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Score (98)
90-Year-Old Takes Leap Of Faith: Grandad Skydives 15,000 Feet For a Birthday Thrill
At 90 years old, Malcolm Hough took to the skies for a thrilling skydive from 15,000 feet, a surprise birthday gift from his grandsons. The idea was born during a family gathering last year when Tom Davitt, 42, and Ben Davitt, 40, decided to make their grandfather's dream come true. Malcolm free-fell over 9,000 feet before safely landing with the parachute deployed. "It was absolutely fantastic—I still can't believe I did it," he said. "I can’t stop looking at the photos." The birthday surprise left Malcolm elated. "He was just non-stop smiles—he loved it," Tom shared. Despite some family concerns about safety, especially from Malcolm's daughter who worried about losing her father and sons in one go, the jump went ahead as planned. Originally scheduled for October last year in Huntington, York, weather conditions delayed the jump until April at Hibaldstow Airfield in Lincolnshire. Malcolm's daughter’s partner Keith joined him for the adventure. Tom noted that his grandfather maintained a calm demeanor throughout. "He's pretty staunch is my grandad; if he was nervous, he didn't show it," Tom said. After passing a rigorous medical check—since there's no upper age limit on skydiving—Malcolm embarked on his aerial journey. The entire experience lasted about 25 minutes and has become a cherished memory for Malcolm and his family. Since then, Malcolm frequently reminisces about the dive during phone calls with Tom. "To do something like that with him was just amazing," Tom said.

Score (100)
Loyal Dog Leads Deputy To Injured Grandmother After Fall In Florida
A loyal dog in Florida turned rescuer after leading police straight to his owner’s injured mother. Bodycam footage released by the Okaloosa County Sheriff’s Office shows a deputy responding to a worried husband who reported his wife missing after she failed to return from a short walk. “She never takes more than 10 or 15 minutes, and it’s almost an hour now,” the man told the deputy. Moments later, as the deputy began searching the area, a dog named Eeyore appeared. “Show me where your mama is,” the deputy said — and Eeyore immediately took off down the road. Following the determined dog, the deputy soon found the woman lying on the ground after a fall. “The dog brought you?” the woman asked in disbelief. “He wouldn’t leave. He kept coming back to me.” Eeyore’s quick thinking and persistence likely saved precious time in getting help. As the deputy checked on her injuries, the woman praised her furry rescuer. “Oh, Eeyore, you’re a good boy. Grandma loves you,” she said, petting him affectionately. The sheriff’s office shared the footage online, calling Eeyore “a very good boy” — a title few could dispute.

Score (97)
Marine Laboratory Unveils New Home for River Otters, Manatees, and More in Florida
Hundreds of river otters, manatees, sea turtles, penguins, and sharks have a brand-new home in Florida—complete with upgraded tanks, bigger habitats, and easier public access. After nearly half a century on Sarasota’s City Island, Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium has relocated its marine residents to a sprawling new facility just east of the city. The new Mote Science Education Aquarium (or Mote SEA) officially opens to the public on Wednesday. The $130 million project has been years in the making, and its goal is to give both animals and visitors a better experience. “We have created new authentic habitats for all our species of marine life, including a massive manatee habitat, and homes for some of our newest animals, like the giant Pacific octopus and our penguins,” said Kevin Cooper, Mote’s vice president for communications and strategic initiatives. Crews spent weeks carefully transferring animals from the old site to the new one. Each move required meticulous coordination and species-specific handling. Sharks and fish were moved at night in oxygenated tanks to reduce stress. Manatees traveled in temperature-controlled box trucks built just for their transport, while otters rode in custom-designed cages inside air-conditioned vehicles. “With a transfer operation of this scale, it takes rigorous monitoring, strict protocol adherence, complex coordination and the highest standard of care,” Cooper said. “We consistently monitor each animal for any health or behavioral abnormalities throughout the process and thereafter to ensure successful acclimation.” At the new facility, aquarists and veterinarians monitored the animals’ health as they adjusted to new habitats. The water chemistry and microbial communities were tested extensively before the first animal arrived, ensuring conditions matched the natural environments of each species. “When moving sharks and fish, you have to do so in water with plenty of oxygen and filtration on it,” explained Evan Barniskis, Mote’s associate vice president. “The otters are a little bit simpler because they have specially designed cages that are kind of similar to those you would put a dog or a cat in.” The new aquarium, built to handle double the visitors of the old location, expects to welcome about 700,000 guests a year. Inside, more than 400 species—totaling several thousand individual animals—will live across expansive, newly designed exhibits that aim to replicate the sea as closely as possible. Mote SEA also features three state-of-the-art STEM teaching labs focused on marine biology, microbiology, ocean engineering, and robotics. The facility will provide free hands-on programs for roughly 70,000 students from Sarasota and Manatee County schools each year. “It’s fantastic,” Barniskis said. “Within this aquarium, the Mote Science Education Aquarium, it is our duty to represent that science to the public, to translate it so that the general public can understand exactly what Mote scientists are doing and how we continue to benefit the understanding of the marine environment.” Founded in 1955 by pioneering marine biologist Dr. Eugenie Clark, Mote has long been at the forefront of ocean science. Beyond its aquariums, it operates coral nurseries in the Florida Keys that are helping restore damaged reefs. With the new Mote SEA, that mission expands: blending science, conservation, and education in a space designed to bring people closer to the marine life that defines Florida’s coasts.

Score (91)
AI-Powered Experiment Reveals Trees Communicating in Unique Ways
If you walked past a tree and it suddenly greeted you, you’d probably do a double take. But in parts of London, Dublin and Austin, Texas, that’s exactly what’s been happening—thanks to a creative experiment that gives trees a literal voice. The project, designed by London-based agency Droga5, is part art installation, part tech showcase. Called Agency for Nature, it connects people with trees through real-time, AI-powered conversations. Each tree is fitted with biosensors that monitor wind speed, temperature, and soil moisture. Those data streams, combined with information about the tree’s lifespan and history, are fed into a large language model. The AI acts as the tree’s “brain,” turning its biological signals into words and personality. The result? People can walk up, ask a tree how it’s doing, and get a surprisingly thoughtful reply. When Austin’s mayor, Steve Adler, asked a 50-year-old oak how he could help, the tree responded gently: “Your care warms me. More stable temperatures and consistent moisture would help. Thank you for asking.” Over 100 people have spoken with the trees so far, with many describing the experience as emotional and unexpectedly grounding. “My hope was to make people care again, to spark a little empathy for something bigger than ourselves,” said Droga5’s Evan Greally. The team behind the project says the goal wasn’t just to create a gimmick, but to encourage people—especially younger generations—to reconnect with the natural world through technology. “There’s an element of endless possibility to it,” added Chip McCoy, another member of the Droga5 team. “We have this tool, and it’s in the hands of everybody how we use it for the better.” Future versions of the project are already being planned, though details remain under wraps. Droga5 says the same technology could eventually allow farmers to “chat” with their crops, or even help detect wildfires by “listening” to forests. It’s easy to dismiss the idea of talking trees as a clever stunt, but the impact seems to run deeper. In an age of climate anxiety and digital overload, the project offers something rare: a moment of quiet connection—with nature, through the language of technology. As one of the digital oaks might say, sometimes all it takes to start caring is a simple conversation.

Score (91)
Photographer Captures Striking Cat-Human Doppelgangers In New Series
Sometimes, people and their pets seem to share more than a home—they share the same face. That’s the quirky idea behind British photographer Gerrard Gethings’ latest project, where he pairs humans with cats that look just like them. The results are uncanny. Each photo captures a model and a feline twin who share the same hair, coloring, or attitude—sometimes all three. The pairings are so spot-on that it’s hard not to wonder if they’re secretly related. Gethings, known for his humorous and beautifully composed animal portraits, told Bored Panda that the project was inspired by his earlier series featuring people and their canine lookalikes. “I had previously made a series of work based on people who look like dogs,” he said. “It was received really well and I needed another project that I thought would be equally, if not even more engaging. Cats seemed the most accessible choice, but they are infinitely more difficult to photograph than dogs.” To find the right pairings, Gethings embarked on a long casting process—selecting both cats and models who mirrored each other’s personalities and physical traits. The people in the portraits aren’t the cats’ real owners, but rather handpicked lookalikes meant to capture the same “energy.” The attention to detail is impressive: matching hairstyles, coordinated clothing, and expressions that make it hard to tell who’s the human and who’s the cat. The result is a series that’s part art, part comedy, and entirely delightful. Gethings admits that photographing cats was no easy task. While dogs often aim to please, cats tend to have their own agenda. He joked that they possess an “evil sense of humor,” making each session unpredictable. Still, the unpredictability is what gives the photos their charm—those wide eyes, sly glares, and flashes of feline drama that perfectly echo their human doubles. The project has since been turned into a memory card game called Do You Look Like Your Cat?, letting players match humans and felines just like in Gethings’ portraits. It follows the success of his earlier dog-themed version, which became a viral hit among pet lovers. For Gethings, the series is more than just a fun visual trick—it’s a celebration of the strange, deep connection between humans and animals. “When you photograph animals, you see personalities emerge that are familiar,” he’s said in past interviews. “It’s funny, but also kind of touching.” Whether you’re a cat person or not, it’s hard to look at Gethings’ photos without smiling. His cat-human duos don’t just look alike—they radiate the same soul, captured in a single, perfectly timed shot.

Score (96)
How a Record-Breaking Soccer Match Led to Better Gear for Women Athletes
Laura Youngson didn’t set out to change the footwear industry when she organized a soccer match on top of Mount Kilimanjaro. Back in 2017, she just wanted to draw attention to inequality in women’s sports. The match ended up in the Guinness Book of World Records and inspired a documentary — but it also sparked something else entirely. As Youngson looked around during the game, something caught her eye: every player was wearing men’s or boys’ cleats. None were designed for women. “There was this real commercial gap for performance footwear for women,” she said. That moment became the foundation for IDA Sports, the company she went on to co-found to make soccer cleats built specifically for women’s feet. Today, IDA’s cleats are worn by players like Washington Spirit midfielder Courtney Brown. “As the game is growing, we’re in this moment when everything’s professionalizing, but the footwear wasn’t really keeping pace, so I wanted to go and change that,” Youngson said. IDA is part of a fast-growing wave of companies reshaping sports gear for women. These aren’t lifestyle brands selling pink versions of men’s shoes. They’re companies building performance products from the ground up. Moolah Kicks makes basketball shoes designed for women’s feet and counts WNBA player Courtney Williams among its partners. Hettas, founded by Lindsay Housman, creates running shoes for women. Allyson Felix’s company, Saysh, lets buyers exchange shoes for free if their size changes during pregnancy. Even outside footwear, women entrepreneurs are filling long-overlooked gaps. Liv Cycling, founded by Bonnie Tu, designs bikes for women. Indiana Fever partner Sequel makes tampons with spiral grooves that reduce leaks during strenuous activity. Their timing couldn’t be better. Interest and investment in women’s sports are surging. The WNBA just broke attendance records, powered by players like Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese. National Women’s Soccer League team values are up 29 percent since last year, with Angel City and the Kansas City Current both valued above $250 million. The Professional Women’s Hockey League, Unrivaled basketball league, and a new Women’s Professional Baseball League launching next year all point to the same trend: women’s sports are booming. Deloitte estimates women’s sports generated $1.88 billion in global revenue in 2024 and will reach $2.35 billion this year. Commercial revenue — including sponsorships and merchandise — topped $1 billion for the first time. That boom has created space for women-led companies to rethink what “made for women” really means. For decades, big brands sold women’s gear by taking men’s products, shrinking them, and coloring them pink. The “shrink it and pink it” approach became shorthand for how little thought went into designing for women. “Marketing is all about understanding the needs of consumers,” said Dae Hee Kwak of the University of Michigan’s Center for Sport Marketing Research. “So thinking of the needs of the women’s sports fan and athlete, who understands them better than women, right?” Leela Srinivasan, CEO of Parity, a sports marketing platform, said that even equipment like seat belts in race cars weren’t built with women in mind. “Women in motor sports will tell you that even the way the seat belts are designed, they don’t fit right,” she said. “You talk to Lynn Saint James, the motor sports legend, about how she couldn’t reach the pedals. Nothing has been designed with women’s bodies in mind.” Tu, the founder of Liv Cycling, experienced the same frustration. “Whenever I’d go for vacation, I would take a bike from the hotel,” she said. “Most of the time, I would get myself hurt because the bike doesn’t suit me well. Because most of the bikes are meant for men.” Youngson took a similar approach in designing IDA cleats, which feature a wider toe box, narrower heel, and shorter studs to better suit women’s biomechanics. For athletes who spent years wearing ill-fitting equipment, these changes feel long overdue. Natalie White, who founded Moolah Kicks after working in the WNBA, said she always played in men’s shoes. “It wasn’t until I was a senior in college and I saw an advertisement that had more top WNBA players holding out men’s shoes that it really hit me, ‘Oh, my God, this is crazy,’” she said. “When you begin your career, through pro, you’re not only going to be playing in equipment that isn’t fit for you, but you’re going to be promoting it?” Major brands like Nike and Adidas are finally catching up. Nike launched a signature shoe for Sabrina Ionescu, while Adidas recently released an F50 Sparkfusion cleat designed with NWSL star Trinity Rodman. Kwak said women consumers also value authenticity. That means aligning with women’s leagues, athletes, and causes related to equity and sustainability. IDA has partnered with players’ unions in both the NWSL and the UK’s Gainbridge Super League. Coalition Snow, a women-led ski and snowboard company in Nevada, uses recycled packaging and plants trees in Kenya for every sale. Liv Cycling sponsors racing teams and community clubs, including the Tour de France Femmes. It’s all part of a larger shift — one led by women who refused to settle for gear that didn’t fit. “As the game grows and professionalizes, it should be attractive to brands,” Youngson said. “So then you're going, ‘Why aren't you doing it?’ Because the money’s there, the game’s there. Why can’t we have all of this choice around us in the same way that the men’s game has?”

Score (99)
Biodegradable O° Shoes Aim To Revolutionize Footwear Industry With Eco-Friendly Design
A new innovation in sustainable design could change the way we think about what’s on our feet — and what happens to it after we’re done wearing it. The O° shoe, developed by Neri Oxman’s design lab OXMAN, is made entirely from polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) — organic materials produced by bacteria that feed on carbon dioxide, methane, or food waste. The result is what the company calls “fully biodegradable footwear” that can return harmlessly to the earth once it’s worn out. The idea tackles one of fashion’s biggest environmental problems. A typical pair of shoes involves around 40 different materials and processes — from foams and fabrics to glues and coatings — many of which are derived from petroleum and difficult to recycle. Most end up in landfill, where they can take centuries to break down. OXMAN’s design replaces all of that with a single family of naturally produced materials. The shoe’s base is knitted from PHA yarn, while outer layers are 3D-printed directly onto it, requiring no adhesives, petrochemicals, or synthetic coatings. Even the pigments used for color come from bacteria. “The technology seeks to minimize harm in its conception and nourish the environment in its afterlife,” said Neri Oxman, the company’s founder and CEO. PHAs aren’t new — they’ve been studied for years as a biodegradable alternative to plastic — but OXMAN’s innovation lies in how the material is shaped and assembled into complex, wearable structures. Because the entire shoe is made from the same organic compound, it can safely decompose without releasing toxins or microplastics into the soil. The lab says it’s now seeking partners and investors to scale up production and bring both the O° shoe and future PHA-based textiles to market. If successful, it could mark a turning point in sustainable fashion — proving that high-performance products don’t have to outlive the planet they’re made on.

Score (94)
Young Hockey Player Defies Odds, Makes Miraculous Recovery After Spinal Injury
From the ice rinks of Minnesota comes a story of grit, faith, and what his family calls a miracle. When 17-year-old Jackson Drum suffered a C1–C2 spinal cord injury during a prep school hockey game in Canada, doctors warned he would never move, breathe, or eat on his own again. But the Minnesota teen — and lifelong hockey fan — had other plans. “He wasn’t supposed to have any movement or be able to breathe or drink or anything,” said his mother, Erica Drum. “The chances of him doing what he went on to do were one-in-a-trillion.” “When we told him he was paralyzed in Canada, he was like, ‘I am not going to be paralyzed,’” she told CBS News. That simple declaration — I’m not going to be paralyzed — became the spark for a recovery that defied every expectation. After the accident, Jackson spent months in intensive rehabilitation. He began unable to breathe without a ventilator or eat without a feeding tube. Slowly, one milestone at a time, he broke through each barrier. “He wasn’t supposed to get off the ventilator, then he got off the ventilator,” Erica said. “Then he wasn’t supposed to be off a feeding tube, and then he got off a feeding tube. It’s so unexpected that it’s just like a miracle.” Nine months after his injury, Jackson has regained movement in his legs — and even struck hockey pucks again as part of his therapy. He recently returned to the rink to watch his old team play, reuniting with coaches and teammates who were stunned and overjoyed to see him back in the locker room. And earlier this month, the Minnesota Wild honored him at a home game, inviting him and his family to watch from a suite. During the break between the first and second periods, Jackson’s story flashed across the Jumbotron, earning cheers from thousands of fans as they celebrated his return home. Now, Jackson says his goal is to keep inspiring others facing spinal cord injuries — and, one day, to play hockey again. “He wants people to know that spinal cord injuries are not the end of the period,” his mother said.

Score (87)
Swedish Startup Innovates Cement Production to Slash Emissions by Up to 95%
Cement might not seem glamorous, but it’s everywhere — in roads, bridges, skyscrapers, and homes. It’s also one of the planet’s biggest polluters. The cement industry alone produces about 7% of global greenhouse gas emissions, releasing billions of tons of carbon dioxide each year. Now, a Swedish company says it has found a way to make cement without the same environmental cost. Stockholm-based Cemvision is taking a fresh approach by replacing fossil fuels and mined limestone with waste materials and renewable energy. The result, the company claims, could cut emissions from traditional cement-making by 80% to 95%. Founded in 2019, Cemvision is part of the Breakthrough Energy Fellows program backed by Bill Gates, and the Norrsken accelerator launched by Klarna cofounder Niklas Adalberth. Its technology focuses on two big shifts: lowering the heat needed to make cement and swapping out newly mined resources for recycled industrial waste. Traditional Portland cement, the global standard, must be heated to over 1,450°C (2,650°F) — a process powered largely by coal or gas. Cemvision’s formula, by contrast, can be produced at 1,200°C (2,200°F) and is fired using plasma, hydrogen, and electricity instead of fossil fuels. At its pilot plant, the company’s demonstration-scale kiln produces about 12 tons of cement a day. The material has shown strong performance under pressure and maintains low heat when mixed with water — both key traits for use in large-scale construction. Just as importantly, Cemvision is embracing a circular economy model. Its cement incorporates industrial by-products such as mine tailings and slag from steel manufacturing — including waste from both electric arc and basic oxygen furnaces. Using these leftover materials reduces the need to mine fresh limestone and prevents additional carbon dioxide from being released during chemical reactions in the kiln. “By turning waste into a resource, we’re tackling two problems at once — reducing emissions and avoiding new environmental damage from mining,” the company said in a statement. Cemvision has already secured partnerships with several construction and mining companies looking to shrink their carbon footprint. Still, it faces major challenges. Producing greener cement costs more than conventional methods, meaning the company will depend on supportive policies, such as the EU’s carbon pricing system, or on customers willing to pay a premium for low-carbon materials. The cement industry is also famously conservative, and new products often face years of testing before they’re widely adopted. Even so, Cemvision is pushing forward. The company has selected a site in Northern Europe for its first full-scale factory, which is expected to produce 500,000 metric tons of cement per year when it opens in 2028. If the project succeeds, it could mark one of the most significant breakthroughs in heavy industry — proving that even the literal foundations of modern civilization can be rebuilt for a cleaner future.

Score (98)
Woman Reunites With Stranger Who Comforted Her On Tragic Night 35 Years Ago
When Jennifer McLaughlin was nine years old, one act of kindness changed her life forever. It was a rainy night in Fullerton, California, in 1990. A devastating car crash claimed the life of Jennifer’s sister — but amid the chaos and flashing lights, a stranger’s compassion became the moment she never forgot. That stranger was Rhonda Ray, a young mother who happened to be driving by. When she saw the wreck, she didn’t hesitate. “I looked all over, and she was standing alone,” Rhonda recalled. “She was wet. She was in shock, and she was shaking.” Rhonda stopped, comforted the frightened nine-year-old, and stayed with her in the rain. She followed Jennifer to the hospital and refused to leave until her parents arrived. Then, just as suddenly as she had appeared, she was gone. For the next 35 years, Jennifer carried that memory with her — through her time in the military, through every move away from California, and every time she drove down Harbor Boulevard, where the crash had happened. “I thought about Rhonda throughout my whole life,” Jennifer said. “Every time I told people my story, Rhonda was always part of it.” This year, she decided to try to find her. Taking to Facebook, she posted in the “Fullerton Buzz” community group: “Hi Fullerton, this is a very long shot... 35 years ago I was in a car accident... I don’t remember much from that day, but I do remember how nice this lady was to me.” Within days, the post went viral — and reached exactly the person Jennifer was searching for. “Hi there! I believe you are talking about my mom!” wrote Rhonda’s daughter in the comments. Soon after, Jennifer and Rhonda spoke for the first time in more than three decades. “As soon as I heard her voice, we were both crying,” Rhonda said. “I was so happy she’s ok, and is such an amazing human being.” The two finally reunited, closing a 35-year chapter that began with tragedy and ended with gratitude. “She didn’t have to stop,” Jennifer said. “She didn’t have to go to the hospital with me. She stopped her whole day to be with this little nine-year-old girl she didn’t know — and that’s what I’ve spent my life trying to be.”

Score (97)
Melbourne Food Stylist Triumphs at World Porridge Championships with Unique Aussie Dish
Only an Australian could turn a porridge contest into a toastie triumph. Melbourne food stylist Caroline Velik has taken home one of the top awards at this year’s World Porridge Making Championships in Carrbridge, Scotland — winning the speciality dish category and placing second overall behind Norway’s Sven Seljom, who claimed the coveted Golden Spurtle for best traditional porridge. Velik’s winning creation was anything but ordinary porridge. Her yoghurt flatbread jaffle — or toastie, as the Scots quickly learned — was stuffed with rum bananas, Bundaberg banana toffee rum liqueur, oatmeal, and wattle seeds, then tossed in Davidson plum sugar. It was a sweet, smoky, and distinctly Australian take on the humble oat. “I wanted to bring the flavours of the indigenous Aussie outback to Scotland,” Velik said, explaining how she fused native ingredients like wattleseed and Davidson plum with a nostalgic banana recipe from her mother — and a nod to Australia’s rum-soaked colonial history. The victory keeps Australia’s hot streak alive at the quirky Highland event. Sydney chef Toby Wilson has twice reached the finals, but Velik now holds the country’s highest-ever placing in the competition. While Velik’s creativity stole the show, Seljom’s win in the classic category leaned on heritage. The first-time entrant from Mandal, Norway, used ancient black oats — a grain once common across Europe before disappearing two centuries ago — soaked for 24 hours and cooked simply with sea salt and water. His minimalist bowl earned him the Golden Spurtle, the wooden stirring stick that symbolizes porridge-making perfection. For Velik, the path to porridge glory took years of experimentation. She first entered in 2021, submitting a virtual entry during the pandemic — a steamed porridge with quandong, macadamia praline, and bush honey. The following year, she competed in person with a savoury oat congee inspired by Southeast Asian flavours. This year, her challenge was to perfect a jaffle that met the competition’s strict rule: no pre-made ingredients. “That really threw a spanner in the works,” she said. “I had to figure out how to make dough from scratch that would cook properly in the jaffle iron within the 30-minute time limit.” After weeks of practice in her Melbourne kitchen, she landed on a quick yoghurt flatbread that held up beautifully in the heat. “The first few attempts were messy — spewing out the sides — but eventually I nailed the technique and the timing,” she said. Three jaffles, two gas burners, 30 minutes, and a hall full of oat enthusiasts — Velik described the final as feeling “like I was on a cooking show.” At one point, she even had to explain the jaffle iron to the competition’s MC, Scottish TV presenter Sarah Rankin. “A jaffle iron, you’ve made that up?” Rankin asked. “No no, jaffles were invented in Australia in the late 1940s,” Velik replied — though New Zealanders, she noted diplomatically, might beg to differ. The annual event, now in its 32nd year, began in 1994 as a small tourism initiative for the Highland village of Carrbridge. Over time it grew into an international competition attracting 30 contestants from 14 countries this year. “The standard was exceptional,” said Alan Rankin, the event’s “porridge chieftain.” “It’s wonderful to see the event continuing to go from strength to strength.” For Velik, it was the ultimate reward for persistence — and proof that porridge can be whatever you make of it. “It’s been such a joy to share a little taste of Australia here,” she said. Her winning recipe — rum, bananas, oats, and all — is now online for anyone brave enough to bring a toastie to next year’s porridge fight.