
So the Government is talking about something that actually makes sense - limiting the amount of time kids can access social media on smartphones. Let's face it, too many modern parents have completely lost their grip. They're scared of saying "no," scared of setting boundaries, and scared of being seen as the "strict one". So instead, they hand over an iPhone, look the other way, and let TikTok do the babysitting.
We have a generation of kids who can barely hold a conversation but can scroll for eight hours straight; children who are addicted to 'likes', filters and followers before they've even learned to tie their shoelaces. It's madness - and it's down to weak parenting and cowardly excuses. Yes, being the bad guy is hard. But that's the job.
You're not there to be liked, you're there to protect, guide, and raise your child. If you're relying on Snapchat and Instagram to do that for you, then you've failed before you've even started.
Children don't need social media. They need sleep, real friends, and the ability to look up from a screen without getting withdrawal symptoms.
We've got eight-year-olds watching violence and porn, 13-year-olds suffering from body dysmorphia because of Instagram filters and teenagers being bullied, groomed, or radicalised in their bedrooms while their parents are downstairs bingeing Netflix, assuming all is fine. Social media has become the new babysitter - and not a particularly safe one.
This ban would remove the excuse for those who are simply too lazy to try and say no.
We've tried trusting people to do the right thing, and it hasn't worked. So now it's time for the state to step in. Ban social media for under-16s. Lock it down. Let kids be kids again without filters, dopamine hits, or strangers in their DMs.
And if that makes some parents uncomfortable? Good. Maybe it's time they remembered what parenting actually involves.
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Kim Woodburn wasn't just a reality star, she was absolute TV dynamite! Unfiltered, unapologetic, and utterly unforgettable. In an industry full of fake smiles and PR-trained clones, Kim was exactly the same off-camera as she was on: brutally honest, hilariously sharp, and mesmerisingly endearing.
She didn't need a script or a storyline - she was the show. From How Clean Is Your House? to Celebrity Big Brother, she gave us gold just by being herself. A true one-off. The last of a dying breed. She didn't clean up her act for anyone. And we loved her for it. RIP, Kim.
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I fully support my mate Myles Burrell and his involvement in the #DadStrike, and if you care about families, you should too. Last week, hundreds of fathers took to the streets, babies in tow, to say 'enough is enough'.
We're bottom of the barrel when it comes to paid leave in Europe. We talk about family values in this country, but when it's time to back them up, the Government disappears.
The idea that two weeks' paternity leave is enough is not just outdated - it's insulting. What can any dad actually do in 14 days? You barely learn how to change a nappy before you're back at your desk pretending everything's fine.
This isn't about lazy dads wanting duvet days, It's about being present for your partner, bonding with your child, and not being punished financially for being a decent father.
Let's stop pretending two weeks is generous. It's not. It's a disgrace. And until the system changes, dads have every right to strike.
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Ray Winstone reigniting his ancient feud with Jack Nicholson is proof that some men really do peak at pub fights and never move on. Winstone has branded Nicholson "very rude" and "up his own a**e" for how he behaved on The Departed set nearly 20 years ago.
Mate, seriously? You're still banging on about a Hollywood ego clash from 2006 like it's EastEnders on repeat? Ray is a wrinkled hardman who is acting like a bitter uncle nursing slights from a wedding no one else remembers.
It's pathetic. Nicholson's been out of the game for years, and Winstone - who is a great actor - would be better off focusing on the work, not playground drama from a film most people forgot he was even in. What exactly do we gain from this clash of the cinematic dinosaurs?
Nothing. Just another reminder that even millionaires with global fame can be as petty and insecure as anyone.
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Say what you want about Donald Trump - and, believe me, people do - but when it comes to national pride, the man doesn't flinch. This week Trump erected two giant 100-foot flagpoles on the White House lawns, personally funded, not a single taxpayer cent spent.
That's right, he dipped into his own pocket to fly the Stars and Stripes higher and louder than ever before. Now ask yourself, can you imagine Keir Starmer doing the same for the Union Flag? Of course not. He's too busy pretending patriotism is problematic.
Trump understands what so many modern leaders have forgotten: the flag isn't just fabric - it's identity. It can be unifying and, with the right citizens, it can be something to be proud of.
While British politicians shy away from showing love for their country in case they offend someone, Trump's planting steel into the ground and saying: "This is who we are."
You don't have to agree with Trump's politics to admit this - but that's leadership. Starmer could do with a dose of it.
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