Luster Pro Light Review: UK’s First Complete DIY Teeth Whitening System

Out of all of the things you can do to look younger, whitening your teeth is one of the most important. It takes years off you. Teeth whitening can be expensive though, and scary. I have heard stories in the past of people burning away their gums. Thankfully these are now a thing of the past. The UK’s First Complete DIY Teeth Whitening System, Luster Pro Light has been released. Let’s find out if it works.

luster Pro Light Review

It uses the same paint-on whitening gel and Dual-Action ‘blue light’ technology that is used by dentists. Luster Pro Light does work and it also did not upset my sensitive teeth. It is clinically proven to be safe and effective which I was glad to read before I used it. I am always very cautious before I use anything. It can be a little bit of a pain pretreating with whitening solution, brushing and then applying the dual-action whitening. The ready-to-use trays which you put in your mouth are not exactly comfortable but this is all small fry and a minimal amount of effort that you can do in the comfort of your own home.

The treatment really does work. You can even use the rapid schedule and get results in 30 minutes. I will definitely use this again for top ups. Already a best-seller and close to becoming the No. 1 teeth whitening system in America where it first went on sale, this is good stuff indeed.

£49.99 from Boots.com or Boots.

 

 

First World War For Dummies Dr Seán Lang Interview

I was very excited to interview Dr Seán Lang, author of First World War For Dummies. Dr Lang has written a great book, you can read our review here. He also gives great answers in the interview below. Enjoy!

firstworldwarfordummiesbookreview

How long did it take to research and write the book?

Not easy to say, because in a sense I have been reading up on the FWW for years, and teaching it to university students for the past four or five years. There was a tight turn-round schedule for the book, especially as the “for Dummies” process involves submitting chapters as you write them, rather than submitting a whole manuscript. The writing itself took about six months.

What is your writing process?

It’s different for the “For Dummies” series because of the very close process of collaboration with the editor. Then not only are there always some academic experts who review your text, but with this book, because of the partnership with the Imperial War Museum, their experts vetted it too. So you have to get a balance between what is academically respectable and what is comprehensible to a wide readership.

The readership is very different from that of a standard academic article or even a textbook: you’re writing for people who might not normally pick up a book, or who might even be a bit scared of them. I’ve seen people taking FD history books off the shelves in bookshops like WH Smith (ie a shop where they might not have gone in to buy a book) and hesitating a long time before deciding whether to buy it or to put it back – and I’ve seen people do both. So I think of the book not in terms of something primarily for people who already know a lot about the war, but rather in terms of the sort of book I would turn to if I needed a quick briefing on something about which I know nothing and of which I have scary memories from school – physics, say, or fairly advanced mathematics. You have to go to where people are and take them forward, not stand where you are and expect them to come to you.

Being a lecturer obviously helps, but did you learn anything that surprised you when writing the book?

There are always part of the narrative which you didn’t know much about before starting to read up for the book – elements of the war in Africa, for example, or the epic journey of the crew of the German raider “Emden”. But I think the greatest surprises lay in some of the images in the IWM’s collection, which we used for the illustrations. We tend to see only a limited range of types of photos from the war – trenches, recruits, women in factories and so on – so it was very refreshing to see images from around the world, some of them quite dramatic.


In the parts of tens you list First World War poets and writers, do you have a personal favourite?

I think probably RC Sherriff, author of “Journey’s End”. Joan Littlewood, who devised and directed “Oh! What a Lovely War” in 1964, loathed the play and wouldn’t allow anyone to mention it in her presence, but I think it is a much more authentic voice from the front line than she managed. It’s a play about a group of officers in 1918 and it captures that loss of schoolboy ideals we associate with the trenches. Sherriff went to the grammar school in Kingston across the road from the one I went to, so maybe there’s a sense in which I see him as the First World War equivalent of me.

A lot of women got their first taste of real work during the first world war, do you think that had a lasting difference?

There’s a lot of debate about this one among historians, because the liberation and emancipation of war work very quickly disappeared when the men came back home and resumed their old jobs, so some people say that the change for women was illusory. There’s also a certain irony in the fact the sort of work that women did in the FWW was often the very sort of work Victorian social reformers had been trying to rescue them from. But yes, I do think the change was long lasting, even if it wasn’t immediate. It made it clear that men and women were all part of the same fighting nation, and that women, whether they were in the factories or whether they were bringing up children at home, had a part to play in the national war effort just as the men had. That idea swung back into action in the Second World War, of course. That in itself effectively smashed the old Victorian idea that men and women inhabited “separate spheres”, both metaphysically and in reality. That idea has never revived, at least not in British society, so yes, I think the war made a lasting difference for women.

What can be learned from World War I?

That’s too big a question to answer fully, so I’ll give just a couple of things that can be learned from it, though I ought to start with a lesson that can’t be learned: I heard someone during this year’s centenary commemorations saying something like “We must learn from this war so it never happens again”, and I thought “Have you never heard that there was a Second World War? It has happened again”. I think the lessons that can be learned include: a) political leaders must avoid playing games of bluff, because that is effectively what was happening in 1914, and everybody’s bluff got called, with disastrous results. b) People always go into war assuming it will be like the Last One (whichever that one is) and it never is, but seldom have expectations about the likely nature of a war been so completely wrong as they were in 1914. So, if you go to war, assume it will be a hundred times worse than you expect. And remember that your decision will mean that a lot of people now alive will soon be dead.

What do you think is the lasting legacy of World War I?

There’s no strict hierarchy about these things, of course, but I would rank the First World War’s legacy as even greater and longer-lasting than the Second’s – after all, the SWW was itself a legacy of the FWW. For example, all the problems that blew up in the Balkans in the 1990s were almost directly a legacy of the FWW. So is the continuing and growing crisis in the Middle East, including Israel-Palestine, resurgent Islam etc. The Middle East (itself a European term) was a backwater before the FWW, when the Europeans carved it up, with all the consequences we are still living with. Ireland’s troubles go back a long way, but the specific issue of Northern Ireland – an issue which never quite goes away – is a direct legacy of the FWW. Above all, a) the Russian Revolution and the formation of the Soviet Union were both precipitated by the FWW (it is arguable that Russia would have had a revolution without the FWW, but there’s also a good case for saying that it wouldn’t have happened without a war to bring things to a head), and b) it was the FWW that first got the United States acting as a Great Power, well outside its own back yard, starting the process of American global action which still dominates the world.


D-Day just had its 70th Anniversary, as time goes by is there a danger of people forgetting what happened, and the lessons learned?

Yes, there is such a danger. Schools and local communities do a very good job of keeping the memory of the FWW alive at the moment, but we can’t assume that will go on for ever: firstly, it is noticeable that Islamist protests against western involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan seem to have taken the form of assaults against FWW symbols – desecrating war memorials, burning poppies, and so on. That might indicate that the commemoration of the FWW could become divisive in future, rather than welding the nation together, as it has done so far. But even if it doesn’t, just think of the children currently going on school trips to the trenches. Their teachers are old enough, except perhaps the very youngest, to have known people who lived through the war – grandparents and so on – so the human link is still there. But in forty years’ time, in 2054, those pupils will be the teachers and parents: they won’t have that direct link, and their children and pupils will be even further removed from it. The FWW will be about as close to them as the American Civil War or the Crimean War are to us. Now, okay we still acknowledge the losses and suffering in those wars, so it may well be that the memory of the FWW will still be kept alive, but it won’t be on anything like the scale of current commemorations. Lastly – and I hate to point this out – future generations may well have wars and disasters of their own to commemorate, which will push the 20th century world wars out of the picture.

Do you think the first World War was avoidable?

Yes. Totally. I think the fall into war in 1914 was entirely avoidable. There are some wars in history which probably had to be fought – the SWW, civil wars, wars against revolutionary regimes, for example – and others which were entirely avoidable, like the US/British ‘War of 1812’, or the Crimean War, but the FWW is the worst. The crisis that provoked it was entirely solvable – assassinations, even of Archdukes, do not usually provoke wars – and the Great Powers HAD solved far more dangerous crises in the years before 1914. But among some statesmen in 1914 there was a certain eagerness that this time they should get a war out of it, and among some – notably in Berlin but also in Vienna – there was a determination that nothing should get in the way of their desire to have a war. You remember that Israeli Eurovision song, “A Little Peace?” Or even John Lennon’s “GIve Peace a Chance?” Well, in 1914 there were some statesmen who thought in terms of having “A Little War” or wanted to “Give War a Chance”. They had no idea of exactly what that war would be like, but they bear a very heavy responsibility nevertheless.

What’s next?

I’m also a playwright. A short play of mine called “The Road Less Travelled” which is set in 1914 and is a reflection on the outbreak of the war has been picking up good reviews and awards recently and will be published soon; I’m also writing a play called “1914: Assassination Before Lunch” which will be performed in Cambridge in October.

First World War For Dummies

The Sons To Headline First Off Axis Show

Their New Single

Relic

Release Date: Monday 30th June 2014 as a digital download

Relic is a heartfelt and gentle song that showcases singer Paul Herron’s accomplished vocal performance against a simple yet effective piano and guitar accompaniment, but the song’s lyrics come from a place of mourning for what has passed.

The Sons to Headline First Off Axis Show
L-R: Roger Millichamp (Drums), Paul Herron (Vocals, Piano & Guitar),

Steven Herron (Vocals, Guitar & Keyboards), Stewart English (Vocals & Guitar), Lee Blades (Vocals & Bass).

The Sons, an independent British five piece from Derby, draw inspiration for their alternative guitar pop from the likes of Crowded House, Wilco, Paul Simon and Fleetwood Mac, to create a current sound with a timeless feel.

They are masters at coupling upbeat, catchy songs with rather dark, complex lyrics about the pains and hardships of life. Having toured the UK & Europe extensively, The Sons have attracted a large and a very loyal following with fans fully funding the making of the band’s third studio album, ‘Heading Into Land’. This record hit the UK album charts upon its release in March 2014, marking a new chapter for the band.

The premiere single from the album, ‘Death Love Money’ was released in January 2014. The video received 20,000 views within a week of release and Sony then chose the band as a feature artist for their Xperia Lounge app. The Sons have been featured on BBC Radio’s ‘Introducing’, chosen as Tuborg’s ‘Spotlight Artist to Watch’ and included on Jonathan L’s list of ‘Ones to Watch in 2014’.

‘Relic’, the band’s second single from their new album, showcases their softer side. This alt-pop ballad features Paul Herron on piano and tells the story of a man who feels a universal, post-break-up emptiness – “I’m just what’s left of you and me”. He continues to pursue his big dreams and as the song progresses, he becomes more and more successful, finally becoming the “creator of every particle you see”, yet he still feels only emptiness, a shell of the man he once was, a relic.

Tour Dates:
31 May – Hucknall Fake Festival

31 May – Summer Gathering Festival (headline set)

7 June – The Venue, Derby – Off Axis Show

20 June – The Cookie Club, Nottingham

28 June – The Goodship, London – Relic Release Party

Great Britain Wheelchair Rugby Announce First Ambassador

Great Britain Wheelchair Rugby has welcomed its first Ambassador to the sport that captivated the nation at London 2012.  Harlequins and England rugby star Mike Brown will take on a role that continues the rugby links GBWR has made recently – partnering with the RFU and with Harlequins, Saracens, Gloucester, Leicester and Woodbridge rugby clubs – involving him in the GBWR military programme, supported and funded by Help for Heroes.

wheelchairrugby

(From left to right: Alan Ash, GBWR Captain, Mike Brown, Harlequins and England and Kylie Grimes, GBWR)
Mike – who has amassed 21 caps for England and had a starring role in England’s recent Autumn Internationals picking up the coveted QBE Player of the Series Award – comments,  “I enjoy playing rugby because it is physical and I enjoy wheelchair rugby for the same reason.  The sound they make with the hits they put in is unbelievable.   It is a fast-paced, high-action game and the physicality and skill they show with the ball is brilliant.  I look forward to my new role and hope I will get a chance to join them for a game.”
David Pond, Chief Executive of GBWR, comments “I’m delighted that we have the support of Mike for this initiative.  We have been working closely with the charity Help for Heroes and Battle Back to provide opportunities for wounded and injured service men and women to try wheelchair rugby for the first time. The programme started with a series of sessions at Headley Court and I’m pleased it is to be part of the rehabilitation programme rolled out to support Help the Heroes run Recovery Centres at Colchester, Tidworth, Catterick and Plymouth.”
Mike Brown met with GBWR squad players (including Alan Ash [Captain] and Kylie Grimes) at Headley Court, the Ministry of Defence Medical Rehabilitation Unit, to announce the appointment and joined them in a demonstration match against the patients.
The programme, funded by Help for Heroes, along with Sport England, will be available to wounded, injured and service personnel and veterans at UK Recovery Centres across 2014.”
 

The Wanted Announce their First Single of 2013 ‘Walks Like Rihanna’

thewantedreleasenewsingleReleased June 23rd

One of the biggest pop acts in the world, The Wanted, have announced details of their first single of 2013. ‘Walks Like Rihanna’ is to be released in the UK on June 23rd. The new track was co-written and produced by the legendary Dr Luke who has previously worked with the likes of Katy Perry, Kelly Clarkson, Pink and Britney Spears.

‘Walks Like Rihanna’ is a pure pop summer anthem, on the song Tom Parker said,

“We are really excited about this single. We feel it’s a little different from the usual Wanted sound, we’ve stripped it back to pure pop, it’s just a feel good, fun track. Fun is a good word to describe the video too. Let’s just say it’s got a lot of character.”

The video for ‘Walks Like Rihanna’ takes a tongue in cheek look at what being in a boy band is all about, in the undeniable style of The Wanted. It was shot in LA and will be released on Tuesday 7th May.

Subscribers to The Wanted Wanted World, the Wanted online fan club, will be able to access an exclusive first listen to a section of the new track from 10am on Friday 26th April.

The single includes vocals from Nathan Sykes who under went specialist surgery to correct a hemorrhaging vocal cord in Los Angeles in mid April. The surgery went as planned however it is still uncertain when Nathan will be re-joining the band.

2013 has been an exceptionally busy year already for The Wanted. It began with them scooping The People’s Choice Award for Favorite Breakout Artist, beating off competition from Fun, Gotye, Carly Rae Jepson and One Direction.

The band have been filming a TV show in the US for E! titled, ‘The Wanted Life’, the show will air in the US on June 2nd with UK and international transmission dates to be confirmed shortly. They have also been in the studio working on their forthcoming album which will be released globally later this year.

The Wanted will be performing shows and completing major promotion across the globe this year from Australia, Japan and Europe. UK dates include The Capital FM Summertime Ball on June 9th, Chester Rocks and North East Live. A full list of tour dates can be found here.

Fans will be able to pre-order ‘Walks Like Rihanna’ from iTunes on Tuesday 7th May. The first play of the single will be on Monday 29th April across UK radio.

First Québec Cinema Showcase for London

Following the international success of Québécois films including Monsieur Lazhar (Philippe Falardeau), Incendies (Denis Villeneuve) and Café de Flore (Jean-Marc Vallée), a showcase of new cinema from Québec will take place for the first time in London at the Institut Français, South Kensington (2-4 November).

Québec Cinema Showcase is part of the 50th anniversary celebrations marking the opening of the Québec Government Office in London. The programme of five feature-length films and four shorts will present some of Québec’s finest and most recent cinematic offerings, including the latest work from award-winning director, 23-year-old Xavier Dolan, Laurence Anyways.

Québec Cinema Showcase will open with the UK premiere of Ken Scott’s massive box office hit comedy Starbuck (2 November).  Veteran comedy actor Patrick Huard plays David Wozniak, a 40-something delivery man whose life is out of control. But things are worse than he thinks. In his twenties, David was a prolific sperm donor to help pay the bills but the past comes back to haunt him when nearly 150 of his more than 500 offspring, now young adults, collectively take court action for their right to know the identity of their father. The film has been so successful – Canada’s biggest domestic hit in 2011 taking $3.5 million at the box office – that Scott has been asked to direct the US remake starring Vince Vaughn for Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks Studios. Starbuck is on general release in the UK from November 23.

Laurence Anyways (3 November) is the latest offering from Cannes award-winning director Xavier Dolan, (I Killed My Mother, Heartbeats). Dolan’s success continued in 2012 at the Cannes Film Festival when Laurence Anyways’ female lead, Suzanne Clément, won best actress in the festival’s “Un certain regard” category and the film was awarded the Queer Palm. Laurence Anyways also won the award for Best Canadian Feature Film at Toronto International Film Festival 2012. Dolan made his Cannes debut with I Killed My Mother, a film he made in his teens, resulting in an eight-minute standing ovation and three awards in the Directors’ Fortnight section in 2009. Spanning a decade, Laurence Anyways tells the story of a couple who are passionately in love. But when Laurence (Melvil Poupard) announces to girlfriend Fred (Suzanne Clément) on his 30th birthday that he wants to live as a woman, the consequences are tumultuous – and unexpected.  Laurence Anyways screened at the BFI London Film Festival on 11 and 12 October and is on general release in UK cinemas from 30 November.

“The Québec Government Office in London takes pride in witnessing Québec cinema’s current popularity worldwide. We are delighted to welcome the first edition of the Québec Cinema Showcase as part of our 50-year anniversary celebrations marking the opening of our London office,” says Pierre Boulanger, Agent-General of the Québec office in London.

Other films in the programme include Karakara from Claude Gagnon (3 November), a Canadian/Japanese co-production which follows Pierre (Gabriel Arcand), a retired professor in his early sixties who goes on a short, unsettling trip around Okinawa in Japan with Junko (Youki Kudoh), a 40-year-old runaway wife. Bestiary (Bestiaire) from Denis Côté (4 November) is an intriguing documentary which reflects on human fascination with animals.  Behind Closed Doors (Catimini) from Nathalie Saint-Pierre (4 November), the final film in the Québec Cinema Showcase, is a touching story about a reunion between four girls living under the care of the child protection services.

Across the weekend there will be director Q&As: Claude Gagnon, on Saturday, 3 November after the screening of Karakara and Nathalie Saint-Pierre on Sunday, 4 November after Behind Closed Doors.

Cinema from Québec is currently enjoying the international spotlight with two films – Incendies and Monsieur Lazhar – shortlisted for best foreign language Oscars in the past two years, as well as a BAFTA nomination for Incendies. Québécois director, Jean-Marc Vallée’s Café de Flore starring Vanessa Paradis, has also garnered critical acclaim. Earlier this month (October) at the Raindance Film Festival – Europe’s leading independent film festival – a number of films were screened in a special Québec Strand and Laurentie by directors Mathieu Denis and Simon Lavoie scooped Best International Feature.

François Macerola, President and CEO of SODEC, Québec’s development agency for cultural enterprises added: “For many years, the international market’s interest in Québec cinema and its filmmakers has grown considerably.  New audiences and new possibilities have allowed films from Québec, and our filmmakers’ vision to cross borders, thanks to events such as the Québec Cinema Showcase in London.”

 

Tickets for Québec Cinema Showcase are £10 (conc £8) and are available from the Institut Français website (https://www.institut-francais.org.uk/book)

Québec Cinema Showcase is an extension of the marketplace event Cinema du Québec a Paris which is celebrating its 16th year (6-11 November). Québec Cinema Showcase is also part of the 20th French Film Festival UK, which will present a selection of the best shorts from Québec in Glasgow and Edinburgh . (http://frenchfilmfestival.org.uk/FFF2012/wp/)

 

Québec Cinema Showcase has been organised by the Québec Government Office in London, with the support of SODEC and the Ministry of Culture and Communications, in collaboration with the Institut Français in London and the French Film Festival UK.

The Québec Government Office in London’s cultural services implements market development initiatives for artists and cultural industries from Québec.

For more information:
www.quebec.org.uk
www.sodec.gouv.qc.ca
www.mcc.gouv.qc.ca
www.institut-francais.org.uk
www.frenchfilmfestival.org.uk

 

Starbuck 
Dir: Ken Scott 2011 – 109 mins
Friday 2 November, 8.15pm

The biggest Canadian box office hit in 2011, Ken Scott’s comedy Starbuck follows a likeable middle-aged loser as he wrestles with regret and responsibility. Hapless deliveryman David Wozniak (Patrick Huard) gets parking tickets at every stop along his route, has thugs on his tail for massive overdue loans, and his girlfriend tells him she’s pregnant just before dumping him. These are the least of David’s concerns, however, when he returns home to find a lawyer in his kitchen. The past comes back to haunt him in the form of a class-action lawsuit launched by 142 of the 533 children who resulted from sperm donations he deposited over 20 years ago.

Starbuck will be preceded by Demoni, a short directed by Theodore Ushev.

 

Karakara  
Dir: Claude Gagnon 2012 – 101 mins
Saturday 3 November, 5pm

Gabriel Arcand plays Pierre, a retired professor in his early sixties who has decided to renounce sex and achieve spiritual peace until Junko (Youki Kudoh), a  40-year-old Japanese housewife arrives on his doorstep seeking refuge from her abusive husband. They end up making a short, unsettling trip around Okinawa, Japan, together. Though the confused intellectual would rather not get involved with this unlikely and unexpected lover, he decides to follow his destiny, wherever it may take him.

Karakara will be preceded by Anata O Korosu, a short directed by Phillipe David Gagné and Jean-Marc E. Roy

Laurence Anyways 
Dir: Xavier Dolan 2012 – 159 mins
Saturday 3 November, 7.30pm

The third Cannes award-winning film by 23-year-old writer-director Xavier Dolan (Heartbeats, I Killed My Mother), Laurence Anyways follows the story of Laurence and Fred, his girlfriend – a couple passionately in love who attempt to sustain their relationship and fight the prejudices of their family, friends and society when Laurence turns 30 and can no longer deny his desire to be a woman.  Winning two awards at Cannes including Best Actress in the festival’s “Un certain regard” category for Suzanne Clément and the Queer Palm and, as well as the award for Best Canadian Feature Film at Toronto International Film Festival 2012.he film had its UK premiere at this year’s BFI London Film Festival on 11 and 12 October.

Bestiaire ( Bestiary)

Dir: Denis Côté 2012 – 72 mins
Sunday 4 November, 4.15pm

The documentary explores the fascination humans have for animals, combining footage from a drawing class, a taxidermist’s workshop and a Québec safari park. The poet, essayist and naturalist Diane Ackerman has reflected on animal parks as venues for the discovery of interspecies shared identity, but also as places where humans focus “on the lives of other creatures to dispel the usual mind theatres that plague us.” Those notions are challenged as often as they are reinforced in Denis Côté’s soberly beautiful Bestiaire, but exact conclusions are left for the viewer to form.

Bestiaire will be preceded by Tout va Mieux (Everything is alright) a short directed by Robin Aubert.

Catimini (Behind Closed Doors)  
Dir: Nathalie Saint-Pierre 2012 – 112 mins
Sunday 4 November, 6.30pm

Four girls are living under the care of child protection services: Cathy, six-years-old, arrives in a new foster family, the Bilodeaus; 12-year-old Keyla is transferred into a group home for teenage girls; Mégane, a rebellious 16-year-old, ends up in a detention centre in late winter; on her 18th birthday, Manu leaves her youth centre and moves into her first apartment. In the hope of reconnecting with the few people that have meant something to her, Manu attends a reception honouring the Bilodeaus, one of her former foster families. She bumps into Keyla and Cathy, and ends up hanging out with Mégane. It proves to be a reunion that no-one will forget anytime soon. Behind Closed Doors won the Valois d’or prize at the fifth festival of francophone cinema in Angoulême.

Behind Closed Doors will be preceded by Ina Litovski, a short directed by Anaïs Barbeau-Lavalette and Andre Turpin.

 

Rowers Heather Stanning And Helen Glover Win First Team GB Gold.

Team GB won it’s first gold today as Rowers Heather Stanning And Helen Glover came first in their race. Stanning and Glover were clearly ahead at Eton Dorney Lake.

They made a good start and left the competition well behind. They may have looked knackered towards the end but the also looked elated. Well done gals, you done us proud!

Zara Phillips was in tears yesterday because she thinks she cost Team GB the Gold after her horse clipped the fence. Don’t worry Zara, we think you still did amazing and Team GB still got a Silver medal.