• Altice seeks to sell Dominican Republic unit to cut debt

    French cable group struggling to reassure investors after share price halves
  • The London Buzz – 15th June 2026

    The London Buzz – 15th June 2026
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Euston station
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Multi-millionaire banker with royal connections arrested in hunt for notorious ‘Putney Pusher’ LBC
    Street drinkers could face £100 fines in Camden after the council approved new powers to crack down on alcohol-fuelled anti-social behaviour in the borough. Fitzrovia News
    Britain’s oldest Indian restaurant heads to court to challenge eviction  Restaurant
    A homeowner in Collier Row ha
  • Gandhi autograph and suffragette protests among treasures in new London archive

    Gandhi autograph and suffragette protests among treasures in new London archive
    London has gained a free history archive after more than 200 years of records, photographs, films and artefacts were uncovered and catalogued during the restoration of Union Chapel’s Sunday School building.
    Friends archive work (c) Union Chapel
    The new Sunday School Stories archive spans the period from 1799 to the present day and reveals the social, political and cultural history of both Union Chapel and London itself.
    The collection is now available online, with in-person access also off
  • Tower of London doubles price of late-night Ceremony of the Keys

    Tower of London doubles price of late-night Ceremony of the Keys
    The Tower of London has doubled the cost of attending the late-night Ceremony of the Keys, from cheap to still very affordable.The Ceremony of the Keys is the formal locking up of the tower, and it takes place every single evening at 10pm. Although it’s a private event inside the Tower, each evening a small group of people are allowed to watch. And you can apply to be in that group.
    Attending the ceremony used to be free of charge, but you also had to write in for tickets and usually wait
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  • Exhibition celebrates the women who made a living painting dogs

    Exhibition celebrates the women who made a living painting dogs
    At a time when women could struggle to carve out a career as an artist, there was a niche they excelled at – painting dogs. And to show off that niche, an exhibition has opened, displaying over 120 doggy artworks painted by women.Appropriately, it’s at the Royal Kennel Club, and almost emphasising how normalised the idea of women painting dogs was, about half the club’s art collection was painted by women. That is compared to a tiny fraction of historic female artists in most a
  • Lumo to launch Starlink based Wi-Fi on East Coast trains this autumn

    Lumo to launch Starlink based Wi-Fi on East Coast trains this autumn
    Passengers travelling on Lumo’s services are set to benefit from improved onboard internet connections, as the rail operator prepares to introduce Starlink satellite technology across its fleet this autumn.
    (c) Lumo
    The upgrade will be provided on Lumo’s trains running along the  East Coast Main Line between London and Scotland.
    Unlike traditional onboard Wi-Fi systems, which rely on mobile phone networks and trackside infrastructure, Starlink uses a network of low Earth orbit s
  • Government strips Epping Forest Council of major planning powers

    Government strips Epping Forest Council of major planning powers
    Epping Forest District Council has joined a very small list of councils that have lost their power to determine major planning applications after exceeding the government’s threshold for planning decisions overturned on appeal.Under planning rules, developers can appeal if they believe a council has wrongly refused an application. To discourage councils from rejecting schemes without sound planning grounds, the government monitors how many refusals are later overturned.
    Councils are expect
  • London’s Alleys: Bride Court, City of London, EC4

    London’s Alleys: Bride Court, City of London, EC4
    This covered late Victorian alley sits next to what was once the heart of England’s noisy and boisterous newspaper trade, but today is a rather quieter space.The alley sits on the southwestern corner of the large junction where Fleet Street, Farringdon Street, New Bridge Street and Ludgate Hill meet. The corner plot was once the site of the Abbot of Winchcombe’s Inn, and later the Bishop of St David also built an inn next door.
    However, the alley quickly appeared as the area began to
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  • SFR’s €20bn break-up can win watchdog approval, says Bouygues

    Lead bidder for French telecoms operator hopes EU’s competitive drive will offset regulatory concerns about merger
  • The London Buzz – 12th June 2026

    The London Buzz – 12th June 2026
    Piccadilly
    Today’s London news round-up:
    More than 70 people have been evacuated from their homes after a huge fire ripped through a nearby warehouse. Metro
    A “living legend” DJ who has played every Sunday night at a Hornchurch pub for the past 27 years has decided to stop. Romford Recorder
    A north London cat who has helped to save countless lives has been named blood donor of the year. Ham and High
    Dozens of protesters expressing support for Palestine Action have been arrested
  • The Red Arrows to fly over London for the King’s Birthday flypast

    The Red Arrows to fly over London for the King’s Birthday flypast
    Weather permitting, a military aircraft flypast will take place over central London on Saturday to mark the King’s official birthday.
    (c) ianVisits
    The flypast is part of the Trooping the Colour ceremony, the ceremonial event that takes place on Horseguards Parade in the morning, and once that has finished and people have time to get into place, a flypast over London accompanied by the Red Arrows.
    As it happens, there’s also a rehearsal over the North Sea a week or so before the flyp
  • Canada House exhibition explores visibility, loss and LGBTQ+ lives

    Canada House exhibition explores visibility, loss and LGBTQ+ lives
    Some exhibitions are content to tell stories from the past. Invisible Portraits, by British-Canadian artist Lucy Ash, is more interested in asking why certain stories disappear in the first place.Through painting, film and sound, the exhibition explores lives that have been overlooked, erased or only partially remembered, bringing together figures from LGBTIQ+ history alongside personal works that confront prejudice, grief and loss.
    Among the cultural figures represented are poet Wilfred Owen an
  • Tickets Alert: A chance to step inside the original Public Records strongroom

    Tickets Alert: A chance to step inside the original Public Records strongroom
    There’s a rare chance to step inside the original strongroom where the nation’s public records were once housed as part of a new immersive audio exhibition.
    Entrance to the former Public Records Building (now the Maughan Library)
    The Public Records Building was constructed in the 1850s next to Chancery Lane in the City of London and is claimed to have been the first purpose-built fireproof building in England. To further minimise the risk of fire, the document storerooms were designe
  • This week’s sale theatre ticket offers from London Theatre Direct

    This week’s sale theatre ticket offers from London Theatre Direct
    This week’s sale and discount theatre ticket offers from London Theatre Direct.
    Kinky Boots
    Kinky Boots struts back into the West End!
    From £15 – SAVE UP TO 53% Oliver!
    Experience the Olivier Award-winning family musical today!
    From £25 – SAVE UP TO £41 To Kill A Mockingbird
    Opens 25th June 2026
    Harper Lee’s masterpiece, reimagined for London theatre
    From £37 – SAVE UP TO 31%
    Titanique
    All aboard the Titanique!
    From £25 &ndash
  • The London Buzz – 11th June 2026

    The London Buzz – 11th June 2026
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Digging the Piccadilly line – old cigarette card
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Serious cycling accidents have jumped in Hackney and other London boroughs, a new analysis reveals. Standard
    Ealing Council has decided to pull the plug on its arms length housing venture after the scheme left it needing to make huge write-offs and delivered just 180 homes as opposed to thousands Neighbournet
    Enfield Council agrees out-of-court settlement with owner of T
  • Dress for 1066: The Bayeux Tapestry now has its own official Scottish tartan

    Dress for 1066: The Bayeux Tapestry now has its own official Scottish tartan
    Any Scots planning a trip to London this summer to see the Bayeux Tapestry could choose to arrive suitably dressed — in an official Bayeux tartan. That’s because a tartan has been designed by Professor Michael Lewis, who just happens to also be the lead Curator of the British Museum’s Bayeux Tapestry Exhibition.Its colours are drawn directly from the famous embroidery, particularly a scene depicting the dying King Edward the Confessor apparently promising the English throne to
  • Limehouse station platforms to close in phases for upgrade works

    Limehouse station platforms to close in phases for upgrade works
    The national rail platforms at Limehouse station in East London will be partially closed until late this year for maintenance. They will also extend the London-bound platform.The first phase of works will run from Monday 22nd June to Monday 6th July, when the Essex-bound platform (Platform 2) will remain closed throughout.
    During this phase, customers using the Essex-bound Platform 2 at Limehouse Station are advised that there will be no station entrance or exit access for Essex-bound services,
  • London unveils a blue plaque for Sir Laurence Olivier

    London unveils a blue plaque for Sir Laurence Olivier
    Sir Laurence Olivier, widely regarded as one of the greatest actors of the 20th century, has been honoured with an English Heritage blue plaque at his childhood home in Pimlico.
    (c) ianVisits
    Unveiled by Ian McKellen, the plaque at Olivier’s childhood home on Lupus Street marks the London address where Olivier first discovered a passion for acting and where the foundations of his stage and screen career were laid.
    Olivier lived in the house between the ages of six and 11 while his father s
  • Warburg Pincus and KKR tap buyers for UK broadband businesses

    Altnet sector grapples with lower-than-expected customer fibre uptake and higher costs
  • The London Buzz – 9th June 2026

    The London Buzz – 9th June 2026
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Embankment
    Today’s London news round-up:
    China accused of ‘snubbing’ judicial review over controversial London mega-embassy Jurist News
    First Putney gym to win community protection now battling TfL over rent Putney News
    Brent Council has been ordered to pay out £2,500 for the “distress and difficulties” it caused a mum and her three children after they were left in unsuitable housing for 10 months. Harrow Online
    New powers s
  • VodafoneThree bids for TalkTalk consumer business

    Acquisition would help UK’s largest mobile operator fulfil ambition to double its broadband business
  • Tickets Alert: Backstage tours of the Eventim Apollo

    Tickets Alert: Backstage tours of the Eventim Apollo
    This summer, there’s going to be the first in a series of backstage tours of Hammersmith’s famous Eventim Apollo.
    (c) Eventim Apollo
    Originally opened in 1932 and renowned for its Art Deco architecture, the Grade II*-listed venue has hosted generations of legendary music, comedy, theatre and cultural events.
    There are three events – one for performers, a stage show, and one offering the backstage tours.
    Centre Stage – Saturday 8th August
    A rare chance for music fans to pe
  • Blue plaque honours East End anti-racism pioneer Kamal Chunchie

    Blue plaque honours East End anti-racism pioneer Kamal Chunchie
    A blue plaque has been unveiled on a sailors’ hostel in Poplar to commemorate Kamal Chunchie, the pastor, community worker and anti-racist campaigner whose work transformed the lives of Black and Asian communities in London’s docklands.Installed by English Heritage on the Queen Victoria Seamen’s Rest in Jeremiah Street, the plaque marks the building where Chunchie’s mission first took shape. Working there between 1922 and 1924, he encountered Black and Asian seamen and th
  • Pride Month on the move with new TfL art trail and audio tour

    Pride Month on the move with new TfL art trail and audio tour
    Transport for London (TfL) is marking Pride Month with the launch of a new audio tour celebrating LGBTQIA+ stories across the capital’s transport network, while also commemorating the 10th anniversary of the distinctive Pride-themed pedestrian crossings in Trafalgar Square.
    (c) TfL
    Produced by Art on the Underground in partnership with OUTbound, TfL’s LGBTQIA+ staff network, the free Pride Audio Tour invites Londoners to explore five artworks across the network while listening to per
  • The many faces of Marilyn Monroe on display in London exhibition

    The many faces of Marilyn Monroe on display in London exhibition
    There are nearly 300 Marilyn Monroes in the National Portrait Gallery at the moment as they put on a centenary exhibition about the woman whose image was fixed by an untimely death.The exhibition opens with two images, one instantly recognisable as an Andy Warhol print, but opposite something small and easy to overlook – an early, untouched photo of a young lady. That’s the Norma Jeane who would become Marilyn Monroe.
    Then there’s room after room of Marilyn. A smorgasbord of Ma
  • Tickets Alert: Explore miniature worlds at London’s Bonsai treehouses exhibition

    Tickets Alert: Explore miniature worlds at London’s Bonsai treehouses exhibition
    The team that brings us the Gingerbread city in the winter has turned to the Japanese art of Bonsai trees for its summer exhibition.
    Galina Nelyubova For Unsplash+
    On display will be a collection of bonsai specimens alongside treehouse designs, created by architects and designers, that are inspired by the distinct form and character of these ancient trees.
    Each tree has its own story, and every treehouse design explores this year’s theme: “Together”.
    Bonsai are not naturally mi
  • What phantom traffic jams can teach us about crowded Tube escalators

    What phantom traffic jams can teach us about crowded Tube escalators
    Have you ever stepped onto an escalator intending to walk up the left-hand side, only to find yourself trapped behind a wall of people standing still because a bottleneck has formed ahead?
    And wished there were some way to make it clear?
    As it happens, there is.
    Oddly enough, the answer comes from the way traffic behaves on motorways.
    Elizabeth line’s Farringdon station in the rush hour (c) ianVisits
    Drivers have long experienced the curious phenomenon of crawling through a traffic jam, ex
  • The London Buzz – 8th June 2026

    The London Buzz – 8th June 2026
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Bridge to Cannon Street station circa 1875
    Today’s London news round-up:
    Man denies causing nuisance by climbing Big Ben BBC News
    TfL must use new regulatory powers granted by the government to crack down on “nuisance” e-bike parking, City Hall Labour have said. South London
    The Met Police have backed down on plans to force out dozens of Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) previously tasked with enforcing red route restrictions on roads
  • Fancy a scoop of… what? London’s strangest ice cream shop returns

    Fancy a scoop of… what? London’s strangest ice cream shop returns
    One of London’s more unusual summer pop-ups has returned, as Anya Hindmarch’s Ice Cream Project opens for its fifth year. The annual venture takes familiar supermarket and pantry staples and turns them into ice cream and sorbet flavours – with varying degrees of weirdness and success.Previous years have featured everything from Heinz Baked Beans and Branston Piccalilli to Bisto Gravy, alongside slightly less challenging options such as Sun-Pat Peanut Butter, McVitie’s Mil
  • After-work art: National Gallery opens until 7pm throughout summer

    After-work art: National Gallery opens until 7pm throughout summer
    The National Gallery is extending its opening hours and will open late every evening for a couple of months this summer.The gallery, which has seen its visitor numbers struggling to recover to pre-pandemic levels says that the late opening initiative responds directly to audience demand for more flexible visiting hours, particularly for Londoners and commuters who are unable to visit during traditional daytime opening hours.
    National Gallery Summertime also aims to attract first-time visitors lo

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