News Headlines - 27 September 2016

Exclusive investigation: England manager Sam Allardyce for sale

Sam Allardyce used his position as England manager to negotiate a £400,000 deal and offered advice to businessmen on how to “get around” FA rules on player transfers, The Telegraph can disclose.

MI6 hiring 1,000 new staff to tackle modern threats

There is no detail on what positions are being advertised, but it's thought the new personnel will be experts in cyber, data collection, languages and foreign analysis.
It will take the size of MI6 from about 2,500 staff to as many as 3,500 by 2020.

Deutsche Bank Shares Drop on Fears of Capital Raising - WSJ

Intensifying concerns about Deutsche Bank AG’s financial health caused its shares to drop Monday and pushed the company into the awkward position of publicly denying that it had sought help from the German government.

Japan swimsuit teen's eel ad pulled over sexism claims

An online ad featuring a swimsuit-clad teenage girl who turns into an eel was pulled Monday after Japanese internet users complained it was sexist.
Officials in far-south Shibushi yanked the commercial but insisted they had only wanted to draw attention to locally-farmed fish.

Why the story of body-swapping teenagers has gripped Japan - BBC News

A Japanese film has made history by becoming the first animation not made by the legendary Studio Ghibli to rake in more than 10bn yen (£76m; $98m) in a month. But what exactly is it that has been drawing in the crowds?
1. It is a body-swapping fantasy
2. It mirrors the boy-girl swaps found in old Japanese tales
3. It captures the melancholy of adolescent dreaming
4. It is a reminder of the earthquake that changed a nation
5. Fans are making pilgrimages to its stunning locations
6. Hope for the next generation of mainstream Japanese animation