Exciting news, writing for my first two #Films’ / #Series …. In progress now , Titles; “ OUR WORLD IMMORTALIZED” & “ STAR SEED”
( Written by Heather Izzard , 2021)
More to come on this soon 💫🎬❤️
“Animals are not here for us to do as we please with. We are not their superiors, we are their equals. We are their family. Be kind to them.” - Ricky Gervais
#everyone 🤬😢🦢🦆🪺🥚🐣 what the hell is the matter with people now ??!!! No respect for our beautiful wildlife pushed out of their homes, bad enough government concreting grenbelts all over England pushing them to decline ! I’m So disgusted !!! https://t.co/vWDWZOjvEW
“The National Trust is absolutely right to confront the Government over its plans to weaken species & habitat protection to build new homes & fuel economic growth. Our physical & mental health is hugely enhanced by nature & our society will suffer greatly if we continue to destroy it” my interview with Matthew Wright on LBC Radio this morning @LBC@WCL_News@nebriefing@nationaltrust
I absolutely detest how our country has been allowed to overflow with rubbish. The countryside filled with plastic. It is everywhere. Every roadside, caked with filth. We shouldn’t accept it as normal. It is not normal. It is vile. Clearly there needs to be a central clean up effort, but actually? The key message is this.
PUT YOUR RUBBISH IN A BIN.
People need to take responsibility. It’s disgusting.
Today we honor and celebrate Lisa Marie Presley on her birthday. Forever loved and always a part of Graceland's story.
Happy Birthday, Lisa Marie Presley 🤍
BRIAN MAY QUIETLY WALKED INTO A SMALL RESCUE SHELTER ON THE BRINK OF CLOSING — WITH JUST 48 HOURS LEFT BEFORE EVERY CAT INSIDE WOULD BE PUT DOWN
The bills were overdue. Donations had dried up. The owner had run out of options. In less than 48 hours, 39 cats were scheduled to be euthanized—not because they were sick or aggressive, but because there was nowhere left for them to go.
Then, without cameras, a film crew, or any announcement, Brian May walked through the door.
Known to millions as the legendary guitarist of Queen and a lifelong animal-rights advocate, Brian didn’t ask for recognition. He didn’t lead with his iconic status. Dressed simply, with his familiar calm presence, he walked straight to the back of the shelter—to the quietest row of enclosures, where the oldest and weakest cats lay unnoticed.
There, curled up in the corner of a worn blanket, was an 11-year-old tabby mix named Buddy.
Too tired to lift his head.
Too old to be adopted.
Too close to the end.
Brian knelt beside him, his gentle hands resting softly on the cat’s head. He spoke quietly, careful not to startle him. For several moments, he said nothing at all. Then he looked up at the owner and asked softly,
“How many cats are here?”
“Thirty-nine,” the owner replied, her voice breaking.
Brian nodded. No hesitation. No phone calls to assistants. He said calmly—with a steady certainty that stilled the room:
“All 39 cats deserve a future.”
What followed felt unreal to the shelter staff. The very next morning, delivery trucks began arriving.
New bedding and climate-safe flooring.
High-quality food and medical supplies.
Scratching posts, grooming stations, and enrichment areas.
Every enclosure was repaired and restored. All outstanding debts were paid in full. Veterinarians were brought in to examine every single animal. Above each enclosure, a small wooden sign appeared: “Forever home — with love from Brian.”
But the moment that brought everyone to tears came from the quietest corner of the room. Buddy was being lifted gently for a checkup when Brian stepped forward.
“I’ll take him,” he said.
The room went silent. Buddy—overlooked for a decade—finally belonged.
“He’s waited long enough,” Brian said later, a soft smile on his face. “I think it’s time he came home.”
Brian May didn’t post about it. He didn’t mention it on stage. He didn’t call the press. The story surfaced days later when a volunteer, overwhelmed by what she’d witnessed, decided people needed to know.
He didn’t just save a shelter.
He didn’t just save cats.
He saved 39 lives—and reminded the world that compassion doesn’t need applause.
Sometimes, the greatest acts of kindness happen when the spotlight is off.
I remember all those so very many lives that could have been, cut so cruelly short.
They fought for Britain. They fought for our home. They fought for us. I am forever grateful that they were successful.
Their sacrifice mattered.
I always think of just how lucky we are to live in a country they defended. It is very easy indeed to take for granted the peace they secured, because we have never known anything else.
We wake up, we work, we raise our families - all on the foundation they built. In peace, because of them.
However many challenges Britain faces today, the alternative is far worse.
All of our freedoms, however now fragile, didn’t happen by accident. They were earned in the hardest way imaginable. An enormous price was paid - the most enormous price.
Fewer and fewer remain to tell their stories, but their generation left us a Britain built on courage and decency.
Our job is to keep it that way, to protect the country they gave everything for.
We will remember them.