Australia's elimination was the biggest shock. Their innuendo-laden pop anthem Milkshake Man had received a warm reception ahead of the contest but, on the night, viewers proved to be lactose intolerant.
The continuing row in Wales is an unwelcome distraction to Sir Keir Starmer during the general election campaign - although the Labour leader hasRML runs the Withyhedge landfill site near Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, which people have complained since October 2023
RML said it would "continue to fully cooperate with any pending investigations by Natural Resources Wales".But it is not the first time a waste management company controlled by Mr Neal has been investigated.He was twice convicted for environmental crimes relating to two companies in 2013 and 2017, and one of those also pleaded guilty in March this year to another offence.
One woman said she moved back to her childhood home in the nearby village of Crundale with her partner and two young children for a "better quality of life", but it has been marred by the Withyhedge site."I went out of the house to go to work and was hit with a horrible stench of rotten eggs, I held my breath until I got to the car. It was horrible," Jenny Clubbe told Wales Investigates.
"When I got to the car, my lips started tingling and I started getting headaches soon after.
"We've been shutting the windows because we don't want to wake up to my house smelling of rotten eggs, which is worse than my son's nappy."While it would start by providing guidance and support on improving environmental performance or meeting targets, it would have the power to take court action if needed.
The plans feature in aThe bill would also put targets on reversing loss of wildlife into law - with a headline goal of stopping the declines in biodiversity by 2030 and for there to be "clear recovery" by 2050.
More specific targets on particular species and habitats will follow, it says.The latest stocktake of Wales' wildlife in 2023 revealed what conservationists branded as nature loss on a "devastating scale", with one in six species at risk of disappearing.