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It might barely be November, but the battle for the best Christmas advert is already in full flow, with John Lewis launching its festive offering today.

And while they might be a staple of our Christmas diet now – as much a tradition as pigs in blankets or carol singers – the hype around festive adverts wasn’t always such a big part of the calendar.

Today’s clip from John Lewis comes a week after Asda revealed their Christmas ad, which used classic footage from the 2003 film Elf, and hot on the heels of festive clips from Tesco, Argos, Morrisons and Aldi.

But with food bills rising, surging energy bills, mortgage hikes and reports of Britons cutting back ahead of the festive season, retailers have a difficult sales pitch to make this year.

A topic that is ‘so much bigger than Christmas’

John Lewis used their 90 seconds to shine a spotlight on an “often overlooked issue” – children in care.

The Beginner – set to a cover of Blink 182’s All the Small Things by US artist Mike Geier – shows a man as he struggles painfully to master skateboarding in the build-up to Christmas.

EMBARGOED TO 0001 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 10 Undated handout image issued by John Lewis and Partners of their 2022 Christmas advert "The Beginner", which launches qat 8,00am on Thursday. The campaign is set to a soundtrack of All The Small Things, a cover of the Blink 182 song by Mike Gier, and raises awareness of children in care. Issue date: Thursday November 10, 2022.

Viewers are left questioning the motive behind his perseverance until the final scene, when a social worker arrives with young teenager Ellie, who has arrived at her new foster home carrying her skateboard.

Kate Hardcastle, a consumer expert and chief executive of Insight with Passion, told Sky News: “Getting the tone of voice was really important for this year, and it was probably quite guessable it was going to be around corporate social responsibility because how can you do anything other else right now?

“But this is an incredibly fragile topic and needs handling with care.”

The ad was created with input from partner charities Action for Children and Who Cares? Scotland.

Alongside its longer-term work providing apprenticeship opportunities within the John Lewis Partnership for people leaving care, the retailer said it would make donations of Christmas decorations, food and gifts.

EMBARGOED TO 0001 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 10 Undated handout image issued by John Lewis and Partners of their 2022 Christmas advert "The Beginner", which launches qat 8,00am on Thursday. The campaign is set to a soundtrack of All The Small Things, a cover of the Blink 182 song by Mike Gier, and raises awareness of children in care. Issue date: Thursday November 10, 2022.

Ms Hardcastle said: “I would never say it missed the mark because the topic matters so much to me and I think any awareness is important.

“But I think the topic is much bigger than a Christmas advert and that’s because our care system support is needed 365 days a year, not just for Christmas.”

The ad is almost entirely devoid of product placement except for two brief glimpses of the retailer’s Lewis Bear toy.

But consumers can still purchase a number of products linked to the story including the £30 bear, £19 Lewis Bear pyjamas, a £5 Lewis Bear tote bag and a Rampage Skateboard for £34.99, with 25% of the sales going to the two affiliated charities.

The retail giant declined to reveal its budget for the ad.

How John Lewis changed the Christmas game

In the early 2000s, adverts were filled with as “many products as you could find” because “every frame costs money, so you want to show as much product as possible”, said Ms Hardcastle

This was seen with Marks and Spencer, who ruled the roost for years with their product-heavy offerings.

But in 2011, John Lewis changed the game with The Long Wait, a story of a young boy waiting desperately to give his mum a Christmas present.

Dr Hanlon told Sky News: “John Lewis did it differently. They told a story, rather than saying ‘here are the products, please buy these’.

“It is a classic marketing technique, it is telling a story, and it takes us back to that childhood notion of storytelling and it’s a comfortable place to be.”

And from there the battle for best Christmas advert, as it is know it today, began.

How to sell during a cost of living crisis

But as Christmas approaches this year, almost half (48%) of Brits have said they are planning to cut down on purchases – including festive activities and gifts – to save money, according to a report from Barclaycard.

Of these consumers, six in 10 will be spending less on gifts for family and friends, 44% will cut back on festive food and drink, including turkey and mulled wine, and two-fifths will curb their spending on Christmas parties and socialising.

Ms Hardcastle said John Lewis made the right choice picking a lower-priced toy as their feature product – the £35 skateboard.

She said: “This understands where people are right now. If they had put a £200 product on there, there would have been an immediate backlash of ‘how are people meant to afford this?'”

EMBARGOED TO 0001 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 10 Undated handout image issued by John Lewis and Partners of their 2022 Christmas advert "The Beginner", which launches qat 8,00am on Thursday. The campaign is set to a soundtrack of All The Small Things, a cover of the Blink 182 song by Mike Gier, and raises awareness of children in care. Issue date: Thursday November 10, 2022.

Brands ‘played it safe’

Matt Bourn, from the Advertising Association, said: “It is clear that advertisers and their agency and media partners are sensitive to the mood of the nation, the importance of being together, gifting and helping people to celebrate despite the geopolitical issues impacting us all.”

But Dr Hanlon said most of this year’s adverts “fell flat”, which indicates brands “don’t want to demonstrate they are spending millions on an ad when people are wearing extra jumpers and not putting the heating on”.

“I don’t think this year was meant to be a year for an iconic advert,” added Ms Hardcastle.

But she said she understands why brands have played it safe: “To have got it wrong this year, you would have been as villainous as the queue-jumping scandal.

“I think everyone just wants to say, let this Christmas be kind, let this Christmas be safe.

EMBARGOED TO 0001 THURSDAY NOVEMBER 10 Undated handout image issued by John Lewis and Partners of their 2022 Christmas advert "The Beginner", which launches qat 8,00am on Thursday. The campaign is set to a soundtrack of All The Small Things, a cover of the Blink 182 song by Mike Gier, and raises awareness of children in care. Issue date: Thursday November 10, 2022.

“And that’s how we feel about Christmas this year ourselves. No one’s telling you, they’re going to do some massive flash thing.

“Everyone’s saying we just going to keep it simple. We’re just going to go back to basics, getting the family together, with fewer presents, maybe a bit less food, and the currency of the adverts fits in with that.”

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Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner and investor of Swansea football club saying it’s ‘an underdog just like me’

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Snoop Dogg becomes co-owner and investor of Swansea football club saying it's 'an underdog just like me'

Snoop Dogg has become a co-owner and investor of Swansea, with the US rapper hailing the Welsh football club as “an underdog that bites back, just like me”.

The former Premier League club, which plays in the English second tier, confirmed the US rapper and producer plans to use his own money to invest in it, Sky Sports reports, although it didn’t disclose financial details.

“My love of football is well known, but it feels special to me that I make my move into club ownership with Swansea City,” the music icon said in the announcement.

“The story of the club and the area really struck a chord with me,” he added. “This is a proud, working class city and club.

“An underdog that bites back, just like me.

“I’m proud to be part of Swansea City. I am going to do all I can to help the club.”

Swansea’s American owners, led by Brett Cravatt and Jason Cohen, are trying to grow the Championship club’s global brand and increase commercial revenue.

Snoop Dogg, 53, who has 89m followers on Instagram and more than 20m on X, helped launch the team’s 2025-26 home shirt last weekend.

More on Snoop Dogg

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The club ownership group said: “To borrow a phrase from Snoop’s back catalogue, this announcement is the next episode for Swansea City as we seek to create new opportunities to boost the club’s reach and profile.”

Luka Modric, who recently signed with AC Milan from Real Madrid, joined Swansea’s ownership group in April.

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Police taking no further action after investigating Kneecap’s Glastonbury show

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Police taking no further action after investigating Kneecap's Glastonbury show

Police are taking no further action over Kneecap’s performance at Glastonbury.

Officers said they had investigated “comments about a forthcoming court case made during Kneecap’s performance” at the festival on 28 June.

However, after Crown Prosecution Service advice, they decided there is not enough evidence “to provide a realistic prospect of conviction for any offence”.

The Avon & Somerset force started investigating the Irish group’s show last month, as well as comments by punk-rap duo Bob Vylan.

It said they were looking at a possible public order incident.

Police said on Friday that the investigation into Bob Vylan’s performance was ongoing.

The London duo were widely criticised – and caused a BBC crisis – after leading on-stage chants of “death to the IDF” (Israel Defence Forces).

Kneecap's Liam Og O Hannaidh leaves Westminster Magistrates' Court in London
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Kneecap’s Liam Og O Hannaidh appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in June. Pic: PA

Kneecap posted a photograph on Instagram, which the group said was an email from police announcing the case was being dropped.

They said their packed Glastonbury gig was a “celebration of love and solidarity” and reporting used “wildly misleading headlines”.

Fears over what Kneecap might do or say during the performance had prompted the BBC not to show it live.

The group said: “Every single person who saw our set knew no law was broken, not even close… yet the police saw fit to publicly announce they were opening an investigation.”

“There is no public apology, they don’t send this to media or post it on police accounts,” they added.

The police statement on Friday said they had informed Kneecap of their decision to drop the case.

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One of the group’s members appeared in court in June charged with a terror offence.

Liam Og O hAnnaidh is accused of displaying a flag in support of Hezbollah, a proscribed organisation in the UK, at a gig last year.

He was released on unconditional bail ahead of a second court appearance in August.

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Tomorrowland: ‘Devastating’ blaze destroys main stage at major festival – two days before it was due to begin

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Tomorrowland: 'Devastating' blaze destroys main stage at major festival - two days before it was due to begin

A huge fire has destroyed the main stage of a major festival in Belgium – two days before it was due to begin.

Tomorrowland is a dance music event as big as Glastonbury – and David Guetta was due to perform.

Footage showed flames and thick plumes of black smoke engulfing the stage and spreading to nearby woodland on Wednesday.

fire destroyed the main stage at the Tomorrowland festival site in Belgium
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The fire gutted the main stage


 fire which destroyed the main stage at the Tomorrowland festival site in Belgium
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Fire crews attempt to bring the blaze under control

The annual festival in the town of Boom, north of Brussels, is one of the biggest in Europe and attracts about 400,000 people over two consecutive weekends.

It is famous for its immersive and elaborate designs and attracts big names within dance music – including Guetta, best known for tracks When Love Takes Over and Titanium.

Dutch DJs Martin Garrix and Charlotte de Witte were also due to perform, along with the likes of Swedish House Mafia, Eric Prydz and Alok.

A fire destroyed the main stage at the Tomorrowland festival site in Belgium
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Black smoke could be seen rising into the sky


The festival’s website described the creative elements which went into the elaborate main stage.

More on Belgium

The theme, described as Orbyz, was “set in a magical universe made entirely out of ice” and “full of mythical creatures”.

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Organisers said no one was injured in the blaze but confirmed “our beloved main stage has been severely damaged”, adding they were “devastated”.

Spokesperson Debby Wilmsen added: “We received some truly terrible news today. A fire broke out on the Tomorrowland site … and our main stage was essentially destroyed there, which is truly awful.

“That’s a stage that took years to build, with so much love and passion. So I think a lot of people are devastated.”

Spokesperson Debby Wilmsen who said fire destroyed the main stage at the Tomorrowland festival site in Belgium
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Spokesperson Debby Wilmsen told reporters ‘a lot of people are devastated’

Despite the fire, Tomorrowland organisers said they were still expecting 38,000 festivalgoers at DreamVille, the event’s campsite.

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