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Fall Film Festival Season 2025 Begins - 10 Films I'm Excited to Watch
Hollywood

Fall Film Festival Season 2025 Begins – 10 Films I’m Excited to Watch

by jummy84 August 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Fall Film Festival Season 2025 Begins – 10 Films I’m Excited to Watch

by Alex Billington
August 27, 2025

Off we go back into the lands of cinema and storytelling. Hoping to encounter some of the best films of the year. The fall film festival season is upon us once again, and we’re ready to start watching. Kicking things off with the 82nd Venice Film Festival which is now under this week in sunny Italy, along with the 52nd Telluride Film Festival in Colorado – two of the most beloved and iconic festivals in the world. Then the Toronto Film Festival will take over in mid-September celebrating 50 years (!!), before Fantastic Fest in Austin, TX (starting on Sept. 18) and the 63rd New York Film Festival in NYC (starting on Sept. 26), continuing with the London Film Festival (starting on Oct. 8) & Sitges Film Festival (also on Oct. 9). This is when all the big new movies and surprise projects they’ve been saving for the end of the year finally make their first appearance. Which of them will win us over? It’s an exciting time for cinephiles who make the voyages to these cities to discover the latest that the gods of cinema have provided. We’ve been covering these festivals all over the world for the last 19 years in a row – it’s part of who we are. Below is my list of my most anticipated from the line-ups across all of the festivals. I’ll be back in Venice to watch films at this annual cinema celebration in Italy – though this list includes many films from each of the various fall fests.

The challenge with film festivals nowadays is that it’s impossible to see everything at every festival, and it’s unaffordable to go to every festival all over the world (as much as I wish I could). Each of these fests has its own set of world premieres & special presentations – I decided to pick my own Top 10 Most Anticipated from among the entire set of films debuting this fall. Not just the ones at Venice or at TIFF or otherwise. Alas, I won’t be able to watch all of these listed as I won’t be able to attend the Toronto and New York Film Fests. But I still think these are some of the most interesting premieres. Choosing only 10 films is always a daunting task – I could name 50 films I want to see right now. However, this is always what’s so enticing and exhilarating about festivals, and why I always go back year after year. Let’s go watch and discover something new and discuss cinema! Let’s celebrate all of these achievements – and make sure writers and actors and the entire film crew are paid fairly & treated with respect. Anyway, enough of my rambling, onto the films…

No Other Choice – directed by Park Chan-wook – Venice & TIFF & NYFF

No Other Choice - Park Chan-wook

As a huge fan of Park Chan-wook’s last film Decision to Leave (read my full review), I am excited to see him continue on in his tender era with this dark comedy about a man doing what he must. I’ve already read the synopsis and know what it’s about, which actually makes it even more exciting knowing that Park Chan-wook is handling this story about capitalism’s darker sides, right next to his colleague Bong Joon-ho, focusing on criticizing the financial woes of modern Korean society. Unless you prefer to watch this without any idea of what’s happening, don’t read on. Which is the best way to watch the film anyway – either way I’ve got a feeling this is going to be another knock out from Park Chan-wook. Lee Byung-hun stars as Man-soo, a father and family man who, after being unemployed for years, decides to start taking out the competition to hopefully give him a better chance at getting a job. Ha… Adapted from the book “The Ax” by Donald E. Westlake. There’s already an official trailer out if you want to see more footage from this one. Premiering in the Main Competition at the 2025 Venice Film Festival – this one is a strong contender for the Golden Lion.

Jay Kelly – directed by Noah Baumbach – Venice & NYFF & London

Jay Kelly - Noah Baumbach

Yet another beloved filmmaker who is a regular at the Venice Film Festival returning with his new movie. I also watched Noah Baumbach’s last two films, Marriage Story (2019) and White Noise (2022), in Venice in the years prior. He’s back with a personal story of a famous actor struggling with his own fame & glory as he gets older. Baumbach was lucky to get the one-and-only George Clooney as the titular Jay in his new film titled Jay Kelly (made for Netflix). It’s a very meta story – famous movie actor Jay Kelly and his devoted manager Ron embark on a whirlwind & profound journey across Europe to a (fictional) European film fest. Both are forced to confront choices they’ve made, their relationships with loved ones and the legacies they’ll leave behind. Baumbach’s cast also includes Adam Sandler as his manager, and Laura Dern as his publicist, along with his usually terrific ensemble: Patrick Wilson, Eve Hewson, Riley Keough, Billy Crudup, Isla Fisher, Greta Gerwig, and Emily Mortimer. While Baumbach has said the film is inspired by White Noise doing poorly, the script is co-written by fellow actor Emily Mortimer and feels very much like it’s meant for someone like Clooney to work through his own film industry woes and depression.

Silent Friend – directed by Ildikó Enyedi – Venice & TIFF

Silent Friend - Ildikó Enyedi

I love trees and nature and spending time in the forest and saying hello to trees. No really, it’s true, I adore trees (I love to photograph them all the time). Silent Friend is the new film from acclaimed Hungarian filmmaker Ildikó Enyedi, who won the Golden Bear top prize at Berlinale 2017 for her film On Body and Soul (it’s very good). The film is about a giant, old ginkgo tree located inside a garden in a medieval German town (yes this town and garden and tree really exist in Marburg, Germany). Spanning three periods in time – from 1908 to 1972 to 2020. 🌳 “In the heart of a botanical garden in a medieval university town in Germany stands a majestic ginkgo tree. This silent witness has observed over a century the quiet rhythms of transformation across three human lives.” The intro goes on explaining: ” We follow their clumsy, awkward attempts to connect — each one of them deeply rooted in their own present — as they are transformed by the quiet, enduring, and mysterious power of nature. The ancient ginkgo tree brings us closer to what it means to be human — to our longing to belong.” Yep I really cannot wait to watch this – it honestly sounds like it’ll be this year’s Perfect Days. The film stars Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Léa Seydoux, and also Luna Wedler.

Bugonia – directed by Yorgos Lanthimos – Venice

Bugonia - Yorgos Lanthimos

Yorgos is back! Let the Lanthimos Chaos reign! I was there in 2023 when Greek filmmaker extraordinaire Yorgos Lanthimos rocked everyone in Venice with Poor Things (here’s my full review) – which went on to win the Golden Lion and four Academy Awards. This time he’s going to surprise us all and take us another wild journey into madness. I’ve got a feeling the story and the way it all plays out in this film will be just as upsetting & divisive as Poor Things, though in a completely different way. Bugonia is a Lanthimos remake of the 2003 Korean sci-fi tilm titled Save the Green Planet, about a beekeeper who kidnaps a corporate exec because he believes he’s an alien controlling humans. Or something like that… This time around it’s Emma Stone starring as the corporate CEO + Jesse Plemons as the beekeeper guy who kidnaps her. Everything else, well, we’ll have to watch and find out where it goes and what happens and how wacky and weird and fun it gets. Or not! I’m so excited to watch this and argue about it with everyone at the festival and beyond…

Frankenstein – directed by Guillermo del Toro – Venice & TIFF

Frankenstein - Guillermo del Toro

Only need to say: Guillermo del Toro! The maestro is back! I was also in Venice in 2017 when The Shape of Water (here’s my full review) premiered at at all of the fall festivals, then went on to win the Golden Lion as well as Best Picture at the Oscars. Happy he’s back with his latest creation – an epic, stylish, grandiose new take on the classic tale of Frankenstein from the story by Mary Shelley. Though it is a Netflix movie, it still sounds like it’ll be a fascinating new version of this classic tale: “A brilliant but egotistical scientist brings a creature to life in a monstrous experiment that ultimately leads to the undoing of both the creator and his tragic creation.” Featuring Oscar Isaac as Dr. Victor Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi as The Monster, with Mia Goth, Christoph Waltz, Ralph Ineson, Charles Dance, Christian Convery, and Burn Gorman. It was filmed with real sets, shot on location around the world, with lavish costumes and limited CGI. Even though everyone expects horror, apparently it’s more of a “deeply personal & intimate” character study than anything horrifying. I’m not even a big fan of the Frankenstein story, but I’m ready to watch this.

Rose of Nevada – directed by Mark Jenkin – Venice & TIFF & NYFF & London

Rose of Nevada - Mark Jenkin

What do we have here? A new project from clever Cornish filmmaker Mark Jenkin? I’m intrigued. Jenkin has been earning his marks on the film festival circuit with two other films before which cinephiles have been raving about: Bait and Enys Men. Rose of Nevada is his latest and it’s a mysterious new project. This time he was able to cast two major actors: George MacKay and Callum Turner star in the film as young men who try to join a fishing boat crew. In a forgotten fishing village, a boat mysteriously appears in the old harbour. The Rose of Nevada, lost at sea with all hands 30 years ago, reappears. After this lost ship returns to a village 30 years after vanishing, two men join its crew hoping for better fortune. After one voyage, they find themselves transported back in time, mistaken for the original crew. That’s the only intro that anyone should be reading before watching this – the rest will be a discovery when it’s playing on the screen in front of us. I’ve been following Jenkin’s work over the years and it seems like his most exciting creation yet. Keep an eye out for it playing at festivals this fall and hopefully in your local art house theater sooner than later…

After the Hunt – directed by Luca Guadagnino – Venice & NYFF

After the Hunt - Luca Guadagnino

This one is going to be major. Early word is that After the Hunt is 2025’s Anatomy of a Fall – it’s the kind of “what do you believe?” movie that will have everyone talking and debating and arguing. The trailer hints at an upsetting incident with a young woman, played by Ayo Edebiri, at a prestigious university. She files an accusation against another professor then it becomes a controversy, etc. The rest of it is a mystery – we’ll have to wait to find out what really happened and why everyone is so defensive in here. From what I’ve heard, it’s possible Julia Roberts will end up winning the Academy Award next year for this movie. The main cast also features Andrew Garfield, Michael Stuhlbarg (still beloved for his great performance in Guadagnino’s Call Me By Your Name), and Chloë Sevigny. Venice Fest regular Luca Guadagnino also specifically requested to not have the film premiere in the Main Competition, which I believe is because he’d rather everyone focus on what the movie is actually talking about and not whether it should win any awards.

Rental Family – directed by Hikari – TIFF & London

Rental Family - Hikari

Rental Family was a surprise addition to the fall line-up of new releases (now set to open in theaters in November). While it won’t be premiering in Venice, it will show up at TIFF (and probably Telluride) instead. Brendan Fraser stars in the lead role in a story quite obviously inspired by Werner Herzog’s film Family Romance, LLC (which premiered at Cannes 2019) as a struggling American actor who moves to Tokyo and starts working for a “person rental” company. He is given various jobs to play various people – father, friend, etc. This seems like it’s the perfect post-Oscar role for Fraser – playing a man working for a Japanese “rental family” agency, “starring” in stand-in roles for strangers. He rediscovers purpose, belonging, and the beauty of human connection. The charming Japanse cast features Takehiro Hira, Mari Yamamoto, Shannon Mahina Gorman, and Akira Emoto. It’s also the second feature film made by the filmmaker known as Hikari, aka Mitsuyo Miyazaki, her next big project after directing episodes of the hit TV series “Beef” for A24 & Netflix. This is definitely one to watch, even if it is a bit too cheesy & sentimental that’s fine with me.

Straight Circle – directed by Oscar Hudson – Venice

Straight Circle - Oscar Hudson

My wildcard pick for 2025 is this intriguing indie film creation – premiering in the Critics Week sidebar at the 2025 Venice Film Festival. Straight Circle is the first feature from British director Oscar Hudson, best known for directing many commercials & music videos. He’s finally making his leap into feature films and this one sounds like a fascinating psychological thriller similar to The Lighthouse or Foxtrot. Here’s the intro: “A pair of enemy soldiers stationed on a remote border in a vast featureless desert descend into a state of profound disorientation after forgetting which side of the border is which. As they grapple with identities, loyalties, and the absurdity of their situation, their isolation slowly gives way to an unfathomable nightmare that will blur the line between friend & foe.” The film stars Luke Tittensor & Elliot Tittensor – actual brothers in real life playing characters on opposite sides of the border. I am always interested in discovering new films that attempt to show how alike we are by revealing the truth about borders & nationality & wars: we’re all pretty much the same and we’re fighting over nothing aside from the hubris of greedy politicians.

A House of Dynamite – directed by Kathryn Bigelow – Venice & NYFF

A House of Dynamite - Kathryn Bigelow

As a reminder, filmmaker Kathryn Bigelow’s The Hurt Locker, which went on to win Best Picture, initially premiered at the Venice Film Festival back in 2008. Her next movie is much more ominous: When a single, unattributed missile is launched at the United States, a race begins to determine who is responsible and how to respond. I thought this might take place entirely in the White House in underground rooms focused on a few people, but apparently it’s a full-on dramatic thriller following many different people involved in deciding what to do in this situation. The return of nuclear fear! Netflix hasn’t really revealed any marketing yet other than a basic poster with the tagline: “Not if. When.” The full cast includes Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos, Greta Lee, Jason Clarke. I’m especially intrigued to find out what happens in this fictional (or not?) story. Will they make the right call? Bigelow’s director’s statement also explains: ” I wanted to make a film that confronts this paradox — to explore the madness of a world that lives under the constant shadow of annihilation, yet rarely speaks of it.”

Aside from these 10 films listed above, there are also a handful of films that I want to watch but fall into the category of “I just really hope they’re good.” I’m not as excited about them as I should be right now, I just want them to be very good films. These include: Werner Herzog’s new doc Ghost Elephants about African elephants; Chloe Zhao’s new film Hamnet starring Jessie Buckley as Agnes Shakespeare & Paul Mescal as William Shakespeare; Derek Cianfrance’s crime comedy Roofman with Channing Tatum; Mona Fastvold’s follow-up to The Brutalist, which she also co-wrote with Brady Corbet, a new film titled The Testament of Ann Lee starring Amanda Seyfried as as Ann Lee – the founding leader of the Shakers religious sect in the 18th century; the next Daniel Day-Lewis project titled Anemone (which looks quite good); and of course Rian Johnson’s latest whodunit with Daniel Craig as Benoit Blanc titled Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery – which is premiering at TIFF. There are plenty of other discoveries and surprises that I am sure we’ll encounter over the next few months as they premiere at upcoming film festivals around the world.

A few others that are also on my watchlist: Steven Soderbergh’s The Christophers (TIFF), Claire Denis’ The Fence (TIFF & NYFF), Ulrich Köhler’s Gavagai (NYFF), Kent Jones’ Late Fame (Venice & NYFF), Romain Gavras’ Sacrifice (TIFF), Olivier Assayas’ The Wizard of the Kremlin (Venice & TIFF), Bryan Fuller’s Dust Bunny (TIFF), Kenji Tanigaki’s The Furious (TIFF), and Ben Wheatley’s Normal (TIFF) with Odenkirk. You can find more preview lists for the fall festival season here: Metro UK’s I can’t wait for these 10 movies; The Film Stage’s 15 Most-Anticipated Films, Indiewire’s Fall Festival Preview: 42 Must-See Films, and THR’s Venice Top 10 Must-See Titles. Keep following for reviews / updates on all these & more.

With the Venice Film Festival beginning soon, I’ll be dedicated entirely to this festival and catching films for the next two weeks and writing about them. Venice 2025 runs from August 27th until September 6th, ending Saturday night with the awards (the Golden Lion). Follow my daily coverage and instant reactions on Twitter/X as usual @firstshowing, follow my photography posts as always on Instagram @abillington, follow my reviews on Letterboxd, and check the site for daily updates on films + reviews. Back in 2016, I wrote an essay about Why I Can’t Stop Going to Film Festivals. What I said then is still true. It always is. I’m still totally addicted film festivals, and they still fill me with so much joy and inspiration. Let’s hope some of these films turn out to be all-timers – like Dune and Tar and First Man in the years before. I’m always ready to start watching, hoping for some real discoveries and unforgettable works of cinema that will fascinate us.

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Find more posts in: Feat, Indies, Lists, Venice 25

August 28, 2025 0 comments
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Bollywood Melodies That Celebrate The Festival of Ganesh Chaturthi
Bollywood

Bollywood Melodies That Celebrate The Festival of Ganesh Chaturthi

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

A vibrant mix of devotional and energetic Bollywood tracks that perfectly capture the spirit of Ganesh Chaturthi.

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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EventMania Festival 2025: TED Zone — A Glimpse into the Future of the Event Industry
Events

EventMania Festival 2025: TED Zone — A Glimpse into the Future of the Event Industry

by jummy84 August 26, 2025
written by jummy84

On September 9, 2025, the SkyLight Gallery (Arjaan by Rotana, Dubai Media City) will become the key meeting point for event professionals. EventMania Festival will bring together over 500 participants — agencies, corporate clients, venues, and contractors from across the region. Alongside large-scale networking and a vibrant show program, the agenda features a highlight session — TED Zone: Event Marketing 360°.

TED Zone: Maximum Insights in 90 Minutes

Start time — 3:00 PM. Format: 11 topics × 8 minutes × 1 stage.

Participants will gain a concentrated overview of the trends and practices shaping the industry’s future:
• audience psychology and client journeys;
• creativity and storytelling as a source of WOW-effect;
• technology and automation in event management;
• team and contractor management;
• experience design and emotional scripts;
• measuring impact — from ROMI to NPS;
• ESG, inclusion, and emerging formats including the metaverse.


Key Speakers 2025

📣 Sujoy Cherian
📍 Creative Technologist • Futurist • Serial Entrepreneur • CEO of Option1live
Topic: The Future of Events: Values and Trends
How ESG, inclusion, hybrid formats, and the metaverse are shaping client expectations and redefining the industry.

📣 Patrick Narracott
📍 Founder of The PartyPlatform
Topic: Technology & Automation: The Heart of Digital Events
How CRM, chatbots, and AI are reshaping organizer workflows and guest communication.

📣 Gauri Chadha
📍 Co-Founder & Creative Director of The Big Night Events
Topic: Creativity: From Big Idea to WOW Effect
How to turn concepts into powerful experiences through storytelling and visual metaphors.

📣 Kateryna Khristi
📍 Founder of OBRANIcrew
Topic: How to Sell Ideas in Events
From event manager to $4M+ agency leader: building a business based on selling ideas.

📣 Denis Panchenko
📍 Founder & Creative Designer of Celebration Station UAE
Topic: Production and Budget: Turning Dreams into Reality
How to balance ambitions and resources to bring projects of any scale to life.

📣 Adam Parry
📍 Co-founder of Event Industry News & Founder of SpeakerStacks
Topic: Metrics of Success: Measuring Impact
Adam will guide participants through ROMI, NPS, analytics, and feedback tools that help professionals measure success and set the foundation for growth.

📣 Mikhail Ovchinnikov
📍 Partner of Video Production Studio502, Director & Filmmaker
Topic: Content as an Asset: Visuals and Scalability
Mikhail will explore how to turn events into long-term assets with videos, reels, and podcasts — creating content that continues to deliver value long after the event ends.

📣 Nikita Menshov
📍 Actor, Emcee, Frontman of DramaQueen School in Dubai
Topic: Understanding the Audience: How to Understand What Drives Guests through Psychology and Research
Nikita will share how behavioral insights and audience psychology can be applied to event design, helping professionals craft experiences that resonate on a deeper level.

📣 Mohand Gharabli
📍 Creative Director & Founder of WhiteCrowShow
Topic: Experience Design: Crafting Unforgettable Moments
Mohand will reveal how to design emotional and sensory experiences that leave a lasting impression on guests.


Where New Ideas Take Shape

EventMania Festival is designed as a practical platform for networking and business opportunities, but TED Zone elevates it further. It concentrates the strategies and insights that will define tomorrow’s event industry.

📅 Date: September 9, 2025
📍 Venue: SkyLight Gallery, Arjaan by Rotana, Dubai Media City


Editor’s Note

TED Zone will serve as the intellectual core of EventMania Festival. In just 90 minutes, participants will receive a strategic overview of the industry from leaders who are actively shaping its future. This is where ideas are born and the new season’s agenda begins.

August 26, 2025 0 comments
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Vampire Weekend Call Out Victorious Festival Organizers After Mary Wallopers Set Cut Short
Music

Vampire Weekend Call Out Victorious Festival Organizers After Mary Wallopers Set Cut Short

by jummy84 August 25, 2025
written by jummy84

On Friday, August 22, Irish folk band the Mary Wallopers had their set at Portsmouth, England’s Victorious Festival cut short after flying the Palestinian flag onstage and leading a chant of “free Palestine.” Several artists, including the Last Dinner Party, subsequently pulled out of their scheduled performances in protest, and now Vampire Weekend, who are among this year’s headliners, have called out the festival’s organizers.

As reported by Portsmouth News, Ezra Koenig addressed the crowd during Vampire Weekend’s set last night (Saturday, August 23). “If someone was punished for flying a flag, that is wrong and they deserve an apology,” Koenig said. “The terrible suffering of the Palestinian people deserves all of our sympathy.”

Writing to NME, representatives for Victorious originally claimed to have cut off the Mary Wallopers’ sound because they “used a chant which is widely understood to have a discriminatory context.” The band then responded with their own statement alongside footage of the stage during their set: “The festival have released a misleading statement to the press claiming they cut our sound because of a discriminatory chant and not the band’s call to Free Palestine.”

The statement continues: “Our video clearly shows a Victorious crew member coming on stage, interfering with our show, removing the flag from the stage and then the sound being cut following a chant of “Free Palestine.” The same crew member is later heard in the video saying “you aren’t playing until the flag is removed.” Victorious Festival then released a second statement apologizing to the band. Read both in full below.

In June, British punk-rap duo Bob Vylan had their U.S. visas revoked after a controversial Glastonbury set where frontman Bobby Vylan led the crowd in a chant of “Death, death to the IDF.” Irish rap trio Kneecap, whose performance at Coachella 2025 featured pro-Palestine and anti-Israel messages, have since been removed from the lineup of Glasgow’s TRNSMT music festival, banned from Hungary, and had one of their members, Mo Chara, charged with a terror offense for allegedly displaying the Hezbollah flag during a 2024 concert. Both groups are currently being investigated by British police following their sets at Glastonbury this year.

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August 25, 2025 0 comments
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The Last Dinner Party lead boycott of Victorious as The Mary Wallopers hit back and festival respond
Music

The Last Dinner Party lead boycott of Victorious as The Mary Wallopers hit back and festival respond

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

The Last Dinner Party are among a group of artists to have boycotted Victorious Festival after The Mary Wallopers’ set was cut short for displaying a Palestinian flag.

On Friday (August 22), the Irish band were halfway through their opening song at the Portsmouth festival when their sound was cut by festival organisers and the Palestine flag on stage with them was taken away. As the crowd started to boo, the band led a chant of “free, free Palestine”.

The Mary Wallopers updated fans on Saturday with an Instagram post reading: “Yesterday, a famine was declared in Gaza, where at least 65 people were killed by Israeli attacks, all the while Israel pushed ahead with plans to split the West Bank in two. These are the important facts about yesterday.”

Alongside an unedited video of their set being cut short, they added: “The festival have released a misleading statement to the press claiming they cut our sound because of a discriminatory chant and not the band’s call to Free Palestine. Our video clearly shows a Victorious crew member coming on stage, interfering with our show, removing the flag from the stage and then the sound being cut following a chant of ‘Free Palestine’. The same crew member is later heard in the video saying, ‘you aren’t playing until the flag is removed’.”

“We completely reject Victorious’ portrayal of today’s events and request that they retract their statement immediately. We know this is getting some attention and we don’t want another distraction which takes attention away from the genocide that is happening in Palestine,” they added.

Now, a number of other artists have announced they will not be playing at Victorious this weekend, including The Last Dinner Party, The Academic and Cliffords.

“We are outraged by the decision made to silence The Mary Wallopers yesterday at Victorious,” The Last Dinner Party wrote in a statement. “As a band we cannot cosign political censorship and will therefore be boycotting the festival today.”

“As Gazans are deliberately plunged into catastrophic famine after two years of escalating violence, it is urgent and obvious that artists use their platform to draw attention to the cause. To see an attempt to direct attention away from the genocide in order to maintain an apolitical image is immensely disappointing.”

“Throughout this summer we have used our stages to encourage our audience to donate even a drink’s worth of money to Medical Aid for Palestinians, and today we urge you more than ever to do the same,” they continued.

“We are so deeply sorry to our fans who were looking forward to seeing us today, and we are devastated to be put in this position that upsets both us and you.”

The Mary Wallopers’ fellow Irish artists The Academic and Cliffords have also pulled out of the festival. The Academic said they “can’t in good conscience stand up and play at a festival that silences free speech and the right to express your views”, while Cliffords said, “we refuse to play if we are to be censored for showing our support to the people of Palestine”.

On Friday, Victorious told NME that “although a flag was displayed on stage contrary to our policy, and this was raised with the artist’s crew, the show was not ended at this point, and it was the artist’s decision to stop the song. The decision by the event management to cut the sound and end the performance was only taken after the band used a chant which is widely understood to have a discriminatory context.”

The festival has since posted a statement that said they “didn’t handle the explanation of our policies sensitively or far enough in advance to allow a sensible conclusion to be reached. This put the band and our own team in a difficult situation which never should have arisen. We would like to sincerely apologise to all concerned.”

Posted by Victorious Festival on Saturday, August 23, 2025

“We absolutely support the right of artists to freely express their views from the stage, within the law and the inclusive nature of the event,” they added. “Our policy of not allowing flags of any kind, which has been in place for many years for wider event management and safety reasons, is not meant to compromise that right.”

“We accept that, although mics remained live for longer, sound for The Mary Wallopers’ audience was cut as described in the band’s video and that comments after that were not audible to the public. We are sorry that this situation has come about and will be making a substantial donation to humanitarian relief efforts for the Palestinian people.”

Victorious is one of many festivals to be operated by Superstruct Entertainment, which is owned by the controversial global investment firm KKR, which has been criticised by many artists for its alleged stakes in weapons manufacturing companies and Israel corporations operating in the occupied Palestinian territories.

Several other festivals that are backed by KKR have addressed their concerns about the connection. Tramlines said they would “never send them a single Euro”, while Mighty Hoopla stated their “clear opposition to KKR’s unethical investments”.

One group of 50 artists, which included Massive Attack and Brian Eno, signed an open letter urging Field Day to distance itself from KKR in May, while another 11 artists announced that they were boycotting the festival in solidarity with Palestine.

Victorious Festival is running on the Southsea seafront this weekend, with Kings Of Leon, Queens Of The Stone Age and Vampire Weekend topping the bill.

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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'Wind Talk To Me' Wins Best Feature At Sarajevo Film Festival
TV & Streaming

‘Wind Talk To Me’ Wins Best Feature At Sarajevo Film Festival

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Stefan Ðorďević’s Wind, Talk to Me has snapped up the top prize at the Sarajevo Film Festival, taking the Heart of Sarajevo award for Best Feature Film. The Serbia-Slovenia-Croatia co-production, which earned €16,000 with the prize, is a blend of documentary and fiction and also stars the Serbian helmer and his family. 

The project sees Ðorďević reuninte with his family to celebrate his grandmother’s birthday for the first time since his mother died. According to a synopsis, “this homecoming, driven by Stefan’s urge to complete a film about his mother as well as an attempt to make amends by rescuing a strat dog, will ignite an introspective journey.”

Elsewhere, Ivana Mladenović picked up the Heart of Sarajevo award for Best Director for her project Sorella Di Clausura while the ensemble cast of Fantasy  – Sarah el Saleh, Alina Juhard, Mia Skrbinac and Mina Milovanoviċ – all won for Best Actress.

Yugo Florida star Andrija Kuzmanović took the prize for Best Actor while Best Documentary Film went to Ivette Löcker’s Our Time Will Come. The latter project focuses on a year in the life of an interracial couple. 

Sarajevo’s four competition sections included feature, documentary, short and student films. The festival screened 15 world, six international, 28 regional and two national premieres throughout the eight-day event. A total of 50 films competed for the Heart of Sarajevo Awards. 

The jury comprised of Ukrainian helmer Sergie Loznitsa, who served as president, actor Dragan Mićanović, director-writer-actor Emanuel Pârvu, writer-director Ena Sendijarević and Berlinale director Tricia Tuttle. 

Here’s the full line up of the winners for the festival, which wrapped August 22: 

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST FEATURE FILM  

WIND, TALK TO ME / VETRE, PRIČAJ SA MNOM  

Serbia, Slovenia, Croatia 

Director: Stefan Đorđević  

Producers: Dragana Jovović, Ognjen Glavonić, Stefan Ivančić  

Award in the amount of €16,000.  

The filmmaker behind our Best Film takes a formally bold and inquisitive approach to his very personal subject, working with his collaborators to combine elements of fiction and documentary into a film of beguiling melancholy and delicate beauty. It is our please to present the HEART OF SARAJEVO to the producers and director of WIND, TALK TO ME.  

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST DIRECTOR  

Ivana Mladenović, SORELLA DI CLAUSURA  

Romania, Serbia, Italy, Spain  

Award in the amount of €10,000 is sponsored by the United Nations in Bosnia and Herzegovina in cooperation with UNESCO.  

The punk spirit is never far away in this skilfully directed film, which flows like a dostojevskean river, stacking failure on failure, to finally arrive at a romantic comedy, but without the romance. The best director award goes to Ivana Mladenović, SORELLA DI CLAUSURA. 

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST ACTRESS  

FANTASY ensemble – Sarah al Saleh, Alina Juhart, Mia Skrbinac, Mina Milovanović  

Slovenia, North Macedonia  

Award in the amount of €2,500.  

In a film exploring the distances between how we understand ourselves and how others perceive us, our ensemble of talented actresses brought great charisma and authenticity to their roles. We proudly present the Best Actress Award to the ensemble quartet at the heart of FANTASY.  

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST ACTOR  

Andrija Kuzmanović, YUGO FLORIDA  

Serbia, Bulgaria, France, Croatia, Montenegro  

Award in the amount of €2,500. 

Our Best Actor brings depth and complexity to a performance of deceptive simplicity, as his character struggles to unlearn a lifetime of avoiding emotional closeness. Our Best Actor Award goes to Andrija Kuzmanović.  

COMPTETITION PROGRAMME – DOCUMENTARY FILM 

Jury:  

Blake Levin (producer, USA)  

Cíntia Gil (film curator, Portugal)  

Veton Nurkollari (artistic director of DokuFest and film curator, Kosovo*)  

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST DOCUMENTARY FILM  

OUR TIME WILL COME / UNSERE ZEIT WIRD KOMMEN  

Austria  

Director: Ivette Löcker  

Award in the amount of €4,000 is sponsored by the Government of Switzerland. 

AN OSCAR® QUALIFYING FILM  

The Heart of Sarajevo award for best documentary feature goes to a film that combines the beauty and the challenges of creating togetherness, with the generosity and rigour of making films in the intimacy of lives being lived. It is a film that builds a cinematic time and space for the complexities of love and the politics of coexistence, valuing the richness that each person may bring to our common spaces.  

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST SHORT DOCUMENTARY FILM  

THE MAN’S LAND / KACEBIS MITSA Georgia, Hungary  

Director: Mariam Bakacho Khatchvani  

Award in the amount of €2,000. 

To a film that brings forward and challenges a centuries old custom. With unobtrusive, yet close and intimate camera work, and with precise editing, we are presented a film that speaks volumes about injustice and integrity. The Heart of Sarajevo for Best Short Documentary goes to Mariam Bakacho Khatchvani for her film The Men’s Land.  

SPECIAL JURY AWARD  

IN HELL WITH IVO  

Bulgaria, United States  

Director: Kristina Nikolova  

Award in the amount of €2,500. 

For the filmmaker’s deft ability to let her iconoclast subject’s charisma and talent erupt on screen, shaping a narrative of Ivo’s performances that push audiences into discomfort with honesty, compassion, and connection, the Special Jury Prize for Documentary goes to ‘In Hell With Ivo’ from director Kristina Nikolova.  

SPECIAL MENTION  

I BELIEVE THE PORTRAIT SAVED ME / MUA BESOJ MË SHPËTOJ PORTRETI  

Kosovo*, Netherlands  

Director: Alban Muja 

To a formally daring film that uses re-enactment to tell a story of survival during the war, as well as the power of art, the jury is delighted to give a special mention to I Believe the Portrait Saved Me by Alban Muja. 

COMPETITION PROGRAMME – SHORT FILM 

Jury:  

Teresa Cavina (festival programmer and script doctor, Italy)  

Cem Demirer (cinematographer and director, Türkiye)  

Nebojša Slijepčević (director and writer, Croatia)  

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST SHORT FILM  

WINTER IN MARCH / LUMI SAADAB MEID  

Armenia, Estonia, France, Belgium  

Director: Natalia Mirzoyan  

AN OSCAR® QUALIFYING FILM  

Award in the amount of €2,500.  

The Heart of Sarajevo goes to the film done with exceptional precision and amazing creativity. It’s an authentic story of inner conflict that comes from facing your country falling into the moral abyss. The name of the film is WINTER IN MARCH directed by Natalia Mirzoyan.  

SPECIAL MENTION  

ERASERHEAD IN A KNITTED SHOPPING BAG  

Bulgaria  

Director: Lili Koss  

The special mention goes to the playful film that is set against the backdrop of the Bulgarian rough 90’s, where children, left to grow up by themselves, invent their own world. 

The narrative subtly emerges from witty smart and believable human interactions, directed with youthful energy and supported by vivid cinematography. The name of the film is ERASERHEAD IN A KNITTED SHOPPING BAG directed by Lili Koss.  

COMPETITION PROGRAMME – STUDENT FILM  

Jury:  

Miroslav Mandić (director and writer, Bosnia and Herzegovina)  

Nađa Petrović (writer, screenwriter and director, Serbia)  

Yorgos Tsourgiannis (producer, Greece)  

HEART OF SARAJEVO FOR BEST STUDENT FILM  

TARIK  

Serbia  

Director: Adem Tutić  

Award in the amount of €1,000 is sponsored by the Regional Cooperation Council. 

A teenage boy floats through the spaces that define his youth, thanks to a visual approach dominated by the fuzzy depth of field, supported by intense acting and crisp dialogues. It is not a dreamy levitation, but the hardship caused by toxic masculinity of his peers and his family, primarily by his sensitive soul. For the deliberate aesthetics that employ remarkably sparse means and thus aptly convey important narrative issues, for the details that are thoroughly considered and subtly woven into the narrative, the award goes to TARIK directed by Adem Tutić. 

SPECIAL AWARD FOR PROMOTING GENDER EQUALITY  

Jury:  

Anna Croneman (producer and CEO of the Swedish Film Institute, Sweden)  

Ivan Marinović (director, writer and producer, Montenegro)  

Norika Sefa (director and writer, Kosovo*) 

GOD WILL NOT HELP / BOG NEĆE POMOĆI  

Croatia, Italy, Romania, Greece, France  

Director: Hana Jušić  

Award in the amount of €7,500 sponsored by Mastercard. 

The award goes to – an intense mystery, set in isolation, that flirts with genre while creating something wholly on its own. Grounded in a strong sense of place, powerful performances speak volumes without excess dialogue in an atmosphere both familiar and uncanny. Its narrative challenges our assumptions and in doing so, it ultimately confronts us with feelings of not belonging. 

SPECIAL YOUTH PERSPECTIVES AWARD  

Jury:  

Anja Jokić (youth policy specialist, Serbia)  

Eréndira Núñez Larios (producer, Mexico)  

Milan Stojanović (producent, Serbia)  

DJ AHMET  

North Macedonia, Czech Republic, Serbia, Croatia  

Director: Georgi M. Unkovski  

Award in the amount of €7,500 sponsored by the Council of Europe. 

The Special Award Youth Perspectives goes to a film about young people challenging their community and tradition – a lighthearted and humorous, but highly moving story, enriched with endearing and lively performances by the young actors and colorful cinematography, which we believe has the potential to reach audiences, especially the young ones, around the world. For giving voice to youth from small community, this award goes to the producers and the director of the film DJ AHMET. 

PARTNERS’ AWARDS 

EUROPEAN FILM ACADEMY SHORT FILM CANDIDATE  

Jury:  

Gregor Božič (director, cinematographer, Slovenia)  

Kasia Karwan (film consultant, Poland)  

Dominique Welinski (producer and film consultant, France) 

THINGS HIDDEN SINCE THE FOUNDATION OF THE WORLD 

Greece, United States  

Director: Kevin Walker, Irene Zahariadis  

The winner receives candidacy for the European Film Academy’s Best Short Film Award.  

CICAE AWARD  

Jury:  

Alexander Omar Lang (film curator and programmer, Germany) Sylvie Da Rocha (artistic director, Cinema Zola, Portugal)  

Diego Ginartes Rodríguez (film curator, programmer and cultural producer, Spain) 

WHITE SNAIL  

Austria, Germany  

Director: Elsa Kresmer, Levin Peter 

The International Confederation of Art Cinemas (CICAE) bestows this award on a film from the Competition Programme – Feature Film. The winning film receives CICAE support for distribution, exhibition, and audience outreach, through a network of 3,000 cinemas.  

CINEUROPA PRIZE  

Jury:  

Srdjan Kurpjel (composer and sound editor, Bosnia and Herzegovina)  

Alfonso Rivera (film journalist and critic, Spain)  

DJ AHMET  

North Macedonia, Czech Republic, Serbia, Croatia  

Director: Georgi M. Unkovski  

The prize is awarded by the Cineuropa portal, the site dedicated to the European cinema and film professionals, and is given to a fil that besides having indisputable artistic qualities also promotes the idea of European dialogue and integration. The value of this award is €5,000. 

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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The Festival of Eventing 2025 debuts in Cape Town
Events

The Festival of Eventing 2025 debuts in Cape Town

by jummy84 August 21, 2025
written by jummy84

The inaugural Festival of Eventing (FOE) brought together 350 event professionals, 85 speakers, and 10 countries under one roof for a two-day showcase of innovation, inspiration, and industry connection. From cutting-edge event tech to sustainability-led activations, FOE set the stage for what the future of eventing in Africa could look like — and the industry responded with enthusiasm, energy, and a shared commitment to collaboration.

Hosted at the Century City Conference Centre from 8–9 August 2025, the Festival opened with an unforgettable ceremony featuring Danielle Bitton and the Ithemba Youth Choir, a spellbinding set from Mo Magic, and dynamic hosting from Alan Committie alongside FOE’s AI assistant, Ask Nia. The programme spanned masterclass circles, international keynotes, networking breaks, and interactive exhibitions, culminating in The Eventurers’ Soirée — a sunset celebration of community and creativity.

“We set out to create more than a conference — we wanted an experience that would leave people thinking, feeling, and connecting differently,” says the Founders of the Festival of Eventing: Keshni Reddy, Devi Paulsen-Abbott and Betty Sichivula. “Seeing the calibre of speakers, the quality of conversations, and the sense of unity in the room exceeded every expectation.”

Across the two days, delegates explored topics ranging from experiential marketing to future event design, data-driven personalisation, sustainability, and leadership in a tech-driven world. Highlights included an international keynote from Lorne Sulcas – The Big Cat Guy, wellness sessions with Chair Pilates and Sunrise of Strength & Serenity, a sponsored luncheon by Old Mutual, and buzzing networking zones where authentic connections were forged.

“This event was a love letter to our industry,” says Betty Sichivula, FOE Co-Founder. “It was built on the belief that Africa’s eventing sector has world-class talent, ideas, and stories to share — and this was the platform to showcase them.”

“We’re walking away inspired, grateful, and already dreaming about what 2026 will bring,” adds Devi Paulsen-Abbott, FOE Co-Founder. “And we want the next one to be bigger, bolder, and even more collaborative.”

FOE’s 2025 edition would not have been possible without the support of its partners, including the City of Cape Town as Host City and Century City Conference Centre as Venue Sponsor. The inaugural edition featured an impressive list of partners across the event industry supply chain and garnered support from major industry associations like the Association of African Exhibition Organisers (AAXO), the Exhibitions and Events Association of South Africa (EXSA), the Event Greening Forum (EGF), the Southern African Communications Industries Association (SACIA) and The International Festivals and Events Association (IFEA).

Festival of Eventing 2026 – Cape Town
Dates and venue will be announced soon. Partnership, sponsorship, and speaking opportunities are now open.

For partnership and sponsorship enquiries, contact:
Keshni Reddy – [email protected]
For speaking opportunities, contact:
Devi Paulsen-Abbott – [email protected]

For event updates or more information, visit: www.festivalofeventing.com

A Message from the Founders

“As co-founders with decades of experience launching, managing, and transforming some of Africa’s most prestigious events, exhibitions, conferences, and meetings, we’ve seen firsthand the triumphs and trials of this industry. And we know one thing for sure: it’s time we had an event that celebrates the industry while equipping us all to tackle its ever-evolving challenges.

For far too long, event professionals have worked in silos, navigating an ever-changing landscape without a true community to lean on. That changes now. We created the Festival of Eventing not just as a platform for knowledge exchange but as a space where we can connect, learn, and elevate the industry together.”

August 21, 2025 0 comments
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Behind the Noise: How local council teams keep Download Festival safe, compliant and community-friendly
Events

Behind the Noise: How local council teams keep Download Festival safe, compliant and community-friendly

by jummy84 August 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Download Festival may be famed for its massive stages, legendary acts and 70,000-strong crowds — but behind the scenes, an army of council officers are working year-round to keep it safe, compliant and connected with the local community. In this exclusive interview with Andy Cooper, Environmental Health Manager at North West Leicestershire District Council, Event Industry News uncovers the hidden work of licensing, environmental health and safety teams who make one of the UK’s biggest festivals possible.

What does the local council actually do at a festival like Download?

First of all, we’re the Licensing Authority and we issue the license for Donington Park, allowing events like Download Festival to take place on the site.

We chair the Safety Advisory Group (SAG), which brings the event organisers together experts from various agencies to guide and support event planning and safety.

Our communities and communications teams help with liaison with parish councils and local residents, and getting information out there to keep communication open and responsive.

During the festival our officers oversee food safety, water testing, and hygiene inspections, working closely with on-site teams to ensure everything meets high standards and complies with the law.

We also live-monitor sound levels and campsite conditions, with a direct link to event management to prevent and respond to any issues.

We inspect bars, work with taxi services, and ensure all licensing conditions are met during the event.

It’s a whole load of hidden work – all geared towards people having a fun and safe time at Download.

When does planning for Download start, and who’s involved?

Our work to prepare for the next Download Festival happens year-round. As soon as the festival is over, we debrief and start planning for next year, with SAG meetings, joint planning sessions and site visits. We use the learning from the event just gone to improve planning for the following year’s event alongside the event organisers.

Our monthly SAG meetings usually start in the January, with subgroups set up for noise, health and safety, water safety, traffic, police and security and so on.

The event is pretty unique in that we also have to consider aerodrome safeguarding because it’s so close to East Midlands Airport. So, alongside all the usual considerations for an event of this size we’re also looking at the impact of pyrotechnics, radio frequencies, drone mitigation, lighting and structures, in relation to the airport operations.

As part of the process, the event organisers will reach out to partners, businesses, and residents, and will host several engagement meetings. Each year we’ll run various tabletop exercises running through different scenarios to ensure we can react, deal with and manage different situations that could arise.

With the festival taking place in early June, the site build starts in May, and during the build, site visits will be held with different agencies.

The Safety Advisory Group is absolutely key to the safety of the event.

Collectively, we offer advice and guidance, and help event organisers understand their responsibilities. We make sure they have the necessary plans and procedures in place – for things like risk assessments, emergency planning, and crowd management.

Our advice is always based on relevant legislation, best practices, and the specific circumstances of the event. We bring together the various agencies –  local authorities, emergency services, health and safety bodies, and other relevant organisations – which means everyone is aware of the event plans and can contribute their expertise and resources effectively.

One of the things that makes Download such a success is the way that the event organisers engage with the planning and safety process, before, during and after each festival. Delivering an event of this scale, while ensuring the safety and enjoyment of all attendees, is no small feat. It requires exceptional planning, dedication, and collaboration.

Communication and coordination between different agencies is key – in the planning and in the real time management of the event, which, ultimately means people have a good, safe time, and the festival gets a well-earned reputation as a well-run event.

As the local council for the area, we also need to have an eye on our permanent communities and any impact the festival might have on them. The SAG works to minimise any potential negative impacts of events on the local community, such as noise, traffic congestion, or disruption to local businesses.

We’ve found that, so long as local people are aware of what’s happening and they have a place to contact with any concerns, they’re generally very supportive of the festival and what it brings to the area.

How is safety and compliance managed during the festival itself?

During the live event, we’re on the ground, working side-by-side with event teams in the control centre and across the festival site to keep everything running smoothly.

Our ultimate role is to make sure the event runs successfully and safely, so all that planning, communicating and coordination really comes into its own during the festival itself.

With more than 70,000 people on site typically, our job is not just about ticking boxes. We’re constantly monitoring, checking, inspecting, communicating – working as one big team with the event organisers and other agencies.

If issues arise during the event our officers are in contact on the ground with the organisers to deal with issues swiftly. And then we have daily debriefs –  each day ends with a review of any incidents or concerns, so we can continually improve safety, even as the festival is in full swing.

What are the biggest challenges from a regulatory perspective?

Large-scale festivals come with complex risks. Some of the most critical areas are food hygiene, water quality and sanitation, crowd safety and noise control.

We also keep a keen eye on how waste is managed on the site, and the access to the site, whether that’s traffic management around Donington Park or taxi license and safety checks.

Each agency brings its own expertise to the table. For example, police and SIA handle security, while the council uses industry standards like the Purple Guide to ensure best practices are followed.

What happens after the festival ends?

For us, the post-event review is just as important as planning.

Each agency sends debrief feedback to the event organisers, and then we have a joint in-person session with all partners. Each agency receives these findings and we share them with our parish councils.

Any lessons learned are used to shape planning for the following year, so we are always raising standards and making sure we avoid repeat issues.

Why is this work so important – and often overlooked?

Many people don’t realise the scale of local authority involvement in making festivals happen. It’s not just about enforcement – it’s about enabling a safe, successful event that benefits everyone.

Council teams take great pride in their work. We help create an environment where festivalgoers can have fun, while also protecting the local community from disruption.

It’s a rewarding role that deserves recognition.

What’s it like to be part of a major festival from the local authority side?

It’s an honour and a real point of pride to be part of Download Festival. Although I’ve worked on the event for many years, this year was my first time leading as the SAG Chair, and it was a fantastic experience.

I’ve received great feedback from event organisers, local councillors, and colleagues, which means a lot. It’s a real team effort, and the collaboration with partner agencies is invaluable.

We’re all working toward the same goal: a safe, successful event for everyone involved.

What makes this work meaningful for council staff?

The bulk of the work brings three council teams together – Licensing, Environmental Health and Environmental Protection. We chair the Safety Advisory Group for the event and we’re the lead for food health and safety. Our communities team also supports us with liaison between the event and the communities surrounding Donington Park.

Being involved in a large-scale event like Download offers something unique – there aren’t many licensing, environmental health and environmental protection professionals that get to work on the second largest festival in the country!

For many Environmental Health Officers (EHOs), this might be their first experience working on an event of this scale. It’s a chance to apply their skills in a dynamic, high-profile setting.

We also get to collaborate with our colleagues from across our organisation and other agencies – staff who don’t usually work in events get the opportunity to contribute, learn, and grow in new ways.

And finally, there’s a real sense of achievement in helping deliver a nationally recognised event that puts the district on the map.

Are there any personal highlights?

Absolutely – there are definitely perks to being part of the action!

Catching Green Day up close was a standout moment from this year! But more than that, it’s seeing everything come together – the planning, the teamwork, the problem-solving – and knowing you played a part in making it happen.

Why does this work matter beyond the festival itself?

I think this kind of behind-the-scenes work builds public trust and showcases the value of local government in action.

We aim to strengthen community ties through our work by working closely with residents, businesses, and partners, helping to foster a sense of shared ownership and pride.

We’re also really aware that successfully hosting a major event like Download enhances the district’s reputation as a capable, vibrant, and welcoming place.

And ultimately, we hope that promoting what we do can help to inspire future talent. By showcasing the impact of public service in such a visible way can encourage others to consider careers in local government.

August 20, 2025 0 comments
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