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Terrifying moment tourists scream as fighter jet performs nail-biting low passes and aerobatics over Spanish beach

Terrifying moment tourists scream as fighter jet performs nail-biting low passes and aerobatics over Spanish beach

The Sun4 days ago
THIS is the terrifying moment tourists screamed in horror as a fighter jet skimmed frighteningly close to a packed Spanish beach.
Shocking footage shows a Spanish Air Force EF-18 Hornet roaring over San Lorenzo Beach, its nose diving towards the sea before pulling up just metres from sunbathers.
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The combat aircraft, spewing puffs of black smoke, is seen flipping upside down in the sky before swooping so low it appears to almost graze the sand.
Holidaymakers lounging on the beach can be seen grabbing their phones to film the heart-stopping stunt, with several screaming in shock as the jet thundered overhead.
In another clip, groups of spectators watching from a nearby hill can be heard raising their voices in alarm as the supersonic beast tore through the air.
The hair-raising display took place during the nineteenth edition of the Gijón Air Festival, held on Sunday over San Lorenzo Bay in Asturias.
Around 250,000 people flock to the annual event, which has been wowing crowds since 2006 and is considered one of Spain's biggest aeronautical spectacles.
After its perilous near-miss, the fighter jet continued its flight away from the crowded shoreline, leaving shaken tourists staring in disbelief.
But online, viewers were divided over whether the death-defying maneuver was intentional — or a risky slip-up.
'Very risky maneuver... is that allowed?' one user asked on TikTok.
Another on Reddit suggested: 'For me it looked like he lost too much height during the roll and pulled up too hard, making him lose a lot of speed, unintentionally.
'Could be the perspective, too.'
Others, however, were left awestruck.
One thrilled festival-goer declared: 'I witnessed that live and it was one of the best things I've seen in a long time.'
It comes as terrified beachgoers in Sardinia were forced to flee when a raging wildfire tore across the popular Punta Molentis coastline.
Holidaymakers dropped towels and sunbeds as smoke engulfed the golden sand, with flames creeping right up to the water's edge in the blistering 34C heat.
More than 100 people had to be rescued by sea after escape routes were cut off, while firefighters battled the inferno with Canadair water bombers, helicopters and even an Italian Air Force aircraft.
Cars parked by the shore were left reduced to twisted metal after the blaze ripped through a beach parking area, torching around 200 vehicles and a kiosk.
Local media said a 'jewel' of the Sarrabus coast had been destroyed, with footage showing families scrambling to safety as thick plumes of grey and black smoke filled the sky.
The Sardinia fire is the latest in a series of Mediterranean infernos, with Turkey enduring a deadly 50C heatwave that has already claimed four lives and forced 3,500 people to evacuate.
Greece has also been ravaged, with wildfires sweeping villages near Athens and scorching parts of the Aegean islands after a week-long heatwave pushed temperatures beyond 45C.
A blaze even tore through a northern suburb of Athens at the weekend, forcing panicked residents to flee their homes.
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‘A psychological umbilical cord': Why fiction loves difficult mothers
‘A psychological umbilical cord': Why fiction loves difficult mothers

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

‘A psychological umbilical cord': Why fiction loves difficult mothers

'My love for my mother is like an axe,' the narrator of Deborah Levy's 2016 novel Hot Milk tells us. 'It cuts very deep'. Set in the Spanish coastal city of Almería, the book – which has now been made into a film starring Sex Education's Emma Mackey – is a sun-drenched unravelling of a daughter tethered to her ailing mother. Hot Milk fits into a growing canon of literature exploring the absent, or fading, or otherwise inaccessible mother – stories in which the maternal figure is pulled to the edge of the frame, so that the daughter can take centre stage. Books such as Gwendoline Riley's My Phantoms and First Love, both featuring mother-daughter relationships marked by emotional distance and strained communication. Or The Lost Daughter by Elena Ferrante, where the protagonist, Leda, is both unseen daughter and deserting mother, a collision that unleashes emotional chaos. That writers slip into the narrative reflex of the mother as too powerful or too central to allow for a character's development is revealing. Space must be cleared for the daughter to suffer, individuate and grow. Yet, these novels also show that we never fully cast our mother out. She remains at the edges of our identity, both threat to the self and origin. Hot Milk – adapted for film by Rebecca Lenkiewicz and released in the UK last month – follows Sofia and her mother, Rose, as they travel to Spain in search of a cure for Rose's unexplained paralysis. In the novel, Sofia seems to inherit her mother's pain: 'Sometimes, I find myself limping,' she says. 'It's as if my body remembers the way I walk with my mother.' She experiences psychosomatic symptoms mirroring her mother's sickness, and must break free from her mother's feigned helplessness in order to discover her own body, her own desires. But what is most poignant is that Levy, whose works refuse sentimental arcs, shows us that this separation isn't always clean cut. It can sometimes be a feverish drift. Sofia's freedom is not triumphant, but strange and unstable. Levy doesn't promise that separation brings clarity, rather she suggests it may bring vertigo. And few stories succeed in making this psychological umbilical cord feel more real. In my own novel Selfish Girls, we see three women trying to be daughters but also yearning to be free. To adequately write about this tension, I first needed to interrogate why the absence of the mother makes for such compelling storytelling. Why do we keep circling it, again and again? The opacity comes from cultural contradiction: motherhood is revered as sacred and essential, and yet mothers themselves are often invisible or misunderstood. A mother will always be defined by her absence because she will never fully be there – or never as you need her to be. Then there's the strange ache of it: that in her presence, our mother remains unknowable. She is the most familiar stranger we'll ever love, and that is narrative gold. 'The hardest things to talk about are the ones we ourselves can't understand,' writes Ferrante in The Lost Daughter. Subtext is the pressure point where literary complexity builds: 'Who was my mother, really?' becomes the story engine. My own mother was this impenetrable mystery I needed to let go of in order to become myself, but she was also someone so close, whose laugh carried through my own, whose image I caught glimpses of in my own reflection. In some sense, my novel is a reckoning of wanting to truly understand her at the same time as I am detaching, getting married, assuming my own family unit and moving to another country, putting an ocean between us. Idolising and rejecting her all at once. Perhaps there is ambivalence and guilt for stepping away, tangled with the quieter grief and shame of feeling I'd been left long before. Maybe the act of writing offers a way back into those unknowns of deep love and resentment, trying to shape them into something I could live with – a story of my own, without losing the parts of my mother that still mattered. Riley captures this bind with razor-sharp realism and cool, clipped colloquialism in First Love. Neve receives a text from her mother: 'CUT ALL MY HAIR OFF DO YOU WANT BOBBLES AND BRUSHES ETC. MUM.' It has to be wheedled out of her that she is, in fact, going through a tough time having broken up with her boyfriend. With pitch-perfect humour, Riley captures the apparent availability of the mother against a background of emotional absence. Neve recalls visits or phone calls with her mother characterised by awkwardness and superficiality. The protagonist in My Phantoms echoes this: 'She asked questions she didn't want answers to, and gave answers no one had asked for'. For Riley, the maternal relationship is a tug-of-war between performance and authenticity. The mother's presence feels like a performance of motherhood only – all form, no feeling – leaving the daughters deeply isolated in their company. You see, it is not enough for our mother to simply be a mother; she must embody the right kind of motherhood. Sign up to Inside Saturday The only way to get a look behind the scenes of the Saturday magazine. Sign up to get the inside story from our top writers as well as all the must-read articles and columns, delivered to your inbox every weekend. after newsletter promotion In her lecture titled Motherhood Today, philosopher Julia Kristeva references the 'good enough mother', a term coined by the British psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott. 'The 'good enough mother' would be she who knows how to leave to make room for pleasure, for the child, for thought. To leave room, in other words, to disappear.' To withdraw just enough so the child can emerge as a self. Levy, Riley and Ferrante are trying to do on paper what we can never quite do in life: allow the mother to live fully inside our skin as a presence absorbed. In Hot Milk, Levy doesn't resolve the mother-daughter bind, she lets it linger in the body – a felt, inescapable inheritance. Perhaps these stories don't offer catharsis, but do something braver: let the mother remain inside the daughter, not as obstacle or ideal, but metabolised as a presence the self must grow around. Selfish Girls is published by Hodder & Stoughton

Love Island spoilers: Meg and Dejon clash AGAIN over chemistry with Yas and another couple are abruptly dumped
Love Island spoilers: Meg and Dejon clash AGAIN over chemistry with Yas and another couple are abruptly dumped

Daily Mail​

time3 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Love Island spoilers: Meg and Dejon clash AGAIN over chemistry with Yas and another couple are abruptly dumped

Friday's instalment of Love Island sees Meg and Dejon clash yet again over Yas while another couple is abruptly dumped from the villa. If one dumping wasn't enough, another couple will leave the villa after Thursday's episode of the ITV2 show saw Blu and Helena get the boot. It was shortly after eager fans spotted the boys filming in the village of Sant Llorenç in Mallorca - and Blu was nowhere to be seen. The boys all head out to get some bits from the shop ahead of their dates with the girls. They head off to the shops in high spirits to get a present for their other half. Despite the thoughtful gift, and cooking dinner for Meg, she argues with him about their co-star and his former fling Yas. The most recent episode of Love Island saw the couples take part in the Knowing Me, Knowing You Challenge. During one of the questions, Dejon picks Yas - who he had a flirt with at the start of the series. Meg is left feeling confused about the situation and decides to talk to Yas about it. She tells her: 'I've heard through the grapevine that you got the question wrong and D's name was written on the board. 'I wanted you to explain it because in challenges and stuff, everyone's always got a bad word to say about D. 'So, for you then to write him on the board, it was like "what's this about?" 'Am I missing something?' And although the boys have come back with thoughtful gifts and cooked dinner for their girls, Meg decides that it is the best time to bring the conversation up. But Dejon tells her: 'I can't believe these are our final days and we're arguing over Yas - change the topic.' 'You're still not getting where I'm coming from,' Meg tells him. And a confused Dejon asks: 'Where are you coming from? What is your point?' To make matters worse, one Islander gets a text that says: 'Islanders. The public have been voting for the most compatible couple. 'The couple with the fewest votes and therefore dumped from the island tonight is…' The next Islander to receive a text reads out who has been dumped from the show. Who do you think will be axed from the show next? Last night Love Island fans have claimed Dejon has ' shown his true colours' with a TV show comment and say he and Megan Moore 'won't last three months'. Viewers were left outraged after they witnessed Dejon be confronted by girlfriend Megan over his romantic confession for show favourite, Yasmin. On the show Dejon has come under fire for his behaviour towards Meg after keeping her around but continuously flirting with every bombshell that enters the villa. And while the couple have appeared to go from strength to strength as they are now officially boyfriend and girlfriend and confessed that they 'love' each other. But there seems to be trouble in paradise as Meg told Dejon he had not been completely honest once again about his antics around Yas. During a game of Knowing Me, Knowing You, the islanders were asked who they would couple up with if they were not with their current partners. Dejon confessed that he would couple up with Yas because he has previously explored that connection earlier in the season. The comment shocked Meg as she explained Dejon had never expressed that she would be his number two in the competition before. Love Island continues tonight at 9pm on ITV2 and ITVX. NAME: Dejon Noel Williams AGE: 26 FROM: London OCCUPATION: Semi-pro footballer and personal trainer WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Someone who is beautiful on the inside and out, looks after themselves and is healthy CLAIM TO FAME? My dad being an ex-professional footballer. I've met all kinds of famous people through him. When I was younger it was weird because he was just my dad, but we'd go to a game and fans were asking for photos. I've met David Beckham, he was really nice. Megan Moore NAME: Megan Moore AGE: 25 FROM: Southampton OCCUPATION: Payroll specialist WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? I'd like to meet someone who is tall, with a nice tan, nice eyes and a nice smile. He needs to have a good fashion sense and a really good, funny personality that I can get on with HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR LOVE LIFE? Bankrupt, right now. But we're going to make sales and get on that corporate ladder and be booming. Profits, profits, profits! NAME: Helena Ford AGE: 29 FROM: London OCCUPATION: Cabin Crew WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Somebody funny or Northern. I feel like Northern people have much more banter than Southerners. If you look through my previous dating history, you'll see I clearly go for personality. You can pretty much laugh me into bed. WOULD MAYA HIRE YOU FOR YOUR FLIRTING SKILLS? I would say hire but then quickly fire soon after. It would only be a temporary contract. NAME: Shakira Khan AGE: 26 FROM: London OCCUPATION: Construction Project Manager WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Someone who is tall, charming, witty, with big arms, a good smile and just really funny. HOW WOULD YOU DESCRIBE YOUR LOVE LIFE? Booming, but they're all frogs. It's a busy love life but I've not found 'the husband', I'm looking for 'the one'. I'm looking for the ring. NAME: Harry Cooksley AGE: 30 FROM: Guildford OCCUPATION: Gold trader, semi-professional footballer and model WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? The girl next door that makes me laugh and can hold eye contact with me. I don't think I'd go for the most obvious girl, I like a real sweet girl. CLAIM TO FAME? I'm the body double for Declan Rice. So when he does a shoot, any body close ups will actually be me. You'll never see my face, but you'll see my shoulder or chest, that kind of thing. NAME: Conor Phillips AGE: 23 FROM: Limerick OCCUPATION: Professional rugby player WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?Someone who is really sure of themselves, ambitious, a bit of a go-getter and good craic. I like dark eyes and I don't mind a dominant woman. WOULD MAYA HIRE YOU FOR YOUR FLIRTING SKILLS? Definitely hire. I ask girls if they want to go halves on a baby. It doesn't work, but it gets them laughing. It's an ice-breaker, not a serious question of course! NAME: Toni Laites AGE: 24 FROM: Connecticut OCCUPATION: Las Vegas Pool Cabana Server WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? I'm looking for darker hair, definitely muscular but not too muscular. Super fit. Clean hair cut. Someone that can make me laugh - I'm super outgoing. And someone that's quite active. Maybe one day we could start our own family together. I WANT TO DATE A BRITISH GUY BECAUSE... I've lived in three different states and I'm still single. It's time to try something new! I have some British friends and they're pretty charming. I think all Americans love a good accent. British men are just more polite, with better manners. NAME: Yasmin Pettet AGE: 24 FROM: London OCCUPATION: Commercial Banking Executive WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? I'm looking for a guy who is fit, has a nice body and who is funny with a bit of banter. WHAT'S YOUR BIGGEST ICK? A guy that's stingy NAME: Megan Moore AGE: 24 FROM: Dublin OCCUPATION: Musical theatre performer and energy broker WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Someone who doesn't take themselves too seriously and has a sense of humour. If they're not bad looking, that's always a plus. I love a boy that's a bit pasty, like Timothé e Chalamet. I don't mind scrawny, or a bit of a 'dad bod'. I'm 5ft1 so any height really. CLAIM TO FAME? Me and my friends made a Derry Girls TikTok for Halloween and it went a bit viral around Brighton. Sometimes I get stopped in the street about it. I've also done Panto. NAME: Blu Chegini AGE: 26 FROM: London OCCUPATION: Construction Project Manager WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Someone who is family oriented, has a lot of love to give and a lot of love to receive. Personality goes a long way. WOULD MAYA HIRE YOU FOR YOUR FLIRTING SKILLS? She'd fire me, but I've got the charm to smooth things over with a girl. The fact I speak fluent Spanish comes in handy when it comes to flirting! Jamie NAME: Jamie Rhodes AGE: 26 OCCUPATION: Electric Engineer WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Bubbly, cheeky, outgoing, good face card and a nice bum. WHAT KIND OF ISLANDER DO YOU THINK YOU'LL BE? I'll be in amongst the drama! It's a once in a lifetime opportunity, I'm gonna take it by the horns and go for it. NAME: Ty Isherwood AGE: 23 OCCUPATION: Site Engineer WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? I go off energy, if we vibe. I've typically dated brunettes, tanned, nice teeth with a nice smile. WHAT KIND OF ISLANDER DO YOU THINK YOU'LL BE? A head turner! I get along with lads easily and like to make people laugh. NAME: Cacherel 'Cach' Mercer AGE: 24 OCCUPATION: Professional Dancer WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? Someone who's emotionally intelligent, beautiful, charismatic, caring, affectionate, and I'd say an intro extrovert. WHAT KIND OF ISLANDER DO YOU THINK YOU'LL BE? I think I'm gonna get into trouble, I feel like I'll be the joker of the group! I'll also be the person people come to for advice… and a bit of eye candy at the same time. ......................................................................................................................... Angel NAME: Angel Swift AGE: 26 OCCUPATION: Aesthetics Practitioner and Salon Owner WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? I'm ready to make memories with someone, go travelling with them and fall in love WHAT KIND OF ISLANDER DO YOU THINK YOU'LL BE? I feel like people have been getting their heads turned very easily. I do feel like I have quite a good chance of turning someone's head.

What to drink with seafood? Albariño is its natural companion
What to drink with seafood? Albariño is its natural companion

The Guardian

time4 hours ago

  • The Guardian

What to drink with seafood? Albariño is its natural companion

It's World Albariño Day today – 1 August. I've got a soft spot for arbitrary wine holidays, so I'm marking the occasion by using it as an excuse to spend the weekend guzzling one of my favourite white wines. I've given you notice (sort of), so off you go to your nearest independent or supermarket to pick up something racy and saline. The Guardian's journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more. It used to be thought that the albariño grape was brought to Spain by the French monks of Cluny, but that has since been disproved, with no parentage between albariño and burgundian varieties. Rather, the grape is now believed to be an ancient variety that's native to the Iberian coast, with a naturally thick skin providing resistance to the diseases a humid climate can give rise to (alvarinho is the grape's name in northern Portugal, where it's essential in the production of easy-to-love vinho verde). The wines it produces are direct and acidic, with an unmistakable mineral salinity. It's often unoaked, but some producers are having fun by experimenting with barrel-ageing their albariños to give them extra weight and depth. Such wines are often drunk a little later, but most albariño is designed to be drunk within a couple of years of its release. But why August for World Albariño Day? Why not deepest, darkest winter or the yawning, stretching spring? My guess is that it's because the stuff goes down like a homesick mole and works with pretty much anything you'd want to eat when it's hot and sticky outside. Which makes sense when you think of Galician cooking, or indeed other coastal regions that grow albariño, where the cuisine is defined by seafood. What grows together goes together, and all that. A friend of a friend in Galicia says albariño has aguja, unlike most other Spanish wines. The word translates as 'needle', and relates to the verve of top, high-acid albariño, whose unique electricity is best paired with very simple seafood, preferably cooked in salt water, as they do in Galicia. 'It's my go-to picnic wine,' says Jeff Koren, director of wine at The Chancery Rosewood in Mayfair, who loves albariño so much that he once worked a vintage at the vaunted Bodegas Albamar. 'I want to drink it with crudites, Greek salad, prosciutto or jamón with melon, while I'd pair the cool, textured, barrel-aged stuff with anything I'm eating in the summer heat.' The grape's harmonious relationship with coastal regions has brought it to various corners of the world where the vineyards benefit from cooling maritime climates. Areas of New Zealand, California and South America are all producing their own interpretations of this wine, so there are plenty of options for your albariño day celebrations. Apologies for the rather late notice, it will almost definitely happen again. M&S Albariño Uruguay £10 Ocado, 12%. Defined by the Uruguayan coast, this saline wine shows ripe peach and nectarine. Adega de Moncao Trajarinho Vinho Verde £11.95 Jeroboams, 12%. A classically styled vinho verde made from alvarinho and trajadura. Anna's Way Nelson Albariño £11.95 The Wine Society, 14%. From New Zealand, this is all orchard fruit and lively citrus. Bodegas Albamar Albariño £28 Mother Superior, 12%. Made with natural yeasts, this is a great introduction to this experimental producer.

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