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Darts ace girlfriend is daring to dream
THE girlfriend of teenage darts prodigy Luke Littler today said “the dream carries on” as the 16-year-old prepared to battle for a place in the final of the PDC World Darts Championship.
Top Tory warns of 'hardest election ever' as party faces robust Labour lead in polls
RISHI SUNAK will have to scale a “steep and narrow path” to pull off a general election victory this year, a senior Tory official said today.
Spotlight on Olise to turn the tide for win-needy Palace
AT Selhurst Park tonight, Crystal Palace face their fiercest rivals Brighton for the first time since the departure of Wilfried Zaha.
GREEN LIGHT FOR RETURN OF SUPER LEAGUE PLAN
EDROPEAN COURT RULES UEFA ABUSED POSITION’ BY STOPPING THE FORMATION OF RIVAL COMPETITION
Hipgnosis battle hots up after $63m loss
THE row between the board of the Hipgnosis Songs Fund and its founder Merck Mercuriadis heated up today, as the fund's chair accused the Mercuriadis-led firm that manages its portfolio of \"ongoing failures\" in its financial reporting.
Landlord secures approval for Curzon Mayfair makeover
CURZON has lost a planning battle over the future of its Mayfair cinema after Westminster council approved a refurbishment scheme from its landlord that will see the number of seats reduced by more than 100.
Tiny ONS tweak tomorrow could be grim for No 10
BRITAIN'S economy was flat in the third quarter - right? Well, no actually.
All hail St Francis, the genius behind the Nativity
THE Christmas crib is 800 years old. That's right, the Nativity scene with ox, ass and manger wasn't always a thing.
Meghan's advert shows she and Harry have begun their descent
THE miracle of the latest advertisement for Clevr, a \"mission-driven, women-led wellness brand\" which sells revolting-sounding powdered coffee, is that it features Meghan Markle doing actual work. The Duchess of Sussex is seen packing boxes, making hot drinks and doing something or other on a computer before doing a mock fist bump and exiting off-screen.
Ugly, vulgar and a climate catastrophe - we should ban SUVs in London
WHAT upsets me most about life in London today? The endless proliferation of \"luxury flats\" marW keted abroad while ordinary Londoners can't afford to rent a basic home? Yes, that upsets me. The fact that so many young people in the capital are so utterly devoid of manners that they see nothing wrong with listening to their phones on public transport without headphones? Deeply upsetting on an existential, future-of-mankind level.
London in winter is a city of darkness, but you can still see light in the gloom
THE first line of the song Cities by Talking Heads is, \"Think of London, a small city/It's dark, dark in the daytime.\" That is an American perspective, but as Londoners travel to the station or bus stop and then from work to home again, it does feel like being in perpetual shadow. It has been a hard year, and the stress of living and working in London comes in many forms, so reflecting on the challenges of 2023 feels especially gloomy in a city of darkness. It's tempting to ask why we live here at all.
It's not just about fundraising, we're changing the capital too
IT'S astonishing what we take for granted. Back in early 2010, the most the Evening Standard had ever raised in a campaign was £250,000. That was considered a pretty good result back then for the paper's traditional annual Christmas drive, which typically solicited funds for a chosen charity. Today, a Standard campaign that raises anything short of £1 million can seem like a failure.
New Gaza ceasefire deal and hostage release might be possible, says US
THE United States today expressed hope that a new ceasefire deal in Gaza and the release of more hostages held by Hamas could be in the offing, as the death toll reported from Israel's offensive surpassed 20,000.
100 teenagers unlawfully convicted in secretive single justice system
CHILDREN have been unlawfully handed criminal convictions in a fast-track justice system in which magistrates sit behind closed doors, the Evening Standard can reveal.
Bargain Hunt star on assault charge over 'domestic abuse'
BARGAIN HUNT star Charles Hanson has been charged after a police probe into domestic abuse allegations.
Money, Money, Money! Abba effect brings £322m boost
THEY might only be digital dancing queens and kings - but the four holograms performing every night to sell-out audiences in east London are pumping serious Money, Money, Money into the capital's economy.
How stars aligned to help Londoners in distress
Campaigns Editor David Cohen chronicles the astonishing progress of our appeal this year - and how its big-name backers weighed in
My husband's mother would encourage him to hit me, now I'm free and getting stronger
Anna Davis visits a refuge backed by our appeal for women from abusive homes
You're a fighter: Rita's tidings of comfort and hope
As our appeal hits £2.4 million (including 3,500 individual donations from ordinary Londoners) the singer-songwriter pays a visit to one of the charities benefiting
Russell Norman changed the way that Londoners dine out forever
IT is difficult to overstate what Russell Norman, the restaurateur who died on November 23 aged 57, did for London dining - and in turn, for dining across Britain. The list isn't endless, but long enough.
Nico Ladenis, a self-taught star who only ever did things his way
TIME is a filter that warps. It's often repeated that the first British chef to win three Michelin stars was Marco Pierre White, but he didn't cross the finish line alone: in 1995, the guide that year awarded two restaurants run by Brits the highest accolade - one was White's, the other was Park Lane's Chez Nico, run by Nico Ladenis. Ladenis died on September 10, aged 89.
Oh Jamie, this is like a show with a star who can't sing
I don't want to name-drop,\" a pal said, as he finished a story about partying with will.i.am. \"But Andrew Lloyd Webber said to me last week, 'look, it's Jamie Oliver. He'll automatically get a spanking from the press. Be kind.\" Perhaps. As it is, Google News records 64 positive Oliver press stories from the past week which - call me a cynic - smacks of publicity bods flooding the internet in the hope of hiding bad reviews. Banning Turkey Twizzlers aside (worse than Maggie and the milk, I reckon), Oliver's been a target since the 2019 crumbling of his British restaurant empire, which left debts of £83 million and a reported 1,000 staff out of work. The chef himself was ruined.
Lifeless Korean sent to grave by insulting tips rule
EXCUSES. I suspect how easy they are to accept rather depends on how serious the crime. I remember my sister's godfather once refusing to head into a wedding until the taxi delivering his cigarettes turned up \"but it's three packs,\" he kept protesting - which might have been fine, if my sister hadn't already been waiting 15 minutes to walk down the aisle.
Camaraderie that helps turn lives around through a love of cooking
William Hosie joins Marchioness of Bath Emma Thynn at the Beyond Food Foundation in London Bridge
A Jenga tower of flavours - and the very best pudding
THE thing about immensely talented chefs is that they cannot help themselves. I am not talking, in this instance, about any accusations of off-duty misbehaviour that might give this newspaper's lawyers cause for concern.
Gothic Bar promises seduction - and drinks as lethal as Dracula
SUGGESTION is the thing, isn't it? So much more seductive than out-and-out saying something. A flash in the eyes, a tilt of the head. We're not talking ill-advised fire emojis here. Take the Gothic Bar, where opening hours are kept to \"till late\", and \"until a little later\". Granted, hardly the first to do it, but when a friend is fretting if there's time for another nightcap, it's an enjoyable thing to be able to say, \"well of course, tonight they're open a little later\".
My recipe for the perfect martini? Be really bloody careful who makes it
GIVEN that I suspect anyone searching for their personality in a newspaper column simply may not have one, I tend to avoid those occasional \"this is what your order says about you\" stories. But as I send back bad martinis, I do concede that some preferences matter.
Paris's best bistro... on Goodge Street
YOU can't have it all; not every dream is realised. Here's one I have: I'm walking in the Paris dusk and, as I do the Elvis in my leg to extinguish a cigarette dreamland, it is the city of d'you-havea-light? - I notice a bistro glowing in the gloom.
Forget my big mouth, this place speaks for itself
WELL this is exciting. In a sadistic, unflattering sort of way. We were not long settled into the chic, exposed-brick gloom of Akara - a new West African spot in the redeveloped outer rim of Borough Market - when our waitress's introductory spiel, about the restaurant's namesake black-eyed bean fritter, was interrupted by a voice that sounded alarmingly like my own.
Before the bill was even paid, I'd made plans to come back
THE promise of \"authentic Thai food\" has long been an especially elastic and problematic one; an ever-moving target shaped by time, context and whatever level of regional fidelity the cautious masses deem tolerable.