Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Most unusual excuse for rail delays yet? Train over an hour late due to signalman trapped in toilet

He nipped away from his post to answer the call of nature but was left flushed with embarrassment when the brick outhouse’s lock jammed


Stuck: The toilet























Train passengers were held up for more than an hour when a railway signalman became trapped in an outside toilet.
The signalman nipped away from his post to answer the call of nature but was left flushed with embarrassment when the brick outhouse’s lock jammed and he was stuck inside.
The driver of the Hereford to London service heard the hapless worker’s cries for help after he was forced to stop his train because he could not make radio contact.
Colleagues eventually managed to set the signalman free by forcing the door open with a crowbar.
The 3.13pm service was delayed during the rescue near Worcester Foregate Street station.
General view of the Henwick signal box in Worcester

Rail bosses gave the reason as “signalling problems” but rail ­enthusiasts became privy to the truth through an internet forum.
One user joked: “Where are all the relief staff when you need ‘em…?”
And another added: “Too busy filling in the signalman’s log.”
Network Rail ­apologised for Wednesday’s incident and blamed the rail system’s ageing buildings.
A spokesman added: “Much of the railway network is still controlled from Victorian signal boxes, which often have outside loos.
“Our plans to modernise will see control moved to state-of-the-art regional control centres, where unfortunate incidents such as this simply wouldn’t be an issue.”

The James Bulger murder and 10 crimes that shook Britain

It is 20 years since James Bulger was abducted and killed in one of the country's most shocking crimes

Led to his death:
The image of toddler James Bulger being led away from a shopping arcade by his killers still haunts 20 years on.
Jon Venables and Robert Thompson were convicted of torturing and murdering the youngster, but their life sentences were set to a minimum of just eight years.
The case is one of the most shocking crimes in recent UK history.
We look back at other crimes that shook the nation...

1 - The murder of James Bulger

Robert Thompson and Jon Venables, the two boys jailed in 1993 for beating to death of two-year-old toddler James Bulger (pictured)
Robert Thompson and Jon Venables, the two boys jailed in 1993 for beating to death of two-year-old toddler James Bulger (pictured)
Reuters
James Bulger, who was just short of his third birthday, was murdered in February 1993 by two 10-year-old boys who lured him away from a Liverpool shopping arcade while his mother was distracted.
The boys, Robert Thompson and Jon Venables, led the crying toddler on a two and a half mile walk across the city to Walton.
Robert Thompson, 10 years of age, poses for a mugshot for British authorities February 20, 1993
Robert Thompson, 10 years of age, poses for a mugshot for British authorities February 20, 1993
Getty
Jon Venables, 10 years of age, poses for a mugshot for British authorities February 20, 1993
Jon Venables, 10 years of age, poses for a mugshot for British authorities February 20, 1993
Getty
There, on a rarely used piece of railway, they used bricks and sticks to beat and torture him and finally killed him by repeatedly dropping a 22lbs piece of steel railway track on his head.
The killers then placed his body across a rail hoping people would think he had been killed by a train.
When he was found two days later his body had been cut in half by a freight train but police examinations showed he was already dead before he was run over.
CCTV from the shopping centre showed him being led away by the two older boys, who were soon caught.
Thompson and Venables were tried and convicted, becoming the youngest murderers ever in British history.

Double killer David Oakes dies after being jailed for life for torture and murder of ex-partner and daughter

Oakes subjected ex-partner Christine Chambers to "degrading assaults" before blasting her and their daughter Shania with a shotgun



Undated Essex Police handout photo of David Oakes, who was found guilty at Chelmsford Crown Court

A man ordered to serve the rest of his life in prison for torturing and murdering his former partner and two-year-old daughter has died.
David Oakes, 50, was jailed last year after Chelmsford Crown Court heard he went to Christine Chambers's house in Braintree, Essex, where he subjected her to "degrading assaults" before blasting her and their daughter Shania with a shotgun.
Today, the Ministry of Justice confirmed that Oakes had died from natural causes after being taken to hospital.
Prison Service spokesman said: "HMP Frankland prisoner David Robert Oakes died at hospital on Monday.
"He is presumed to have died from natural causes.
"As with all deaths in custody, the Independent Prisons and Probation Ombudsman will conduct an investigation."
Christine Chambers and her two-year-old daughter Shania
Christine Chambers and her two-year-old daughter Shania
PA
 
Oakes had denied two counts of murder but was found guilty after nine hours of jury deliberations at his trial in May.
Mr Justice Fulford ordered Oakes to serve a whole life sentence, making him one of a limited group of inmates who would never be released from prison.
Describing Oakes, he said: "A bullying and controlling man, who had frequently inflicted violence on Miss Chambers during the six years of their relationship, he killed his ex-partner and their young daughter simply because he knew she could not bear to be with him and wished to start a new life."
The trial heard Oakes forced Miss Chambers to cut off her own hair, after arriving at the house with the shotgun, a drill and an axe.
Oakes did not appear in court to be sentenced, after prison guards raised concerns he would harm himself.
The shotgun used by David Oakes to kill his partner Christine Chambers and their two-year-old daughter Shania.

In November, the Court of Appeal refused to quash the whole-life order imposed on the killer.
He was one of several inmates who argued such orders were incompatible with Article 3 of the European Convention of Human Rights, which prohibits torture and inhuman or degrading treatment and punishment.
Judges rejected that argument, saying: "Each of these appellants is dangerous, and on the available evidence, likely to remain dangerous for the indefinite future."

A community in mourning 20 years on: Tragic James Bulger remembered on anniversary of his murder

The two-year-old was abducted, tortured and killed by child murderers Jon Venables and Robert Thompson in Liverpool 20 years ago

Tragic: Murdered toddler James Bulger

a community will mourn as it marks 20 years since the brutal murder of toddler James Bulger in Liverpool.
The two-year-old was abducted, tortured and killed by child murderers Jon Venables and Robert Thompson in Liverpool 20 years ago.
Venables and classmate Thompson, who were just 10 years old at the time, abducted James from the Bootle Strand shopping centre before carrying out the murder which shocked the nation.
The Rt Rev James Jones, Bishop of Liverpool, said: "The whole community join the family and friends of James to remember his tragically short life and to share in their grief. I pray that the life and death of James will always remind us of how vulnerable our children are."
Venables and Thompson were jailed for life but released on licence with new identities in 2001.
Venables, 30, had his parole revoked in 2010 and was jailed for two years after admitting downloading and distributing indecent images of children. Now he has made a fresh application for release and the hearing is expected to take place in the coming months.
Speaking on Monday, James' mother Denise Fergus said she hopes to personally address the Venables parole hearing.
Mrs Fergus, 45, said: "My message to them (the parole panel) is don't release him, I think Venables is still a danger to the public."
Mrs Fergus, from Kirkby, Merseyside, believes there are indications that Venables is an "undiagnosed psychopath" who should be moved to a hospital unit. "I have very serious concerns that the parole board's approach to Venables is fundamentally flawed," she added.
Mrs Fergus married electrician Stuart in 1998 following the end of her marriage to James' father, Ralph. She said she aims to mark the anniversary by going with her family to place flowers on James' grave.
Mr Bulger, who is releasing a book called My James, spoke last week of how, in his darkest moments, he blamed Denise for letting their son out of her sight - a reaction which now makes him feel deeply ashamed. He also said he downed two bottles of whisky a day to blot out the pain and that he thought about killing himself in the wake of the tragedy.

Skateboarder Adam Miller nails first skateboard-to-skateboard gainer backflip - video


 |


North Korea nuclear test: Pyongyang threatens 'stronger response'

China joins global condemnation of nuclear tests as North Korea warns it will take stronger action unless US hostility ends


Seismic waves of North Korea's nuclear test are being monitored by a South Korean soldier in Seoul.
North Korea has reacted angrily to global condemnation of its nuclear test, warning it would follow up with "stronger" actions unless the US ended its hostility towards the regime.
"This nuclear test was only the first response we took with maximum restraint," an unnamed spokesman for the North Korean foreign ministry said in a statement carried by the official KCNA news agency.
"If the United States continues to come out with hostility and complicates the situation, we will be forced to take stronger, second and third responses in consecutive steps." The agency did not say what those steps might be.
China joined the US, Japan, South Korea and other countries in condemning the test, the third North Korea has conducted since 2006.
China, whose patience with the unpredictable state appears to be wearing thin, summoned the North Korean ambassador and delivered a stern protest.
The Chinese foreign minister, Yang Jiechi, said Beijing was "strongly dissatisfied and resolutely opposed" to the test and urged the North to end its bellicose rhetoric and "or acts that could worsen the situation, and return to the right course of dialogue and consultation as soon as possible".
Analysts said the test had embarrassed China, the North's only ally and its biggest aid donor. "The test is hugely insulting to China, which now can be expected to follow through with threats to impose sanctions," Mark Fitzpatrick of the International Institute for Strategic Studies told Reuters.
North Korea's diplomats blasted UN resolutions, calling on it to abandon its nuclear weapons programme, and blamed Washington for the "gloomy" prospects for denuclearisation on the Korean peninsula.
"The US and their followers are sadly mistaken if they miscalculate [North Korea] would respect the entirely unreasonable resolutions against it. [North Korea] will never bow to any resolutions," Jon Yong-ryong, first secretary of North Korea's mission in Geneva, told the Conference on Disarmament.
The test, which took place in the north-east of the country just before noon local time, could bring North Korea closer to developing a nuclear warhead small enough to be mounted on a long-range missile and possibly bringing the west coast of the US within striking distance.
The authorities in Pyongyang said scientists had set off a "miniaturised" nuclear device with a greater explosive force than those used in two previous nuclear tests, in 2006 and 2009.
"It was confirmed that the nuclear test that was carried out at a high level in a safe and perfect manner using a miniaturised and lighter nuclear device with greater explosive force than previously did not pose any negative impact on the surrounding ecological environment," the KCNA announced.
The agency said the test had been in response to "outrageous" US hostility that "violently" undermined the regime's right to peacefully launch satellites – a reference to the condemnation and tighter sanctions that greeted Pyongyang's successful rocket launch almost two months ago.
Tuesday's test was quickly condemned by the UN general secretary, Ban Ki-moon, who said it was "deplorable" that Pyongyang had defied international calls to abandon it, adding that it was a "clear and grave violation of the relevant UN security council resolutions".
Barack Obama said the test was a highly provocative act that violated security council resolutions and posed a threat to US and international security. The US president called for "further swift and credible action by the international community" against North Korea.
William Hague, the UK foreign secretary, joined the international chorus of condemnation and warned North Korea faced further isolation if it did not stop developing its nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities.
Diplomats said the UN security council was convening an emergency meeting in response, although with so many sanctions in place against the regime after previous nuclear tests and rocket launches it is not clear what options remain open to the international community.
Any push for a fresh round of sanctions could take weeks. The US, South Korea, Japan and European nations are expected to call for further sanctions against the North for defying previous security council resolutions banning it from testing nuclear weapons and ballistic missile technology.
A UN body that monitors nuclear tests said earlier it had detected an "unusual seismic event" in North Korea. "The event shows clear explosion-like characteristics and its location is roughly congruent with the 2006 and 2009 [North Korea] nuclear tests," said Tibor TĂłth, the executive secretary of the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation in Vienna.
The agency said it constituted "a clear threat to international peace and security, and challenges efforts made to strengthen global nuclear disarmament and non-proliferation, in particular by ending nuclear testing".
Seismic activity had been picked up by the US geological survey and monitoring stations in South Korea. It appeared to be a more powerful blast than the North's two previous tests.
Experts in South Korea, the US and Japan put the quake at magnitudes of between 4.7 and 5.2. Earthquakes of magnitude 3.9 and 4.5 respectively were detected in the North's 2006 and 2009 nuclear tests. The US geological survey said Tuesday's seismic activity had been magnitude 4.9.
The South Korean government raised its military alert level, while Japan was preparing to dispatch military aircraft to look for signs of atmospheric radiation.
Tensions have been running high in the region since North Korea threatened to conduct a nuclear test in protest at fresh UN sanctions imposed after the regime successfully launched a satellite into orbit in mid-December.
The North again raised the diplomatic stakes when its most powerful military body, the National Defence Commission, warned its ballistic missile and nuclear weapons programmes were targeted at the US.
Any progress the North makes in its missile and nuclear programmes is a cause for concern, although it is thought to be some way off having the ability to produce a nuclear warhead small enough to mount on a reliable long-range missile.
North Korea has enough plutonium to build between four and eight nuclear weapons, according to Siegfried Hecker, a nuclear scientist who visited the country's main Yongbyon nuclear complex in 2010.
Other reports suggest the country has enough fissile material for about a dozen plutonium warheads. In 2009, the regime said it would begin enriching uranium, giving it another means of building a nuclear arsenal.
Speculation had been mounting that this third test could involve a uranium device – a clear signal that North Korea's scientists have mastered the ability to produce highly enriched uranium.
In October 2012, a spokesman from the North's national defence commission told state media the country had built a missile capable of striking the US but did not provide further details. A missile featured in an April 2012 military parade appeared to be an intercontinental ballistic missile but its authenticity has not been verified by foreign experts.
Daniel Pinkston of the International Crisis Group in Seoul said: "The question is whether things could spiral. I agree there should be some costs and consequences, but as far as believing the consequences should deter them – I think that's wishful thinking.
"The [North Koreans] view the world as hostile and menacing; and if even China is hostile, then even more so. Other people might think OK, they will be more cautious and have second thoughts because even China will take action. But, from their point of view, it reaffirms why they need [a nuclear programme]. When the world is like this, do you not want to be a nuclear power?"

How to cook perfect pancakes

Does butter make a better batter, what's the most ripping topping, and do you have any top tips for foolproof flips?


Felicity makes her perfect pancakes. Link to video: Perfect pancakes recipe
With hot cross buns already staling on shelves, and mince pies surely mere months away, plum pudding and pancakes are the only two foods I can think of that unite the nation for but one day a year. While more delicate sorts claim to find Christmas pud too "heavy", I've yet to meet anyone, regardless of religious affiliation, who eschews a Shrove Tuesday treat. Why we don't dare to bust them out at Easter too, or on fine September mornings, is a mystery to me. 

Pancakes are a remarkably versatile foodstuff: French crĂŞpes, Indiandosas, even Ethiopian injera, all fall under the same delightful banner. AsKen Albala, author of a gloriously comprehensive "global history" of the things explains, "any starchy batter … cooked in a small amount of fat on a flat surface" counts. But in Britain, as any schoolchild knows, modern pancakes are descended from those specifically designed to use up fat before the beginning of Lent, which means they tend to be heavier on the eggs and butter than, say, the fluffy American stack, or the squatRussian blini.

Elizabethan pancakes

Interestingly, the oldest recipe for pancakes as we know them comes from an English cookery book – the Good Huswifes Handmaide for the Kitchen (1594 edition) – but it's even richer than the modern incarnation: a pint of "thicke Creame", 5 egg yolks, "a good handful of flower" and 2 or 3 tablespoons of ale, seasoned with copious amounts of sugar, cinnamon and ginger.
Albala assures me that "the result is a horrible mess" with these proportions ("one can only imagine the author was either careless or had gargantuan hands"), but once I've added enough flour to make it into a more workable consistency, I manage to create a pancake, of sorts, from the mixture. It's so meltingly rich it's all but impossible to flip, which is clearly no good at all: tasty, but more of a chaser to some roasted peacock and a goblet of sack than one for the modern kitchen.

Puritan pancakes

The 17th century ushered in more sober tastes – Gervase Markham's 1615 recipe uses two eggs, a "pretty quantity of faire running water," cloves, mace, cinnamon and nutmeg, all beaten together, "which done make thicke as you think food with fine wheate flower". (No one can accuse these old-school food writers of being prescriptive.) Spice aside, they're pretty dull things; rubbery and heavy. Cream may be taking things too far, but milk is a must.

Butter batter?

Telegraph food writer Xanthe Clay uses melted butter in her batter to compensate for any loss of flavour occasioned by cooking them in vegetable oil. BBC Good Food, meanwhile, adds a tot of vegetable oil. The first gives a better tasting pancake, but because I quite like the nutty flavour of browned butter, and the slight crispness of a plainer batter (all the better a foil for crunchy sugar and lemon juice) I decide to include neither. I do take one tip from Xanthe however, using an extra yolk to give the pancakes a depth of flavour without that slight toughness that egg white imparts.

Stand or deliver?

Resting batter, like soaking rice, or washing mushrooms, is one of those ideas which I've always lazily chosen to ignore – after all, what kind of busy thrusting sort of executive has the time to make their pancake mix half an hour before they plan to eat? Gordon Ramsay says there's "no need", Nigel Slater and Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall disagree: and suddenly the idea seems almost attractive (even if Nigel does insist on calling them crĂŞpes).
I make up two batches of batter and allow one to sit for 30 minutes while I make and devour the other. The first lot aren't a disaster, but the second are distinctly more even in texture – Hugh suggests this is because the starch has had more time to absorb the liquid, and air bubbles to disperse.

The heat

Although Hugh and Good Food magazine counsel cooking the pancakes over a moderate heat, I prefer to follow Professor Peter Barham, physicist and adviser to Heston Blumenthal, in getting the pan really hot, because I like mine thin and crisp – you can turn it down before cooking if you prefer a softer finish. Spread the batter as thin as possible for delicately lacy edges – and treat the first pancake as an experiment; it usually goes wrong, which is a good excuse to treat it as a cook's perk. As Nigel so wisely observes, "you could argue that the perfect crĂŞpe is always the first of the batch … Wolfed hot and hissing from the pan, squirted with lemon and a thick layer of sugar - this is the pancake that pleases the mouth if not the eye."
Perk aside, these are also good wrapped around a creamy seafood filling, stuffed with spinach and ricotta and gratinated – or, if you must, slathered with whipped cream and chocolate sauce. I've even heard it whispered that the sky won't fall in if you make them this evening, as well as next Tuesday …

Perfect pancakes

Perfect pancakeA perfect pancake. Photograph: Elliot Smith for the Guardian
Makes about 8
125g plain flour
Pinch of salt
1 egg plus 1 egg yolk
225ml whole or semi-skimmed milk 
Small knob of butter
1. Sift the flour in a large mixing bowl and add a pinch of salt. Make a well in the centre, and pour the egg and the yolk into it. Mix the milk with 2 tbsp water and then pour a little in with the egg and beat together.
2. Whisk the flour into the liquid ingredients, drawing it gradually into the middle until you have a smooth paste the consistency of double cream. Whisk the rest of the milk in until the batter is more like single cream. Cover and refrigerate for at least half an hour.
3. Heat the butter in a frying pan on a medium-high heat – you only need enough fat to just grease the bottom of the pan. It should be hot enough that the batter sizzles when it hits it.
4. Spread a small ladleful of batter across the bottom of the pan, quickly swirling to coat. Tip any excess away. When it begins to set, loosen the edges with a thin spatula or palette knife, and when it begins to colour on the bottom, flip it over with the same instrument and cook for another 30 seconds. (If you're feeling cocky, you can also toss the pancake after loosening it: grasp the handle firmly with both hands, then jerk the pan up and slightly towards you.)
5. Pancakes are best eaten as soon as possible, before they go rubbery, but if you're cooking for a crowd, keep them separate until you're ready to serve by layering them up between pieces of kitchen roll.
Why don't we eat more pancakes in this country – and which recipes are good enough to change our minds? What are your favourite toppings, and do you have any top tips for foolproof flipping?

Ed warns Ed on Euro poll


Ed Balls and Ed Miliband


ED Balls risked plunging Labour into civil war over Europe yesterday by declaring the party would be “stupid” to rule out an EU referendum.

The Shadow Chancellor insisted it was vital they did not let themselves “be caricatured as an anti-referendum party”.
His views contrast sharply with Ed Miliband’s admission last month that Labour didn’t want an in-out vote.
The party’s official position is a fudge that rules out offering a nationwide vote now — but not in the future.Former leadership rival Mr Balls declared: “If we allow ourselves either to be the ‘status quo party’ on Europe, or the ‘anti-referendum party’, then we’ve got a problem.
“We would be pretty stupid to allow ourselves to get into either of those positions.”
He added: “We’ve absolutely not ruled out a referendum.”
The outburst came after The Sun revealed deep unease among senior Labour figures over Mr Miliband’s stance.
David Cameron
Vote vow ... David Cameron
They blame his pro-European brother David for talking him out of matching David Cameron’s landmark pledge for a vote by 2017.
Policy review boss Jon Cruddas is leading the internal battle to offer a referendum in their 2015 manifesto.
But a source close to Mr Miliband insisted Mr Balls backed the party’s official line, adding: “It is ridiculous to suggest there is a difference between Ed Miliband and Ed Balls on Europe.” The PM attacked Labour over the muddle in the Commons yesterday.
After Mr Balls was reprimanded for “barking” at the Government, he said: “The Shadow Chancellor is indeed barking. We don’t mean as in Barking and Dagenham. We mean woof.”
Mr Cameron was cheered by MPs on all sides after updating them on the proposed cuts to the EU budget.
He challenged Mr Miliband to say whether his MEPs will vote with other socialists in the European Parliament to block the deal next month.
But after talks, Labour clarified they will back the historic spending reductions.

Daisy right now


Beyoncé dazzles in floral underwear

Beyonce for Vogue magazine

BEYONCE Knowles looks stunning as she poses in her underwear for Vogue magazine.


The 31-year-old diva appears on the cover of the March 2013 Power Issue of the US version of the glossy.


Beyonce poses in Vogue
And she proves why she is one of the most beautiful women in the world as she is seen posing in a series of glamorous and dramatic outfits for the shoot.
One shot sees her wearing a ruffled red flamenco-style gown as she lies seductively on a chaise longue.
And on the cover she sports an edgy monochrome outfit and sleek up-do teamed with light make-up that accentuates her natural beauty even further.
And a behind-the-scenes video shows the light-hearted side of the star as she laughs and playfully dances on set between shots.
The March issue of Vogue USA is available from March 19 in stores and now for digital download.
For more information or to see more of Beyonce posibng for Vogue visit AmericanVogue.com.



Imogen Thomas: I had a blow dry before birth so I would look good in my pictures


Imogen Thomas went for a blow dry before having her baby Ariana Siena Horsley


IMOGEN Thomas says she had a blow dry before giving birth because she wanted to "look OK in my pictures".

The Welsh glamour girl, 30, had her first child — Ariana Siena Horsley — by Caesarean yesterday.
And before going into hospital she says she had her hair done because she didn't want to look "really sweaty and have no bra on" in her post-birth pics.
She says in her Star magazine column this week: "I went for a blow dry before I went into hospital.
"I’ve seen some awful photos of women who have just given birth who look really sweaty and have no bra on.
"I just want to look OK in my pictures."
Adam Horsley and Imogen Thomas
Proud parents ... Adam Horsley and Imogen Thomas
Rex Features
Imogen was forced to have a C-section because her daughter was in the breech position.
Tweeting after the birth yesterday morning, Imogen gushed: "Ariana is beautiful & perfect. Thanku 2 every1 for all ur well wishes & support.
"This has been the greatest experience & day of our lives x."
Ariana, who weighed 6lb 2oz, is former Big Brother star Imogen's first child with her city trader boyfriend Adam Horsley.



Batman & Ricky


Val Kilmer and Ricky Gervais


RICKY GERVAIS has signed former Batman actor Val Kilmer to appear in Life’s Too Short.

The Hollywood star will join fellow A-listers Les Dennis, Keith Chegwin and ex-soap actor Shaun “Barry from EastEnders” Williamson in the one-off special when it returns.
The hour-long episode – created by Ricky and pal Stephen Merchant – is in lieu of a second series of the sitcom starring dwarf Warwick Davis.
It will reunite Kilmer and Davis, who worked together 25 years ago on the fantasy movie Willow.
In the new show, to be screened on BBC2 in the spring, Davis takes Cheggers, Les and Shaun under his wing in the hope of rebooting their careers.
Stephen, who is also directing the programme alongside Ricky, said: “I think fans of Willow are going be really surprised to see Warwick Davis and Val Kilmer reunited on screen.
“Almost as surprised as Val when he finds out what we’re paying!”
The show includes on-screen roles for Ricky and Stephen.

Trolley dolly Taylor launches fresh hat-tack on Harry in new vid


Taylor Swift wears similar beanie hat to her ex boyfriend Harry Styles from One Direction


TAYLOR Swift appears to be taking yet another dig at her ex Harry Styles – wearing his trademark beanie hat in her new video.

The singer risked injury by taking a ride in a shopping trolley pushed by pals as she shot scenes for the music promo.
She also demonstrated great balance, standing up in the supermarket cart while holding an ice cream.
But it was the sight of her woolly headwear that really caught the eye during her adrenaline-fuelled work day in Malibu.
Given Harry’s famous fondness for beanie hats, it seems likely that Taylor’s decision to wear one in her new vid wasn’t a coincidence.
Taylor Swift appears to wear One Direction star Harry Styles' trademark beanie hat
Beanie meany ... Taylor Swift
X17Online.com
During the spoken part of her song, she acted out a woman chatting to a former lover on the phone – and she used a British accent for the male.
One Direction star Harry Styles wearing beanie hat
Fan of woolly headwear ... Harry Styles
REX
The 23-year-old said: “So he calls me up and he’s like, ‘I still love you'.
“And I’m like, ’I’m sorry. I’m busy opening up the Grammys, and we are never, ever getting back together. Like ever.'”
Despite the jibe, it’s claimed that Harry’s 1D mates have urged him not to hit back.
Taylor Swift
Balancing act ... Taylor Swift
X17Online.com
A source told RadarOnline: “The lads have told Harry to forget about retaliating, because it’s just not worth it.
“They’ve all advised him to be the bigger person and not to wash his dirty laundry in public – it’s just tacky and embarrassing.”
Taylor Swift
Trollied ... Taylor Swift
X17Online.com
Taylor and Harry split earlier this year after a whirlwind 65-day romance.
Their relationship broke down following a blazing row after flying to the Caribbean island of Virgin Gorda on New Year’s Day.
Taylor Swift