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DAVID BECKHAM has joined an exclusive club after becoming the latest British football star to receive a knighthood.
Golden Balls will officially arise as Sir Becks after SunSport exclusively revealed he will be knighted in the King’s Birthday Honours next week.
Beckham, 50, has long yearned for a knighthood after his services to the beautiful game.
And Spice Girl wife Victoria will benefit by becoming Lady Beckham.
Former Manchester United star Becks, who played 115 times for England and has made major contributions to charity, has struck up a firm friendship with King Charles.
He will now join an exclusive group of other British football personalities to receive royal knighthoods.
But just 16 names are already on the list.
The first was Sir Charles Clegg, who received his award in 1927 after both playing for England and later serving as chairman and president of the FA.
He was followed by Sir Stanley Rous in 1949, a former referee who was also the sixth president of FIFA.
England legend Sir Stanley Matthews next received one in 1965 while still being an active player, having become the first person to win the European Footballer of the Year award.
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World Cup-winning manager Sir Alf Ramsey then got his in 1967, a year after leading the Three Lions to glory against West Germany.
And in 1968 it was the turn of Man United icon Sir Matt Busby, the first manager of an English team to win the European Cup.
Fast forward 10 years later and Sir Walter Winterbottom was the next to receive a knighthood after becoming the first-ever England gaffer in 1946.
Sir Bert Millichip then got one in 1991 after his time as chairman of the FA.
Three years later it was Sir Bobby Charlton’s turn, having previously been award a CBE and an OBE.
In 1998, both Sir Geoff Hurst and Sir Tom Finney were knighted by the Queen – with news of the latter’s honour exclusively revealed by SunSport.
And one year later Sir Alex Ferguson received his after leading Man United to the Treble.
Newcastle legend Sir Bobby Robson was then knighted in 2002 thanks to his iconic career in the dugout.
Sir Trevor Brooking followed two years later, with Sir Dave Richards honoured in 2006.
Sir Kenny Dalglish then became the next 12 years later in 2018 thanks to his brilliant time with Liverpool as both boss and player.
And in January, Sir Gareth Southgate was awarded for leading England for successive second-place finishes at the European Championships.
Now, it’s Beckham’s turn to take his place among the pantheon of British football legends.
But an additional knighthood has also been given to a non-Brit, with the late Brazilian legend Pele receiving an honorary one in 1997.
RESIDENTS of a town made famous by a hit TV show have hit out at brazen tourists who peer through their windows and block their driveways.
Bampton in Oxfordshire was made famous by the hit period piece with several locations across the village used in filming.
Locals have said the town, which features in Downton Abbey, has become a magnet for tourism and now attracts thousands of brash visitors a year.
Some residents told the Telegraph that the tourism has made them a small fortune and helped to improve local amenities.
Others have slammed the tourists, demanding their quant village be freed of “brash American accents.”
Residents of Bampton have told horror stories of their encounters with tourists.
Locals have been subjected to selfie-sticks appearing at bedroom windows, tourists wandering into their back gardens and buses blocking up narrow streets.
Guided tours of the village are offered to fans of the hit show with some charging as much as £500.
Busloads of fans are taken around the small village to visit filming locations made famous by the British drama series.
Local shop owners have claimed at one point they were making £1,000 a day from the tourists.
The thousands of pounds raised from visiting TV fans has been used to fund renovation works to buildings.
Local services have also been improved using the massive wealth brought into the community.
Despite all this locals still hit out saying they’ve had enough of nosey tourists peering in their windows and obstructing their driveways.
One resident told The Telegraph: “My friend overheard a tour guide say that Bampton was nothing before Downton Abbey.
“Let me tell you – Bampton was a beautiful, expensive place to live long beforehand.”
“I live on the main square and they often stand in my driveway. They just go everywhere.”
The small village was used for several scenes in the hit show which ended ten years ago.
Even though it has been a decade since the last episode of the original series was aired tourists still flock to Bampton.
Locations including St Mary’s Church and the Manor House, home to Mrs Crawley in the show, can be found in the small village.
The main set for the historical drama, Highclere Castle, is forty miles away.
The tiny village has a population of just 2,500 and plays host to two coffee shops, a butcher, a deli, a charity shop, an art gallery, antique store and garden centre.
Residents claim that visitors spend most of their time and money in a few select locations, bringing no benefit to the rest of the town.
A resident told The Telegraph: “They contribute to the library, but apart from that they don’t have enough time.
“We are better off with individual travellers, with families in cars – not the buses. There’s so much more to Bampton than Downton Abbey.”
The Community Hub receives shedloads of support but according to locals the other shops and businesses are left to fend for themselves.
The Witcher 3 was and is one of the best games ever made. But it’s ten years old now, and with The Witcher 4 in the works, CD Projekt Red (CDPR) has a lot of work cut out. The industry has changed in the last decade, new technologies have come out, and with so many […]
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Taylor Sheridan’s best movie ain’t just a gripping drama. It’s a masterclass in power, pride, and what happens when egos collide. At a time when the Elon Musk–Donald Trump fallout is lighting up headlines, Sheridan’s storytelling feels more relevant than ever. His film dives into the chaos unleashed when billionaires go head-to-head, revealing how unchecked […]
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SKY is dishing out access to 35 premium channels at no extra cost to customers this weekend.
The special offer also includes 35,000 shows episodes on demand.
Viewers on Sky‘s cheapest £15 package, Sky Essential TV, will benefit from the boost to Sky Ultimate TV.
However, the channels will only be available from today until Monday.
It’s designed to give people a taster of the shows to watch elsewhere.
They include Sky Max, Sky Crime, Sky Documentaries, U&Gold, and Comedy Central.
Highlights at the moment range from Matlock and The Rookie on Sky Witness, Hacks and Rob Beckett’s Smart TV on Sky Max, Boyzone No Matter What on Sky Documentaries, Planet Weird on Sky Nature and The Righteous Gemstones on Sky Comedy.
Customers don’t have to take any action to gain access to the channels.
They will all be unlocked for the duration of the giveaway.
Sky Essential TV was launched at the end of last year as a cheaper way for telly fans to watch Sky TV, with Sky Atlantic, Netflix and Discovery+ all included.
Sky Ultimate TV costs £7 more (a total of £21).
It comes as Sky just launched a brand new TV product in the UK, Sky Glass Air.
The device builds on the company’s existing streamed TV offering, which does away with a satellite dish on the side of your house.
Instead, channels are all transmitted via a broadband connection.
Sky Glass Air is a cheaper option with no built-in soundbar unlike the main Sky Glass model, making it much thinner.
The Sky Essential TV package is only available to those with Sky Stream and Sky Glass.
Try a whole host of Sky tricks to take your TV to a whole new level.
Image credit: Getty / The Sun / Sky
WEARING white as a wedding guest used to be a cardinal sin and the ultimate insult to the bride.
But nowadays there’s a far worse style crime.
Gone are tailored trouser suits, chic two-pieces and glamorous, ankle-skimming gowns.
Instead, you’re more likely to spot looks you would find on the strip in Benidorm.
Think bum-skimming Lycra mini-dresses, skimpy bra tops, or dresses with sky-high thigh slits and boob-baring cut-outs.
One of the things I love about a wedding — aside from dancing to Come On Eileen and drinking a headache-inducing amount of champers, — is getting dressed up.
I’m talking sophisticated dresses, stylish hats and fascinators and killer heels for the girls, and sharp suits for the blokes.
The novelty of getting spruced up to the nines makes the special day all that more exciting and memorable.
Passing judgement on others’ outfits while you wait for the bride to make her entrance (which, admit it, we all do) is a big part of it, too.
I’m out of the “going to a wedding every other weekend” age bracket now — and what a relief, because the looks that seem to be trending wouldn’t be out of place in the queue for an Oceana nightclub.
Across social media, scantily-clad twenty-somethings share their wedding outfits with pride — while I gawp, with prejudice.
A quick Google search for “wedding guest outfits” produces dozens of brands’ standalone pages dedicated solely to this category.
But as you scroll through the likes of Club L, Oh Polly and River Island, you’ll find that the dresses and gowns — yes, Gen Z wear full-on gowns now — are better suited to the Love Island finale than a wedding in your local country house hotel.
And, like most trends, we have celebrities to blame.
When Dani Dyer wed footballer Jarrod Bowen last week, guest and fellow Love Islander Georgia Steel was slated for wearing what looked like a revealing white dress to her pal’s big day.
After Georgia posted a snap on TikTok of the lace-trimmed Miss Circle number she wore, the trolls came out in force, bashing her for picking what was in fact a “soft beige” dress.
“Wearing white to a wedding?” questioned one, while another waded in with: “Way too bridal for a wedding.”
And Georgia isn’t alone. Two months ago, White Lotus actress Sydney Sweeney came under fire for the “inappropriate” dress she wore to her Anyone But You co-star Glenn Powell’s sister’s wedding.
Across social media, scantily-clad twenty-somethings share their wedding outfits with pride — while I gawp, with prejudice
Clemmie
She chose a cleavage-baring corset-style dress from V Chapman in a very pale blue.
Fans thought the colour was an issue.
Comments included: “That is not an appropriate shade of blue for a wedding” and “The number one [rule] of a wedding is don’t wear anything close to white.”
Personally, I take no issue with guests wearing white at a wedding. As long as they aren’t also wearing a long veil (cropped veils on fascinators are allowed), who cares?
Especially during summer, when every other dress on the high street is some shade of white.
No one at the wedding is going to mistake someone else as the bride. It’s the bride’s name on the invite and her kissing the groom — so no need for the unnecessary uproar.
However, what I would take issue with is the plunging neckline and lingerie-style basque of Sydney’s outfit and, in Georgia’s case, the fact her lacy dress is practically see-through.
Don’t get me wrong, Sydney is a knock-out, and if I looked like that, I’d be wearing sexy numbers, too — just not to a wedding.
As one person commented online: “Kinda tacky to wear to a wedding. C’mon Syds, you can do better.” And she can.
The woman is an ambassador for designer brand Miu Miu, for crying out loud. Raid something from their archives that’s less underwear-like and more sophisticated. But it’s not just Sydney. Kendall Jenner wore a heavily cut-out black gown to her pal’s wedding, which sent the internet into meltdown due to its slashed fabric that barely covered her nipples.
And her sister, Kylie, has also faced outfit-shaming from keyboard warriors.
Don’t get me wrong, Sydney is a knock-out, and if I looked like that, I’d be wearing sexy numbers, too — just not to a wedding
Clemmie
At Hailey and Justin Bieber’s wedding, fans accused her of trying to steal the bride’s limelight by wearing a gold, floor-sweeping gown with peek-a-boo cleavage and a hip-high slit.
On X, one critic wrote: “If someone tries to pull a Kylie Jenner move like this at my wedding . . . they will kindly be escorted out with a red wine stain down the front of their dress.”
Ouch!
But then Hailey wore a backless white dress to a friend’s big day in 2023, which broke all the so-called wedding rules for looking just like a bridal gown.
When it comes to these codes, they’re subjective and are dependent on the wedding location.
If you’re lucky enough to be a guest at a ceremony abroad in a hot country, sitting in a long-sleeve, high-neck, polyester dress at noon is going to give you heatstroke.
And wearing a tailored pencil midi dress to sit on a bale of hay in a field will make you stick out like a sore thumb. I get it. I’ve been there myself and it’s a minefield. But if in doubt, aim for a more demure style.
Don’t copy the under-boob and pelvis-flashing looks of young celebs — think more of the women who have nailed the guest brief.
Cast your mind back to happier times when Meghan Markle and Prince Harry got married.
Amal Clooney, in a yellow, capped-sleeve midi-dress by Stella McCartney, was crowned best-dressed guest in attendance. Bold, but without being in danger of over-shadowing the bride, it was perfect.
Another flawless guest at a royal wedding was Demi Moore.
She battled gale-force winds in a burgundy dress and matching veiled hat — again, by Stella McCartney — when Princess Eugenie married Jack Brooksbank in 2018. And she looked incredible.
Cindy Crawford’s daughter, actress Kaia Gerber, also got it right when she wore a classy, long-sleeved dress from Reformation to a friend’s 2018 wedding in Miami, Florida.
At the time, the navy, slit-leg frock retailed for £180, proving that even supermodels with designer brands at their fingertips can look amazing in high street buys.
A big emerging trend on the high street this wedding season seems to be minimal frocks with slinky scarves, which are intended to be worn draped down your back, not wrapped around you like a winter woollen.
They create a sense of elegance without having to have your boobs and bum out.
So if you are heading to someone’s nuptials this summer, keep it classy, girls.
Underwear as outerwear and flesh-flashing cut-outs are for the weekend, not for a wedding.
YOU’D be hard pushed to find someone these days who hasn’t tried their luck on Vinted – with some even managing to turn reselling into their entire career.
However, there are some downsides to selling on the app, such as scams when buyers say they haven’t received the item you’ve sold them.
But there’s a clever way to avoid that happening, and it’s really easy too.
Double wrapping your sales means you’ve abided by Vinted’s packaging rule, and could swing a dispute in your favour if someone claims they’ve received an empty bag.
“As a seller, it’s crucial you double wrap your items before shipping,” Marc Porcar, CEO of QR Code Generator, explained.
“Otherwise, Vinted is likely to side with the buyer, and you may end up without the item or payment.
“Vinted’s packaging rules state double wrapping, and by following them you can help tip the balance in your favour if a buyer lies about not receiving an item.”
If you’re worried that paying out for mailing bags isn’t the most environmentally-friendly approach, you can reuse packaging from previous deliveries to avoid contributing to landfill sites.
Another way you can reduce your risk of being scammed is to collect photographic evidence.
“Take a series of clear photos while packaging and shipping your packages to use if a buyer falsely claims an item wasn’t received,” Marc continued.
“Some Vinted sellers record themselves wrapping the package, ensuring visual proof of what was included and confirming that you followed the double wrapping practice.
“This can help strengthen your case for disputes.”
The photos you need to take are: the item before packaging, the item inside the package, the sealed package with the shipping label attached, and the package at the drop-off point.
If you can take a snap which shows the person’s address on the shipping label too, it helps make the package identifiable – which will also strengthen a case.
“If shipping via a post office that weighs the package, take a photo of the weight at home and again at the counter to help verify the item packaged,” Marc added.
“Mentioning to the buyer that the package has been shipped with photographic evidence recorded may help deter any scammers.”
IF you fancy clearing out your wardrobe and getting rid of your old stuff on Vinted, you’ll need to consider the new rules that recently came into play.
If people are selling personal items for less than they paid new (which is generally the case for second-hand sales), there is no impact on tax.
However, since January 1, digital platforms, including eBay, Airbnb, Etsy, Amazon and Vinted, must share seller information with HMRC as part of a crackdown.
You’re unlikely to be affected if you only sell a handful of second-hand items online each year – generally, only business sellers trading for profit might need to pay tax.
A tax-free allowance of £1,000 has been in place since 2017 for business sellers trading for profit – the only time that an individual personal item might be taxable is if it sells for more than £6,000 and there is a profit from the sale.
However, firms now have to pass on your data to HMRC if you sell 30 or more items a year or earn over £1,700.
It is part of a wider tax crackdown to help ensure that those who boost their income via side hustles pay up what they owe.
While your data won’t be shared with HMRC if you earn between £1,000 and £1,700, you’ll still need to pay tax as normal.