 In entertainment news now, London clubbers have flocked to one of the first rule-free live music events since the pandemic began last year. Dancing through the night and rejoicing in human interaction as England lifted most COVID restrictions at midnight. Britain, which has one of the world's highest death tolls from COVID, is facing a new wave of cases, but Prime Minister Boris Johnson is lifting most restrictions in England in what some have dubbed Freedom Day. Epidemiologists are generally skeptical that lifting restrictions is the right thing to do, but many young British people have had enough of more than one-and-a-half years of lockdowns and they say they are craving a party. I want to dance. I want to hear live music. I want to hear the vibe of being at a gig, being around people. I think I'm really excited for that. I feel like we've lost it. Yes, it feels like Freedom Day. It really, really does, yeah, to me. I mean, I'm so excited and I know that obviously... I know that the rate is going up, but people say that it's not a big deal because it's young people that are getting infected and it wouldn't be a serious thing. They're not going to die from it, so it feels okay for us to do it in a way. It's nice to be out, but at the end of the day it's all going to result in some sort of impending doom with everybody out and mingling and not really knowing what they're doing. Because I also feel like everybody who's the vaccine thinks they're invincible. The once is there, most definitely. I think people have severely been missing it. It's something that you can't replace with any other feeling. I think that I've seen more and more people take caution than they did a month ago and basically, apart from if it's the football, but at the same time, like the way we've got to now, Freedom Day is not as let all your shackles go, but it still doesn't mean this stuff shouldn't happen.