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index.feed.received.today — 15 mars 20256.9 📰 Infos English

Manchester City v Brighton, Everton v West Ham and more football: clockwatch – live

15 mars 2025 à 16:37
  • Saturday 3pm updates from across the country
  • Get in touch: contact Emillia with your thoughts

League One fixtures

Bolton 0-1 Stockport

Cambridge United 0-1 Peterborough

Blackpool v Leyton Orient

Reading v Stevenage

Rotherham v Exeter City

Mansfield Town v Barnsley

Charlton v Wigan

Wycombe v Wrexham

Huddersfield v Crawley

Northampton v Birmingham

Lincoln v Bristol Rovers

Shrewsbury v Burton

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© Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

© Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

Italy v Ireland: Six Nations 2025 – live

15 mars 2025 à 16:37
  • Latest from the Stadio Olimpico (2.15pm kick-off, GMT)
  • Get in touch: you can mail Alex with your comments

1 min: Italy win their first lineout and look to test the visiting defence early on, but cede possession and it’s with Ireland. Crowley, a big day for him, has it.

The referee Luke Pearce blows long and loud, we are under way at Stadio Olimpico!

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© Photograph: Seb Daly/Sportsfile/Getty Images

© Photograph: Seb Daly/Sportsfile/Getty Images

How a Columbia Student Fled to Canada After ICE Came Looking for Her

15 mars 2025 à 16:01
Ranjani Srinivasan’s student visa was revoked by U.S. immigration authorities. That was just the start of her odyssey.

© Dave Sanders for The New York Times

Demonstrators rally outside Columbia University on Friday to demand the release of Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian activist and former Columbia student arrested by immigration authorities.

Unearthed notebooks shed light on Victorian genius who inspired Einstein

15 mars 2025 à 16:00

Michael Faraday’s illustrated notes that show how radical scientist began his theories at London’s Royal Institution to go online

He was a self-educated genius whose groundbreaking discoveries in the fields of physics and chemistry electrified the world of science and laid the foundations for Albert Einstein’s theory of relativity nearly a century later.

Now, the little-known notebooks of the Victorian scientist Michael Faraday have been unearthed from the archive of the Royal Institution and are to be digitised and made permanently accessible online for the first time.

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© Photograph: Hulton Deutsch/Corbis/Getty Images

© Photograph: Hulton Deutsch/Corbis/Getty Images

‘I’ve always felt a little neurospicy. But it’s my factory setting!’ Natasha Rothwell on taking The White Lotus by storm

15 mars 2025 à 16:00

The comedian and former drama teacher was only expecting to do one series of HBO’s hit comedy-drama. Now, as Belinda, she’s stealing season three. She talks ADHD, big breaks and micro-resistances

Natasha Rothwell pops up on video from the US looking super-glamorous in a silvery-grey dress, with her hair and makeup on point. Did we miss a memo about a dress code for our interview? “I’ve just come from an event and thought, even though you’re not filming this, you could at least admire,” she laughs. “You know what they say: share the hair and never waste a face.”

Rothwell is currently stealing the show as spa manager Belinda in season three of HBO hit The White Lotus – reprising her role from season one, for which she was Emmy-nominated. Having endured the whims of Jennifer Coolidge’s needy heiress in Hawaii, Belinda has now travelled to the titular resort in Thailand to take part in its wellness training programme. She’s “cosplaying as a guest”, as Rothwell puts it – and in the process both finding romance and uncovering a potential crime.

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© Photograph: Corey Nickols/Getty Images for IMDb

© Photograph: Corey Nickols/Getty Images for IMDb

Intern of the Jedi: film sector turns to franchise favourites in effort to woo talent

15 mars 2025 à 16:00

Careers fair at Pinewood is among initiatives to lure young to an industry hit by cost inflation, writers’ strikes and an advertising recession

In a corner of a cavernous hangar in Buckinghamshire, a group of Jedi are honing their lightsaber skills, Deadpool and Chewbacca are posing for photos, while a squad of Imperial stormtroopers make their presence felt by arresting a passing reporter.

Pinewood Studios is pulling out all the stops – including a stunt display at the underwater stage famous for scenes including the sinking Venetian villa in the 2006 James Bond film Casino Royale – to wow young attendees at the third edition of Europe’s largest free careers fair for the film industry.

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© Photograph: Teri Pengilley/The Guardian

© Photograph: Teri Pengilley/The Guardian

Black Bag review – glossy Steven Soderbergh spy thriller is less Slow Horses, more show pony

15 mars 2025 à 16:00

Michael Fassbender and Cate Blanchett head a starry cast to match the luxurious production design, but the director’s espionage yarn could do with some grit

In a world built on deception, populated by people who can lie as easily as breathe, strait-laced British intelligence agent George Woodhouse (Michael Fassbender) values the truth above all else. Which is probably why he’s given the task of unmasking a traitor suspected of stealing and selling a piece of potentially devastating technology. What complicates matters is the fact that one of the main suspects is his wife, high-ranking fellow agent Kathryn (Cate Blanchett). Others in the frame include in-house psychiatrist Dr Zoe Vaughan (Naomie Harris), alcoholic maverick Freddie Smalls (Tom Burke) and junior agent Clarissa Dubose (Marisa Abela).

This knotty spy thriller from Steven Soderbergh attempts to distract us from a convoluted plot and baffling character motivations with fabulously chic interiors, impeccable tailoring and a general sense of dissolute luxury. And for a while it almost works: it’s always a pleasure to watch Blanchett slink expensively around a set, and Fassbender wears his serious, Harry Palmer-style thick-framed glasses with suitable gravity. But times have changed, and to audiences acclimatised to the grubby, malodorous whiff of frustration and professional disappointment that seeps out of something like the TV adaptation of Mick Herron’s Slow Horses, this all feels about as authentic as a set of dental veneers.

In UK and Irish cinemas

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© Photograph: Claudette Barius/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.

© Photograph: Claudette Barius/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.

Trump administration mulling new travel restrictions on citizens from dozens of countries

15 mars 2025 à 15:30

New memo lists 41 countries – including Afghanistan, Cuba and Syria – that could face new restrictions, evoking first-term Muslim ban

The Trump administration is considering issuing travel restrictions for the citizens of dozens of countries as part of a new ban, according to sources familiar with the matter and an internal memo seen by Reuters.

The memo lists a total of 41 countries divided into three separate groups. The first group of 10 countries, including Afghanistan, Iran, Syria, Cuba and North Korea, among others, would be set for a full visa suspension.

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© Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

© Photograph: Gareth Fuller/PA

Chelsea win Women’s League Cup final after own goal denies Manchester City

15 mars 2025 à 15:30
  • Women’s League Cup final: Chelsea 2-1 Manchester City
  • Ramírez 8, Hasegawa 77og; Fujino 64

Sonia Bompastor won her first trophy in English football and continued her unbeaten first season as Chelsea manager as they triumphed over Manchester City in a well-contested Women’s League Cup final at Pride Park.

The result gave Chelsea a 26th victory from Bompastor’s 28 competitive matches in charge of the club so far in all competitions, while the interim Manchester City head coach, Nick Cushing, lost his first game back in charge of the club, after the sacking of Gareth Taylor.

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© Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

© Photograph: Mike Egerton/PA

‘It’s controversial and polarising’: is Disney’s new Snow White a poisoned apple?

15 mars 2025 à 15:27

The studio’s latest remake may need more than a magic kiss to survive its entanglements with politics, sexism and CGI dwarf trouble

Five years ago a $250m remake of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Walt Disney’s first full-length animated feature film, must have seemed like a fine idea to corporate executives, who were going all out on remaking the studio’s dated classics into contemporary live-action movies.

But the film – its title trimmed to Disney’s Snow White, set to be released in cinemas this week – has turned into a massive headache for the studio. The press have barely been let near the remake’s stars, Rachel Zegler, who is of Colombian-Polish descent and plays Snow White, and Israeli actor Gal Gadot, playing the Evil Queen. And there are no dwarves.

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© Photograph: Disney

© Photograph: Disney

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