A conservation group says the pod's move inland is concerning.
from BBC News https://ift.tt/XBuLNsC
الخميس، 27 مارس 2025
Watch: Pod of dolphins spotted in Suffolk river https://ift.tt/XBuLNsC A conservation group says the pod's move inland is concerning. https://ift.tt/FaUAi4l March 27, 2025 at 12:26PM
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My Brain: After the Rupture review – a fierce mantra for us all to live by https://ift.tt/0FtSB4O Rachel Aroesti
High-flying broadcaster Clemency Burton-Hill was robbed of basic abilities after a brain haemorrhage. This film about her recovery is brutal, raw – and full of gut-wrenching moments that have nothing to do with the injury
The first time we encounter the writer and presenter Clemency Burton-Hill in this Arena documentary, she is in full, fluent, broadcasterly flow, promoting her new book on classical music, Year of Wonder. The next time we see her, she is struggling to spell her own name. The former clip is from 2017, the latter while Burton-Hill was recovering from the brain haemorrhage she suffered in January 2020 at 38 years old.
My Brain: After the Rupture covers the two years after Burton-Hill’s brain injury. She begins recording herself in her hospital bed, having clearly grasped the journalistic potential of documenting such a life-altering event. She tries to speak, but much of what she says is incomprehensible: she can remember most words, but has lost the ability to actually say them. Her terror and despair, however, is crystal clear. “I don’t know that this is going to be OK,” she eventually manages to utter, her voice wavering violently.
Continue reading... https://ift.tt/Srf2eMo March 29, 2025 at 12:25AM
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Brianna: A Mother’s Story review – surely this exploitative documentary should not have been made https://ift.tt/nwAvzCB Lucy Mangan
Esther Ghey’s grief for her murdered daughter is so raw that her participation here is agony to watch. Sadly, the important thing in TV is to be first
It is possible to make a cynical piece of television without anyone who appears on screen having a drop of toxicity in their veins. Documentaries with subjects ripped from the headlines are particularly likely candidates; documentaries centring the recently, appallingly bereaved even more so.
We turn, then, to Brianna: A Mother’s Story. Brianna is Brianna Ghey, the 16-year-old who in 2023 was murdered in a premeditated attack by two 15-year‑olds – Scarlett Jenkinson, whom Brianna considered a friend, and Jenkinson’s friend (if that is the correct word for what seems more accurately to have been a murderous partnership between two disturbed individuals) Eddie Ratcliffe. They lured Brianna to a park, then stabbed her 28 times. Det Supt Adam Waller of Cheshire police says he still wrestles with “the level of depravity” on display in the attack. Brianna’s friends, still in their teens, remember that “she was kind, funny, could always make you feel better” and how “she brought me comfort”. They share videos full of giddy, youthful energy and laughter.
Continue reading... https://ift.tt/oAiXcB3 March 28, 2025 at 12:20AM
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