
Kate Ng
Writer at Freelance
Freelance food and lifestyle writer who lives to eat. Bylines in @IndyLife , @insiderfood , @vittlesmagazine , @YahooLifeUK, @MailOnline , @guardian and more
Articles
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4 days ago |
ca.style.yahoo.com | Kate Ng |Billie Schwab Dunn
The Chase's Paul Sinha has opened up about the two heart attacks he had back in 2023, sharing what he felt. (ITV)The Chase star and stand-up comedian Paul Sinha has recounted what it felt like having two heart attacks at the Edinburgh Fringe in 2023. Appearing on Good Morning Britain on Tuesday, the 55-year-old former doctor shared: "I was in a room with 400 people in, and it all got on top of me, and I had two heart attacks in the same Edinburgh Fringe. Two! Week number one and week number three.
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1 week ago |
the-independent.com | Kate Ng
let’s unpack thatAs thirst for the vivid green drink reaches an all-time high, Kate Ng looks at the origins of the tea leaf and how the versions of it on the high street are a world away from its authentic rootsFrom reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing.
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1 week ago |
independent.co.uk | Kate Ng
let’s unpack thatAs thirst for the vivid green drink reaches an all-time high, Kate Ng looks at the origins of the tea leaf and how the versions of it on the high street are a world away from its authentic rootsThrow a stone anywhere in central London nowadays and you’re sure to hit someone holding a clear takeaway cup of vivid green matcha latte.
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1 week ago |
aol.co.uk | Kate Ng
Last year, green was the colour of the summer, when Charli XCX’s album Brat made acid green go viral. For summer 2025, the hue is still going strong, only this year it comes in the form of the more mellow matcha. Iced matcha lattes have been steadily rising in popularity, in large part thanks to Blank Street Coffee’s viral marketing of the milky green drink.
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1 week ago |
aol.co.uk | Kate Ng
There isn’t a day that goes by without a new viral health trend on social media, and a new survey shows how Brits are willing to spend hundreds a month to test them out. The survey, which involved more than 2,000 respondents, found that the average Briton now spends more than £2,000 per year on "miracle" wellness products they’ve seen online.
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RT @lizziedearden: This piece is incredibly disturbing, and contains severe warning signs for the future A man who tried to kill the Queen…

O: https://t.co/Wj3lEpf70p

People are having very strange conversations with ChatGPT, in which they discover secret cabals or conspiracies or that we are in fact living in The Matrix. It sends these people into delusional spirals. Then ChatGPT tells them to email me about it. https://t.co/9IL5rbNy8v

I'm officially a kitten heels kinda girl now