• chevron_right

      Cancelled Glasgow book festival Aye Write receives lifeline donation

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 17 April - 14:41

    £65,000 gift will not restore the full, 10-day occasion but organisers say it will make pop-up events possible

    Aye Write, the Glasgow literary festival that was cancelled last month after its funding application was turned down by Creative Scotland has announced that it will present a slimmed programme after an “unexpected, but very welcome” £65,000 donation.

    The donation, from a foundation set up by the late lottery winner Colin Weir, will help fund a series of pop-up events throughout 2024, featuring authors including David Nicholls, Val McDermid and Lionel Shriver.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      ‘We’ve been taken for granted for too long’: equal pay strikes by women spread across Scotland

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 14 April - 08:00


    Hundreds walk out of their council roles, saying they are paid less than comparable male-dominated jobs

    Hundreds of women have gone on strike in Scotland as three more councils face claims over equal pay.

    Almost 500 workers walked out of their council roles in Falkirk, Renfrewshire and West Dunbartonshire in protest at a pay grading system which they say is outdated and pays women less than comparable male-dominated jobs.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Ratcatcher review – Lynne Ramsay’s haunting debut is a hallucinatory wonder

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 11 April - 06:00 · 1 minute

    Ramsay’s brilliant rendering of a child’s experience during the 1975 Glasgow bin-collectors’ strike, spiked with a horrifying twist of fate, remains masterful

    Twenty-five years ago, we saw one of the most impressive debut features in modern British movie history. Ratcatcher, by the 29-year-old Glasgow film-maker Lynne Ramsay , was a visually haunting, passionate piece of work to compare with Terence Davies or Ken Loach and which set a gold standard of artistry for new social realist cinema – or cinema of any sort – in the UK. I remember how blown away I was when I saw it at the Edinburgh film festival , especially by the rippling, sunlit fields at which a troubled child gazes, framed by the doorway of the half-built council house development outside Glasgow. (Only now does it occur to me to wonder if Ramsay was influenced by John Ford.)

    The setting is Glasgow during the 13-week bin collectors’ strike of 1975 during which bags of rubbish piled up everywhere, causing a plague of rats in the grim estates whose families were waiting to be rehoused in new council accommodation; it was finally cleared up by sending in the army, in an uneasy echo of the Troubles in Northern Ireland. James Gillespie (played by non-professional William Eadie) is a 12-year-old from one of these families; he’s roaming around the place, squabbling with his sisters Ellen (Michelle Stewart) and Anne Marie (Lynne Ramsay Jr), hectored by his longsuffering Ma (Mandy Matthews) and scared of his hard-drinking, violent Da (Tommy Flanagan). While playing near the reeking canal, for a laugh James pushes in another boy called Ryan Quinn – who disappears under the water and doesn’t resurface. Guilty and panicked, James runs away and doesn’t tell another living soul about his guilty role in what happened, even as the hearse with the small coffin some weeks later pulls up and the open door squashes against a rubbish bag on the pavement.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Glasgow Willy Wonka ‘Chocolate Experience’ to be recreated – in LA

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 10 April - 13:20

    US version of failed immersive event that made headlines is said to include Q&A hosted by comedians

    The infamous Willy’s Chocolate Experience staged in Glasgow , which prompted angry parents to call police, inspired dozens of memes on the internet and even got a mention in the House of Commons, is to be recreated in Los Angeles.

    Billed as a “celebration of chocolate in all its delightful forms” when it opened at a warehouse in Glasgow in February, it instead made headlines after furious families demanded their money back and the event was abruptly cancelled midway through.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Scottish authors criticise cancellation of Glasgow literary festival Aye Write

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Monday, 1 April - 14:02

    Val McDermid and Douglas Stuart were among many writers to express outrage after Creative Scotland turned down the literary festival funding application

    Val McDermid, Douglas Stuart and Andrew O’Hagan are among the Scottish authors criticising the cancellation of Glasgow literary festival Aye Write after its funding application was turned down by Creative Scotland.

    McDermid said it was “profoundly depressing” that Glasgow “cannot sustain a book festival”, while Stuart called it “unacceptable”. O’Hagan said that the cancellation is “savage and it shouldn’t be happening”.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Creatives are leaving London, and for the first time I understand why | Barbara Ellen

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Saturday, 16 March - 18:00

    Facing sky-high costs, it’s no wonder that struggling artists are opting for cities like Glasgow

    Are young people, especially creatives, as excited about London, as driven to live in it, as people like me once were? The answer appears to be a very firm no, and, for the first time, I get it.

    Yet another creative exodus appears to be under way, this time from London to Glasgow. Estate agents are reporting a significant spike in interest from Londoners. Prices have risen by 28% since 2019. Glasgow is a magnet for the alternative sensibility. Dynamic and artist friendly, the cost of living is 48% cheaper than London , with affordable property to rent and buy.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Props from botched Willy Wonka event raise over £2,000 for Palestinian aid charity

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 14 March - 22:28

    Glasgow record shop Monorail Music auctioned the props on eBay after they were discovered in a bin outside the warehouse where event took place

    Props from a botched Willy Wonka event in Glasgow that went viral after frustrated attenders called the police have raised over £2,000 at auction for a Palestinian aid charity.

    Fabric backdrops from the “immersive experience”, which was cancelled midway, were found in a bin outside the warehouse where it took place.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Mother of Emma Caldwell calls for criminal investigation into mishandling of murder case

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Sunday, 3 March - 15:16

    Margaret Caldwell and her family also want public inquiry into failures by authorities after man finally jailed for 2005 killing

    The mother of a murdered woman whose killer was convicted last week after a two-decade long campaign for justice has called for a criminal investigation into mishandling of the case.

    Iain Packer was jailed for life with a minimum of 36 years at the high court in Glasgow on Wednesday for the murder of Emma Caldwell in 2005, as well as for 11 rapes and 21 further charges including sexual assaults and abduction.

    Continue reading...
    • chevron_right

      Why did it take so long to convict Iain Packer of Emma Caldwell’s murder?

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 28 February - 18:02

    Police Scotland and Crown Office are accused of sitting on evidence while he continued on a path of sexual violence

    Summing up the case for the defence in the trial of Iain Packer, who was jailed for at least 36 years for the murder of sex worker Emma Caldwell and a catalogue of sexual violence against similarly vulnerable women, Ronnie Renucci KC posed a question to jurors last week.

    “If he is this person [who murdered Emma Caldwell], how on earth did he get away with it for all these years right under the noses of the police?”

    Continue reading...