Entertainment
‘Stranger Things’ hit with more timeline errors ahead of finale
Stranger Things fans have once again zeroed in on continuity errors—this time in the newly released first volume of the show’s fifth and final season.
Viewers quickly noticed a discrepancy involving Will Byers’ childhood memory in episode 4, Sorcerer.
In the scene, Will (Noah Schnapp) flashes back to a bright, sunny day when he and his brother Jonathan (Charlie Heaton) built Castle Byers. But the moment doesn’t line up with how Jonathan previously described that day in season 2’s The Mindflayer.
At the time, Jonathan said, “We stayed up all night building Castle Byers… just the way you drew it. And it took so long because you were so bad at hammering. You’d miss the nail every time.” He also recalled that it started raining and they both got sick but refused to stop.
“We just had to finish it, didn’t we? We just had to.”
Fans pointed out that the two versions of events don’t match, though some note the difference could be attributed to the way trauma distorts memory—especially since it happened shortly after their father left.
The flashback isn’t the only continuity slip viewers caught. In episode 6, The Turnbow Trap, Joyce (Winona Ryder) says Will was 11 when he was taken into the Upside Down, despite earlier missing posters listing his age as 12.
This echoes a previous oversight from season 4, when the show failed to acknowledge Will’s birthday. At the time, creators Matt and Ross Duffer admitted the mistake, telling Variety, “It was obviously a mistake, and we’re sorry. We apologize to the fans.”
They joked about possibly doing a “George Lucas” fix in the future, though it hasn’t happened.
Volume 2 of the final season arrives December 25.
Entertainment
Phil Garner, feisty baseball lifer, three-time All-Star, dies aged 76
Phil Garner, a three-time All-Star baseball lifer passed away at age 76 in The Woodlands, Texas, on Saturday, April 11, 2026.
Garner, a three-time All-Star infielder, led as the manager of the Astros to their first World Series appearance.
Garner was battling with pancreatic cancer for over two years, according to his son Ty, in a statement issued by the Pittsburg Pirates.
“Phil never lost his signature spark of life. He was so well known for his love for baseball, which was with him until the end,” said Garner’s son Ty.
Phil Garner gave baseball 16 years of his career playing for the Oakland Athletics (1973-76), then moving to Pittsburgh Pirates (1977-81), Astros (1981-87), Los Angeles Dodgers (1987) and San Francisco Giants (1988).
Pirates chairman Bob Nutting paid a tribute to Garner, saying, “Phil Garner was a fierce competitor, a respected leader, and a cherished part of the Pirates family.”
“His contributions to the 1979 World Series championship team will forever be part of Pirates history. We always appreciated welcoming Phil back to Pittsburgh, and it was evident how deeply this city, this team, his teammates, and our fans meant to him,” added Nutting.
Garner made All-Star teams with Oakland in 1976 and Pittsburgh in 1980 and 1981.
As a player, he made appearances in 150 games and had an .800 OPS for Pittsburgh during the Pirates’ 1979 World Series championship season.
He posted a .417 in the National League Championship Series sweep of the Reds and batted .500 in the World Series, helping the Pirates overcome a 3-1 hole to beat the Orioles.
Garner spent a decade and a half managing in the big leagues, posting a 985-1,054 record with the Milwaukee Brewers (1992-99), Detroit Tigers (2000-02), and Astros (2004-07).
He held the Brewers’ franchise record for most managerial wins until Craig Counsell overtook him in 2002.
Entertainment
Cop guarding polio vaccination team martyred in Hangu attack
- Govt launches countrywide anti-polio campaign.
- 45m children targetted for inoculation against poliovirus.
- Pakistan reported one case of wild poliovirus this year.
A policeman deployed to protect an anti-polio team was martyred and four others were injured when unidentified assailants opened fire on them in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Hangu on Monday.
Hangu SDPO Mujahid Hussain said that the attack targeted a police van carrying a team of five personnel assigned to provide security to a polio vaccination team in the Chapri Waziran area. All of the policemen sustained bullet wounds in the shooting, but one of them later succumbed to his injuries, he revealed.
The remaining injured personnel were shifted to a medical facility, the SDPO added.
The Pakistan Polio Programme officially commenced its second National Immunisation Days (NIDs) campaign of 2026 today, to make Pakistan a polio-free nation.
The five-day countrywide campaign aims to immunise over 45 million children under five years of age. This effort is seen as a decisive step in the country’s final push to stop poliovirus transmission and achieve eradication by the end of 2025.
NEOC confirmed the first wild polio case of 2026 in a four-year-old child from Bello Union Council, Sujawal district, Sindh, last month.
The case was reported through the polio surveillance network and confirmed by the Regional Reference Laboratory for Polio Eradication at the National Institute of Health (NIH), Islamabad.
In Pakistan and neighbouring Afghanistan — the only countries where polio remains endemic — militants have for decades targeted vaccination teams and their security escorts.
Over the past decade, hundreds of police officers and health workers have been killed by militants.
Polio, a highly infectious virus mainly affecting children under five, can result in lifelong paralysis but is easily prevented by the oral administration of a few drops of a vaccine.
The Polio Eradication Initiative (PEI) is already analysing the best response to tackle and prevent further transmission.
Despite challenges, eradicating the global public threat of polio in Pakistan and worldwide is within reach, and the PEI continues to intensify its efforts to leave no child behind. Since 1994, thanks to polio vaccines, Pakistan has reduced polio cases by 99.8% – from 20,000 estimated cases in the early 1990s to 31 in 2025.
In 2025, Pakistan’s PEI carried out five nationwide campaigns, in addition to targeted rounds of oral and injectable polio vaccination and integrated activities with the national routine immunisation programme.
While the overall trend shows a decline in poliovirus detections compared to 2024, reflecting the impact of high-quality vaccination campaigns conducted in 2025, virus circulation persists in certain high-risk areas, including districts of Sindh and southern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP).
These detections underscore the continued need for robust, targeted efforts to interrupt transmission and consistent vaccination for children.
Polio is a highly contagious and incurable disease that can cause lifelong paralysis and death. However, the disease can be prevented thanks to polio vaccines, which are safe and effective and have been safely used in 195 countries, including all Muslim countries.
Polio eradication is a collective responsibility. While Pakistan’s dedicated frontline workers ensure that vaccines reach every child, parents and caregivers play a crucial role by making sure their children receive all recommended doses, including routine immunisations.
The PEI urges all parents and caregivers to ensure that their children are vaccinated during every campaign to protect them from lifelong disability and/or death.
Communities, religious leaders, and the media also play a vital role in promoting vaccination, countering misinformation, and ensuring that every child in Pakistan is protected. Together, we can achieve a polio-free future for every child, in Pakistan and worldwide.
Entertainment
Palace left in shock as Prince William cancels grand ceremony
Prince William, who has big plans to change the monarchy, surprised the Firm when he rejected the idea of holding a major ceremony, a stark contrast to what his father King Charles had done.
Following the death of Queen Elizabeth II, Charles ascended to the throne and he passed down the title of Prince of Wales to his eldest son and heir to the throne. The King’s courtiers had made plans to hold a ceremony at St David’s Cathedral in Pembrokeshire, West Wales, but it was all cancelled.
When it had been Charles’s time, it was a grand ceremony held at Caernarfon Castle to announce his promotion. This ceremony was broadcast live to 19 million people in the UK and 500 million across the world.
Hence, William’s plans caused quite a frenzy behind Palace doors, according to royal author Robert Hardman.
“On becoming Prince of Wales, he [William] had not only ruled out an investiture, like his father’s in 1969, but even a church service,” he revealed in his book In Elizabeth II: In Private. In Public. The Inside Story.
He shared that notion had been such a novel concept that the Government went as far as consulting Plaid Cymru, the Welsh nationalist party, about the ceremony plans to make sure there was no objection. However, the “idea never progressed beyond the desk of Prince William”.
A member of Prince William’s team said that it “wasn’t ever something that he wanted to do”.
Prince William and Princess Kate instead celebrated their new titles with a visit to Anglesey, where they lived for three years after getting married, and Swansea.
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