
Kneecap ‘banned from advertising' on London Underground
On Thursday, in a social media post, they said: 'We've been banned from advertising on the London Tube.
We've been banned from advertising on the London Tube.
How petty can political policing and interference get…
After using the tube to advertise loads of times for gigs, records and our movie, all without issue.
The below poster has been rejected because:
"it is likely to… pic.twitter.com/jx8gnqSdkF
— KNEECAP (@KNEECAPCEOL) July 10, 2025
'How petty can political policing and interference get…
'After using the tube to advertise loads of times for gigs, records and our movie, all without issue.
'The below poster has been rejected because: 'It is likely to cause widespread or serious offence to reasonable members of the public on account of the product or service being advertised, the content or design of the advertisement, or by way of implication.'
'Speak out against genocide and they'll use every single angle they can to silence you.'
The poster shows their logo, based on the balaclavas worn by paramilitaries during the Troubles, and reads: 'Kneecap. OVO Arena Wembley, London. Thurs 18th September '25.'
This performance will be their first in the capital since they supported Irish post-punk band Fontaines DC at a sold out performance in Finsbury Park on July 5.
In May, Liam Og O hAnnaidh, who performs under the stage name Mo Chara, was charged with a terrorism offence relating to displaying a flag in support of Hezbollah at the O2 Forum in Kentish Town, north London, during a gig in November 2024.
Ahead of his first court date billboards appeared in London that said 'More Black, More Dogs, More Irish, Mo Chara', referencing discriminatory signs placed in some boarding houses across the capital in the mid 20th century.
O hAnnaidh, 27, and his bandmates Naoise O Caireallain and JJ O Dochartaigh were cheered by hundreds of supporters when they arrived at Westminster Magistrates' Court on June 18.
Musicians including Nadine Shah and Gurriers have said they will attend court to support the rap group when O hAnnaidh returns on August 20.
The group performed at Glasgow's 02 on Tuesday, in a gig which sold out in 80 seconds.
They were due to perform at TRNSMT festival in Glasgow this weekend, but their set was axed after concerns raised by police.
The musicians have repeatedly spoken out against the war in Gaza and performed to a sea of Palestinian flags during their set at Glastonbury Festival in June.
The trio followed punk duo Bob Vylan on the West Holts stage, and both acts are being investigated by Avon and Somerset Police for comments made on stage.
A TfL spokesperson said: 'All adverts submitted for display on our network are reviewed on a case-by-case basis.
'Having given this very careful consideration, this advert was rejected as it was deemed that running it would likely cause widespread or serious offence to reasonable members of the public.'
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Edinburgh Reporter
34 minutes ago
- Edinburgh Reporter
Cast return to Edinburgh supporting Oasis
Cast return to Edinburgh to support Oasis for the 'biggest support slot of the year, if not the decade'. John Power discussed his first meeting with Liam Gallagher, before the singer's fame, when Gallagher was just a teenager. Power admits it was a 'strange atmosphere' as he was going to see The La's, the band he had just left. 'This lad came up to me and asked for a smoke, I told him to p**s off, it was Liam Gallagher. A couple of years later, Oasis was doing a gig in Liverpool and had appeared on The Word, playing Supersonic. Liam came over and said: 'I asked you for a smoke and you told me to p**s off, and we just both burst out laughing.' There's been a long history between Oasis and John Power. The 'Scouse-Irish' songwriter and front-man of Cast was a teenager himself when he first joined The La's and mercurial musical magus Lee Mavers back in 1986. 'At the height of it, it was like nourishment,' explains Power of the band's mystical sea shanties, Mersey melodies and spirited flamenco rhythms, 'How can you not be blown away by songs like Son of Gun when you are that age and learning the guitar. There were Biblical highs, there was something eternal within The La's, and with Lee's songwriting, the waters were crystal clear and you could baptise yourself within them. I couldn't play before that, with those songs, they were the first bass lines I played and understood. It all felt very natural, Lee was like a mentor and a massive influence on my songwriting, and it was a beautiful part of my life.' While The La's made only one self-titled album released in 1990 featuring their hit There She Goes, Power would go on to form Cast two years later. During his time in The La's he began to write what would soon be a string of hit singles, among them Alright and Sandstorm would eventually appear on Cast's debut album All Change. Later this year the band will tour the 30th anniversary of the LP but before then they are about to embark on as Power suggests, 'the biggest tour of the year, if not the decade' with Oasis. I suggest to him it's like a gathering of the clans for the last Kings of Ireland. 'I like that,' he laughs, 'we all have those working-class Irish connections so there has to be something in the lineage or the blood, it's too common for it not to be the case.' Noel Gallagher is quoted as saying Oasis came to finish what The La's started. As Power suggests Oasis gave Cast 'a bump' when asking them to play support in May 1994 at The Venue in Newcross. 'I remembered Noel from when he was a roadie with Inspiral Carpets back when The La's played at G-Mex in Manchester, we were always zig-zagging and crossing paths. Cast got a record deal from that gig in Newcross, and then Noel would give us a shout for gigs like Irvine Beach, Loch Lomond and Knebworth.' It's fair to say that Loch Lomond often gets overlooked for Knebworth, but author Simon Spence points to the importance of the band's links with Scotland, even using a shot from one of the gigs for the limited edition version of his book Feeling Supersonic: From Manchester To Britpop. Spence said: 'Oasis have strong and deep links to Scotland, which explains the fervent reception they get here and the sense among fans that Oasis are part of them. Liam and Noel's mum Peggy lived in Glasgow before moving to Manchester and, crucially, the band's big break, the infamous meeting with Alan McGee that led to them being signed to his label Creation in 1993, also took place in Scotland at Glasgow's King Tut's Wah Wah Hut. 'For many, including McGee, their best ever gig during their 90s heyday, and one of the defining moments of Britpop, took place in Scotland, on the shores of Loch Lomond in Balloch Castle Country Park, where they played to 80,000 over two rapturous nights. After Manchester, Scotland is the band's second home. Noel and Liam have both spoken with pride of their Scottish fans who have remained ferociously loyal over the years. Liam described them as 'the f**king bollocks'. 'The band's two previous shows at Murrayfield were epochal, for different reasons, and these three nights are set to reignite joyous memories for both the band and the fans (if not the local council). Remarkably, after a 15-year absence, the bond between the band and their Scottish fans has only strengthened. Expect to party like it's 1999 again; Hogmanay comes early this year.' John Power is only too familiar with what it's like to play alongside Oasis in Scotland. It was another gig here that helped put the band on the map. Inertia had set in for The La's with Lee Mavers halting progress at every stage, partly due to his obsession with the debut album's sound and a refusal to play or record new songs. Cast soon managed to build on a head of steam with a memorable sonic force during performances that buried those previous disappointments. Power said: 'Before it happens, you are working spiritually and physically towards a dream. As a band, we were all connected to it and cutting it live, through that, you are discovering this new ground, it's like heading towards the promised land. We knew we would see it, and we were getting there, which gave us that strength. When you do break, it's all about maintaining it like with Oasis or U2 you go into another stratosphere but for most of us having a top ten record, getting on Top of the Pops and meeting the fans. That's as good as it's ever going to be and that's more than most bands ever get a whiff of. At that time you can feel it happening and no one can get in the way or tell you otherwise.' Cast and The Verve both made an impact on fans as support at the Irvine Beach shows. As Cast walked off stage Noel Gallagher remarked that it was 'like a religious experience'. The line was picked up by a journalist and quoted in the press. 'Fine Time was massive in Scotland before we had a hit with it,' added Power. 'People would go off their nut.' Oasis gifted coveted support slots to both bands at key gigs, it was fitting that both The Verve's frontman Richard Ashcroft and Cast are both invited thirty years later as support for the long-awaited reunion. Power said: 'I think we are all really looking forward to seeing Noel and Liam walk on that stage together again in Edinburgh. Cast is in such a great place and we've got momentum, it's going to be a big year. The line-up is stratospheric with Richard Ashcroft as well – it's real northern soul rock n' roll, and here we all are thirty years later. It was easy to miss things back then because I was always looking forward. When the Oasis tour becomes the present time I'll be in the eye of the hurricane and right in the presence of it in all these places like Dublin and Edinburgh and the rest of them.' Next year will mark forty years since Power joined The La's, he now performs tracks such as Son Of A Gun, taking him full circle. 'The ifs and buts could go on forever, but those two voices together', he says of the hypnotic connection with Mavers, 'I did some of the best songs I ever wrote with Lee, together we were a force to be reckoned with, it's like letting the genie out of the bottle. I hope we can get together for a cup of tea and play together again, even if it's just in his kitchen'. Cast will support Oasis in Edinburgh on August 8, 9, and 12 along with Richard Ashcroft. Feeling Supersonic: From Manchester To Britpop by Simon Spence is out now Members of Cast – L_R Liam Tyson, Peter Wilkinson and John Power Like this: Like Related


Scottish Sun
3 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
Laughing gas ‘epidemic' sweeping party island with tourists left foaming at mouth, having seizures & permanently scarred
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) BRIT tourists have been suffering seizures, foaming at the mouth and left permanently scarred after inhaling toxic drugs on the streets of Ibiza. Armed with industrial-sized canisters of nitrous oxide, determined dealers roam the infamous San Antonio party strip - targeting Brits as "easy prey". 9 Tourists laden with balloons on the notorious San Antonio party strip Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 9 Local businesses are fed up with the rampant use of balloons on the streets of Ibiza Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 9 A holidaymaker inhaling nitrous oxide - surrounded by empty balloons Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd But the Class C drug can cause a range of health issues - and in some cases can even be fatal. In the UK, the gas is most commonly sold in small canisters which deliver a single dose - enough to fill one balloon. But dealers in San Antonio are armed with huge canisters that pump out up to 80 hits - and come in boxes of six. At the going rate of five euros a balloon, the street value of a six-pack of canisters is around £2,000 - and they're strewn across the town. When The Sun visited the notorious strip, our reporter was hounded and followed down the street by dealers. Katie Mae, a bartender at Irish pub Shenanigans on the town's main strip, said laughing gas is 'the worst of them all'. The 21-year-old told The Sun: "I'll lecture anyone I see taking it - I've seen the worst things from laughing gas. 'I've seen young lads having seizures on the street and foaming at the mouths, but their friends are high so do nothing to help. 'One girl I saw inhaled gas straight from the canister, and it froze one side of her face. "It was all cut up and she would have been scarred for life." After working on the strip for three seasons, Katie said: 'The consequences aren't talked about anywhere near enough. "People don't take it seriously as a drug - but it's one of the worst." One British bar worker living in San Antonio told us she used to sell laughing gas here, but stopped after one of her customers 'nearly died'. The Brit said she got 'freaked out' when a young lad fell backwards and smashed his head on the road in the midst of a balloon high. She told us: 'I used to sell laughing gas for about a year-and-a-half because it was easy money. 'You'd sell each balloon for five euros and buy the canisters for cheap. There's loads of shops around here that sell them. 'But as soon as that happened I stopped. It really freaked me out. 'And the gas is not good stuff - it freezes your insides.' Nitrous oxide - the facts NITROUS oxide - also known as laughing gas or hippy crack - was recently made a Class C due to the dangers associated with the drug. It can cause a range of health issues and in some cases can even be fatal. Some common side effects from inhaling the gas are dizziness, nausea, disorientation, loss of balance and weakness in legs, according to a study on its risks published to the National Library of Medicine. Nitrous oxide can impair memory and thinking, the research mentioned. Some users might also feel anxious or paranoid. According to the Alcohol and Drug Foundation (ADF), the gas from nitrous oxide bulbs is intensely cold, sometimes as low as minus 40 degrees Celsius. Inhaling directly from the canister or crackers - handheld devices used to 'crack' open canister - can cause frostbite on the nose, lips and throat, even the vocal cords. The icy chill of the gas canisters can also cause cold burns to the hands. Long term, heavy use of laughing gas can cause a lack of vitamin B12. Severe deficiency can lead to serious nerve damage, causing tingling and numbness in the fingers and toes. Lack of B12 can also cause damage to the spinal cord. In some cases, frequent and prolonged use of nitrous oxide has been linked to thromboembolic events - this means a blood clot has gotten stuck and caused an obstruction. The so-called laughing gas has also resulted in deaths. Another Brit staff member at the bar described the situation as an "epidemic". The streets around San Antonio's so-called West End, which includes the main strip and most of the bars, are littered with brightly-coloured rubber confetti. Angelica Giraldo, a shopworker at Xanadu Supermarket near the strip, said the mess left behind by party-goers has ruined certain areas. She said: 'Lots of the tourists who come to San Antonio seem just to want to take drugs and to party rather than enjoy the island. 'I don't really see the other stuff - but the rubbish from the balloons is very clear. You see them all over the road, it's very ugly.' Angelica, 40, has lived in Ibiza all her life and noticed a sharp rise in laughing gas in recent years. She said: 'It is everywhere now. And it causes lots of accidents. 'People take it while driving, but it makes them go crazy and they crash. This happens a lot.' Selling the gas for recreational use is illegal in Spain - but that doesn't stop a crew of drug dealers openly pushing it every night. 9 The streets in San Antonio are full of tourists inhaling nitrous oxide Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 9 Dealers in San Antonio are armed with huge canisters that pump out up to 80 hits Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 9 Nitrous oxide balloons litter the floor on the notorious party strip in San Antonio Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd Walking around the West End, tourists are hounded constantly by - and see youngsters as an easy sell. The dealers loiter amongst the outdoor bar seating and persistently hassle drinkers to encourage them to buy balloons - and many do. Bartender Katie claimed the dealers have an app to alert each other if police are patrolling a certain area. On one occasion, The Sun saw Civil Guards officers walking down the strip with a confiscated canister, and another cop was seen searching a young man for drugs. The Sun approached cops on the street - but they all refused to talk about the issue. While laughing gas is the most obvious drug in San Antonio due to the brightly-coloured balloons, almost any party drug you can think of is readily available. 9 Tourists inhale laughing gas on benches in San Antonio Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 9 Finished balloons litter the street on the notorious party strip Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd 9 Angelica Giraldo, a shopworker at Xanadu Supermarket near the strip, said the mess left behind by party-goers has ruined certain areas Credit: News Group Newspapers Ltd Walking along the sea-front, dealers call out "hey, dude, yo, what do you need?' to almost every passerby. Anything other than a stern refusal sees them opening up a pouch stuffed full of drugs, and flashing you bags of coloured powders or pills. Ricardo, who runs Jungle Bistró Ibiza in the old town district with his wife, said he is glad that most of the anti-social behaviour is limited to San Antonio's West End. And he said it is 'easy' for the dealers to sell to young Brits. The restaurant manager said: 'A lot of them are British, they come to San Antonio just for the parties. 'It is easy to sell to them. I don't want any of that over in this part of town. We mainly have families around here' San Antonio Town Council said: "The process is also underway to incorporate ten new officers into the Local Police force, increasing its staff from 59 to 69. "This will ensure a more effective service tailored to the municipality's current needs. "A new position of intrusion and community coexistence officer has also been created, and a private security service will be put out to tender with the aim of reducing vandalism and uncivil behaviour in selected areas. "The City Council is fully aware that these are only the first steps in a broader transformation process and that there is still a long way to go. "Therefore, it remains steadfast in its commitment to continue working to build a better Sant Antoni for everyone, supporting a tourism model that prioritizes quality, sustainability, and coexistence."


Daily Mirror
4 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Barry Gibb's son Stephen reveals 'survivor's guilt' after growing up with The Bee Gees
EXCLUSIVE: Stephen Gibb, the son of Bee Gees legend Barry, has opened up about growing up around the band and bravely shares his struggles and excitement over his new music His dad may be one of the most recognisable singers of all time, but Stephen Gibb admits that he prefers taking a step back. The 51-year-old son of Bee Gees icon, Barry Gibb, has grown up with music in his blood, with his dad and uncles performing across the globe – and for the family. But now, London-born Stephen is stepping into his own having already performed with some of the biggest names in the business, including with his dad Barry, at his final performance to date on the Pyramid Stage at Glastonbury Festival in 2017. Now residing in South Florida, Stephen and his Kill The Robot bandmates have released their debut self-titled album, and he reveals that although his father was obsessed with songwriting, this came later for the guitarist. "My dad wasn't obsessed with guitar playing, I was, he was obsessed with writing songs and singing," he exclusively told the Mirror. He added: "That came for me later. But the thing that gets asked of me a lot is, how come I'm not the full time lead singer of Kill The Robot? The fact of the matter is, I have a great singer in Gil [Bitton], and he's a great performer. I really just enjoy playing the guitar. Singing is fun as well but being the son of a Bee Gee and being a 'singer' always seemed daunting to me. "Why? I don't know what else to compare it to, but if your dad was Michael Jordan, maybe you should get into baseball. If I get into pop music and being a singer, they're going to destroy me. And that would also be kind of semi-not authentic to me. I'm a rock and metal guy who loves all kinds of music." But he is partial to pop music, after all, his dad and uncles were the Bee Gees. "I have a deep appreciation for the form when it's done at the highest level, I've seen that with the Bee Gees." Stephen, however, is much more comfortable with his guitar, having grown up listening to Pink Floyd, Black Sabbath, Metallica and Van Halen. Aged just 16, Stephen admits his heart was left broken when blues legend Stevie Ray Vaughan, a hero of his, died in 1990 in a helicopter crash. "He finally got sober, his life together, making the best music of his life," he said. Stephen added: "Sometimes, I think the hardest part is, especially in a family like mine, there's a little bit of survivor's guilt." In his younger years, Stephen battled drugs and alcohol before getting clean. He admits he questions how he survived this, after his uncle Andy, aged just 30, died as a result of myocarditis after the use of cocaine had weakened his heart. "Eventually, you have to forgive yourself. You've got to live your life and accept it, God's got a plan, I don't know what it is, but I'm here for it," he said. Growing up with a global icon as a dad, Stephen quickly had to discover who his real friends were. "The Bee Gees were still a very big band, the hardest thing is knowing who your real friends are," he said, adding: "That's a process, you might have to blow your life up for you to figure out who your real friends are, but you do. "The big misconception a lot of people have is that because a family is famous, it's somehow not affected by certain things that everyone else is affected by. The fact of the matter is, like most celebrities that I've met in my life, are real people that have problems, just like everybody else – it's just that they have this unimaginable skill or gift that they're able to bestow upon the world. It comes with a price." Growing up, he followed his dad on the road and to the studios, but around the ages of eight and nine, he soon realised that not everybody's dad was a singer, never mind a global icon. "My dad and his brothers, we used to be a very close-knit, large family, we spent a lot of time together," he said, adding: "We would have cookouts at Maurice's house. The most powerful memories that all of us have, I can't speak for everybody, many nights after dinner, they would sit around and sing other people's songs, their favourite songs to entertain us. "I don't think it dawned on me until I was a little bit older, how special, unique and powerful their contributions were and are. You grow up as the oldest son of a guy that a lot of people know. The thing I'm most grateful for, I knew what it looked like, I knew what it took to be good at something that you really loved. It took obsession for my dad, all of them, 100 per cent commitment. "You could be the greatest thing in the world, had the Bee Gees not gone back to the UK, what could have happened? Maybe nothing. It's an incredible gift and honour to be in a family that created something that has, up to this point, outlived them. I think as I get older, that's more and more rare with each passing year." He revealed he had to have his fair share of challenges, rites of passage, admitting he had a "bit of a chip on his shoulder" as a child, because of his dad's fame. "It does make life a little bit more challenging for your kids." One of these challenges was fans of Barry's turning up at their family home when Stephen was a child. "I've had one or two of them say they were my real mum, my dad and them and me were going to run away together," he joked, adding: "It's odd, it comes with its odd things, as I've gotten older, I work just as hard as anybody else I know that does what I do. There's no free lunch; it doesn't matter if you're Barry Gibb's son or John Lennon's son; they're not going to make it easy for you. It's a double-edged sword. "It's like 'Oh, your son has a band, does he sound like his dad?' I don't, people get disappointed that you have your own fingerprint." That fingerprint left Stephen "terrified and excited" for Kill The Robot's debut album. He admits it's "hard" to get people to listen to a new band, but the record is a "labour of love." "Making this album with some of my best friends, we had a lot of fun doing that," he beamed. He hopes that the record will please and entertain new fans, as well as fans who have stuck by him over the years. "My hope is now that it's out, people will see what Kill The Robot is as a band, they can find something that's comfortable for them in our music." Although the record experiences waves of different emotions, it has a slight touch of grief following the death of Brett Cosmo Thornberry, a friend of the band. Brett sadly died during the coronavirus lockdowns, when Gil had asked Stephen whether he wanted to write music, which he leapt at the chance, having believed he had already played his last gig. The record opens with Mothership, a metaphor of going to heaven, which is a conversation between Stephen, Gil and Brett. Another track, Western Shores, is dedicated to Foo Fighters icon, Taylor Hawkins, a dear friend of Stephen and his dad. "That was a tough one," he said of losing Taylor, who died in March 2022 after consuming 10 different drugs, including THC, tricyclic antidepressants, opioids, and benzodiazepines. "I just spoke to him days prior to losing him; it was a real shock for me and my dad. My dad was really close with him, and they would speak often at that time. Dad took it really hard. I'll never understand why some people get to stay and some people have to leave. Taylor was the best. The thing is, he was the real embodiment of pure rock and roll love I've ever seen in a human being. "He really loved it. The world will never forget him, and it won't be because of a song I wrote. I wrote that song because I loved the guy. I'll never get to make music like we planned on doing. This was a little love letter to a guy that should be getting loved on forever. He was the real thing, a heart of gold and one of the greatest drummers in history. "He accomplished what he set out to do here, I think, I hope for his sake, but God, I love him and I know the world loves him."