Hi-de-Hi! actor Paul Shane dies

 

Paul Shane, second from right

Paul Shane, second from right, made his name playing Ted Bovis in TV sitcom Hi-de-Hi!

Paul Shane, the actor famous for starring in the 1980s BBC sitcom Hi-de-Hi!, has died, his agent has confirmed.

His agent said the 72-year-old died surrounded by his family at a hospice in Rotherham, South Yorkshire, earlier on Thursday after a short illness.

He leaves behind his three daughters and six grandchildren. His wife died in 2001.

Shane made his name playing entertainer Ted Bovis in Hi-de-Hi!, a long-running TV series set in a holiday camp.

He later appeared in You Rang, M’Lord, alongside some of the former Hi-de-Hi! cast members.

Shane, born in Rotherham in 1940, began his working life as a miner but turned to the entertainment industry following an accident.

In his early career, he sang and entertained in pubs and clubs across South Yorkshire until he was offered TV work in the early 1970s.

His big break came with the BBC hit Hi-de-Hi! in 1980, written by Jimmy Perry and David Croft.

The series, which ran until 1988, won large audiences and a Bafta for Best Comedy Series in 1984.

Shane also worked on 1990s BBC sitcom Oh Doctor Beeching!, as well as Emmerdale, Common as Muck, A Touch of Frost, Doctors and Holby City.

 

RIP

Ministers pledge to remove ‘peace walls’

 

Published Thursday, 09 May 2013The First and Deputy First Ministers have pledged to remove all the so-called “peace walls” in an ambitious package of measures unveiled in a bid to tackle sectarianism in our communities.

 

 

The target is included in a package of measures unveiled today by Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness.

However, the most contentious issues of flags, parades and the past were not included and instead Peter Robinson and Martin McGuinness have said they will establish an all-party working group to look into those controversial measures.

They said the working group will address the “twin blights of sectarianism and racism”.

The group, which will have two nominees from each of the five main political parties and an independent chairman, will also consider ways to handle parades, protests, symbols and emblems as well as how to deal with the past.

At its first meeting the group will determine which stakeholders will be invited to join with it and which other organisations will be asked to give evidence.

In parallel with the creation of the group the ministers will also publish their community relations strategy ‘Together: Building a United Community’ within the next two weeks.

“Our vision,” the ministers said in a joint statement, “is a united community, based on equality of opportunity, the desirability of good relations and reconciliation – one which is strengthened by its diversity, where cultural expression is celebrated and embraced and where everyone can live, learn, work and socialise together, free from prejudice, hate and intolerance.”

Whilst recognising there are no easy answers, we are committed to attempting to find long-term and sustainable solutions that are in the best interests of the community we serve.

OFMdFM

Both ministers did, however, reveal an agreed package of “significant and strategic actions” aimed at tackling segregation among communities which includes working towards removing all the so-called “peace walls” by 2023.

Another measure announced today was the creation of a youth programme to help get young people not in education, employment or training into work.

The ‘United Youth’ programme will offer 10,000 young people between the ages of 16 and 24 paid work placements and volunteering opportunities – outside of their own community – to help build good relations.

The multi-million pound strategy will also look to establish 10 new shared education campuses, a cross-community sports programme and shared summer schools for post primary school-aged children.

They have also said a proposal to develop 10 new shared neighbourhood developments will be brought by the Social Development Minister within the next two months.

The joint statement added: “Taking down interface barriers is not something that can be achieved without engagement, consent and support with the people who live there.

“We must be sensitive to the views and perceptions of residents and balance this against the responsibility on us to create the conditions within which division and segregation can become resigned to the past.

“Community confidence can only be built when assurances can be given that the intimidation and threat which led to the erection of barriers has been removed.

“We are committed to finding alternative ways of reassuring communities that safety can be achieved without separation.

“Removing interface barriers and other structures of division will send out an important message that our society is continuing on its journey to peace and reconciliation, but more importantly will bring community benefits.”

WWII Irish troops are pardoned

 

Thousands of Irish soldiers who joined the British Army during the Second World War have been pardoned by the government.

 

 

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Legislation providing an apology and amnesty to the former troops, who were branded deserters after returning home from battle, was passed in the Dail on Tuesday.

Justice Minister in the Republic of Ireland, Alan Shatter, said it will make amends for the past and will recognise the efforts of those who fought on the Allied side against Nazi Germany, but who were court-martialed or dismissed from the defence forces as a result.

“It gives important statutory expression to the apology given by me on behalf of the state last year for the shameful manner in which they were treated,” said Mr Shatter.

“Unfortunately, many of the individuals whose situation is addressed in this Bill did not live to see the day that this state finally acknowledged the important role that they played in seeking to ensure a free and safe Europe.”

The Defence Forces (Second World War Amnesty and Immunity) Bill 2012 provides a pardon for the roughly 5,000 soldiers who were removed from the Irish Army under special powers introduced during WW2, known as the Emergency in neutral Ireland.

They faced widespread persecution when they returned home.

These men who fought bravely and with honour to rid Europe of fascism should have been commended instead of condemned

David Ford

Northern Ireland’s Justice Minister, David Ford, said the legislation which was passed in the Oireachtas recognises the bravery of the soldiers, some 70 years on.

The Alliance leader said: “This legislation before the Dail recognises the discriminations they faced when they returned to Ireland following the Emergency.

“It also plays a part in reconciliation in these Islands and recognises the shared values we have in our history. Just last year, both the Taoiseach and Tánaiste laid wreaths in Enniskillen and Belfast during remembrance services highlighting the fact that people from all backgrounds came together and fought side by side in both World Wars One and Two.”

North Down MLA Peter Weir said: “This announcement by the Irish government has ensured that an historic injustice has been put right. These were thousands of Irish soldiers who stepped forward to fight against fascism and for the freedom of Europe.

“It is clear that progress has been made in relations between the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom, and much of that must be down to the impact made by Her Majesty the Queen on her historic visit to the Republic.”

SDLP Councillor Pat McCarthy said: “Nazism was a real evil and something which thousands of Irish soldiers wanted to fight against. That they were labelled deserters rather than heroes on their return is shameful.

“Today’s apology is welcome and is recognition, albeit late of the outstanding and courageous service of Irish soldiers during the Second World War.”

MPs’ booze plot

 

Taxpayers to fund price cuts in Commons bars

Commons bar

Cheap … Commons bar

BOOZY MPs are plotting to cut drinks prices in Parliament bars — leaving taxpayers with the bill.

John Smith's bitter

Pint … John Smith’s bitter

Dean Burrows

Prices at lavish Palace of Westminster bars are linked to those in a Wetherspoons pub on nearby Victoria Street — but always kept cheaper.

A pint of John Smith’s bitter costs just £2.60 in the Commons, and Becks lager is set at just £3.20. But some backbenchers have complained even that is too expensive.

And senior MPs suggested prices should be linked to a cheaper venue outside of the capital’s prime retail spots.

A record of the Administration Committee’s meeting — seen by The Sun — said: “Several Members suggested that the House should not benchmark against Central London pubs: those had to pay Central London rent, rates and utility charges, which House services did not pay.”

Commons eateries and bars are already subsidised with £5.8million a year of public money. Taxpayers would fork out even more if prices were lowered, unless services were cut elsewhere.

The row broke out after Commons catering managers asked for prices to rise for the first time in three years due to food inflation.

TaxPayers’ Alliance chief executive Matthew Sinclair said: “Politicians could not be more out of touch in demanding a bigger subsidy for their booze and meals.”

Thatcher song joins list of tunes BBC censored

 

FILE – This is a Thursday, Oct. 25, 2007 file photo of John Lydon as performs with The Sex Pistols at the Roxy in West Hollywood, Calif., The concert marked the legendary British punk band’s first-ever club performance in Southern California. A 70-year-old song is giving the BBC a headache, as it decides whether to play “Ding Dong! The Witch is Dead” _ a song from the “Wizard of Oz” being driven up the charts by opponents of Margaret Thatcher as a mocking memorial to the late prime minister, It’s not the first time Britain’s national broadcaster has been caught in a bind about whether to ban a song on grounds of language, politics, or taste. And the broadcaster _ nicknamed “Auntie” for its “we-know-what’s-good-for-you” attitude usually comes under fire, whatever it does. The Sex Pistol song “God Save the Queen” was banned by the BBC. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello, File)LONDON (AP) – A 70-year-old song is giving the BBC a headache.

The radio and television broadcaster has agonized over whether to play “Ding Dong! The Witch is Dead,” a tune from “The Wizard of Oz” that is being driven up the charts by opponents of Margaret Thatcher as a mocking memorial to the late British prime minister.

A compromise announced Friday- the BBC will play part of “Ding Dong!” but not the whole song on its chart-countdown radio show- is unlikely to end the recriminations

This is not the first time Britain’s national broadcaster, which is nicknamed “Auntie” for its “we-know-what’s-good-for-you” attitude, has been caught in a bind about whether to ban a song on grounds of language, politics or taste.

Here’s a look at some previous censorship scandals:

SEX, DRUGS AND DOUBLE ENTENDRES

The 1960s and `70s saw several songs barred from airplay for sex or drug references, including The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life,” for a fleeting and implicit reference to smoking marijuana.

For The Kinks’ 1970 hit “Lola,” the trouble was not sex or drugs, but product placement. The line “you drink champagne and it tastes just like Coca-Cola” fell afoul of the public broadcaster’s rule banning corporate plugs. The brand name had to be replaced with “cherry cola” before the song could be aired.

The BBC frequently has been targeted by self-appointed moral guardians, most famously the late anti-smut activist Mary Whitehouse, who campaigned for decades against what she saw as pornography and permissiveness.

In 1972, Whitehouse got the BBC to ban the video for Alice Cooper’s “School’s Out” for allegedly being a bad influence on children. The controversy helped the song reach No. 1 in the charts, and Cooper sent Whitehouse flowers. He later said she had given his band “publicity we couldn’t buy.”

But Whitehouse’s campaign to get Chuck Berry’s “My Ding-a-Ling” banned on grounds of indecency was unsuccessful. The BBC’s chief at the time told Whitehouse that, while the song’s title could be seen as a double entendre, “we believe that the innuendo is, at worst, on the level of seaside postcards or music hall humor.”

POLITICAL PITFALLS

Paul McCartney may now be the cuddly elder statesman of pop, but his first single with the band Wings, “Give Ireland Back to the Irish,” caused a storm.

Written after the 1972 killing of 13 Irish nationalist protesters by British troops on “Bloody Sunday” in Londonderry, the single was barred from all TV and radio airplay in Britain- but reached No. 1 in Ireland, where it was not banned.

The Sex Pistols’ “God Save the Queen”- with its opening refrain “God save the queen, the fascist regime”- was released in 1977, the year of Queen Elizabeth II’s Silver Jubilee.

The BBC banned it on the grounds of “gross bad taste,” and some stores refused to stock it, to the delight of the punk band, whose anti-establishment credentials were cemented by the controversy.

It remains one of the most famous songs never to reach No. 1 on the charts. It hit No. 2, but was kept from the top spot by Rod Stewart’s “I Don’t Want to Talk About It.”

Punk fans sensed a conspiracy, and debate still rages over whether the Pistols’ song really did reach No. 1.

BUOYED BY A BAN

“God Save the Queen” and “School’s Out” aren’t the only examples of how an airplay ban can boost a song.

In 1984, BBC DJ Mike Read pulled the plug on “Relax” by Frankie Goes to Hollywood midway through its first broadcast, calling the thumping, lyrically suggestive song obscene.

Though it wasn’t officially banned, the BBC did not play it. The controversy helped push the song by a then-unknown band up the charts, where it stayed in the No. 1 spot for five weeks.

CENSORS AND SENSIBILITIES

While the moral panics of past eras can seem ridiculous, this week’s Thatcher controversy shows that the central issue- which is worse, censorship or causing offense?- is both complex and unresolved.

In 2007, the BBC censored the Christmas song “Fairytale of New York” by The Pogues, which was first released 20 years earlier, by dubbing out an anti-gay slur. Some listeners were outraged, but others, including gay rights campaigner Peter Tatchell, said the BBC had been right to remove the word.

Argentina’s Cristina Kirchner ‘is an old hag’

 

Argentina has made a formal protest against neighbouring Uruguay after President Jose Mujica was caught describing the Argentine leader as “an old hag”.

Mr Mujica, a former guerrilla leader, spoke disparagingly of Cristina Kirchner without realising his microphone was turned on at a press conference. He also said that she was “worse” than her late husband Nestor, president before her who died suddenly of a heart attack in 2010 and had an eye condition.

“This old hag is worse than the cross-eyed man,” he told Carlos Enciso, the governor of Uruguay’s Florida province.

“Cross-eyes was more of a politician, she’s just stubborn.”

He criticised his neighbouring leader for her overtures to Pope Francis, the former Archbishop of Buenos Aires, who she wants to mediate over sovereignty of the Falklands.

“You’re not going to go to an Argentine pope explaining him what’s a map, what’s mate (Argentine tea) and what’s a flask.”

Hector Timerman, the Argentine foreign minister, said the remarks were “unacceptable” and “denigrating,” adding that they offended the memory of the deceased.

An official protest was delivered in the form of a note to Uruguay’s ambassador to Argentina, Guillermo Pomi.

An hour after making his comments, Mr Mujica, 77, told a Uruguayan newspaper that he hadn’t been talking about the Kirchners, and as his comments weren’t public he would not be apologising.

“I’m not going to get down on my knees nor run around the world clarifying anything,” he said. “They can invent all the nonsense they like.”

HMV shops saved: The list in full

 

HMV store

The deal could save 2,500 jobs

Restructuring specialist Hilco has clinched a deal to rescue music and DVD retailer HMV, acquiring 132 HMV shops and all nine branches of the Fopp chain. Here is a full list of the stores saved:

1. Aberdeen

2. Ayr

3. Banbury

4. Bangor (Wales)

5. Basingstoke

6. Basildon

7. Bath

8. Belfast Donegall Arcade

9. Birmingham Bullring

10. Blackpool

11. Bluewater

12. Bournemouth

13. Bradford

14. Brighton

15. Bristol Broadmead

16. Bristol Cribbs Causeway

17. Bromley

18. Bury

19. Bury St Edmunds

20. Cambridge

21. Canary Wharf

22. Canterbury

23. Cardiff

24. Carlisle

25. Chelmsford

26. Cheltenham

27. Chester

28. Chichester

29. Colchester

30. Coventry

31. Crawley

32. Cwmbran

33. Darlington

34. Derby

35. Doncaster

36. Dudley Merry Hill Centre

37. Dundee

38. Eastbourne

39. East Kilbride

40. Edinburgh Fort

41. Edinburgh Ocean Terminal

42. Edinburgh Princes Street

43. Exeter

44. Gateshead

45. Glasgow Argyle Street

46. Glasgow Buchanan Street

47. Glasgow Fort

48. Gloucester

49. Grimsby

50. Guernsey (St.Peter Port)

51. Guildford

52. Hanley (Stoke-on-Trent)

53. Harlow

54. Harrogate

55. Hastings

56. Hatfield

57. Hereford

58. High Wycombe

59. Horsham

60. Hull

61. Inverness

62. Ipswich

63. Islington

64. Isle of Man (Douglas)

65. Isle of Wight (Newport)

66. Jersey (St.Helier)

67. Kettering

68. King’s Lynn

69. Kingston-Upon-Thames

70. Leamington Spa

71. Leeds Headrow

72. Leeds White Rose

73. Leicester

74. Lincoln

75. Liverpool LiverpoolOne

76. Livingston

77. Llandudno

78. Maidstone

79. Manchester 90 Market Street

80. Manchester Trafford Centre

81. Mansfield

82. Middlesbrough

83. Milton Keynes

84. Newcastle

85. Newport (Wales)

86. Northampton

87. Norwich Chapelfield

88. Norwich Gentlemen’s Walk

89. Nottingham Victoria Centre

90. Nuneaton

91. Oxford

92. Oxford Circus 150 Oxford Street, London W1

93. Peterborough

94. Poole

95. Portsmouth Commercial Road

96. Portsmouth Gun Wharf

97. Preston

98. Plymouth

99. Reading Oracle Centre

100. Romford

101. Selfridges Oxford Street, London W1

102. Sheffield High Street

103. Sheffield Meadowhall

104. Shrewsbury

105. Solihull

106. Southampton

107. Southend

108. Southport

109. Speke Park (Liverpool)

110. Staines

111. Stevenage

112. Stirling

113. Stockport

114. Stratford-Upon-Avon

115. Sunderland

116. Sutton

117. Swansea

118. Taunton

119. Thanet

120. Thurrock

121. Truro

122. Tunbridge Wells

123. Uxbridge

124. Westfield London Stratford City

125. Westfield London W12

126. Wimbledon (hmvcurzon)

127. Winchester

128. Wolverhampton

129. Worcester

130. Worthing

131. Yeovil

132. York

Fopp Stores

1. Bristol

2. Cambridge

3. Edinburgh

4. Glasgow, Byres Road

5. Glasgow, Union Street

6. London – Covent Garden

7. London – Gower Street

8. Manchester

9. Nottingham