Latest news with #AdrianChiles


The Guardian
a day ago
- The Guardian
Why MI6 chief is C and uses green ink
Your report (Blaise Metreweli named as first woman to lead UK intelligence service MI6, 15 June) said 'the head of MI6 is known internally as C – short for chief'. C is not short for chief. The first head of MI6 was Sir Mansfield Cumming, who always signed his letters 'C' in green ink. It has been a tradition since to call the head of service C and for them to use green HollesLeeds One Christmas our son bought my husband a Donald Trump lavatory brush. Although it's not official merchandise (Why is there a Maga-branded Instant Pot? Because capitalism never sleeps, 18 June), over the years it has given us immense satisfaction plunging the orange head into the depths in order to Make the Bowl Great EdwardsGrange-over-Sands, Cumbria When our children were young and their dad had decided to shave off his moustache (Adrian Chiles, 18 June), he'd shave off half and see how long it took them to EvansRuthin, Denbighshire Gifting gifts (Letters, 16 June) becomes less of a problem and more worthy of thought if you recall that Gift is the German word for SmithBerlin, Germany I've always been given GodaLiverpool 'Swap in/swap out' rather than 'swap'. 'Hacks' in place of 'tips'. And radio interviewees starting with: 'Thank you for having me.'Janet FraserTwickenham, London Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.


The Guardian
4 days ago
- General
- The Guardian
A sweet moment for refugee schoolchildren
Re Adrian Chiles' article (Who could deny a hot, tired delivery driver the fruit from their cherry tree?, 12 June), as a teacher in west London in the 90s and noughties, I taught numerous recently arrived refugee children. Among these were Kosovans and Albanians, many unaccompanied. Everything was strange for them. Outside our tech block stood three tall morello cherry trees whose fruit generally lay squashed, staining the concrete with their juice. That all changed with the Kosovans. As the fruit ripened, they climbed and harvested the treasure, later coming to lesson with stained shirts and faces. It was a delight to see them happily in their SokoloffLondon I didn't know whether to laugh or cry at the idea that traybakes are 'a 'queering' of the meat-and-two-veg sit-down dinners associated with the traditional heterosexual British family unit' (My unexpected Pride icon: The Green Roasting Tin, a cookbook no lesbian vegetarian can be without, 12 June). So many assumptions to unpack there, but every sentence including the word 'lesbian' could be rewritten to refer to 'women', 'men' or just 'people who like food'.Janet FraserTwickenham, London Re your report (Ever-rising height of car bonnets a 'clear threat' to children, report says, 11 June), if councils charged owners of these vehicles more for parking and road use, it might force a bit of a rethink by the likes of Land Rover that produce these ever larger AllanTrustee, Solve the School Run It sounds strange to be now gifted a gift rather than having a gift given (Letters, 15 June)Jen FittonSharow, North Yorkshire Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.


The Guardian
5 days ago
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
At a festival, are you Elinor or Marianne?
Your articles presented two entertaining but very different approaches to kitting yourself out for a music festival ('A godsend at 5am', 12 June; Field the love, 13 June). One was all boots and head torches, the other pretty dresses and earrings. How appropriate, in this Jane Austen anniversary year, to see the contrasting demands of Sense and Sensibility so clearly set RooksLeicester Adrian Chiles' piece (Who could deny a hot, tired delivery driver the fruit from their cherry tree?, 12 June) reminded me of a tree we had at the front edge of our garden by the pavement. When its luscious red fruits were ripe, we'd often see someone pluck a handful, only to spit them out a moment later. They were crab MacintoshBurley-in-Wharfedale I'm still trying to get my head round 'a nuclear-capable canon' (Trump's military parade taps an ancient tradition of power: from Mesopotamia to Maga, 14 June). Presumably, such a cleric would, in addition to administering cathedral affairs, be able to bring forward the date of HearnLondon 'If finding 18 words in Word Wheel … is 'genius' level, what does the 46 words I found make me?' (Letters, 13 June). A big showoff!Margaret CoupeLongnor When did we start having to listen up as opposed to listen (Letters, 13 June)? And don't get me started on skyrocketing! Surely rocketing would suffice?!Sue BeaumontBedford Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.


The Guardian
11-06-2025
- Politics
- The Guardian
Donald Trump is the lord of the edgelords
Adrian Chiles (Opinion, 4 June) has just discovered the word edgelord – a term that was new to me too – and now he sees it everywhere. He's not wrong: it's rife on social media, in podcasts and in YouTube comments. But how did he overlook the edgelord-in-chief himself? Donald Trump is the archetypal edgelord: endlessly provocative, chronically online, allergic to truth and addicted to the attention his outrage generates. He didn't just dabble in edgelordery for clicks – he built his own social media megaphone to broadcast it. It's as if Truth Social had been handed the nuclear codes. Chiles writes about edgelords with bemused detachment. But Trump shows what happens when trolling becomes statecraft, and moral vacuity masquerades as 'telling it like it is'. This isn't just an online persona – it's a governing style with global consequences. Next time Adrian spots an edgelord, he might glance across the Atlantic and realise that we're all still living with the LawtonChurch Langton, Leicestershire Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.


Daily Mirror
09-06-2025
- Business
- Daily Mirror
Martin Lewis explains new ISA rule change for anyone with more than one account
Martin Lewis has explained how a change in the rules now means savers can take out several different cash ISAs or stocks and shares ISAs within the same tax year Money Saving Expert Martin Lewis has offered crucial guidance for individuals with more than one Cash ISA, in light of a recent change in government regulations. On the latest episode of The Martin Lewis podcast, the founder of MSE clarified to his listeners and co-host Adrian Chiles how Cash ISA rules now operate following a fiscal rule alteration in 2024. Previously, a long-standing rule restricted people to only one Cash ISA or Stocks and Shares ISA per year, but this has now been scrapped. This means savers can now utilise several different Cash ISAs and Stocks and Shares ISAs, including fixed-rate and easy access, all within the same tax year. During the July 5 episode of The Martin Lewis Podcast on BBC Sounds and Spotify, Martin Lewis explained: "Ever since ISAs were set up, there's been a limit on the amount of money you can have in, and you've been able to open a Cash ISA and a Stocks and Shares ISA in the same year. "But you've only been able to open one of each type. But, from April 6 2024, the rules were changed, and the restriction on subscribing to one ISA of each type, in a year, was removed. "You may now open as many different ISAs of one type, for example a Cash ISA, you can have a fix, and you can have two different Cash ISAs, all of which you've opened and put money into, within one tax year." There are whispers that changes to Cash ISAs could be imminent, after the government declined to dismiss a potential reduction to the limits in the future, reports the Express. Currently, savers can stash up to £20,000 into Cash ISAs within a single tax year, across various accounts. However, there's buzz that the government might slash this limit to as little as £4,000, potentially from 2026. This move could, insiders claim, nudge more Brits towards investing rather than hoarding cash in ISAs, with stocks and shares ISAs reportedly not facing the same cuts. Earlier in the year, money guru Martin weighed in on the potential changes, remarking: "The concept behind it is that it'd encourage people to put the money in shares ISAs instead (personally, I'm sceptical if it'd work - many will just keep saving but pay more tax). "Of course, everything is pure supposition - I doubt any firm decision has been made yet. But if it happens as rumoured, it WOULDN'T impact money already in cash ISAs, it'd just cut what you can put in, in future. "Whether it'd start immediately, or in January or April 2026, no one knows (including at this point, I suspect, Rachel Reeves). Yet if you plan to save in a cash ISA, all of this would suggest getting it in sooner would seem safer."