Alice Giddings

Alice Giddings | Lifestyle Reporter

Metro's dedicated sex and relationships reporter, covering all things dating, sexual health, women's safety, gender politics and love. Alice is a Hearst Scholarship winner and occasional podcaster.

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A branch of the clothing store, Seasalt Cornwall located on Trinity Street in Cambridge L, UK

High street staple blasted for selling 'middle class boring clothes' to open 10 new stores

Channel: Shopping Shopping January 5, 2026
Sad womansitting on bed, hand on head

Today is the riskiest day of the year for your relationship

Channel: Sex Sex January 5, 2026
Young business woman searching for job online. Woman writing resume on laptop.

The small CV change that increases your chances of landing the job

Channel: Lifestyle Lifestyle January 5, 2026

The £5,000 British sex cruise setting sail in 2026 — with tantra, lube and no single men

Channel: Travel Travel January 5, 2026
??400 bras and distracted teachers, my life with 25kg breasts that??won???t??stop growing picture: Supplied

My O-Cup breasts won’t stop growing due to a rare condition

Channel: Health Health January 2, 2026
HIDI How I do it 24/12 Picture: Myles Goode/ getty

I love loud sex with my girlfriend — but my childhood bedroom is a mood killer

Channel: Sex Sex January 2, 2026

How to maximise your 2026 holidays and get 57 days off with 28 days' annual leave

Channel: Travel Travel January 1, 2026
Woman sitting on toilet holding toilet paper roll

Back up, this is what really happens to your body when you hold in your poo

Channel: Health Health December 31, 2025

Job hunters are facing 11 rounds of interviews as 'skills testing' becomes the norm

Channel: Lifestyle Lifestyle December 31, 2025

Forget 6'5 finance bros, this was the man everyone wanted in 2025

Channel: Sex Sex December 30, 2025
Pic from Kennedy News/ Ania Hough (Pictured:JAMIE HOUGH, NOW 10, BEFORE STARTING CHEMOTHERAPY IN 2024.) A mum thought her son was being 'silly' by not walking properly until discovering it was a symptom of cancer - claiming their Christmas Day walk 'saved his life'. Ania Hough, from Staplehurst in Kent, said her then eight-year-old son Jamie Hough had first complained of a headache in October 2023 and started vomiting. Initially, the mum-of-two thought he had picked up a school sickness bug but after calling 111 she took him to A&E at Maidstone Hospital in Kent. DISCLAIMER: While Kennedy News and Media uses its best endeavours to establish the copyright and authenticity of all pictures supplied, it accepts no liability for any damage, loss or legal action caused by the use of images supplied and the publication of images is solely at your discretion. SEE KENNEDY NEWS COPY - 0161 697 4266

Spotting one ‘silly’ thing on a Christmas Day walk saved my six-year-old son’s life

Channel: Health Health December 29, 2025
The Swiss Glockenspiel Clock, a McDonald's restaurant and the side of M&M World in London's busy Leicester Square.

London's 'most naff' tourist attraction gets 2,500,000 visitors a week

Channel: Travel Travel December 30, 2025
Drone view of Milton Keynes, England

Where all 13 Hunger Games districts would be in the UK — from Aberdeen to Milton Keynes

Channel: Property Property December 29, 2025
Story from Jam Press (Christmas On Narrowboat) Pictured: Josh and Tish. 'We live on a 57ft narrowboat to save on rent and bills ? we have to move every TWO weeks, but it's worth it' A couple living on a 57ft narrowboat in a bid to save on rent and bills has revealed they have to move every two weeks ? but says it?s worth it. Tish and Josh made the decision to leave their traditional abode for a home on the water due to rising living costs in the UK. The pair, aged 36 and 35, now move locations every two weeks, which they say feels a bit like a ?holiday?. Even though the lifestyle looks ? and sounds ? appealing, it doesn?t come without its issues. Despite dealing with mounting rubbish, plus less time on their hands, they wouldn?t trade it for anything, including at Christmas. Especially as the holiday is set to be a scorcher for them, even though it?ll be just 14 degrees outside. ?Christmas will be hot,? the photographer, from Staffordshire, told?What's The Jam. ?Everyone assumes a boat will be cold in winter, but it?s [currently] 24 degrees inside. ?We don?t have the space for a tree in our boat, so we decorate our ceiling instead, and I have a friend who made us custom-made door bows to fit our tiny doors. ?It?s an incredibly cosy festive place to be.? The pair moved onto their boat in early 2024 after rising rent costs and the housing market left them rethinking things. She said: ?It was always part of our long-term plan to move onto a boat. ?We planned to retire to one, and then one day we asked ourselves why we were having the mindset that we needed to wait until our 60s to have the life we dreamed of. ?Our rent was continually going up, and the goal posts for the housing market kept moving. ?We?d been saving for years and never stopped to think about whether we even really wanted to buy a house or if it was just something we were taught was the next thing you do. ?When we really asked ourselves what we wanted out of a house, they were all things that a boat could provide us, with the added bonus of an adventure.? And often, it feels like they?re on a never-ending holiday. Josh said: ?Food shopping is a bit like being on holiday because every few weeks you?re in a new supermarket. ?Sometimes you forget where you left your home and auto-drive to the previous place you left it. ?Because of moving regularly, we?ve visited local areas we?d never thought to go into. ?We support local businesses more because now we know better places to buy things. ?But sometimes it?ll be six months until we?re back near those places, so we have to stock and plan around travelling.? Even though they?ve been?saving themselves a fortune each month, the costs do fluctuate per season, with winter the most costly. Tish said: ?Every boat is different to how the running costs are. ?Our fire is connected to our diesel tank, so we spend a lot more on diesel than others, but we spend zero on coal. ?For us personally, when we moved out of renting, our outgoings went down by roughly ?1,000 a month. ?But we have different costs to save for, like batteries, solar panels and blacking. ?Our costs are determined by the weather; summer is much cheaper because of sunlight. ?Winter is roughly ?200 a month more for us because of the increase in diesel for running the fire and charging our batteries for electricity. ?But when we lived in a house, we paid ?190 a month in gas and electric. ?Now we have about eight months of electricity powered by sunlight.? Their main costs include ?10 a month on gas, which lasts them four months at ?40 a bottle. Their license fee is ?122 per month, which they say would be the equivalent of council tax for a house. And as their boat measures a whopping 57ft, the prices aren?t set, as they vary based on size and if it?s docked in a marina. Outside of winter, they?re forking out around ?400 in fuel, and luckily, electric is free. Tish added: ?I?m asked a lot by people what it?s like to live on a boat, and it?s hard to put into words to someone because it?s a feeling more than anything, of peace. ?It?s not just a place to live but an entirely different mindset to life. ?We felt quite held down by our belongings, and it was very liberating getting rid of 90% of the things we own. ?What we hold value to now has changed; sunlight, water, nature and our loved ones are the most valuable things in our lives. ?Some things are harder ? it?s a more time-consuming way of life ? and I can?t pop my rubbish into my wheelie bin. ?If I?m lucky, I?ll find a bin a mile walk away. ?But, until then, it?s storing it until you pass a bin. ?If a fuel boat isn?t passing where I am, then we have to fetch fuel. ?We don?t have room for a washing machine, so we have to leave our home to wash clothing. ?And it takes five hours to sail a 12-minute car journey.? ?It?s all things that take up more time ? but, for me, the benefits far outweigh any negatives. ?I?ve been a long-time sufferer of mental health, and the changes were day and night, living on water just agrees with me. ?I have seen things some people will never see with their own eyes, and the closeness to nature gives you a totally new respect for it. ?I?ve rescued a squirrel out of the canal, I?ve had ducklings asleep next to my front door, we saw a mole digging next to our window once, ducks and swans regularly knock on our boat asking for food, and I once came home to a horse escaped on the towpath ?I know that sounds very appealing, and in a world where everything costs too much, it looks like a wonderful solution to a cost-of-living crisis. ?But batteries don?t last forever, blacking is done every few years, and there are lots of other costs to factor into. ?So if it?s something you?d be considering, money is the wrong reason to do it; it's a way of life, and that?s the main reason to do it.? ENDS EDITOR'S NOTE: Video Usage Licence: (EXCLUSIVE) We have obtained an exclusive licence from the copyright holder. A copy of the licence is available on request. Video Restrictions: None.

We save £1,000 per month living on a narrowboat — but there are multiple downsides

Channel: Property Property December 28, 2025
Family  Waits While Checking In Luggage

A new 'DNA' law just hit US airports — here's everything you need to know

Channel: Travel Travel December 27, 2025
HIDI How I do it For: 22/12 Picture: Myles Goode/ Getty

My husband's raunchy Christmas gift reignited our sexual spark

Channel: Sex Sex December 26, 2025