Coldplay and BTS’ new collaboration My Universe lands at Number 1 on the UK's Official Trending Chart as it heads towards a Top 5 debut.
09.09.2021 - 14:43 / dailyrecord.co.uk
Openreach has announced it will scrap connection fees for access to its superfast broadband network for those who receive Universal Credit with no other earnings from next month.
The BT-owned firm said new, eligible customers from October 5 could save up to £92 for installation charges, but it will be up to their provider to pass on the savings.Openreach manages the telephone cables, ducts, cabinets and exchanges that connect much of the UK, which companies including Sky and TalkTalk use for
.Coldplay and BTS’ new collaboration My Universe lands at Number 1 on the UK's Official Trending Chart as it heads towards a Top 5 debut.
universities to go to across Scotland, according to the students. Put together by the university comparison website, Uni Compare, the list shows the top 100 unis from across the whole of the UK.
Coldplay headlined the New York leg of Global Citizen Live over the weekend, where they performed their new collaboration with BTS, ‘My Universe’.While BTS were not physically at the concert, the group were featured as holographs on a backdrop while Coldplay frontman Chris Martin sung in both English and Korean.
Coldplay & BTS’ new single My Universe is taking on Ed Sheeran for Number 1 on this week’s Official Singles Chart. The Max Martin-produced collaboration opens at Number 2 on the Official Chart First Look and is just 1,000 chart sales behind current leader, Ed Sheeran’s Shivers (1).
Get the United transfer latest, team news, match updates and analysis delivered straight to your inbox every day for free
Alexander Stewart said he had "real sympathy" with comments made last week by Ruth Davidson, who claimed the reduction in the benefit was the “wrong thing to do”. The £20 uplift to the all-in-one benefit was a temporary measure to help poorer families during the pandemic and is due to come to an end from October 6 in a move that has sparked fury among anti-poverty campaigners.
When writer/director Justin Simien’s debut indie movie, “Dear White People,” first arrived at the beginning of 2014, it was a sharp, insightful and prescient breath of fresh air— woke— a good three years before the word was added to the Oxford English Dictionary in 2017, several months before “stay woke” became a BLM call to action following the shooting of Michael Brown in the summer of 2014.
Coldplay and BTS have released their much-anticipated collaboration ‘My Universe’.The new joint single was co-written by both groups, alongside Swedish hitmaker Max Martin, and is sung in both English and Korean.
Sign up for our daily newsletter to get the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox
This series of Married At First Sight UK has been a drama fueled riot from start to finish. This year, we followed the newlywed couples as they love together in an apartment complex, regularly meeting for the infamous dinner parties.To get them through the experience each couple is provided with a weekly shop provided by show bosses.
iOS - Android It will offer sit in, take away, drive-thru, deliveries and mobile order and will complement Hamilton's existing Starbucks drive thru on Palace Grounds retail park.Starbucks latest drive-thru is being brought to the town again by Glasgow-based OCO Westend, one of the firms longest licensed partners in the UK, who recently opened another new store in Polmadie.Recent growth means OCO Westend, owned by JJ O'Hara, now employs 273 people across 13 stores in Scotland including Rutherglen
benefit claimants could be due £1,500 in back payments if the UK Government loses a legal case over whether it was fair to exclude people on legacy benefits from extra Covid support. Earlier this year, the High Court granted two people claiming Employment Support Allowance (ESA) the right to challenge a decision not to increase their payments in line with the top-up given to those on Universal Credit.
benefits claimants say their current pay-out is barely enough to cover the bills, with circumstances set to get worse as government removes the Covid-19 uplift next month. Almost six million people rely on Universal Credit in the UK, and as of October they will be receiving £20 less per week when the change is made.Mum-of-five Shannon Brown says she will likely face debt as a result of the cut.
Get the day's biggest stories sent direct to your inbox so you never miss a thing
EXCLUSIVE: Charlotte Hope (Game Of Thrones), Charlie Creed-Miles (Giri/Haji), Plan B/Ben Drew (Harry Brown) and Sadie Frost (Waiting For Anya) are among cast to join UK biopic The Chelsea Cowboy.
Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) recently published its ‘Shaping Future Support: the Health and Disability Green Paper’ which outlined the UK Government’s proposals to improve the experience of disabled people and those with health conditions using their services.
HBO Max is set to launch in a number of countries across Europe but there are no plans for a UK platform yet.The service will be available in six countries from October 26 – Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Finland and Andorra – before expanding to a following 14 in 2022.Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Hungary, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, and Slovenia will all receive HBO Max next year, while there’s no news on any plans
UK Government is being urged to "bring clarity" soon on the future of the State Pension triple lock after reports suggested that a decision on the rule, which is used to uprate pensions, is to be made this week. Helen Morrissey, senior pensions and retirement analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, said: "Any decision needs to take account of the needs of both pensioners and taxpayers.
uplift to the benefit which was introduced at the height of the first coronavirus lockdown last year - despite several high-profile party members urging Boris Johnson it must be kept. Numerous charities and anti-poverty campaigners have warned that removing the uplift will plunge hundreds of thousands of people across the UK into poverty.