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  • The Week Evening Review
    Relentless rain, Hong Kong’s visa scheme, and the ‘ugliness’ of reality TV

     
    TODAY’S BIG QUESTION

    How much more rain pain can the UK take?

    “You would be forgiven for thinking the rain this year has been relentless,” said BBC weather presenter Ben Rich, “because in some parts of the UK, it actually has been.” There have been more than 280 flood warnings and alerts across southwest and central England, Scotland and Wales, and 26 weather stations reported new monthly records for the highest January rainfall.

    The constant rain feels like “some sort of biblical punishment”, said The Independent. Few corners of the country have been spared. “And there’s more to come.”

    What did the commentators say?
    We appear to have “reached the apotheosis of British climate: unchangeably changeable weather”, said The Times. The weather is “stuck”, and the “setting it has been stuck on is ‘miserable’”.

    The “main architect” of our current weather pattern has been the fixed jet stream heading in from the Atlantic, said the Met Office. Caused by significant “cold plunges” across North America, this “powerful ribbon of air” is positioned further south than is usual at this time of year. Acting as a “conveyor belt”, it has funnelled low-pressure systems towards northern Europe, “increasing the frequency and intensity of rain-bearing weather fronts”. At the same time, high-pressure zones in mainland Europe have “blocked” the jet stream from passing through.

    Some “saturated souls” here in the UK have suffered downpours every day from 31 December up to this week, said The Independent. But perhaps the “bleakest” fate is that of Aberdeen, which hasn’t “seen a single minute of sunshine for two weeks and counting”. That’s the “longest period for the area” since records began in 1957.

    The “persistent” wet weather across the nation is impacting “farmers, builders, sports, wildlife – and damaging roads and homes”, said The Guardian. Hundreds of people have faced “misery” after the flooding of businesses and homes.

    There is the “occasional bright spot” amid the grey-skied gloom. A “Month of Mud” festival is taking place across Somerset’s Quantock Hills. And on Studland beach in Dorset, the extreme weather has caused a “historic shipwreck” to emerge, “thought to be the remains of a Dutch merchant ship that sank in 1631”.

    What next?
    “Change is on the horizon,” said BBC weather presenter Chris Fawkes. The end of the month may bring “more settled weather conditions” for the country. “It’s a long way off, but it’s the least we deserve.”

     
     
    THE EXPLAINER

    The expanded Hong Kong visa scheme

    The UK is expanding its visa scheme for Hong Kongers after British citizen and democracy campaigner Jimmy Lai was jailed for 20 years. Lai’s sentence has “criminalised dissent” in the Chinese-administered territory, the Home Office said. The expansion of the visa scheme “honours the UK’s historic commitment to the people of Hong Kong and comes amid the continuing deterioration of rights and freedoms”.

    How did the scheme start?
    British National (Overseas) status was established in 1987 as a new form of British nationality that enabled Hong Kong citizens to register their connection with the UK ahead of the 1997 handover to China. Those with BN(O) status could obtain a special type of British passport, although they did not gain the right to live or work in the UK and were still subject to UK visa requirements.

    That changed in 2021, following the imposition of a national security law in Hong Kong that allowed Chinese authorities to crack down on pro-democracy dissent. The UK government set up a new visa pathway to allow people with BN(O) status and their dependent family members to live in the UK for up to five years, after which they could apply for permanent settlement and British citizenship. Since then, more than 230,000 people have been granted a visa, and almost 170,000 have moved to the UK.

    Who will now be eligible?
    The expanded visa scheme addresses the issue of young people who may have missed out on full eligibility because of their age. Those who were under 18 when their parent or parents qualified for BN(O) status were only able to apply to come to the UK with their mother or father. Now, they will be eligible to come independently, and bring their partners and dependants with them.

    Applicants must still “meet other suitability and eligibility requirements for the route, pay application fees and the immigration health surcharge”, said Reuters. Around 26,000 people are expected to arrive in the UK over the next five years under this expanded route.

     
     
    QUOTE OF THE DAY

    “It’s hard to forgive. Even after a declaration of love in front of the whole world.”

    The ex-girlfriend of Norwegian biathlete Sturla Holm Laegreid responds to his public bid to win her back. The unnamed woman spoke to Norway’s VG newspaper after the Olympian confessed in a televised post-race interview yesterday that he had cheated on her.

     
     

    Poll watch

    Only 13% of British consumers generally use cash for everyday purchases, according to a YouGov survey of 6,923 adults. The majority (58%) are most likely to use a debit or credit card, while more than a quarter typically use their phone.

     
     
    IN THE SPOTLIGHT

    Reality TV faces a reckoning

    A warts-and-all documentary about “The X Factor” is to air on Sky later this year. Produced by the makers of “Jimmy Savile: A British Horror Story”, it promises to tell the “definitive” story of the reality show, which drew audiences of close to 20 million during its late-2000s peak.

    Another new documentary landing on Netflix next week promises to tell the inside story of “America’s Next Top Model”, amid the continuing backlash against the treatment of contestants on the series, which was cancelled in 2015 after 22 seasons.

    The two upcoming releases follow similar exposés on weight-loss contest “The Biggest Loser” and “There’s Something About Miriam”, a 2004 Sky dating show revolving around the hidden identity of trans woman Miriam Rivera, who took her own life in 2019.

    Humiliation and manipulation
    The value of such reality shows “lay in humiliation”, said The i Paper’s culture editor Sarah Carson. Viewers are now wise to the producer manipulation and “welfare risks to every hopeful nobody launched through the fame machine” – cast into stark relief by the “tragic death” of One Direction singer Liam Payne in 2024.

    When clips from “America’s Next Top Model” began circulating on social media in recent years, “it wasn’t quite the nostalgic escape many remembered”, said Grazia. “From assigning models different ethnicities for photoshoots to having them pose as victims of violent crimes”, the featured flashbacks triggered intense criticism of the show.

    Theatre of cruelty
    The mid-2000s were a “peculiar time in television”, said The Guardian. It became clear that using the “travails of so-called ordinary people as fuel for small-screen entertainment was an idea with legs”, leading to a “mini goldrush”. Programme creators realised that “conflict, extremity and dysfunction would always sell”.

    Yet “even contemporary critics baulked” at the “ugliness” of shows like “There’s Something About Miriam”, said The Independent. And now, thanks to social media, “horrified and bemused Gen Z-ers” can recoil at “soundbites of ‘Fat Families’ host Steve Miller branding obese people disgusting losers”. TV in the early 2000s was “ruled by cruelty” and “punching down”. It’s hard not to be appalled by the “bear-baiting that Noughties audiences were taught to expect in their prime-time offerings”.

     
     

    Good day 🎨

    … for artists in Ireland, where the government has expanded a pilot scheme that offers a basic income for creative workers. Up to 2,000 eligible artists can claim €325 a week for three years, to give them the financial security to pursue their craft and help to keep creative talent in the country.

     
     

    Bad day ⚽

    … for Thomas Frank, who has been sacked as Tottenham Hotspur’s head coach following the team’s 2-1 defeat to Newcastle last night. The Dane is departing after just eight months at the north London club, which is 16th in the Premier League after eight games without a win in the English top flight.

     
     
    picture of the day

    Flight of fantasy

    Hundreds of thousands of starlings flock together in the shape of a giant bird in the skies above Ham Wall nature reserve in Somerset. Such murmurations peak between November and February, when many more winged migrants arrive from Scandinavia.

    Natasha Quarmby / Alamy Live News

     
     
    Puzzles

    Guess the number

    Try The Week’s new daily number challenge in our puzzles and quizzes section

    Play here

     
     
    THE WEEK RECOMMENDS

    Small Prophets: a comedy ‘treasure’

    Mackenzie Crook’s new comedy is “eccentric, funny, sweet, and sad – often all at once”, said Anita Singh in The Telegraph. If you enjoyed “Detectorists”, his “gentle” comedy series about metal-detecting enthusiasts, you’ll find “much to love” in his latest show.

    Our “hero” is Michael (Pearce Quigley), who has led a “lonely existence” since his partner, Clea, vanished seven years ago. His days are filled working at the local DIY superstore and visiting his father Brian (Michael Palin), who is in the early stages of dementia and lives in a nearby care home. But the show takes an “unexpected swerve into magical realism” when Michael sets out, by “dabbling in alchemy”, to grow six homunculi in his garden shed. His quest to conjure these “titular ‘small prophets’” is “driven by the one question to which he desperately seeks an answer: where is Clea?”

    This plot twist may “come as a surprise to those who have spent the first 25 minutes expecting a downbeat workplace comedy about drills and buckets”, said Rebecca Nicholson in the Financial Times. But it’s “all part of the show’s charm”. Crook has once again crafted an “idiosyncratic British comedy”, and it’s “undoubtedly a treasure”.

    So “don’t be put off” when “Crook pulls the rug” and the show shifts from “kitchen-sink comedy into folklore and the supernatural”, said Patrick Smith in The Independent. If you stay the course, you will be “rewarded with something funny, strange and surprisingly accessible”.

     
     

    Statistic of the day

    494: The number of days since Manchester United supporter Frank Ilett last got his hair cut, after vowing to let it grow until his team win five games in a row. The superfan, whose hair now stretches 25cm, was just one win away from the chop when the Red Devils played West Ham yesterday, but faces another lengthy wait after they drew 1-1.

     
     
    instant opinion

    Today’s best commentary

    Is this the way the world ends?
    Sarah O’Connor in the Financial Times
    “Young men and women seem to be increasingly fed up with one another,” writes Sarah O’Connor. And now “enter stage right: AI boyfriends and girlfriends”. Chatbots “won’t hurt or reject you, and can be designed to embody your desires and endorse your values”. Why would “anyone settle for a flawed human” when they can have an “always-attentive bot” that “never leaves its socks lying around”? Maybe our world ends “not with a bang, but a whisper from your AI lover”.

    Peter Mandelson Sold Off Britain to the Super-Rich. He’s Not the Only One
    James Schneider on Novara Media
    Every British political scandal, writes Momentum co-founder James Schneider, “leaves the same impression”: that the “real” decision-making happens not in Parliament but “in private rooms where wealth and power recognise one another”. Peter Mandelson is the “perfect expression” of this system and its members, who glide “from Davos to Washington to Whitehall”, turning “public authority into private advantage”. A country “run this way can’t be sovereign”, because “its wealth flows outward” and “its politics are for sale”.

    The debate about kids in restaurants has taken a worrying turn
    Punam Krishnan in The i Paper
    People feel strongly about whether to allow children in restaurants, but I worry about “the direction this conversation keeps taking us in”, writes TV doctor Punam Krishnan. Sitting “near a restless toddler” can be frustrating, but it “doesn’t necessarily ruin an entire experience”. Children “learn how to behave in public” by “being in it”. Sure, “let’s talk about respect in shared spaces”, but let’s also have tolerance. “If we lose that, we lose far more than a quiet meal.”

     
     
    word of the day

    Dizi

    Turkish for “series”, and a genre of television drama. With “lush production values, good-looking actors and gripping” storylines, Turkey’s TV soaps have “hooked audiences” worldwide, said the Financial Times. But dizi makers are facing “an unusual plot twist: high inflation”. As production costs soar and the value of advertising revenues drops, the “squeeze” on these “binge-worthy shows” is a “parable of Turkey’s economy”.

     
     

    Evening Review was written and edited by Hollie Clemence, Rebecca Messina, Will Barker, Chas Newkey-Burden, Irenie Forshaw, Adrienne Wyper, Helen Brown and Kari Wilkin, with illustrations by Stephen Kelly.

    Image credits, from top: Illustration by Stephen Kelly / Getty Images; Paul Yeung / Bloomberg / Getty Images; Daniel Berehulak / Getty Images; Natasha Quarmby / Alamy Live News; Matt Squires

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

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