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Nottinghamshire Venues Announce Games Nights Inspired by The Traitors

Fans of the hit TV show, The Traitors, can rejoice, as numerous venues in Nottinghamshire are now hosting games nights that give you the chance to wear the iconic green cloaks. If you’ve always thought you could have done better than the faithful on screen, or if you have always thought of yourself as being a good traitor, then there are numerous places you can go to try and put your skills to the test.

Fully Interactive Events that are Inspired by the Hit TV Show

In these interactive events, every guest is a player. When you arrive, you will be assigned a role, whether that is a Deceiver, who has to sabotage the group, or a Dedicated, who has to try and root out the traitors before you are eliminated. 

Guests are first seated in groups of six or eight, with table-based challenges to try and recreate the games as seen in the TV show. These could be logic games, puzzle games, or bluffing games. People will also have to compete for clues, as well as prizes. After each game, guests rotate to meet new players on different tables. The aim is to eliminate players whom you suspect, with votes cast anonymously.

light people table luxury
Photo by Tima Miroshnichenko on Pexels.com

The tension builds across different rounds, but if a Deceiver is caught, then the round resets, leading to more theatrics and dramatic reveals. Venues across Nottinghamshire are encouraging people to wear cloaks to add to the atmosphere and to keep players in character. The events take place on Fridays, with new dates announced after each event. Two venues that are partaking right now include the Cross Keys and Prince Rupert in Newark. You’ll need to pay the fee, which is £20 a person.

Why Do People Love Traitors so Much?

A lot of people love Traitors because there’s a strong element of strategy when trying to work out who is a traitor. Some people decide to take a more strategic approach, like in chess, finding out what moves they can make and how that exposes them. Others prefer to make moves as seen in games like blackjack. In this casino game, the odds are mathematical. You have to decide whether to hit, stand, double down, or split, based on what the dealer shows, and what’s in your own hand.

As seen in Celebrity Traitors, some people like to use mathematics to decide how many traitors there are, to deduce whether someone in their friendship group could be one, so they can cast votes accordingly. Other people like to take inspiration from games like Mafia, where people have hidden roles, but they aren’t limited to just two, like in Traitors. Either way, the fact that there are so many ways to play is one of the many reasons why the show is such a success, and why local venues have adopted the format for themselves. Traitors isn’t the only bluffing game out there either, as many games have adopted this format over time. This shows how much appeal it has from a strategy point of view, but at the

Police arrest man ‘driving suspiciously’ moments after burglary in Ravenshead

Police have arrested a suspect in connection with a burglary in Ravenshead after spotting a car being driven suspiciously moments after a break-in.

Officers were searching in the area following reports of a burglary in Kirkby Road, Ravenshead, at 8.25pm on Saturday (1).

The residents were out at the time but internal cameras picked up intruders inside their property and the victims called 999.

Police arrested a suspect in connection with a burglary after spotting a car being driven suspiciously (PIC: Notts Police)

Burglary
The man was also arrested in connection with a burglary in Rushcliffe

Operational Support officers observed a car parked at the junction of Kirkby Road and Little Ricket Lane.

When they approached, the car immediately drove away, so it was followed and pulled over a short time later.

Officers detained a man who was inside the car and seized a mobile phone and a two-way radio.

The suspect was arrested on suspicion of the Ravenshead burglary, as well as an earlier break-in at Cropwell Road, Radcliffe-on-Trent.

A 33-year-old man has been arrested on suspicion of two burglaries and has since been bailed with strict conditions while investigations continue.

Detective Constable Aisha Grainger, of Nottinghamshire Police, said: “We believe these two burglaries are linked so the officers on patrol deserve great credit for responding efficiently and detaining a suspect.

“The investigation is now being progressed by detectives and extensive CCTV, door-to-door and forensic inquiries are ongoing.

“We believe the public could also assist as the break-ins took place early in the evening when people may have been out and about.

“Anyone who was in either of these locations on Saturday evening and spotted anything suspicious, or has any relevant dashcam or other footage, should get in touch without delay.”

Anyone who can assist should call 101, quoting incident 686 of 1 November 2025, or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

Lanterns after dusk

Walking home at dusk can say more about a place than any glossy brochure.

A street where café lights stay on after five, where a junior team walks past in muddied kit, where the bus still feels safe — that is a town with a heartbeat. People sometimes think “night-time economy” means only loud venues and neon signs.

In smaller communities, it is gentler: libraries running late sessions, bowls clubs hosting quizzes, churches opening warm spaces, and corner shops that remember faces. Even talk of soft2bet or “the digital sector” feels far away unless it connects back to these ordinary moments.

There is a growing sense that local life should not switch off after tea. That doesn’t mean chasing big-city trends. It means giving residents reasons to linger a little longer and feel welcome as daylight fades. On the economic side, hospitality needs steady footfall; on the social side, teenagers need somewhere to go that isn’t a bus shelter; on the safety side, eyes on the street matter. Digital work plays a quiet role here too — from click-and-collect orders that justify late opening to online-first employers that let people live local and earn global. Even in consumer tech, platforms like Soft2Bet show how regulated, design-led companies build careers that are not tied to a single postcode. The interesting bit is how that kind of opportunity loops back into the high street after dark.

Local energy after dark

The magic of evenings isn’t the big event. It’s the predictable small habits. A craft group that meets every Thursday. A school hall that becomes a badminton court at six. A micro-cinema night in the community centre with subtitles on and the kettle ready. When people can rely on these anchors, they plan their week around them. Reliability beats spectacle.

That reliability has a few ingredients. Lighting that actually works and feels warm, not harsh. Timetables that line up so the last bus does not leave before choir practice ends. Clear information in one place — not posters flapping on six different noticeboards. It also helps to think about “last mile belonging”: the final ten minutes between a venue and the front door. If the walk back is pleasant, evenings grow all by themselves.

High street revival by habit not hype

Plenty of high streets chase novelty. The better pattern is small businesses quietly coordinating and sharing customers. It can look like this:

  • A bookshop runs a reading circle on Wednesdays and lets the café next door pre-sell hot drinks to anyone with a ticket.
  • A barbershop keeps two late chairs on Fridays, then points the last slot to the chip shop that stays open until nine.
  • A bakery posts the next-day leftover schedule, and the sports club collects it after training for a pay-what-you-can table.

None of this requires a festival budget. It requires talking and timing. The point is to teach residents that “there is something nice on most nights, even if small.” When that message settles in, footfall stops being a guess and becomes a rhythm.

A useful twist is the “pocket late night.” Rather than stretching everything to 10pm, businesses pick one weekday to stay open until 8pm and tell everyone that Thursday is the night. Shoppers know when to come. Volunteers know when to help. The bus company knows when to add a run. A single shared late night is easier to sustain than seven half-hearted ones.

Grassroots sport and quiet pride

Evenings belong to sport as much as to shops. Floodlit five-a-side, netball on the school courts, running clubs that loop around well-lit paths — these things knit strangers together. They also generate tiny economies: the takeaway that times its fresh dough for whistle-time, the corner shop that stocks tape and water, the taxi firm that knows three pitches by heart.

There’s a social payoff too. When teenagers have purpose built into the week, the town centre feels calmer. When parents linger to chat after training, the car park becomes safer by being ordinary. It is not complicated sociology. It is habit forming space. The trick is to keep it inclusive. Sessions for beginners. Football nights where boots can be borrowed. Clear sign-ups that don’t require mysterious WhatsApp invites. Pride grows from welcome, not from walls of silverware.

The digital layer locals ignore

It’s tempting to treat “digital” as somewhere else, but it lives under every evening decision. Residents check maps, book slots, and browse menus. Traders compare suppliers, schedule staff, and manage orders. Community organisers juggle RSVPs and risk assessments. Quietly, the places that thrive after dark are the ones that treat online tools like a public utility, not a gimmick.

Two principles help:

  • Fewer links, more clarity. One page that lists this week’s late openings beats twelve scattered posts.
  • Meet people where they scroll. A simple weekly post pinned on a local Facebook group or a council-hosted “What’s On This Week” page is enough if it is always up to date.

Local employment in digital industries matters too. When more households have remote-friendly work, weeknight life benefits. People with flexible hours can coach youth teams. Designers can help a café fix its menu boards without charging agency rates. Those who build careers in regulated online sectors — whether fintech, creative studios, or consumer platforms — spend their earnings close to home. The loop completes when wages earned in headsets and code translate into real-world coffee, tickets, and takeaways at 7pm.

What actually turns momentum into change

Towns do not need dashboards to feel progress. A handful of simple measures tell the story well enough:

  • Lights on later. Count shopfronts still lit at 7.30pm on a Thursday each month.
  • Safe routes. Walk the three most used paths and note broken bulbs, poor sightlines, or puddles that force people into the road. Fix two a month.
  • Regular faces. Track recurring groups using public space after six — choirs, clubs, study circles. Help the flaky ones become reliable.
  • Quiet corners filled. Identify two underused venues and trial low-cost uses for six weeks — chess tables, board-game nights, open studios.

Momentum is fragile, so expectations should be modest. Some weeks will be cold and empty. That is fine. It is the pattern that matters. Keeping the calendar steady through winter often unlocks a lively spring. Residents learn that the town will show up for them even on flat days, and they repay it when the light returns.

A gentle rule for night life

The most resilient places follow a simple rule: slow, friendly, and safe beats loud, flashy, and short. People want routine they can trust, faces they recognise, and spaces that feel like an extended living room. The job is not to invent a brand. It is to stitch together the thousand small fibres already here — shopkeepers who know names, coaches who bring spare gloves, librarians who learn which lights feel cosiest.

In that cloth, technology is thread, not pattern. It helps a bakery forecast demand. It lets a pottery studio sell extra seats for an evening class. It gives local workers options so they can coach on weekdays and spend money where they live. And when online-first employers grow — whether they build games, manage platforms, or design tools — the benefits land on pavements and in community halls, not only on screens.

The outcome is not a nightlife district. It is a neighbourly dusk. A place where the kettle is still warm at eight, trainers squeak on polished floors, and the walk home feels like a small celebration that tomorrow will offer something again. That is how a town stays bright, even after the sun clocks off.

Neighbourhood policing inspector for Gedling borough updates crime fighting priorities during October

Gedling neighbourhood policing team’s new Inspector Steve King has provided an update on how they have progressed on tackling crime across the borough during October..

He said: “Residents will no doubt be aware of the tragic death of Stephanie Irons, known as Steph to her friends and family. Police were called to an address on Westdale Lane West at 10.07pm on Tuesday, October 21 where Steph was sadly found deceased. A male has since been charged with murder and remanded to prison. It is believed that the victim and suspect were known to each other.  

“I wanted to pass on my deepest condolences to Steph’s family, friends and loved ones at this exceptionally difficult time. It is also not lost on me the impact that this incident will have had on the local community, and I would like to pass on my thanks for their continued patience and support. “

PRIORITIES 

The Inspector said: “October saw the setting of new priorities for Gedling borough which will run until the new year. These are Acquisitive Crime (Burglary, Robbery, Shoplifting, Theft), Anti-Social Behaviour (including behavioural, motorcycle, speeding, begging), and Drugs (Possession, Possession with intent to supply, cultivation of cannabis).  

“Here’s the latest update on progress made during October:”

Acquisitive Crime: Considerable work continues to target repeat offenders for acquisitive crime. Two of our most prolific shop theft offenders have been issued with Criminal Behaviour Orders over recent months, with several more prepared and awaiting court dates being set.  

Burglary: Overall we have seen theft offences fall by 15% in the last month which is 22 less offences. Burglary is also down by 36% which is really positive. That said, I am really mindful of the darker nights now being with us and Christmas fast approaching which can often see an increase in acquisitive crime. To that end, it is worth reminding residents to consider their home security to make life as difficult as possible for potential intruders. Improving security features such as locks, alarms, CCTV, lighting, and doorbell cameras can also make a big difference in deterring potential burglars, as well as making sure your house always looks occupied.  

Anti-social behaviour: ”Days of action have continued throughout October to tackle various forms of ASB. Our team has benefitted from the Off-Road Bike Team being deployed across Gedling borough to tackle nuisance motorbikes and electric bikes. 

The Gedling NPT worked closely with our Roads Policing Unit colleagues for an operation targeting road traffic offences which have a detrimental impact on the local community. During one day of action 14 Traffic Offence Reports (TORs) were issued to motorists for various offences including speeding, failing to wear seat belts and for driving without due care and attention.  

Bonfire night can often see a spike in ASB related issues, we have officers that will be out on patrol over this period so should you experience any issues please do report this via 101 at the time.  

Through the hard work of the NPT and partners, recorded ASB is down over 28% in the last month and over 26% in a rolling 12 month period. That said, I am not complacent and am mindful that statistics do not always capture the public perception of safety in the community.  

Drug offences: In respect of drug offences, a number of intelligence-led operations have taken place during October to disrupt the supply of controlled drugs. One example was a joint operation with colleagues from the City North NPT where a series of warrants were executed across the areas with large amounts of controlled drugs being recovered from various addresses, including one within Arnold.  

We now have a new Local Intelligence Officer within the Gedling area who is busy developing intelligence to support our priorities, so further enforcement and prevention activity will take place in the coming months.  

Gedling borough residents invited to take active role in keeping community safe

Volunteers from across Gedling borough are being sought by Nottinghamshire Police to join the their new Street Watch scheme and provide visible reassurance in the community.

Street Watch is a scheme for the community that is run by the community to improve the local area.

Street Watch is made up of a group of community-minded residents who walk around their local areas in pairs, wearing high-visibility jackets, to promote safety and deter crime or anti-social behaviour.

Police said volunteers should think of it as ‘a walking version of Neighbourhood Watch’.

A PCSO will be allocated as a point of contact and will stay connected with the team’s nominated community coordinator

Volunteers, whilst on the walk, will be asked to report issues such as graffiti, fly tipping, overgrown footpaths and ASB hotspots using the Fix My Street system run by the Office of Police Crime Commissioners Office.

These identified issues will then be picked up by the Immediate Justice team who will ensure people who commit low-level offences and antisocial behaviour are made to clean up local streets or public areas.

Volunteers are asked to carry out just two hours of patrols per month.

Anyone between 18 and 80 years can sign up. All volunteers receive training and support from their local policing team. An identified PCSO is allocated as a point of contact and will stay connected with the nominated community coordinator for each group on a fortnightly basis and then once a month would arrange to come out with the group to support them.

People wanting to join the scheme can email streetwatch@notts.police.uk for more information.

MILLERS STAY TOP Corby Town 0-1 Carlton Town: Hylton goal enough to see off Corby

In a tight game of relatively few chances Hylton’s 53rd minute strike beat home goalkeeper Alex Street at his near post to the delight of the travelling support in the excellent crowd of 733. 

Hylton’s goal was enough to win the game was the result of a fine second half display by the Millers, where Corby were generally kept at arm’s length, and some fine defending and goalkeeping when the Steelmen threatened to equalise.

On a sluggish pitch Mark Harvey and Andy Clerke made one change to the side which had beaten Rugby Borough last time out with Lewis Durow replacing the injured Khyle Sargent.  That meant that Niall Davie moved forward into midfield where he played for most of the Rugby match.

Carlton started the better of the two sides with Nat Watson pulling the strings and Ollie Clark dominating the early midfield exchanges.  An early break saw a Durow cross go just beyond Clark but Watson was injured during the move and after a lengthy spell of treatment had to be substituted.  Hylton joined the fray with Davie moving into the centre.  While Watson was off the pitch and before Hylton had come on, Corby had their first attack with the dangerous Connor Tomlinson drawing a fine save from Annan.

The game settled into a series of inconclusive attacks with the defences generally on top.  Corby’s next chance came on 23 minutes and they were very close to scoring.  Tomlinson advanced down the left and cut into the area.  He was thwarted by a fine Ewan Robson interception but the loose ball fell to Reuben Marshall who looked set to score until he was denied by a superb palm away at his feet from Annan.  Soon afterwards Jordon Crawford saw his shot hit the side netting with some home fans celebrating a goal.

Carlton should have opened the scoring on 38 minutes with their best chance of the first half.  The ball was cleared from the Millers defence to Ash Chambers on the half way line.  He played a fantastic ball to release Manneh on the left-hand side.  Manneh sped past Jack Noble but as he tried to take the ball around Street the goalkeeper got an excellent hand on the ball and the home side were able to clear the danger.

Shortly afterwards Manneh got himself into a similar position.  This time he elected to shoot early but his effort went high and wide.  Tomlinson then caused danger to Carlton twice in the closing stages of the half, only to be stopped on both occasions by the excellent Robson.

The home side had the first attempt of the second half with Annan saving well from Crawford before Carlton took control of the game.  A fine interchange between Manneh and Durow saw the forward play a lovely ball to Hylton on the right-hand side.  He played the ball into Manneh in the penalty area.  His shot was well saved by Street.  The ball was deflected towards Alex Troke but with an open goal in front of him he missed his kick and the chance went.

However, four minutes later the Millers went ahead.  Corby had a free kick close to the corner flag on the Corby right.  The delivery into the box was headed clear by a combination of the resolute Dean Freeman and a Corby forward and the ball landed with Manneh on the edge of the Carlton area.  Under pressure he darted to the touchline and then played a wonderful pass to set Hylton scampering down the left wing.  Hylton still had plenty to do but he knocked the ball ahead of Jack Noble, sprinted half the length of the pitch before firing past Street from just inside the area.  It was a superb counter-attacking goal.

Hylton went close a couple of minutes later with a shot that flashed just wide before Troke, having a fine game alongside Davie and Clark in midfield, sent over a lovely cross which was excellently controlled by Chambers but the striker just couldn’t get a shot away.

Shea Thompson-Harris looked impressive throughout at right back, with occasional breaks into the opposition half to support the attack.  Indeed, the work rate of the Millers team meant that Corby were unable to get a foothold in the game for the majority of the second half.   Durow had a chance to seal the win with 18 minutes remaining but he headed over from a Davie corner.

The final 15 minutes saw the home side push forward in an attempt to get something from the game.  Annan made a superb save from Thompson, tipping away his close-range shot, after an initial block from Freeman.  The goalkeeper then tipped a long-range effort from Crawford over the bar.

Corby’s final chance came with four minutes remaining but Robson once again was on hand to block a Crawford cross and the Millers saw out the five minutes of added time in some comfort as they secured an excellent win.  The delighted squad came across to thank the travelling Millers fans at the end which, as always, was much appreciated.

Carlton Town: F Annan, S Thompson-Harris, L Durow, D Freeman, E Robson, O Clark, L Manneh, N Watson (N Hylton 17), A Chambers (K Watson 82), A Troke (J Law 71), N Davie.  Unused Subs: A Howes, O Taylor

Goals: N Hylton 53

Carlton Town Supporters Club MOTM: Ewan Robson

Att: 733

Nottinghamshire County Council now predicting reduced budget shortfall over next three years

Nottinghamshire County Council is currently predicting a reduced budget shortfall over the next three years, new figures show. 

The Reform-led authority’s cabinet is set to meet on Thursday (November 6) to discuss its updated budget report. 

In February this year, the previous Conservative administration approved a funding shortfall of £18.5 million over the next three years to the end of the 2028/29 financial year. 

These figures are contained in the council’s Medium-Term Financial Strategy, which assesses what areas of financial pressures the authority faces and helps the council set a balanced budget each year. 

In next week’s cabinet documents, updated figures show this figure brought down to £15.9 million – a £2.6 million decrease. 

Documents also state there is currently a forecast overspend of £3.1 million in the current 2025/26 financial year, stemming from overspends in adult social care and transport and environment services which are “partially offset” by an underspend in another area due to the Business Rates relief grant. 

Adult social care continues to be one of the largest pressures on a council’s finances. Budget papers show service demand pressures has increased by £7.28 million in the 2026/27 financial year, mainly caused by a projected increase of £4.5 million in adult social care which “reflects extensive growth in care package demand”. 

The authority says “particular headwinds” are being felt within this department, including pressures from increased complex needs of people who currently have care and support, increasing cost pressures from providers – including the national living wage – and from partners. 

Documents say the senior leadership team within this department is currently developing a recovery and redesign plan to make sure they can “deliver an effective service” despite challenges. 

Following the government’s autumn statement in November 2025, which will detail areas such as council funding and national living wage increases,  the council will update its budget projections in line with this. 

The previous Conservative council hiked council tax by 4.84 per cent which is just under the maximum allowed limit. 

Reform council leader, Mick Barton, previously told the Local Democracy Reporting Service the amount of council tax residents will pay next year will not be discussed until January. 

He said the authority would wait until it knew how much money the Labour Government would give it in its financial settlement, which are awarded each year to councils, with the amount itself revealed in December. 

He said: “Council tax, until we know what we are going to get off the Government, then we can’t talk about council tax until January. 

“We’ve not heard about the multi-year settlement. It’ll either give us some relief or some more head-scratching to do. I don’t think we will get much relief.” 

The Reform-led authority is expected to complete its own efficiency review by the end of 2025 to try cut costs. 

Carlton school set to benefit from £7.5 million improvement fund

A school in Carlton could benefit from a funding pot of more than £7.5 million in council cash for building improvements. 

Standhill Infant School is one of nine sites that have been identified as needing a slice of cash from the fund to pay for much-needed repairs. 

The works are part of Nottinghamshire County Council’s schools building improvement programme which focuses on health and safety and maintenance issues which are likely to “result in a school closure” if not fixed. 

Cabinet papers show the latest estimated cost of improvements for the 2025/26 programme is £7,576,549 and the improvements will be funded by a pot of money from the Department for Education. 

Standhill would have £993,250 spent on replacing and improving its boiler and boiler room and other ceiling and decoration works. 

Nottinghamshire County Council is due to discuss the improvements in a cabinet meeting next Thursday (November 6). 

Put your small business forward for Gedling MP’s awards

Your favourite firms from across Gedling borough can now be celebrated as nominations open for the Support Local Small Business Awards 2026 

The awards, run by Gedling MP Michael Payne, will look to celebrate the contribution small businesses make to the local economy. The only criteria are that the business must be based within the Gedling constituency. 

One of last year’s winners Coosh Micro Bakery with Gedling MP Michael Payne

Last year more than 375 nominations in total were received and 19 winners announced.

MP Payne said: “Last year I launched my Support Local Small Business Awards where hundreds of local businesses were nominated. This year I’m running my awards once again to celebrate our amazing local small businesses.” 

Returning for a second year, People across the borough can nominate their local business by naming them in an email and sending to the MP. 

E-mail michael.payne.mp@parliament.uk with the subject line ‘SUPPORT LOCAL’ and the name of your small business in the body of the e-mail. 

Residents have until Saturday, December 6 to nominate their favourite small business. 

Warning as section of Westdale Lane to close overnight for almost two weeks from Monday

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A section of Westdale Lane will be closed overnight for resurfacing works for almost two weeks from Monday (3). 

The works are taking place between Hartington Avenue and Elmhurst Avenue. 

This section of the road will be closed to traffic between 8pm-5.30am. 

During this time an alternative route will be in place. Traffic will travel on Westdale Lane East and then divert onto Main Road, Arnold Lane, Plains Road and Westdale Lane West and vice versa. 

Lilac 25 will divert during Westdale Lane works

Buses are also affected with Lilac 25 and 25B also diverting during this time using the same diversion as other traffic towards Mapperley

Those heading towards the city will be on their normal route as far as Mapperley Shops. They will then divert via Mapperley Plains, turning right onto Colliery Way, then Arnold Lane, right onto Main Road and then resuming their normal route onto Gedling Road. 

A spokesman for Nottingham City Transport said: “During the works all bus stops on Westdale Lane cannot be served.”