EXCLUSIVE: Punky Brewster duo Eugene Garcia-Cross and Robin Shorr have teamed up with Modern Family star Ty Burrell on a new multi-camera comedy for ABC.
04.01.2023 - 15:15 / dailyrecord.co.uk
Cleaning experts have shared their number one product for keeping bathrooms clean - and it's a very common and cheap household ingredient.
No matter how often you clean the bathroom, it can be difficult to stay on top of it. Over time, grout can become grubby-looking and other stains can crop up that are hard to remove.
With so many different bathroom cleaning products on the market, choosing the right one may feel daunting. However, experts at Sanctuary Bathrooms say that you can tackle all the messes using just one product, because of how versatile it really is.
The Express reports that vinegar is one of the most effective products you can use to clean your bathroom, according to the experts.
It's also more eco-friendly and "a lot cheaper" than other cleaning products, despite having the common ingredient of acetic acid.
The expert added: "Vinegar is good for cleaning because it’s acidic which means it’s able to dissolve dirt, grease, grime and kill bacteria, making it perfect for cleaning your bathroom."
It's best to choose a white distilled vinegar rather than a dark one, as there's no added colour agent meaning stains are less likely.
It has about five percent acidity which is the same as many store-bought household cleaners, making it the "best cheap alternative" that you might already have in your kitchen cupboard. However, if you don’t like the smell of the white vinegar, there are alternatives.
Diluted apple cider vinegar doesn't smell as strong, but is also more likely to leave stains. Instead of taking the risk, you could add a few drops of scented oil to your distilled white vinegar to mask the smell.
White wine vinegar is also great for cleaning, working best when it’s heated up. When cleaning with vinegar you
EXCLUSIVE: Punky Brewster duo Eugene Garcia-Cross and Robin Shorr have teamed up with Modern Family star Ty Burrell on a new multi-camera comedy for ABC.
The horror genre is littered with creepy kid movies; some, like “The Babadook” and “Us,” are vastly better than others. Unfortunately, even with clear evocations of both those films, “Run Rabbit Run” by director Daina Reid (“Shining Girls”) and screenwriter Hannah Kent is not destined to be a classic of this sub-genre.
The legacy of Buffy The Vampire Slayer has taken a serious hit in the past couple years. The smart, original, genre-bending girl power hour is a classic for a reason — but as its creator faces accusations of bullying and the creation of a toxic environment on set, it’s getting harder to look back with rose-colored glasses.
EXCLUSIVE: Some were expecting Netflix to curb their acquisitions here in Park City, but, as we told you earlier this morning, never count them out of the Sundance marketplace. Before its premiere in the midnight section tonight, the Reed Hastings-Ted Sarandos-run streamer has scooped up a majority of global rights on the Australian horror movie, Run Rabbit Run, starring 2x Emmy nominated Succession actress Sarah Snook. XYZ Films, which co-funded the film, brokered the deal with Netflix on behalf of the filmmakers.
Netflix has made the first high-profile buy at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, picking up global distribution rights to “Run Rabbit Run” ahead of the film’s premiere, minus select territories.The deal occurred on the first day of the festival, with the feature debuting in the Midnight selection on Thursday night. Directed by Daina Reid and penned by Hannah Kent, the psychological thriller stars Sarah Snook (HBO’s “Succession”) as a fertility doctor who must confront her grim past and her presumptions about life and death when her daughter begins acting out alongside the arrival of a mysterious rabbit.
As reporters continue to dig into the past of Idaho murder suspect Bryan Kohberger, they’re only finding out more chilling details of the accused murderer’s life…
Oscar-nominated screenwriter, director, and actor Sarah Polley was tasked with writing the cinematic adaptation of the best-selling novel “Women Talking” by Miriam Toews. The book is inspired by real events involving Mennonite women and girls who are repeatedly abused by men in their religious colony.
Lime Pictures Head of Unscripted Sarah Tyekiff is exiting as the Only Way is Essex indie forges a new popular factual division with All3Media stablemates Lion Television and Wise Owl Films.
where home-organization content regularly takes over our TV and phone screens (see, at your own risk, ), professional organizers have taken on their own star quality. It’s easy to see them as perfection-fueled, semi-mythical creatures who are never too tired to tidy up as they go, who innately know the best way to maximize storage space, who weed C-list socks and undergarments out of the drawer regularly— before they’re threadbare.Yet truth be told, most professional organizers are ordinary, hard-working humans, hired by other ordinary, hard-working humans for very practical purposes.
If you look at “Women Talking” on paper, it automatically piques interest. The film is directed by Sarah Polley, produced by Brad Pitt, and stars Claire Foy, Jessie Buckley, Ben Whishaw, and Frances McDormand.
Ryan Jack turns 31 the day after next month’s League Cup final but there’s no need for the Rangers midfielder to be treated to another round of the birthday bumps.