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Oxford Chinese takeaway could reopen as off-licence shop

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Green Bamboo in Botley Road, which is listed online as ‘permanently closed’, has submitted a licensing application to Oxford City Council to convert the former takeaway into an alcohol-selling premises.

Green Bamboo Chinese takeaway in Botley Road could become an off-licence (Image: Newsquest)

In November 2024, Avtar Singh was granted permission to convert it into a restaurant but now Manpreet Lalpurwal wants to open what could be called ‘Botley Booze’.

READ MORE: Oxford construction firm in liquidation with £200k debts

The licence will allow for the sale of alcohol for consumption off premises from 8am to 11pm Monday to Sunday.

The application says Avtar Singh Lalpurwal will have no day‑to‑day role in running the premises, except when he is on site to deliver stock.

If you wish to object to this application, email licensing@oxford.gov.uk, or visit the application online.





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Jeremy Clarkson announces new venture after Clarkson’s Farm

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The former Top Gear and Grand Tour host purchased Diddly Squat Farm in Chadlington, Oxfordshire, back in 2008.

Having taken over the day-to-day operations back in 2019, Mr Clarkson started filming for the first season of Clarkson’s Farm, which was released in 2021.

Available on Prime Video, the documentary shows life on the farm and highlights the plight of British farmers.

READ MORE: Jeremy Clarkson bids final goodbye to Clarkson’s Farm fan favourite

The fifth series had a staggered release across this month, with fans able to now binge-watch all eight new episodes.

This time last year, series four had also just been released, and Mr Clarkson followed up the conclusion of this with an announcement on his latest venture.

The 66-year-old has written several books over the years, including multiple which have covered his farming adventures in Oxfordshire.

He announced in June of 2025 that another was set to release later on in the year called Diddly Squat: The Farmer’s Dog.

READ MORE: TV legend praises Jeremy Clarkson after meeting him at Cotswolds pub

The book covered the latest action on the farm as well as his Asthall pub, The Farmer’s Dog, becoming the fifth book Mr Clarkson has written in the series.

Having purchased the Cotswolds watering hole for around £1m, the former Top Gear and Grand Tour presenter opened it to the public in the summer of 2024.

Although no confirmation has yet been made, it is expected that another book will be released this year, following on from Clarkson’s Farm series five.

It has also been confirmed that filming for the show’s sixth season is underway, with an anticipated release date in 2027.





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Oxford private school in new ‘mobile phone ban’ announcement

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St Edward’s School (‘Teddies’) in Woodstock Road has extended its mobile phone restrictions to its Year 11 students as well as Year 9 and Year 10.

As such the 16-year-olds will no longer be allowed their phones at any time during the week, with daytime access to them at weekends.

READ MORE: Head of Oxfordshire private school defends Latin teaching

This followed a recent survey of pupils which said that four in five feel happy ‘all or most of the time’ compared to three in five before the first phone restrictions were introduced in 2022.

Alastair Chirnside, warden (headteacher), said: “This year’s pupil survey has put into numbers what we have been seeing and feeling for a long time: that Teddies pupils are leading more enriched and less distracted lives without their phones throughout the week.

Alastair Chirnside, headmaster of St Edward’s School (Image: St Edward’s School)

“While we know that extending restrictions even further won’t be universally popular with teenagers, last month’s pupil survey has quite clearly demonstrated that, when asked in private, many children are in fact thankful to be given clear rules on phone usage.

“From comments in the survey, it is clear that many children even feel a sense of relief that the burden of moderating their phone use has been lifted from them.”

Pupils at St Edward’s School (Teddies) in Woodstock Road, Oxford (Image: St Edward’s School)

Restrictions have also been extended in the sixth form with the upper sixth now following the lower sixth in only having access to phones after lessons, before handing them in at 10pm each evening.

The school has 817 pupils with 644 responding to the anonymous survey carried out last month.

Almost half said they were spending more time talking to friends, with 32 per cent noting they were working harder and 19 per cent saying they were spending more time reading.

Pupils at St Edward’s School (Teddies) in Woodstock Road, Oxford (Image: St Edward’s School)

One pupil said: “I believe the no-phone policy has been really beneficial at this school for helping friendships and hobbies grow.”

Another added: “I completely agree with it, and I think it’s an incredible way to relieve tensions and build friendships quicker in the earlier years of school.”

READ MORE: Oxford private school’s restrictive phone policy boosts joy

In addition, Teddies has revealed that – in contrast to wider societal trends – it re-introduced landline phones last September, after 15 years without them.

This was part of an overhaul about its mobile phone rules to enable pupils’ contact with their homes, family and friends.

Pupils also have access to Nokia ‘brick’ phones in their boarding houses, and to WhatsApp, Teams and Zoom at certain times through the school’s monitored network, using laptop computers which are managed by the school’s IT department. 





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Disney+ renews Cotswolds show Rivals for third series

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The award-winning drama features famous faces including Doctor Who star David Tennant, Poldark’s Aidan Turner and former EastEnders actor Danny Dyer.

Set in the 1980s amid the backdrop of the Cotswolds countryside, it follows the high-stakes world of British television as careers, marriages and reputations hang by a thread when professional and personal lives collide.

The second series, which received an extended run of 12 episodes, has received widespread acclaim from both critics and the public.

READ MORE: Alex Kingston reacts to ‘devastating’ Doctor Who cancellation

It depicts the ruthless world of independent television in 1986, and follows a rivalry between Lord Tony Baddingham (Tennant) and former MP Rupert Campbell-Black, played by TV and theatre star Alex Hassell.

The mid-season finale aired earlier this month and shocked viewers with the death of a fan-favourite character, while a further six episodes will be released later this year.

Dame Jilly was an active part of the show’s production and served as an executive producer.

In October last year, during filming for the second series, she died unexpectedly aged 88 after suffering injuries from a fall at home.

READ MORE: Katy Perry selling $8.5m mansion days before Oxfordshire festival gig

Dominic Treadwell-Collins, chief creative officer of Happy Prince, and Alexander Lamb, Happy Prince’s creative director, said: “We’ve been delighted and overwhelmed by the audience’s response to season two of Rivals – testament to the hard work from everyone working on Rivals both on and off screen.

“Our one sadness is that Jilly didn’t get to witness the love for season two.

“But she’s still very much with us in spirit and would be so delighted that season three has been greenlit.

“We’re so thrilled to continue to work with Disney as we dive deeper into the Rutshire Chronicles and expand the Cooperverse even further.”

READ MORE: Cotswolds named among the best holiday spots in the UK for 2026

Lee Mason, vice-president, Scripted, Disney+ EMEA, added: “The phenomenal response to Rivals is a credit to the bold, irreverent and endlessly entertaining world created by Dame Jilly Cooper, our cast, creative team and production partners at Happy Prince.

“We’re delighted to be bringing audiences a third season on Disney+/Hulu.

“Expect more ambition, more romance, more rivalries and, of course, more scandal as we return to Rutshire for another irresistible chapter.”

The second half of Rivals series two will air in November on Disney+ in the UK and internationally, and on Hulu in the US.

Further details about the third season are yet to be revealed.





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