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TV station owners reinstate Kimmel show after ban

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Sakshi VenkatramanUS reporter

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Jimmy Kimmel Live! will now appear again on all ABC channels.

Sinclair Broadcast Group and Nexstar Media Group announced on Friday they will bring the show back to their ABC affiliates after a week-long ban.

The two companies, which carry dozens of ABC stations across the US, pulled the programme over comments Kimmel made about Charlie Kirk’s death.

Sinclair decided to reinstate the late-night talk show after “thoughtful feedback from viewers, advertisers, and community leaders”.

Kimmel was also briefly suspended from all of ABC, and returned to the network on Tuesday.

“It was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man,” he said in his opening monologue that night.

By lifting the blackout, Sinclair and Nexstar viewers in cities like Washington, DC, Nashville, New Orleans and Seattle can now watch Kimmel’s show again.

Sinclair said in a press release its discussions with ABC and parent company Disney are “ongoing and constructive”. The media conglomerate said it had suggested measures to promote “accountability” within Disney.

None of those measures have been adopted yet, it said.

Nexstar also cited positive discussions with ABC, saying in a press release that they “appreciate their constructive approach to addressing our concerns”. The company said it is “committed to protecting the First Amendment”.

What happened?

Kimmel landed in hot water after his 15 September monologue on conservative firebrand Kirk’s death.

He said US President Donald Trump and his allies were “desperately trying to characterise this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them” and trying to “score political points from it”.

He also likened Trump’s reaction to the influencer’s murder to “how a four-year-old mourns a goldfish”.

Federal Communications Commission (FCC) chair Brendan Carr, who was appointed by Trump, threatened to revoke ABC’s broadcast licence during an interview with a conservative podcast.

After Carr’s comments, Sinclair and Nexstar said they would stop airing the show on their dozens of ABC affiliates.

ABC then pulled the show off the air entirely.

This triggered nationwide debates about free speech, including online trends of people canceling their Disney+ subscriptions.

Kimmel’s comeback

Disney announced on Monday that Kimmel would return to air, but Sinclair and Nexstar maintained they would not air it.

His return show on Tuesday drew record ratings, with 6.26 million people watching it live despite a quarter of ABC stations not airing it.

Kimmel expressed regret about his earlier joke about Kirk, but also went after Trump and Carr for what he called “mob” censorship tactics.

“Our leader celebrates people losing their livelihoods because he can’t take a joke,” Kimmel said, adding that Trump openly rooting for people to lose their jobs was “un-American” and “dangerous”.

Trump was openly disappointed in Kimmel’s reinstatement.

“I can’t believe ABC Fake News gave Jimmy Kimmel his job back,” he wrote in a social media post.

Breaking News

‘My labour went on for 85 hours – now I know why’

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Jenny ReesWales health correspondent

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When Lana Boocock gave birth to her first child, the labour lasted for a gruelling 85 hours.

Her baby then needed to spend time in neonatal intensive care.

Ms Boocock, now a mum-of-two, said difficulties giving birth to both of her children became easier to understand when she was later diagnosed with adenomyosis, a condition which is believed to affect more than one in 10 women.

Pregnant women with adenomyosis are at a greater risk of complications during labour, according to consultant gynaecologist Anthony Griffiths, but the risks are not managed because it remains under-diagnosed.

“It’s remarkably common, it’s just we’re not looking for it,” said Mr Griffiths.

Adenomyosis is a condition where the lining of the womb starts growing into the muscle in the wall of the womb.

It can cause painful periods, heavy bleeding, pelvic pain and pain during sex.

Dr Griffiths said pregnant women with adenomyosis also had a much higher rate of miscarriage, premature births and issues like pre-eclampsia, but that risks could be well managed with increased monitoring by healthcare professionals.

“What I’ve learned is that [during labour] your uterus fails to contract properly and you have a failure to progress with labour – and that, to me, is exactly what happened,” said Ms Boocock, 30, from Caerphilly.

“It just makes me upset to think of how many women have gone through labour and had worse outcomes than me, because of these complications.”

‘It was ruining my life’

Prior to her diagnosis, Ms Boocock – who also has endometriosis – had lived with debilitating symptoms that left her regularly needing to use a walking stick.

“I was haemorrhaging every couple of weeks, my iron levels were critically low and I had no energy to do anything,” she said.

The pain was centred in her hip and initially coincided with her menstrual cycle, but developed to be a constant, agonising problem.

She said after years of medical appointments and being told it was “just part of being a woman”, “probably IBS” or repeatedly being prescribed birth control, she paid for a hysterectomy, retaining her ovaries.

“At some points when I was so poorly before my surgery, I was suicidal. I was in so much pain it was ruining my life.

“But when I finally got to see an NHS gynaecologist and asked to be put on the list for a hysterectomy, the consultant’s words were: ‘You’re too young, you’ll lose your fertility’.

“But I didn’t want my fertility, I wanted my quality of life.”

A hysterectomy will remove symptoms of adenomyosis, though it is not a cure for endometriosis.

However, Ms Boocock said three months on from her surgery life was “just fantastic”.

“I would love these diseases to be taken more seriously,” she said.

imageAnthony is wearing a grey suit, white shirt and a yellow tie. He is wearing dark-framed glasses and is looking at the camera. He is stood in an office with a white backdrop, and a plant in the background.

Mr Griffiths said medical textbooks from a decade ago defined adenomyosis as a “disease of ladies in their 40s” with heavy vaginal bleeding that was not easily controlled with medication.

“But that’s not true at all,” he said. “That’s a myth, mainly because we didn’t have tools to diagnose it.”

He said high quality MRIs were now detecting the condition in much younger women, and that around a third of the women he saw with endometriosis had some adenomyosis.

“Adenomyosis and endometriosis are different diseases, but there are similarities – people can present with heavy periods, agonizing pain often with periods but it can be throughout the menstrual cycle.”

Dee Montague-Coast, from the charity Fair Treatment for the Women of Wales – which chairs the women’s health Wales coalition – said there were more than 158,000 people living with adenomyosis in Wales.

“Yet in our experience, people won’t have heard of it before,” she said. “Often their healthcare professionals haven’t heard of it either.”

imageDee has short dark hair and is sat on a dark sofa, wearing a white t-shirt with the Fair Treatment for the Women of Wales logo on the right hand side. The logo depicts three stick-women, joining hands, balanced as if a scales. In the background to the left are plants and ornaments on a shelf.

She explained that adenomyosis was only recently included on the NHS 111 website, following a petition by the charity.

“If people can’t find information on it, that harms patients, it contributes to diagnostic delays, but also harms healthcare professionals looking for this information.”

Mr Griffiths said treatment options for both adenomyosis and endometriosis had improved but there was limited diagnostic capability within the NHS.

“There’s obviously financial constraints everywhere, but unless you recognise there’s a problem – and a significant problem – you’re not going to allocate healthcare,” he said.

“We know it ruins lives. There’s high suicide within this bracket of people because they’ve got agonising, intractable symptoms, and yet are unable to get help.”

‘54,000 women waiting for care’

A spokesperson from the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) said: “The relationship between adenomyosis and pregnancy outcomes is complex, and current research remains limited and inconclusive. More investment is needed in research to understand its potential impact on fertility, miscarriage, and premature birth.

“At the same time, urgent action is required to reduce gynaecology waiting lists, with over 54,000 women in Wales currently waiting for care for conditions such as adenomyosis – conditions that can have a severe impact on quality of life.

“We welcome the Welsh government’s recognition of adenomyosis in the Women’s Health Plan. However, women’s health continues to be chronically underfunded.

“The RCOG is calling on governments to prioritise investment in research, diagnostics, and treatments so that women affected by adenomyosis and similar conditions can access the care and answers they deserve.”

The Welsh Government said endometriosis and adenomyosis was “one of the eight priority areas in the Women’s Health Plan for Wales which outlines how we are determined to improve women’s health services and women’s experience of those services”.

“Funding of £3m is being used to deliver the actions in the plan, with a specific focus on establishing a Women’s Health Hub in every health board by March 2026, as well as supporting timely diagnosis and management of conditions including adenomyosis.”

If you have been affected by the issues raised in this story, information and support can be found via the BBC’s Action Line website.

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McIlroy putt circles the hole

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Leigh beat Wakefield to set up Wigan semi-final

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Updated 42 minutes ago

Betfred Super League play-off eliminator

Leigh (18) 26

Tries: Brand, Liu, Charnley, Tuitavake Goals: O’Brien 5

Wakefield (0) 10

Tries: Myers, Scott Goal: Lino

Leigh Leopards swept aside Wakefield Trinity in the first Super League play-off eliminator to book their semi-final place.

The hosts finished nine points ahead of Trinity in the regular season and dominated the first half as tries from Keanan Brand, Isaac Liu and Josh Charnley put them 18-0 up at the break.

Jayden Myers’ reply early in the second half gave Wakefield hope, but a Gareth O’Brien penalty and Alec Tuitavake’s score meant Cameron Scott’s superb solo try was mere consolation.

The win earned Leigh a short semi-final trip to second-placed Wigan as they bid to reach their first Grand Final.

Leigh went into the game looking to reach a second successive semi-final, while Trinity faced their first play-off appearance in 13 years after a stellar first season back in Super League.

Daryl Powell’s side won 40-14 on their last visit to the Leopards Den and almost enjoyed a dream start when Josh Griffin charged down O’Brien’s first-minute clearance kick but couldn’t gather as a clear run to the line beckoned.

But that was as it got in the first half for the visitors who lost second rower Matty Storton to a leg injury within five minutes.

Leigh soon hit the front as slick passing created a two-on-one at the right edge where Umyla Hanley sent Brand in for his seventh try in four matches and a 17th Super League try of the season.

Frankie Halton was held up a metre short, while three tacklers combined to stop Hanley’s charge for the line as Wakefield were penned deep in their own territory by rampant Leigh.

Trinity’s goalline defence soaked up wave after wave of pressure, but a battered backline finally cracked in the face of Liu’s powerful run.

Lachlan Lam maintained the almost relentless momentum with a 40-20, and a few plays later, the instrumental scrum-half fed Charnley to cross in the left corner.

The visitors badly needed the next try and got it within four minutes of the restart. Mason Lino’s high kick rebounded back off O’Brien and the ball was quickly moved out to the right edge where Myers applied a super one-handed diving finish.

But an error from the restart immediately gifted O’Brien a momentum-stalling penalty before Tuitavake crashed over on the hour to put the hosts out of sight at 26-4.

A try out of nowhere gave Wakefield the final say as Scott weaved his way through a gap just inside the Leigh half and outpaced his chasers for a fine individual effort.

‘Hopefully we can reproduce that next week’ – reaction

Leigh Leopards head coach Adrian Lam told BBC Radio Manchester:

“That’s what we’re capable of when our attitude’s right and there’s effort to back that up. It’s taken a long time to get to that point and hopefully we can reproduce that next week.

“I’m grateful because we were in this position last year with the last four, 80 minutes away from Old Trafford and we got touched up.

“I made a lot of changes because I knew we needed to do that to take that step forward.

“Whether or not this team’s ready for that or not next week, we’ll wait and see, but I’m just grateful that this set of players are starting to come together as a group.”

Leigh: Hodgson; Brand, Niu, Hanley, Charnley; O’Brien, Lam; Ofahengaue, Ipape, Mulhern, Halton, Trout, Liu.

Interchanges: Hughes, Tuitavake, Davis, Dwyer.

Wakefield: Rourke; Myers, Scott, Pratt, Johnstone; Trueman, Lino; McMeeken, Hood, Faatili, Griffin, Storton, Pitts.

Interchanges: Rodwell, Nikotemo, Atoni, Smith.

Referee: Liam Moore.

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