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Daily Mirror
17 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Tourists visit 'most boring place in the UK' to see if it deserves reputation
Two tourists decided to spend a day in a 'boring' British location to see if it really was as bad as people make it out to be – and they were surprised by what they found For years, the Berkshire town of Slough has earned a reputation as one of Britain's worst places to call home, as it's often named both the ugliest and most boring place in the UK. The area is plagued with shuttered shop fronts and abandoned high streets. But two tourists decided to see just how bad it truly was. Posting on TikTok, Liam Dowling from Australia and Matt Giffen from Canada chose to spend a day in Slough to determine whether it genuinely lived up to its dismal reputation. And they were shocked to what they found as they arrived there. Liam asked viewers: "Okay, can a Canadian and an Aussie have fun in the most boring place in the UK? That's what Google and ChatGPT said is Slough... Come with us on a day is what's known to be the worst place and see if we can have fun." "How bad could it really be?" Matt wondered, appearing to maintain a positive attitude about the town at first. Their first port of call was the local Wetherspoons, named 'The Moon and the Spoon'. Inside, they encountered some residents and sought suggestions for activities. Hilariously, a man quickly recommended hopping back on the train to explore somewhere else entirely, which caught Liam off guard. The pair then ventured outside, where they seized the chance to quiz additional locals about attractions in the vicinity. One resident quickly said: "There's nothing here." A bewildered Matt questioned: "Why does everyone keep saying that?". The bloke didn't hold back with his candid response as he said: "Because it's a dump." After persuading Matt to down a shot, Liam declared: "Now we're having fun." The duo then pressed on with their mission to uncover some entertainment. They found themselves wandering down the high street in central Slough, which locals had branded 'the worst place on Earth'. One resident even warned them not to trust a soul in the town. Nevertheless, they made their way to Chicking Chicken Shop, one of the few local places that had come recommended. Despite being tucked away in what appeared to be a deserted shopping centre, Liam and Matt were blown away by their meal. Liam raved: "Bro, that is unreal. That's the most amazing chicken shop wings I've ever had. Slough might not have a shopping centre or anything else, but they have great chicken shop wings." Their adventure continued at another pub called The Brickhouse, before they headed to Slough Ice Arena for some ice skating. "See guys, you can have fun wherever you go. You just got to do fun stuff," Liam remarked whilst gliding across the ice. For their next meal, the pair grabbed a pizza from Pizza GoGo. They wrapped up the video back at the local Spoons, before catching their train out of Slough. Reflecting on their adventure, Liam concluded: "It's been an interesting day." Matt concurred, saying: "Here's the thing, it's not a fun place, but we had fun together." Liam finished the clip on an upbeat note, adding: "The one thing I will say is the people here, everyone was so friendly, so nice... Slough, we had as much fun as we could."


Daily Mail
19 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Couple blames ChatGPT after missing flight to Puerto Rico
As partner Alejandro Cid comforts her, Caldass tells the camera: 'Look, I always do a lot of research, but I asked ChatGPT and they said no,' referring to whether they needed a visa to enter the country. 'I don't trust that son of a [expletive] anymore', she adds. But in between her tears, the influencer jokes that the AI tool gave them the wrong information as an act of revenge after she insulted it. 'I don't trust that one anymore because sometimes I insult him, I call him a [expletive], you're useless, but inform me his revenge'. The video has racked up 6.1 million views on TikTok and several users have poked fun at the couple for asking ChatGPT for information instead of checking official travel advice. 'Well, natural selection I guess. If you are going to take a transoceanic trip and you put all your advice in ChatGPT, little has happened to you,' one user commented. 'But who trusts ChatGPT for those types of situations?,' another said. Others came to ChatGPT's defence, claiming the AI tool's answer was not incorrect and that instead the couple had asked it the wrong question about the necessary documents to enter Puerto Rico. Spanish tourists do not need a visa to enter the Caribbean island, however holidaymakers must process an Electronic Travel Authorization (ESTA) online. The couple's ordeal with ChatGPT comes a day after a man was left fighting for his sanity after replacing table salt with a chemical more commonly used to clean swimming pools after following AI advice. The 60-year-old American spent three weeks in hospital suffering from hallucinations, paranoia and severe anxiety after taking dietary tips from ChatGPT. Doctors revealed in a US medical journal that the man had developed bromism - a condition virtually wiped out since the 20th century - after he embarked on a 'personal experiment' to cut salt from his diet. Instead of using everyday sodium chloride, the man swapped it for sodium bromide, a toxic compound once sold in sedative pills but now mostly found in pool-cleaning products. Symptoms of bromism include psychosis, delusions, skin eruptions and nausea - and in the 19th century it was linked to up to eight per cent of psychiatric hospital admissions. The bizarre case took a disturbing turn when the man turned up at an emergency department insisting his neighbour was trying to poison him. He had no previous history of mental illness.


The Guardian
19 hours ago
- The Guardian
Jason Bourne is coming back – but what do we want from him this time?
What do you consider to be the end of Jason Bourne? For connoisseurs, Bourne's story definitively ended in 2007's The Bourne Ultimatum, which masterfully wrapped up the story that began five years earlier with The Bourne Identity. For the less discerning viewer, it ended with 2016's scraggy and inconsequential Jason Bourne. For the three people who watched the USA Network's 2019 series Treadstone, it ended there. So which is it? Trick question, because Jason Bourne is never actually going to end, ever. This week, NBCUniversal has won a bidding war to acquire all non-publishing rights to Robert Ludlum's Bourne and Treadstone properties in perpetuity. The deal, described as 'very large', means that Bourne is now firmly as much a part of Universal as Jaws, Jurassic World and the Minions. It also means we are never getting rid of him. As the Universal Pictures president, Peter Cramer, said: 'We're energized to continue expanding the Bourne universe into the future with exciting new stories for global audiences.' This is potentially very interesting news, because if any franchise needs a shot in the arm, it's Bourne. While its first three movies are rightly regarded as peerless, things really went off the rails after that. There was 2012's The Bourne Legacy, made without Matt Damon during that weird time where every franchise on Earth seemed to hire Jeremy Renner as its new face. There was 2016's Jason Bourne, where Paul Greengrass and Matt Damon attempted to depict Bourne as a slightly narky nightclub bouncer. And then there was Treadstone, which didn't feature Bourne at all and was canned after a single season. It might have been a wobbly couple of decades for the franchise, but it's important to remember just how revelatory Bourne was at the beginning. As soon as The Bourne Identity landed in 2002, with its grounded, propulsive, parkour-based action, it instantly made every other film in its genre look creaky and ancient. It was released in the same year as Die Another Day and, while Bond outgrossed Bourne two to one, the pure athleticism of the latter made the former – with its phalanx of invisible cars, diamond-faced baddies and shoddy CGI – look ready for the glue factory. Pierce Brosnan was ditched, Daniel Craig was hired and, tellingly, Casino Royale ended up being stuffed to the gills with an absolute Bourneload of parkour. Already there is talk of bringing Matt Damon back into the fold, with Deadline revealing that a script by Joe Barton has been written but not greenlit. And this would be the most sensible avenue, since people automatically equate Bourne with Damon and, thanks to his leading role in Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey next year, his stock has rarely been higher. However, he is also in his mid-50s, which puts him squarely in 'Liam Neeson in Taken' territory, which isn't necessarily the best long-term strategy for the franchise. Then again, the character isn't exactly wanting for source material. Although Robert Ludlum wrote three Bourne books before his death in 2001, many, many more have been knocked out by various other writers since then. Maybe there'll be an adaptation of 2009's The Bourne Deception, or 2016's The Bourne Enigma, or this year's The Bourne Vendetta, or next year's The Bourne Revenge. There is now such a glut of Bourne books that perhaps the character needs to be reset with a younger actor to get them all made. One thing to avoid, perhaps, is deepening the mythology too much. Treadstone proved that any appetite the character has for the Bourne franchise begins and ends with the character of Jason Bourne. We're already drowning in watered-down IP, so the thought of sitting through a spin-off property about the madcap adventures of Julia Stiles sounds absolutely exhausting. Most pressing of all, though, is making sure that there is a place for Jason Bourne in the current landscape. Since the peerless original Bourne trilogy ended, James Bond has lived and died and been bought by Jeff Bezos. The MCU burst into life, dominated the market and then slowly asphyxiated on its own bloat. The go-to action blockbuster reference for a long time was Mission: Impossible's maximalist stuntwork, but even that came unstuck in the end. We find ourselves in exactly the place we were at the start of the century. The action world has stagnated, and there is a window for something to come along and revolutionise the game. Jason Bourne already did this once. If he can come out of retirement and do it again, the investment will be more than worth it.