Ant And Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway.

I love watching this when they is a new series of it on the telly it is Ant And Dec’s Saturday Night Takeaway. It is always on itv the series started on the 8th June 2002 summer 02 twenty one years ago when I was fifteen and in year ten at Southlands School when I was very young and I think it is really good to. It is always on for 2 hours every time it is on it is on for just a couple of hours on a Saturday night and sometimes think it is really funny to.

Hitler took advice from Edward 8th to bomb Britain

Edward 8th “encouraged Nazis to bomb UK into submission” in World War Two, according to a new Channel 4 documentary.

The documentary, Edward VIII: Britain’s Traitor King, will show evidence the former king — who abdicated in 1936 after the Church of England, the government and the public condemned his decision marry American socialite Wallis Simpson — passed information to Germany and encouraged the Nazis to bomb Britain before reappointing him as king.

It will reportedly also show evidence that Edward VIII aided the Nazis with the fall of France in 1940.

The revelatory documentary, which will air on Sunday, 27 March, is based on the work of historian Andrew Lownie whose book Traitor King will be released in May.

The documentary uses evidence from captured German documents held in the Royal Archives.

Edward was known to write reports while living in Paris that exposed weaknesses in the French army, including poor leadership. The information was then passed, perhaps unwittingly, to a Nazi sympathiser, Charles Bedaux.

Jane Ridley, a professor of modern history at the University of Buckingham and talking head on the documentary, claims: “[Edward] knew, when he boasted about the inadequacy of French war defences, that this would go back to Germany”.

In 1937, Edward and his wife met Hitler and he was famously pictured giving a Nazi salute.

After Winston Churchill, who was prime minister at the time, sent the Duke to govern the Bahamas, Edward sent a coded telegram to a Nazi associate saying he was willing to return to Europe.

Mr Lownie argues in the documentary that this indicates Edward was aware of Operation Willie, the German plan to put the Duke back on the throne as the head of a puppet state.

The rumours are longstanding. In 2015, researchers at the Institute of Historical Research at the School of Advance Study at the University of London pieced together from open archives across 30 countries, including Germany, Spain and Russia.

They revealed that Edward, the Duke of Windsor, told the Spanish diplomat Don Javier Bermejillo that the effective bombing of England “could bring peace”.

Dr Karina Urbach, the senior research fellow who worked on the study, said: “This report went to Franco and was then passed on to the Germans. The bombing of Britain started on 10 July.”

Royal Edward 8th and his collaboration with the Nazi’s

In April 1945, less than a month before the end of World War II in Europe, an American army captain found an abandoned vehicle with a trove of German government documents, one of which was signed by Joachim von Ribbentrop, the Nazi foreign minister who would later be executed at Nuremberg. Eventually, the Americans searched castles in the nearby area, as well as a country house in another part of the country, and found a huge cache of files that would eventually provide insight into the inner workings of the Nazi state—along with one set of microfilm that detailed the Third Reich’s attempt to build a relationship with King Edward VIII, whose 1936 abdication made him a virtual exile, after his brief reign on the throne.

In his new book, Traitor King, out this week, historian Andrew Lownie uses these files and many more, including documents from the FBI and the State Department, to trace the route that Edward and his American-born divorcée wife, Wallis Simpson, took from France to Portugal to the Bahamas during World War II, and the way that they kept in touch with German agents and officials even after the Battle of Britain began in the summer of 1940. He notes the American intelligence service belief that Wallis was in “constant contact” with Ribbentrop after the war started and cites a report that she even kept a signed picture of him on her dressing room wall. In the book, Lownie also elaborates on Ribbentrop’s eventual plan to kidnap the couple when they wouldn’t willingly join onto a German effort to force a negotiated peace with England.

“It’s to the credit of the Americans, particularly the American historians, that captured German documents found at the end of the war, which give chapter and verse to the duke’s treachery, were saved,” Lownie said in a video call. “Of course, this has provided our evidence, but there’s plenty of other evidence. I found, for example, private diaries of the king’s private secretary, of an MI-5 officer, diplomats, all of this confirming that the German documents were accurate and that the duke had been a traitor.”

The traditional view of Edward is that he chose love over his duty to the country and sparked a crisis in the British government. But in investigating the connections between Edward VIII and Wallis, Lownie finds evidence that it isn’t the whole story. “The revisionist view is my view, which was that he was maneuvered off the throne because they were desperate to get rid of him,” Lownie said. The government may have been skeptical of Edward even before he became king. “Fortunately Wallis came along and gave them their excuse to push him off the throne.”

Vanity Fair spoke to Lownie about the case that Edward and Wallis represented a bigger threat to Britain than previously acknowledged and why he prefers writing about the royal “baddies” rather than those thought to be following the rules and causing no scandal.

Andrew Lownie stated: I’d always suspected that they were more actively involved as intriguers with the Nazis rather than unwitting victims of the Nazis. That’s what I set out to investigate. By looking at files in the States and in other countries and looking at private papers, one began to get the sense that they were much more deeply implicated than perhaps history has realized, because of course, a lot of the files have been destroyed or cleaned out. So the evidence really wasn’t there in the British archives.

Wwe Rowdy Roddy Piper’s Greatest Hits 1985.

I am going to watch this on the Wwe Network sometime it is really good it is Wwe Rowdy Roddy Piper’s Greatest Hits 1985 I think it is really good it is on for 1 hour 38 minutes just over an hour and a half. It came out and released on video on the 15th September 85 a year before I was born. I have watched it on the Wwe Network before and it is all about Rowdy Roddy piper’s matches and interviews and Piper’s Pit episodes and moments on Piper’s Pit all from the 80s and mid 1980s before I was born.

new update coming soon

Good news: Bus Simulator 21 Next Stop will arrive one week earlier than expected! The huge Next Stop update, the free Official Map Extension, the versions for PS5 and Xbox Series X|S as well as the Gold Edition will become available on May 16, 2023. So, be prepared!

This blog was made by simon schofield

Whitley Bay Metro Station In February 1998.

This is Whitley Bay Metro Station in 98 this picture on the metro at Whitley Bay Metro Station was took on the 27th February 1998 when I was eleven years old when I was in class seven at Glebe and when I was in my last year at Glebe School when I was younger. As you can see the metro stop where the bar is is not they anymore and has now been moved off the track for years. Back then in those day the metro only started off from Whitley Bay Metro Station on platform 2 and went from Monkseaton Metro Station West Monkseaton Station and Shiremoor Metro Station from they. So in those days the metros and Metro Stations worked a bit different from what the metros and Metro Stations work like now at the Metro Stations.

Newcastle Airport In The 1970s.

This is what Newcastle Airport looked like back in the 70s and throughout the 1970s back then years before I was born. It is a lot different to how it looks like now and you still drove in on the right hand side as you can see on the photo and you didn’t have to pay to drive back out of the Airport car park as you can see the machine and bars weren’t they back then in those days before I was born. Also back then it was still called Newcastle Airport and it was years and years before it changed its named to Newcastle International Airport.

Britannia Airplanes From The 1990s.

These were the really old Britannia Airplanes from the 90s when I was little it’s from the old Newcastle Airport which is now called Newcastle International Airport. These Britannia Airplanes are from when I was little I use to love going on these Airplanes when I was younger when I was going abroad on holiday in the summer holidays. People use to smoke on the Britannia Airplane back then in those days because it was allowed back then. It was years before all the health and safety rules came out and other rules came out and young kids and loads of little kids use to be allowed to meet the pilot when they got on the plane and sit with the pilot while he was driving the plane. But now people cant do it anymore because they stopped it because of the terrorist attack that happened in September 2001 twenty two years ago.