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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    A ‘secret’ peace plan, Fergie’s ‘pulped’ book, and skincare for toddlers

     
    today’s INTERNATIONAL story

    US chiefs in Ukraine to share ‘secret’ plan to halt war

    What happened
    Pentagon officials have arrived in Kyiv to discuss a framework for ending the war with Russia. The plan, leaked to the media, comes after “secret talks in Miami between US and Russian negotiators”, and appears “to reflect” many of the Kremlin’s long-standing demands, said The Times.

    Who said what
    The 28-point blueprint includes elements that Ukraine “has long denounced as amounting to capitulation”, said The New York Times. It requires Kyiv to “surrender territory, significantly reduce the size of its army and relinquish some types of weaponry”.

    According to The Telegraph’s sources, Ukraine would “maintain legal ownership” of the Donbas, with Moscow paying an “undisclosed rental fee” for “de facto control” of the area in a “cash-for-land deal”.

    Kyiv will also be asked to recognise Russian as an official state language and give the local branch of the Russian Orthodox Church “formal status”, said the Financial Times, while foreign troops would not “be allowed on Ukrainian soil”. One source “said it would amount to Ukraine giving up its sovereignty”.

    What next?
    The Pentagon team, led by US Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll, is expected to meet with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Kyiv today after he returns from a trip to Turkey. The gathering is Donald Trump’s “latest attempt to revive negotiations” on “halting” the war, said The Wall Street Journal, but Zelenskyy has repeatedly ruled out any “territorial concessions” to Russia.

     
     
    today’s ROYAL story

    Fergie’s ‘unsalvageable’ book pulled from sale

    What happened
    Thousands of copies of Sarah Ferguson’s new children’s book are reportedly being “pulped” after she was stripped of her royal titles over her links to Jeffrey Epstein.

    The former duchess of York’s book, “Flora and Fern: Kindness Along the Way”, was due to be published last month, but was rescheduled for 20 November after her 2011 emails to the late sex offender were released. Now an insider says the book has been withdrawn altogether and the title has disappeared from New Frontier Publishing’s website.

    Who said what
    Printed copies are “being sent to the recycling centre”, the source told the Daily Mail. “It’s an acknowledgment of the inevitable. No one is going to want to buy it.”

    Planned book signings and talks have also been cancelled. One bookshop that was forced to refund meet-and-greet tickets told The Telegraph: “It’s a mess. The book is unsalvageable.”

    Ferguson has also been “dropped by numerous charities with whom she had long-term associations”, said The Guardian.

    What next?
    Neither New Frontier Publishing nor Ferguson have commented on the decision. Her other books remain available to purchase.

     
     
    Today’s HEALTH story

    UPFs ‘harm every major organ system’

    What happened
    Ultra-processed foods are the leading cause of the “chronic disease pandemic”, according to a new study by 43 global experts published in The Lancet. UPFs, which include a vast array of products such as ready meals, ice cream and biscuits, have been linked to obesity and a number of diseases including cancer. And the consumption of them is rising, with UPFs accounting for more than 50% of food eaten in the US, according to Reuters.

    Who said what
    Study author Professor Carlos Monteiro said UPFs “harm every major organ system in the human body”. The evidence “strongly suggests” that people are “not biologically adapted” to process them properly. The study proposes having stronger restrictions on advertising, banning UPFs in schools and putting limits on their sales.

    But there is still “room for doubt and clarification from further research”, said Kevin McConway, emeritus professor of applied statistics at the Open University. The research “certainly doesn’t establish that all UPFs increase disease risk”.

    What next?
    The study’s authors acknowledge that “more evidence is needed”, said Reuters, but maintain that the findings of the report are “already strong enough” to require government action. 

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Rural vets in Northern Ireland will be encouraged to talk to farmers about their health while treating their animals. The scheme – the first of its kind in the UK – will see vets learn about human health as part of their continuous training, which is updated each year. Farming bodies have welcomed the initiative, which aims to tackle cancer inequalities in rural communities, whose residents are 5% less likely to survive the disease, according to Newcastle University research.

     
     
    under the radar

    The expanding world of child skincare

    “Maybe in 20 years every one-year-old will have a beauty routine,” said Ally Nelson, host of the “UnTrivial” wellness podcast. She was “joking, mostly”, said The New York Times. But in the same week social media went into meltdown when “Pretty Little Liars” actor Shay Mitchell launched Rini, a new skincare line for children aged three and up. 

    Skincare lines for “pre-teens” and younger “have become a robust product category” – and “a battlefield for parents and critics”. A “growing list” of companies sell skin products for pre-teens that are packaged to “look like candy dispensers”. The advertising works: in the US, households with children between the ages of seven and 12 spent almost $2.5 billion on skincare last year, according to Nielsen IQ consumer research.

    The brands say their tween-orientated wares are “safer alternatives to adult products”. But some critics see “something more pernicious”: a strategy to “hook children on unnecessary products, laying the groundwork for ever-earlier anxieties about their appearance”.

    Children’s growing interest in beauty products already has a “catch-all” name: “Sephora kids”, after the beauty store chain, said The Guardian. Shop-floor employees say young children are “filling shopping baskets to the brim with testers” while their parents are “elsewhere in the store”.

    “In the rage-bait frenzy” that followed the Rini launch, the line’s “mission statement” was “missed”, said Ariana Yaptangco in Glamour. It’s “play skincare”. The products are “similar to the play make-up I used as a child” and probably an improvement on Claire’s palettes.

    The “uproar” against Rini is “misplaced at best and overblown at worst”. It’s not about whether a skincare routine for tweens is “necessary” or not, but rather about children being “able to experiment with products responsibly and safely”.

     
     
    on this day

    20 November 1958

    Puppeteer Jim Henson established Muppets, Inc., later renamed The Jim Henson Company. His most famous creations, such as Kermit the Frog, have since starred in multiple TV shows, ads, films and a Broadway musical. This month it was announced that Miss Piggy would be getting her own film for the first time.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Ship hits the fan’

    News that a Russian spy ship pointed lasers at RAF pilots features on several front pages this morning. “We see you, we’re ready for you”, says The Mirror. “Ship hits the fan”, says The Sun. “Zero” is the percentage of British voters who think the economy is in a “very good state”, says the Daily Mail. The “excoriating verdict” comes just six days before Rachel Reeves’ budget. Local authorities in London and the South East will be allowed to raise their council tax without a public vote, says The i Paper. Whitehall grants will be “diverted” from areas with “low spending needs” to places with “greater needs”.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Brew bird

    Customers at a cafe in Seoul were treated to an unlikely visitor over the weekend: an endangered parrot with a taste for barista-crafted coffee. The feathered caffeine junkie swooped into Cafe the Merge in the Yeongdeungpo district of the South Korean capital, where he posed for photos, ate from customers’ hands and even helped himself to a sip of someone’s drink. The parrot was taken to an animal rescue shelter where officials identified it as a yellow-headed amazon, an endangered species numbering only about 4,000 worldwide.

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Hollie Clemence, Rebecca Messina, Chas Newkey-Burden, Harriet Marsden and Will Barker.

    Image credits, from top: Zinchenko / Global Images Ukraine / Getty Images; Kirsty Wigglesworth / WPA Pool / Getty Images; Noman Akbar / 500px / Getty Images; Natalia Lebedinskaia / Getty Images

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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