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‘EscalatorGate’ escalates and goes viral as MAGA call out sabotage of UN escalator

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When Nathan Ames patented the first moving staircase in 1859, little did he know that 166 years later the escalator would become the latest fixation of Trump and his MAGA base.

At the United Nations general assembly this week, Donald Trump delivered a sprawling speech that often felt like experimental free form jazz. Except the avant-garde approach to the music genre requires a great deal of improvisational talent.

When he wasn’t describing climate change as the “greatest con job ever”, he was singling out how European nations are “going to hell” over their migration policies or waxing lyrical about his red hat merch.

But the moment that caught people’s attention was when he broke from his prepared remarks to bemoan a defective teleprompter and the now-viral moment when he and first lady Melania Trump were on a malfunctioning escalator.

“All I got from the United Nations was an escalator that on the way up stopped right in the middle,” said Trump.

Indeed, the escalator did suddenly stop as Donald and Melania Trump stepped onto it, leading to them having to walk up the stairs.

Trump posted about the harrowing experience on Truth Social, writing that it was “amazing that Melania and I didn’t fall forward on to the sharp edges of these steel steps, face first.”

In his legnthy chronicle of the “REAL DISGRACE”, Trump made reference to a report in the Times of London newspaper on Sunday saying that UN staff members had joked that they would turn off the escalators and “tell him they ran out of money.” This would have been a jab at the sweeping US funding cuts. 

Trump has demanded an “immediate investigation” into whether UN staff sabotaged his attendance, with the Leader of the Free World calling the teleprompter failure and the escalator SNAFU “very sinister events”. He added that the “people that did it should be arrested!”. 

As overblown as the presidential reaction was to a malfunctioning piece of equipment, the Trump administration and the MAGA base doubled down.

Karoline Leavitt, the White House spokeswoman, told Fox News that the Secret Service was investigating allegations that Trump had been deliberately sabotaged by UN staff.

“It doesn’t look like a coincidence to me,” she told Fox News. “And I know that we have people, including the United States Secret Service, who are looking into this to try to get to the bottom of it.”

Good luck, as that particular escalator was supposed to go up, and not to the bottom. 

Leavitt then suggested on X that this was an intentional act of protest and that someone could have intentionally halted the escalator.

Where’s Hercule Poirot when you need him? 

Then again, even the famous fictional detective would probably come to the conclusion that the UN have better things to do with their time than investigate a malfunctioning escalator under the guise of sabotage suspicions.

Still, UN officials took it seriously and have said the escalator’s built-in safety mechanism had been “inadvertently triggered” by a videographer working for the Trump administration and that the teleprompter was operated by the White House rather than the UN.

So, the call was coming from inside the (American) house after all.

UN spokesperson Stephane Dujarric confirmed that a videographer from the US delegation who ran ahead of him may have triggered the stop mechanism at the top of the escalator.

He said: “In an effort to document their arrival, a videographer from the US delegation stepped on to the escalator ahead of the president and first lady. As the videographer, who was travelling backwards up the escalator reached the top, the first lady, followed by President Trump, each mounted the steps at the bottom. At that moment, the escalator came to a stop.” 

His statement continued: “Our technician, who was at the location, reset the escalator as soon as the delegation had climbed up to the second floor. A subsequent investigation, including a readout of the machine’s central processing unit, indicated that the escalator had stopped after a built-in safety mechanism on the comb step was triggered at the top of the escalator.” 

“The safety mechanism is designed to prevent people or objects accidentally being caught and stuck in or pulled into the gearing. The videographer may have inadvertently triggered the safety function described above.” 

Still, MAGA are convinced there’s a wider conspiracy here – leading to the trending hashtag #EscalatorGate.  

Still, some found a silver lining…  

Late-night talk show hosts had a field day with the moment, pointing out the lunacy of overblown conspiracy theories.  

“My favourite part of that clip (of Trump stuck on the escalator) is trump looking around like he doesn’t know what to do next,” said Seth Meyers. “We all know that when an escalator breaks, we just use it as stairs. But when Trump see a broken escalator, he turns to Melania and says, ‘We live here now’.” 

Referring to Leavitt’s comments on Fox News, in which she blamed “UN globalist staffers” plotting to set up Trump, Meyers quipped: “I’ve heard a lot about these globalists over the years, but I didn’t realise their M.O. was to just burn you with soft pranks.” 

Jimmy Kimmel, who is now back on the air despite Trump’s wishes, showed clips of Fox News host Jesse Watters saying: “They could have hurt the most beautiful first lady in American history.” 

Kimmel said: “Just to recap: Trump will not release the Epstein files, but we will be doing a thorough and complete investigation into who stopped his escalator…” 

As for The Daily Show’s Jordan Klepper, he referred to the extensive Fox News coverage of escalatorgate and their repeated accusations of sabotage by asking: “Can you people please decide if Trump is the strongest man who has ever walked the Earth or a sickly child with hollow bird bones who will crumble if he walks up three stairs?” 

No news on which one they’re picking, but suspicions of a shadowy UN cabal continue.

We really do live in the most unserious timeline, don’t we?

Culture

Slow Horses review: Dour, dumpy and depressed, is this the broken Britain of spy dramas?

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Much like an expensive gadget you never get much use from, Apple has ploughed billions into its streaming service, Apple TV+, without yet arriving within tweeting distance of a viral hit.

The closest it has come is the insufferable Ted Lasso, a psychotically cuddly comedy about soccer aimed at and seemingly made by people who have never attended a match in their lives.

The second closest is the rumpled espionage dramedy Slow Horses (Apple TV+, Wednesday), which has received admiring reviews – mainly from the UK, it must be said – for portraying the operatives at MI5 as relatable weirdos rather than gimlet-eyed instruments of British foreign policy.

Slow Horses returns: ‘Readers know by now I’m capable of killing off whoever is in danger,’ says creator Mick HerronOpens in new window ]

Something is going on here. Every country likes to hold up a mirror and see something that it likes about itself in the reflection. It surely says a lot about the Britain in the 21st century that it would rather be represented by wisecracking underdogs than by a mercurial womaniser such as James Bond. Dour, dumpy, depressed: is this the broken Britain of spy dramas?

The other question is whether it’s worth the acclaim. Sort of – though the series’ charms are not immediately obvious as it returns for a fifth season. The major obstacle is Gary Oldman. He plays a rude slob named Jackson Lamb, whom the show insists we find completely charming.

He’s actually just a rude slob – and a bit of a boss from hell, given that he is in charge of a team of spooks at MI5’s Slough House, a dumping ground for underperforming agents.

The stewing Lamb aside, Slow Horses reels you in with an enjoyably crunchy plot that owes a lot to the master of ennui and espionage, John le Carré. It begins in a grim corner of London, as a progressive mayor from a southeast Asian background seeks re-election over a red-faced far-right headbanger.

So far so depressingly true to life. But things take a turn for the mildly fantastical when a crazed gunman goes on a shooting spree – with a campaigner for the mayor among his victims. Meanwhile, back at Slough House, the team’s in-house hacker, Roddy Ho (Christopher Chung), has seemingly been targeted for elimination.

But why? That is one of the mysteries confronting Lamb and his dashing sidekick River Cartwright (Jack Lowden – who is actually in the conversation as the next Bond). Alas, every step of the way they find obstacles laid in their path by their spiky boss, Kristin Scott Thomas – once again impersonating Theresa May.

Slow Horses excels at capturing the grey vastness of modern London, and the plot is packed to bursting, but it can’t decide whether it wants to be hilarious or profound, and the humour comes across as trying too hard.

The show’s fast-expanding fan base will tell you it’s the best thing on TV, but newcomers will find Slow Horses less hot to trot than a bleak black sheep that ambles at its often wayward pace.

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Ticketmaster commits to greater price transparency after Oasis sale

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The British competition watchdog has secured formal commitments from Ticketmaster in the UK to ensure greater transparency when it comes to the future sale of concert tickets there.

It comes following a lengthy investigation carried out by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched in the wake of a ticket-pricing controversy that erupted after Oasis reunion concert tickets went on sale last September.

Following the investigation, the CMA found that Ticketmaster did not tell fans waiting in lengthy queues that standing tickets were being sold at two different prices, and that prices would jump as soon as the cheap tickets sold out.

Ticketmaster also sold some “platinum” tickets at almost 2½ times the price of “standard” tickets – without sufficient explanation that these offered no additional benefits over some “standard” tickets in the same areas of the venue.

What has been described as “dynamic ticket pricing” was also used for the band’s Croke Park concerts and saw some fans paying more than three times more for the same tickets as other fans who were ahead of them in the queue.

A similar investigation is being carried out by the Competition and Consumer Protection Commission in Ireland and a spokeswoman confirmed to The Irish Times that it was still ongoing.

“The CCPC is actively investigating Ticketmaster Ireland and its handling of the sale of Oasis tickets on the weekend of August 31st, 2024,” she said. “As the investigation is still ongoing, no further comment can be made at this time.”

As part of the agreement Ticketmaster in the UK will tell fans 24 hours in advance if a tiered pricing system is being used (as it was for Oasis standing tickets). This means fans will know beforehand if there are multiple prices for the same type of ticket, and that more expensive ones will be released once the cheapest sell out.

It will also provide more information about ticket prices during online queues, helping fans anticipate how much they might have to pay.

The range of prices available for the event will be set out when people join the queue and fans will be updated swiftly when the cheaper tickets sell out.

Oasis tickets controversy: ‘People say it was better in the old days. It really wasn’t’Opens in new window ]

And the platform has also agreed not use any misleading ticket labels and ensure that tickets are described accurately and do not give the impression that one ticket is better than another when that is not the case.

Ticketmaster will regularly report to the CMA how it has implemented the undertakings over the next two years to ensure robust compliance. Failure to take forward these measures could result in enforcement action.

Sarah Cardell, the chief executive of the authority, said that “fans who spend their hard-earned money to see artists they love deserve to see clear, accurate information, upfront.

“We can’t ensure every fan gets a ticket for events as popular as the Oasis tour, but we can help ensure that next time an event like this comes along, fans have the information they need, when they need it,” she said.

She said the undertakings “have been provided to the CMA voluntarily and without any admission of wrongdoing or liability. Ticketmaster has stopped using ‘platinum’ labels in the UK, separate to providing undertakings.”

The CMA added that while “many fans were under the impression that Ticketmaster used an algorithmic pricing model during the Oasis sale – with ticket prices adjusted in real time according to changing conditions like high demand – also known as dynamic pricing – the CMA has not found evidence that this was the case.”

Ticketmaster Ireland have been approached for a comment.

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House of Guinness on Netflix review: Wildly unfaithful retelling is like Succession with shillelaghs

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Netflix has pitched House of Guinness (Netflix, from Thursday) as a sort of Succession with shillelaghs. It begins with the death, in 1868, of Benjamin Guinness, grandson of the brewery’s founder, Arthur Guinness. As with the acclaimed HBO show, the story is driven by his dysfunctional children, all of whom have various designs on his beer empire.

There are many negatives, so perhaps it’s best to focus on the positives up top. First, the music is fantastic. An early “Fenian” riot in Dublin is soundtracked by Kneecap’s Get Your Brits Out, a pairing so on the nose I could feel my nostrils climb up into my skull. Elsewhere, the score features such up and coming Irish artists as Fontaines DC, Gilla Band, Shark School, Lankum, The Scratch and Sprints.

Fontaines don’t need the exposure. But how fantastic that, to pluck a random example, Gilla Band’s weapons-grade postpunk is about to be beamed into livingrooms across the globe. There is also an undeniable thrill of witnessing Irish history told in epic-budget fashion.

James Norton on perfecting a Dublin accent for House of Guinness: ‘I knew if I didn’t work hard, I’d be really exposed’Opens in new window ]

But that’s about as good as it gets. One problem with House of Guinness is the at best rudimentary understanding of Ireland’s experiences of colonialism of Steven Knight, the drama’s creator. (He didn’t even have to leave the UK: the series was filmed mainly in Liverpool.)

He pitches the struggle for independence as a battle between different kinds of Irish people. On one side are Dublin Metropolitan Police units with flint urban burrs, on the other “Fenians” who dress and speak like feral leprechauns. At no point in an eight-part series unfolding in a post-Act of Union Ireland do we encounter a single person with a British accent – which Americans might call burying the lede.

Knight is responsible for one of the worst television shows of all time, in the atrocious Peaky Blinders – starring Cillian Murphy’s flat cap and Nick Cave’s Red Right Hand and not much else. (No man has ever loved anything so much as Knight does Murphy’s hat.) So there are obvious concerns now that he is getting his mitts on 19th-century Irish history with House of Guinness, a wildly unfaithful retelling of the adventures of the porter-fuelled Anglo-Irish dynasty at a time when Ireland was a powder keg primed to detonate.

He also has a stunning lack of appreciation for who the Anglo-Irish were and where they fit (or didn’t) into Irish society. To Knight, all the Irish seem much the same; the Guinness dynasty and their peers are just that little bit posher. For instance, as played by the Dublin actor Danielle Galligan, Lady Olivia Hedges, daughter of the Earl of Bantry, is depicted essentially as a middle-class Cork woman.

Still, she and the rest of the cast do their best. James Norton sounds like a steampunk Mr Tayto as the Guinness consigliere Seán Rafferty. As the sensible one in the family, Edward, played by Louis Partridge (boyfriend of Olivia Rodrigo), appears to have walked straight out of a Ross O’Carroll-Kelly spin-off. Forget the black stuff: Edward was born to chug Heinomites. There is also Anthony Boyle as the closeted head of the family, Arthur Guinness, Jack Gleeson as their illegitimate half-sibling, Byron Hughes, and Emily Bairns as Lady Anne Guinness.

In one of the more unintentionally hilarious sequences, Ms Guinness visits a village in “Connacht, Co Mayo”, and is shocked to discover that a famine took place several years earlier and that everyone speaks Irish. These and other scenes might leave you crying out for a nice cold, creamy pint of Beamish.

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