BBC In early 2022, residents of the rural Philippine town of Bamban, north of Manila, gathered for the mayoral campaign rally of a plucky ...

 BBC A composite image showing 1) a poster of a smiling Alice Guo in a red outfit when she ran for mayor and 2) a photo of Guo weairng a mask and answerng questions with a mic in front of her after she is detained

BBC

In early 2022, residents of the rural Philippine town of Bamban, north of Manila, gathered for the mayoral campaign rally of a plucky young woman named Alice Leal Guo.

Supporters dressed in pink – their candidate's favourite colour – chattered in anticipation of her arrival.

Then came the low thudding of a helicopter rotor, prompting cheers from the crowd. Sitting in the cockpit, Guo – in a pink shirt and a pilot's headset – flashed a smile, waving down at her supporters.

As the helicopter touched down, the crowd broke into a chant: "A-lice Guo! A-lice Guo!"

At 31, Guo's star was rising: with promises of generous subsidies and economic development, all delivered in her signature brassy, upbeat tone, she had galvanised a following in the town which would see her become its first female mayor.

But few of those cheering could have predicted that less than three years later, Guo would be behind bars, facing charges of human trafficking and allegations that she was a Chinese spy.

Her downfall began with a police raid that uncovered a compound where a giant scam operation was being run from just behind her office. But as the authorities delved deeper, and Guo struggled to answer basic queries about her past, a perplexing question emerged: who really is Alice Guo?

The mayor everyone seemed to love

Guo says she came to local politics from the pig-farming business, having managed her family's commercial piggery for several years.

The career change would have required deep pockets – and when quizzed about her campaign finances much later, Guo said it was friends and acquaintances in the pig-farming business who had supported her mayoral bid.

A leaflet from Alice Guo's election campaign made into a composite image with another image of the Bamban municipality building.
Guo's rising star was interrupted by the discovery of a scam operation just minutes from her office in the Municipal Hall

But Guo also had connections to a number of wealthy Chinese businesspeople. Little is known about them, but some have subsequently been convicted of money-laundering, and now also face charges of human trafficking alongside Guo.

Her campaign focused on her sunny persona. On stage at one event, Guo told her audience: "For our team, rule number one is: Do no harm! No harm is allowed, we should just spread love, love, love!"

Such cheerful platitudes would carry a taint of irony, in retrospect, when authorities exposed the harm and suffering they alleged had been inflicted under Guo's watch.

But upon taking office in June 2022, she brought the youthful, bright-eyed energy of her campaign into Bamban Municipal Hall, painting it pink and decorating the outside of the building with flowers.

Rappler/Joann Manabat A squat building two floors tall, painted red and pink and decorated with flowers, with the words "Bamban Municipal Hall" emblazoned across the top of its facade in large silver lettersRappler/Joann Manabat
Bamban Municipal Hall as it was during Guo's time as mayor

"Alice was beautiful, she was kind and she was helpful to other women," said Priscilla May Aban, 31, who runs a vegetable stall in the town. She told the BBC that she had voted for Guo precisely because she was a woman, adding that as mayor, Guo had arranged cleaning jobs for women of the town.

Guo was widely regarded as a caring and empathetic leader, judging by conversations the BBC had with several residents of Bamban. Miah Mejia, the daughter of one of Alice's political allies, claimed that she had given a free scholarship to every local household. Another interviewee told us he hadn't received a college scholarship but had been given a cash subsidy for his school fees.

An emotional Francisco Flores, 75, said, "She's helped a lot of poor people here in Bamban, giving medicines and the way she is with people, you'd never see a problem."

He proudly mentioned the arrival of a McDonald's and a branch of the Philippine fast-food chain Jollibee during Guo's tenure.

BBC/Tony Han A lady, Miah, holding a pink and blue poster featuring a headshot of Alice Guo with a wide smile above her name in large, white letters. Next to her is an older man, Francisco, wearing a white polo shirt and baseball cap.BBC/Tony Han
Miah (L) and Francisco (R) with one of Alice Guo's mayoral campaign posters

Online, pro-Guo social media accounts portrayed her as a progressive young mayor presiding over a pink-tinted wonderland of parades, buffalo races and concerts.

A year-and-half into her mayoralty, however, this carefully crafted image began to crumble.

Inside Bamban's underbelly

In February 2024, Philippine police received a report about a Vietnamese national who had escaped from the captivity of Zun Yuan Technology Incorporated, a company operating out of a walled compound in Bamban.

On the evening of 12 March, police officers and soldiers gathered nearby to plan a raid on the site, located just a minute's walk from Guo's office in the Municipal Hall.

One officer who was there, Marvin de la Paz of the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission (PAOCC), told the BBC that around midnight, police informants sent word that people were leaving the compound in buses.

Suspecting that their plans for a raid had been leaked, Mr de la Paz and his colleagues raced straight for the compound. On the way, they saw people fleeing in the other direction, and some officers in the convoy had to peel off and chase them down. When they arrived at the site, they found one of the largest scam hubs ever uncovered in the Philippines, containing 36 buildings and spanning almost 20 acres.

"We were amazed," Mr de la Paz said, "That was our first time seeing such a grandiose entrance [to a scam compound]... Somehow you feel like you're small in this compound."

It later emerged that the compound was built on land which Guo had previously owned – and that, as mayor, she had granted Zun Yuan a business permit. Her name also appeared on an electricity bill found at the site.

Alice Guo's lawyers did not respond to the BBC's request for comment.

BBC/Tony Han A long, low building faced in white panels and dark blue coloured glass. It has multiple floors, and features an arcade of businesses on ground level. An archway has been driven through the centre of the building, resting on two large pillars.BBC/Tony Han
The compound's largest building featured a liquor store, teahouse and nightclub

Zun Yuan was purportedly an online gambling and entertainment company, which held a Philippine Offshore Gaming Operator (Pogo) licence – accreditation that previously allowed such entities to operate legally in the Philippines.

A relaxation in gambling regulations under ex-President Rodrigo Duterte in 2017 led to a surge of Pogo-driven business activity. But many scam syndicates also found Pogo licences useful for masking their criminal operations – and PAOCC told the BBC they found evidence that Zun Yuan was running "pig-butchering" scams from its office in the compound.

Pig-butchering is a con where scammers take time to build trust with victims by posing as lovers or prospective business partners, then trick them into investing their money into fraudulent schemes.

When shown around the compound by PAOCC officers earlier this month, the BBC found, in a deserted employee dormitory, training scripts on how to scam targets.

"I want to create my own financial empire," a scripted character – a female crypto expert at an international bank - says to her target, before flattering him and encouraging him to share his dreams. She is told to put her target on hold while pretending to "cash in on a trade" - only to declare, moments later, that she had made a killing. She then asks whether he himself knows how to trade, setting him up for the transfer of money that would soon follow.

This is just one of the many ways in which these compounds swindle billions of dollars around the world. Typically run by Chinese organised crime groups across South East Asia, they are staffed by a mixture of willing employees and trafficked victims who are forced to scam.

BBC/Tony Han A slightly worn-looking notebook, with the phrase "I will meet my targets tomorrow" copied out in Chinese hundreds of times on the ruled lines in a somewhat messy scrawlBBC/Tony Han
A notebook in which a worker has copied out the same phrase hundreds of times in Chinese

According to de la Paz, he and his colleagues found more than 300 foreign nationals in the Bamban compound, many of them working there against their will.

Punishments for disobedient or underperforming workers ranged from beatings to the banal: the BBC was shown a notebook from the compound, in which a worker had copied out the phrase, "I will meet my targets tomorrow", hundreds of times in Chinese.

Enclosed by walls topped with barbed wire, the workers' area of the compound was its own self-contained world, featuring a basketball court, supermarket and restaurants. Employees lived in rooms of six, each with a balcony equipped with a toilet and shower.

Their bosses meanwhile lived in a separate gated enclave, says de la Paz, who showed the BBC one of the villas there.

A marble-clad living room featured a high-end entertainment system, security monitor and ornate hardwood furniture. Behind the house was a swimming pool, beside which was a staircase that led down into what were supposedly escape tunnels, now flooded with water.

BBC/Tony Han A view from a balcony, with a ripped curtain and an old towel in the foreground. Beyond these can be seen a basketball court, behind which lies another dormitory block several floors highBBC/Tony Han
A view of the basketball courts from one of the dormitory blocks and...
BBC/Tony Han A two-floor-high living room with floor-to-ceiling windows and curtains. The space is clad in marble, and furnished with a coffee table and sofas carved out of wood in a rich red-brown colour. It also features a large flatscreen television.BBC/Tony Han
the lavish interior of one of the villas

By the time security forces stormed the Bamban compound on the evening of 12 March 2024, some of these scam bosses had already eluded capture.

But the raid signalled a shift in the political climate.

In June 2022, just as Guo was being sworn in as mayor, Rodrigo Duterte's presidential term had ended.

His successor, Ferdinand Marcos Jr, soon began facing calls for a ban on Pogo businesses. Many across Philippine society sounded the alarm about the criminality that often lurked within, despite the millions they brought in as revenue. Their biggest customers were rich Chinese, which led to concerns about foreign influence as Marcos, unlike his predecessor, courted Washington over Beijing.

When the raid in Bamban happened, it exposed a dark underbelly of the Philippines – and the two worlds of Alice Guo – the pink office from where she had sought a political career and the scam compound, which suggested far murkier ambitions – collapsed in on one another.

'Amnesia girl'

Guo had been a relatively unknown name in the Philippines until last May when she was called to appear before the Senate to explain her links to the scam compound.

Almost overnight, she became a meme. When she told senators she had grown up on a family farm, it brought swift ridicule from Filipinos who said she was too glamorous for the countryside. She became notorious for her inconsistent, vague comments, as well as her claims to have forgotten basic details of her early life, leading social media to nickname her "my amnesia girl".

Guo said she'd had a secluded childhood as the child of a Chinese father and Filipino mother – but could not remember where in the Philippines her family home had been.

At one point, a senator said to her: "Please mayor, a little more candour than you have shown so far in answering some of the important questions."

She told sceptical senators that she had sold her stake in the land before becoming mayor, and that the issuance of a business permit to Zun Yuan had been a mere administrative measure.

Suspicion mounted when, during the hearings, a court in Singapore convicted two of Guo's Chinese former business partners in the Philippines of money-laundering.

Then, last July, despite the intense public interest in her case, Guo managed to slip through the travel restrictions imposed on her and escape to Indonesia. A few months later, she was re-arrested and returned to the Philippines.

Getty Images Alice Guo wearing glasses and a black jacket is seated at a table during one of the senate hearings in Manila. Begind her two female officers are visible in their navy uniforms.   Getty Images
Guo appeared several times before Senators to answer questions about her links to the scam compound

It was also in July that Philippine investigators made a breakthrough. Guo's fingerprints were found to match those on file for a girl from China named Guo Hua Ping, who had arrived in the Philippines alongside her mother, also Chinese, in the early 2000s.

This revelation sparked another line of inquiry in the Senate: the idea that Guo might be a spy, exercising influence or gathering intelligence for the Chinese state. The idea spread quickly among the watching public, dominating public discussion of the case.

Jaye Bekema - a senior officer on the staff of Risa Hontiveros, one of the senators who probed potential links between scam syndicates and Chinese intelligence - says the possibility that Guo was a spy warranted an investigation.

"I think there should be some clarity as to what a spy means," Ms Bekema said, while stressing that there is no conclusive proof of Guo being a spy.

"I am more likely to believe that she didn't plan to be a spy, but that she was tapped to be one [by the Chinese government] because of her criminal connections and her influence on local politics and the local government."

In many ways, Guo had become a victim of her own success. The career she chose and the limelight she worked hard to attract meant that she was fully exposed to public scrutiny when China-Philippines relations soured under Marcos.

As political rhetoric escalated and tensions between the two countries spiralled, not least of all in the South China Sea, the young mayor found herself in the crosshairs of espionage accusations.

Others, however, are more sceptical of the allegation. The Chinese state and Guo would have made strange bedfellows, according to Teresita Ang See, a civic leader in the Chinese-Filipino community.

"What can she spy on in a place like [Bamban]? It's in central Luzon, it's not near any of the sensitive establishments. Why use her? She's very visible, she flaunts her lifestyle. The last person you would use as a spy would be a person like Alice Guo," says Ang See.

The Pogo problem

But those who led the questioning against Guo, such as Senator Sherwin Gatchalian, say that it's more complicated than that.

"Transnational criminals working around the region know how to tap into... I'll call it local talent to penetrate our society, whether through politics or business," he explains.

Either way, Guo's case shed light on the Philippine state's vulnerability to being corrupted and co-opted by criminal groups abusing Pogo licences.

BBC/Tony Han A couple on a moped ride past a shop plastered with green and pink campaign posters with the candidates' names and headshotsBBC/Tony Han
Bamban is festooned with campaign posters for the upcoming municipal elections

In mid-2024, President Marcos declared a blanket ban on all Pogos, citing their widespread abuse by organised crime.

Gatchalian says that the investigation into Alice Guo helped drive this change.

"Because of it, there was a groundswell of people really clamouring for a ban," he tells the BBC. "And that's when the president officially banned Pogos."

Since then, Philippine police have raided scores of scam hubs across the country. But given how influential the syndicates have become, there are concerns that leaks within the security forces and government institutions are allowing criminals to evade capture, according to Mr de la Paz.

Ms Bekema says she feels certain that some candidates in the upcoming national elections are still being financed with Pogo money, while Ang See says that serving police officers have been found working for the criminal syndicates.

BBC/Tony Han A man dressed in a loose-fitting blue t-shirt with "California, San Francisco" emblazoned across the chest stands in front of a faded campaign poster bearing the words "Mayor Alice Leal Guo"BBC/Tony Han
Fortunato Mejia ran for councillor in 2022 as a member of Guo's political party

In Bamban, concerns about state infiltration seem far from people's minds.

The streets are decked with brightly-coloured campaign posters for the upcoming municipal elections. The Municipal Hall has been whitewashed, and the flowers have been removed.

Guo is currently on trial in six separate cases, potentially facing decades in prison, and has been barred from running for public office again. She has pleaded not guilty to human trafficking charges.

Yet many still treasure the memory of their embattled ex-mayor.

One of those currently standing for Bamban councillor is Miah Mejia's father, Fortunato, a garrulous 69-year-old, who also ran in 2022 as a member of Alice's party, although he lost. He even featured in one of her publicity videos at the time.

He says that the people of Bamban had taken a chance by electing Guo, but that she had good connections to Chinese investors and had delivered on all her promises to the townspeople.

He is also indifferent to the Senate's evidence that Guo was not a Filipino.

"That's what they've been showing, but we still don't believe it because we don't care whether she's Filipino or not," he says. "What's important is whether or not she helps us."

Mr Mejia is adamant that the Alice Guo he knew would not have been involved in human trafficking.

"Never, ever would she do something like that," he says, flatly. "I know she has a heart. She fears the Lord."

Additional reporting by Harry Atteshlis and Jay Behrouzi

  Washington DC is still digesting an apparent security breach at the heart of the Trump administration. It's the story of how a journal...

 


Washington DC is still digesting an apparent security breach at the heart of the Trump administration.


It's the story of how a journalist - the Atlantic magazine's Jeffrey Goldberg - was added to a Signal platform messaging group which apparently included Vice-President JD Vance and Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, in addition to National Security Adviser Mike Waltz.


The topic being discussed was attacking the Iran-backed Houthi group in Yemen.


Goldberg said he had seen classified military plans for the strikes, including weapons packages, targets and timing, two hours before the bombs struck.


What are the main revelations in a nutshell?


LIVE: Yemen strike secrets shared

Anthony Zurcher: Washington stunned

Three potential security breaches in Signal group chat leak

Vance questions Trump's thinking

On the military action, Goldberg reported that the account named JD Vance wrote: "I think we are making a mistake."


The vice-president said targeting Houthi forces that are attacking vessels in the Suez Canal serves European interests more than the US, because Europe has more trade running through the canal.


US launches wave of air strikes on Yemen's Houthis

Vance added that his boss was perhaps unaware of how US action could help Europe.


"I am not sure the president is aware how inconsistent this is with his message on Europe right now," Vance said. "There's a further risk that we see moderate to severe spike in oil prices."


The vice-president went on to say, according to Goldberg, he would support the consensus but would prefer to delay it by a month.


Goldberg reported in his article that spokesman for JD Vance had later sent him a statement underlining that Trump and Vance had had "subsequent conversations about this matter and are in complete agreement".


Since coming to power, Trump has castigated his European Nato allies, urged them to increase defence spending and generally insisted that Europe needs to take responsibility for protecting its own interests.


Blame for 'free-loading' Europe

Arguments over why the US could - and should - carry out the military strike against the Houthis did not sway Vance.


He said to the defence secretary, "If you think we should do it let's go. I just hate bailing Europe out again."


Hegseth reciprocated:


"I fully share your loathing of European free-loading. It's PATHETIC."


A group member, only identified as "SM" suggested that after the strike, the US should "make clear to Egypt and Europe what we expect in return".


"If Europe doesn't remunerate, then what?" he asked.


"If the US successfully restores freedom of navigation at great cost there needs to be some further economic gain extracted in return," the user continues.

  Scientists Develop “Super Sapphire” That Resists Scratches, Glare, Fog, and More Researchers at UT Austin have developed durable sapphire ...

 

Scientists Develop “Super Sapphire” That Resists Scratches, Glare, Fog, and More





Researchers at UT Austin have developed durable sapphire nanostructures that repel glare, dust, and fog, potentially revolutionizing phone screens, glasses, and windshields. Inspired by moth eyes and lotus leaves, the structures are both tough and multifunctional, ideal for harsh environments like space and defense.
New sapphire nanostructures created at UT Austin repel dust, glare, and fog while staying durable. Inspired by nature, these surfaces could be used in electronics, optics, space, and defense, and are being developed for real-world applications.

Imagine a phone screen that stays flawless no matter how many times you drop it, glasses that eliminate glare, or a windshield that doesn’t get dusty. These could soon become a reality, thanks to a new method for producing sapphire.

Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have developed innovative techniques to bestow superpowers upon sapphire, a material often seen as just a gemstone but valued in industries ranging from defense to consumer electronics. Its exceptional hardness makes it nearly impossible to scratch, making it ideal for high-performance applications.

“Sapphire is a high-value material because of its hardness and many other beneficial properties,” said Chih-Hao Chang, associate professor in the Walker Department of Mechanical Engineering and lead researcher on the project. “But those same properties also make it very difficult to manufacture at small scales.”

Engineered Sapphire Sample
A sample of the sapphire. Credit: The University of Texas at Austin
Record-Breaking Sapphire Nanostructures
Chang and his team hope to ease this challenge with new sapphire-based nanostructures as documented in Materials Horizons. The nanostructures show the highest aspect ratio yet for this material, which enables its superpowers without completely losing its stiffness and hardness.

The research: While not quite as scratch-resistant as traditional bulk sapphire – the nanostructures are comparable to tungsten or traditional glass in that way – these new sapphire nanostructures repel fog, dust, and glare with self-cleaning capabilities.

Professor Chih Hao Chang With Mehmet Kepenekci and Andrew Tunell
Professor Chih-Hao Chang with Mehmet Kepenekci and Andrew Tunell, members of his lab. Credit: The University of Texas at Austin
“This is very exciting since nanostructures are traditionally seen as being fragile, but making them in sapphire can solve this problem,” said Kun-Chieh Chien, a recent Ph.D. graduate from Chang’s lab and one of the lead authors.

Nature-Inspired, Self-Cleaning Design
Inspired by the moth eye, the tapered profile of the sapphire nanostructures enhance light transmission and reduce glare. The nanostructures’ high surface energy and aspect ratio create a superhydrophilic surface to prevent fog. The structures can also be treated to be a superhydrophobic surface to allow water droplets to roll off the surface, mimicking the lotus leaf effect.

“Our sapphire nanostructures are not only multifunctional but also mechanically robust, making them ideal for applications where durability and performance are critical,” said Mehmet Kepenekci, a graduate student in Chang’s lab and one of the lead authors.

Why it matters: This technology has a wide variety of benefits. For consumers, it could lead to smartphones that are easier to read in challenging lighting conditions, lenses and windows that don’t fog up, cameras that aren’t prone to glare and hardy windshields that don’t get dusty.

The Nanostructures, Plus Anti Fog and Glare Capabilities.
The nanostructures, plus anti-fog and glare capabilities. Credit: The University of Texas at Austin
As we embark on the next generation of space travel, the anti-dust properties could ensure mission-critical equipment doesn’t get caked in dust during landing missions on other planets, for example. It could lead to the creation of stronger infrared sensors and protective windows in defense applications.

“Our self-cleaning sapphire surfaces can maintain 98.7% dust-free area using gravity alone,” said Andrew Tunell, the student who conducted the dust adhesion experiments. “This is a significant improvement over existing dust-mitigation technologies and is particularly beneficial for applications in space, where water is not readily available for cleaning.”

What’s next: The researchers aim to bring this technology to life, and they’re looking to improve it several ways. They’re scaling up fabrication to apply these nanostructures over larger samples, improving mechanical and chemical properties to enhance their abilities and exploring even more real-world applications.

Reference: “Scratch-resistant sapphire nanostructures with anti-glare, anti-fogging, and anti-dust properties” by Kun-Chieh Chien, Mehmet Kepenekci, Andrew Tunell and Chih-Hao Chang, 11 February 2025, Materials Horizons

  Entertainment Royal family breaks silence after Prince William's heartfelt message Royal family shares an update on key royal figure B...

 Entertainment

Royal family breaks silence after Prince William's heartfelt message

Royal family shares an update on key royal figure

By Web Desk
March 24, 2025
Royal family breaks silence after Prince Williams heartfelt message
Royal family breaks silence after Prince William's heartfelt message

The royal family has shared an update on a key royal figure after Prince William's heartfelt video message to a beloved person.

Buckingham Palace has released details about Duchess Sophie's husband Prince Edward's visit to Shropshire.

 ** Princess Eugenie’s Milestone Celebration Overshadowed by Prince Andrew Scandal**   Princess Eugenie, the youngest daughter of Prince And...

 **Princess Eugenie’s Milestone Celebration Overshadowed by Prince Andrew Scandal**  

Princess Eugenie, the youngest daughter of Prince Andrew and Sarah Ferguson, is set to celebrate her 35th birthday on Sunday. However, her milestone event has been significantly impacted by the ongoing controversies surrounding her father, Prince Andrew.  


According to royal experts, Eugenie has chosen to keep her birthday celebrations private, opting for a low-key gathering with her immediate family rather than a large, public event. This decision comes as the royal family continues to navigate a challenging period, both personally and publicly.  


Jennie Bond, a former BBC royal correspondent, shared insights with *The Mirror*, highlighting the difficulties Eugenie and her sister, Princess Beatrice, have faced in recent years. “The past couple of years have been extremely tough for both sisters,” Bond said. “They are incredibly close to their mother, Sarah Ferguson, who has battled cancer, and they have also been deeply affected by the cancer diagnoses of King Charles and the Princess of Wales.”  


Bond added that Eugenie’s focus is on spending her special day with her parents, husband Jack Brooksbank, and their young family in a quiet, intimate setting. “Eugenie will want to celebrate her birthday with her parents and her own little family in a very private way,” she explained.  


The decision to keep the celebration understated also reflects the ongoing fallout from Prince Andrew’s scandals, which have cast a long shadow over the York family. Despite the allegations and controversies surrounding her father, Eugenie and Beatrice remain fiercely protective of him.  


“It has been very difficult for them to watch their father under attack from so many sides,” Bond noted. “But they are a very close family, and both sisters are deeply committed to supporting him and his welfare.”  


As Princess Eugenie marks this personal milestone, the focus remains on her resilience and dedication to her family amidst the challenges they face. While the celebrations may be subdued, they underscore the strength of familial bonds in the face of adversity.

 .  .  .  .  .  .  .     By Noor Nanji & Annabel Rackham Culture reporters For two female journalists in their 30s - who also happen ...

 .  .  .  .
 .  .  .    

For two female journalists in their 30s - who also happen to be massive Swifties - there's a lot about Taylor Swift's new album that rings true.

From exes who strung us along, to comfort-eating after a breakup. We've all been there, and pop's biggest superstar has too.

Swift is no stranger to writing about personal subject matters. And she's also by no means the first musician to sing about heartbreak, pain and sorrow.

But in The Tortured Poets Department, Swift pinpoints the unique 21st Century anxieties that so many of us millennials have experienced when dating.

Perhaps more than any other song on her new album, So Long, London is the real sucker punch.

"I'm pissed off you let me give you all that youth for free," she laments, in a track widely thought to be about her ex-partner, Joe Alwyn.

This feels like a pivotal moment in the album. A moment so raw, that you're stopped in your tracks.

It doesn't matter that Swift is a world-famous musician, with A-list friends and a massive billion-dollar fortune. Beneath all of that, she's a 34-year-old woman, who understands all too well the anxieties about running out of time to find "The One", settle down and start a family.

 Swift still experiences dating despair'

"[The song] is about telling everybody you're fine and being creative and pushing through when you're not really giving yourself the space to heal or to grieve, that you need this," Reid says.

"Again, that's something that I can really resonate with because I spent the early period of my break-up single parenting, and going on TV and radio and writing books and telling everybody how great I was and how happy I was when I was, in fact, processing one of the worst traumas of my life."

Helen Brown, a music critic at The Independent, says "a whole generation of women" have found Swift's songs to be the soundtrack to their lives.

"Singing of the elusive lure of rings and cradles, Swift articulates the challenges facing a generation who are marrying and having children on average five years later than in the 1990s," she tells BBC News.

"It's equally reassuring and alarming to think that even without the financial challenges facing most people her age, Swift still experiences the dating despair of her peers.

"Like them she sounds overwhelmed by the options and describes being ghosted as she asks herself if she expects too much, or too little of herself and her partners."


 New Huawei Watch 4 Pro special edition smartwatch launches with upgraded features The Huawei Watch 4 Pro Space Exploration smartw...

 New Huawei Watch 4 Pro special edition smartwatch launches with upgraded featuresThe Huawei Watch 4 Pro Space Exploration smartwatch has been officially announced in China following recent leaks. The model has a red, black and dark gray design with various premium materials. Plus, the wearable has several feature upgrades compared to the original version of the watch.


The Watch 4 Pro Space Exploration watch also has a diamond-like coating over the aerospace-grade titanium for improved wear and scratch resistance. Like the standard version, the watch has a 1.5-inch AMOLED LTPO screen with a 466 x 466 px resolution. In addition to design changes, there are several feature upgrades. Version 2.0 of the health report features 13 biometrics, compared to the 10 of version 1.0. The additions include pulse wave arrhythmia analysis, sleep apnea detection, and hyperglycemia risk assessment. Another feature is the Ultra Wide Band (UWB) car key, a new tool alongside the Bluetooth and NFC car controls available on the original model. Other features of the smartwatch include WeChat, eSIM, contactless payments and maps. The watch lasts for 4.5 days with typical use or up to 12 days in ultra-long battery life mode.


While the device will officially launch on April 12th, you can pre-order the Huawei Watch 4 Pro Space Exploration smartwatch in China for 4,999 yuan (~$690). For comparison, the existing version of the watch with the Mars Titanium Strap retails for 3,999 yuan (~$550) in China and €649 (~$700) in Germany. It is unclear whether or when the new edition of the smartwatch could go on sale in other countries.

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