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March of the Penguin Madness: Which penguin will win in 2025?

March of the Penguin Madness: Which penguin will win in 2025?

BBC News18-03-2025
If you're a fan of unusual animal competitions (we're looking at you Fat Bear Week!) then look no further.March of the Penguin Madness (MOTPM) is taking place this month, and is an international celebration of our feathered friends organised by animal charity Penguins International.Each year as part of the celebrations a competition called The Peng-Win Championships takes place, where penguins from zoos and wildlife parks around the world compete to be crowned the world's best penguin.This year 48 penguins from 12 different species have been nominated by their keepers, where they'll battle it out online in a public vote, before the winner is announced on 18 April.
Aside from the glory of winning, the victorious penguin will be immortalised in the Iceberg Hall of Heroes, earning the esteemed title of Global Penguin Ambassador, and may receive a crown and a fishy feast worthy of a global champion.If a penguin is knocked out of the Peng-Win Championships they can still compete in the charity's other competition, the Species Spirit Awards, which aims to celebrate and recognise one of the world's 18 species of penguin.Katie Propp, the Chief Operations Officer at Penguins International, said: "We want to highlight penguins in zoos and aquariums that serve as ambassadors to their species."Wild penguins continue to face numerous threats, as demonstrated by the uplisting of African Penguins from 'Endangered' to 'Critically Endangered' last October."
Meet the nominees
Of the 48 contestants, six are from the UK.They include:Brian - a Gentoo Penguin from The Deep in Hull.Barbie - a Humboldt Penguin from Birdworld, in Surrey.Ellis - a Humboldt Penguin from ZSL London Zoo.Nelly - a Northern Rockhopper Penguin from Edinburgh Zoo, in Scotland.Seth - a King Penguin from Birdland, in England.Squid - an African penguin from Birdworld in Surrey.However, the UK penguins will face tough competition from superstar Pesto, the King Penguin from SEA LIFE Melbourne Aquarium, in Australia, who went viral last year for his large fluffy form.Other competitors include Meatloaf the Little Penguin, from Birch Aquarium, in San Diego in the US, and Floppy the Gentoo Penguin from Pittsburgh Zoo and Aquarium, in Pennsylvania in the US.
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This Glasgow band that made one great album
This Glasgow band that made one great album

The Herald Scotland

time16 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

This Glasgow band that made one great album

Joni Mitchell's Blue, Led Zeppelin's fourth album, Who's Next, by The Who, David Bowie's Hunky Dory, Pink Floyd's Meddle and the Rolling Stones' Sticky Fingers all came out in the space of 12 remarkable months. So pivotal was that year that the music writer and broadcaster David Hepworth devoted a book to it: 1971 – Never a Dull Moment, it was called. 'Rock's best year', he said of those 12 months. One record that saw the light of the day in 1971, though not mentioned in Hepworth's survey, was by a Glasgow band called Northwind. Entitled Sister, Brother, Lover … it was their first and only album. Released on the Regal Zonophone label, the band was 'unofficially' told that some 10,000 copies were pressed and sold. It has surfaced every now and again in the intervening decades but in the last week or two it has received a distinctive accolade. The Ultimate Record Collection: The 200 Greatest Progressive Rock Albums … Ranked!, from the makers of Uncut magazine, includes Sister, Brother, Lover… in its 'in-no-way comprehensive' list of the 20 most collectable prog albums. It's in stellar company, taking its place alongside King Crimson's debut, In the Court of the Crimson King, and Pink Floyd's mighty The Dark Side of the Moon, to say nothing of records by Gentle Giant, Genesis and Van Der Graaf Generator. (All the albums on the list came out between 1969 and 1975). Northwind's record, the magazine observes, is 'breezy, bucolic soft-prog from Glasgow's short-lived answer to Wishbone Ash – big on tasteful twin-guitar team-ups', and which sold well in France. It's a 'well-regarded obscurity from a band who lacked label support, although they did open for Fleetwood Mac, [Deep] Purple and Yes'. And though the reissue age had dented prices, copies of the original 1971 vinyl have been spotted for sale at £500. Read more: Sister, Brother, Lover… was made by Brian Young (guitar/acoustic guitar/vocals), Hugh 'Shug' Barr (guitar), Tam Brannan (bass/vocals), Colin Somerville (organ/piano) and Dave Scott (drums/percussion). Brian and Colin, who had been at school together, had launched a band, The Power of Music. As Brian told Martin Kielty, author of Big Noise: The Sound of Scotland, the group did well enough to enable it to buy a van, PA, backline and instruments, mostly on hire purchase. 'We supported The Move and the Pathfinders at the Maryland in Glasgow in 1967, where everyone was wearing kaftans and the stage was covered with flowers. All really groovy! The Move were stunning with Flowers in the Rain and I remember seeing wee Roy Wood standing on top of his massive Vortexian amps to see the audience. '… The Power of Music moved to Germany towards the end of 1969,' he added. 'We played around the Frankfurt area, and the whole experience changed us. We were doing six long nights a week in front of a well-sussed and well-stoned audience of GIs and Germans. We ended up changing our name to Northwind and signed a deal with Regal Zonophone'. The band's agents were Ronnie Simpson's company, Music and Cabaret Entertainment, which was based in Glasgow's Hope Street. Other clients were Tear Gas (who subsequently evolved into the Sensational Alex Harvey Band) and Hate. Tony Calder, who with Andrew Loog Oldham had handled management for the Rolling Stones, 'was looking for bands for his production company Realization 7', Brian told the Rocking Scots website in 2004. 'Both Tear Gas and Northwind signed at the same time – we were then offered Regal Zonophone (no advance) like Tear Gas'.The band hit the gig circuit. Among their memorable shows was one at Green's Playhouse in November 1970, when they supported Fleetwood Mac 'featuring Christine Perfect' – Christine McVie, as she later became. Northwind also once played Wolverhampton Civic Hall in place of Deep Purple whose keyboard player (Jon Lord) had an injury. 'We played on our own for the entire evening to a delighted audience', Brian told Psychedelic Baby Magazine last year. 'We also supported Free in Edinburgh when 'All Right Now' hit No. 1. Additionally, we supported Tyrannosaurus Rex (unusual but interesting), Eric Burdon and the New Animals (San Francisco was mind-blowing)'. Recording work on the Sister, Brother, Lover ... album began at Regent Sound, in London, where the Stones, the Beatles and the Kinks had all recorded, and continued at Sound Techniques, a studio that had been used by such bands as Pink Floyd. From the vantage point of 2025, Northwind's solitary album remains an interesting and highly melodic piece of work. The dual-guitar approach of Brian and Hugh works well throughout, giving a bluesy edge to many of the songs, such as Castanettes. The beguiling opening track, Home for Frozen Roses, recalls Crosby, Stills & Nash, whose debut album had come out in 1969. The next cut, Acimon and Noiram, has a hypnotic riff and some lovely guitar work by Brian and Hugh. As Brian told Psychedelic Baby Magazine website last year, 'Lead guitarist Shug Barr was an excellent guitarist and a lovely progressive guy. We had two Gibson Gold Tops and Marshall amps (loud), and we played even louder on stage'. He has also remarked that the band devised the double-harmony sound long before Wishbone Ash had even thought of it. Elsewhere on the album, there are arresting vocal harmonies and tempo changes. Quill, the closing track, written by Tam Brannan, is propelled irresistibly by organ, bass and drums. 'A gentle piece of 'rural' Prog-acoustic rock, which now changes hands for over £150', Martin C Strong noted in his comprehensive 2002 book, The Great Scots Musicography.'The stand-out tracks were the mellow openers, 'Home for Frozen Roses' and 'Acimon and Noiram' (a softer Yes or Wishbone Ash come to mind…)'. The band, unfortunately, split up the year after the album's release. 'Northwind disbanded after a fateful trip to Zurich around 1972, which followed a less interesting month playing to the GI's again in Fulda, Germany', Brian, who for decades has run Glasgow's CaVa Sound recording studio, told Psychedelic Baby Magazine. That interview, last year, was prompted by the emergence of 'Peaceful', a compilation of previously unreleased material put out by Bright Carvings, a vinyl-only label specialising in unreleased – 'or barely released' – music from the underground era in British rock and folk music. As Bright Carvings' website phrases it, The Sister, Brother, Lover studio album 'is, rightly, a major collectible, with its mix of elegantly played and endlessly melodic tracks'.'Peaceful', for its part, assembles unused material from two 1970 Apple acetates with tracks rescued from 1973 studio tapes. 'The result is a careful balance of driving but controlled progressive rock and spectral ballads enhanced by some truly majestic guitar work, great vocals and superb production'. Shindig! magazine rated it at number 13 in a list of 2024's best reissues. Jon Groocock, the man behind Bright Carvings, believes Sister, Brother, Lover to be 'a bit of a minor classic: excellent songs, well sung and beautifully played, arranged and recorded'. Read more On the Record: As to whether it genuinely is 'prog' in the modern sense is, however, open to question. ''Prog'', says Jon, 'is really a term invented in the late 1980s by music journalists and applied to rock-based music from the mid-1970s characterised by long tracks, mainly instrumental, played by often classically-trained musicians, or those from a jazz background, in shifting keys and time signatures with LPs often constructed as 'concept albums' with pretentious or incomprehensible lyrics sung by virtuoso singers'. Such bands include Emerson Lake and Palmer, Yes, King Crimson, early Genesis, and Gentle Giant. Jon continues: ''Progressive Rock' on the other hand was a term that actually comes from around 1969 and was used to describe rock music that had moved on - progressed, in other words - from beat/psychedelia/urban blues rock to a more sophisticated sound, absorbing influences from folk, classical music and jazz on the way. 'So Led Zeppelin was Progressive blues rock, for instance. Black Sabbath and Deep Purple were Progressive hard rock - definitely not heavy metal, the term didn't exist. Fairport Convention were Progressive folk rock. As for Northwind, they were Progressive soft rock'. * 'Peaceful' can be obtained from Only a few copies remain of the 227-strong limited edition.

Gloucestershire in Pictures: RIAT, 2000trees and penguins
Gloucestershire in Pictures: RIAT, 2000trees and penguins

BBC News

time19-07-2025

  • BBC News

Gloucestershire in Pictures: RIAT, 2000trees and penguins

People have been looking to the skies over Gloucestershire as the Royal International Air Tattoo returned to the while the crowds were arriving at Fairford, the clean-up was finishing at Cheltenham after the 2000trees was also the opening of a new shopping centre in Tewkesbury and new adventures for some penguins in the county. Heat haze: It was a hot weekend for all the music fans who headed to Upcote Farm in Cheltenham for the 2000trees festival. To the horizon: Weather watcher 'Stormin' took this photograph, which has a mystical feel, on an early morning trip out in Colesbourne. To the skies: The Royal International Air Tattoo is taking place this weekend at RAF Fairford. The event is celebrating its 40th anniversary this year - and the Red Arrows will be flying each day this weekend. Festival time: Gloucestershire took on Sussex Sharks at the College Ground in Cheltenham on Thursday as the county cricket side made its annual pilgrimage to the area, whose name it bears. Welcome aboard: Four new Humboldt penguin chicks at Birdland have entered an exciting new phase, as they have begun exploring their surroundings and meeting the rest of the colony at the park in Bourton-on-the-Water. Look at that view: A walk up Crickley Hill at Birdlip was rewarded with views for miles on a clear, sunny day. Shop till you drop: A brand new outlet centre has opened in Tewkesbury this week just off Junction 9 of the M5. They started building the Cotswold Design Outlet in 2023 - and it has now opened to the public. All things bright and beautiful: This was too good to miss off the list of highlights this week. The colourful image of a bee enjoying a visit to a bloom was taken in Framilode by weather watcher 'Spacewalker'. Crisp views: Weather watcher 'Andy B' took this image of a sunny morning with great views in Cam.

Very rarely seen Big Brother star Brian Belo spotted in public for first time in 11 years – on show's 25th anniversary
Very rarely seen Big Brother star Brian Belo spotted in public for first time in 11 years – on show's 25th anniversary

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Very rarely seen Big Brother star Brian Belo spotted in public for first time in 11 years – on show's 25th anniversary

The star made return appearances to Big Brother following his win star seen Very rarely seen Big Brother star Brian Belo spotted in public for first time in 11 years – on show's 25th anniversary Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) RARELY seen Big Brother star Brian Belo has been spotted in public for the first time in 11 years - on the show's 25th anniversary. Brian, 38, won series eight of Big Brother back in 2007 - aged 19 at the time. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 5 Big Brother star Brian Belo was spotted out and about Credit: Splash 5 He won the hit reality show back in 2007 Credit: PA:Press Association 5 Brian memorably claimed he had never heard of Shakespeare Credit: Channel 4 New snaps show the reality show winner out and about, fittingly 25 years to the day since Big Brother first aired. Brian, sporting a beard, wore a black leather jacket with a blue button-up shirt alongside medium-wash blue jeans and white trainers. During his time in the famous House, the eventual winner memorably declared he didn't know who Shakespeare was. Up until 2018, Brian held the distinction of being the youngest Big Brother winner. He later reappeared as a housemate in Big Brother 16, entering on Day 32. However, he ultimately voluntarily chose to leave the House on Day 43. Back in 2016, Brian said his second stint led to the "hardest year of my life." Following his dramatic exit, the star revealed he battled issues with anxiety as he struggled to fit back into society. 'Everyone I've spoken to on the show has had issues with anxiety when leaving,' he said at The Sun Online's Celebrity Big Brother Facebook Live Party. He added: 'We need to be properly looked after. I've been massively effected since. It's been the hardest year of my life.' Huge Brit pop star reveals she's been approached for Celebrity Big Brother Brian continued that contestants aren't given the resources to cope with life after the house, and that many suffer from anxiety attacks. The star said:'I'm just a normal boy from a council estate, not Justin Bieber, and I've been on one of the biggest shows and then just have to go back to real life? 'We're not given the resources of the presenters - were just normal people and then expected to navigate back in real life. I didn't audition last year they came to me. 'You can chat to one therapist initially after leaving, but then you are on your own. 'I don't want in another 10 years' time another bunch of teenagers to go through what we went through. Big Brother's Return Big Brother has returned to our screens. AJ Odudu and Will Best are hosting the much-loved show. The return of Big Brother marks a revival of one of the most iconic reality TV shows. The show will bring back its classic challenges and format, promising to entertain a new generation of viewers. AJ Odudu is set to bring her dynamic presenting style to the show, alongside co-host Will Best, ensuring a fresh and engaging viewing experience. AJ and Will are set to breathe new life into Big Brother, combining nostalgia with contemporary twists to captivate audiences once again. 'People are having anxiety and panic attacks. All BB housemates suffer from panic attacks and this is something that needs dealing with.' As well as a cameo in Hollyoaks, Brian also appeared in Coach Trip, Come Dine With Me, Dead Set and Harry Hill's TV Burp. Brian hit the headlines again in 2013 when he sued the producers of The Only Way Is Esssex for allegedly stealing the idea of the show from him. The reality star - who had come up with the idea for a show called Totally Essex - eventually settled out of court with ITV and Lime Pictures. 5 Brian made several TV appearances following his Big Brother win Credit: Splash

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