Sunday 13th July 2025
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NHS chief criticises Gwyneth Paltrow’s GOOP lifestyle brand at Oxford event

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Gwyneth Paltrow’s lifestyle brand Goop has been criticised by Sir Simon Stevens, chief executive of the NHS, for perpetuating “myths and misinformation” that pose a risk to public health.

The comments were made last Thursday at an event entitled ‘An Oxford Conversation: The impact of fake news on our lives’, during which Stevens joined Damian Collins MP and BBC Radio 4 presenter Sarah Montague for a panel discussion on the phenomenon of fake news and how this problem might be best addressed by governments and technology companies alike.

During the event, Stevens hit out against those who spread misinformation, calling them “quacks, charlatans and cranks,” and warning of the dangers of false information regarding health that can be easily disseminated online and in the media. Specifically, he directed his criticisms at Goop, the lifestyle and wellness brand whose products he referred to as “too good to be true.”

Goop, the brand launched by Paltrow in 2008 with the aim to “start hard conversations, crack open taboos, and look for connection and resonance everywhere we can find it,” as stated on their website, has been subject to media scrutiny over the past few months, following the sale of controversial products such a candle named ‘This Smells Like My Vagina’ and the release of a Netflix series, ‘The Goop Lab’, in which the Goop team try out the company’s various treatments. The beginning of each episode contains the disclaimer: “the following series is designed to entertain and inform – not provide medical advice.”

In September 2018, the company was fined $145,000 in civil penalties for making “unsubstantiated” marketing claims surrounding a $66 jade egg meant to “increase sexual energy and pleasure” – an assertion that was refuted by gynaecologists around the world. The outcome of the lawsuit means the brand is no longer able to make claims about their products that are unsubstantiated by medical research, although the products are still allowed to be sold.

Stevens referred to this controversial product in his discussion of the dangers posed by the company, also mentioning the “vampire facials” and a “psychic vampire repellant” tested by the so-called ‘Goopers’ in the Netflix series. He noted that the company’s promotion of colonic irrigation, defined by the brand on their website as “essentially a way to hydrate and irrigate your colon,” was directly opposed to advice from the NHS that “there is no scientific evidence to suggest there are any health benefits associated with colonic irrigation.” He also criticised the brand’s $135 Coffee Enema kit, which is listed online along with the description: “if you wish to use a home system and you know what you are doing.”

A spokeswoman from Goop said: “Goop takes efficacy and product claims very seriously. With the editorial and commercial aspects of our business, we sometimes approach different topics from different points of view.

“On the editorial side, we are transparent when we cover emerging topics that may be unsupported by science or may be in early stages of review. When products are available for retail sale, we have a robust legal and compliance team that works closely with our science and research group to vet product claims.”

“We are proud of our procedures and internal protocols and we are constantly evolving to ensure our approach is best in class. We applaud the important work that NHS does, and often take our cues from the UK standard. For example, in the case of chemical sunscreens that the NHS cited in their speech, the US bans only 11 personal care ingredients while over 1,000 are banned in the UK. It’s for that reason we recommend non-toxic sunscreens.”

Along with Goop, Stevens also criticized the ‘anti-vax’ movement in his warnings against fake news, attributing the steep rise in cases of mumps to the ‘widespread disinformation’ being spread about vaccinations online.

New bus lanes may harm trade

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The council’s decision to install a series of bus lanes across Oxford has been criticised by a retail leader who believes it will take a toll on the city’s trade.

Five new camera-enforced bus gates, similar to the one operating in High Street, will be installed by city and county councils. The plan is part of a scheme called ‘Connecting Oxford’ which aims to reduce congestion in the city.

The council has said of ‘Connecting Oxford’: “The plans would make a real improvement to journey times for commuters and quality of life for residents, including improved air quality, by reducing the number of cars travelling into and around the city.”

The gates will lead to ordinary traffic being restricted during the day, driving Rox spokesman Graham Jones to make a statement about the harm that may be caused to the city’s trade.

Jones said: “The high street is suffering and the bus gate in Worcester Street would stop people travelling from north Oxford to West Oxford – it could put some shoppers off and should be reviewed.

“Some shoppers are already saying it’s easier to go and shop in Milton Keynes – Boswells has announced it is to close and council leaders need to take a careful look at this.”

The Wolvercote resident expressed specific grievances over plans for a new bus gate in Marston Ferry Road, maintaining that this made ‘no sense whatsoever’.

He added: “Marston Ferry Road is an important link road to the Churchill, the John Radcliffe and other hospital facilities and not all residents are able to get a bus.

“There are lots of schools in the area and lots of teachers don’t live in Oxford. “We all want to see less congestion in the city and a prosperous city.”

Jones’ argument against the Marston Ferry Road bus lane is that it will lead to more traffic on the A40. He also contends that putting a new bus gate on Worcester Street would cause more traffic on the A34.

Rox, an organisation which campaigns on behalf of Oxford businesses, commented on Connecting Oxford, saying: “Just how would these new gates be policed?

“It seems that a vast number of vehicles both commercial and private would have to be exempt.

“Apart from the needs of delivery and service vehicles already mentioned, what about the need to access the many schools and private residences either side of the gates?”

On Rox’s website they pledge to “campaign for a properly balanced transport policy within the city and a more welcoming approach to car-borne visitors.”

Oxford’s PickMeUp bus service at risk due to lack of funding

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The PickMeUp bus service is at risk of being axed if further funding cannot be sourced, warns the Oxford Bus Company.

The on-demand ride-sharing minibus service was launched in June 2018 and is advertised as the equivalent of “Uber for buses”. It currently boasts over 250,000 completed journeys, as well as having more than 30,000 users registered on its app.

However, despite an expansion into Horspath village last month, the company behind the pioneering service has revealed that its future remains uncertain as it enters the final phase of its three year pilot scheme.

A customer survey has been released to help gather ideas on how to make the service financially viable. Phil Southall, managing director of the Oxford Bus Company, said “To break the 250,000-passenger journey barrier is a great landmark achievement.

“Over the next few months we will be reviewing the future of the service, as it is still challenging to operate on a fully commercial basis.

“If we cannot find a sustainable way forward during this review which may include additional local or government funding, or local business support, then the service may have to end which would be a real tragedy for everyone who has come to rely on it and those who work on it.

“We need wider support of PickMeUp to help us maintain the service, which has been enjoyed by those who have used it.”

This statement comes after the company decided to withdraw its X90 coach service to London, which had been making a substantial annual loss.

PickMeUp is a pioneering appbased transport service which serves the eastern part of the city, the first of its kind in the county. According to their website, an ultra-low emission minibus will pick a customer up “within a short walkable distance” of where they are, with an average response time of 10-15 minutes. Their software ensures passengers wanting to make similar journeys are then matched up to share a ride to their destination.

Initially introduced to help ease congestion and combat pollution in the city centre, the service has since expanded to Summertown, Jericho and Horspath village, with the fleet growing from six to nine buses to cater to increasing demand.

The service is accessible from the PickMeUp app, operating between 6am and 11pm on weekdays, from 7am to midnight on Saturday and from 9am to 9pm on Sundays and Bank Holidays.

Christ Church Chef avoids prison for knife threat

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On 30th January 2020, Christ Church kitchen staff member was spared jail yesterday for threatening a bouncer outside of Kiss Bar after a staff party on the evening of 10 January.

The kitchen staffer, Dean Lewis, 28 years old, had already admitted one count of a knife threat in a public place.

Oxford Crown Court heard from prosecutor Julian Lynch that the incident took place in the early hours after the staff party outside Kiss Bar on Park End Street.

After being denied re-entry due to intoxication, the situation escalated with verbal abuse and then revealed what was described in court as a ‘lock knife’ with a 6cm blade. Then Lewis threatened stabbing bouncer, Emeka Collins.

The police were called in the early hours of 11 January and Lewis was arrested and the knife he threatened the bouncer with was found in his pocket. During his police interview Lewis claimed that he could remember little about the night because of the amount of alcohol he had drunk.

The court also heard that Lewis has a number of previous convictions including the possession of a blade and wounding.

Described in a reference by his steward at Christ Church, Lewis was termed a “hard-working and talented young chef”.

Lewis pleaded guilty and the Sentencing, Judge Ian Pringle QC ordered a 12-month jail term, suspended for two years. Lewis was also ordered to complete two programmes to tackle the charge of his offences and that he must obey a two-month curfew.

Christ Church have declined to comment on Lewis’ employment status and any plans put measures in place to discourage excessive drinking at staff socials in the future.

Persecution and protection: new Blavatnik programme announced

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The Alfred Landecker Foundation has announced a new programme, focusing on the study of the persecution and protection of Europe’s minorities, at Oxford’s Blavatnik School of Government. It will include a new chair, the Alfred Landecker Professorship of Values and Public Policy, and postdoctoral and doctoral fellowships to support the research, teaching and engagement programme the Foundation undertakes.

Jonathan Wolff has been appointed by the Foundation as the first academic chair of the Alfred Landecker Professorship of Values and Public Policy, and gave the first annual lecture on the 27th of January to coincide with the United Nations’ Holocacust Remembrance Day. It was entitled ‘Political ideology in the 1930s: lessons for the 2020s’, and expanded on the similarities between the two eras, their values and ideologies, and how they can be countered to “articulate and reaffirm the values underlying open, liberal, democracy.” It drew on philosophy, history, politics, sociology, cultural studies, legal theory, and human rights theory. Wolff has taught at Oxford since 2016 and has published books on Marx, Nozick, ethics and political philosophy more generally.

David Kamenetzky, the Landecker Foundation’s chairman, described the focus of the broader programme as “researching the values of individual and communal dignity, liberty and belonging, rights and duties, and the role of public policy and government in protecting and strengthening such values.” He points to the rise of recent anti-semitic attacks as proof that such a programme is needed.

The Foundation was established by the billionaire Reimann family, the proprietors of JAB Holding Company, after discovering their predecessors had been ardent supporters of Adolf Hitler and used forced labour in their factories. Albert Reimann Jr., alongside his father, was the owner and director of Benickson, the predecessor to JAB, and described himself as an “unconditional follower” of Nazi race theory. His children, who inherited JAB Holdings after his death in 1984, named the Foundation after a maternal relative, Alfred Landecker, a Jew who was deported from Germany and is thought to have died in an extermination camp. Two of Landecker’s grandchildren currently own 45% of JAB. The firm counts Krispy Kreme and Pret a Manger as its subsidiaries and the family has a net worth of over $20 billion.

The programme to make amends includes a donation of €5 million to those forced to work in the family’s chemical factory, of which over 800 have been identified. The firm will also donate €25 million annually to educational programmes on the Holocaust and democracy, which will be monitored by an independent academic council.

Professor Ngaire Woods, Dean of the Blavatnik School of Government and vice-chair of the Landecker Foundation, praised the “courage” of the Reimann family. She also stressed the Blavatnik School’s desire to “find, educate and support a new and better kind of leadership in politics around the world.” Elsewhere, this has also been articulated through their Pathway to Success Leadership and Development programme which aims to increase the representation of Black and Ethnic Minority groups in politics.

Student Union cracks down on offensive Bop themes

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The Oxford Student Union’s Inclusive Policy for Events has received media attention for banning offensive Bop themes, such as ‘Vicars and Tarts’ or ‘Cowboys and Indians’.

The policy states that: “highly sexualised themes can have distressing impacts on marginalised communities” and highlights the problematic nature of gendered bop themes which can leave nonbinary students feeling alienated, as well putting both male and female students in “a highly objectified and/or sexualised role”.

Bop themes which involve drag are also addressed by the policy. Regarding college bops, the SU states that: “attendees shouldn’t seek to dress as another gender for the purposes of ridicule or to make light of the experiences of people of that gender.”

However, the policy does not seek to ban all events which involve drag themes; the policy also notes that: “students should not be restricted from dressing in drag in a way which expresses themselves or to demonstrate admiration for individuals. If handled sensitively, themes that involve drag have the potential to be friendly and positive for all students.”

The SU also warn against cultural appropriation in bops, stating that events with themes such as ‘Cowboys and Indians’ or ‘Arabian Nights’ often leave BAME or international students feeling excluded and mocked.

‘Fox hunts’ and ‘pimps and hoes’ were also labelled as potentially offensive themes.

The policy was brought in through motion at student council in Trinity term of 2011, and was updated and renewed in 2014 and 2017. However, papers like The Sun and The Telegraph have been reporting on the policy more recently. This has sparked controversy from the public, with one individual commenting “lefties, sucking the joy out of everyday life”, and another “leisure is being destroyed by these snowflakes who thinks everything offends people” on The Sun’s post.

However, the policy page is headed by the statement that: “This advice does not seek to repress student self-expression through the clothing they choose to wear but is here to help everyone feel able to have a good time”.

Róisín McCallion, Vice President of Welfare and Equal Opportunities at the SU told Cherwell that the council had shown “ongoing support” for the policy and added: “whilst I have been in role, we have never received any backlash [for the policy]”

Hard water for Oxford

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Newly published research has suggested that Oxford has some of the UK’s hardest water. Harvey Water Softeners have conducted the 2020 Hard Water Index with the aim to ranking places across the country by their hardness of water.

The Index determined the hardness of the water by measuring the number of milligrams of calcium carbonate per litre for each area investigated. Oxford’s water possesses 295mg per litre.

Hard water is water in possession of a high mineral content. Water’s hardness is a product of its travel through various levels of chalk, limestone and gypsum. As these are largely made of calcium and magnesium carbonates, bicarbonates and sulphates, water found to contain more of these is thought to be harder than that water which lacks them: socalled “soft water”. Rain is naturally soft, and water’s hardness is a consequence of rainfall being soaked into the ground.

Around 60% of the UK is thought to have hard or very hard water, according to Thames Water. Oxford is not alone in being one of many areas exhibiting over 200mg of calcium carbonate per litre. The South and East of England have the hardest water in the country, as they have regions of chalk and limestone which transfer more minerals into water than the primarily granite-based areas of the North and West.

Incidentally, this geological divide separates Yorkshire into a harder east and a softer west, meaning the popular tea-makers named after their home county have taps with both strands at their manufacturing plants. One tea-drinking student, who wished to remain anonymous, described this as “good news” for them and fellow beverage fans as it meant those who lived in soft water areas were not forced to change their tea brand when coming up to study. Unfortunately, hard water does also produce limescale in kettles, and one student expressed personal irritation that Oxford’s hard water had ruined their almost decade-old kettle.

According to the index, Ipswich has the hardest water in the UK and Edinburgh the softest. Places with water similar in hardness to Oxford reportedly include Swindon and Southampton.

Review: ‘American Dirt’

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There was high expectation placed in American Dirt, what with Oprah Winfrey evangelising on Apple TV and a flood of celebrity endorsements on Twitter and television. The aggressive marketing campaign didn’t even peak with the many pictures and appraisals from prominent Latinx actresses and minor authors. It went further, with claims of it being “The One”, and comparisons to Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath. Sandra Cisernos even seems to think it “not simply the great American novel, it is the great novel of las Americas”.

This “great American novel” follows Lydia and her son on the run from a vengeful drug cartel, on their journey towards safety. Her quiet suburban life as a bookseller unravels when she unwittingly befriends the leader of the improbably named drug cartel los jardineros (the gardeners). Without knowing who he is, she befriends him, reads his poetry (it gets worse), until her journalist husband uncovers who her new friend really is. When his exposé piece results in the suicide of the boss’s daughter, retaliation comes in the form of the massacre of Lydia’s family at a quinceañera. What follows is an attempt to humanise the emigration process, but it reads instead as a bland pastiche of stereotypes and a drama better off in a telenovela.

The dialogue and pacing is quite terse and quick, as befits a thriller. What weighs it down, and has provoked the anger of most reviewers, is the needless inclusion of what has been termed “google-translated Spanish” into every bit of the novel. Sentences are absurdly long, for example: ‘manned by gangs of narcotraficantes, or soldiers who may also be narcotraficantes, and policemen who may also be in league with narcotraficantes’, and the novel is interspersed with needless chunks of dialogue in which characters address each other in untranslated Spanish for one part of the conversation and then continue in English. And then the odd Spanish word, dotted around pages of English speech, ‘my sweet son, so intelligent, so guapo’. This may have been a bid to lend the novel more authenticity, but instead it contributes to the many stereotypical elements that pervade the book.

The characterisation is similarly flat, with the novel populated by a series of one-dimensional characters. A degree of ventriloquism is inevitable in thrillers – one need only think of the thinly concealed propaganda of Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan books or the law-and-order police dramas manufactured by Patterson. Far from the searing character portraits of Tom Joad and Jim Casy that give the tragedy of the Grapes of Wrath its depth, American Dirt offers only thin stereotypes. In this case, the Catholic priest harbouring immigrants, the rapist narco, twin sisters on the run from domestic violence, and further stock characters that make up the “Mexican” in the American popular imagination. Even the ridiculousness of “La Lechuza/ The Owl”, the bloodthirsty, creepy poetry-writing leader of the cartel is far from the worst example of this. The missed opportunity here is to give an identity to the sheer number of people who cross the border and carve out a life in a hostile America, or have died trying. Far from refuting Trump’s rhetoric of hate, the novel perpetuates stereotypes, such as that of Mexico standing in for the whole of Latin America. The entire continent is yet again presented in the binary of violence and drug cartels. 

The improbable, if sometimes blithe plot is another victim here. One of the few good things about the book is an attempt to lay out the geography of the route to the US, especially the “train of death”, “La Bestia”, the infamous cargo train perched on by migrants to get to the border. It gets worse from there. Cummins manages to reduce what would otherwise be a terrifying and profound journey to a series of cliff-hangers and monotonous flash-backs worthy of the crappiest of Netflix series, with lines such as: ‘without a thought in her head except Luca, she jumped.’

Despite the best efforts of magazine and newspaper owners to censor them, a raft of critical reviews, spearheaded by prominent chicana author Myriam Gurba have protested against many aspects of the book. Over 120 writers, including Mexico’s leading novelist Valeria Luiselli called on Oprah’s book club (the gatekeeper to ‘making it’) to boycott the novel. Accusations of racism, cultural appropriation have flown around. Targeted first against the claims of ‘representation’ and an authentic account of the immigrant experience, to the poor quality of the writing. Cummins’s publishers have had to cancel a nationwide book-tour citing threats of violence. The problems seem to stem from whether Cummins, a self-identifying white woman with Puerto Rican roots, has the right to tell the story of America’s Latin American migrants, as well as the quality of the book, and accusations of making profit from other people’s suffering. This is not helped by the fact of the hefty seven-figure publishing advance, or the inevitable schmaltzy Hollywood movie. Or even the ‘border-themed’ launch party, with decorations of barbed wire and flowers. 

The reaction surrounding this book is yet another symbol in a longstanding culture war. At best it can be described as a marketing bid gone wrong, a cack-handed approach to wanting to initiate a public discussion. Again, publishers knew better than Latinx writers as to the Latin-American experience and identity and any of their criticisms have been silenced. The ‘controversy’ includes the usual amount of celebrities hand-wringing, giving and withdrawing endorsements and punditry that seems to be the staple of American cultural life. What began as an over-ambitiously marketed thriller has degenerated into a perfect example of muzzling minorities and white-saviourism.

The role of fiction to criticise and hold a mirror to society is a tradition in which all the great and minor novelists have taken part. And in a nation such as America, with a politics and society ranging from hypocritical to sheer tragedy, biting social critique is all the more urgent. Cummins does this in her own minor way. The impact this will have on shaping the view of Latin American immigrants for good or for ill will be there, and there are good intentions behind it. What crosses the line is the blatant attempt at money-making, the artificial engineering of ‘a classic’, and the reality that Latinx authors who do write these stories just don’t get the same platform. It seems that American corporate capitalism can reduce any spirit or principle to the calculus of profit.

Oxford City Council maintains tax reduction

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Oxford City Council has unanimously voted to maintain its council tax reduction (CTR) scheme into 2020/2021 as part of its commitment to tackle poverty and inequality in the city.

The measure supports households with the costs of council tax, allowing claimants on low income or benefits to have their bill reduced by up to 100%.

Households on weekly incomes of less than £131.99 in 2020 can receive a full exemption from the tax, while households earning over £398 per week become ineligible for any reduction.

Since the national council tax benefit was abolished by the government in 2013, councils have been in charge of designing and implementing their own CTR schemes.

Lack of support from the central government has made the cost of the program unfeasible for many councils who have had their budgets cut. Oxford City Council is one of the few remaining local authorities in England to opt to continue fully funding CTR.

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) found in 2019, that nearly 90% of English councils had made cuts to their CTR schemes since the government began to phase out revenue support grants for councils. The most common change has been the elimination of the 100% reduction; two fifths of councils have now increased minimum payments to at least 20%.

The program has been estimated by the council to cost £1.6 million in 2019/20, rising to £1.7 million in 2020/21.

Marie Tidball, cabinet member for supporting local communities, said in a statement: “Oxford City Council is one of a small handful of councils to retain our council tax reduction scheme at 100% for working age households.

“This demonstrates our commitment to preventing homelessness and our support for financially vulnerable people in our communities. The 100% discount benefits more than 1,000 households in Oxford. This provides a significant financial benefit for people who have suffered the most from the cumulative impact of policies like welfare reform. Government funding cuts mean that three million more households across England now have to pay some council tax or a greater proportion of their bill than in 2013. I’m proud that Oxford is bucking that trend and that we’re doing what we can to protect people who can least afford to pay the price of austerity.”

Twin city Wroclaw expresses friendship with Oxford

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Oxford’s twinned city Wrocław has responded to the UK’s exit from the European Union with a display of friendship. Students of the Polish city accompanied mayor Jacek Sutryk to raise a Union Jack in the city’s Market Square on Friday.

The Oxford City Council took to Twitter to thank those who showed “their friendship with Oxford citizens.” Leader of the Council Susan Brown tweeted that ‘ties will remain strong’ between the two cities, whilst the Lord Mayor will be visiting Wrocław and other twin cities later this month to show unity and solidarity.

Oxford residents are encouraged to send the Mayor messages of friendship to share with the cities. Speaking exclusively to the Cherwell, the Council said “We are very grateful to the Mayor and citizens of Wrocław for their demonstration of support on Brexit day. The response online shows how much this gesture was appreciated by people here, and particularly the Polish community.”

The Council has also responded with a similar display of friendship. Having flown the EU flag above Oxford Town Hall on Friday, the flags of the five EU twin cities with be raised on consecutive days this week. Oxford’s other EU twin cities are Bonn in Germany, Grenoble in France, Leiden in the Netherlands, and Padua in Italy.

Each of these towns have released statements expressing their desire to maintain close ties with Oxford.

The mayor of Grenoble, France says: “The strong ties that unite Oxford and Grenoble are precious. We shall keep them growing!”

Meanwhile, Wrocław citizens had their say on Brexit in an interview by BBC Oxford. One described it as “heart-breaking” and another said, “for me being part of the EU is fantastic.”

When asked about Polish citizens in the UK, a Wrocław resident described that “Whereas before they were happy there, now because of the overall sentiment, and the overall approach of some people, they are thinking that they’re not really wanted there’.”

Despite Brexit, the Council is committed to retaining strong ties with Wrocław. A spokesperson said “we will continue to strengthen ties with our twin cities post Brexit, and do not see any reason for Brexit to affect these relationships.”

University city Wrocław is the fourth biggest in Poland and has been twinned with Oxford since 2018. The two cities have participated in cultural exchanges and one of Wrocław’s famous gnomes can be found in the Covered Market.

Oxford has eight twin cities, including three outside of the EU: Perm in Russia, Nicaragua’s former capital León, and Ramallah, the administrative capital of Palestine.