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James Walker works with young talent from Jersey

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Walker working with young talent from Jersey
As he continues to make his own racing plans for 2011, James Walker has announced that he has also taken a young driver under his wing in a driver management capacity.

Struan Moore is a young karter from Jersey who James first spotted last summer at a kart race on the island.  The two racers struck up a friendship and Struan is now going to benefit from having a manager who has been through the racing ranks before him.
“I have a great manager in Tim Sugden and know how important it is to have someone who knows the teams and knows the industry on your side,” said James. “It helps you to get the right deals and take the right steps with your career.  Struan is an exciting talent and I think with the right management he will go a long way.”
James Walker’s own race programme is taking shape and an announcement can be expected in the next few weeks.  His new role as a driver manager will run alongside his own racing as he has pledged his commitment to mentoring young talent from Jersey.

ZumbaZumba!

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ZumbaZumba!

The latest and greatest fitness trend to hit Jersey is Zumba. Gyms up and down the island have incorporated a Zumba fitness routine into their class schedules for 2011.
With so many to choose from, it can be a bit daunting. However when we heard that Curves (the women only gym) were doing a Curves Circuit with Zumba, we thought that would be the perfect way to get a taste and feel  for Zumba.
I arrived at Curves for my introductory session to the normal Curves circuit as a prelude to my Curves Circuit with Zumba scheduled for the next day. On entering I was immediately impressed with the fantastic attitude of the staff; I don’t think I’ve ever been anywhere where everyone seems to love their job. You felt like they would be there regardless of being paid because they are having such a great time. It created a genuinely lovely atmosphere.
I was shown around all the circuit machines, and got the hang of them on my second round, the staff are there encouraging you and giving tips, so it wouldn’t have mattered if I’d made mistakes. It is such a nice concept to be able to whizz around all the machines, and complete the Curves circuit, and have your exercise done and dusted in 30 minutes. In gyms I tend to constantly clock watch, willing my session to be over, however the fast pace kept my attention focused on the equipment and my fat burning at all times. Afterwards I was shown how to do correct stretches and waved goodbye by the whole team, who all had learnt my name!
I bounded into Curves the next day in my lunchbreak ready for their new Curves Circuit with Zumba. It’s just like the traditional Curves workout, but with a few fun new twists. It was nice to see that my class had people of all ages and fitness levels, and everyone just goes at their own pace. You alternate between strength-training machines and Zumba moves for a high-energy burst of focused movement. The intervals are set at one minute. The one-minute intervals also provide benefits for muscular endurance because participants push and pull at a lower intensity with more repetitions. So it is the whole Curves circuits, but with Latin dance-fitness moves between each machine.
The whole class was very high energy, with everyone laughing and partying along to the music between their turn on the machines. It says “participants can easily burn hundreds of calories without even realising it – they’re too busy having fun!” and I did. And for that reason I signed up for 6 months straight after my lesson.

Andrew’s Brutally Honest Album Review- Fantasy Issue

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We were approached to review an album this month for a couple of guys from Jersey and it was stressed that we don’t approach it with kid gloves but give an honest Jeremy Clarkson / AA Gill style no holds barred review. We there fore let our trusy music maestro Andrew give it the once over…

Selectalldeletesaveas
Selectalldeletesaveas

I like to think I have a good sense of humour but the eponymous debut album from Selectalldeletesaveas appears to be a joke that I just don’t get.  After listening to the musical twelve-car-pile-up that is “Join The Navy”, it’s hard not to come to the conclusion that the album must have been made with the intention of creating a musical comedy in the vein of Flight on the Conchords.  Listening to the comic ballads written into the nursery rhyme melodies of “Best Damn Wolf” and the whiny refrain of “Land of the Dinosaurs” you have to ask yourself if Selectalldeletesaveas are seeking to build up a male tween fan base who like to daydream of surreal and silly world’s filled with creatures who say rude and naughty words.  It’s a shame that the musical vehicle for the duo’s unique brand of humour is equally as gauche.  From the monotonous power chords of “Binman” to the somewhat bi-polar shift between styles and tempo in “Restaurant”, the bad jokes seem to be in fitting musical company.  “My Dabid Icke”, an odd homage to the less than sane conspiracy theorist David Icke, provides a morsel of respite with its Death Cab-eque guitars, yet the track’s competence is overwhelmed in a album overflowing with cringe inducing voiceovers, tacky synths and repeated attempts to parody the vocals of Placebo’s Brian Molko.  “Selectalldeletesaveas” is a record that is devoid of any sense of cohesion or coherence lurching from lame joke to lame joke while stumbling over a contanminated melting pot of genres in the process.  Never have the words select, all, delete seemed more appropriate.

see what you think:
www.selectalldeletesaveas.com

If you’d like your album critiqued, email music@gallery.je!

Britain’s got… Midnight Expresso?

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Somewhere after midnight
Britain’s got…
Midnight Expresso?

 

On October 31st 2010, I submitted an application to audition for one of the UK’s biggest shows, Britain’s Got Talent. Three months on and a lot has happened in between, but first, I should give you some background.

In 2004 at the Live Lounge (then named The Q Bar) in St Helier, I made my debut performance as cabaret croooner-rapper The Midnight Expresso. The idea of the act was to perform comedy ballads in the style of an overly dramatic lounge singer with delusions of grandeur whilst clearly been completely rubbish – but hopefully so rubbish that it was good. Armed with a cheap Yamaha keyboard with an array of cheesy pre-programmed demo tracks, my early performances were completely improvised, and if a little (i.e. very) ramshackle, were a huge amount of fun., and what was supposed to be a one-off gig got a little out of hand and here I am in 2011, still performing the act on a regular basis here in London.

Three years ago I was introduced to a documentary filmmaker at the inaugural Branchage Film Festival who, after seeing me perform at the festival, approached me about making a film with him; he had been commissioned by satellite channel Current TV (whose CEO is none other than former US Presidential candidate Al Gore) to produce a documentary about the nature of fame and thought I would be an interesting act to base the film around. The aim of the project was to see how famous I could get in the space of three months, by flagrantly abusing a well-populated music industry contact book, built up throughout my time as publisher of indie music magazine Beat Happening. The results were mixed, but I scored some notable successes, achieving Radio One airplay by one of my favourite DJs, the influential Rob Da Bank and gaining support slots with bands such as Pete & the Pirates and Mr Hudson. The documentary was eventually screened in the US and UK, and off the back of the exposure this gained me, I was subsequently booked to perform at major UK festivals Latitude and Bestival, on lineups that included such luminaries as The Flaming Lips, Thom Yorke and Grace Jones.

I recently returned to London after having lived in Jersey for a brief period, and began to toy with the idea of making a sequel to the film, but this time, going down the route of many hapless and hopeless variety acts. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, I opted to apply to appear on Britain’s Got Talent.

Not expecting to hear back from them, I was pleasantly surprised to receive an email in mid-November, inviting me to a non-televised audition in front of the shows producers at London Docklands’ Excel Centre. Realising that my best route to following in the footsteps of the likes of Susan Boyle, Paul Potts and co was to play the novelty card (in other words, be one of those acts that gets three buzzes from the judges in under a minute, but be entertaining at the same time), I formulated a cunning plan to convince the producers that my act was entirely ad-libbed. I wrote a song especially for the audition, and worked mistakes in, so as to create the impression that I was making it all up on the spot, right there and then.

December 6th, 2010, and it’s audition day. Making my way through a snow-covered London in sub-zero temperatures, I arrive at the Excel Centre with my keyboard in tow, and my tightest spandex suit, shiny red cape and Mexican wrestling mask packed in my bag. Apparently 50,000 peoople apply to audition for Britain’s Got Talent, and my audition session is just one of three that day, the sessions taking place for the entire week in London before moving on to five other major cities. Several hundred hopeful acts are there, and it’s some bunch; scores of teenage girl groups, street dancers, and the obligatory ‘wacky’ contingent are in attendance, dressed to the nines in fancy dress costumes and face paint. I realise at this point, I’m one of them. What have I let myself in for?

After performing my piece, I was encouraged to be asked to film some extra shots of ‘B-Roll’ (supplemental shots used to intercut with interview or performance footage), and also by the fact that the producers seemed to find the act very funny. It was probably the costume more than anything. Two weeks later, I received a telephone call to tell me that I had been shortlisted to appear on the show, and carried out an interview with one of the production team, answering questions about my background, my aspirations, my inspirations and all manner of other subjects, with the intention of building a character profile and decide if I would make good television. There seem to be two types of people on the show – mentalists and those with a sob story – so I tried my very best to toe both lines. I even told them I was a stripper, to give a comedic slant to my backstory..

On Christmas Eve, I received the call I’d been hoping for: I was through to the first round of Britain’s Got Talent, and would perform on January 6th at the Hammersmith Apollo in front of a packed theatre and the TV judges – Amanda Holden, Michael McIntyre and Louis Walsh.. I immediately went to work, swotting up on Youtube clips of the show, which I must confess, I hadn’t really watched very much of before then. It was at this time that I began to consider the potential consequences of appearing on the show. What if I crashed and burned and became a figure of ridicule on the internet? What if it became a viral hit and gig offers started rolling in? What if I somehow got lucky and sneaked through to the next round? After some umming-and-ahhing, I decided to go for it.

On the big day, I arrived at the Hammersmith Novatel to check-in for the audition, accompanied by my girlfriend, friends and family. We would wait for an unspecified length of time (keeping participants informed doesn’t seem to be BGT’s strong point) and be interviewed on camera before being bussed over to the nearby Apollo theatre to perform. Surveying the scene and my competition, I saw a Polynesian dance duo, a group of youngsters each dressed as Edward Scissorhands, a beatboxing collecitve and dozens of oddball acts, including a hilariously rubbish singer going by the name of M-Zyne. Aged only eighteen or thereabouts, he spent the entire afternoon strolling around the waiting room, singing – badly – into a torch he had employed as a pretend microphone. With a seemingly bottomless bank of confidence, he explained to me this wasn’t too huge a deal for him, as  he had “already done a crowd of 5,000 before.” When? I enquired. “I was in the Pied Piper at a theatre in Sussex when I was eight”, was his response, without a hint of irony.

After seven hours of waiting, taking part interviewed for both Britain’s Got Talent and ITV2’s Bitain’s Got More Talent, and sinking more than my fair share of whiskey’s in an attempt to muster up some courage, it was time to head over to the Apollo and do my thing for the panel of judges. Waiting in the cavernous underbelly of the theatre, it was impossible not to feel apprehensive, hearing the deafening sound of 3,500 audience members roaring applause or booing in dissaproval. I was to perform after the aforementioned beatbox group, and would be followed by an Amy Winehouse-impersonating drag act called Baga Chipz. In the hectic moments before heading onstage, the scene was abuzz with sound engineers, camera operators and production staff frantically working to keept the huge show running smoothly. After the beatboxers won over the judges and proceeded to the next round, it was my turn. Waiting in the wings of the stage, I was greeted by Geordie cheeky chappies Ant and Dec. ‘So, what are you going to be do for the judges then?”, they asked me. “No idea, just going to wing it” I told them, keeping up the pretence of being an improv act. In fact, I was going to sing a song about preserving the world’s stocks of fossil fuels by banning Michael McIntyre from having a limousine – because it would be a waste of petrol. Heading out to the centre stage, I exchanged some pleasantries with the judges. I even received chants of ‘Off, Off, Off’ immediately, after explaining that my day job was that of a stripper. And then I launched into my act. A confidentiality agreement prevents me from revealing the result, but I can tell you that one director of the show told me excitedly that ‘this is going to be a massive hit on Youtube’, and Michael McIntyre assured me that he was going to remember me. Whether we’ll be meeting again in the next round will have to remain a mystery for now, but be sure to tune into the show on ITV in April to find out. It may just be the start of a big adventure.

www.myspace.com/themidnightexpresso

Yoga Detoxification

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Yoga Detoxification

It’s a new year, and if you’ve always wanted to give yoga a go, Central Yoga are making it as easy as possible for you to try it out.  Their current offer is for 10 days of unlimited classes for just £15.
If you have embarked on a New Year’s detox then yoga is for you, By gently stretching muscles and joints, yoga ensures the optimum blood supply to various parts of the body. This helps in the flushing out of toxins from every nook and cranny as well as providing nourishment so you get a complete detoxification.
Also yoga is brilliant for stress reduction, so if 2011 has already got off to a turbulent start then Yoga can help soothe the mind and lower stress levels by focusing the mind on the moment and the movements rather than on external distractions. We also love the added flexibility that a yoga session can give you. It keeps us feeling young!
Give it a try – sessions are 6pm Mon – Thurs and 10am on Sundays.
www.centralyoga.co.uk
Call 07797717775 or if you are sitting at your desk craving a boost of energy then e-mail them at hotyoga@centralyoga.co.uk

Nick Trower

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Age:
24
School attended:
Victoria College
Favourite ice cream flavour:
Chocolate
Favourite Animal:
Tiger
Favourite food:  
Salad
Favourite rugby expression:
Subdue and Penetrate   
What would you wear to a fancy dress party?
Depending on theme, probably a dress
Hypothetically, how would you not like to die?
Drowning in Michael Barrymore’s pool
Favourite song?
Everlong by Foo Fighters
 What com petition have you entered recently?
Movember – I did fairly well, but I should have grown more interesting facial hair. I just went for the traditional tache.
When did you start rugby?
About 7 years old at the mini rugby at the Rugby Club. I think my dad had me running around with a rugby ball well before that though.
What is your worst rugby accident?
I fractured my ribs playing for Jersey in a pre-season match in August.
Where do you think is the best place to play rugby in the world?
Australia for the weather or Biarritz in SW France as it has good weather, beaches and surf.   
Where and when was your favourite rugby moment?
There’s two really. Winning the National 3 Championship at Twickenham and winning a 7’s tournament in Coutances with the Men of Leisure. We had been beaten in the final the year before but 2010 was our year.   
What do you think was the best game of rugby ever?
1972 Barbarians vs New Zealand. This showcased what is great about rugby with some amazing play. It also showed some of the best hairdos and facial hair to ever grace the rugby pitch.
How can people get into rugby in Jersey?
Youngsters can go to Jersey Rugby Club on a Sunday morning. Any person over 17 can train and play with any of the Junior rugby teams in the Island like Banks, Beaches, Les Quennevais or Jersey 2’s (I played for Banks Rugby club before playing for Jersey).

3D glasses are so last year

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If you agree with the title above then prepare to change your mind, as Sony unveiled a working prototype of the next generation of three-dimensional specs at last month’s International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

Not content with wearing the retro throwaway glasses handed out at cinemas, nor wearing your very own set of rather expensive 3D specs to compliment your brand new 3D telly, the pint-sized boffins at Sony have developed an entire three-dimensional viewing experience that you can wear on your head, blissfully unaware of your actual surroundings whilst also looking like an extra from the recent sequel to Tron which, quite frankly, is probably one of the coolest things imaginable. Aside from having your very own, fully functional Optimus Prime, of course.

Using an organic light emitting diode display (or OLED if you’re out of your depth and trying to bluff your way through a tech-headed conversation) with a resolution of 1280 x 720 they’re not quite full HD but I’m sure they’ll manage to cram in the extra pixels given time. Apparently, this kind of display looks and feels so more natural as it offers such high refresh rates. This in turn prevents the loss of fluidity, causing eye strain and headaches, so commonly experienced when viewing in 3D is completely eliminated which, if your eyes are as worn out as mine could be a godsend.

OLED seems like it will prove itself as the ultimate medium for 3D displays thanks not only to the incredible sub-millisecond refresh rates but also the 24-bit RGB spectrum they are capable of. That’s a lot of colours.

According to people who have worn the prototypes, the viewing experience is akin to looking at an 80 inch display from a distance of around fifteen feet (I wouldn’t recommend actually doing that in real life as your eyes would almost certainly turn square) which sounds nothing short of breathtaking, and verging on total cinematic immersion.

The promise of ‘cinematic surround sound’ will help perch the audio-visual cherry atop your virtual pie, be that a new film, watching your football team be annihilated by their least favourite competitor or getting destroyed at Call Of Duty by a twelve year old squealing American child. Again.

Let’s just hope Sony decide that these headsets are a viable product and manage to put them on shelves within the next year or so as opposed to ‘doing a Gran Turismo’ on us and making everybody wait the best part of a decade for the next big thing.

‘Pfft, all of this 3D lark is just a fad – just like the ten minutes last year when stuff from the eighties was actually cool…’

ANYONE FOR A LITTLE… S&M?

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Concept cars, whilst just as their name suggests, are for the most part mere design studies penned to showcase the manufacturers’ creative skills, advancements in technology, materials and manufacturing processes, do on occasion manage to float gracefully through the particulate filter of possibility and firmly into reality.

Cast your minds back to the turn of the century and to the unveiling of two defining cars that took styling cues courtesy of a rear-view glance into motoring past but with a futuristic twist: the ‘new’ Volkswagen Beetle and BMW-built Mini. These retro-throwbacks were contextually accurate, yet looked as if they’d just landed from another planet, especially the bubbly take on the Beetle – I could scarcely imagine them floating along our roads at the time and yet they’re commonplace but ten years later. Given our de-sensitization to thought-provoking aesthetics in all areas of design, how far will manufacturers have to go to grab our attention? Not just pushing the envelope, but opening it up and turning it inside-out to test our perception of what is possible today, tomorrow and far beyond.

Whatever your motoring fantasies this year, surely nobody can deny the temptation of a little S&M? By that, of course, I make reference to Audi & BMW’s long awaited and brand new offerings for 2011, both of which are guaranteed to pack plenty of pint-sized punch; the S1 and 1M respectively.

Audi recently unveiled a one-off ‘A1 Quattro’ in a decidedly snowy Canada presumably as a taster and the test-bed for the S1 variant due later this year and early indications suggest they’ll turn the boost up slightly on the current A1 range flagship’s 1.4TFSI engine to achieve around 180bhp, coupling it to the obligatory Quattro four wheel drive system and a 7 speed DSG twin-clutch gearbox to put their new S1 head to head up against the Fiat 500 Abarth, Mini John Cooper Works and upcoming Alfa Romeo MiTo Cloverleaf.

The epinephrine-injected heart being transplanted into the S1 will no doubt provide the perfect accompaniment to the A1’s positively evil looking rear lights and audacious overall silhouette. Audi make the best contemporary rear lights, and I consider this to be fact. Narrowly pipping Maserati’s ‘boomerang’ lights from the 3200GT and the Mk1 Cortina’s inverted ‘ban the bomb’ rear clusters to the post, modern Audi rear lights are undoubtedly pick of the bunch in my eyes, whilst their use of clever styling cues throughout the ranges compliments this near perfectly.
No polar bears were spared during the recycling of model names that Audi seem happy to have exercised, but BMW staunchly refused to re-use the M1 moniker used on their late seventies GT car, instead opting for the rather typically straightforward, efficient  and very German decision to reverse the characters, calling their new baby the 1M.

Shrewdly positioned below the M3 in size as well as power and price, so we are told, I’m confident that the 1M won’t fail to tick all of the boxes on your uber-hot coupe checklist. 335bhp from its 3 litre twin-turbo straight six powerplant? Check. A 0-60 sprint of 4.7 seconds? Check. Lightweight M-specific cross-spoke style alloy wheels from the M3 GTS? Check. Flared arches to set your car apart from any ‘lesser’ 1 series? Check. BMW seem to have dramatically poured a generous phial of synthesised testosterone into the injection moulding machines that will produce the bumpers to get the results we’re shown in the teaser images and renderings that have been unveiled and I for one can’t wait to see this car in the metal. And plastic.

Available exclusively with a six speed manual gearbox and with the obligatory and very necessary limited slip differential tucked neatly between the rear wheels, the 1M will also sport an ‘overboost’ function, providing an extra 37lb ft of torque for a brief moment when you realise that enough just isn’t enough. The proof of the pudding, they say, is in the eating, and I’m sure it won’t take too long to eat away at the rear tyres once anyone gets behind the wheel of one of these miniature machines, swiftly demoting those driving in front of you to those now driving behind, drowning in your efflux. Where do I sign?

Whether you’re looking for a hot-hatch or tyre-smoking coupe this year I doubt you could go far wrong with either of these two – let’s just hope they both make it to the showrooms without any delays, although thankfully they’re both from German manufacturers so there shouldn’t be too much chance of that.
 

Financial Focus- Fantasy Issue

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New Year – New Solution
words | Adam Dawson,
Managing Director of Close Finance

    
Christmas may have left you with a financial hangover that could last long after the headache has gone, but it can be fixed. This is a step-by-step guide to debt, and how to manage it.

Imagine that you had a credit card and decided to only pay off the minimum each month – how long would it take to pay off £1,500?
Three years? Ten years? Twenty? Well, if the interest rate were 20% APR, it would take 39 years and 9 months, and you would pay £4,308 in interest.

It’s staggering isn’t it; you chip away at the total and suddenly realise that those monthly payments are adding up to much more than you actually borrowed.

It’s called the payment trap and it’s very easy to fall into. You might have a couple of credit cards (which originally had 0% APR), a store card (you got a bargain when you signed up), a loan (can’t remember what for), and a little chunk of money leaves your account each month for each one.

The great thing is that, as long as you continue to pay those chunks, nothing will happen. The debts, however, won’t get noticeably smaller and you might worry about just how long it’ll take to pay them off.

There is an alternative: take a proper look at the debt. If you are making repayments to several credit and store cards, and are paying off loans too, then you’ll be paying a variety of different interest rates. One option is to amalgamate them into a consolidation loan. All your cards and loans will be paid off, leaving you with one lower monthly payment. For some people, the difference between paying all those chunks and a consolidation loan can be thousands of pounds.

At Close Finance we give all of our customers a free and confidential borrowing review that help people to manage their debts and monthly budgets, and also see if a consolidation loan is right for them. We believe in responsible lending, are up front about how much it will cost, and give advice on how to manage your money.  

And don’t worry, you’re not alone. Our research recently found that almost three quarters of islanders plan to borrow money at some point in the future, so you’re in good company.
 
 

Large personal injury awards in Jersey about to get larger?

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If you’ve been involved in an accident that was due to someone else’s fault, chances are you can pursue a claim for damages for personal injury.
Although financial compensation cannot change the past and people do not always feel they have been fully compensated for the physical and psychological effects of an injury, this is the only relief the Court can order.

But how do you calculate what a personal injury claim is worth?  It’s difficult to reach a specific figure because each claim is invariably unique and doesn’t just include items on which a fixed financial value can be placed. If your bicycle is written off, the replacement cost is easy to calculate. But what if it’s you that is damaged? People often ask “what is my claim worth?”, but they overlook the important issue of, “how is my claim calculated?”.

If the other party’s insurers admit liability, recovering immediate losses and expenses can be relatively straightforward providing there is some documentary evidence in support. It is possible, using guidelines recognised by the courts and referring to previous cases where similar injury has been sustained, to provide a range of compensation for, say, breaking a leg, but how do you calculate what an injured person’s future care costs may be, or how much money they will have to pay for medication over a number of years?

In England and Wales a formula exists for these sorts of calculations, and up until 11 November 2010, when the Guernsey Court of Appeal thought otherwise, this method was also used by lawyers in the Channel Islands. The English formula is intended to reach an amount reflecting the income an injured person will receive by investing a lump sum damages award, balanced against reduction by taxes, costs of living and inflation; effectively allowing the lump sum to survive the intended period.

On 18 November 1998, Manny Helmot, who had represented the Channel Islands at the Kuala Lumpur Commonwealth Games that year, was cycling in Guernsey when he was involved in a head-on collision with a car. Manny was in hospital for 36 weeks and suffered a serious brain injury, loss of his right arm and partial vision; he continues to require 24-hour care for the rest of his life. The driver of the vehicle was convicted of dangerous driving following the accident.

In January 2010 (some complex personal injury claims can take many years to conclude), Manny was awarded approximately £9 million by the Royal Court of Guernsey which incorporated a significant sum for future care costs based on the English formula. However, Manny’s family, now his full-time carers, appealed this amount on the basis that it wasn’t going to be sufficient to cover his life-long requirements. The Guernsey Court of Appeal ruled that it was not bound by the English formula and imposed their own local calculations to try to reflect the real and true cost. This resulted in Manny receiving approximately £13.7 million overall, which exceeds any personal injury award made in the UK.

While the decision is currently under appeal to the Privy Council by the defendant’s insurers, our neighbour has sparked a movement away from the English formula, not only in the Channel Islands, but in the UK, where the Lord Chancellor has been asked to review it. The Guernsey Court of Appeal’s decision is considered ground-breaking, and we await to see if, and when, a test case comes before the Jersey Court for similar consideration.