‘Great British Bake Off’ 2017 Final: Sophie Faldo Crowned Winner

‘Great British Bake Off’ 2017 Final: Sophie Faldo Crowned Winner
Sophie Faldo has been crowned the winner of this year’s ‘Great British Bake Off’.

The 33-year-old beat off stiff competition from her fellow finalists Steven Carter-Bailey and Kate Lyon on the Channel 4 show.

 Sophie was the bookies’ favourite going into the final and also topped an exclusive HuffPost UK poll, with 50% of readers voting her as their favourite to win this year’s competition.

After being crowned the winner, a clearly emotional Sophie said: “I’m sure it’ll sink in but it hasn’t quite yet. I just kind of disbelieve really.

She added: “The idea of winning is such a minute possibility. I don’t think I’ll ever forget this as long as I live.”

Paul Hollywood admitted he was “shocked by the standard” in the final, and said it had been a “real learning curve” for Sophie.

Runner up Steven added: “I know Sophie can appear quite tough, but she’s not – she’s soft. She was as scared as Kate and I were. And for the first time in 10 weeks I saw vulnerability. She put her heart and soul into this, and she earned it.”

For some viewers, it was the least surprising ‘Bake Off’ result ever, after judge Prue Leith accidentally tweeted the result 12 hours ahead of Tuesday night’s pre-recorded final.

OMG PRUE! No baby no! RT @PrueLeith No one told me judging a #gbbo final would be so emotional. I wanted them all to win. Bravo Sophie.
The chef and food writer hastily deleted the premature tweet, but the damage had already been done.

She later took to Twitter again to apologise to fans for spoiling the result, admitting she was “mortified”.

I am so sorry to the fans of the show for my mistake this morning, I am in a different time zone and mortified by my error #GBBO.
Former Army Officer Sophie had been the dark horse of this year’s competition with a consistent stream of solid bakes, always delivered without barely breaking a sweat.

However, even she admitted that sometimes things did get a bit much in that tent.

“Walking into that tent first time is so much harder than training to be a stuntwoman,” she said at the start of the series. “There is just so much pressure baking in the tent.”

Just one day before the final aired, Sophie was forced to deny claims she failed to report a change in her living circumstances to the Department Of Work And Pensions.

The trainee stuntwoman had been accused of claiming a single person’s living allowance, while cohabiting with her boyfriend, chef David Slattery.

A ‘GBBO’ spokesperson defended the baker, saying: “Sophie has recently declared a change in her circumstances to the DWP.

“A meeting to reassess her situation, scheduled for last Friday, was postponed by her local jobcentre until next week.

“Any suggestion of benefit fraud relating to Sophie is ­categorically untrue.”

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/great-british-bake-off-2017-winner-final-sophie-faldo_uk_59f88a08e4b0aec1467ae758

Ambrosia Starling, iPhone X Unboxing, Saturday Night Massacre, Andy Dick, Octopuses: HOT LINKS

Ambrosia Starling, iPhone X Unboxing, Saturday Night Massacre, Andy Dick, Octopuses: HOT LINKS

SEAN HANNITY. Mueller issued indictments to distract from Sean Hannity. “Don’t think this is a coincidence,” Hannity said. “Last week right here on this program, we had stunning revelation after revelation, day after day, about Hillary Clinton, Uranium One, the fake news dossier.” 

SATURDAY NIGHT MASSACRE. Is Trump laying groundwork?

PAUL MANAFORT. Former Trump campaign manager Cory Lewandowski says Manafort joined in “very limited capacity,” then immediately says he was “high-profile.”

RUSSIA PROBE. Steve Bannon pushing Trump to curb Robert Mueller: “According to Politico, Trump considered the idea of ousting Mueller, who was appointed by Deputy Attorney Rod Rosenstein in May after Trump fired then-FBI Director James Comey, shortly after Mueller took over the Russia investigation, but ultimately decided against it.”

I’m told Bannon pushing trump to be more aggressive against Mueller: urge gop to cut funding, withhold document production and more t.co/ttqepfKZQ9

— Dana Bash (@DanaBashCNN) October 31, 2017

WITHOUT SPACEY. House of Cards spin-offs in the works.

RAISING BUCHANAN. Andy Dick fired from film after sexual harassment allegations.

THAT’S CUTE. Donald Trump Jr. mocks Hillary Clinton for suggesting she’ll be the president for Halloween.

That’s cute. She can borrow my @realDonaldTrump mask. t.co/e3UC4V3pti t.co/iBbYbDlCp0

— Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr) October 31, 2017

RUSSIA REVERSAL. Misogyny is a national vulnerability.

WALES. Dozens of octopuses spotted crawling the beach. “Dozens of octopuses have emerged from the sea at New Quay beach in west Wales. Some experts have said the strange behaviour by the cephalopods, who can’t survive on dry land for long, may be the result of injury or confusion caused by recent storms

AMBROSIA STARLING. Alabama drag queen donates garb she wore during gay marriage fight: “A drag queen known for opposing Republican U.S. Senate candidate and gay marriage foe Roy Moore has given Alabama’s history agency the garb she wore during the fight that helped unseat Moore from the state Supreme Court last year.”

CARTER PAGE. Congratulations on not being indicted…yet.

UNBOXING OF THE DAY. Marques Brownlee unboxes the iPhone X.

TOUCH AND GO LANDING OF THE DAY. Plane attempts to land in wind at Salzburg, Austria airport.

TOO HOT TUESDAY. Hill.

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Ambrosia Starling, iPhone X Unboxing, Saturday Night Massacre, Andy Dick, Octopuses: HOT LINKS

Hospitality And Temporary Workers ‘More Likely To Stay Silent Over Sexual Harassment’, Experts Warn

Hospitality And Temporary Workers ‘More Likely To Stay Silent Over Sexual Harassment’, Experts Warn
Hollywood and Westminster have been rocked by allegations of sexual harassment, but it’s junior staff and those on “precarious” contracts across other sectors who are less likely to come forward through fear of losing their jobs, experts say.

The power dynamic of sexual assault and the pattern for predators to target victims who don’t always know their rights mean that the hospitality industry and workers on temporary or zero hour contracts are facing additional challenges when it comes to sexual harassment.

“You don’t often find a cleaner, a temp worker, a zero hours retail person saying ‘screw all of you guys, I don’t need a job’. That’s actually the opposite of what they’re saying, which is actually ‘I will do anything for a job, please just let me stay’,” Michael Newman, a discrimination and employment law specialist at Leigh Day, tells HuffPost UK.

A Trade Union Congress (TUC) report last year into sexual harassment found that 67% of women in the hospitality and leisure industry reported experiencing some form of sexual harassment compared to an average of 52%.

The report found: “Perpetrators of sexual harassment are often third parties. Women working in retail, hospitality, healthcare, care, transport and many other sectors deal with clients, patients, and customers on a daily basis and currently have little protection from their employer when facing harassment. Reintroducing a duty on employers to act where an employee is being harassed by a third party would be an important step in tackling workplace sexual harassment.”

Whether it involves filmmaking or bartending, a pattern appears to have emerged of powerful men targeting women – and at times, men – who are less likely to make a fuss.

Experts suggest a culture of silence means that those who are financially vulnerable or more susceptible to losing their jobs often feel that they cannot report sexual harassment allegations.

Scarlet Harris, senior strategy and development officer at the TUC, tells HuffPost UK: “Sexual harassment is very much about the power dynamic.

“It’s certainly younger women that are likely to experience sexual harassment and I think it’s fair to say that the more junior you are in an organisation, the more likely it is that you will experience sexual harassment, because of that power dynamic.”

This month has seen an avalanche of sexual harassment claims levelled against film producer Harvey Weinstein and last week it emerged that Westminster MPs have been caught up in allegations of sexual misconduct.

Danielle Parsons, an employment lawyer at Slater and Gordon, says that, although no industry is immune from sexual harassment, more junior members of staff are more susceptible to such abuse because of the power dynamic.

Parsons says: “Sexual harassment can occur across all industries but generally it would happen where you have that particular dynamic, you have someone in a position of power and you have somebody junior who is reporting to them.”

Harris says that sexual harassment is “absolutely everywhere”, but that agency workers, as well as those on temporary and zero hour contracts find it more difficult to report experiences of sexual harassment.

This is because the nature of temping means that staff are moving around in different oranisations, potentially finding themselves in a new workplace where they don’t know anyone, the culture or who to report harassment allegations to.

“Very often the perpetrators of sexual harassment are very good at honing in on the person who’s least likely to know how to deal with it and will spot someone who is more vulnerable and will prey on them because they’re an easy target,” Harris says.

Furthermore, hospitality workers have the added risk of third party harassment.

Roles can include restaurant and bar staff, hotel workers and receptionists. Jobs where employees are working with customers who might be inebriated might also face additional unwanted attention, as customers might feel particularly entitled to make unsolicited advances.

Sexual harassment can be “humiliating to the victim”, Parsons says and can manifest itself in a number of ways, such as bullying, intimidating and offensive behaviour.

It’s not just women that have sought Parson’s help for sexual harassment. The solicitor says that on one occasion a male secretary came to her about “upsetting and intrusive comments” made about his sexuality by his manager who was harassing him.

Newman says that, although he has not seen an increase in the number of clients coming forward, the problem “isn’t getting better”.

“I haven’t seen them drop off. It’s sadly consistent, I think that’s the problem,” he tells HuffPost UK.

“It’s just a steady trickle and it keeps happening. Every time a new complaint comes in it’s like ‘oh this is an industry I haven’t see before, but why am I surprised?’.”

He agrees with Parsons and Harris that the more junior someone is the more prevalent sexual harassment may be, adding: “The opportunities for exploitation are greater.”

But sexual harassment can happen “right up the food chain”.

“People who you think are very serious who, for a lot of their jobs call the shots, but they will still be for some situations beholden to men in positions of power and that’s when things can happen, sadly,” Newman says.

Newman admits that those who seek his help are often at a stage where they have the means to take the complaint further – an option that might not be available to those in a more vulnerable position, but financially and professionally.

“Often if you are being harassed, if you are in your job and want to stay in your job, the chances are you’re not going to complain,” Newman says. “And so of course I never hear about those. Those are people who don’t tend to come to me.”

Newman says people who are not worried about their career prospects being threatened, perhaps because they are leaving the sector, or people who have reached a certain level of security are more likely to come forward.

Examples of sexual harassment that he has dealt with varies, but includes lewd comments and innuendos, physical contact and even other advances, including non-consensual sexual conduct.

For employees experiencing sexual harassment at work, they don’t have an unlimited amount of time to file a case with an employment tribunal.

The time limit currently stands at three months, although lawyers are urging that this cap be doubled.

Those who are experiencing sexual harassment at work are advised to talk to their manager, keep a record of any incidents and collect evidence of any inappropriate encounters and to talk to their trade union representative.

If you have been affected by sexual harassment at work but you felt you couldn’t speak out about it, contact [email protected]

www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/hospitality-workers-temporary-staff-sexual-harassment-claims_uk_59f72f2de4b077d8dfcb0977

Reformation Day: Protestant Christians Embrace LGBTQ Diversity 500 Years after Martin Luther

Reformation Day: Protestant Christians Embrace LGBTQ Diversity 500 Years after Martin Luther

Protestant Christians — and especially Lutherans — have come a long way on LGBTQ issues since their founder and namesake, Martin Luther, is said to have nailed his 95 theses (“On the Power of Indulgences”) on the door of a Roman Catholic Church in Wittenberg, Germany, 500 years ago. His theses publicly challenged the Catholic Church, spawning protest movements that formed the Lutheran, Baptist, and Calvinist traditions that nearly half of Americans affiliate with today.

While Luther’s Reformation questioned the repressive and ecclesiastical policies of the Catholic Church that lead to the flowering of Protestantism, his denunciation of LGB people remained embedded in the teachings of the church.

But today, there are more than 5,000 Protestant churches in the U.S. that are welcoming and affirming of LGBTQ people. The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, the largest Lutheran church body in the U.S. that traces its theological foundation to Luther himself, consecrated an openly gay bishop in 2013 and allows clergy to perform same-sex marriages. Other major mainline protestant denominations, including the United Church of Christ and the Presbyterian Church (USA), have also opened their doors to LGBTQ people and advocate for LGBTQ equality.

These reforms have been driven because the LGBTQ faithful are Coming Home to Faith, to Spirit and to Self. They are the fruits of the prophetic work being done by faith-based LGBTQ organizations and their allies, including DignityUSA, the Reformation Project, Gay Christian Network, Soulforce, the Metropolitical Community Churches and and HRC’s Religion and Faith Program. LGBTQ people are engaging the church in the same spirit of Luther — the original Protestant — whose intention was not to break away from the church, but rather reform it for the better from within.

The New Testament calls on Christians to be as one. Toward that goal, years of dialogue led to Pope Francis last year to formally apologize for Catholic slaughters of Protestants, and the Catholic Church and various Protestant denominations have signed agreements recognizing each other’s baptisms.

One lesson we can learn from Catholic-Protestant rapprochement during this time of shifting understanding on faith and LGBTQ issues, is that it has never been more important to engage in dialogue with respect and love, and with the goal of deepening the understanding between the faith and LGBTQ communities so we can truly be as one, as God’s children. It is not always easy but critical to the LGBTQ movement’s goal — to save lives.

www.hrc.org/blog/reformation-day-protestant-christians-embrace-lgbtq-diversity-500-years-aft?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss-feed