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Britain' Got Talent 2025 latest odds: The 11 acts most likely to take the talent title

Britain' Got Talent 2025 latest odds: The 11 acts most likely to take the talent title

Scotsman22-05-2025

2 . Hear Our Voice - 7/2
Priced at 7/2 are Hear Our Voice, a choir mainly made up of Sub Post Masters directly affected by the Horizon Post Office Scandal. They impressed at their first audition with a performance of 'Falling Down' by Will and the People and have seen their odds tumble in the lasat couple of weeks to become second favourites. | ITV

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'Brilliant' Britain's Got Talent for Roch sub-postmaster
'Brilliant' Britain's Got Talent for Roch sub-postmaster

Western Telegraph

time2 days ago

  • Western Telegraph

'Brilliant' Britain's Got Talent for Roch sub-postmaster

Former Roch sub postmaster Tim Brentnall is still buzzing from his Britain's Got Talent experience with Hear our Voice, the joyous choir of people whose lives have all been directly affected by the Horizon scandal, that had the BGT judges and audience on its feet. He was initially reluctant to join when fellow sub postmaster Mark said that he wanted to start a singing group. (Image: Tim Brentnall) 'He approached a few of us at a BBC event and suggested that we do something nice together,' said Tim. 'We got on a group of people but only was each other at enquiries or events to do with the negative past. 'At that point I said anything but singing.' However, encouraged by his partner Steph, he went to the first rehearsals and began to enjoy the experience. By this point the choir had enlisted Will and the People who had offered them access to their back catalogue of songs and joined to give the choir support. The choir practised online right up until the day before the Britain's Got Talent audition in Blackpool's Winter Gardens, when they all sang together in the same room for the first time. 'I remember saying. We will either be able to do it in an hour's time or we will be able to do it,' said Tim. 'It was terrifying. When you stand out in practice in a 5,000 seat theatre, I was thinking 'what have I got myself into', said Tim. 'But you are standing there with people who have supported each other through the worst times. "We wanted to stand together and show how strong we are. The desire to get out there was much stronger than the fear.' (Image: Britain's Got Talent/ ITV) All the judges loved their performance and chose them for the semi-finals. The reaction at the semi finals was just as positive with the judges praising the joyful and unifying performance and the public vote sending them through to the finals. 'To get the public vote to win the semi final was so heartening,' said Tim. 'It showed that people still care about our story. It was brilliant. 'We never expected to reach the finals. We were happy to keep our story alive.' The story continues to be kept alive with the release yesterday, Saturday, June 7, of Falling Down, a collaboration between Will and the People and Hear our Voice. The track has been released across all streaming platforms and a physical copy will also be available to buy. All money raised will support Lost Chances, a charity for the children of sub postmasters and the Horizon Shortfall Fund charity. (Image: Britain's Got Talent/ ITV) 'We set up the choir with three objectives; to keep our story in the public eye, to give people in the choir something joyful in a safe, therapeutic environment and to raise some money for the two sub post masters' charities.' So far the single has had a very positive reception with airtime on BBC Radio 2 and Radio Wales. 'For me being in the choir has been brilliant,' said Tim. 'I'm still in a complicated battle with the Post Office which is almost totally consuming of my energy and time. 'This has been a really good distraction. "When I've got a song to learn or a practice it's very mindful. A good way away from the negative things. 'We've got to know each other much better and support each other really well. You've always got these people you can reach out to when you need a pick up. "It's been really good like that.' To stream Falling Down by Will and the People and Hear our Voice, go to linked above.

Post Office choir founder says 'therapuetic' BGT stint was 'life changing'
Post Office choir founder says 'therapuetic' BGT stint was 'life changing'

Daily Mirror

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Post Office choir founder says 'therapuetic' BGT stint was 'life changing'

Mark Wildblood, the founder of Hear Our Voice - the choir made up of people impacted by the Post Office scandal - says the initiative has been 'therapeutic' after a battle with depression. Hear Our Voice, the choir made up of people affected by the Post Office scandal which placed seventh in the recent series of Britain's Got Talent, are releasing a new charity single alongside band Will & The People. The single, Falling Down, is a rendition of the song they performed in their audition for Britain's Got Talent. And choir founder Mark Wildblood says the initiative has been 'life changing' for him, admitting the talent show stint has made a significant impact on his mental health. ‌ 'I personally have found it very therapeutic,' said Mark. 'I was on antidepressants prescribed by my doctor for a long long time and I spoke to them very early this year and I said, 'Look [the choir] is really starting to make me feel good and I wouldn't mind trying to go without [the antidepressants]. ‌ "So, at the recommendation of doctors I was told it's ok to give it a go and I haven't been back on them since,' he says of the choir's impact. Continuing that it has given him 'purpose' following dark days, Mark shared, 'It's not difficult to get caught up in dwelling on all of the negatives. So, to be surrounded by the same people that you talk to about it every day and that are seeing the positives as well, I think we've done a really really positive thing and a lot of that is thanks to BGT.' While Mark says the choir has meant he's managed to let go of 'anger' he was holding onto against the post office, he confirms that the 'concern' remains. 'My concern for the procedure is not eliminated. We still have to make sure that we get closure and closure can only come with compensation.' Mark was a sub-postmaster at Upton Post Office before he was suspended from the role as one of the thousands of people impacted by the Post Office scandal. The scandal saw the wrongful prosecution of sub-postmasters and postmistresses by the Post Office, who accused them of theft, fraud, and false accounting due to faulty data from the Horizon IT system used by the company. ‌ He founded the choir in May 2024, inviting others impacted by the scandal to take part and raise money for the cause, alongside awareness. As the former tour manager for Will and the People, Mark then enlisted lead singer Will Rendle to get involved as he fronted the act on Britain's Got Talent. And detailing how the choir has become a family dynamic, Mark said, 'W e always say to each other that we have become family now. The choir is spread out throughout the country and so BGT has given us the opportunity to actually meet five times in a very short space of time and be together.' Many of the victims are still awaiting compensation from the Post Office, with Mark admitting that despite the success of their campaigning and the recent TV series; Mr Bates vs The Post Office, there's still a long way to go. ‌ It comes as Simon Recaldin, a Post Office boss who has been backing compensation for the scandal victims, has left his position in the company. Simon is thought to have opted for voluntary redundancy, a move which comes amid the increased pressure on the company to pay victims. Previously, the government announced that those who have had convictions overturned are eligible for £600,000, with hundreds still waiting for the compensation. 'Scandals like these have a commonality where the bureaucracy of closure takes so long that many people pass away by the time that the situations are resolved - I just hope that we don't get into that situation,' says Mark of those yet to be paid. 'We've already lost a lot of people in the Post Office scandal and we can't afford to lose more without getting a speed up, so I would say to those in power, please change the system. It'll be better for everyone all round and cost a lot less money if they just do it now as it should be,' pleaded Mark. With fellow choir member Maria Lockwood joking that the unit would be keen to front the Glastonbury stage this summer, Mark says he isn't opposed to the idea. "We wouldn't say no to anything where we had the opportunity to get together in person again and Glastonbury would be amazing, that would be phenomenal." Falling Down, the single by Hear Our Voice choir and Will and The People, is available on all platforms from tomorrow, 10 June. 100% of profits after costs from the single are going to the Horizon Scandal Fund and Lost Chances—two organisations supporting victims and their families.

Hear Our Voice: How choir helps Post Office scandal victims
Hear Our Voice: How choir helps Post Office scandal victims

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • BBC News

Hear Our Voice: How choir helps Post Office scandal victims

A singer in a choir made up of victims of the Post Office scandal and their families has described it as the "most joyful" experience which has seen their confidence grow since having their wrongful convictions Brentnall, from Roch, Pembrokeshire, was among hundreds of sub-postmasters and sub-postmistresses prosecuted after its Horizon computer system incorrectly recorded financial said they previously had met only at "horrible events like public inquiries or court dates" in the years it took to clear their names, so some decided to start the choir, Hear Our charity single will help colleagues and their children with many still seeking compensation. A Post Office spokesperson said it "apologised unreservedly" to the victims of the Horizon IT scandal and was focused on paying redress as quickly as Brentnall said: "It's been absolutely fantastic to get to know this group of people even better and do something so positive together. "It's given people something to focus on, and you can certainly see in the group, people have really grown in confidence, not just happiness," he told BBC Radio Wales' Breakfast."It was, it still is, the most joyful thing that I've ever done." The choir reached the finals of ITV show Britain's Got Talent last weekend which Mr Brentnall described as a "fantastic" and "crazy" experience which was "terrifying for everybody"."Everybody stood up and applauded us which was amazing," he added. Mr Brentnall explained the Horizon scandal had not yet been resolved with him and other former postmasters and mistresses trying to settle compensation claims."My claim, and everybody's claim, is not plucked out of thin air - it's put together by forensic accountants and people much cleverer than I am."You submit it and the Post Office and their legal team go through it and come back with a cost minimised claim."Then you have to rewrite it, resubmit, and it's a fight to get to somewhere that's acceptable where, if there was a will, they could just pay everybody's claims tomorrow."

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