Tom Plays Games: Family Edition
Tom Plays Games: Foody Tom Edition
“I must say that i’m also very happy to call Tom a hero. I look at this young man and think, ‘Yes, if he doesn’t fit the bill, I don’t know who does’. In this country we generally don’t do heroes, unlike in America where every cheeseburger commercial has one in it. But I’ve seen Tom up close for long days in stressful situations and he carries himself with such grace and generosity. He’s a marvel to watch.”
Hugh Laurie on Tom Hiddleston winning the Empire Hero Award, 19th March 2017
Tom Hiddleston, promoting Kong: Skull Island in China, March 2017
Favourite Tom Hiddleston images 27/ ∞
Behind The Lens Bonus:
‘We went Go Karting, and I learnt that i’m absolutely terrible at it. Yeah. Awful.’
Tom Hiddleston talking about one of the many bonding events organised by Brie Larson during the filming of Kong: Skull Island
Bonus:
Tom Plays Games: The Two Extremes of Pub Quiz Tom during Magic Radio’s Celebrity Minute Quiz, 2nd March 2017
Tom Hiddleston and John Goodman ‘making beats’ in their spare time while filming Kong: Skull Island
Tom Hiddleston attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Kong: Skull Island, 8th March 2017
Tom Hiddleston promoting Kong: Skull Island on the Nick Grimshaw Show, 1st March 2017
Good Morning Sir!
“Since we spoke about your arms actually on the show the other day, various gyms and people are tweeting me like: ‘Come in and you could look like Tom Hiddleston!’ ”
Bonus: because self-deprecating Thomas is always ridiculously cute
Tom Hiddleston, Taking Great Delight In Scaring His Friends
Tom Hiddleston on the famine in South Sudan
13th March, 2017
Right now, across east Africa, millions of children and their families are facing starvation as a result of civil war, drought and lack of food.
In South Sudan, famine has already been declared in parts of the country – the first time in six years famine has been declared anywhere in the world – and more than 270,000 children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition. This is the most deadly form of malnutrition which, if untreated, leads to death.
South Sudan is the newest country in the world, after the declaration of independence from Sudan in 2011. Since civil war broke out in 2013, its dreams of independence and a future of hope have been shattered. Those that bear the brunt of the conflict are, as always, innocent children.
Two years ago I first travelled to South Sudan in my role as a UNICEF UK Ambassador and met malnourished children, who were fighting for their lives. Children who don’t have enough food to eat are at risk of illness and disease: pneumonia, diarrhoea, malaria. Children, too often the case in grave emergencies, are always the most vulnerable.
At an emergency feeding centre, I spoke to a mother called Regina with her 15-month-old child, Emmanuela, who was suffering from severe malnutrition. Regina had been caught up in the fighting but managed to escape, travelling miles by foot to reach Wau Shilluk in the north east of the country. Eventually, they arrived at the treatment centre where Emmanuela received lifesaving treatment to bring her back from the brink. Emmanuela is one of many children across the country on the verge of starvation due to a power struggle between political factions which are supposed to be leading the country into prosperity. Sadly, there are currently hundreds of thousands of children like her who need immediate help.
On the same visit, I was privileged to join a UNICEF emergency aid mission by helicopter, called a Rapid Response Mechanism. It is the most efficient and quickest method of delivering life-saving food and supplies to people in remote regions trapped by war. Together with the World Food Programme, which delivers emergency food, UNICEF is able to set up stations in the field, where starving children can be given life-saving food, while at the same time they can be immunised for polio and for measles, and collect the names of unaccompanied children in the hope of reunifying them with their parents and families. The team spent a week on the ground spreading the word so that as many people as possible were able to come and receive the treatment they desperately need. It was a remarkable operation; over the course of 2016, UNICEF carried out 190 of these missions, continuing to reach areas that no other humanitarian organisation can access. UNICEF have the resources, the skill, the knowledge, and the manpower. But more than that, they have the passion, the courage, and the will.
More must be done, however. Famine has been declared – in part due to restricted access to regions of the country, and UNICEF is working hard to combat this. This week they have launched an emergency famine appeal for urgent donations so that they can continue to provide children and families with life-saving food and supplies, not just in South Sudan but across the east Africa region including countries such as Somalia, which is on the brink of famine as a result of severe drought. We have a window of opportunity with the rest of east Africa to ensure agencies such as UNICEF are given unhindered access to deliver emergency aid and prevent another famine such as the one currently and tragically unfolding in South Sudan.
(This piece first appeared in the Metro (UK) on 13 March 2017)
‘We’re just: ‘When’s it going to happen?!’
So. Much. Pretty.
‘What’s the most frustrating thing about having your life kind of up for grabs?’