence aloud and if a pause sounded right with a count to one, a comma was required, two – a semicolon, and three – a colon. It seemed to work.Marilyn RowleyDidsbury, Manchester
• Stand by for balaclavas becoming ubiquitous fashion wear (Live facial recognition cameras may become 'commonplace' as police use soars, 24 May).Colin Prower Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire
• 'Artificial intelligence to play increasing role in armed forces, says defence secretary' (20 May). Could this be one small step on the road to the dystopia envisioned by the Terminator franchise?Tony RimmerLytham St Annes, Lancashire

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Goldbridge Raises Alarms Over Manchester United Transfer Planning
Goldbridge Raises Alarms Over Manchester United Transfer Planning

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Goldbridge Raises Alarms Over Manchester United Transfer Planning

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'I beat the horse racing odds and I'm now on track for £18m with my digital publishing firm'
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'I beat the horse racing odds and I'm now on track for £18m with my digital publishing firm'

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'I beat the horse racing odds and I'm now on track for £18m with my digital publishing firm'
'I beat the horse racing odds and I'm now on track for £18m with my digital publishing firm'

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'I beat the horse racing odds and I'm now on track for £18m with my digital publishing firm'

'I would have saved myself a lot of aggro had I not set it up in Manchester all those years ago,' Andrew Trotman says of his regular M62 commutes from Leeds to front one of the biggest social media publishers in the UK. 'But I don't regret it.' After launching a horse racing tips subscription service during his university days to creating some of the biggest sporting parody accounts on X, formerly Twitter, Trotman founded digital publisher Komi Group in 2016. Starting out as Facebook page It's Gone Viral (IGV), Komi Group builds, owns and operates over 40 creator brands on social media. While IGV has 11 million followers, reach across its brands totals more than 150 million and generates over 4 billion monthly views in total. Read More: We sold a hand cream every 36 seconds after appearing on This Morning With 125 staff based out of Manchester — less than a mile from fellow publishing giant LadBible — and set to grow headcount by another 25% this year, Komi Group's stock has risen after several years working on how to best deliver content and serve audiences. 'It was very exciting, the fact that we could go after the big players in the game and, for many years, stay really silent and actually build this business,' says Trotman. 'I love the idea you can be a bit of an underdog that suddenly people have got to take notice.' Growing up in Scotland, Trotman moved to Leeds aged 15 and attended Northumbria University to study business management and marketing. He didn't know anything about horse racing when he first set up his tipster service, but instead looked at ways to beat the odds with overvalued prices. 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Read More: The boss who has found 'nature's answer to plastic' The viral account reached its peak when Ibrahimovic was interviewed by Bleacher Report reading out some of the best tweets. Trotman never envisaged reaching the former Swedish star in such a way but understood the power of social media. He has taken diversification into the Komi Group, which now has over 100 different revenue sources and includes talent management and licensing arms. Social media stagnation is clearly not in Trotman's business outlook, with the rise of other in-house brands such as Ultimate, Go Fetch, Back to the Past and The Tradesman. With over 100,000 licensed clips, Trotman says the difference between his business against the more traditional spaces is an ability to leverage its expertise and identify content faster for a competitive edge. Komi uses its Insights platform to see when videos are doing better than average. A case in point is last year's viral video of an Amazon (AMZN) driver helping a mother with health conditions who had fainted after her six-year-old had asked for his help. Footage was captured on a Ring doorbell and the story went global. 'We were one of the first people to view this, we licensed the content and it went all over the news,' says Trotman. Amazon commissioned Komi Group to create a bigger story around the content which the retail giant then published across its social channels with record engagement. 'The way that brands use UGC (user-generated content) is still a massive untapped potential,' adds Trotman. The Manchester-based firm's average employee age is 28 and Trotman believes that putting staff and audience first is key to its success. 'The most important people in our business is where the value exchange happens and that is the creators and editors in our business,' he admits. 'We aren't top-down and we do everything the other way around. 'You'll regularly hear me and Sam [Lenehan, group managing director] say, 'We are the least important people in the business because we're the furthest away from the audience.' Read More: The Briton who invented Alexa is now helping to make AI trustworthy 'It's our job to make sure that we've got the right data, training and resources for those people so that we can serve our audiences.' Komi Group has raised over £10m from private equity firm BGF and, with 40% of its audience based in the US, is seeing 45% growth year-on-year. After revenues of £2m in 2021, Trotman says Komi Group is on track to double revenue to £18m for 2025. 'I'm a very inquisitive person, I love to ask questions, how things work and I hope that that never stops,' adds the 34-year-old. 'Being a young entrepreneur, I think it's very easy to get swept up in trying to pretend you're something that you're not. 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