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Aujourd’hui — 27 février 2025The Guardian

Emma Raducanu will return to action in Indian Wells after Dubai incident

27 février 2025 à 17:41
  • Briton expected to be offered extra security at event
  • Zverev loses to Tien as seeds exit at Mexican Open

Emma Raducanu will return to action next week at the BNP Paribas Open in Indian Wells.

At the former US Open champion’s most recent tournament in Dubai last week, she was approached by a man displaying what the WTA described as “fixated behaviour” before her second-round defeat to Karolina Muchova. Raducanu was visibly distressed, hiding behind the umpire’s chair early in the contest after spotting the man in the first few rows of seats.

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© Photograph: Christopher Pike/Getty Images

© Photograph: Christopher Pike/Getty Images

‘We get along’: Norris and Verstappen laugh off tensions and prepare to renew battle

27 février 2025 à 17:24
  • Pair were involved in series of incidents last season
  • Carlos Sainz quickest in testing ahead of Lewis Hamilton

Max Verstappen and Lando Norriswere in fine fooling form at the pre-season test in Bahrain with the pair expectant of a closely fought but respectful contest on track when the world championship begins and poking fun at any notion of lingering tension between them.

Last season as they went head to head for the title in the second half of the year, friction rose between the two drivers. A series of on-track incidents, notably in Austria, Austin and Mexico, included the Dutch driver controversially forcing Norris off track. After the race in Mexico City, where Verstappen was penalised, Norris stated: “Today was not fair, clean racing, therefore he got what he had coming to him.”

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© Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/REX/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Hollandse Hoogte/REX/Shutterstock

Space station’s lack of dirt may damage astronauts’ health, says study

27 février 2025 à 17:00

Scientists find sterile ISS environment could explain rashes and cold sores and suggest adding microbes to stations

Excessive cleanliness is not generally regarded as a downside when it comes to travel accommodation. However, scientists have concluded that the International Space Station is so sterile that it could be having a negative impact on astronauts’ health and have suggested making it “dirtier”.

The study found that the ISS is largely devoid of environmental microbes found in soil and water that are thought to beneficial to the immune system. The lack of microbial diversity could help to explain why astronauts often experience immune-related health problems such as rashes, cold sores, fungal infections and shingles.

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© Photograph: Kayla Barron/AP

© Photograph: Kayla Barron/AP

Jimmy Kimmel on Trump: ‘Somehow, he’s managed to make everything disgusting’

27 février 2025 à 16:51

Late-night hosts discuss Trump’s proposal for ‘gold card’ visas, allowing rich foreigners to enter the US for $5m each

Late-night hosts talk Donald Trump’s proposed “gold card” visas, Trump’s first cabinet meeting and confusion over who leads the so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge).

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© Photograph: Youtube

© Photograph: Youtube

Trump administration ends funding for UN program fighting HIV/Aids

27 février 2025 à 16:50

Peter Marocco sends letter to UNAids terminating US involvement in serious blow to live-saving health service

The Trump administration has terminated its funding of the joint United Nations program on HIV/Aids, known as UNAids, delivering another devastating blow to the global fight against the disease.

The notice that US funding of UNAids is being cut off is the latest move by the administration to staunch American involvement in life-saving health and anti-poverty programs around the world. It was issued by Peter Marocco, a Trump loyalist who is spearheading the evisceration of the US overseas aid program through USAid.

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© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

© Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

Deadly blasts hit M23 rebel rally in captured DRC city of Bukavu

27 février 2025 à 16:39

Deaths and injuries reported after explosions at rally attended by thousands in city captured by rebel group

Several people have been killed and dozens more injured after blasts at a mass rally held by the M23 group in Bukavu, the city in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo captured by the rebels earlier this month.

Footage posted on social media showed people fleeing the scene. In another video, bloodied bodies lay on the ground and injured people were being carried away.

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© Photograph: Janvier Barhahiga/AP

© Photograph: Janvier Barhahiga/AP

King asks Moroccans not to kill sheep for Eid al-Adha as drought reduces herds

27 février 2025 à 16:26

First such request in 29 years blames economic hardship and climate crisis for high livestock prices and shortages

King Mohammed VI has urged his fellow Moroccans not to slaughter sheep for upcoming Eid al-Adha festivities as the country grapples with dwindling herds due to a six-year drought.

The request was delivered on Wednesday by the minister of Islamic affairs, Ahmed Toufiq, who read a letter on the monarch’s behalf on the state-run Al Aoula TV channel. He cited economic hardship and the climate crisis as reasons for the rising prices of livestock and sheep shortage in the north African state.

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© Photograph: Mosa’ab Elshamy/AP

© Photograph: Mosa’ab Elshamy/AP

Museums defend BP sponsorship after firm abandons climate targets

27 février 2025 à 16:23

British Museum and Science Museum said BP’s decision to grow fossil fuel investment would not alter relationship

Two of Britain’s best-loved museums have been forced to defend their financial ties to BP after the company announced this week that it was abandoning its climate targets to focus on growing fossil fuel production.

The British Museum and the Science Museum, which have sponsorship deals with BP, said the company’s decision to grow its investments in oil and gas by cutting back on green spending would not alter their relationship with it.

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© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

© Photograph: David Levene/The Guardian

Madrid and Marseille lead anti-referee epidemic but no officials means no game | Max Rushden

27 février 2025 à 15:47

Of course this problem isn’t new, but the recent levels of vitriol towards refs in Europe could drive more of them out of football

It was so refreshing to hear one of the world’s best players defend referees last week. Real Madrid’s Federico Valverde reminded us that officials are people too – just like us. If you prick Darren Cann, does he not bleed?

“I’m not one to judge the referee,” Valverde said in the press conference before Madrid’s victory over Manchester City. “We are all human and we can make mistakes. Referees are also criticised a lot and when they do things well, they are not flattered either.”

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© Composite: Getty, Shutterstock, PA

© Composite: Getty, Shutterstock, PA

Jailed Kurdish leader calls for PKK to disarm – in shift that could shake up region

27 février 2025 à 17:15

Abdullah Öcalan’s message, which follows four decades of guerrilla warfare, will have far-reaching implications

The ageing leader of a Kurdish militant group imprisoned on a remote Turkish island has called on the group to disarm and dissolve itself, signalling the start of a fragile peace with Turkey after four decades of guerrilla warfare, attacks and reprisals.

Abdullah Öcalan, a founding member of the Kurdistan Workers’ party (PKK), a group long regarded as a terrorist organisation in Turkey as well as in Britain and the US, issued the message in a letter read out by allies in Istanbul.

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© Photograph: Ümit Bektaş/Reuters

© Photograph: Ümit Bektaş/Reuters

Tell us about the life-changing decisions you have made inspired by art

27 février 2025 à 15:16

We would like to hear from people who have uprooted their life for a piece of art

The Guardian’s Saturday magazine is looking for people who made a life-changing decision because they were inspired by some kind of art or culture.

Did you propose after listening to a particular song? Or move to New Zealand after seeing Lord of the Rings? Has a really great sex scene ever made you want to dump your boyfriend?

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© Photograph: Praveen Menon/Reuters

© Photograph: Praveen Menon/Reuters

Liverpool have one hand on title, plus drama at Old Trafford: Football Weekly Extra - podcast

Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, Jonathan Fadugba and Sam Dalling to discuss Wednesday night’s Premier League action

Rate, review, and share on Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, Audioboom, Mixcloud, Acast and Stitcher, and join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter and email.

On the podcast today: Liverpool stretch their lead at the top of the Premier League with a comfortable 2-0 win over Newcastle, as Dominik Szoboszlai continues to impress. The panel ask: is the race done? Meanwhile, Arsenal are held to a 0-0 draw at Nottingham Forest, with Mikel Merino starting up top, and the panel ask if Raheem Sterling peaked too early in his career.

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© Photograph: Kieran McManus/REX/Shutterstock

© Photograph: Kieran McManus/REX/Shutterstock

AI is ‘beating’ humans at empathy and creativity. But these games are rigged | MJ Crockett

27 février 2025 à 15:00

Research pitting people against AI systems gives AI an edge by asking us to perform in machine-like ways

Techno-optimists are evangelizing a vision of “superhuman” artificial intelligence (AI). Dario Amodei, the CEO of the AI company Anthropic, predicts within a few years, AI will be “better than almost all humans at almost everything”. Elon Musk’s so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge) is proposing replacing government workers with chatbots in the name of efficiency. And some scientists are claiming that AI can already outperform humans even in domains previously thought to be exclusively human, such as empathy, creativity and conflict resolution.

It’s true that in several prominent studies, researchers have staged “competitions” in which AI technology appears to outperform humans in these very human areas. But a closer look reveals that these games are rigged against us humans. The competitions do not actually ask machines to perform human tasks; it’s more accurate to say that they ask humans to behave in machine-like ways as they perform lifeless simulacra of human tasks.

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© Photograph: Héctor Retamal/AFP/Getty Images

© Photograph: Héctor Retamal/AFP/Getty Images

Strangers mock the way I dance. How can I regain confidence on the dancefloor? | Leading questions

27 février 2025 à 15:00

Dancing in the dark can restore a sense of fun in your body without anyone watching, writes advice columnist Eleanor Gordon-Smith. You’re never too awkward or sober to start

I am in my early 30s and happily married with two young children. I have never been an amazing dancer. It has always been painfully awkward. I feel mortified whenever there’s a requirement to dance, even if it’s as silly as when the grownups join in during a kid’s party! I’ve had strangers offer well-intentioned help; people try to teach me to dance while on the dancefloor (clearly they decided I needed help). I’ve had a friend comment that my dancing is “cute” and strangers mock my dancing by mimicking it in front of me.

When I was in my 20s, I made up for this in the only way I knew how – by drinking a lot and losing all inhibition. I loved letting go and just losing myself on the dancefloor, enjoying the music and not caring what people thought. I’m now at a stage in my life where I’ve got young kids, I work a million hours a week in an intense job and I like making the most of my weekends with my family, so getting extremely drunk to enjoy a night of dancing isn’t an option. Even when the option has presented itself, I feel so saddled emotionally with responsibility and physically with my larger, squidgier mum body that I just avoid dancing altogether.

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© Illustration: mauritius images GmbH/Alamy

© Illustration: mauritius images GmbH/Alamy

White House social media Trump-style: bad taste, sycophancy and trolling

27 février 2025 à 15:00

The president’s official feeds are traditionally relatively sober but the 2025 version projects a petulant wannabe king

Traditionally the White House social media feeds have been a relatively sober way for administrations to communicate with the public. The X and Facebook accounts promote their presidents, but have tended to stop short of full-fledged propaganda.

Not any more. Under Trump’s presidency the White House’s digital communications have blasted past mere propaganda, to a level of bad taste and sycophancy that has shocked observers and prompted concerns that Trump sees himself as a monarch.

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© Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty Images

© Photograph: Alex Wong/Getty Images

Lionesses find recipe for Euro 2025 success with ‘English’ performance | Tom Garry

27 février 2025 à 15:00

One game does not fix everything but Leah Williamson and Millie Bright were delighted with team’s grit against Spain

While Wembley was rejoicing at the sight of England putting the ball in Spain’s net, there were two people noticeably not joining in with the celebrations. Sarina Wiegman had reacted to the Lionesses’ goal by making her way urgently down to the touchline for a detailed conversation with her captain, Leah Williamson, clearly relaying some key tactical details.

Such a sight is not uncommon in top-level sport, but on Wednesday night it felt particularly indicatory of England’s focus, determination and steadfast resolve to win. Their committed performance in the 1-0 Nations League triumph was one of a side fixated on nothing but victory, high levels of work rate, concentration and, perhaps above all, grit. The centre-back Millie Bright had another description for it: “Proper English.”

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© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

© Photograph: Tom Jenkins/The Guardian

‘People spontaneously strip off and join us’: nude cyclists send message you don’t need to be buff

27 février 2025 à 15:00

Melbourne’s World Naked Bike Ride will celebrate its 20th anniversary as it winds through the city’s streets spreading a message of body positivity and environmentalism

This weekend in Melbourne, expect to see hundreds of cyclists with a striking difference. Instead of the usual Lycra-clad peloton, these riders will be getting their kit off in a day of nude protest to draw attention to rider safety and visibility, diversity of body image and a celebration of low-carbon transport.

Dearne Weaver, a 61-year-old community worker from Canberra, says when she first attended Melbourne’s World Naked Bike Ride in 2019 she was worried it might be too male-dominated – but she was pleasantly surprised.

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© Photograph: World Naked Bike Ride Melbourne Inc.

© Photograph: World Naked Bike Ride Melbourne Inc.

More than 100,000 African seeds put in Svalbard vault for safekeeping

27 février 2025 à 15:00

Seeds of 177 species from across Africa to be stored in Norway to preserve crop diversity in case of disaster

More than 100,000 seeds from across Africa have been deposited in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault, the world’s repository for specimens intended to preserve crop diversity in the event of disaster.

Among the latest additions are seeds critical to building climate resilience, such as the tree Faidherbia albida, which turns nitrogen into ammonia and nitrates, and Cordia africana, the Sudan teak, a tree renowned for its strength and durability.

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© Photograph: Azzura Lalani/CIFOR-ICRAF

© Photograph: Azzura Lalani/CIFOR-ICRAF

Austrian centrist parties reach deal to form government without far right

27 février 2025 à 14:39

Christian Stocker, the ÖVP leader, says ‘common programme’ has been agreed with SPÖ and Neos

Five months after the far-right Freedom party (FPÖ) finished first in parliamentary elections, Austria’s three leading centrist parties have reached agreement to form a new government without it.

The centre-right People’s party (ÖVP), the Social Democrats (SPÖ) and the liberal Neos, whose first attempt at forming a coalition failed in January, unveiled a 200-page programme aimed mainly at reviving the country’s ailing economy and cutting its budget deficit.

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© Photograph: Heinz-Peter Bader/AP

© Photograph: Heinz-Peter Bader/AP

‘Ambition beyond words’: How Siena’s art revolution brought heaven down to earth

27 février 2025 à 14:38

Before the Black Death devastated Siena, the city thrummed with energy, expressed in art and architecture designed to dazzle its audience – and which still astonishes 800 years later

If you want to know the moment of a medieval Italian city’s greatest prosperity, look at the year it began work on its cathedral. In Siena, the magic year was 1226, the start of some 85 years of construction of the duomo, a remarkable gothic structure with an intricately complex, creamy pink facade and stripy, black-and-white campanile. “The scale of ambition is difficult to put into words,” says Laura Llewellyn, one of the curators of The Rise of Painting, the National Gallery’s new exhibition of Sienese art. “The extravagance of it: to appreciate it you need to unknow and unlearn later buildings like the duomos in Florence and St Peter’s in Rome.”

But by the 1350s, Siena’s most glorious years in the raging Tuscan sun would be as good as over. After decades of rapid artistic transformation – a half century that saw the art of the city leave behind the distant, hieratic grace of Byzantine-flavoured painting for a world of dynamism, drama and emotion – the Black Death halved the city’s population from 60,000 to 30,000, stripped away its wilder ambitions and dulled its gleaming wealth. One of Siena’s more implausible plans had been to enlarge the already huge cathedral by converting its existing nave into a transept and tacking on to its belly a new, vastly oversized nave on the precipitous edge of one of the city’s peaks. The project was never completed, but ghostly unfinished arches remain as a monument to lost dreams and a raging pandemic.

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© Photograph: ’Lorenzetti/BPK/Scala

© Photograph: ’Lorenzetti/BPK/Scala

Most banned books feature people of color and LGBTQ+ people, report finds

27 février 2025 à 14:30

Study counteracts claims by conservative lawmakers that books being removed from classrooms are sexually explicit

The majority of banned books in US public schools last year dealt with people of color, LGBTQ+ people and other demographics, according to a new study from PEN America.

The report also counteracts claims by conservative lawmakers that books being removed from classrooms are sexually explicit and that book bans are altogether a “hoax”, an assertion made by Donald Trump.

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© Photograph: Haven Daley/AP

© Photograph: Haven Daley/AP

NFL star Justin Tucker offers apology but denies sexual misconduct claims

27 février 2025 à 14:19
  • Kicker says he is committed to respect of others
  • Tucker has faced mounting accusations since January

Baltimore Ravens kicker Justin Tucker has released a new statement maintaining that he did not act inappropriately while receiving treatment from massage therapists. He also offered an apology.

“It devastates me to know that anyone I have worked with would not have felt respected and valued as a professional, but more importantly as a person, and to anyone who has felt otherwise, I am sorry,” Tucker said in a statement from his publicist. “I want you to know I am committed to ensuring that everyone I interact with continues to feel that I respect them and care about them as a human being.”

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© Photograph: Tim Warner/Getty Images

© Photograph: Tim Warner/Getty Images

‘The love child of Mick Hucknall and Crazy Frog’: is Eurovision’s Lumo the worst mascot ever?

27 février 2025 à 14:05

Meet the song contest’s first ever mascot – a sentient heart with a bizarrely sexy mouth that looks like the result of the ChatGPT prompt ‘please ruin my day’. Why oh why has this happened?

The miracle of Eurovision is how much it has legitimised itself over the last decade and a half. For years, the song contest was the laughing stock of Europe, a toe-curling night on which all the continent’s fifth-rate novelty acts would gather and bing-bam-boom themselves to death while the rest of Europe looked on and jeered.

But look at it now. By carefully repositioning itself, and by encouraging countries to submit relevant, modish entries, Eurovision has transformed into the party of the year. People love Eurovision – and not ironically, either. At a time of growing international strife – the sort of strife that it was designed to combat – Eurovision represents a moment of unity. It is, in short, in the shape of its life. It would take something spectacular to mess it up.

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© Photograph: Eurovision

© Photograph: Eurovision

Thailand deports dozens of Uyghurs to China despite torture fears

Rights experts say group, who have been detained for more than 10 years, face risk of disappearance and imprisonment

Dozens of Uyghurs have been deported from Thailand to China in the face of warnings from human rights experts that there is a high risk they will suffer torture, enforced disappearance and imprisonment.

Local media reported that several trucks with their windows covered were seen in the early hours of Thursday leaving the Bangkok immigration centre where 48 Uyghurs had been held during their more than 10 years in Thai detention.

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© Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA

© Photograph: Narong Sangnak/EPA

YouTube star MrBeast planning investment round that could value company at $5bn

27 février 2025 à 14:01

Funds would be used to create holding company for 26-year-old’s growing empire of video and food businesses

The world’s biggest YouTube star, MrBeast, is planning to raise hundreds of millions of dollars in a move that would reportedly value his company at roughly $5bn (£3.9bn).

The YouTuber, whose real name is Jimmy Donaldson, is said to have spoken with several wealthy individuals and financial firms about taking part in the investment round.

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© Photograph: Cary Edmondson/USA Today Sports

© Photograph: Cary Edmondson/USA Today Sports

‘Married men HATE glitter’: TikTokers take to crafty way to ward off cheaters

27 février 2025 à 14:00

Glitter transfers easily and is tough to wash off, which is why women are using it to leave a message – and for revenge

Lipstick on the collar, a stray earring tucked into seat cushions: women have long relied on makeup and fashion to catch cheaters. Now, there’s a new method for singles who want to ensure a date doesn’t have a secret spouse at home – provided they aren’t afraid of microplastics.

In a TikTok posted this month with more than 2m likes, the fitness influencer Dalia Grande spritzed glitter all over her body while getting ready for a first date: “bc I’m at the age where they could be married (Married men HATE glitter)”, she wrote in the caption.

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© Illustration: Rita Liu/The Guardian

© Illustration: Rita Liu/The Guardian

‘I was causing harm’: author Helen Jukes on motherhood and our polluted bodies

27 février 2025 à 14:00

In her latest book, Mother Animal, the writer gives a personal account of the impact of ‘forever chemicals’ on her and her child during and after pregnancy

When Helen Jukes told her friends she was writing about motherhood and pollution, they advised her against it and warned she might make pregnant people more anxious than they already were. But she disagreed. Mother Animal, a personal account of Jukes’ pregnancy and early years of motherhood, details her growing realisation of how contaminated her body, and her baby, have become. And it’s something she thinks all would-be parents should be more aware of. There are chemicals from human industry in breast milk, amniotic fluid and bones, she writes. Toxicologists have found “forever chemicals” in embryos and foetuses at “every stage of pregnancy … in lung tissues, in livers”. It is inescapable.

Yet it is spoken about far too little. “I find it quite disrespectful to think that mothers wouldn’t be capable of handling [this] information,” she says when we meet at her home on the edge of the Peak District.

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© Photograph: Amanda Jackson

© Photograph: Amanda Jackson

White House ‘very pleased’ with UK’s increase in defence spending ahead of Starmer-Trump meeting – live

The two leaders will hold talks later, followed by a joint press conference

European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen will travel to London this Sunday to take part in an informal meeting on Ukraine and European security, the European Commission has just confirmed. Jakub Krupa has more on his Europe live blog.

David Lammy, the foreign secretary, has confirmed that President Trump has the ability to veto the deal that the UK has negotiated transferring sovereignty of the Chagos Isands to Mauritius. Speaking on ITV’s Peston last night, Lammy said:

If President Trump doesn’t like the deal, the deal will not go forward.

The reason for that is because we have a shared military and intelligence interest with the United States, and of course they’ve got to be happy with the deal, or there is no deal.

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© Photograph: pool

© Photograph: pool

MP Mike Amesbury has prison sentence suspended after appeal

Ex-Labour MP was originally jailed for 10 weeks for assaulting a man in the street

The former Labour MP Mike Amesbury has had his 10-week prison sentence for assault suspended for two years, after an appeal at Chester crown court.

Amesbury, the MP for Runcorn and Helsby, was jailed on Monday for drunkenly punching a constituent in the street after an argument.

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© Photograph: Adam Vaughan/EPA

© Photograph: Adam Vaughan/EPA

Panda Bear: Sinister Grift review | Alexis Petridis's album of the week

27 février 2025 à 13:00

(Domino)
Noah Lennox’s powerful and adventurous album has plenty of playlistable psych-pop, but then turns introspective: it’s a striking emotional arc

The last time the world heard from Noah “Panda Bear” Lennox, he was in the company of Pete Kember, better known as Sonic Boom, co-founder of Spacemen 3 – the latest in a string of musical left-turns that have made Lennox the most prolific and intriguing member of Animal Collective. Solo, he has variously spawned an entire sub-genre more or less singlehanded (the sample-heavy sound of his acclaimed 2007 album Person Pitch effectively gave birth to chillwave), collaborated with Daft Punk, Solange, Paramore and Jamie xx, commissioned dub albums from On-U Sound’s Adrian Sherwood, and dabbled in a stark acoustic sound on 2019’s Buoys.

Lennox and Kember’s collaborative album, Reset, united two generations of psychedelic experimentalists in a charmingly playful musical dialogue. Among its delights was a track called Whirlpool. It sounded beatific and blissed-out, but on closer examination seemed to depict a failing relationship: Lennox later confirmed that his marriage to fashion designer Fernanda Pereira – who directed the videos that accompanied Reset – had collapsed.

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© Photograph: Chris Shonting

© Photograph: Chris Shonting

Why Wicked should win the best picture Oscar

27 février 2025 à 13:00

With its real tulips, real singing and real BFFs Ariande Grande and Cynthia Erivo front and centre, this musical is as authentic and credible as fantasy gets

For the opening scene of Wicked, 9m real tulips were planted, improbably, by a farmer in Norfolk. The necessity of this opulence was completely obvious to director Jon M Chu and production designer Nathan Crowley – otherwise they’d have to use CGI for the Munchkin Village. Is CGI lush? Does it recall the heady, future-facing surge of hope and optimism that the original Oz has come to represent for, goddammit, almost a century? It does not. While it isn’t for the production values alone that Wicked deserves the best picture Oscar – anyone can spend money if they have enough money – take a second to consider the commitment of this film, and its impossibility. It tries to remain true to the moment when the world discovered Technicolor (sure, sure, come at me with The Toll of the Sea some other time); cheerfulness, magic, a naive faith in cinema and beyond – these are quite big asks in 2024, and Wicked went for it.

It was partly in tribute to that quality of early musicals that Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande performed all the songs live; lip-syncing as an innovation has brought increased slickness to a movie’s sound quality, but at the expense of stripping out jeopardy and emotion from the human voice. Clearly, Erivo and Grande could both lift a building off its foundations with their vocals – the last thing you’d describe them as being is “fragile” – but it’s a “whites of their eyes” thing. You never realised you needed to see the muscles move in a singer’s throat to believe that they really mean it – yet it turns out, you do.

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© Photograph: Universal Pictures/AP

© Photograph: Universal Pictures/AP

Premier League could be forced to have two summer transfer windows because of Club World Cup

27 février 2025 à 13:00
  • Interim window planned for teams in competition
  • League considering brief window at start of June

The Premier League could be forced to operate two separate transfer windows this summer due to disruption caused by the Club World Cup.

Fifa has announced plans to open an interim transfer window at the end of this season for clubs competing in the tournament, to allow clubs such as Chelsea and Manchester City to add to their squads and agree contract extensions with their current players before the tournament begins on 14 June.

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© Photograph: David Klein/Reuters

© Photograph: David Klein/Reuters

The 15 best games to play on the Nintendo Switch in 2025

27 février 2025 à 13:00

From the cutest postapocalyptic world to multiplayer mayhem and a modern family classic, here are the Switch’s must-play games

When we think of Nintendo we picture serene and cosy cartoon adventures filled with cute creatures and lovable Italian stereotypes. But while there is plenty of Mario on the Switch, the console offers a diverse range of delights for newcomers and longtime gaming veterans. Here are the 15 essentials.

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© Photograph: Nintendo

© Photograph: Nintendo

‘Testing ground for Project 2025’: behind Oklahoma’s rightwing push to erode the line between church and state

With Trump back in the White House, the state and others across the US are making efforts to install Christian viewpoints in governance

Ryan Walters bowed his head in prayer at his desk in the Oklahoma state superintendent’s office.

“Dear God, thank you for all the blessings you’ve given our country,” the rising star on the Christian right said in the mid-November video. “I pray for our leaders to make the right decisions. I pray in particular for President Donald Trump and his team as they continue to bring about change for our country.”

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© Photograph: September Dawn Bottoms/The Guardian

© Photograph: September Dawn Bottoms/The Guardian

‘We used to think the ice was eternal’: Colombia looks to a future without glaciers

27 février 2025 à 13:00

In Sierra Nevada del Cocuy, people have watched the ice fields turn to exposed rock and experts predict these vital water sources could be lost in 30 years

  • Words and photographs by Euan Wallace in the Sierra Nevada del Cocuy, Colombia

At an altitude of 4,200 metres in the Sierra Nevada del Cocuy, Colombia, Edilsa Ibañéz Ibañéz lowers a cupped hand into the water of a glacial stream. A local guide and mountaineer, she has grown up drinking water that runs down from the snowy peaks above. As she stands up, however, the landscape that greets her is markedly different from that of her childhood.

“We used to think the ice would be eternal,” says Ibañéz, 45. “Now it is not so eternal. Our glaciers are dying.”

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© Photograph: Euan Wallace/The Guardian

© Photograph: Euan Wallace/The Guardian

Carrion Crow by Heather Parry review – body horror with historical bite

27 février 2025 à 13:00

The ‘mad woman in the attic’ is an archetypal force to be reckoned with in this gothic tale of metamorphosis

You don’t tend to encounter much body horror in historical fiction. We have our bold innovators, to be sure, but for many the archaic and the genteel remain oddly synonymous. The good news, if that’s you, is that there’s almost no swearing in Heather Parry’s new novel. The bad news is that it’s vile and unspeakable in almost every other way. But don’t let that put you off. Carrion Crow may be set in a fetid late Victorian London and couched in lightly brocaded prose, but what lurks within is unmistakably red in tooth and claw, a creature nearer in kinship to Kathy Acker than to Sarah Waters.

The body undergoing the horrors belongs, in this instance, to Marguerite Périgord, the daughter of a French noblewoman in reduced circumstances. When the wayward Marguerite attracts a suitor, a strenuously unromantic solicitor named Mr Lewis, Cécile Périgord isn’t taking any chances. In a show of aristocratic mettle, she imprisons Marguerite in the attic, there to acquire the complexion and manners her wifely vocation will require.

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© Photograph: Robin Christian

© Photograph: Robin Christian

BBC creative chief Charlotte Moore to leave for Sony job

27 février 2025 à 12:48

Moore says ‘time is right for a new challenge’, while BBC board meets to discuss Gaza documentary row

The BBC has announced the departure of its creative chief after five years in charge.

Charlotte Moore, the corporation’s chief content officer since 2020, is to leave later this year to take up a new job at Sony.

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© Photograph: Graham Turner/The Guardian

© Photograph: Graham Turner/The Guardian

Foodie thefts, lottery wins and Roman rulers – take the Thursday quiz

27 février 2025 à 12:00

Questions on general knowledge and topical trivia, plus a few jokes, every Thursday. How will you fare?

When the quiz master sat down at a blank page to write this week’s introduction, nothing came to mind. There must be an infinite number of ways that you could introduce readers to a quiz, but not a single thought popped into his head. Nothing. Nada. Zilch. Still, here the quiz is – 16 questions on topical news, popular culture, general knowledge and whatever else cropped up during the writing process, all liberally sprinkled with some jokes. There are no prizes, but you can let us know how you got on in the comments.

The Thursday quiz, No 199

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© Photograph: Lanmas/Alamy

© Photograph: Lanmas/Alamy

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