Tuesday, October 6, 2015

The singer found her sea legs as she took part in her first underwater shoot

Rita Ora has transformed into a mermaid for an underwater shoot to promote a new London restaurant.
The X Factor judge played the part of an underwater siren as she donned a sequin fish tail and posed up a storm for Berkeley Square's new restaurant, Sexy Fish.
Talking prior to diving in, Ora said: "I'm excited to shoot underwater, I'm a bit nervous, I don't know what's going to happen, I'm kinda just gonna go with the flow.
"So we'll see if I'm a strong underwater poser, you know I have seen The Little Mermaid."
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Rita Ora for Sexy Fish
The shoot was inspired by the restaurant’s private dining room, The Coral Reef Room, on the lower level of the restaurant, which houses the largest live coral reef tank in the world and seating for up to 48.
The new restaurant tweeted a picture of the Poison singer as a mystical mermaid alongside the caption: “Plenty of fish in the sea, but only one mermaid @RitaOra #SexyFishLondon #comingsoon #mayfair.”

Thursday, October 1, 2015

The boy appeared on This Morning where he claimed his confidence had been "shattered" by Caroline Berriman, who was spared jailed after admitting the affair

A schoolboy groomed by a teaching assistant went on TV today to blast her punishment as "disgusting".

The student claims his confidence had been "shattered" by Caroline Berriman, who was spared jail despite admitting sex with the 15-year-old.
The relationship started when Berriman was working as a classroom teaching assistant at Abraham Moss Community School in Crumpsall, Manchester.
The boy claims the pair did not have sex until five months into their relationship but from then on it was regular and "always unprotected".
Today the boy was interviewed by This Morning's hosts Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield who referred to him as "Jack" as he cannot be named for legal reasons.
Jack, now 17, said: "I think it's disgusting and I want people to understand that even though they might not have seen what happened, I wouldn't wish it on anybody."
ITVThis Morning- seduced by teacher
Talk: Holly Willoughby and Phillip Schofield talk to 'Jack'
ITVThis Morning- seduced by teacher
Moved: Holly Willoughby listens to Jack's story
Jack said the pair regularly texted and called each other and he spent a lot of time at Berriman's home.
He said: "I just started by just going there talking, watching TV, chilling out. Then I started going four or five days a week."
Asked if had a 'crush' on the teaching assistant at first, he said: "At the time, yeah. She made me feel like I was special."
Speaking about the first time they became intimate, Jack said: "She put her arm around me and she kissed me and I kissed her back and things led on to sexual stuff."
He eventually confided in his mother, who told him he had to end the relationship.
He said: "Mum was mortified. She didn't know what to say. She sat me down and said you've just got to end it.
"After my mum said that I felt like I couldn't deal with it. I didn't want to be selfish and put it on them (family)."
Spared jail: Caroline Berriman admitted the offences
Former teaching assistant Caroline Berriman admitted to having sex with a 15-year-old student
Smiles: Caroline Berriman's affair ended when Jack confided in his mum
Describing how the relationship has affected his life, Jack said: "I can't look at a girl. I can't stay in the same room as a woman unless they are older, like 40, 50.
"My confidence is broken, I've got no confidence no more. I used to be confident and have girlfriends and that's just shattered."
Giving advice to others, he continued: "No mater how scared and how fragile you are you should come forward and talk to people. That's the only way it is going to help."
Former teaching assistant Caroline Berriman admitted to having sex with a 15-year-old student
Pose: Caroline Berriman regularly had sex with the under-age boy
School: Abraham Moss Community School in Crumpsall, Manchester.
Berriman, now 30, was sentenced last week, but avoided being sent straight to prison having admitted the offences.
She pleaded guilty to two counts of sexual activity with a child and a further charge of sexual activity with a child by a person in a position of trust.
Berriman, of Chadderton, Oldham, was handed a two-year sentence, suspended for two years at Minshull Street Crown Court, having pleaded guilty to all three charges at an earlier hearing.
She faces 250 hours of unpaid community work - and was ordered to pay a £100 victim surcharge.
Berriman must also obey a restraining order prohibiting her from contacting or seeing the victim.

The Chelsea doctor left her post at Stamford Bridge following her poor treatment from Jose Mourinho - and Rabbatts does not think enough was done

Jose Mourinho & Eva Carneiro's touchline argument
Bitter row: Carneiro rowed with Mourinho on the sidelines
Heather Rabbatts has revealed her disappointment with the Football Association's handling of Eva Carneiro 's high-profile Chelsea exit.
The doctor was forced to leave Stamford Bridge after a bitter row with team manager Jose Mourinho, following an incident on the first day of the season.
The Portuguese doctor ran onto the pitch with physio Jon Fearn, after the referee waved them on, to treat Eden Hazard who was injured during the 2-2 draw with Swansea.
As a result, Mourinho was left fuming that his team would temporarily have to be reduced to nine men.
After being stripped of her duties as a match-day and first-team doctor, Carneiro has left Stamford Bridge.
But FA executive Rabbatts says that not enough was done by the FA as one of the most popular females working in the male game was allowed to just walk away.
Rabbatts said: "The FA's reaction to the treatment of Dr Eva Carneiro has been seriously disappointing. I have major concerns over the way in which ‎the disciplinary process has been conducted and the lack of an organisational response to the wider issues raised by this case.
Tom Dulat - FIFA
Influential: Rabbatts is one of the game's most prominent females
"We had an announcement late yesterday (September 30th‎) relating to a high profile incident which occurred on August 8th and yet it would appear that during that time no witnesses were requested to speak to the FA, including Dr Carneiro, and in the course of the investigation some media were reporting it was likely that no charge was to be brought. This on top of a previous case when clear evidence of sexist and abusive chanting from groups of supporters against Dr Carneiro was apparently not seen as sufficient for a charge to be raised.
"A highly respected‎ medic, a woman at the top of her profession in football, has been mistreated, undermined, verbally abused and yet no-one apart from Dr Carneiro has faced significant consequences.
Gonzalo Arroyo Moreno/GettyJose Mourinho during Chelsea's Champions League match against Porto
Criticised: Mourinho was heavily criticised for his treatment of the club doctor
"In addition, the demotion of Dr Carneiro and her subsequent departure from Chelsea FC raises important issues which ‎the club, the FA , the Premier League, the PFA and the LMA need to address. It is my view that the lack of support given to her as a medic and as a woman has resulted in her removal from the game. This is not only a personal tragedy but is a setback for player welfare and sends a terrible message to other medics and all those girls and women who aspire to play a role at the top level of professional football.
"I have shared these views with senior colleagues at the FA and hope that by speaking out‎ all parties involved will be encouraged to take steps to support Dr Carneiro and ensure that real and serious lessons are learned for the future."

McLaren boss Ron Dennis says the whole team is "demotivated" at their lack of pace after Fernando Alonso's complaints during the Japanese Grand Prix

McLaren boss Ron Dennis says the whole team is "demotivated" at their lack of pace after Fernando Alonso's complaints during the Japanese Grand Prix. (Motorsport.com) 
Pirelli motorsport director Paul Hembery says his company would "think very heavily" about their future in the sport if the Red Bull and Toro Rosso teams were not on the 2016 grid. (Autosport) 
Formula 1 engines will be louder next year after the FIA World Motor Sport Council approved changes to the exhaust set-ups of cars. (Autosport) 
New American Manor driver Alexander Rossi says the United States Grand Prix in Austin on 25 October "can't come soon enough". (NBC Sports) 
We would not recommend this but Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo posted a video of himself dancing while driving. 
The rivalry between Mercedes' team-mates Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg has "diluted echoes" of that between Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost at McLaren in 1988-89. (Motor Sport) 

Wednesday, 30 September

Despite speculation about his future, Jenson Button says McLaren's difficult 2015 campaign has brought him and the team closer together. (Formula1.com) 
McLaren Group CEO Ron Dennis insists McLaren's partnership with Honda is the team's only possible means of returning to the front of F1.(Sky Sports) 
At the Japanese Grand Prix, Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg received a fifth of the coverage that Mercedes enjoyed in previous races, but F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone denies claims of a blackout.(Telegraph) 
Lotus driver Romain Grosjean believes his move to Haas F1 will see him finally record a maiden Formula 1 victory. (ESPN F1) 
Lotus
Lotus's Twitter account had an interesting way of reacting to Romain Grosjean's announcement that he would be joining Haas F1
Ecclestone has warned that Red Bull could walk out of Formula 1 if European Union investigators demand that they hand back £46m in special payments. (Times - subscription required) 
However, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner feels Toro Rosso's situation in Formula 1 is more critical than his team's right now, as owner Dietrich Mateschitz considers pulling both of them out of the championship. (Autosport) 
ART Grand Prix team principal Frederic Vasseur says it would be "an absolute denial" of the ladder system in single-seater racing if GP2 champion-elect Stoffel Vandoorne, 23, fails to make it to Formula 1 in 2016. (Motorsport.com) 

Tuesday, 29 September

Jenson Button could quit McLaren and join Renault, who are set to buy the Lotus team, if he cannot resolve a contract dispute with the Woking-based outfit. (Daily Mirror) 
The likely departure of driver Romain Grosjean, 29, to the new Haas outfit will be a "loss" to Lotus, says the team's trackside operations chief Alan Permane. (Autosport) 
Ferrari driver Kimi Raikkonen, 35, says that the Italian team has "surprised itself" with the improvement in form in recent races.(Motorsport.com) 
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton says he has a "mega balance" between his on-track and off-track commitments and, although the Briton is poised to attend the Paris Fashion Show this week, he does not feel like he is "overstepping the line". (Daily Mail) 
Hamilton is currently leading the standings as he bids for a second successive drivers' crown and, as a picture he has posted on Twitter shows, he has also made the front cover of men's magazine GQ in South Africa.
Lewis Hamilton on Twitter

Monday, 28 September

The future of the British Grand Prix is in doubt because of a shortage of funding at Silverstone. (Daily Telegraph) 
Former world champion Jenson Button, 35, and two-time champion Fernando Alonso, 34, give no guarantees that they will remain with McLaren next season. (Daily Mail) 
Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button
Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button have had two spells together at McLaren
Alonso believes drivers' radio conversations during races should be private after television viewers heard him criticise McLaren's lack of power from their Honda engine during the Japanese Grand Prix. (Fox Sports) 
Mercedes bosses plan to speak to F1 chief Bernie Ecclestone about the apparent lack of on-track TV coverage involving their drivers Lewis Hamilton, who won the race, and team-mate Nico Rosberg during the Japanese Grand Prix. (Daily Mirror) 
Lotus return to the High Court on Monday hoping to avoid being placed in administration as they wait for Renault to complete a planned takeover. (Sky Sports) 
Lewis Hamilton tweet about Ayrton Senna
Lewis Hamilton's victory at the Japanese Grand Prix puts him level with Ayrton Senna on 41 race wins
Triple former world champion and Mercedes non-executive chairman Niki Lauda believes Red Bull owner Dietrich Mateschitz could leave the sport.(Reuters) 

Red Bull & Renault: How it started, where it went wrong, what now?

From total domination to the brink of departure from the sport, Red Bull's rise and potential fall is a remarkable tale.
The road to the precarious position in which the team find themselves in Formula 1 dates back several years, to an engine supply partnership with Renault which hit problems almost as soon as it started.
That was the end of 2006 after Red Bull became dissatisfied with their previous supplier, Ferrari. Nine years on, Red Bull's options have distilled to another deal with Ferrari or quitting F1.
How they reached this point is a story of ambition, fuelled by success, turbocharged by frustration, spiced with a dash of arrogance and topped with a sense of entitlement. And not all of that applies to Red Bull.
It is a story of how the most successful team of the past five years have got to a point where, five races before the end of the 2015 season, they have secured a split from their current engine partner without having anything lined up to replace it.
On the face of it, it is a catastrophic strategic miscalculation. But, as ever in F1, it is not quite as simple as that.

The rise of Red Bull-Renault

Red Bull technical director
The partnership of Red Bull's Adrian Newey and Renault horsepower appeared invincible between 2010 and 2013
When Red Bull started their relationship with Renault in 2007, they soon realised that the engine was down on power compared with the rivals from Mercedes and Ferrari - which was a problem, because F1 had started a period of frozen engines, when only changes aimed at reliability would be allowed.
Red Bull and Renault started lobbying to be allowed to retune the engine, on the basis that the engine freeze was predicated on there being parity between teams, and there wasn't any.
Governing body the FIA agreed, and Renault was allowed to modify its engine over the winter of 2008, while Mercedes and Ferrari were not. Inevitably, this led to resentment that continues to rumble behind the scenes today.
Even after retuning, the Renault was not the most powerful engine - it lagged by about 5%, or 35bhp, according to Red Bull. But it had other positive attributes, including excellent driveability.
Rivals were not impressed when, following a major rule change on chassis for 2009, Red Bull-Renault had suddenly transformed themselves from midfielders to front-runners.
Red Bull came on increasingly strong in that year's championship, but ended up as runners-up to Jenson Button and Brawn.
In 2010, Red Bull and Sebastian Vettel went one better - and then repeated the double success of drivers' and constructors' titles for the next three years.
A fair bit of that success over 2010-13 was based on Renault's expertise at a particularly esoteric form of engine technology.
The French company tuned the engine to blow exhaust gases even when the driver was off-throttle. These were harnessed by Red Bull's aerodynamicists, led by the genius Adrian Newey, to create rear downforce out of reach of other teams - even when they cottoned on to what Red Bull were up to.
Their lead driver adapted brilliantly to the unique and counter-intuitive driving style required by this technology and Vettel-Red Bull-Renault swept all before them.

The collapse of the relationship

Red Bull consultant Dr Helmut Marko and Renault's Cyril Abiteboul
Red Bull consultant Dr Helmut Marko and Renault's Cyril Abiteboul at the 2015 Spanish Grand Prix
Behind the scenes, though, all was not well.
Red Bull bosses wasted no opportunity to point out that they were achieving this success despite having a down-on-power engine, rarely mentioning the effect of the blown exhaust. And Renault began to resent the lack of coverage they were getting for the success, despite their integral part in it.
Tensions began to grow.
Despite being a works partner, Red Bull were paying for their engines. Renault introduced to team principal Christian Horner the idea of a sponsorship from Infiniti, the luxury brand of Japanese company Nissan, which is part of an automotive conglomerate with Renault.
Horner and the Infiniti bosses quickly concluded a sponsorship deal for the 2011 season, which grew into a title sponsorship for 2013.
But the deal was not a win-win for Red Bull.
The Infiniti title sponsorship deal - worth $30m (£19.8m) - more than covered the cost of the engines. So it meant the Renault engines were effectively free. And even with the more expensive turbo hybrid engines introduced from 2014 Red Bull still had a net financial gain from the deal.
However, $30m was considerably less than the space allocated to Infiniti on the car could theoretically be sold for to another company.
So, all in all, Red Bull felt it was offering a pretty good arrangement to the Renault-Nissan group.
But the logic of the arrangement was always lost to those not involved - by putting another car company's brand on the Red Bull car, and including it in the team's official name, it was inevitably going to further frustrate Renault by reducing its brand exposure.
Sure enough, Renault realised this too. As Renault F1 boss Cyril Abiteboul puts it: "The problem is, when we were winning championships with Red Bull, no-one was talking about us."

Slow and unreliable: the hybrid disaster

Although both parties admit the relationship was not exactly one of roses and chocolates to begin with, things really began to go wrong from 2014.
Renault entered the new era of turbo hybrid engines last season with confidence. One executive told a senior insider in F1 towards the end of 2013: "Nobody knows more about turbocharged engines than Renault."
But the executive was wrong. Mercedes had committed more resources to the project much sooner than anybody else, and their four-year development programme resulted last year in an engine that was miles ahead of any other manufacturer.
As well as being slow, Renault's engine was initially catastrophically unreliable, and Red Bull had a terrible pre-season testing programme.
The biggest problems were solved by the start of the season, but reliability remained an issue through 2014 and, with in-season development frozen, Red Bull were resigned to a season picking up scraps. They did, at least, win three races when things went wrong for Mercedes, thanks to some brilliant driving by Daniel Ricciardo.
Renault promised Red Bull a significant step forward in performance for 2015. But when the definitive 2015 engine appeared for the first time at the first race of the season in Australia, it was not only no more powerful than the 2014 engine, it had worse drivability and was unreliable.
Sebastian Vettel and Daniel Ricciardo
Former Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel has enjoyed success with Ferrari since his move for 2015
Red Bull had had enough and severely criticised Renault in public after the race, Horner describing the situation as "unacceptable".
Renault, too, was unhappy, and both parties quickly concluded that the current relationship was not working for them.

The end game: finding new partners

Renault began to explore the possibility of running its own team again - five years after it had concluded this was not the way forward and handed its team to investment group Genii Capital.
Initially, Renault looked at Toro Rosso, Red Bull's junior team. Red Bull proposed a deal that locked it into the Renault Group - Renault would buy and rebrand Toro Rosso; Red Bull would continue with Renault engines, but badged as Infiniti. Renault rejected it and started to look at buying back its old team, now called Lotus.
Meanwhile, Red Bull had funded its own engine development programme with the British Ilmor company.
By early summer, it had produced a new engine design that it believed would be 0.45secs a lap quicker than the current one.
Red Bull team principal Christian Horner and company owner Dietrich Mateschitz
Red Bull team principal Christian Horner (left) and company owner Dietrich Mateschitz
Renault was doing its own parallel development. After being told about Ilmor's progress, Renault said its development engine was worth an extra 0.46secs, and it would pursue that design.
Later, that step forward was downgraded to 0.25secs. Now, Renault is telling Red Bull the new engine that is due to debut at the US Grand Prix next month will gain them 0.15secs. Red Bull is questioning whether that gain is worth the grid penalties using it would incur.
As this saga unfolded, Red Bull owner Dietrich Mateschitz decided he had had enough of Renault - and that he would not work with them any longer, even if it meant pulling out of F1.
That the Red Bull-Renault partnership will end after this season has not been officially announced, but it is an open secret within F1.

The Mercedes option: Wolff shuts down deal

As the Renault relationship collapsed, Red Bull began exploring other options. First on the list was Mercedes.
Mateschitz - who has a longstanding antipathy towards Mercedes for a reason few in F1 understand - met with Mercedes non-executive chairman Niki Lauda, a fellow Austrian, who is close to Red Bull motorsport adviser Helmut Marko.
There are differing versions of what happened at that meeting. One is that a deal for Red Bull to have Mercedes engines in 2016 was "effectively agreed". Except Lauda is not empowered to make that decision.
Another is that Lauda said he was pro the idea and would do all he could to persuade Mercedes to make it happen.
Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull's Daniil Kvyat
Could Ferrari power once again sit behind a Red Bull driver?
Red Bull's problem was that Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff was very much against the idea - and he worked hard to make sure it did not happen. By early September, Wolff had got his way.
Now, though, Red Bull had a problem. They had dumped Renault and Mercedes had said no. Which only left Ferrari, whose engine in 2015 has improved dramatically and is as near as makes no real difference a match for Mercedes.
No problem - Ferrari president Sergio Marchionne had said as long ago as June that he would be happy to supply Red Bull engines if they needed them.
But what he did not say was which engines - and there's the rub.
Ferrari's F1 team have offered Red Bull a supply of 2015 engines - their very real fear being that if Red Bull had parity, they would beat Ferrari, whose car has not been as good as a Red Bull since 2009.
Red Bull describe this as an "insult", given that Ferrari customers Sauber and Haas will get 2016 engines, and say if they do not get parity they will quit F1. And so they have reached an impasse.

Red Bull and Ferrari both have cards to play

Red Bull have a negotiating position. Ferrari wants to change the engine development rules for next year, to give it a chance of surpassing Mercedes.
Currently, in-season engine development is banned again next year, after being permitted on a limited basis this season. Ferrari want the system that has applied this year to continue - and Honda and Renault want completely open development, to try to close the chasm that exists between them and the others. Mercedes are open to discussion.
But for this to be allowed, all the teams need to agree - and Red Bull could threaten to block it unless they are given a 2016 Ferrari engine.
Ferrari, though, also have cards in their hands.
Red Bull have under contract four of the most promising young drivers in F1. Ferrari initially had Ricciardo at the top of their list as a potential replacement for Kimi Raikkonen in 2016, but he is locked into Red Bull until the end of 2018.
The Italian team are also interested in Toro Rosso's teenage sensation Max Verstappen, who has a three-year deal with Red Bull until the end of 2017.
Ferrari could use their interest in either of them as leverage in the engine negotiations.
It's a game of brinksmanship. Who will win? The Austrian soft drinks billionaire? Or the world's most glamorous car brand?