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Israeli DJ Skazi cancels performance at Tomorrowland due to accessibility improvements

Israeli DJ Skazi Cancels Tomorrowland Performance Over Security Concerns

Israeli DJ Skazi has canceled his performance at Tomorrowland due to “security considerations,” following backlash over his support for the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). He made the announcement on social media on Saturday., reports 24brussels.

“Due to security considerations and our deep commitment to spreading only love and music, my performance at Tomorrowland scheduled for today, July 26th, has been canceled,” Skazi wrote in an Instagram story.

Asher Swissa, known as Skazi, has faced criticism in Belgium for his backing of the Israeli army and perceived endorsement of genocide. Identifying as a “combat DJ,” he has performed free of charge for IDF soldiers in the Gaza Strip.

Recent reports revealed that Swissa contributed to a propaganda video for the Israeli army, featuring controversial Arabic lyrics, “You came like rats from a sewer… We will dance on the ruins of Gaza,” as reported by De Morgen on Friday.

Focus on Safety and Unity

“My priority is to ensure a safe and positive atmosphere for everyone involved,” Swissa stated on Instagram. “My message has always been and will continue to be one of unity, joy, and mutual respect.”

The festival organization acknowledged Swissa’s decision to withdraw, emphasizing their appreciation for the dialogue surrounding his performance. Spokeswoman Debby Wilmsen stated, “Like many of our stakeholders, we were confronted with questions about his performance, and we value the open and thoughtful dialogue that ensued.”

Organizers Investigate and Adapt

Following scrutiny of Swissa’s comments, Tomorrowland confirmed that most of his statements were not problematic. Despite this, he was still welcome at the event and had assured organizers that he would perform without a microphone or an Israeli flag, in contrast to his appearance last year. Ultimately, the decision to cancel his performance was made by Swissa.

Wilmsen reaffirmed, “At Tomorrowland, we are fully committed to providing a safe and respectful environment for everyone. That is, and always will be, at the heart of our work. We continue to have great respect for Skazi’s musical journey and hope to hear his music on one of our stages again in the future.”

Key search phrases: Tomorrowland cancellation, Israeli DJ controversy, security concerns in events, music festival reactions, Skazi performance news.

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Teenager and man in hospital after Derry City and Bohemians fans ‘attack each other’

The incident happened in the Lecky Road and Lone Moor Road areas of Derry on Friday evening.
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Before-and-after photos show how a woman boosted her home’s curb appeal with a mudroom and statement arch

A side-by-side of a house with an archway and steps leading to a yellow front door, and a woman standing on the same stairs.
Steffy Degreff transformed her home with an arch entrance.

  • The entrance to Steffy Degreff’s home led directly to her living room.
  • She decided to extend her house, adding a mudroom and a statement archway to the front.
  • Now, the house works better for her family and has better curb appeal.

This time last year, Steffy Degreff was desperate for a coat closet.

Degreff, 37, has owned her home since 2017, and she loves adding personal touches to the property in Long Beach, New York, which she shares with her husband and two sons.

By May 2024, though, she was sick of the entrance to her home, which led directly to the living room. It let in cold winter air, and finding a place for coats, shoes, or guests’ items was difficult.

Degreff decided to solve the problem by extending her house to create a mudroom — and she transformed the exterior with an arch in the process.

Steffy Degreff’s home has changed a lot since she and her husband bought it in late 2017.
A side-by-side of a house with a for-sale sign in the yard and a woman standing on the steps leading to a house.

Degreff, a full-time content creator, and her husband, Matt Degreff, bought their home in Long Beach, New York, in 2017. They have been raising their sons, Hudson, 8, and Charlie, 5, and their dog, Claude Pepper, there ever since.

When they bought the house, which was originally built in 1954, it had three bedrooms and two bathrooms. However, the Degreffs did a big renovation in 2019. Now, it has three bathrooms, and they converted an attic into an additional bedroom.

“To be honest, when we bought it, I don’t think we viewed it as a forever home,” Degreff told Business Insider. “It needed so much work that it was overwhelming to think that we would be the people to do that work, but everything that’s good takes time.”

“Now, eight years later, it’s finally in a place where I don’t feel like we have anything massive to do on it anymore,” she added.

Degreff has been putting her personal, whimsical stamp on her home for years.
A room with built-in, green bookshelves and floral wallpaper covered ceilings.

Although their big renovation took place years ago, Degreff updates her home almost constantly, taking on DIY projects and documenting them on her social media pages. She paints areas of her home throughout the year and makes small additions in her personal style, which she describes as “vintage grandma.”

Some of her projects are meant to be temporary, like painting doors or windows, while others are longer-term.

For instance, Degreff constructed built-in bookshelves for one room in her house, painting them green and adding floral touches to the doorway next to them.

“A lot of the bigger projects I do with permanence in mind,” she told BI. “If I’m putting up built-in bookshelves or redoing paneling in a bedroom, chances are I’m not ripping that out. But paint is just such a fun way to change your vibe year to year.”

Although they had personalized their home, there was still one part of the house that wasn’t working for the Degreffs by 2024: the entryway.
A brick house with a green doorway and stairs painted green with flowers.

From the outside, a simple staircase led to the Degreffs’ front door, which had a small patio next to it. Inside, guests entered the living room.

“I always knew that the entry to my home was less than ideal,” Degreff told BI. “People would walk in, and we had nowhere to put our coats. We had no coat closet. It was freezing in the winter.”

In 2024, the Degreff family reached a breaking point with the entrance to their home. They decided they wanted an entryway that would provide storage, make their living area warmer, and fit the aesthetic of their home.

The Degreffs decided to extend the front of their home to make space for the mudroom and a statement archway.
Two men remove stairs from the exterior of a house.

Degreff said she got inspiration for the renovation from other homes in her area.

“I started walking around the neighborhood and getting ideas, and the really cool thing about Long Beach is that there’s a multitude of home styles,” she said, including Spanish, Victorian, and Cape Cod houses. “No two homes are exactly alike, which brings an endless amount of inspiration.”

As she studied homes in her neighborhood, Degreff found herself drawn to the ones with rounded doors, but she didn’t want to commit to the nontraditional shape.

“I started to think outside the box of what can I do that looks like that same quaint, cottagey type of look but isn’t actually the door, and that’s where I landed on the arch,” Degreff added.

The project kicked off in May 2024 with the removal of the existing steps at the home.
A brick house with a green door and no stairs.

The new room and arch extended out of the front of the house, adding just 80 square feet to the space. But it would have the closet the Degreff family wanted so desperately.

Degreff comes from a family of contractors, so it was a no-brainer for her to hire her uncle, Pat Gordon Contracting, for the project.

She also worked with James Joyce Architect, and she tapped Weathertop Masonry to find brick that would match the home’s existing stonework.

The arch was the most difficult aspect of the renovation to create.
Two men work on a brick house.

Like the rest of the house, the arch was raised off the ground, and stairs led to the platform entrance. The arch pointed at the top, while the door beneath was designed with a round window atop it for contrast.

Degreff told BI that Weathertop Masonry was integral to creating the archway, which was almost entirely made of brick and stone. She said the team initially tried to find vintage bricks to match the house, and when that didn’t work, Degreff said Paul Scanio, Weathertop Masonry’s president, got creative.

“We ended up ordering a blend of two or three different types of brick, and the way that he grabbed and picked each brick, it mixed it in a way that made it look exactly like the old brick on my house,” Degreff said.

Degreff chose custom tile for the interior of the mudroom.
A man lays green tile in an entryway.

Degreff said she spent “hours and hours” researching tiles before selecting a green, patterned set from London Mosaic.

The tile was laid in August, and Degreff held off decorating the rest of the space until January 2025, getting used to it before deciding how to finish it.

When Degreff finished the mudroom, green was integral to the design.
An entryway with a white door and green walls.

Thanks to the arch, the inside of the mudroom has high ceilings, and Degreff played up that height by painting the walls and ceilings a deep green.

A textured light hangs from the ceiling, and the window above the door lets in natural light.

There’s a second door that leads to the living room, making the main house warmer.

Degreff added a bench to the entryway.
A bench with picture frames and a shelf above it in an entryway.

When you enter the mudroom, the long-awaited coat closet sits on the right, but the left side was a blank canvas for Degreff to decorate.

“I knew I wanted to do a bench seating with a little open shelf, something that I could restyle seasonally, and a spot to hang extra stuff,” she told BI.

She did the work on the corner herself, adding paneling to the wall behind and next to the bench for some texture. A wooden shelf floated above the bench, and Degreff added hooks to the wall for jackets and purses.

Degreff said the mudroom is already making her home more functional.
A woman grabs a purse in the entryway of her home, which is painted green.

“It’s so nice,” Degreff said of having a mudroom. “This was the first winter that we walked into having a mudroom, and it’s just so much easier having a place to put the kids’ sports bags and hang up our coats.”

“For work, I have a lot of random props that I get, and I have a closet space there now,” she added. “It’s not just sitting by the front door in the middle of the living room.”

The archway also improved the home’s curb appeal, as Degreff’s neighbors can attest.
A home with a yellow door and a brick arch in the front.

The arch drastically changed the house’s appearance, but Degreff said all the work they did on the exterior in 2024 improved its curb appeal.

“We were adding sod, we added a fence, we added landscaping, so the arch is just like a piece of other things that definitely made the house more attractive from the outside,” she said.

Degreff said people who live in her community noticed the upgrades.

“The amount of neighbors that are excited about it has also been really cute,” Degreff said. “I have at least one neighbor every day, and it’s been a year, that’s like, ‘Your house came out so great. I love how it looks.'”

She feels like the exterior finally matches the interior.

“Nobody realized that it was cute inside because it had sad grass and it was just so dumpy outside, and now I feel like people get it,” she said. “When we first did the renovation, people asked me when I moved in and welcomed me to the neighborhood because they thought I had just bought the house and started to fix it up.”

She also has fun changing up her doorway seasonally.
A woman stands in front of the staircase of her house on a snowy day.

Degreff has been switching up the decor out front to match the season.

“Decorating it every season has been so fun,” she said. “I put leaves around the arch for fall last year, and then I did garlands and lights for Christmas, and it’s just fun and festive.”

She told BI that she’s also “constantly” repainting the front door. Degreff knows repainting it so often might lead to wear and tear long-term, but she considers it a work expense because so much of her content revolves around her house.

“I sand it in between, but it does get thick. It’s definitely a casualty, and I look at it as a business expense at this point,” she said. “Worst case scenario, I will, in five years, get a different door and start from scratch. There’s nothing saying the door has to be forever.”

Having a clear vision helped Degreff bring her renovation to life.
A woman smiles on the steps in front of her home.

Degreff didn’t have an exact cost breakdown for her mudroom and arch renovation because she and her husband also had work done on their driveway and other parts of their home. Still, she recommends people estimate between $50,000 and $70,000 if they want to take on a similar project.

She also said that people who plan to take on similar projects should have a clear vision for their transformation.

“I think my best advice would be to go on Pinterest and take a look at all the elements that you want to have in your space, whether it’s a bench seating area when you walk in or a special kind of tile or special window,” she said. “When you hire a contractor, they’re just carrying out your vision. If you don’t go into it with the vision, then you’re not going to get exactly what you want.”

“The first time I renovated, I definitely didn’t do enough research or planning, and there are things that I would do differently,” Degreff said. “But with the arch, I 100% feel like it’s exactly everything I wanted and hoped and dreamed.”

Read the original article on Business Insider
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Royal Caribbean Crew Member Stabs Colleague, Jumps Overboard: Police

A 35-year-old South African man allegedly attacked a 28-year-old South African woman, stabbing her multiple times.
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One Extraordinary Photo: A photographer covers a story that felt very close to home in the Gaza Strip

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Mom Stuck on Homework—Not Ready for How Daughter ‘Exposes’ Her to Teacher

“Raise your hand if you’ve ever been personally victimized by your child’s homework,” the mom posted.
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When the Group Chat Replaces the Group

People using technology illustration concept shows people using the smartphone for online and communicating with their friends, the wireless technology making people can work everywhere.

A couple of weeks ago, my friend wrote a message in our group chat, announcing that he’s moving to Newcastle—somewhere I love but rarely go. The initial flicker of excitement to visit the North East of England again was quickly countered by a pang of sadness. We barely see each other now, in London, so what’s going to change when he’s 300 miles away?

[time-brightcove not-tgx=”true”]

Around the same time, in a different group, my friend who already lives in Islamabad shared news of a new job. Another posted pictures of his one-year-old son, who I still haven’t met. Moments like these remind me that life keeps moving forward, even when we’re not around to witness it. 

I talk to my closest friends every day. It’s not always direct. Sometimes, it’s just reading their messages, reacting with an emoji, or book-ending a meme bonanza with “haha.” But it is every day. 

Group chats—I’ve got three what I’d call “core” collections of friends—feel alive. They’re like hallways we all pass through, but we hardly ever hang out. The late nights playing video games, watching films, or musing which carnivores we could possibly beat in a fight, have been replaced by jobs, families, and lots of other adult responsibilities. 

The ease of friendship—that unthinking, ambient closeness you only get when you’re young, broke, and within walking distance of each other—dilutes as you grow up. Now, any get-together must be booked weeks or even months in advance. And there’s usually one dropout. Could we do mid-to-late September? How’s your 2026 looking? The logistical overheads of adult life mean that even the people I feel closest to exist mostly as bubbles on a screen.

Read More: How to Make Friends As an Adult—At Every Life Stage

We like to tell ourselves that the group chat is a lifeline—that it keeps people loosely tethered as geography and circumstance try to cut the cord. You can drop in, send a birthday message, share a Facebook memory (if you still have Facebook), or photo dump at semi-regular intervals to create the illusion of presence. 

It looks like friendship, when really, it’s thinner. But because it’s the default now, we don’t admit the group chat has its flaws. One may be that it isn’t a substitute for in-person connections, especially at a time when loneliness has been declared a “global public health concern”. Another is that group chats can feel draining. In one study of 1,000 American adults, 66% of respondents said they felt overwhelmed by their messages, while 42% said that keeping up with them can feel like a part-time job.

It’s also true that not everyone uses a group chat in the same way. For some, WhatsApp is just a glorified calendar. For others, it’s a therapist’s couch. Some people only speak in memes and reels. Some will never say anything but randomly “like” a comment from a month ago.

So it’s hard, maybe impossible, to create a group chat that can meet everyone’s emotional needs. Yet we keep expecting it to. We rely on it like a Swiss Army knife for adult friendship: an all-in-one tool for intimacy, vulnerability, humour and support. 

There are also some things which are simply too hard to say in a group chat. A redundancy, a break-up, or a bereavement are not easy to drop in.

None of this is to necessarily disparage technology. Group chats can be fun and useful. They’re just not enough on their own. True friendships ask us to be there for each other in ways that aren’t always convenient; to say things that don’t come with a reaction button; to risk showing up, even if we feel out of sync.

It’s hard. My own WhatsApp behavior is not perfect. I’ve missed important moments. I’ve left messages sitting unread for days because I was too tired, too busy, or just didn’t know what to say. And I’ve felt that same sting from others. 

It’s not too late to recalibrate, though. A group chat can be just one part of friendships. Bring back one-on-one phone calls. Don’t let meet-ups become memories. Carve out time, as much as you can, to see friends. Just do it and to hell with the cost of a train or plane ticket.

The people I love most still live in my phone. But I’m trying—perhaps imperfectly and clumsily—to invite them out of it now and then, to move beyond the placeholder. We need to remember that friendship, like any living thing, needs air and attention.

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Two-fifths of mobile phone thefts in Europe happen in UK, shows insurance data

Analysis shows phone theft claims in UK have risen by 425% since 2021 with 42% of thefts occurring in London

Nearly two in every five phones stolen in Europe are taken in the UK, according to data collated an insurance firm.

An analysis of claims made to the American insurance company SquareTrade showed that 39% of all phone thefts across the company’s 12 European markets were in Britain. This was despite the UK only making up 10% of the company’s European customers.

Continue reading…

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Why are Thailand and Cambodia fighting along their border?

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