Wednesday, April 29, 2026
Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Sainsbury's shopper discovers 'amazing' £1 hack to save money on supermarket weekly shop

Invalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later.When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Your information will be used in accordance with ourPrivacy Notice.A savvy shopper has wowed supermarket customers with a clever £1 trick that will reduce the price of their weekly shop. The Sainsbury's customer revealed that instead of scanning her whole shop they paid for just one item worth just £1 and used their Nectar Card before paying. The unnamed shopper says customers could be given a £4.50 voucher in return for doing the hack. This means she can then use this money-off coupon against the rest of her shop, or a larger spend next time she is in store. Writing on the Money saving hints, tips and ideas Facebook group, she said: “I don't shop at Sainsbury's often, but when I do, I pay for one item first, which is just over a £1. Read more -Watch - Racers record themselves on Snapchat speeding along 40mph Birmingham New Road at 150mph “I usually then get a money off voucher for my next shop, today it was £4.50. Hope this is helpful.” If you’re thinking of trying this hack…

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Chris Schillig: Supreme Court's not-so-snappy ruling on Snapchat post

Chris Schillig  |  Special to The Alliance ReviewFreedom of speech for students was reaffirmed this week by the nation’s highest court.In an 8-1 decision, the Supreme Court ruled it was acceptable for teens to criticize their high schools, even in an explicit manner, when they are off campus. As often happens, the defendant waited a long time for resolution (see: the wheels of justice grind slowly and all that). In this case, Brandi Levy of Pennsylvania had already graduated and moved on to college before the ruling was delivered. Levy was just 14 when she expressed dismay at not making the varsity cheerleading squad by posting an expletive-filled Snapchat rant and a photo of her raised middle finger. The administration punished her by taking away a year’s eligibility to cheer. A charm-school graduate, Levy isn’t. Nevertheless, it isn’t necessary to agree with a particular sentiment or its means of expression to defend somebody’s right to express it. Indeed, the Supreme Court’s decision upheld an earlier finding for Levy, even as it narrowed the rationale of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. While the lower court’s contention is that school administrators have no authority to punish students for statements made off campus, the Supreme…

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Paedophile battered by vigilante gang stole from OAP and took wedding and funeral deposits

Invalid EmailSomething went wrong, please try again later.When you subscribe we will use the information you provide to send you these newsletters. Your information will be used in accordance with ourPrivacy Notice.A sick paedophile battered by vigilantes is an ex-hotel worker who stole deposits for wedding and funeral functions. Matthew Atkinson set up a SnapChat profile using a photo of a former work colleague to 'catfish' young boys online. When she reported it to the police, officers raided his home and discovered a twisted collection of child rape photos. READ MORE:Paedophile attacked by vigilantes Liverpool Crown Court heard Atkinson has since been attacked by a group of men who "rampaged" through and smashed up his flat. He was spared jail after a judge said he wanted him to take a course to make sure he didn't progress to even more serious offences. The ECHO can now reveal that Atkinson, 36, formerly of Seaforth, is also a lowlife thief who once targeted a 92-year-old woman. And when working at the Holiday Inn Express in Hoylake, he helped himself to £13,600 in wedding party and even funeral deposits. The then 32-year-old crook left his employers footing the bill for seven events, after…

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User-generated content (UGC) Platforms Market to Eyewitness Massive Growth by 2028: Snapchat …

Global User-generated content (UGC) Platforms Market (Post Covid-19) Size & Forecast Analysis till 2029: Global research report on the User-generated content (UGC) Platforms market is a product of a brief review and an extensive analysis of the realistic data collected from the Global User-generated content (UGC) Platforms Market. The data was gathered based on manufacturing drifts and services & goods linked demands. Download Free Sample Report PDF @ jcmarketresearch.com/report-details/1360691/sample          Due to the rising partnership activities of key players over the projected period, North America accounted for the xxx million $ share on the User-generated content (UGC) Platforms market in 2020 Top Key players included in this Research: Snapchat, Instagram, Baidu, Wikipedia, Niwango, Twitter, DealsPlus, A Medium Corporation, Endurance International Group, YouTube, SNOW, Yelp, Facebook, Mercari, Automattic, Mirrativ, Linkedin, Tumblr, Fandom, Reddit, Zenly, AbemaTV, Twitch, Pixiv, Pinterest, DeNA, Cookpad Major Types: Present in User-generated content (UGC) Platforms Market: A flawless example of the latest developments and groundbreaking strategic changes allows our clients the opportunity to improve their decision-making skills. Ultimately this helps to work with perfect business solutions and execute innovative implementations. The Global User-generated content (UGC) Platforms Market 2020-2029 Report highlights the latest trends, growth, new opportunities and latent tricks. [We are currently offering Special Discount…

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The Out-of-Touch Adults' Guide To Kid Culture: When Will Britney Spears Be Free?

Photo: Rich Fury / Staff (Getty Images)This week covers the whole spectrum of kid-internet-culture, from Britney Spears stuck in a conservatorship, to a movie about family stuck next to the ultimate Karen, to a TikTok lady who got stuck in her own chair. Let’s dive in—here’s what you need to know.This week in Supreme Court rulings: Teenage cheerleader vindicatedI don’t usually cover Supreme Court decisions, but this case features a disgruntled teenage cheerleader, vulgar Snapchat messages, and a school district petty enough to take a discipline matter to the Supreme Court. The trouble began way back in 2017 when Brandi Levy, then a high school student in Pennsylvania, was not moved up to varsity cheer. Angered, the teenager posted, “Fuck school fuck softball fuck cheer fuck everything” to her SnapChat, and the school responded by cutting her from the cheer team. Her parents filed suit, arguing that she wasn’t in school when she cursed on the internet, and maybe the school should stop being such fascists. The case moved from Pennsylvania district court up the legal pyramid to the Big Show—the Supremes. In a win for free speech and The Cheeristocracy, the Court ruled 8-1 that The Mahanoy School district…

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SCOTUS sides with student in free speech case

Oops! This video is not supported on your web browser To continue streaming, we recommend using the latest version of Chrome or Firefox.   Help Player FeedbackUse the form below to send us your comments. If you are experiencing problems, please describe them. SUBMIT Player Help | Paramount+ Help 3min The U.S. Supreme Court ruled 8-1 on Wednesday that a Pennsylvania public school wrongfully suspended a student from her cheerleading activities after she used profanity in a Snapchat post. She was not on school grounds when she made the post. Jan Crawford has the details. Air Date: Jun 24, 2021 Weekdays

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Economists know how to break your phone addiction

Debate has raged about whether digital addiction is a real affliction or something akin to a strong habit. As the evidence has accumulated, however, doctors and psychiatrists are increasingly confident classifying our digital devices as addictive, not unlike cigarettes or gambling.Now economists are weighing in. This June, a team of economists from Harvard, Stanford, and New York universities released a white paper entitled, simply, “Digital Addiction” that used economic methods, such as small payments, to analyze people’s “digital self-control problems.”The researchers recruited about 2,000 American adults who installed an Android app allowing them to limit screen time. Participants were given self-control options that were difficult to override, as well financial incentives ($2.50 for every hour that blocked Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, and YouTube). Users reduced screen time for those services by 22 minutes per day over 12 weeks.The researchers built a model showing how people’s behavior corresponded to their preferences (versus their compulsion to check their phones). The study concludes about a third of social media use (48 minutes per day on average) are linked to self-control problems and habit formation engendered by our digital technology. “The model predicts that 31% of social media use is not what people would…

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Joshua Lowe sentenced over drug business uncovered after IED blast

Ex-Waverley College student ran Snapchat drug business An ex Waverley college student who used Snapchat to run a drug supply business that police uncovered after the detonation of an IED at a Sydney home has avoided jail. There is more to this story But it’s a member-only story. Subscribe today to unlock it and more… Ex-Waverley College student ran Snapchat drug business An ex Waverley college student who used Snapchat to run a drug supply business that police uncovered after the detonation of an IED at a Sydney home has avoided jail. Full Digital Access. $1 a week for the first 12 weeks. Min. cost $4. Conditions apply* Full Digital Access. $1 a week for the first 12 weeks. Min. cost $4. Conditions apply* Read every story on The Daily Telegraph website and app Subscriber-only newsletters straight to your inbox The Rewards member benefits program App or digital edition only customer? To upgrade, call 1300 MY NEWS (696 397) Introductory Offer 12 Month Plan Full Digital Access Features Full Digital Access Features $1/WEEK $4 billed every 4 weeks for the first 12 weeks (min. cost). Then $28 billed every 4 weeks* $4 billed every 4 weeks for the first 12…

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Tinder is about to look more like TikTok and Snapchat

Tinder's new video profile feature Image: Tinder By Anna Iovine2021-06-22 13:00:00 UTC In the years since the ubiquitous dating app Tinder launched in 2012, its interface has stayed largely the same. Until now. Today Tinder is launching a slew of new features to serve Gen Z, which accounts for more than half of their users according to their press release. With the introduction of video and an Explore page, the app is going to look a lot more like TikTok and Snapchat. Let's breakdown the features: Videos in profiles Tinder wants to "bring the main character energy" to the app, invoking a popular TikTok meme, by adding the ability for users to put videos on their profiles. They say this is part of making Tinder a "multi-dimensional experience." Users will be able to crop and upload videos as they are currently only able to with photos. Tinder's video feature in action Image: Tinder A social experience called 'Hot Takes' Hot Takes jumps off of Tinder's experiential Swipe Night, an interactive choose-your-own-adventure game within the app, and Vibes, a question-and-answer game to test your compatibility with other users. More than 20 million Tinder users participated in Swipe Night while Vibes led…

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