In a year of very serious political shifts, there were still a load of very unserious WTF moments to gawk at.
In no particular order, here are some of the standouts.
‘They’re eating the dogs’
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‘They’re eating pets in Springfield’
A completely unverified rumour on social media about Haitian immigrants eating dogs in Springfield, Ohio, made it all the way to Donald Trump, who shocked the world when he took a moment during his presidential debate against Kamala Harris to exclaim: “In Springfield, they’re eating the dogs.”
He went on: “The people that came in, they’re eating the cats… They’re eating… they’re eating the pets of the people that live there.
“And this is what’s happening in our country, and it’s a shame.”
Ms Harris, who could be seen laughing and saying “this is unbelievable”, responded when it was her turn: “Talk about extreme.”
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The rumours were also stoked by the incoming vice president JD Vance, who said people have “had their pets abducted and eaten by people who shouldn’t be in this country”.
Later, he told CNN: “If I have to create stories so that the American media actually pays attention to the suffering of the American people, then that’s what I’m going to do.”
Soggy Sunak
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Not because of the announcement itself – but rather because the then prime minister braved the pouring rain without an umbrella.
Mr Sunak’s shoulders could be seen getting soggier and soggier during his eight-minute speech, leaving many wondering whether it was a tactic akin to Tony Blair showing his dedication to the country through sweaty blue shirts, or if it was simply an oversight.
Mr Sunak later explained his logic to locals in his constituency of Richmond, North Yorkshire, saying: “That’s our tradition, the prime minister, in the big moments, they call the election and they go out there.
“I thought, come rain or shine, it’s the right thing to do.
“But no pneumonia yet… my suit on the other hand… I’m not quite sure what state it will be in when I get back down to London.”
He said the public kept handing him umbrellas in the days following the speech.
Sunak not being in any way relatable
Rishi Sunak probably thought he looked pretty cool when he slipped on his box-fresh pair of Adidas Sambas in April, pairing them with suit trousers and a white shirt.
But the public and the media totally burst his bubble after he was pictured wearing them at Downing Street.
He was accused of “ruining” an “eternally cool sneaker” by GQ, while other magazines rushed to offer lists of alternative trainers after Mr Sunak “killed” the Samba’s credibility.
It got so bad that he issued “a fulsome apology to the Samba community” via LBC Radio.
Image: @rishisunakmp
It’s not the worst thing a prime minister has had to apologise for in recent years – it’s perhaps the weirdest, though.
A couple of months later Mr Sunak, who was the wealthiest prime minister in the country’s history, tried to relate to the public’s cost of living struggles.
In an interview with ITV, Mr Sunak, the son of a doctor and pharmacist, explained that he went without “lots of things” as a child because his parents prioritised funding his and his siblings’ education.
Pressed for a specific example of something he missed out on, he said: “There’ll be all sorts of things that I would’ve wanted as a kid that I couldn’t have. Famously, Sky TV, so that was something that we never had growing up actually.”
Biden and Trump’s weird golf conversation
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Biden and Trump squabble about golf handicaps
Few would have expected golf to be a major talking point in Joe Biden and Donald Trump’s long-awaited presidential debate.
But in one of its many bizarre moments, Mr Trump started bragging about his recent golfing accomplishments in an attempt to demonstrate his mental and physical competence.
He claimed he’d just won “two club championships, not even senior. Two regular club championships.”
“To do that,” he went on, “you have to be quite smart and you have to be able to hit the ball a long way. And I do it.”
Nodding towards Mr Biden, Mr Trump added: “He doesn’t do it. He can’t hit a ball 50 yards. He challenged me to a golf match… he can’t hit a ball 50 yards.”
Mr Biden, four years Mr Trump’s senior, had been laughing throughout his competitor’s claims, giving the impression he may simply shrug them off and move onto more pressing matters.
“Look, I’d be happy to have a driving contest with him,” he said instead.
“I got my handicap when I was vice president down to a six.”
It was then Mr Trump’s turn to laugh.
“And by the way,” Mr Biden continued, “I told you before I’m happy to play golf with you if you can carry your own bag… think you can do it?”
“That’s the biggest lie, that he was six handicap,” Mr Trump responded, prompting Biden to revise the number to “an eight handicap”.
Finally Mr Trump who, need we remind you, brought up his golfing prowess in the presidential debate, said: “Let’s not act like children.”
Rees-Mogg stands awkwardly next to the bean man
Image: Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg listens to the results alongside the bean candidate, whose slogan was reportedly ‘Make brunch great again’. Pic: PA
Arch Brexiteer Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg had a challenging election night, becoming one of the most high-profile Tory backbenchers to lose their seat to a Labour candidate.
To add insult to injury, he learned the news while standing next to a fellow North East Somerset and Hanham candidate wearing a baked bean balaclava, who was running for The Monster Raving Loony Party.
At least he didn’t lose to him.
‘BOOORINNGG’
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He called the hecklers ‘boring’ nine times (yes – we counted)
Nigel Farage is a divisive figure, but a meme born from his exchange with hecklers after the election has proved a hit with all sorts of people who are still using it to react to posts online.
The Reform UK leader repeatedly yelled “boring” at a protester who interrupted his speech after he won his Clacton seat.
It came after one heckler had already been kicked out.
“That’s alright. There’s still plenty of beer left in the pub, mate,” he told the first one.
“Have a lovely day. Bye bye! Lots of love,” he added as security escorted him away.
Trump brings everyone on stage
Image: Trump and his sizeable posse on stage. Pic: AP
All five of his children were there with their partners, along with wife Melania and two of his grandchildren, as was future vice president JD Vance and his wife Usha.
Then there were a load of key members of Mr Trump’s team and political allies, including billionaire backer Elon Musk. Fairly normal so far… but it got stranger.
Further down the line there was MMA boss Dana White and pro golfer Bryson DeChambeau.
The former even took to the mic at one point to declare Mr Trump was “the most resilient, hard-working man I’ve ever met in my life”.
DeChambeau was a bit more shy, with the president-elect awkwardly calling him up mid-victory speech.
Raygun’s breakdancing breaks the internet
Image: Raygun – real name Rachael Gunn – performing at the Olympics. Pic: Reuters
Breakdancing’s Olympic debut made headlines for all the wrong reasons after Australian competitor Raygun’s unconventional moves failed to land her a single point with the judges.
The dancer was mocked relentlessly on social media after completing what has widely been described as “a kangaroo dance”, at one point raising one leg while standing and leaning back with her arms bent toward her ears.
The 37-year-old actually apologised to the breaking community after going viral for the routines, saying she didn’t mean to bring it any backlash.
Image: Pics: Reuters
But she defended her work – insisting she did take the competition “very seriously” – and hit out at the “devastating” abuse she had suffered since.
In November she revealed she had quit competing altogether because of all the criticism.
But love it or hate it, her routine will go down in Olympic history.
Snoop Dogg’s outfits at the Olympics
Image: Snoop Dogg looked the part while watching the Dressage Team Grand Prix Special. Pic: PA
Speaking of Olympic history…
Iconic rapper Snoop Dogg was a special correspondent for Sky’s partner network NBC throughout the summer games, and didn’t exactly shy away from the spotlight.
The American star subverted expectations by ditching his typical baggy rapper fits and lengthy chains for some Olympic-themed outfits.
Most notably, he turned up for the equestrian in full dressage attire.
Image: Pic: PA
He also donned tops featuring some of his country’s most talented athletes, such as beach volleyball player Kelly Cheng and tennis ace Coco Gauff.
Body bags at softplay
Image: A soft play centre’s Halloween decorations gave too much of a scare
Pictures showed how they resembled human bodies covered in black plastic – some wrapped with tape marked “Caution” and “Danger” – hanging upside down from poles adjoining one of the soft play structures.
One parent who took their child there told Sky News: “When I saw them I did a double take – surely that can’t be what I think it is? I just didn’t want to have to explain to my kid what they were.
“I spoke to some other parents after who were as shocked as I was that it was deemed appropriate. It’s a great soft play, but that did shock me a bit!”
A spokesperson for the play area told Sky News they had not meant to “cause distress”.
‘Let’s go to the Oasis reunion! Wait – how much?’
2024 marked the year long-time fans of the Gallagher brothers finally got their reunion announcement.
“This is it, this is happening,” read a tweet from the official band account.
There was a five-day wait between the announcement and the ticket sale for the UK and Ireland gigs, and by the time they went up, almost everyone you know was in the Ticketmaster queue.
Image: Some say there are still people waiting in the Oasis ticket queue. Pic: PA
Fans waited for hours in the virtual line to find that standard tickets, originally worth £148, were being sold at a dynamic pricing level of £355.
The band said they didn’t know dynamic pricing was going to be used, while Ticketmaster stated “all ticket prices are set by the tour”.
Liam Gallagher essentially told fans to stop crying their hearts out, responding to one complainant on X saying: “SHUTUP.”
The system was scrapped for Oasis’ US shows, for which tickets came out later on.
Don’t look back in anger, hey?
Drunk driver smashes into PM’s country home
Matthew Wootten, 44, did exactly that on 25 June, while Rishi Sunak was PM, deliberately steering his white Volkswagen Scirocco into the Victory Gate of Chequers in Buckinghamshire.
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The moment caught on CCTV
Wootten, who seriously injured himself and caused £38,000 worth of damage, was nearly three times over the alcohol limit and was subsequently jailed for two years and eight months and disqualified from driving for 40 months.
Liz Truss plagued by lettuce – again
The UK’s shortest-serving prime minister cut a relaxed figure as she took questions from an audience in Beccles, Suffolk, as part of her book tour.
Little did she know, a banner featuring a lettuce and the words “I crashed the economy” was being unfurled behind her.
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The banner was the work of left-wing campaign group Led By Donkeys, who Ms Truss later accused of trying to “supress free speech”.
When she realised the banner was behind her, the former prime minister said “that’s not funny”, gathered up her notes, took her microphone off and walked off the stage.
Much of the nation – and even a few people there – seemingly did think it was funny.
Banana sells for millions – then the buyer eats it
It raised even more when the buyer, cryptocurrency entrepreneur Justin Sun, decided to eat the banana.
Image: Maurizio Cattelan’s Comedian debuted at an art festival in 2019. Pic: AP
Image: Justin Sun eats banana artwork. Pic: Peter Parks/AFP/Getty
But don’t worry – it wasn’t the banana itself that was worth millions.
The banana, duct tape and the wall made up a conceptual art piece, called Comedian, which became a viral sensation after Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan debuted it at Art Basel Miami Beach in 2019.
So what Mr Sun actually did was purchase a certificate of authenticity and the authority to duct-tape any banana to a wall and call it Comedian, meaning he can replace the banana with another one.
No harm, no foul… now the $6.2m is totally worth it.
Sir Keir calls for the ‘return of the sausages’
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He appeared to accidentally call for “the return of the sausages” before quickly correcting himself to say “the return of the hostages”.
Kendrick and Drake diss tracks
Image: Kendrick Lamar and Drake. Pic: AP
A rapid exchange of insults between Kendrick Lamar and Drake – two of the biggest names in modern rap – will no doubt go down in the genre’s history.
The beef had been bubbling behind the scenes for some time, but Canadian rapper Drake took it public in April with the diss track Push Ups, in which he mocked Lamar’s collaborations with the singer Taylor Swift and the pop group Maroon 5.
Soon after Drake followed with a second track, Taylor Made Freestyle, in which he called Lamar a coward for failing to respond to his track.
It wasn’t surprising that Lamar shot back – but the contents of his lyrics were shocking.
His first response, Euphoria, started fairly tamely compared to what would happen later.
“I hate the way that you walk, the way that you talk, I hate the way that you dress,” he sings.
But his next one, Meet the Grahams, dug deeper, listing a bunch of ways Drake was supposedly letting his family members down.
That was bad, but yet another follow-up from Lamar – Not Like Us – made some serious allegations.
Not Like Us was the number one song in the US for two weeks and reached sixth in the UK charts, and has since been nominated for four Grammys.
The former prime minister, who was foreign secretary at the time, had urged Congress to approve more aid funding for Ukraine.
Ms Taylor Greene did not appreciate it.
“David Cameron needs to worry about his own country and, frankly, he can kiss my ass,” she said.
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Marjorie Taylor Greene’s message to Lord Cameron
In a post on X later on Wednesday, she said his remarks would not “bully me into funding the war in Ukraine”.
In April, much to Ms Greene’s dismay, the $60.8bn funding package was approved by the House.
“This is the sellout of America today,” she said afterwards.
‘I will f*** you up for ever’
Lord Cameron just couldn’t catch a break this year.
Writing in his memoir, which came out in October, Boris Johnson claimed he was having a conversation with Lord Cameron ahead of the 2016 Brexit vote and told him he was considering voting leave.
Johnson wrote: “‘If you do that,’ he said – and these were his exact words – ‘I will f*** you up forever’.”
When Sky News asked Lord Cameron about the quote, he said that was “not my recollection”.
“The recollection I have is that we had a proper discussion – an argument – heated at times,” he said, going on to explain where their views differed.
He did concede that the argument, or as he then put it, “robust conversation” – was “all quite a long time ago” and laughed it off.
This roundup shows what an absolute whirlwind 2024 really was. Take a look at how it compared to 2023’s maddest moments.
The mother of murdered teenager Brianna Ghey is calling on the government to introduce a ban on mobile phones in schools – a move she says will not only safeguard children, but also improve their behaviour and engagement in class.
In the lead-up to the attack, her killers had spent time on the dark web. At the same time, Brianna was also trapped online, struggling with a phone addiction.
Her mother Esther Ghey’s Phone Free Education campaign is driven by her personal experiences as a parent and the impact Brianna’s phone use had on her education.
Image: Brianna Ghey struggled with a mobile phone addiction, according to her mother
“All the arguments that me and Brianna had were down to her phone use,” Esther said.
“But even in school, she had issues and I used to have phone calls from the school saying that Brianna wouldn’t put her phone away.”
Brianna, who was transgender, struggled with an eating disorder and also self-harmed.
Her mother says the constant time she spent online exacerbated those issues, while impacting her behaviour at school, where she had 120 safeguarding logs and 116 behaviour incidents recorded by her teachers.
Image: Esther Ghey said she had calls from her daughter’s school saying that ‘Brianna wouldn’t put her phone away’
“It was so difficult as a parent, because I felt in one way that I was failing and then in another way, and this is really difficult for me to speak about, I was so annoyed with Brianna,” she recalled.
“I thought, why can’t you just go to school, get your head down and just focus on your education, because this is important.
“Only now, after two years of being immersed in this world, do I realise that actually, it’s so much harder than that.”
Research by the Children’s Commission has shown that 79% of secondary schools are still allowing pupils to bring their mobile phones into school, and even into classrooms.
Image: Brianna’s school introduced a ban on mobile phones in September last year
How phone ban is working at Brianna’s old school
Esther is campaigning for government guidance on phones to become statutory, with funding also set aside for the equipment to help schools implement the ban, arguing the lack of legislation is “setting children up to fail”.
At Birchwood Community High School in Warrington, where Brianna was a pupil, they introduced a ban on phones last September.
At the beginning of the day, pupils turn off their phones and place them in pouches, which are locked. At the end of the school day, the pouches are then unlocked.
Image: Pupils at Birchwood Community High School in Warrington place their phones in pouches, which are then locked
The headteacher, Emma Mills, said introducing these measures has come with several benefits.
“It’s had an impact in all areas of school, and it’s actually had a really positive impact in ways that I didn’t foresee,” said Ms Mills.
“Attendance has improved this year. In terms of behaviour, behaviour has improved. We’ve had no permanent exclusions this year in school, which is actually the first time since I’ve been headteacher in six years, there’s been no permanent exclusion.”
This summer, the school also saw its best-ever GCSE results in the core subjects of Science, maths, and English.
Image: Emma Mills, headteacher at Birchwood Community High School in Warrington
‘They can live without their phones’
For Ms Mills, another significant change has been the atmosphere in the school.
“They’re not as worried, they’re not as distracted,” Ms Mills said.
“They’ve realised that they can live without their phones. Something else we’ve really noticed is that it’s a bit louder in school at breaks and lunch times. It’s because they’re talking more, they’re interacting more, and they’re communicating more.”
The positive impact of a ban at Brianna’s old school has served as encouragement to Esther, who has written an open letter addressed to Sir Keir Starmer and Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson, asking for government support.
Police across the UK dealt with more than 3,000 protests over three months this summer – more than three times as many as just two years ago.
There were 3,081 protests this June, July, and August across England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, figures from the National Police Chiefs’ Council have revealed.
Last summer, when riots were raging across the country following the Southport murders, police dealt with 2,942 protests. In 2023, it was 928.
The summer months this year have been dominated by widespread demonstrations, some against the ban on Palestine Action and others against housing asylum seekers in hotels.
Image: Counter-protesters with police as people take part in a Stand Up To Racism rally in Orpington in August. Pic: PA
‘Increasing tension’
Gavin Stephens, chairman of the NPCC, said it was clear that there has been “more community tension and more division”, adding that “we all have a responsibility, policing included, to set the tone”.
“Anybody in a leadership position should think about how we can reduce and defuse tensions and not sow division,” Mr Stephens said.
The senior official said protests this year were a “chronic pressure” for police compared to last year’s disorder, which was acute.
“This is not talking about the volume of protest, and this is not a commentary from policing on people’s right to protest peacefully,” he said.
“We absolutely support that in a democracy, but we do know that there is a climate of increasing tension and polarity in what we’re seeing.”
He is convinced communities will be able to reunite and “reset”, and said claims that the UK is on the verge of civil disobedience are “exaggerated”.
The group of Thames Water lenders aiming to rescue the company have set out plans for £20.5bn of investment to bolster performance.
The proposals, submitted to the regulator for consideration, include commitments to spending £9.4bn on sewage and water assets over the next five years, up 45% on current levels, to prevent spills and leaks respectively.
Of this, £3.9bn would go towards the worst performing sewage treatment sites following a series of fines against Thames Water, and other major operators, over substandard storm overflow systems.
It said this would be achieved at the 2025-30 bill levels already in place, so no further increases would be needed, but it continued to argue that leniency over poor performance will be needed to effect the turnaround.
The creditors have named their consortium London & Valley Water.
It effectively already owns Thames Water under the terms of a financial restructuring agreed early in the summer but Ofwat is yet to give its verdict on whether the consortium can run the company, averting the prospect of it being placed in a special administration regime.
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Is Thames Water a step closer to nationalisation?
Thames is on the brink of nationalisation because of the scale of its financial troubles, with debts above £17bn.
Without a deal the consortium, which includes investment heavyweights Elliott Management and BlackRock, would be wiped out.
Ofwat, which is to be scrapped under a shake-up of oversight, is looking at the operational plan separately to its proposed capital structure.
The latter is expected to be revealed later this month.
Sky News revealed on Monday that the consortium was to offer an additional £1bn-plus sweetener in a bid to persuade Ofwat and the government to back the rescue.
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Thames Water handed record fine
Mike McTighe, the chairman designate of London & Valley Water, said: “Over the next 10 years the investment we will channel into Thames Water’s network will make it one of the biggest infrastructure projects in the country.
“Our core focus will be on improving performance for customers, maintaining the highest standards of drinking water, reducing pollution and overcoming the many other challenges Thames Water faces.
“This turnaround has the opportunity to transform essential services for 16 million customers, clean up our waterways and rebuild public trust.”
The government has clearly signalled its preference that a market-based solution is secured for Thames Water, though it has lined up a restructuring firm to advise on planning in the event the proposed rescue deal fails.
A major challenge for the consortium is convincing officials that it has the experience and people behind it to meet the demands of running a water company of Thames Water’s size, serving about a quarter of the country’s population.