Lap dancers call for equality with male stripperspublished at 14:31 British Summer Time 10 June 2021
They say it is unfair to allow male stripping when the council wants to ban female stripping venues.
Read MoreThey say it is unfair to allow male stripping when the council wants to ban female stripping venues.
Read MoreDean Morrice made a video strumming a guitar to footage of the 2019 New Zealand mosque shootings.
Read MoreThe teenager was held along with three others after the attack on Tuesday night in Bristol.
Read MoreThe film follows political activist Rok Ajulu and his struggle against apartheid in South Africa.
Read MoreWorcestershire hold Notts to a last-ball tie, after Liam Livingstone-inspired Lancashire win the first game of the 2021 T20 Blast.
Read MoreTranmere Rovers sign defender Tom Davies from fellow League Two side Bristol Rovers on a one-year deal.
Read MoreAmelia Edwards, two, walked in front of the vehicle when she was struck, an inquest hears.
Read MoreA winter mooring ban in Mead Lane is set to be reviewed after boaters mounted a legal challenge.
Read MoreCotswolds MP Geoffrey Clifton-Brown says he was not expecting such "radical change" under the plans.
Read MoreThe 28-year-old woman from Coventry set off on Tuesday and was rescued near Minehead the same day.
Read MoreMichael Portillo takes pot luck on the snooker table as he investigates the Victorian origins of the game and finds out what it takes to produce the fine green cloth which smoothes the path of the balls.
In Cirencester, he ploughs a crooked furrow at the Royal Agricultural College before taking tea with the ladies in Bath, where he also discovers a scandalous novel written by an eccentric recluse, once the wealthiest man in England.
Michael Portillo heads for the sharp end of the Victorian industrial revolution at a needle manufactory in Redditch.
The Freemasons of Cheltenham invite Michael into their lodge to share the secrets of their society. In Gloucester, he learns how to make Gloucester cheese.
Continuing on to Highnam, Michael is glad to discover the beautiful Victorian Gothic church of Thomas Parry and to join the Gloucester Choral Society in a rendition of Jerusalem composed by Thomas's son Hubert.
Armed with his Bradshaw's guidebook, Michael Portillo enters the foul-smelling world of a Victorian tannery.
In Nailsea, he discovers how mountains of bird droppings made one of the greatest fortunes of the era for a 19th-century entrepreneur, who spent his wealth building churches and chapels and one of the most luxurious country houses in Britain.
Reaching Glastonbury, Michael heads for the mystical abbey, where Victorian tourists flocked to hear stories of King Arthur and the Holy Grail.
Following his Bradshaw's Guidebook, Michael Portillo stands trial at the Bloody Assizes in Taunton and feels the full force of the law.
He gets to grips with a miracle of Victorian engineering on the Somerset Levels at Westonzoyland and on Dartmoor he embarks on a mid-19th-century treasure hunt still popular today.
Police arrest four men in connection with a stabbing in Highridge Green, Bristol, on Tuesday night.
Read MoreThe girl was walking with a friend in Cam, Gloucestershire, when she was assaulted, police say.
Read More