
How earplugs became the hot new accessory at music festivals
I am 35 and have spent more than two decades taking a fairly cavalier approach to noise. I was in primary school when I got my first Walkman, later upgraded to an iPod. Then as I got a bit older I spent weekends camped near nightclub speakers screaming the lyrics to Mr Brightside. University involved similar nights out with even worse music; after graduating I discovered podcasts. I never gave much thought to my ears — until a bad infection caused my left eardrum to perforate and it scared me. This time at Glastonbury I wore earplugs under my bucket hat.

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The Sun
10 minutes ago
- The Sun
‘That's f***ing stupid' – Tom Brady snaps at Birmingham aide in row about how David Beckham should be treated
DAVID BECKHAM gave Tom Brady a lesson in English football fans' banter when he watched Birmingham take on Wrexham. The England and Manchester Unite d legend was a special guest at St Andrew's as the two teams clashed in League One last September. 4 4 NFL hero Brady, part-owner of Championship club Birmingham, sat with Beckham as the Blues won 3-1. And the two feature in a fly-on-the-wall documentary Built in Birmingham: Brady & the Blues that drops on Amazon Prime on Thursday. Beckham, 50, tells Brady: 'Your fans are singing about sheep s***gers — that's what they say about Welsh people!' The two have a clear bond — which is shown in the second of five episodes charting the American's involvement with Birmingham over the past two seasons. Ex-New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Brady, who won a staggering seven Super Bowls, has huge respect for the six-time Prem-winner. Before the game, Brady suggests to co-owner Tom Wagner that they organise a gift bag with a club sweater, hoodie, scarf and hat for the 115-cap ex-England star. Yet Wagner is told by one of his St Andrew's aides that as Beckham has no affiliation with Birmingham, that it would be a faux pas. But Brady, 47, retorts: 'That's f***ing stupid! Give him a gift bag to take home! 'It's a sweet thing. He doesn't have to wear it.' But one person not impressed with his gift was Wrexham's Hollywood co-owner Rob McElhenney. Tom Brady's ex-wife Gisele Bundchen shares rarely-seen photos of new baby she had with Jiu-Jitsu instructor lover 4 The actor is presented by Brady with a Birmingham shirt on the pitch before kick-off bearing No 12 and 'McElhenney' on the back. He says: 'What am I supposed to do with that?' But Brady does please his fellow American by signing an NFL card for his son. And the actor is gushing in his praise for Brady — telling him: 'You're one of five people in the world any locker room will listen to.' Birmingham went on to win the title and promotion back to the Championship, earning an EFL record of 111 points during the season. 4


The Sun
10 minutes ago
- The Sun
Tom Brady blasts Wayne Rooney's ‘work ethic' in damning fly-on-the-wall doc from Man Utd legend's Birmingham nightmare
TOM BRADY has slammed Wayne Rooney's work ethic during his time as Birmingham boss. The England and Manchester United legend is also branded 'lackadaisical' in a hard-hitting fly-on-the-wall documentary about the club being released on Friday. 7 7 7 7 7 Built in Birmingham: Brady & the Blues is a five-part series being dropped on Amazon Prime that charts the NFL legend's part-ownership of the club during the last two seasons. Brady — who won a record seven Super Bowls — visited their training ground in the first episode to observe Rooney's team meeting and training session. And while being driven away, he tells his business manager Ben Rawitz: 'I'm a little worried about our head coach's work ethic.' Rawitz replies: 'Comes across as lackadaisical.' Rooney proved a disaster in his time at Birmingham between October 2023 and January 2024. He was sacked after winning just two of his 15 Championship games in charge which saw the club plummet from sixth to 20th and they never recovered, crashing into League One. And the 120-cap England hero appears awkward during his exchanges with Brady. Rooney, at one point, offers to school the NFL powerhouse in the small details of football. He explains that the reason Birmingham's players are at Championship level rather than Premier League is not their skill level but lack of focus for 90 minutes. CASINO SPECIAL - BEST CASINO BONUSES FROM £10 DEPOSITS 7 7 Brady tells Rooney: 'What's the difference between football (American) and soccer? Nothing. I treated practice like it was the Super Bowl. Put pressure on them, make them run for everything.' The series goes on to chart their incredible season last time around which saw them win League One with an EFL-record 111 points under new boss Chris Davies. Birmingham fans in meltdown over Tom Brady's 'no messing about moment' as trailer for Amazon Prime doc released But Brady conceded it was a mistake to replace previous boss John Eustace with Rooney within weeks of taking over in August 2023. The NFL star, who had a 22-year career with New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers, said: 'I had good advice, 'Don't go in there and make sweeping changes. You guys have time.' 'But we made sweeping changes that put us in decline. That was our doing.' Brady also blasted the players — laying the blame at their feet. He rapped: 'We were trying to make Birmingham a world-class team - but it's been a s**t year. They were lazy and entitled, which doesn't give you much chance to succeed.' Rooney went on to manage Plymouth after his Brum axe but lasted just seven months. He is now set to focus on his punditry work, including a lucrative gig on Match of the Day. Wayne Rooney's record-breaking career WAYNE Rooney took the football world by storm when he made his debut for 2002 with Everton. He quickly became the club's youngest-ever goalscorer aged 16 years and 342 days and was named the BBC's Young Sports Personality of the Year. The striker joined Manchester United in 2004 and spent 13 years at Old Trafford. He went on to make 559 appearances for the Red Devils and scored 253 goals. To this day he is still the club's all-time leading goalscorer. Following his spell with United, Rooney returned to Everton for a season. He also spent one-season stints with D.C. United and Derby County at the end of his career. As well as his impressive club career, Rooney is also England's second-highest goalscorer with 53 goals in 120 appearances, behind only Harry Kane. After hanging up his boots, the England icon turned to a career in management. He took charge of Derby County in 2020 and managed to just about save the club from relegation from the Championship at the end of his first season. However, with Derby handed a 21-point deduction the following campaign, he was unable to keep them up again and subsequently left. Then came a 15-month spell in charge of MLS side D.C. United. He failed to impress during his time in Washington and parted ways with the club at the end of the 2023 regular season. Rooney was controversially handed the Birmingham job in October 2023, replacing John Eustace with the club doing well and sixth in the Championship table. However, in 15 games he suffered nine defeats and managed just two wins. He was sacked in January 2024 with Birmingham down in 20th. The club were relegated to League One at the end of the campaign. He returned to management in May with Plymouth Argyle but managed just five wins in 25 games. The United legend now finds himself out of work once again.


Daily Mail
37 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Without hesitation as the whistle blows... The wit, wisdom and epitaph of a comic genius: CRAIG BROWN
When is a comedy not a comedy? Perhaps when it involves Radio 4's quiz show Just A Minute and the incomparable Kenneth Williams. As I explained on Tuesday, I am addicted to the website which offers complete transcripts of every episode of the show, dating back to the 1960s. On one episode, broadcast on January 20, 1976, Williams had to speak on the subject of 'When It Is My Go'. He used the topic to round on his fellow panellists. 'When it is my go,' he began, 'I should be allowed to get under way properly and not be interfered with by pygmy-like minutiae and rubbish from other people... 'Get out, you old gasbag!' and rudeness! Whereas I, used to the cloistered world, or groves of academe, as they are sometimes called, should proceed evenly and calmly through life on some vast panopoly. Silken gowns and beauty, noise. No ugly chants. No discord shall interrupt!' At this point, he accused his fellow panellists of failing to interrupt for sly reasons of their own. 'Oh, I realise I'm being set up rotten!' he continued. 'They've all just decided . . .' But then the whistle went: he had completed the minute, without hesitation, deviation or repetition. However, instead of being triumphant, he was wary, complaining. 'They just sat there with no intention of pressing their buttons… I could see what they were doing: give him enough rope and he'll hang himself!' Throughout his life as a comic, Kenneth Williams worried that audiences were laughing at him rather than with him. His diaries form a record of extravagant exhibitionism juxtaposed with intense self-loathing. They often seem to echo the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, who wrote in his 1836 journal: 'I have just returned from a party of which I was the life and soul; wit poured from my lips, everyone laughed and admired me, but I went away – and wanted to shoot myself.' On another episode, Williams expatiated on the subject of 'Wellies'. 'The other use to which they could be put is shoved under a drainpipe and thus you collect water which in these times of emergency . . .' he began. A buzzer went. The actor Alfred Marks was challenging him. 'I don't know of many drainpipes that would take a full-sized welly,' said Marks. Williams erupted with what appeared to be genuine fury. 'I don't care what drainpipes you're familiar with, mate! You don't know anything about drainpipes! You've never been round my place! What a nerve! Sitting there pontificating about drainpipes! You know nothing about them! What do you know about plumbing! You couldn't even change a washer! 'Look at him! He's gone white! He sits there – what a nerve! You've interrupted one of our great pundits! I know more about plumbing than you've had hot dinners!' At this point, panellist Peter Jones interjected: 'You've touched on a very sensitive area there, Alfred!' 'How dare you!' retorted Williams. Another time, he was asked to speak on 'My Other Self'. 'It is the side of me few people ever see,' he said. 'I closely guard this private person because all of us do cherish some secret feeling which we feel, if it were to be betrayed… 'It was Emerson, I believe, who said we have as many personalities as we have friends. Mine consequently are varied and extraordinary. Many times, people say, 'Well, we saw a side of you we didn't know existed! How won-derful it was to have the curtain or the veil, as it were, lifted on your pro-cliv-ities!'' There were roars of laughter but, once again, the private man had unwittingly revealed his vulnerability. Williams did have many personalities: in his private diary he would often employ five or six entirely different styles of handwriting. And most of his personalities were tormented. In February 1976, asked to speak on 'My Epitaph', he quoted – or slightly misquoted – these lines from Gray's Elegy: Here rests his head upon the lap of Earth A youth to fortune and to fame well known And talent smiled upon his humble birth, But melancholy claimed him for her own.