logo
‘Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK

‘Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK

Scottish Sun8 hours ago
Both of his killings were caught on camera by Dolphin watcher Sarah Michelle Wyer, who had previously named him Anakin after the Star Wars character
SOMEFIN IN THE WATER? 'Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK
A KILLER dolphin is on the loose after being caught on video slaying one of its own kind — and then a shark.
The bottlenose dolphin, dubbed Jack the Flipper, targeted a smooth-hound shark last week having previously attacked a juvenile common dolphin three months ago.
3
The killer bottlenose dolphin was caught slaying one if its own kind
Credit: Jam Press/Sarah Michelle Wyer
3
'Jack The Flipper' also killed a smooth-hound shark last week
Credit: Jam Press/Sarah Michelle Wyer
He is part of a pod in Cardigan Bay, off the coast of Mid Wales, and had actually been named Anakin, after the Star Wars character, by dolphin watcher Sarah Michelle Wyer.
She told The Sun: 'I've not seen a dolphin throw a shark out in the eight years I've been watching them.
'One of the skippers has seen them throw topes, which is another small member of the shark family, but not smooth-hounds.
'But when Anakin killed the young common dolphin, it was the first recorded instance of this behaviour happening in Cardigan Bay. It is unknown why this dolphin chose to do it — as it would have been of no threat. Bottlenose dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and are capable of many unusual behaviours.
'They are not 'friendly flipper'. This particular dolphin seems to have a very unusual personality.
'Despite the name, common dolphins aren't common around here. And we now think this could be because of the bottlenose dolphins.'
Smooth-hounds can grow up to 4ft in length — while bottlenose dolphins can reach up to 12ft.
Dolphin Spotting Boat Trips, who Sarah works with, added: 'We were very surprised when one of our local dolphins, Anakin, brought what we originally thought was a large salmon past the boat and then threw the fish out the water.
'To our surprise, it was not a salmon but a member of the shark family called a smooth-hound.
'We aren't sure if there are many records of smooth-hounds being part of a bottlenose dolphin's diet.
Inside the dark world of randy sex pest dolphins who terrorise swimmers & try to ROMP with humans
'Bottlenose dolphins are opportunistic feeders and have a varied diet of fish, squid and crustaceans.
'Anakin's dolphinality is a very unusual one to say the least.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How David Attenborough inspired the 'awe and wonder' in Jurassic World Rebirth
How David Attenborough inspired the 'awe and wonder' in Jurassic World Rebirth

Metro

time5 hours ago

  • Metro

How David Attenborough inspired the 'awe and wonder' in Jurassic World Rebirth

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video Filmmaker Gareth Edwards is back at the helm once more of a major franchise (although he hates that word, he tells me) sequel with Jurassic World Rebirth, following his foray into Star Wars with 2016's Rogue One. This time he's fulfilling a childhood dream by working on one of the most influential 'creature feature' series of all time, working with Steven Spielberg – 'I call him Steve,' he grins, acknowledging the surrealism of that scenario. Coming onboard to direct the next instalment in such a popular run of films Edwards, 50, did have lots of little ways he wanted to put his stamp on it – but also one clear desire to ground the movie in reality, despite the fact it's set 'on an island in the middle of nowhere with dinosaurs on it'. 'One of the great things about Jurassic was that it wasn't that we'd gone back in time to see dinosaurs, it was that they'd come to our time, and so I wanted some iconography of some location that was now,' he explains. 'I wanted, at one point in the movie, there to be dinosaurs in something that was very familiar to us, like the kitchen scene in the original Jurassic Park. So I needed to somehow crowbar into this scenario some imagery that you would watch it and go, 'I know that, that's where I live' – even though it's not.' Without giving too much away before people have seen the movie, Edwards plays clear homage to that terrifying scene from the 1993 film with the hunting Velociraptors as well as plenty of fun Easter eggs from that era. 'I think that's important for people to relate to and feel like these things have come to us,' he adds. Edwards also reveals the way he was inspired by legendary broadcaster and biologist David Attenborough, 99, and wanted to bring his influence in Jurassic World Rebirth to another pivotal scene. He admits 'the way it was written probably wasn't aspiring to this' – but for the filmmaker it was clear. 'Being from the UK, I grew up with David Attenborough documentaries, and on a Sunday night on the BBC or wherever, one of the great things is sitting and watching a natural history show, [where] there's beautiful majesty and awe-inspiring nature,' he recalls. 'And I was like, to get through a Jurassic and not have this awe and wonder moment somewhere…' That was obviously not an option for Edwards, and the result is glimpsed in the movie's trailer when Scarlett Johansson's mission specialist Zora Bennett and Jonathan Bailey's palaeontologist Dr Henry Loomis are seen glimpsing the 50-foot Titanosauruses for the first time. It nicely acts as a throwback to the original film too, when Sam Neill and Laura Dern's expert characters are thrilled to see their first live dinosaur (coincidentally accompanied by Sir David's late actor brother Sir Richard Attenborough as Dr John Hammond, the owner of the park and the company that cloned the dinosaurs). 'That's what you're trying to do, is just navigate it so that you feel like it's that journey that you would want as an audience member.'. Alongside his previous Star Wars responsibility, Edwards is known for original projects as screenwriter and director like Monsters and 2023's The Creator. He appears comfortable switching between studio-led franchise blockbusters and more indie fare, ceding complete creative control for the prior. 'There are certain franchises where I feel like I don't know what I'd do with that, and also I think we'd all disagree about what that is. And there are other ones where you go, the best version of that, I think, is exactly what the studio would want as well.' Jurassic World Rebirth fortunately fell in this latter category and Edwards was delighted to be surrounded by a team who 'challenged' him. 'You want people who go, really? And double check what you're saying and go, how about this? Or throw in new ideas. But you also want to agree on what's a good film. And if they list ones that are your favourites, then you're probably in a good place.' That is something he fortunately found with screenwriter David Koepp too, who was returning to pen a Jurassic film for the first time since 1997's The Lost World, after it was suggested that meeting with producer Frank Marshall and Spielberg wasn't the conversation he should be most nervous about. 'They said, 'Oh, if you think this was tricky, wait 'til you meet David Koepp – if you can get your ideas past him'.' But it ended up a 'blissful' partnership Edwards says, from 'the second we started talking' on Zoom and found that they loved 'exactly the same movies'. Edwards also admits he was expecting the screenplay to be locked, with no way for him to suggest any of his own ideas and tweaks. 'That's what I thought was going to happen. And instead, it was like, 'Okay, you know this scene where this happens – what if we did it in this location instead? And what if this happened during it?'' he shared of his discussions with Koepp. 'And he was like, 'Great!', and would write it and give it his own flourishes, and you'd go, 'Oh, that's better than what I would have written!'' But there were also sections where Edwards felt Koepp had things 'dead right' and he didn't want to touch it. 'We were really on the same page.' This was also of great benefit considering the condensed timeline of making the movie, with Edwards only announced as director in February 2024, before any casting was done, and filming beginning that June. Star and producer Johansson even revealed to me that sound mixing conversations were still happening just days before the London premiere. Even with such a tight turnaround though, they managed to assemble a cast including Johansson, Bailey, two-time Oscar-winner Mahershala Ali and Rupert Friend, as well as Netflix's The Lincoln Lawyer star, Manuel Garcia-Rulfo. 'You worry when you've got not much time that you're going to get the bottom of the barrel, a lot of people that didn't get a job!' laughs Edwards of the situation. Luckily, the films are so definitive – and come with Spielberg attached ('I think when he calls, people pick up the phone') – that it wasn't an issue. 'I think if it had been another project, we might have been a bit stuck.' Hilariously though, Edwards was not aware of Jurassic super-nerd Johansson and how she had already pitched herself to Spielberg. 'I remember being in one of those early conversations at Universal, and there's Steven Spielberg and Donna Langley and everybody, and all these actors [on pieces of paper] and all these names being said. And then Steven goes, 'Well, if I don't give it to Scarlett, she's going to kill me.' And I'm just like, 'What do you mean?' And he goes, 'Scarlett's a massive Jurassic fan and I went for a meal with her,' and he started saying how much she loved it and wanted to be in one. And I was like, 'Hang on, why are we doing this meeting? Scarlett Johansson wants to do this film? Like, what are we talking about? Can you call her?!'' More Trending With Bailey, too, Edwards recalls an enjoyably unsuccessful first meeting when he had been prepped with questions from the producers for the actor but instead spent the entire three-hour chat over a meal in LA just 'joking around' and talking about 'random stuff' before the Wicked star realised he had to go. 'And so he left, and I hadn't said a word to him about Jurassic. And then the producers were like, 'Did he like the screenplay?' And I'm like, 'Yeah, no, it's all good, we're all good, no he didn't have any notes, he loves the character…' the director laughs of his bluffing. 'But it's the kind of movie. There's only a couple of things like this where you just get everyone's full attention. And it was a new chapter in it as well, so everyone felt they could come and put their stamp on it.' Jurassic World Rebirth is in cinemas from July 2. Got a story? If you've got a celebrity story, video or pictures get in touch with the entertainment team by emailing us celebtips@ calling 020 3615 2145 or by visiting our Submit Stuff page – we'd love to hear from you. MORE: Jurassic World Rebirth leaves critics crying 'let the franchise go extinct' with rotten debut MORE: Tom Cruise's 'breathtaking' 90s sci-fi hit quietly arrives on Netflix MORE: 'Underrated' horror movie hailed by fans finally arrives on Amazon Prime

‘Cruel' Meghan launching her rosé on Diana's birthday is scheme to hijack Harry's mum's legacy, expert slams
‘Cruel' Meghan launching her rosé on Diana's birthday is scheme to hijack Harry's mum's legacy, expert slams

Scottish Sun

time6 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

‘Cruel' Meghan launching her rosé on Diana's birthday is scheme to hijack Harry's mum's legacy, expert slams

MEGA SHOW 'Cruel' Meghan launching her rosé on Diana's birthday is scheme to hijack Harry's mum's legacy, expert slams A ROYAL expert has slammed Meghan Markle's decision to launch her rose wine on Princess Diana's birthday as a "cruel" way to hijack Prince Harry's mum's legacy. The 2023 Napa Valley Rosé went on sale on Tuesday at around 4pm UK time via a new wine section on Meg's As Ever website. Advertisement 8 Meghan's new Rosé costs $30 (£21) a bottle 8 But Meghan's timing decision has been criticised by a royal expert Credit: Getty 8 Princess Diana in Hong Kong in 1989 Credit: Getty Images - Getty Meghan's new Rosé will set back punters $30 a bottle and she now plans to bring out a sparkling wine. But now, a royal expert has slammed the timing of the wine's release, which is said to "capture the essence of sun-drenched outdoor moments". Royal reporter and podcaster Kinsey Schofield claims that the release of the beverage on the late Princess Diana's birthday has "struck a nerve" with those in the royal household. Speaking exclusively to The Sun, Schofield claimed: "As Ever appears to be the latest attempt to stake a claim in the oversaturated lifestyle market. Advertisement "Still, this launch has struck a very specific nerve, not just because of what the product is, but because when it was released, July 1, Princess Diana's birthday. "A source close to the royal household told me, it's not lost on Prince William that Meghan has launched an alcohol brand on his mother's birthday, the very mum he lost in a drink driving tragedy. "When I asked if there was anger at Meghan for using Diana's birthday to promote her commercial products, my source replied: 'It's what he's come to expect from her'. "He doesn't think much of her." Advertisement The beverage, priced at more than £65 for a minimum three-bottle order, had only appeared to be available for US customers to buy, with shipping addresses limited to America. A half case costs $159 (£115) and a full case will set you back a whopping $300 (£218). Why has Thomas Markle NEVER met Harry? There can only be 3 reasons - and 3rd is bad news for Meg The wine went on sale at 4pm UK time, but the site was updated less than hour later to signal stocks were sold out. But Schofield claims that "timing an alcohol launch to Diana's birthday wasn't just a misstep, it was borderline cruel". Advertisement The royal podcaster said: "You have to sit at home, you have to sit and think, what is Prince Harry thinking at home today? "As Meghan is doing victory laps around the kitchen, excited for this launch, Harry is still thinking about the mother he lost, the mother that he loved, the mother that he talks to us about constantly. "This is still a tough day for Prince Harry too. Let's be honest, Meghan has spent years framing herself as the spiritual successor to Diana." Schofield added: "I was once told by a royal family source that Beatrice, I believe this was at the Queen's Platinum Jubilee, overheard Meghan tell Prince Harry that Diana spoke to her during her yoga session that morning. Advertisement "I feel like Meghan has hijacked or attempted to hijack this woman's legacy, to the point where Meghan is so important that Diana is speaking to her from the other side of the yoga mat. 8 Kinsey Schofield has weighed in on the latest release Credit: The Sun 8 The release on Diana's birthday has drawn criticism Credit: Getty 8 The rose is being flogged on new website - where more booze will be added Advertisement "So to claim ignorance here doesn't hold up. It wasn't just insensitive. "It felt like a betrayal of the very narrative she's working so hard to craft." Schofield said: "I think Diana's death remains one of the most heartbreaking and symbolic moments in modern royal history. "Linking that memory, whether intentionally or accidentally, to a commercial product, especially one tied to alcohol, feels like a profound misjudgement. Advertisement "There are 363 other days to launch a wine or an alcohol brand. Choosing this one, even if unintentional, speaks volumes." 'TONE DEAF' Schofield also claimed that her source in the royal household said that William and Catherine have been "quite good at ignoring the Sussexes". However, it is claimed that anything to do with Wills mother is still a "tender spot", according to the source. Schofield added: "To launch an alcohol brand on Diana's birthday, it felt pointed, or at the very least, shockingly tone deaf. Advertisement "Privately, there is hope within the family that Harry and Meghan will eventually thrive in the business world, not out of affection, but out of strategy. "The thinking goes, if they're secure and financially stable, maybe the public criticism towards the palace and media outbursts will subside." The new wine is being flogged on new website - where more booze will be added. The Rosé is described by As Ever as "a pale blush wine offers a roundness and depth of flavor that is complemented by gentle minerality and soft notes of stone fruit with a lasting finish". Advertisement They claim the tipple is an "As ever blend" which includes "Cabernet Sauvignon, Mourvèdre, Grenache, and Syrah varietals". While the taste is described as "sophisticated, dry, and refreshing, it is designed for summer's best moments – from lunches that turn into dinners and sun-drenched weekends where the only thing louder than the music is the laughter". It comes as Meghan is also set to reveal a sparkling wine among new wine varieties. 8 Diana, Prince William and Prince Harry at Thorpe Park when the boys were growing up Credit: Getty Advertisement

‘Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK
‘Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK

Scottish Sun

time8 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

‘Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK

Both of his killings were caught on camera by Dolphin watcher Sarah Michelle Wyer, who had previously named him Anakin after the Star Wars character SOMEFIN IN THE WATER? 'Jack The Flipper' killer dolphin on loose off UK coast after slaying a baby dolphin and then a SHARK A KILLER dolphin is on the loose after being caught on video slaying one of its own kind — and then a shark. The bottlenose dolphin, dubbed Jack the Flipper, targeted a smooth-hound shark last week having previously attacked a juvenile common dolphin three months ago. 3 The killer bottlenose dolphin was caught slaying one if its own kind Credit: Jam Press/Sarah Michelle Wyer 3 'Jack The Flipper' also killed a smooth-hound shark last week Credit: Jam Press/Sarah Michelle Wyer He is part of a pod in Cardigan Bay, off the coast of Mid Wales, and had actually been named Anakin, after the Star Wars character, by dolphin watcher Sarah Michelle Wyer. She told The Sun: 'I've not seen a dolphin throw a shark out in the eight years I've been watching them. 'One of the skippers has seen them throw topes, which is another small member of the shark family, but not smooth-hounds. 'But when Anakin killed the young common dolphin, it was the first recorded instance of this behaviour happening in Cardigan Bay. It is unknown why this dolphin chose to do it — as it would have been of no threat. Bottlenose dolphins are highly intelligent creatures and are capable of many unusual behaviours. 'They are not 'friendly flipper'. This particular dolphin seems to have a very unusual personality. 'Despite the name, common dolphins aren't common around here. And we now think this could be because of the bottlenose dolphins.' Smooth-hounds can grow up to 4ft in length — while bottlenose dolphins can reach up to 12ft. Dolphin Spotting Boat Trips, who Sarah works with, added: 'We were very surprised when one of our local dolphins, Anakin, brought what we originally thought was a large salmon past the boat and then threw the fish out the water. 'To our surprise, it was not a salmon but a member of the shark family called a smooth-hound. 'We aren't sure if there are many records of smooth-hounds being part of a bottlenose dolphin's diet. Inside the dark world of randy sex pest dolphins who terrorise swimmers & try to ROMP with humans 'Bottlenose dolphins are opportunistic feeders and have a varied diet of fish, squid and crustaceans. 'Anakin's dolphinality is a very unusual one to say the least.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store