Tech / Technology

‘How To Have Sex’ exposes the grim gender gap for virginity, sex, and the teen holiday experience

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Molly Manning Walker’s film is a chilling revelation of how sexual pressures can manifest differently for men and women.
A young woman and a young man cheers plastic cups on a night out.

Content warning: This feature discusses sexual assault.

It was meant to be the “best holiday ever” but it ended up being a euphoric yet devastating life lesson. 

Molly Manning Walker’s Cannes Film Festival breakout How To Have Sex takes audiences on a sizzling, searing journey to Malia, Crete, on a tumultuous girls trip. Three teenage best friends Tara (Mia McKenna-Bruce), Skye (Lara Peake), and Em (Enva Lewis) have finished their exams and are taking the Cretan town by storm in a blur of hedonism and newfound independence. But what ensues amongst the fish bowl cocktails and sticky nightclub anthems is a tussle with toxic friendships and the nuances of sexual assault and consent. At its core, the film weaves a dark but important tale of female sexuality and pressure.

How To Have Sex encourages post-watch conversations about problematic gender and sexual dynamics, particularly for young people. Walker’s film highlights the harsh contrast between the perceived experience of the “lads” and “girls” holidays, and how they are both portrayed in popular British culture. As a rite of passage, it is known as a trip taken by young women and men during school or college age – often a first solo trip abroad, even more often an excuse to blow off steam, party and experiment sexually. 

Two teen girls hug on a dancefloor with their eyes closed and smiling.

Em (Enva Lewis) and Tara (Mia McKenna-Bruce).
Credit: Film4

When we watch films about “lads holidays” — think The Inbetweeners, American Pie, The Hangover, 22 Jump Street — they’re mostly lighthearted stories of young men on their quest to “get laid”, an experience, for better or worse, that’s often trivialised in comparison to the darker undertones of How To Have Sex and its female leads’ experiences.

The film is a chilling revelation of how sexual pressures can manifest differently for men and women — pop culture represents men having a laugh as they navigate their sexuality, while women are often put in danger. This portrayal is not an accident — it reflects the dark side of this journey for women. One in 16 U.S. women experienced forced or coerced intercourse as their first sexual experience in their early teens, according to a study, while a U.N. Women UK investigation found that 97 percent of women aged 18-24 have been sexually harassed.

How to Have Sex highlights the gender gap in terms of early sexual experiences

Three young women giggle together.

Skye (Lara Peake), Em (Enva Lewis), and Tara (Mia McKenna-Bruce).
Credit: Film4

For sexologist and relationship therapist Madalaine Munro, this highlights a gender gap when it comes to inherent safety within early sexual experiences, and how it has become normalised. Clinical psychologist Dr. Sarah Bishop adds that the lighter portrayal of male sexual experiences “trivialises male sexual exploration, often without addressing the consequences or complexities involved.”

Walker’s research while making the film revealed surprising attitudes towards consent and sexual assault in younger generations. In an interview with Empire, she described “mind-blowing” pre-shoot workshops with teens during which some girls expressed views that veered towards victim blaming. When the production team asked their focus group to read a scene of sexual assault from the film, “they’d be like, ‘I don’t see any issues with this scene,'” Walker said, with one participant saying: “Girls have to wear better clothes. They have to protect themselves and not get drunk.” Victim blaming aside, it’s clear that young women are absorbing societal messages that the onus of preventing sexual assault falls to those most vulnerable. 


Conversations need to be had about the dangerous consequences of victim blaming, particularly amongst women in female friendship groups.

The director described How To Have Sex as “the sort of film we need right now… one we’ve needed for a long, long time”. Conversations need to be had about the dangerous consequences of victim blaming, particularly amongst women in female friendship groups.

“When society teaches women to be competitive, dismissive, and weary of each other it adds to the lack of safety each woman inherently feels,” Munro explains. “It also creates a subtle narrative for women normalising mistreatment — that it is OK to be treated poorly by both men and women. This makes violence against women more dangerous because they feel isolated in it, and they can’t trust others for support while going through traumatic events.”

The film navigates the nuances of consent onscreen

A teen girl looks deeply serious at a party.


Credit: Film4

The film also dives deep into the nuances of consent, as protagonist Mia (played to perfection by McKenna-Bruce) encounters multiple sexual assaults from a “lad” her friends meet and party with on the Malia strip, Paddy (Samuel Bottomley). She’s depicted saying “no” repeatedly, then “yes” in one instance, with clear negative and uncomfortable body language throughout all of the interactions, causing the viewer to think deeply about what consent truly is, and how it cannot be binary and must be continuous. More than that, consent can be withdrawn at any stage – and Tara’s experience onscreen brings attention to this often overlooked fact. Here, we see that “giving in” and saying “yes” after saying “no” repeatedly beforehand does not necessarily count as consent. 

“We are witnessing a transition where consent wasn’t spoken about in the mainstream perhaps a decade ago, so as a society we are catching up with learning about consent,” Munro says. “For many, nuances in consent may be deeply misunderstood because we are living within an infrastructure which wasn’t built to recognise them.” She adds that “consent education at schools is so important, to help children and teenagers understand how to determine their own yes or no, and also how to process someone else’s no.”


“For many, nuances in consent may be deeply misunderstood because we are living within an infrastructure which wasn’t built to recognise them.”

The pressures around damaging trivialisation of “virginity” is also explored, with Tara’s friend Skye threatening to out her sexual inexperience in a game of Never Have I Ever. She tells Tara, “if you don’t get laid this holiday, you never will,” perfectly demonstrating the toxic competitive element of sexual discovery and experimentation, and how peer pressure influences and exacerbates it. It brings attention to how problematic “virginity” is as a concept – after all, it exists as a socially constructed idea within a patriarchal structure to devalue women, including Tara and her friends.

It encapsulates the onus that is applied to one’s first sexual experience, and the way this can warp our expectations to a dangerous degree. Bishop advises that discussions around virginity need to shift from judgement and shame to one that focuses on “personal choice and autonomy”, adding that stories onscreen should depict “a range of experiences and challenge stereotypes”, leading us to a more realistic and inclusive portrayal of virginity. This should help to dismantle harmful narratives, but before these conversations can shift, the negative nature of the status quo has to be highlighted.

Two teen girls stand wearing white dresses in a takeaway shop.


Credit: Film4

In the aftermath of her sexual assault, we see Tara operate in silence, unable to put into words what happened to her. She speaks of how “strong” Paddy is, how he “knew what he was doing”, but the vocabulary of assault is never used. It’s a heartbreaking example of the need for better education around this subject, so that young people, whether they are victims or not, can express themselves about and call out this behaviour.

“From a psychological perspective, sex education is vital to help people develop the emotional and cognitive skills necessary for understanding consent, building healthy relationships, and reducing the stigma around the issues,” Bishop says, adding that a lack of education increases the likelihood of assaults occurring due to people being unaware of what constitutes sexual violence and abusive behaviour.


“For some women, this behaviour can be so normalised that they may not even realise that it is abuse until they see it on the screen.”

Munro adds that this silence and lack of communication after assault is part of a larger picture that involves lack of barriers to resources for victims – government research in January 2023 saw a reduction in conviction rates across domestic abuse (2.1 percent) and rape (7.2 percent). As well as pushing, campaigning and insisting on better sex education, instigating these important conversations through film, TV and other mediums is crucial.

“When consent and violence is portrayed on screen, it can give a voice to women who may not feel they have one. It may help them to understand the impact of what they have been through in a more accessible way,” Munro says. 

“For some women, this behaviour can be so normalised that they may not even realise that it is abuse until they see it on the screen.”

How to Have Sex makes plain the importance of men holding other men responsible

A teen boy with bleached hair and a neck tattoo of a lipstick mark looks concerned.

Badger (Shaun Thomas).
Credit: Film4

Another huge vehicle for change when it comes to sexual assault and violence against women is exploring how men can help in preventing and challenging it – and How To Have Sex depicts this important issue perfectly. Alongside Paddy, we have the dubiously named Badger (played by Shaun Thomas), who forms his own friendship with Tara and clearly holds suspicions about potential sinister behaviour from his mate. But, significantly, he says nothing to try and stop it. He comforts Tara, sure, with weak comments about how long he’s known his friend — as if friendship duration negates the damage and his complicity.  

Tackling this tricky dynamic, and the importance of men holding other men responsible for their actions, is one of the film’s biggest achievements. 

“Engaging men and boys is very much part of the solution to ending male violence against women and girls,” Rebecca Hitchen, head of policy and campaigns at the End Violence Against Women Coalition tells Mashable. “Women consistently say they want men to call out unacceptable views and behaviour amongst their peer groups, and to be helpful bystanders. This means naming problematic behaviour when you see it, confronting your own ideas about masculinity and sometimes intervening in harassment and assault in safe ways.”

Munro insists that portraying the impact of men not holding other men accountable on screen is important, showing the impact of enabling and perpetuating abuse. “The standard of what is socially acceptable then changes, as we see with outdated perceptions of consent, abuse and violence,” she says.


Tackling this tricky dynamic, and the importance of men holding other men responsible for their actions, is one of the film’s biggest achievements. 

One of Walker’s core missions with How To Have Sex was to shine a light on the “gap in education around consent” – she has done this and more, isolating shadowy corners of sexuality and holding them to the light. Munro calls films like this “pivotal for bringing conversations around consent and sexual pressures forward”.

“When we look at old romantic comedies, some of the behaviour normalises nonconsensual, harmful behaviour,” she says. “So films and stories that discuss consent and sexual challenges can help people to identify things that we relate to but may not have words for.” 

Hitchen adds: “We’re still a long way from shifting public attitudes to sex, and it’s crucial that this is tackled not only through education and public campaigns, but in popular culture like films, TV shows, books, the media and beyond, which drives a crucial part of what we find acceptable and how we collectively think and behave.”

How To Have Sex, and films like it past and present, can stand strong alongside other campaign methods to change how we speak about sexuality and assault, and how they are navigated in the future.

How To Have Sex is now showing in cinemas.


If you have experienced sexual abuse, call the free, confidential National Sexual Assault hotline at 1-800-656-HOPE (4673), or access the 24-7 help online by visiting online.rainn.org.

Tech / Technology

Wales vs. Barbarians 2023 livestream: How to watch rugby union for free

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Watch Wales vs. Barbarians live and for free from anywhere in the world.
Finn Russell of Barbarians players celebrate

TL;DR: Watch Wales vs. Barbarians on BBC iPlayer. Access this free streaming platform from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.


It might only be an exhibition match, but there are so many intriguing storylines surrounding the upcoming fixture between Wales and the Barbarians: Welsh legends like Alun Wyn Jones and Justin Tipuric are lining up for the Barbarians, Eddie Jones is coaching a Barbarians team that includes Michael Hooper, and it is the first time that Wales have played since their disappointing World Cup exit.

There’s a lot going on, and we can’t wait to see how it all pans out.

If you’re interested in watching Wales vs. Barbarians for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.

When is Wales vs. Barbarians?

Wales and Barbarians will kick-off at 2:30 p.m. GMT on Nov. 4 at the Principality Stadium, Cardiff.

How to watch Wales vs. Barbarians for free

Wales vs. Barbarians will be live streamed for free on BBC iPlayer.

BBC iPlayer is geo-restricted to the UK, but anyone can access this free streaming service with a VPN. These tools can hide your IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in the UK, meaning you can access BBC iPlayer from anywhere in the world.

Bypass geo-restrictions to unblock BBC iPlayer by following these simple steps:

  1. Sign up for a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK

  4. Visit BBC iPlayer

  5. Stream Wales vs. Barbarians for free from anywhere in the world


ExpressVPN logo

Credit: ExpressVPN


ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free)

£82.82 only at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee)



The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free trials or money-back guarantees. By taking advantage of these offers, you can unblock BBC iPlayer without actually spending anything. This clearly isn’t a long-term solution, but it does mean you can watch Wales vs. Barbarians from anywhere in the world before recovering your investment.

What is the best VPN for BBC iPlayer?

ExpressVPN is the best service for unblocking free streaming sites like BBC iPlayer, for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 94 countries including the UK

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure

  • Fast connection speeds free from throttling

  • Up to five simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for £82.82 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Watch Wales vs. Barbarians for free with ExpressVPN.

Tech / Technology

India vs. South Africa 2023 livestream: How to watch Cricket World Cup for free

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Watch India vs. South Africa in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 for free from anywhere in the world.
Mohammed SIraj of India in bowling action during the ICC Men's Cricket World Cup

We’re getting closer to the knockout stages of the 2023 Cricket World Cup, and it’s looking highly likely that India and South Africa are going to be involved in the business end of the competition. But before that point, these two impressive sides will meet in the round-robin stage of the tournament. Could this be a sneak peak of the final?

If you’re interested in watching India vs. South Africa for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.

When is India vs. South Africa in the Cricket World Cup?

India and South Africa will meet at 8:30 a.m. GMT on Nov. 5 at Eden Gardens in Kolkata, India.

How to watch India vs. South Africa for free

9Now is the best free streaming platform for watching the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup.

This Australian streaming service is offering free coverage of every Australia game, plus the tournament’s biggest matchups. This impressive streaming schedule includes the fixture between India and South Africa.

9Now is geo-restricted to Australia, but anyone can unblock this free streaming service with a VPN. These tools can hide your IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in Australia, meaning you can access 9Now from anywhere in the world. The process of unblocking 9Now is actually really simple:

  1. Sign up for a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in Australia

  4. Sign up for 9Now

  5. Stream India vs. South Africa for free from anywhere in the world


ExpressVPN logo

Credit: ExpressVPN


ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free)

£82.82 only at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee)



The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can unblock 9Now without committing with your cash. This obviously isn’t a long-term solution, but it does mean you can watch India vs. South Africa without actually spending anything.

What is the best VPN for 9Now?

ExpressVPN is the best service for unblocking free streaming sites like 9Now, for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 94 countries including Australia

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure

  • Fast connection speeds free from throttling

  • Up to five simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for £82.82 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Watch India vs. South Africa in the ICC Cricket World Cup for free with ExpressVPN.

Tech / Technology

ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 livestream: How to watch Cricket World Cup for free

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Watch the ICC Cricket World Cup 2023 for free from anywhere in the world.
Virat Kohli of India plays a shot

TL;DR: Watch the Cricket World Cup for free on 9Now with a streaming-friendly VPN. ExpressVPN is the best service for unblocking free streaming sites.


This has been a massive year for cricket. Fans have been treated to The Ashes, the Asia Cup, and some high-quality series between the best teams in the world. And it gets better, because the flagship event of the international cricket calendar is finally here: the ICC Cricket World Cup.

If you’re interested in watching the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.

How to watch the Cricket World Cup for free

The best free streaming platform for the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup is 9Now.

This Australian streaming service is offering free coverage of every Australia game, plus the tournament’s biggest match-ups and every finals fixture. This schedule has included games involving India, Pakistan, England, New Zealand, and South Africa. Here’s everything still to come:

  • Nov. 4 — Australia vs. England

  • Nov. 5 — India vs. South Africa

  • Nov. 7 — Australia vs. Afghanistan

  • Nov. 11 — Australia vs. Bangladesh

  • Nov. 15 — Semi-Final 1

  • Nov. 16 — Semi-Final 2

  • Nov. 19 — Final

That’s an impressive list, especially when you consider that it’s all available for free.

The catch is that 9Now is only available to streamers connecting from Australia. You’ll be blocked if you attempt to connect from outside the country. That is unless you’re using a VPN. With a VPN, you can hide your digital location and connect to a secure server in Australia. This quick and easy process tricks platforms like 9Now into providing you with access.

Unblock 9Now from anywhere in the world by following these steps:

  1. Sign up for a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in Australia

  4. Sign up for 9Now

  5. Watch the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup from anywhere in the world


ExpressVPN logo

Credit: ExpressVPN


ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free)

£82.82 only at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee)



Most of the best VPNs for streaming are not free, but they do tend to offer free trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can unblock 9Now without committing with your cash. This isn’t a long-term solution, but it does mean you can watch most of the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup for free. This is a sneaky trick, but it works.

What is the Cricket World Cup?

The Cricket World Cup is the international championship of One Day International (ODI) cricket. The event is held every four years and is organised by the sport’s governing body, the International Cricket Council (ICC).

England are the current champions after winning the 2019 World Cup on home soil. Australia have won the tournament five times. India and West Indies have both won twice, while Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and England have won the competition once each.

When is the Cricket World Cup 2023?

The 2023 ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup is the 13th edition of the competition. India is hosting this year’s event from Oct. 5 to Nov. 19.

Where else can you watch the Cricket World Cup in 2023?

The good news is that many broadcasters are offering coverage of the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup:

  • Australia — Foxtel Sports, Kayo Sports, 9Now (free and recommended)

  • Canada — Willow TV, Disney+ Hotstar

  • India — Disney+ Hotstar

  • New Zealand — Sky Sport

  • Pakistan — Tapmad

  • South Africa — SuperSport

  • United Kingdom — Sky Sports, Channel 5 (highlights)

  • United States — WillowTV, ESPN+

Unfortunately, most of these services are not free. And those that are available for free are geo-restricted. This is frustrating for dedicated followers of the game, but all is not lost, because you can bypass geo-restrictions with the help of a streaming-friendly VPN.

What is the best VPN for 9Now?

There are many VPNs that can reliably unblock free streaming sites from around the world, including popular services like NordVPN and Surfshark. These VPNs won’t let you down, but ExpressVPN is tough to beat.

This high-speed VPN is the best service for streaming sport, for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 94 countries including Australia

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure

  • Fast connection speeds free from throttling

  • Up to five simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for £82.82 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This heavily discounted plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee. You can sign up to unblock 9Now, and then recover your investment after the Cricket World Cup final.

Watch the 2023 ICC Cricket World Cup for free with ExpressVPN.

Tech / Technology

England vs. Tonga 2023 livestream: How to watch rugby league series for free

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Watch England vs. Tonga 2023 international rugby league series for free from anywhere in the world.
Tongan fans wave the flags

This year has been all about Rugby Union, but that doesn’t mean you should forget about the other code. We’ve seen a lot of thrilling Rugby League this year, and that is continuing this autumn with a three-test series between England and Tonga.

If you’re interested in watching the first-ever international series between the two nations for free from anywhere in the world, we’ve got all the information you need.

When is the England vs. Tonga 2023 rugby league series?

The last time England and Tonga came head-to-head was in 2017’s Rugby League World Cup semi-final, with England just doing enough to win 20-18.

Tonga will be looking for revenge in this eagerly-anticipated series:

  • First Test (Totally Wicked Stadium, St. Helens) — 2.30 p.m. BST on Oct. 22

  • Second Test (John Smith’s Stadium, Huddersfield) — 2.30 p.m. BST on Oct. 28

  • Third Test (Huddersfield, Leeds) — 2.30 p.m. BST on Nov. 4

You can watch every fixture from this series for free.

How to watch the England vs. Tonga series for free

Live coverage of the series between England and Tonga is available for free on BBC One and BBC iPlayer.

BBC iPlayer is geo-restricted to the UK, but anyone can access this free streaming platform with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in another country, meaning you can unblock BBC iPlayer from anywhere in the world.

This process might sound complicated, but it’s actually pretty straightforward:

  1. Sign up for a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK

  4. Visit BBC iPlayer

  5. Watch England vs. Tonga for free from anywhere in the world


ExpressVPN logo

Credit: ExpressVPN


ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free)

£82.82 only at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee)



The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free trials or money-back guarantees. By using these offers, you can watch this series without committing with your cash. This is obviously not a long-term solution, but you’ve got enough time to watch this series before recovering your investment. This is sneaky, but it works.

What is the best VPN for BBC iPlayer?

There are multiple VPNs that can reliably unblock streaming services from around the world, including popular services like Surfshark and NordVPN. These are great options, but ExpressVPN continues to lead the way when it comes to streaming.

ExpressVPN is the best choice for unblocking free streaming services, for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 94 countries including the UK

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is always secure

  • Fast streaming speeds free from throttling

  • Up to five simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for £82.82 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Watch the England vs. Tonga series for free with ExpressVPN.

Tech / Technology

Women’s Super League 2023/24 livestream: How to watch WSL for free

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Watch the Women’s Super League 2023/24 season for free from anywhere in the world.
Magdalena Eriksson and Millie Bright of Chelsea lift the Barclays Women's Super League trophy

The Women’s Super League continues to grow in popularity, and it’s easy to see why. There are so many intense rivalries, star players, and intriguing storylines playing out every week. And you can watch some of the biggest fixtures without spending anything.

If you’re interested in watching the Women’s Super League for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.

What is the Women’s Super League?

The Women’s Super League (WSL) is the highest level of women’s football in England. Established in 2010, it is run by the Football Association and features 12 professional teams. Chelsea are the current WSL champions after winning their sixth title last year.

How to watch the Women’s Super League for free

Sky Sports has the rights to show two games a week, but it’s not free. That’s frustrating news for fans without a subscription, but the good news is that there are free alternatives on offer.

The BBC will broadcast one game from each round of fixtures, with free streaming available on BBC iPlayer. The BBC has released the next batch of fixtures it will cover:

  • Nov. 5 — Arsenal vs. Man City at 12:30 p.m. GMT (BBC Two / BBC iPlayer)

  • Nov. 12 — Tottenham Hotspur vs. Liverpool at 12:30 p.m. GMT (BBC Two / BBC iPlayer)

  • Nov. 18 — Chelsea vs. Liverpool at 1:30 p.m. GMT (BBC One / BBC iPlayer)

And it gets better, because any games that are not shown on BBC or Sky Sports will be available to watch for free on the FA Player. All you have to do is sign up at www.faplayer.tv or via the app to gain full access to live matches.

The FA Player is available internationally, so anyone can watch the WSL with this free streaming platform. The same can’t be said for BBC iPlayer. This popular service will block your access if you attempt to connect from outside the UK, so if you want to watch the WSL on BBC iPlayer from abroad, you’ll need to use a VPN.

VPNs can hide your digital location and connect you to a secure server in the UK, meaning you can access BBC iPlayer from anywhere in the world. The process is actually really simple:

  1. Sign up for a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)

  2. Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)

  3. Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK

  4. Visit BBC iPlayer

  5. Watch the Women’s Super League on BBC iPlayer


ExpressVPN logo

Credit: ExpressVPN


ExpressVPN (1-Year Subscription + 3 Months Free)

£82.82 only at ExpressVPN (with money-back guarantee)



The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but they do tend to offer free trials or money-back guarantees. By making the most of these offers, you can unblock BBC iPlayer without committing with your cash. This isn’t a long-term solution, but it does give you time to watch multiple WSL fixtures on BBC iPlayer before recovering your investment.

What is the best VPN for BBC iPlayer?

ExpressVPN is the best service for unblocking BBC iPlayer. There are decent alternatives like NordVPN and Surfshark, but ExpressVPN leads the way. This high-speed service is the top choice for streaming, for a number of reasons:

  • Servers in 94 countries including the UK

  • Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more

  • Strict no-logging policy so your data is always secure

  • Fast connection speeds free from throttling

  • Up to five simultaneous connections

  • 30-day money-back guarantee

A one-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for £82.82 and includes an extra three months for free — 49% off for a limited time. This heavily discounted plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Watch the Women’s Super League from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.

Tech / Technology

Meet the people spending $4,000 to travel with their favorite creators

Posted on:

How creator-led trips through Trova Trip work, and why YouTubers and their fans go on them.
An illustrated group of people shaded in blue with woman posing in color in the center with a dollar sign.

A YouTube vlog shows a group of twentysomething women on a food tour of Mykonos, Greece. They eat sugar-coated kourabiedes cookies, take shots of ouzo, walk the narrow streets ducking into eateries, and share laughs over a charcuterie board. But this is not your average girls trip. 

The women in the video paid to travel to Greece with their favorite YouTuber, Maddie Dragsbaek. Dragsbaek posted the video, titled “I traveled to Italy and Greece with 40 of my subscribers.” She’s one of a growing number of creators who have made traveling with their audiences into a lucrative endeavor of its own.

While you once might have enviously watched an influencer’s vlog or swiped through photos of her sponsored trip and then jealously planned your own (which would never quite compare), now you can pay for a trip together. The experience lives both on her feed and yours, and in your memories. 

For creators, it’s “a no-brainer”

Dragsbaek’s trip is one of 500 creator-led trips operated by travel company Trova Trip this year — nearly 200 more than in 2022. Founded in 2017 by Lauren Schneider, Trova Trip is a three-sided marketplace that helps connect creators with travel operators in more than 40 countries. Creators, called hosts by Trova Trip, sell trips to their audiences through the platform for an average of $2,000 to $4,000, though the prices go up to $12,000 for an Antartica trip, airfare not included.

To host a travel experience through Trova Trip, a creator first sends out a survey to their audience. They are eligible to host a trip if their community demonstrates interest — for Trova Trip, that means at least 50 responses from adults with budgets of over $2,000 for the experience. Currently, Trova Trip is the only company specializing in creator-led travel, although more traditional creator-led travel, like yoga retreats, have existed for a while, and some creators have planned one-off trips via other companies. “[Based on the survey results] our platform provides recommendations of itineraries that match their audience interests. We have a wide range of experiences, from backpacking in Patagonia to practicing yoga in Bali to eating food in Japan,” explained Schneider. 

Once the creator picks an itinerary, their request must be approved by the local operator of the trip. Then Trova Trip provides the operating cost, and the creator sets the price and sells it to their audience.

The trips range in price depending on location, with the final price set by the creator. “We trust our creators to decide their earnings based on what they believe is best for them and their community,” Lauren Schneider, the founder of Trova Trip, explained to Mashable. “On average, they’re taking about 20 percent of the total trip price.” 60 percent goes to the trip operators, and Trova Trip takes the remaining cut. 

According to Trova Trip, around 700 creators have hosted trips so far. Hosts have spanned from Love Is Blind‘s Kwame and Chelsea to Cassie and Danielle of the National Park After Dark podcast (they’re the ones going to Antarctica). Hosts have access to 150+ itineraries. And the hosts are just that; the trip operators provide tour guides and manage on-the-ground logistics.

When Trova Trip reached out to Dragsbaek to gauge her interest in hosting a trip for her 233,000 subscribers, saying yes was a no-brainer, Dragsbaek told Mashable. “It’s such a strange and unique opportunity that I had to do it,” she continued. “Not only was I getting to meet the people that support my content face to face, but I was able to meet them in a meaningful way by spending a good amount of time traveling together.”

Dragsbaek’s 7-day Greece trip cost a whopping $3,350. The price included a double room with another trip attendee, six breakfasts, two dinners, shuttle service to and from Athens airport, transport to and from Mykonos, and planned activities like a visit to the Parthenon. It did not include attendees’ air fare. 

Despite the steep price, Dragsbaek’s fans were eager to attend.

“I can’t not do this”

In 2020, during a spell of quarantine-induced boredom, Amanda Layne Miller turned to YouTube. An outfit video from Dragsbaek popped up on her homepage and she clicked. “Literally the algorithm just fed it to me,” Miller told Mashable. “I started binging literally every single one of her videos. I felt like I had a lot in common with her.”

Miller found Dragsbaek authentic, conversational, and funny. “The way that she speaks is so personal that I got to know her through her opinions and what she loves,” she explained. 

So when Miller caught wind that Dragsbaek was hosting a trip to Greece in June 2023 for up to 20 of her subscribers, Miller jumped at the opportunity. “I thought, I’ve always wanted to go to Greece. It’s with one of my favorite YouTubers. I think we’d get along, and I want to be friends with her. I can’t not do this,” she said. 

Similarly, several years ago Cari Cakes, an American creator living in Seoul, was recommended on YouTube to Katie Giordano, a 25-year-old media worker in Hong Kong. Giordano became a fan of both Cakes’s travel content and book tube. “Her whole demeanor is so relaxing. I don’t know if that’s weird, but she’s just very calm and realistic,” Giordano explained to Mashable. This past May, Giordano went on Cakes’s trip to Tokyo. “Everybody was a little bit like Cari in a certain way,” she said. “They were all really nice, accepting, and eager and open-minded. Cari attracts niceness, because that is her own aura.”

The inevitable complications when creators meet their fans

These trips seem like a recipe for an Ingrid Goes West situation — a group of people all hoping to become friends with someone they feel like they already know from watching them online for years. But for Dragsbaek, the unique relationship broke down walls between attendees and her. “It’s hard to even describe when you’re talking to someone, and [they’re] a stranger, but you immediately feel understood by them. And it’s because they already know so much about you,” she explained.

While there is the possibility for immediate connection between creator and traveler, creators, who lead and profit from the trip with their followers, could easily act as though they are above the travelers. Followers, who have watched these creators often for years, may fall into overt fan-girling.

Morgan Yates, a 28-year-old lifestyle YouTuber in Los Angeles, California, who has hosted three trips — two through Trova Trip — dealt with overzealous travelers. One made it clear she knew basically every detail of Yates’s life. Others were “clingy.” “It becomes a difficult situation because I don’t want to hurt anyone’s feelings by trying to get away from them, but at times I’ve felt a bit conflicted and frustrated when those people are only making an effort to spend time with me and not get to know everyone else,” she told Mashable.

There are some safety mechanisms in place to help keep overtly dangerous fans off trips. “Hosts have the ability to review or reject a traveler, they control how and who the trip is marketed to, so they could list it in the marketplace or they can only send it to vetted folks,” said Amy Dunn, communications lead at Trova Trip. 

The first trip Yates hosted was through Contiki, a tour company she’d previously been a traveler with, and due to their privacy policy, Yates wasn’t allowed to access any info on the travelers on her trip ahead of time which made her “super nervous,” despite it ending up being a “great group.”

An exercise in managing expectations

Despite going on these trips to meet their favorite creator, travelers are expected to behave as travelers might on any group trip. But this can be a challenge.

“It’s easier to develop a parasocial relationship with a YouTuber, because their art is literally just them,” said Miller. She acknowledged the potential for weird behavior and for travelers to overwhelm Dragsbaek because everyone wanted to develop a connection with her. “I was excited to get to know her as a person and actually have a relationship with her further than just audience and subject.”

You might imagine that as soon as Dragsbaek left the room, all the travelers would immediately begin discussing her and comparing her to her videos. But it wasn’t quite like that. The travelers all being huge fans of Dragsbaek was “the elephant in the room” until the middle of the week, said Miller. “Someone finally said, ‘I feel like, we all came here to like become friends with Maddie to a certain extent.”

When Giordano arrived in Tokyo and met Cakes, she felt like she was meeting a celebrity. “When I first met her, I said, ‘You look like a woodland fairy.’ She’s got the beautiful red hair. She’s literally so gorgeous,” said Giordano. “The first few days I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, she’s so cool.’ But it toned down throughout the trip.”

While Giordano was struck by Cakes’s real-life beauty — and by how slow Cakes talks, because Giordano watches YouTube at double speed — the person she met was exactly how she thought she would be. “I got a good idea of how she was as a person, because she’s very open and honest on her YouTube channel,” explained Giordano. 

Travelers’ expectations aren’t just something they have to manage. The creators are hyper-aware of whether or not they are living up to the persona in their content. Jade Fox, a 32-year-old lifestyle creator YouTuber in Los Angeles, California, worried about her ability to meet expectations ahead of the trip she hosted to Bali with her best friend and fellow creator Arrows this summer. “I’m used to the process of capturing myself exactly the way I want to. People are used to seeing a very curated, edited version of me,” Fox told Mashable. “I was nervous about disappointing folks.”

Yates faces similar anxieties on her trips. “I almost have imposter syndrome going into these trips. I know I’m not any cooler or more special than anyone else there. My fear is always that I’m not living up to what people expected me to be like,” she explained.

“It felt like summer camp”

All the hours of anecdotes Miller and Giordano watched led them to fly across the world to meet their favorite YouTubers, which can make for a lot of pressure. But creators have the capacity to create a community that reflects the content they’ve put out there, and that can lead to incredibly meaningful trips. 

“I was nervous if that [connection between creator and audience] was going to exist in real life, as it does in the comment section. When we met in person it was almost as if we had all already known each other for years,” said Fox. “I’m a Black queer woman. Arrows is a transmasculine, nonbinary queer person, and our audience is just different iterations of that.” 

The group’s shared identities provided a touch point for connection. “We are a giant pack of Black people; some of us are gender-fluid. And we’re going into a city where we don’t know how we’re going to be perceived, we don’t know what’s going to happen. A lot of us had never been out of the country before,” explained Fox. “That was another way that we were all able to protect each other, because we all know what violence looks like toward people who have experiences like ours.”

Fox described the trip as “spiritual,” “a fully immersive experience,” and “kismet.” By the end, travelers were getting tattoos to commemorate the experience and changing their flights home to spend more time with each other. The most magical moment for Fox came on their chill day by the pool when one of the travelers taught her how to swim. “It was this big Disney Channel moment. When I finished my first full lap, I lifted my head out of the water and everyone was just screaming and going crazy,” reminisced Fox. 

Miller also felt moved by the end of Dragsbaek’s trip. “The last night is when we’re all like, ‘We know each other really well’ and wishing it was the first day. It felt like summer camp,” said Miller. “I was like, ‘Whoa, like, I’m an adult. And I have not been in this type of environment since high school.'”

For some, it’s just another hustle

For creators with a smaller audience who might not be sought after for brand sponsorships, a Trova Trip venture can provide more money than a brand sponsorship. So, while Fox and Dragsbaek created meaningful connections with their audiences, there’s the potential from others to treat the travel game like a full-time hustle.

Lindsay Mukkadam, a 37-year-old based in Austin, Texas, who posts under the moniker “One Girl Wandering,” pivoted from being a solo travel creator to making her business about encouraging her audience to get out and travel by coming on one of her trips. Her Instagram bio labels her as “Your solo travel bff! Stop waiting for others and finally book the trip of your dreams,” and in this year alone, she’s hosted trips to Costa Rica, Iceland, Scotland, two to Japan, and two to the Amalfi Coast. By the end of the year she’ll host two trips to Egypt, and two to Christmas markets in Germany and Austria. A slew of her 2024 trips are already being promoted. 

Others, like Danah Clipa, @danahbananaa on TikTok, refuse to, as they see it, take advantage of their followers by making them pay to join them on travel adventures. In a since-deleted video, Clipa explained that she canceled her Trova Trip because it would be free for her at the expense of her followers. “If I’m inviting someone to travel out of the country with me,” said Clipa, “I want them to feel on the same level as me, because we are — we are the exact fucking same.”