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Elio is Pixar's best, most beautifully brilliant movie in a decade. Too bad it will probably bomb

time18 hours ago

  • Entertainment

Elio is Pixar's best, most beautifully brilliant movie in a decade. Too bad it will probably bomb

As a film, Elio is gorgeous. In short, it's a somehow equal parts miraculous and original wonder — so good it feels a bit out of place among a summer of adaptations, remakes, sequels and remakes of adaptations of sequels. Perhaps not that last one. But it is hard to ignore the benefits of Elio : Pixar's animation style (which seemed stuck in a perpetual state of diminishing Toy Story returns) has never looked more fluidly beautiful — especially when used to create a tapestry of glittering nebulae and spaceships. Its characters come to life with originality and heart — none more so than its heart-breakingly damaged namesake, 11-year-old Elio Solis, a space-obsessed child trying his very best to provoke an alien abduction rather than running from one. Brushing past some of its almost too kidd-ish qualities, Elio achieves almost shocking levels of originality, beauty and terrifying tragedy that do more than earn it the title of modern classic. That said, it's probably going to bomb. There are more than a few reasons why that's the case for Pixar's latest release, and buckle up, because it all comes quickly. We're introduced to the movie's heroic, pint-sized namesake with the narrative equivalent of a sledgehammer to the skull. Elio is a silent, terrified child hiding under a restaurant table, worrying the laces of oversized shoes as he tries to spontaneously phase out of existence rather than acknowledge his aunt's futile attempts to coax him back to his chair. It's a lost cause though. We soon learn that Elio (Yonas Kibreab) has just been orphaned, and his aunt Olga (Zoe Saldaña) is the unfortunate, too-young-for-this stopgap, burdened with unwanted parenthood she doesn't have the life skills to handle — especially while juggling her job as a major in the U.S. Air Force, overseeing an array of telescopes scanning the skies for space debris. But Elio's no slouch. As he wanders off into the base, he's more than aware he's the one thing a child fears most — the primal, instinctive fear that eventually evolves into the scattershot assortment of neuroses we call a personality: being unwanted. And as he stumbles into a conveniently-placed exhibit on Voyager 1 — the 1977 probe (new window) launched with a golden record, information about life on Earth and hopeful greetings for alien species — we suddenly get the animated equivalent of Citizen Kane 's Rosebud. Lying on his back, gazing slack-jawed at a glittering star-show about humanity's search for friendly intelligence in the lonely and infinite cosmos while a single tear pools on his cheek, he understands: if no one wants him on this planet, he'll go looking for one that does want him. Elio's brilliant animation feels like a step forward for Pixar, despite maintaining the CGI style the studio has been known for since 1995's Toy Story. (Disney/Pixar) Photo: (Disney/Pixar) But it also does more. This latest offering from Pixar has finally arrived in theatres after a year-long delay and a wildly shifting strategy, possibly resulting from its fraught behind-the-scenes trajectory. The result is a disparate, possibly alienating tonal melange of a UFO movie — somehow even more disorganized than that congressional hearing on UFOs (new window) we are all somehow fine with having happened. For example: Jokes, storylines and even its sometimes stilted, always hand-holdy plot beats ring of a grade-school reading level — perhaps even more childish than Pixar's increasingly tween-focused fare. But that's at cross-purposes with Canadian co-director Domee Shi's sci-fi/horror allusions (new window) that, though geared toward a younger audience, still manage to make grown-ups shiver. How one scene depicting a disintegrating clone — almost directly lifted from Rick & Morty 's horrifying "melting clone babies" (new window) moment — will manage not to inspire a juvenile nightmare epidemic is a mystery for the ages. Delays, rewrites To be fair, these moments are infrequent; a scriptwriting vestigial limb of what was likely a whiplash-inducing envelope push for Pixar. Given that the once dominant-studio's last big non-sequel success was 2017's Coco , it makes sense that they'd be swinging for the fences while trying to recapture the cultural zeitgeist with Elio , at least with the initial version. Speaking to The Wrap (new window) , Pixar chief Pete Docter claimed Elio 's delay from last year was due largely to the SAG-AFTRA strike, but behind-the-scenes changes saw the departure of much of the creative team (new window) , ushering in replacements Shee and co-director Madeline Sharafian. That shift means the story is sometimes at odds with itself, and elsewhere obviously fractured and awkwardly reassembled. The final version of the film has been so fundamentally altered that virtually every moment from its original trailer was purged — including one of the riskiest, genre-pushing, jokes: I'm trying to get abducted, Elio says (new window) , before quickly clarifying: "By aliens!" But even after the loss of some of the more risque asides, there's a seriously mature plot under the surface, one that reflects Disney's wonderfully inventive, surprisingly unsuccessful (new window) 2007 time-travel comedy Meet the Robinsons. In that movie, there's a scene in which one character gives a singular reason for his relentless villainy. In a flashback, we see a rage-filled, pint-sized orphan with bags under his eyes, skulking through a middle school hallway. Other children smile and wave as he passes and enthusiastically ask if he'd like to hang out after class while complimenting his cool, flowery-pink unicorn binder. They all hated me, he narrates. In Elio , our hero's Meet the Robinsons -esque trauma-borne impulse to wall himself off from love or intimacy adds the last ingredient to this frankly bizarre hodgepodge: devastating tragedy. While it's maybe a little subtextual for the toddlers, anyone who's heard the phrase male loneliness epidemic will see the beginnings of mental health issues that too often morph into isolation, depression and rage. Few children's movies have grappled with this before — let alone while vesting it in such a crushingly sad character arc. The hardest thing about watching Elio becomes keeping yourself from jumping through the screen to protect him at all costs. And there's also another complicating plot conceit: a 1985 interview with astronomer Carl Sagan (new window) , initially about space exploration and his book Contact . The search for life elsewhere is remarkable in our age, because this is the first time that we can actually do something besides speculation, we hear Sagan's sage voice intone. It touches to the deepest of human concerns: Are we alone? This is quickly reinterpreted through Elio 's more Earth-bound theme, as the voiceover tellingly bookends his flailings toward and away from love and acceptance, both from the aliens and Olga. In short, it's a lot. The movie's originality is something to be marvelled at. Unfortunately, like Meet the Robinsons , it's probably too original and too divisive to find a massive audience. A polarizing study in loneliness that, unlike the intentionally tame and wildly successful Lilo & Stitch remake (new window) , is anything but conventional, Elio is a joyous, tragic, miracle of creativity. What's most sad is how unlikely it is to be rewarded for that. Jackson Weaver (new window) · CBC News

Voyager hits a 'Wall of Fire': NASA probe finds a furnace at the edge of the solar system
Voyager hits a 'Wall of Fire': NASA probe finds a furnace at the edge of the solar system

Economic Times

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • Economic Times

Voyager hits a 'Wall of Fire': NASA probe finds a furnace at the edge of the solar system

Voyager 1 has detected a shell of superheated plasma far beyond Pluto—offering a direct look at where the Sun's influence ends and interstellar space begins. From nearly 24 billion kilometres away, NASA's ageing Voyager 1 has sent back a signal confirming one of the most extreme discoveries yet: a narrow region near the heliopause where plasma has been heated to an astonishing 30,000 to 50,000 Kelvin. This marks the latest in a string of insights from the 48-year-old spacecraft. The heliopause, which defines the outer edge of the Sun's protective bubble known as the heliosphere, is where solar wind slams into material from interstellar space. It's not a wall in the traditional sense—but data show a sharp, localised zone of extreme discovery began with a spike in temperature data—despite the fact that Voyager 1's original plasma detector had failed years two other instruments still running—one monitoring cosmic ray hits, the other measuring the local magnetic field—spotted the clues. Solar wind ions dropped sharply. Meanwhile, cosmic ray counts surged and the magnetic field began to bend. That's when scientists realised what they were seeing. Researchers processed the data and saw evidence of a hot plasma shell, possibly just 1 astronomical unit thick. Hours later, Voyager 2—following its own path—picked up the same pattern, confirming the phenomenon wasn't a fluke.'It's a narrow, searing frontier,' said NASA Heliophysics scientists. And the spacecraft sailed right through no flame out there. No oxygen to feed one. But the searing temperature comes from the collision of the supersonic solar wind crashes into the slower-moving interstellar medium, magnetic turbulence and compression force particles into a higher energy state. That's where the heat comes from—particles zipping around at extreme speeds in a vacuum barely dense enough to warm short: it's a cosmic blast furnace, but with so little matter that Voyager's hull doesn't heat up.'She's been driving for five decades and just found the hottest rest stop in the universe,' quipped Suzanne Dodd, Voyager's flight director, after the data appeared on her Pasadena of the biggest surprises wasn't the heat—but the alignment of magnetic expected the magnetic field outside the heliopause to change direction entirely. But both Voyager probes have found that the magnetic field beyond the boundary runs almost parallel to the one within the heliosphere. NASA explained: 'An observation by Voyager 2's magnetic field instrument confirms a surprising result from Voyager 1: The magnetic field in the region just beyond the heliopause is parallel to the magnetic field inside the heliosphere.' That's upended existing models of the Sun's protective bubble. It suggests the heliosphere may be more closely connected to the galaxy's magnetic environment than previously assumed—and that our cosmic shielding from high-energy radiation might work in ways still not fully has important implications for protecting Earth and for long-duration human engineers remain in awe that Voyager 1 still data trickles in at just 160 bits per second. It takes 22 hours for a single message to arrive back at Earth's Deep Space Network.'That silence after you send a command is the longest coffee break imaginable,' said Todd Barber, Voyager systems ageing plutonium battery can now only support a few instruments. But NASA has juggled power usage carefully to keep the most valuable sensors running. Even at 48 years old, the probe continues to report back from the is already planning the next step. In 2026, the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) will launch to observe the heliopause from within. It aims to capture the same plasma flows that Voyager just measured, but with modern instruments and clearer further ahead is a proposed Interstellar Probe mission, designed to reach 400 AU in 50 years. Its goal? Map this fiery region—this 'invisible wall of fire'—in unprecedented of this future planning leans on Voyager's current 1 crossed into interstellar space on 25 August 2012. Its twin, Voyager 2, followed in 2018. But even now, these machines keep pushing the boundaries of what humanity knows about the edge of its own solar findings aren't just scientific curiosities. They help shape real-world plans to shield astronauts from cosmic radiation and inform how Earth's magnetic defences another dozen years, the last of Voyager 1's instruments may fall silent. But its final contribution—a message from the solar system's burning edge—might be its most now, it's still out there. Floating. Listening. Sending home the secrets of the stars.

The Golden Records tell the story of Earth. Will alien worlds ever find them?
The Golden Records tell the story of Earth. Will alien worlds ever find them?

National Geographic

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • National Geographic

The Golden Records tell the story of Earth. Will alien worlds ever find them?

In 1977, NASA launched two 12-inch gold-plated copper disks filled with the sounds of children's laughter, heartbeats, and bird calls. Is their time in space running out? The Golden Record carried by Voyager 1 and 2. Photographs of Jupiter by Voyager 1 on March 24, 1979 and Uranus by Voyager 2 on January 24, 1986. Photo Illustration by Jesse Barber, National Geographic; Image Sources from Nat Geo Image Collection, NASA/JPL In 1977, NASA launched Voyagers 1 and 2 from Cape Canaveral, Florida into space to embark on a grand tour of the far reaches of our solar system. Mounted on board each probe was a 12-inch gold-plated copper disk—a cosmic 'message in a bottle' engraved with sights, sounds, and depictions of life on Earth, collectively known as the Golden Records—on the slim chance some far-off alien civilization might discover them. And in Disney and Pixar's animated film Elio, in theaters June 20, that's exactly what happens when main character Elio encounters aliens who believe he is Earth's leader. 'It's meant to be a sort of a letter of introduction to any culture who might find the probe,' says Bethany Ehlmann, a planetary scientist at the California Institute of Technology and a 2013 National Geographic Emerging Explorer, of the real-life Golden Records. Though these gilded greetings were partly intended for an alien audience, they mostly served as a message to humans and our tiny blue marble planet. 'It's a love letter to Earth and all that we have come through to get to the point where we could send these probes to understand our solar system.' But where are the Golden Records now—and how much longer are they intended to last in space? We spoke to the experts, including Ehlmann, to find out. When tasked with figuring out what to include in the intergalactic mixtape aboard the Voyager probes, renowned astronomer Carl Sagan assembled a team of scientists, artists, and engineers. For a true depiction of life on Earth aboard humankind's most distant physical emissary, the team included a variety of sounds associated with daily life and nature, like bird calls, humpback whale songs, children's laughter, footsteps, heartbeats, brain wave scans, and a kiss. There are also 90 minutes of music contained on the disk, including Western classical compositions from Mozart, Bach, Beethoven, and Stravinsky, Senegalese percussion music, Australian Aboriginal songs, and Chuck Berry's 'Johnny B. Goode.' (The close of cosmos, and golden voices in the stars.) The carefully thought-out record, designed to endure space travel for billions of years, also consists of spoken greetings in 55 modern and ancient languages, as well as 115 analog-encoded photographs of Earth and its inhabitants. Engraved on the cover of these records is a map to help find one's way to Earth relative to nearby known, flashing, dense cores of stars called pulsars. There are etched diagrams of a hydrogen atom—the most common element in the universe—and instructions for playing each record. Each disk is enclosed in a protective, gold-plated aluminum jacket, together with a cartridge and a needle to play it. "The spacecraft will be encountered and the record played only if there are advanced space-faring civilizations in interstellar space," Sagan, leader of the Voyager Golden Record project, wrote. "But the launching of this 'bottle' into the cosmic 'ocean' says something very hopeful about life on this planet." (Dear Voyagers: How your billion-year journey carries true love.) A far-out cosmic road trip Over the years, the Voyager probes flew by the solar system's most distant four planets at a rate of 35,000 miles per hour, sending back detailed views of Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and their moons. Voyager 2 flying by Uranus and Neptune is the only time humanity has seen these worlds up close. After completing their primary missions to collectively fly by all four outer planets in 1989, the twin probes kept chugging along through the vast outer reaches of the solar system. Voyager 1 and 2 exited the solar system and entered interstellar space in 2012 and 2018, respectively. At more than 15 billion miles from Earth, Voyager 1 has become the most distant human-made object in space. Voyager 2, in second place, is now about 13 billion miles away. The interstellar environment they're in contains a stew of cosmic gas, dust, and rays. The twin Voyager probes are equipped with radiation-resistant parts, but the onslaught of charged particles in their current neck of the woods still pose a threat to their aging electronics. Both Voyager spacecrafts are still collecting and sending back data, updating humans on their intergalactic adventures, albeit slowly—it takes nearly 20 hours for these signals to reach Earth, given the immense distance they need to travel. We're now reaching the end of the Voyager missions, as the twin probes' plutonium power supplies are running out of juice. The Voyager team is attempting to extend their lifetime for as long as they can by shutting down non-essential instruments like heaters to conserve power. 'More than 47 years into the mission, there's very little power left,' says Suzanne "Suzy" Dodd, the current project manager for the Voyager missions. 'The goal of the mission is to get it to 50 years.' Even after the probe's science mission ends, though, the Golden Records will keep quietly drifting further and further into the cosmic abyss, likely for millions and even billions of years.'Long after we've lost communications with the spacecraft, it'll still be traveling with this record—a time capsule,' Dodd says. She remarks that it's exciting 'to think about a little piece of us, a little piece of what Earth and humanity is all about, traveling around the center of our galaxy to be found by whatever being might be out there.' But, as Dodd points out, there are enormous physical and chronological distances involved. It's going to take around 40,000 years for the probes to drift into the vicinity of any other star system, when Voyager 1 will pass within 1.6 light-years of the star Gliese 445. Around the same time, Voyager 2 will be within 1.7 light-years of the star Ross 248. The legacy of the Golden Records The Golden Records have left a huge cosmic impact. According to Ehlmann, most spacecrafts that followed the Voyager mission included some sort of message from our Earthly abode. 'People sometimes think of science as a cold and calculating endeavor, but really it's the expression of curiosity and awe,' she says. 'It's an ability to leave your mark in the universe.' And almost fifty years after they first took flight, our pair of plucky robot emissaries to the stars continues embarking on the deepest journey ever into space. 'Who knows? The Voyager probes, a million years from now, may end up in some alien museum,' Ehlmann says. 'It's exciting to imagine.' Disney and Pixar's "Elio" is in theaters June 20, 2025. Get tickets now.

Voyager hits a 'Wall of Fire': NASA probe finds a furnace at the edge of the solar system
Voyager hits a 'Wall of Fire': NASA probe finds a furnace at the edge of the solar system

Time of India

time2 days ago

  • Science
  • Time of India

Voyager hits a 'Wall of Fire': NASA probe finds a furnace at the edge of the solar system

Voyager 1 has detected a shell of superheated plasma far beyond Pluto—offering a direct look at where the Sun's influence ends and interstellar space begins. From nearly 24 billion kilometres away, NASA 's ageing Voyager 1 has sent back a signal confirming one of the most extreme discoveries yet: a narrow region near the heliopause where plasma has been heated to an astonishing 30,000 to 50,000 Kelvin. This marks the latest in a string of insights from the 48-year-old spacecraft. The heliopause, which defines the outer edge of the Sun's protective bubble known as the heliosphere, is where solar wind slams into material from interstellar space. It's not a wall in the traditional sense—but data show a sharp, localised zone of extreme temperatures. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like How Much Does It Cost to Rent a Private Jet - The Prices May Surprise You! Private Jet I Search Ads Learn More Undo An unexpected blaze in the cosmic borderlands The discovery began with a spike in temperature data—despite the fact that Voyager 1's original plasma detector had failed years ago. Instead, two other instruments still running—one monitoring cosmic ray hits, the other measuring the local magnetic field—spotted the clues. Solar wind ions dropped sharply. Meanwhile, cosmic ray counts surged and the magnetic field began to bend. That's when scientists realised what they were seeing. Live Events Researchers processed the data and saw evidence of a hot plasma shell, possibly just 1 astronomical unit thick. Hours later, Voyager 2—following its own path—picked up the same pattern, confirming the phenomenon wasn't a fluke. 'It's a narrow, searing frontier,' said NASA Heliophysics scientists. And the spacecraft sailed right through it. What fuels a fire where nothing burns? There's no flame out there. No oxygen to feed one. But the searing temperature comes from the collision of forces. As the supersonic solar wind crashes into the slower-moving interstellar medium, magnetic turbulence and compression force particles into a higher energy state. That's where the heat comes from—particles zipping around at extreme speeds in a vacuum barely dense enough to warm aluminium. In short: it's a cosmic blast furnace, but with so little matter that Voyager's hull doesn't heat up. 'She's been driving for five decades and just found the hottest rest stop in the universe,' quipped Suzanne Dodd, Voyager's flight director, after the data appeared on her Pasadena monitor. A magnetic surprise beyond the Sun's reach One of the biggest surprises wasn't the heat—but the alignment of magnetic fields . Scientists expected the magnetic field outside the heliopause to change direction entirely. But both Voyager probes have found that the magnetic field beyond the boundary runs almost parallel to the one within the heliosphere. NASA explained: 'An observation by Voyager 2 's magnetic field instrument confirms a surprising result from Voyager 1: The magnetic field in the region just beyond the heliopause is parallel to the magnetic field inside the heliosphere.' That's upended existing models of the Sun's protective bubble. It suggests the heliosphere may be more closely connected to the galaxy's magnetic environment than previously assumed—and that our cosmic shielding from high-energy radiation might work in ways still not fully understood. This has important implications for protecting Earth and for long-duration human spaceflight. The hottest postcard in Space NASA's engineers remain in awe that Voyager 1 still works. The data trickles in at just 160 bits per second. It takes 22 hours for a single message to arrive back at Earth's Deep Space Network. 'That silence after you send a command is the longest coffee break imaginable,' said Todd Barber, Voyager systems engineer. Voyager's ageing plutonium battery can now only support a few instruments. But NASA has juggled power usage carefully to keep the most valuable sensors running. Even at 48 years old, the probe continues to report back from the unknown. Next up: Mapping the edge in high definition NASA is already planning the next step. In 2026, the Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe (IMAP) will launch to observe the heliopause from within. It aims to capture the same plasma flows that Voyager just measured, but with modern instruments and clearer resolution. Even further ahead is a proposed Interstellar Probe mission, designed to reach 400 AU in 50 years. Its goal? Map this fiery region—this 'invisible wall of fire'—in unprecedented detail. All of this future planning leans on Voyager's current discoveries. Voyager 1 crossed into interstellar space on 25 August 2012. Its twin, Voyager 2, followed in 2018. But even now, these machines keep pushing the boundaries of what humanity knows about the edge of its own solar neighbourhood. Their findings aren't just scientific curiosities. They help shape real-world plans to shield astronauts from cosmic radiation and inform how Earth's magnetic defences operate. In another dozen years, the last of Voyager 1's instruments may fall silent. But its final contribution—a message from the solar system's burning edge—might be its most important. For now, it's still out there. Floating. Listening. Sending home the secrets of the stars.

‘Elio': Pixar's Latest Animation About A Boy In Outer Space Is Surprisingly Grounded [Review]
‘Elio': Pixar's Latest Animation About A Boy In Outer Space Is Surprisingly Grounded [Review]

Rakyat Post

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Rakyat Post

‘Elio': Pixar's Latest Animation About A Boy In Outer Space Is Surprisingly Grounded [Review]

Subscribe to our FREE Alienation is not an alien concept to most of us. It's a feeling that almost everyone has experienced in their lives – that sense of not belonging, not being accepted, or not feeling understood. © Pixar. For little Elio, this feeling of alienation started early on in his life – and in the movie – as we're first introduced to him grieving the loss of both his parents, crouching underneath the corner of a table, clutching two astronaut figures. I appreciated how we're immediately given a sense of who Elio is from the moment we meet him. This hook made it easy for me to not just understand, but empathise with him – and then continue to experience all the emotions he goes on to feel throughout the film. Not just for Elio, though, but the film wastes no time unravelling plot and characters. © Pixar. Elio 's pacing is great. It's a tightly woven, original story that felt like a breath of fresh air amidst all the remakes, sequels, and spin-offs. Set in the present day, Elio follows the story of a young boy grappling with overwhelming grief after the loss of his parents. Now living on a military base under the care of his aunt Olga – an organised, no-nonsense officer voiced by Zoe Saldaña – Elio (voiced by Yonas Kibreab) struggles to connect with the world around him. Olga, despite her best efforts, finds herself emotionally out of depth, unsure how to reach the withdrawn child in her care. Things begin to shift during a visit to a space exploration museum. © Pixar. Elio is captivated by a display about NASA's Voyager 1 probe, which famously launched in 1977 carrying a message of peace to the stars. Inspired and desperate for connection, Elio begins broadcasting heartfelt messages to the cosmos, hoping some alien life might hear him – because, in his mind, no one on Earth seems to care. A strange twist of fate sees his signals answered. Aliens make contact and Elio hastily sends a message back, ending it with an 'OK bye love you!' without an ounce of shame. © Pixar. Oh, to be a child with zero inhibitions. Mistaken for Earth's representative, Elio is whisked away by the Communiverse, a diplomatic, intergalactic council. © Pixar. There, he's tasked with mediating a tense situation involving Lord Grigon, a domineering alien leader (voiced by Brad Garrett) bent on conquest. But instead of finding conflict, Elio meets Glordon (Remy Edgerly), Grigon's quiet, misunderstood son. © Pixar. Yet while Elio and Glordon's friendship brings moments of lightness and wonder, the real emotional core lies in Elio's evolving relationship with Olga. What begins as a strained connection – driven by pain, miscommunication, and Elio's desire to escape – slowly transforms. Their journey is messy, heartfelt, and ultimately hopeful, grounding the film in something real and deeply human. Elio surprises at times, veering into directions that feel unexpected but emotionally rewarding. © Pixar. It also surprised me how scary some scenes were, complete with signature horror-movie-aesthetics like jarring music and unsettling shadowy figures in the dark. I did wonder if it would be too much for kids, but kids these days could do a lot worse just by scrolling through YouTube shorts. © Pixar. Plus, animation is one of the best ways to communicate heavy topics, both to kids and adults. Movies like Monsters Inc. or The Simpsons are examples, and Elio does really well to offer us a story about loss, love, and the quiet courage it takes to let someone in again. If you still haven't done anything for Father's Day yet, Elio is surprisingly a great pick to watch with Dad. Grigon and Glordon's father-son relationship is a fitting reminder of what family's all about – even aliens don't want to be alienated. Elio will play in cinemas nationwide from 19 June 2025. Share your thoughts with us via TRP's . Get more stories like this to your inbox by signing up for our newsletter.

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