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A father of two was described as the most shocked individual present during his household’s Christmas celebrations, after watching his children open a series of gifts he had never seen before.


Witnesses say Tom Perry, 42, was visibly surprised as each gift was unwrapped, audibly gasping at items that appeared to align uncannily well with his children’s personalities, interests, and correct clothing sizes.


“Wow,” Perry exclaimed, after one present was opened. “I never knew they liked Lego.”


As a new telescope was unwrapped a few moments later, he gasped, “They’re into astronomy? Since when?”

According to family insiders, Perry had no involvement in selecting, purchasing, or wrapping the gifts for his two sons aged 11 and 13, a process that had been quietly completed by his wife over several months while he remained apparently oblivious to the approach of the festive season.


Witnesses say Perry seemed impressed by the mysterious benefactor behind the gifts, describing them as ‘really thoughtful, if a bit expensive’, and ‘definitely not something I would have thought of’.


“He kept saying things like, ‘I didn’t realise Lego made Harry Potter themed kits’,” said 13-year-old Josh Perry. “Didn’t he already know what we were getting?”


At one point, Perry reportedly stared at a pile of empty wrapping paper for several seconds, expressing disbelief that the children had received everything on their lists, plus several items they hadn’t known they wanted yet.

As the final gift was opened, the bemused Dad leaned back, overcome with pride and confusion. “These kids are incredibly lucky,” he said. “Whoever did Christmas this year really understood the assignment.”


When asked who that someone might be, he paused for several seconds before whispering, “Santa?”


Perry’s wife was unavailable for comment, as she was busy in the kitchen producing a 3 course Christmas lunch for 12 people, as if by magic.



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It’s Christmas. And Christmas means round-robin letters from distant relatives that you only hear from once a year. Usually, it’s the correspondence equivalent of watching paint dry – first words, first babies, first offence, first bus driver, first conviction. You know. There’s always a germ of truth, but you always wonder how much.


Anyway, the Slagg family, from Sunderland, have written (or possibly dictated) a round-robin letter that has gone viral because of its brutal honesty. We can’t publish the letter in full, for legal reasons, but here are some extracts:

...Colin got the school prize for the most detentions, and Charlene’s OnlyFans site is going well.  Charlene has nine followers on line, and two followers whenever she leaves the house. Barry’s wrist is still bad after he got his hand stuck in a 2p falls machine at Scarborough. Troy is making home brew gin out of hand sanitiser. There’s loads of it around since Covid, so Troy is cleaning up.  Haha!…


...the cat caught the neighbour's pet rabbit again. That’s the third time since Easter.  And Boris the dog has fathered at least nine litters this year (that we know about).  The neighbours are furious. Well, the ones with dogs are...


...Jezza got cautioned for doing 70mph on the motorway with a grand piano strapped to the roof of his Astra.  Jason’s got himself arrested again, so he can spend Christmas on remand, same as usual.  And we got a fixed penalty notice over the mattresses in the front garden.  We’re hoping the planning people don’t find out about the sun deck we’ve built round the back from old pallets.  We are burning some of the pallets to keep warm, since the electricity company wired our meter back up and put it in a secure box...


...there was no cruise for us this year, but coincidentally Des was cautioned for cruising.  He was upset after finding out that his favourite dogging site is being turned into a Costa drive-thru.  We holidayed in Skegness instead, on that Sun newspaper £9-a-night offer.  Skegness in February wasn’t as warm as we’d hoped…


…still no news about our application to be on Only Connect...



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Festive panic is sweeping the nation after Santa Claus announced he will be outsourcing Christmas gift deliveries to Evri and other mainstream courier companies this year.


Santa said he has been forced to make logistical changes, confessing that Rudolph and the other reindeer are all getting on a bit, and are now more arthritic than magical. “They’ve done wonderfully up to now,” Santa said of his reindeer, “but Dasher’s knees click like a Geiger counter, Prancer needs a sit-down after going up a slight incline and Blitzen has started asking about retirement. Rudolph’s nose still lights up,” Santa explained, “but mostly because it’s inflamed. We had to face facts.”


Under the new system, presents will be distributed by a range of courier services, including Evri, Yodel and Royal Mail, prompting widespread concern that Christmas morning will involve less unwrapping and more frantic checking of tracking numbers. Many fear that children will wake up to find their gifts ‘delivered’ somewhere near the property, possibly balanced on a wheelie bin, lobbed over a fence into a puddle, or at a neighbour’s house three doors down who swears blind they haven’t seen anything. One parent reported already receiving a notification stating their child’s Xbox has been delivered to ‘a safe place,’ though they have no idea where that might be.


Even more alarming is the prospect of waking on Christmas Day and finding nothing but ‘attempted delivery’ cards, explaining that no one was home at 3am on Christmas Eve despite the entire household being asleep upstairs, and that another attempt will be made ‘sometime between January and March’.

Some presents will be delivered by Amazon, arriving promptly but inside boxes large enough to briefly destabilise the Earth’s rotation. Experts estimate that by Boxing Day, Britain’s living rooms will contain more cardboard than furniture, forcing families to spend the day flattening boxes, and Googling ‘when does the recycling centre reopen?’


Santa has urged calm, insisting the magical spirit of Christmas remains intact. “It’s still Christmas,” he said cheerfully. “Just… with tracking.”


When asked how he’ll be spending Christmas this year, Santa replied, “Well, I usually sleep all Christmas Day, to recover from working on Christmas Eve. But this year, I’ll be relaxing with Mrs Claus, and enjoying a lovely Christmas dinner – roast Rudolph, with all the trimmings. 


"Ho ho ho, Merry Christmas!”



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