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Woman got so drunk she forgot she bought a house

<p dir="ltr">A UK woman’s recent purchase of a home came as a surprise, after she confessed she was so drunk when she placed a bid that she forgot about it.</p> <p dir="ltr">Luana Ribeira, 40, told the <em><a href="https://www.dailystar.co.uk/news/latest-news/woman-drunk-work-forgot-bidding-28046594" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Daily Star</a></em> that she had gone with a friend to see the house, which was up for auction, before her surprisingly rambunctious night.</p> <p dir="ltr">“I went to see a house with a friend as it was on auction, but my friend didn’t want it as it was in a rough area,” she explained.</p> <p dir="ltr">“I liked the property and thought it could be really lovely and a good investment.</p> <p dir="ltr">“So, I went to the nightclub where I worked, stayed afterwards and got very drunk.”</p> <p dir="ltr">After finishing her night shift, the founder of Dauntless PR remembered how “one drink turned to two”, which then turned into drinking games before the rest became a blur.</p> <p dir="ltr">The next day, her then-boyfriend informed her that she got home at 8.30am, insisted on calling the real estate agent, putting an offer on the house and going to bed.</p> <p dir="ltr">“I woke up hungover and my boyfriend at the time was very annoyed, and was giving me the silent treatment,” she recalled.</p> <p dir="ltr">She was then informed that her offer of £20,000 ($NZ 37,000) was successful.</p> <p dir="ltr">Though it may have been made under unusual circumstances, Ms Ribeira’s decision to place a bid proved to be fruitful.</p> <p dir="ltr">After 12 months, she sold the home for double what she paid and used it to purchase another.</p> <p dir="ltr">Ms Ribeira then made £20,000 on the second home, going on to earn another £20,000 on a third, and using her earnings to start a new life and business in Portugal.</p> <p><span id="docs-internal-guid-57ea2072-7fff-99ce-e0d1-5d668ee1ddf1"></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><em>Image: @launadauntlesspr (Instagram)</em></p>

Real Estate

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Jetstar pilots forgot to lower landing gear on approach

<p>Pilots of a Jetstar flight forgot to lower the plane’s landing gear on approach to a NSW airport due to “a series of distractions”, the Australian Transport Safety Bureau has found.</p> <p>The pilots of a Jetstar A320 aircraft were approaching Ballina-Byron Gateway Airport on May 18, 2018 when they were forced to abort two landings due to the oversight, a report by the bureau found.</p> <p>It was found that on the first attempt, the flight crew “<a href="https://7news.com.au/travel/air-aviation/pilot-of-jetstar-flight-forgot-to-lower-landing-gear-on-approach-to-ballina-airport-report-c-599719">conducted a go-around</a>” because the captain found the plane’s airspeed and altitude were higher than normal for an approach. The crew realised the landing gear was not down on the second attempt, and the flight landed safely on its third attempt.</p> <p>The ATSB found the crew did not follow Jetstar’s standard procedures during the first go-around, resulting in distractions that contributed to the landing gear oversight.</p> <p>“During the downwind leg following the first go-around, the flight crew did not select the landing gear down as they had commenced the configuration sequence for landing at the Flaps 3 setting,” the report said.</p> <p>“Furthermore the flight crew incorrectly actioned the landing checklist, which prevented the incorrect configuration for landing being identified and corrected.”</p> <p>Dr Stuart Godley, ATSB Director Transport Safety Director, said the incident showed how “<a href="https://10daily.com.au/news/australia/a191210fmrex/distracted-jetstar-pilots-forgot-to-lower-landing-gear-20191211">unexpected events during approach and landing</a>” can “substantially” increase the flight crew’s workload.</p> <p>“Following standard procedures mitigates the risk of the selection of inappropriate auto-flight modes, unexpected developments, or confusion about roles or procedures that can contribute to decisions and actions that increase the safety risk to the aircraft and its passengers,” Godley said.</p> <p>Following the incident, Jetstar Airways said the flight crew members involved attended debriefings with flight operations management and were provided with related simulator and line flying training.</p>

Travel Trouble

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What Queen Elizabeth forgot about her youngest son Prince Edward

<p>Prince Edward is the youngest child of Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, however despite being the baby of the family reports say the Earl of Wessex’s birthday was forgotten while in his 20s by his mother.</p> <p>Now 54 years old, Prince Edward had a rather sobering experience in his younger life that the public took to social media to extend their sympathies.</p> <p>Jeremy Paxman’s new Channel 5 documentary is delving into the early life of the Queen’s children, and his biographer Ingrid Seward described him as a young lonely royal who found it difficult to find his place in Buckingham Palace.</p> <p>Seward, the editor-in-chief of<span> </span><em>Majesty</em><span> </span>magazine, said he was the “overlooked” third son.</p> <p>“At Buckingham Palace, he was lonely.</p> <p>“One year on his birthday he went to have breakfast with the Queen, and nothing was said. No card, no present. She didn’t know it was his birthday,” Seward recounted.</p> <p>Previously she had mentioned the same experience in her 2005 book<span> </span><em>Prince Edward: A Biography</em>, where she described the Q<span>ueen eating her toast and marmalade and sipping her special blend of homemade tea.</span></p> <p>The Prince’s demeanour hadn’t changed throughout breakfast, however, when a royal aide was made aware of the situation, the Queen was alerted, a “hasty” phone call was made, and presents were delivered to him a few hours later.</p> <p>"If it had been Prince Edward’s 20th or his 30th, his mother would not have forgotten,'" Steward wrote.</p> <p>She also noted the Queen’s second “heroic” son Andrew, who fought in the war, was her favourite son.</p> <p><em>Daily Mail</em>’s Richard Kay told Jeremy Paxman that Prince Edward never really knew where he fit in.</p> <p>“His royal aides once told me that the trouble with Prince Edward is that he can never decide whether he is His Royal Highness or Edward Windsor.</p> <p>“He couldn't tell whether he was one of us or a member of the royal family,” Kay said.</p> <p>This news comes days after the surprising revelation that <a rel="noopener" href="https://www.oversixty.com.au/lifestyle/relationships/prince-charles-surprising-admission-prince-andrew-wants-to-be-me" target="_blank">Prince Charles claimed his younger brother, Prince Andrew, wanted to be him.</a></p> <p>The dynamic that existed between Prince Charles and his youngest brother, Edward, was extremely separate.</p> <p>“Charles is 16 years older than Edward and they weren't close,” Stewart admitted.</p> <p>She also confirmed their was a time where Prince Charles was the ‘leading’ son of the family.</p> <p>“On one of those occasions Prince Edward went upstairs and found some of the Duke of Windsor's old kilts which of course were all the tartans that the Prince of Wales is entitled to wear, and he thought, 'Ooh those look rather fun.' So, he put one on, and it fitted.</p> <p>“He went down to dinner in a tartan which was that of the Duke of Rothesay, and as he went into the dining room Charles went apoplectic and said, ‘What are you doing wearing that? I am the only one entitled to wear that kilt. It is a kilt for the Prince of Wales. Go upstairs and take it off.’”</p> <p>“Edward being such a calm person just went, 'OK', went upstairs and took it off and never mentioned it again.”</p> <p>Scroll through the gallery above to see Prince Edward through the years.</p> <p>Are you surprised by the Queen forgetting Prince Edward’s birthday? Let us know in the comments below. </p>

News

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The Kennedy scandal the world forgot about

<p>After Bobby Kennedy was assassinated at the Ambassador Hotel in 1968, Joseph Kennedy only had one son left: Ted.</p> <p>Senator Ted Kennedy had many heavy expectations to carry and after one fatal car crash on Chappaquiddick Island in 1969, protecting his presidential prospects was key.</p> <p>Known as the Chappaquiddick incident, the car Ted was driving flipped off a bridge and crashed into water – which killed his 28-year-old passenger Mary Jo Kopechne, who was trapped in the fully-submerged vehicle.</p> <p>The incident is marked by inconsistencies, cover-ups and smoke screens surrounding the events that occurred before and after the crash.</p> <p>Now, the first non-documentary film based on the event <em>Chappaquiddick</em> has been released.</p> <p>Although it is the Kennedy scandal that is usually forgotten, the incident was believed to have influenced Ted’s decision not to campaign for President in 1972 and 1976. The incident also added to the myth of the so-called “Kennedy Curse”.</p> <p>Australian actor Jason Clarke plays Ted Kennedy in the movie, which shows Kennedy hosting a party on Chappaquiddick Island for the “Boiler Rooms Girls” who worked for Bobby Kennedy’s presidential campaign.</p> <p>Guests attending the party include Mary Jo Kopechne, Kennedy cousin Joe Gargan and Massachusetts US Attorney Paul Markham.</p> <p>Kennedy and Kopechne leave the party where the incident unfolds as his car veers off the bridge.</p> <p>After Kennedy swam to safety, he didn’t report the incident for nine hours. The film follows Ted’s struggle to make sense of the family expectation that is upon him by his father and his moral code.</p> <p>Listening to both the opinions of his lawyer cousin Joe Gargan and his father Joe Kennedy, Ted battles the difference between being a good man and a great man. </p> <p>Do you remember when this tragic car incident happened in the late '60s? Tell us in the comments below. </p>

Movies

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“I can’t believe I forgot to pack that!”: Over60 community’s packing mistakes

<p>It was a wise man who once said nothing in this world can be certain except death, taxes and forgetting to pack something important for your big overseas holiday. No matter how many <a href="http://www.oversixty.com.au/travel/travel-tips/2017/04/packing-tips-to-add-to-your-list/" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">tips and tricks you’ve acquainted yourself with</span></strong></a>, even the most intrepid travellers are prone to the occasional packing gaffe here and there.</p> <p><a href="https://www.facebook.com/oversixtys/photos/a.1426634930900122.1073741828.1426044880959127/1951832995046977/" target="_blank"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">We asked the Over60 Community</span></strong></a> to share some of the times you’ve arrived at your destination, unzipped your bag and said, “I can’t believe I forgot to pack that!”</p> <p>Here are some of your best responses:</p> <ul> <li><strong>Maureen Mary-Ellen Buchtmann</strong> made a huge mistake on her trip to Europe when she forgot to pack, “My aspirin tablets while in Switzerland. Just took my friends without checking the dose. They were 5 times my strength and I took them for a week. Felt strange, but when we went up to the highest mountain I had altitude sickness for the first time ever. My doctor said my blood was too thin from too much aspirin. Terrible feeling.”</li> <li><strong>Christine Nightingale</strong> had a similar problem when travelling with her partner, but thankfully there was a happy ending, “My husband takes quite a lot of medications, discovered he'd not included blood pressure tabs in his daily packs. Cruise ship doctor telephoned our doctor in Adelaide to get correct milligrams required. Problem solved within a few hours.”</li> <li><strong>Sue Grainger’s</strong> problem wasn’t quite as severe, but still unfortunate, “On a recent trip (I forgot to pack) my make-up. Lucky for me I had a text message telling me so as we were about to stop for lunch first shop makeup then lunch. But not as bad as my husband on trip to Hong Kong got in late opened up luggage and no underpants were packed.”</li> <li><strong>Christine Whyte</strong> has had some packing issues in the past as well, “Has only been a toothbrush but OMG going away a few weeks ago down the coast thank got only five minutes from home, had forgotten my makeup bag, of course went and got it.”</li> <li><strong>Joanne Stanley</strong> says, “Nightie and slippers... remembered they were on the bed to go in last whilst trying to sleep on an international flight from Sydney to San Francisco.”</li> <li><strong>Marilyn Brown</strong> says she, “Managed to leave my camera and sun hat at home when I was going to the Gold Coast. Thank goodness I had plenty of sunscreen with me.”</li> <li><strong>Jan Savell</strong> shared a funny one, “One time we were caravanning and of course had to use the communal toilet and shower and I forgot the husband’s pyjamas. Not popular Jan.”</li> <li><strong>April Boucher</strong> has forgotten items a few times, but says her most common one is, “Pyjamas. Must run in the family. Although a towel was a close second.”</li> </ul> <p>What’s the biggest thing you’ve forgotten to pack?</p>

Travel Tips