county Payne: Last News

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‘Line Of Duty’ star Martin Compston says ‘Game Of Thrones’ turned him down

Game Of Thrones.Compston, who is best-known for playing DS Steve Arnott in hit BBC series Line Of Duty spoke recently on his podcast, Restless Natives, with Daniel Portman, who played Podrick Payne in Game Of Thrones.Speaking on the hit HBO series, Compston said: “I auditioned for the pilot and not only did I never get that, I never got an audition again.”He continued: “That character died fairly quickly and I thought, ‘That’s good, maybe I’ll get in later’, [but] no.”Elsewhere in the episode, Compston spoke about the finale of Line Of Duty. He began: “I remember that final night.
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dailystar.co.uk
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Carol Vorderman opens up about the sickening child murder which still haunts her
Carol Vorderman has revealed the harrowing murder that still haunts her is the death of eight-year-old Sarah Payne in 2000.Sarah disappeared while playing in a cornfield with her two older brothers and younger sister in Kingston Gorse, West Sussex.The youngster's disappearance sparked a nationwide manhunt but tragically her body was found abandoned in a field 15 miles away two weeks later.Sarah was snatched and killed by evil paedophile Roy Whiting, who was jailed for her murder in 2001, and was told he must serve a minimum of 40 years in jail.Her death shocked the nation and sparked major concerns about internet chat rooms.At the time former Countdown star Carol feared that chatrooms had become a breeding ground for sex offenders - sparking her to join charities and academics to campaign to improve safety measures around the grooming of young children.As part of her work she joined a task force, which passed the UK's first Online Grooming act, and established a protection body known as the CEOP - now part of the National Crime Agency.The presenter explained: "It was an abduction and murder that shocked us as a nation and deeply changed our attitudes towards child safety."We realised legislation was needed to protect the youngest in society and fast but it seemed impossible at the time.But Carol now fears that virtual online spaces like the Metaverse could result in a new epidemic of paedophiles targeting young children online.
metro.co.uk
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Liam Payne finally addresses ‘ever-changing’ accent in infamous Oscars interview: ‘I’d had a lot to drink’
supports HTML5 videoLiam Payne has finally spoken about what he’s dubbed his ‘ever-changing’ accent in that now-infamous Oscars interview.In a chat that almost overshadowed Will Smith hitting Chris Rock at the Academy Awards, Liam was interviewed on Good Morning Britain about it, with many questioning why the Wolverhampton-born musician suddenly sounded like he was from the Netherlands.‘This was in Oscars week – the ever changing accent,’ the musician began on his Instagram Live on Monday night.‘I’m good at accents, I pride myself on them! I just wish sometimes I could do my own,’ he giggled.‘What can I say about that really? It was quite funny. I had asked Good Morning Britain, the presenter, I said, “Please don’t ask me too much because I’ve had a lot to drink and I’m under-ly educated about the Oscars [sic].” ‘The very first question the man asked me was, “What do you think about Will Smith?” Now can you imagine, imagine being put on the spot in that moment and knowing, “I can’t say anything wrong because I’m gonna upset someone” and I just did the best I could.’‘I actually read back what I said and I stand by what I said.
dailystar.co.uk
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Where the word 'nonce' comes from as ex-prisoner reveals slang was code word
Channel 5 documentary, HMP Wakefield: Evil Behind Bars, has focused on the Yorkshire institution, and in one section highlighted the jail’s large amounts of sex offenders.Containing infamous names including Roy Whiting – who was convicted of abducting and murdering 8 year-old Sarah Payne in 2000 – the so-called 'Monster Mansion' is also home to Robert Maudsley, who has spent more than 30 years locked up.As well as revealing details about life inside, the documentary offered viewers an understanding of labels given to offenders during their time as inmates.Mark, a former inmate, began by explaining that HMP Wakefield carried a reputation for housing prisoners who would typically be held in solitary confinement in other jails.“What prisoners refer to as ‘nonces’, or sex offenders, or people in prison for serious crimes against women and children,” he added.And, Noel ‘Razor’ Smith, who did time at HMP Whitemoor in Cambridgeshire, suggested that HMP Wakefield had been so full of prisoners who had taken part in sex crimes, that a new term had been invented.“Wakefield is where the word ‘nonce’ for sex offender actually originated,” he claimed.Noel explained that this term had been developed because of the risk to sex offenders of being attacked when prisoners were let out of their cells.He continued: “They had a slate board outside the cell with your name and number, and they would put the letters, ‘N.O.N.C.E’ on it, which actually meant ‘not on normal courtyard exercise’.“So when the staff came round to unlock everybody for exercise and let them out, when they saw nonce on the door they would leave them locked up because they knew if they let them out, the other prisoners would attack them.“So it became the universal word for
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