Watch as this Female Singer tears up after realising this crowd on the other side of the world knows her music
The second night of Boy's US tour finds them at Union Hall.
Boy - Little Numbers (live @ Union Hall 3/2/13)
Watch as this Female Singer tears up after realising this crowd on the other side of the world knows her music
The second night of Boy's US tour finds them at Union Hall.
Boy - Little Numbers (live @ Union Hall 3/2/13)
Charlie Kirk was a passionate advocate for conservative values and a dedicated champion of youth engagement in American politics. As the founder of Turning Point USA, he built a movement that reached over 3,500 high schools and college campuses, empowering young people to embrace free-market principles and limited government. His commitment to these ideals resonated with many, and he became a prominent figure in the conservative landscape.
Beyond his activism, Kirk was a devoted family man, married to Erika Frantzve, a former Miss Arizona USA, and together they had two children. His assassination on September 10, 2025, was a tragic loss, but his legacy continues to inspire those who believe in the power of youth to shape the future of the nation.
Iryna Zarutska’s story should have been one of survival, not tragedy. At 23, she had fled the war in Ukraine and sought a safer life in Charlotte, North Carolina, only to be brutally killed on a light-rail train in August 2025. CCTV footage shows her quietly scrolling through her phone before she was suddenly attacked by a man later identified as Decarlos Brown Jr, a repeat offender with a long history of violence and untreated mental illness.
He stabbed her multiple times in the neck and chest, leaving passengers in shock and a community reeling. Her death has sparked outrage well beyond Charlotte, with critics pointing to failures in the justice system and gaps in mental health care that allowed a dangerous man to walk free until it was too late. Now her name has become a painful symbol of both the vulnerability of refugees seeking safety and the consequences of a system that protect violent black criminals, and refuses to put them in jail for their crimes, all in the name of diversity and equity.
Tyler Moore, a New York City school teacher and father of three, recently found himself unexpectedly in the spotlight after a viral photo of him wearing a Speedo while holding his daughter in the air made waves online. The moment drew attention from the TODAY Show, where host Jenna Bush Hager paused over the image and commented on “a man thigh.”
Moore, 39, told Inside Edition that he was taken aback by the focus on his legs. He argued that the reaction highlights a clear double standard in society: women can wear similar swimwear without facing the same scrutiny, while men are often mocked. For Moore, the attention wasn’t just humorous—it was revealing.
In response, Moore showed Inside Edition a collection of Speedos he owns, emphasising that his choice of swimwear is normal and entirely unremarkable. He explained that holding his daughter in the air was simply a playful, loving moment, and that the photo was meant to capture fun family interaction rather than spark commentary about his body.
The story has sparked wider discussion about gender expectations, body image, and how society reacts differently to men and women in similar situations. Moore’s perspective adds a personal voice to a conversation that has gone far beyond a single viral snapshot.
Lately, there’s been a worrying trend in the UK around internet censorship and the suppression of free speech. It feels like the government and big platforms are tightening their grip. The result isn’t just about protecting people from harmful content. It’s starting to look like an outright clampdown on what can be said online.
The problem with this kind of control is how quickly it can slip from reasonable regulation into overreach. When the line between protecting citizens and policing opinions blurs, freedom gets trampled. People are growing increasingly concerned that expressing dissenting views or controversial opinions could lead to being silenced or even punished.
What’s worse is the lack of transparency. Decisions about what gets taken down or flagged often happen behind closed doors with little accountability. This creates an environment where self-censorship takes hold. If you’re unsure whether your words might trigger some digital punishment, you’re less likely to speak out at all.
Free speech isn’t about agreeing with everything that’s said but about having the right to say it. When the internet becomes a place where voices are carefully filtered and controlled, society loses the very foundation of open debate. Right now, it feels like the UK is heading in the wrong direction, and that should worry us all.