The noise around AI has never been louder, and for once it isn’t coming from tech evangelists but from the people being burned by it. Paris Hilton has been one of the most vocal critics, calling deepfake pornography an epidemic and describing it as a new form of victimisation targeting women and girls at scale. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ALL ANGLES UK (@all_angles_uk) Her warning lands at a moment when trust in AI tools is already wobbling, especially after the recent backlash against Grok X, whose safeguards against generating explicit deepfakes were reportedly easy to bypass. The conversation is no longer theoretical; it’s happening in real time, to real people, and the consequences are deeply personal. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ALL ANGLES UK (@all_angles_uk) Even the home of .ai hasn’t escaped the fallout. Anguilla’s own Farrah Banks recently revealed that a video of her had been doctored and circu...
Reggae Land 2026 Lineup Drops: The Biggest Festival Confirms Star‑Studded Line Up for August
Reggae Land 2026 is already shaping up to be one of the most electric weekends on the UK festival calendar, and we’re still months away from touching down at Milton Keynes Bowl. With the official lineup now out in the world, anticipation has exploded. Seven stages, more than 120 artists, and a cultural energy that only reggae and dancehall can deliver.
This year’s bill reads like a who’s who of global heavyweights: Vybz Kartel, Shenseea, Shaggy, The King & The Royals (Beenie Man & Morgan Heritage), Tarrus Riley, Barrington Levy, Konshens, Mr Vegas, Super Cat, Sanchez, Kranium, Inner Circle, Richie Spice, Serani, Ken Boothe, Cham, T.O.K, Ding Dong, Alborosie, Charly Black, Third World, Jesse Royal and many more. With ticket sales already booming and several tiers gone, the final release drops this Friday at 9am — and if last year taught us anything, hesitation is not your friend.
Reggae Land has grown into one of Europe’s largest reggae festivals, a true celebration of Black British culture and Caribbean heritage woven into the UK’s festival landscape. Its rise has been remarkable: last year’s edition pulled in more than 95,000 people, breaking records and cementing its place as a major cultural moment. Fans witnessed a world‑record‑setting crowd, a stacked lineup, and a weekend that pulsed with unity, community, and pure musical fire.
That 2025 energy still lingers — the dancing, the flags, the food, the sunshine, the sense of belonging. It’s no wonder the festival continues to expand, contributing not just to the UK’s live‑music economy but to the visibility and celebration of reggae, dancehall, and Caribbean culture on British soil. Now, with 2026 promising the biggest lineup in Reggae Land history, the countdown feels even sweeter. The Bowl will once again transform into a sea of colour, culture, and unstoppable vibes.
Tickets start from £74.50+bf, and with the final drop landing at 9am on Friday 30 January, the race is officially on. Sign‑ups are live at reggaeland.co.uk — and trust, you’ll want to be locked in. So, who’s heading to Reggae Land this year? Which act has you buzzing the most? And what memories from last year are still living rent‑free in your mind?
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