Category: Featured

  • Motoring: The Nissan Juke Hybrid blends performance and economy

    Motoring: The Nissan Juke Hybrid blends performance and economy

    Nissan has continued its plans to offer a hybrid version of all its petrol cars with its crossover SUV, the Juke, getting the electrifying treatment.

    The Juke’s also had some tweaks, with a revised front end, although it retains the same basic funky shape it’s known for.

    There are a bunch of trims, and the Tekna+ reviewed here gets aerodynamic alloys, exterior styling tweaks and two-tone metallic paint.

    The powertrain is a 1.6-litre petrol engine and an electric motor, producing 143PS.

    The battery is only 1.25kWh, providing an all-electric range of just two miles. But the Juke’s all about preserving fuel economy, rather than engineless driving.

    That said, the engine doesn’t start up until you hit third gear or 35mph, and you can override this to leave it in all-electric mode.

    The Juke Hybrid is keener to make progress than the pure petrol model. But the rate of acceleration dips as you approach 70mph.

    A Sport mode helps increase the accelerator response, although the Juke is anything but sporty in terms of handling. Why? Well, it’s not incredibly athletic in the bends, despite a firm ride.

    The Nissan is better suited to dual-carriageways and motorways, while the automatic gearbox is well-refined.

    Inside, the Juke is fashionable, with circular air vents adding personality. Additionally, the materials feel pretty nice, although there are cheaper plastics on show.

    The infotainment screen protrudes over the top of the dashboard and has been improved along with the car’s makeover. What’s more, the digital display gives valuable information about energy usage and battery statistics.

    The seats are comfortable, and forward visibility is okay but compromised at the rear. That said, the hybrid includes a camera, which helps.

    There is good space in the front and back, although not enough to comfortably fit three adults in the rear. Meanwhile, storage could be better, with small door bins and only one cupholder.

    Boot space is 354 litres, ballooning to 1,114 litres with the back seats folded, while the adjustable boot floor helps minimise the load lip.

    Nissan says you’ll get 56.5mpg, producing 114g/km CO2. But perhaps even more importantly, the Juke earned a five-star safety rating from Euro NCAP. The safety kit includes intelligent emergency braking, lane departure warning and intervention, traffic sign recognition and tyre pressure monitoring. The Tekna+ adds lane-keep assist, a 360-degree camera, blind spot intervention and rear cross-traffic alert, amongst other technology.

    Overall, the Juke is improved on the previous model, and the hybrid offers a respectable blend of performance and good economy figures.

    Choosing the hybrid does push the price up, so other rivals that are even better to drive may appear on your radar.

    Fast Facts – Nissan Juke Hybrid (Tekna+ trim) as tested:

    • Max speed: 103 mph
    • 0-62 mph: 10.1 secs
    • Combined mpg: 56.5
    • Engine layout: 1.6-litre four-cylinder + electric motor
    • Max. power (PS): 143
    • CO2: 114 g/km
    • Price: £30,150

    All Photos: Courtesy of Nissan Juke Hybrid

  • Opinion: Is Annika all at sea?

    Opinion: Is Annika all at sea?

    Annika is either a TV crime drama, a crime drama spoof, or a comedy. I’m not sure exactly which. However you look at it, the BBC hit series is a contemporary take on the archetypal loner who tirelessly pursues justice, outwits the bad guys, no matter what the personal price. Nicola Walker plays the role of Detective Inspector Annika Strandhed, newly promoted and desperately trying to fit in and lead her team at the Marine Homicide Unit (MHU) based on the bonny, bonny banks of Scotland. Each episode conveniently races from corpse to conclusion in the space of 45 minutes. This is handy on a school night when you can’t afford to be awake at 3am trying to work out whodunnit.

    The creator, Nick Walker (no relation to Nicola Walker), and the screenwriters have carefully woven together several multi-layered story threads into each self-contained episode. The complex characters gradually unfold their individual back stories, and we get to know them bit by tiny bit. The cultural sub-plot is very much of the moment, though the dialogue is sometimes choppy and the script does seem to follow a formula. The crime drama scenario centres around a marine-based murder, usually committed by the least nasty person on screen, which is then cleverly solved. Red herrings notwithstanding, DI Annika, has her final show down with the culprit and the cuffs are on. But, as with so many police procedurals, this insightful competence is starkly contrasted by the flawed protagonist’s messy personal life and a crippling inability to solve very much of anything at all in that regard.

    Annika personifies that fashionable modern trend of always being switched ‘on’. Her head is all over the shop. She’s stressy, awkward, and never fully present in the moment. When she’s working, she over shares her personal troubles with her subordinates at every opportunity, they have no choice but to listen. When she’s with her 15-year-old daughter Morgan, who inevitably gets drawn into the saga, she seems mentally absent and still puzzling over the latest crime to be solved. When she’s enveloped by what has to be some of the most beautiful scenery in the world, Annika is stuck in her own head, mumbling musings from her mental archives.

    For good or ill, the screenwriters have employed a gimmick known as breaking the fourth wall, in which a character talks directly to camera. Remember Shirley Valentine talking to the wall, and the viewer? In that movie, another male writer, Willy Russell, took a stab at unpacking the inner workings of the female mind. I’m still working out how I feel about the integrity of that arrangement. These ‘asides’ certainly hold the viewer’s attention. Between dealing with brutally murdered corpses, Annika casually unpacks stories about her Nordic ancestors and encrypted snippets of her personal history. The viewer becomes a kind of imaginary friend or therapist. Though we’re not actually physically present in Annika’s fictional world, we’re recruited to be involved in helping to process her issues. The audience is asked not so much whodunnit, but rather, who is she?

    While the scenery, atmospheric music and production values are truly spectacular, the complex writing is thoroughly crafted and the characters are well developed, I was left feeling quite sad for Annika. She seems friendless, forlorn, desperately casting around to be liked and validated. And for all her career success she’s battling with that most modern ailment, a deep down loneliness and disconnection. I can’t figure out if Walker plays the socially awkward loner brilliantly, or if she’s just playing a parody of herself. Episode four suddenly shifts up into will-they-won’t-they gear, but before that there’s no evidence that Annika has any significant connections in her life. No Mum, sister, best friend, neighbour, romantic partner or community group. The effects of social isolation have been sort of normalised, perhaps even glamorised, on screen. Is this a brilliant work of art imitating life? Or an unhealthy invitation for life to imitate art?

    In a troubling reflection of the digital age in which we live, Annika simply sends her inner most thoughts out into the ether, reaching out to everyone, and ultimately no one. It’s a dysfunctional one-way relationship in which she controls the narrative while attempting to befriend the viewer. She’s wrestling with some big stuff, trying to figure out the way forward alone, without any wise counsel from friends. She’s married to the job so there’s just work, a saintly round-the-clock devotion to it, and not very much else. A lifestyle choice of self-medicating with alcohol, and drinking alone, is hinted at. In spite of all her cleverness, corny quips and crime case closures, Annika’s life is out of balance. She does not seem to be a happy bunny, and if I were her friend in real life, I would be really quite worried about her.

    Main Photo Credit: Val Fraser

  • Faith: Liverpool to host Gospel Music Festival

    Faith: Liverpool to host Gospel Music Festival

    Liverpool is set to host a Gospel Music Festival featuring The Kingdom Choir and Called Out Music. The festival, which will take place in Stanley Park, has been organised by Liverpool Lighthouse.

    Anu Omideyi, Liverpool Gospel Music Festival Director and Music Director at Liverpool Lighthouse said: “As part of the wider vision to spread the power and joy of gospel music alongside the positive impact of black culture, the festival will be accompanied by a programme taking gospel music into schools. In partnership with music education hub Resonate, the schools programme will initially pilot the work with two secondary schools in June and will roll out to more schools in the next academic year, with the eventual aim of curriculum change that will see young people nationwide learning about the music genre.”

    Gospel Music is an inclusive, joyful, music genre that, in addition to relating to the Christian faith, celebrates the stories, histories, cultures and achievements of black communities. Much modern mainstream music, as well as many genres of music of black origin, owe their origins and inspirations to gospel music. However, these roots often go unacknowledged and unrecognised. This will be the first ever mainstream UK gospel festival.

    Liverpool is a city with a strong music and cultural heritage, well known for being the home of The Beatles, the European Capital of Culture, 2008 and recent host to The Eurovision Song Contest. It also has deep links to black history through its role as a slave trading port in the 19thcentury and the location of the International Museum of Slavery. Liverpool is also home to Liverpool Lighthouse, which is currently working to develop the National Gospel Music Centre, a hub for supporting and developing gospel music and gospel music artists in the North West.

    Rebecca Ross-Williams, Creative Director of Liverpool Lighthouse said: “It is beyond exciting to announce Liverpool Gospel Music Festival this September, as it responds to a national need, as there isn’t an equivalent. It’s the right time for the festival, with a drive to make September Gospel Music Heritage Month, with Liverpool as UNESCO City of Music, having such a strong music heritage and because of Liverpool’s contribution to black history. Liverpool Lighthouse is committed to supporting the protection and development of Gospel Music and we aim to provide a much needed platform for Gospel Music artists, showcasing some of the best internationally, and bringing joy to our audiences.”

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Liverpool Lighthouse

  • News: NHS celebrates 75th birthday

    News: NHS celebrates 75th birthday

    This summer, two momentous occasions are being celebrated: the 75th birthday of the NHS and ten years since NHS Property Services (NHSPS) was established.

    To mark these milestones and as a way of saying ‘thank you’ to all NHS colleagues, NHSPS will be joining in with the annual NHS Big Tea event, hosting tea parties across the nation.

    The business is encouraging colleagues to join in celebrations on July 5th or any day that week.

    NHSPS’ charitable partner is Young Lives Versus Cancer, but NHS charities will also be supported.

    Tea parties will be thrown in the North, Midlands, London, and the South for all NHSPS colleagues. But that’s not all: the organisation is encouraging its workers to host their own parties locally.

    Helen McCarthy, Chief People Officer for NHSPS, said: “The NHS Big Tea is a call to join an outpouring of gratitude on 5 July – the birthday of the NHS and NHSPS. It is a celebration to show thanks, a shared moment of happiness and kindness, hospitality, and reflection.

    “So, we’re asking colleagues to please put 5 July in their diary and take some time out to get together, share a cuppa and cake, and raise money. Whether a Big Tea is held at work, at home, or in the local community, joining in the celebrations is what counts.”

    Helen added: “We are encouraging colleagues to invite their ‘invi-teas’, stock up on tea party treats, and plan some fun games to help raise funds and support other NHS colleagues, patients, and volunteers. We look forward to seeing the nation coming together for this brilliant event.”

    For more information, visit nhsbigtea.co.uk.

    Main Photo Credit: Christian Bowen via Unsplash

  • Research: UK adults state they have just two best friends

    Research: UK adults state they have just two best friends

    The team at social network www.thefr.app, who believe in helping to cultivate real friendships, recently undertook a study of almost 2,500 UK adults aged 18 and over to determine what friendship looks like in adulthood.

    While the average UK adult is in a friendship group with five others, they only consider two of those to be their best friends. Best friends are typically those who they’re very similar to, can tell anything to without fear of being judged or exposed and who have a similar sense of humour. Almost all groups have cliques within though, so it’s not as though anyone is being left out. Two in three admit they’re more likely to confide in their bestie before their partner.

    It was initially revealed that the average UK adult friendship group consists of six people, not including partners who are often drafted in for social gatherings. Of those however, adults confessed they would only consider two of those to be best friends, on average.

    Asked what the key differences were with a best friend as opposed to a standard friend, respondents revealed the following five traits to be the most common and most important:

    1. We’re basically the same person – 71%
    2. I can tell them anything and they’ll never judge or tell others – 68%
    3. We have a similar sense of humour – 54%
    4. They’ll always tell me the truth – 53%
    5. They will always have my back, even when I’m not around – 52%

    Only 12% stated their best friends are the people they’ve known the longest. When asked how long it took them to realise that a friend was indeed a best friend, the majority stated they ‘clicked right away’ (49%), while a further 22% realised when the friend was there for them through a tough time.

    Additionally, when asked why more of those within their friendship circle weren’t considered best friends, the top reason cited was that the others weren’t trusted to quite the same level (46%), followed by simply not seeing them as often as they do their besties (28%). It was stated by almost all however (93%) that everyone within the friendship group was in smaller cliques within that group.

    Finally, when asked who they were most likely to confide in and/or turn to, two thirds (67%) admitted that in most cases they were more likely to turn to their best friend than their partner in the first instance.

    Anna Lee, Founder at Fr. App, commented on the findings: “It’s good to have a mix of friends with different hobbies and interests, but it’s our best friends who shape us the most; they’re those people we can turn to for everything, whether that’s to share the load, celebrate the successes or just chit chat about general day-to-day life. Many of us would go as far as considering our best friends our soul mates; they’re just as important to us as our partners.”

    Main Photo Credit: Connor Olson via Unsplash

  • TV: Taskmaster’s Greg Davies lines up comedy contestants

    TV: Taskmaster’s Greg Davies lines up comedy contestants

    As another victorious Taskmaster champion is crowned, a brand-new bunch of the nation’s best and brightest comic minds have been selected by the Taskmaster Greg Davies to compete in a series of his most tricksy tasks yet, while a watchful Little Alex Horne calmly observes and takes notes with admirable efficiency in the 16th series of the BAFTA winning and Emmy nominated global comedy juggernaut.

    Simultaneously bringing their A-Game and bracing themselves for the most bizarre show on television are; comedian, performer, and author Julian Clary (Friday Night Live, Channel 4), comedy actor, writer and stand-up Lucy Beaumont (Meet The Richardsons, Dave), multi-award winning stand-up Sam Campbell (Bloods, Sky), presenter, writer and comedian Sue Perkins (Perfectly Legal, Netflix), and actor, writer and director Susan Wokoma (Cheaters, BBC One). All five are vying to win points, prizes, and eternal glory in hope of winning the coveted golden trophy along with bragging rights as the Taskmaster Series 16 Champion.

    Elsewhere, it has recently been announced that BAFTA nominated comedian, writer, and actor Rose Matafeo, and critically-acclaimed writer and performer Mike Wozniak have been confirmed to host and star in Channel 4’s brand new children-focused entertainment show Junior Taskmaster, with Matafeo assuming the role of the mighty Junior Taskmaster and Wozniak as her loyal Assistant, the show has recently been commissioned following the continuing success of ratings and critical hit Taskmaster.

    Taskmaster is produced by Avalon and Executive Producers for the series are Alex Horne, Richard Allen-Turner, Rob Aslett, James Taylor, Jon Thoday and Andy Devonshire who also acts as Series Director, while Andy Cartwright will also continue as Series Producer. Taskmaster is commissioned for Channel 4 by Tom Beck, Head of Live Events and Commissioning Editor, Entertainment, with Phil Harris, Head of Entertainment and Events.

  • TV: Not Going Out returns for new series

    TV: Not Going Out returns for new series

    Lee Mack’s multi-award-winning hit show, and longest running sitcom on air, returns for a new series on BBC One this June.

    We return to the suburban chaos of Lee (Lee Mack) and Lucy (Sally Bretton) as they’re asked to cover for uptight ice-queen Anna (Abigail Cruttenden) as she allegedly attends ‘secret’ Italian lessons. Lee is immediately convinced Anna is up to no good and, having to lie to his best friend Toby (Hugh Dennis), is not-so-slowly spiralling into an anxious mess. As ever when there’s a delicate situation that needs sensitive handling, Lee could approach it cautiously … or go full sleuth in a bid to personally crack the case!

    The series continues around the anarchy of a packed family life with the couple crashing from one near-disaster to the next (see episode synopses below). Usually close at hand are Lucy’s lovely mum Wendy (Deborah Grant) and curmudgeonly dad Geoffrey (Geoffrey Whitehead), and we know very well what they think about their daughter’s wisecracking husband.

    Produced by Avalon, Not Going Out is directed by Nick Wood and produced by Jamie Rix. The Executive Producers are Richard Allen-Turner, Rob Aslett, Lee Mack and Jon Thoday. The Commissioning Editor for the BBC is Gregor Sharp.

  • Film: Sir Cliff Richard says “don’t miss” Jesus Revolution movie

    A British PR company run by Christians has bought the rights to the hit film Jesus Revolution. It is being released into UK and Irish cinemas from June 23rd and is highly anticipated. This film tells the story of revival in California in the 1970s and the key message is that church is for everyone. A spokesperson for Kova PR explained to Sorted Magazine: “We would love to see people far and wide hearing about the film’s powerful message and how the real story impacted our faith and worship music to this day.”

    “The UK church (in all its denominations and expressions) needs to get behind this message. When released in America, Jesus Revolution doubled box office estimates. We need to show cinemas here that there is demand for faith films in mainstream cinema. Getting faith films into UK cinemas is an uphill battle. We need your prayers that God would open doors by His power and for His glory. There are loads of options, from showing the trailer in your churches, to attending a key leader screening, to ticket giveaways and discount bookings and sharing on your social media. We can help, get in touch!” The UK website jesusrevolutionmovie.co.uk will be taking group bookings very soon.

    Sir Cliff Richard has thrilled his fans with a special facebook video announcement about Jesus Revolution. He said: “Don’t miss it!” Since posting there have been thousands of likes from his 300K strong Facebook following. Watch Sir Cliff’s video here

  • Comment: Making memories at the Big Church Festival

    Comment: Making memories at the Big Church Festival

    Matt McChlery writes: On the recent Bank Holiday Monday, our car pulled up onto our driveway after completing a five hour journey from the depths of Wiston Estate buried deep in the Sussex countryside. I had just been to Big Church Festival with my two daughters, eight-year-old Katrina and six-year-old Lara. We had a fabulous time, although we were all in need of a good bath! Big Church Festival happens every Bank Holiday weekend over the May half term and sees 30,000 people coming together to celebrate all that is good.

    The last time I went to Big Church Festival was ten years ago – before my children were born. People are encouraged to bring a group along, which I did ten years ago. Although this time I knew that bringing my two young daughters would require more planning and energy than a group would demand, and I was right.

    Arriving on the Friday evening, with the help of my daughters, we managed to pitch our tent and blow up their camping mattresses so they could get to sleep just after sundown. This was a very late night for them, so I knew the next day would be interesting.

    On Saturday, we set off at midday towards the Field of Fun and the Kids Tent. We caught a bit of the Superbook show and then had a go at the climbing wall, scaled the huge haystack, jumped on the numerous inflatables, and enjoyed the various fairground rides.

    I was hoping to attend the Bethel Music session in the nearby Worship Tent. However, while we were having fun, a queue of a couple of thousand people had formed and by the time the girls had finished their various rides there seemed little point in joining the queue. Bethel Worship was due to headline on the Main Stage later that evening. With the girls to look after on my own, I accepted that I was going to miss out on all the excellent late night After Hours programme the festival offered.

    We did manage to catch a Cheeky Pandas gig in the Kid’s Tent and Leeland’s set on the Main Stage before we headed back to the tent for an early night.

    We did manage to listen to more music on the Sunday, including The Goudies, Matt Mayher, Tim & The Glory Boys and Israel Houghton. One of the highlights for the girls was hunting for wooden elephants that were hidden around the expo tent so they could win a packet of sweets. Oh yes, not to forget my daughter’s favourite artist, Philippa Hannah, whom we saw perform twice and they also got to meet after the second show. That was a definite highlight for them.

    I knew that bringing my daughters along to a music festival would be hard work, and it was. But for me, the price I paid both financially and sacrificing the bands and things I really wanted to do for the sake of spending time with them, was worth it. I need to make happy memories with my children and I can’t wait to do it again!

    Matt McChlery is a church leader, author and host of the Christian Book Blurb podcast. Find out more about him and his ministry at mattmcchlery.com

    Main Photo Credit: Courtesy of Matt McChlery