The Citizen (Gauteng)

2019: the year that was

ECCENTRICI­TIES: SAUSAGE ROLLS SET TO MUSIC AND A MAP THAT SMELLS

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President Trump would have got the message on climate change on arrival.

From hit songs about sausage rolls to the world’s first odour map, here are 10 of the more offbeat news stories from 2019: 1. Sausage rolls hit No 1 again in UK Christmas charts

British YouTuber LadBaby scored his second consecutiv­e No 1 Christmas hit, this time with a version of I Love Rock & Roll, again focused on the popular UK pastry.

The song, raising money to feed people in need, was packed with meaty puns sung by Mark Hoyle, aka LadBaby, and his wife Roxanne and the chorus: “I love sausage rolls, so put another one in the oven, baby”.

Last year he hit No 1 with We Built This City (on sausage rolls).

2. Manners might be environmen­tally rude

With more than 64 million unnecessar­y “thank you” e-mails per day, Britons significan­tly boost the country’s carbon output, according to a recent study.

If each person sent one less, Britain could reduce its output by 16 433 tons.

3. The first map of the world’s stinky areas

Tested in Barcelona, the D-Noses project allows residents to report unpleasant smells through the free Odour-Collect app.

Its aim is to help residents pressure politician­s to address odour nuisance which, according to experts, can cause a number of ailments, including headaches, stress and respirator­y problems.

4. Hairy female scientists

Dr Ellen Currano, an associate professor of paleobotan­y at the University of Wyoming in the United States, got fed up with being overlooked as a female scientist despite doing the same, muddy, field work.

She founded The Bearded Lady Project: Challengin­g the Face of Science, with a website, two documentar­y films, and a travelling exhibit featuring portraits of about 100 female paleontolo­gists with stuck-on facial hair sharing stories about equal pay and field work opportunit­ies. 5. Women reclaim their space British student Laila Laurel designed an anti-“manspreadi­ng” chair, shaped with a wedge that narrows towards the front, forces the user to keep their knees together and stops them from invading the space of a person sitting next to them.

6. Nice house in that selfie – shame it’s not yours

In an era when few can afford to buy the actual lifestyle, Instagramm­ers are using expensive London properties as the backdrop to social media posts. With thousands flocking to Notting Hill – one of London’s priciest postcodes – some owners get annoyed, while others let the mostly young people following the trend to pretend to live a life they can’t afford.

7. Women put on spin on England football anthem

When England’s famous football anthem was re-written for the country’s female football team ahead of the women’s World Cup, “three Lions” become “three Lionesses” in the new lyrics, with a roll-call of stars from the England women’s team.

8. Houston, we have a problem

The first all-female spacewalk in March was supposed to mark a giant leap for womankind but had to be cancelled when Nasa realised it only had one small spacesuit and two size small female astronauts, Anne McClain and Christina Koch. The mission was accomplish­ed in October.

9. Pokemon Go Slow

Pokemon Go, the augmented-reality game, was lauded by Spanish retirees, who say it keeps them mentally and physically healthy.

The residents of the town of Badalona, north of Barcelona, have joined a European initiative to improve the health and quality of life of older citizens by searching for “Pikachus” and “Weedles” and mixing with other people.

10. “Oi Trump”

An art student had a clear message for Donald Trump as he flew into Britain in June on a state visit.

Ollie Nancarrow, 18, spent a weekend mowing “climate change is real” in giant letters and a massive polar bear into grass underneath the US president’s flight path into London.

Nancarrow also wrote “Oi Trump” and mowed a penis into another field. – Thomson Reuters Foundation

D-Noses project intended to report bad smells

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