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Florida man arrested for repeatedly stabbing shark in head as ‘revenge’ for stealing fish after gory video goes viral
Jazz Chisholm’s ‘70 percent’ strategy pays off in big night for Yankees
Trump admin officials blast LA Mayor Karen Bass’ response to ICE raids — as cops clash with violent protesters
TSA tells Americans they can not use their Costco membership card as an ID
Francisco Lindor saves the day with clutch pinch-hit double to lift Mets over Rockies in thriller
Hong Kong Looks for Ways to Win Back Big-Spending Tourists
© Anthony Kwan for The New York Times
London’s ‘Little America’ Is No More. What’s Taking Its Place?
Conference to recognise Palestinian state to weaken scope of its ambition, diplomats say
UK, France and other western states will not recognise Palestine at Saudi Arabia meeting, instead focusing on agreeing steps towards it
A planned conference in Saudi Arabia this month that supporters of Palestine had hoped would push western governments to recognise a Palestinian state has weakened its ambition and will instead hope to agree on steps towards recognition, diplomats have said.
The change to the aims of the conference, due to be held between 17 and 20 June, marks a retreat from an earlier vision that it would mark a joint declaration of recognition of Palestine as a state by a large group of countries, including permanent UN security council members France and the UK.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Ludovic Marin/EPA
© Photograph: Ludovic Marin/EPA
Mayor quits after facing harassment, threats as texts show her calling Buc-ee’s project opponents ‘terrorists’
Schools can now directly pay college athletes after landmark $2.8 billion settlement
Texas bests Texas Tech to win its first NCAA softball national championship
Shaq makes one thing clear about ‘Inisde the NBA’ joining ESPN next season
Jailed Hong Kong democracy activist Joshua Wong hit with new charges
Wong accused of conspiracy in move rights groups condemn as ‘outrageous’ attempt to keep influential dissident imprisoned
Jailed pro-democracy activist Joshua Wong has been hit with further national security charges, a move rights groups said showed the Hong Kong government was trying to keep dissidents behind bars for as long as possible.
Wong, a well-known activist who has been in jail for more than four years either awaiting trial or serving sentences, is accused of conspiracy to collude with a foreign country. He appeared in court on Friday to hear the charge and did not apply for bail.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Kin Cheung/AP
© Photograph: Kin Cheung/AP
Ice agents use pepper spray and smoke grenades to disperse LA protesters
Rights group says at least 45 people arrested as people demonstrate against coordinated raids throughout the city
The Department of Homeland Security conducted raids on multiple locations across Los Angeles on Friday, clashing with the crowds of people who gathered to protest.
Masked agents were recorded pulling several people out of two LA-area Home Depot stores and the clothing manufacturer Ambient Apparel’s headquarters in LA’s Fashion District. Immigration advocates said the raids also included four other locations, including a doughnut shop.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Damian Dovarganes/AP
© Photograph: Damian Dovarganes/AP
President of California’s largest union arrested while observing ICE raids in LA
SEIU President David Huerta was reportedly injured when ICE detained him
© REUTERS/Daniel Cole
Japan's Princess Kako receives medal in Brazil as she starts 11-day trip
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Supreme Court to hear Alabama appeal in push to execute intellectually disabled man
The inmate killed a man by beating him to death with a hammer and saw.
© Alabama Department of Corrections
Federal judge approves $2.8B settlement, paving way for US colleges to pay athletes millions
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Utah judge rules a convicted killer with dementia is competent to be executed
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How an innovative portable shelter could help India's outdoor workers beat the heat
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
French Open order of play, today’s results and Roland Garros schedule
The women’s final takes place at Roland Garros and a new champion will be crowned
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved
Campgrounds closed along Pacific Crest Trail in search for man wanted in daughters' deaths
© The Seattle Times
FAA slashes flights in, out of Newark Airport through end of 2025
Yankees pound Red Sox early, hold off late comeback to land first punch with rivalry win
Florida ex-sheriff arrested for allegedly running illegal gambling house that generated millions
Ex-sheriff accused of shooting judge in chambers says state skirted law, should toss murder case: report
Abrego Garcia Charges: What We Know
© Haiyun Jiang for The New York Times
‘Throwback’ Ryan Yarbrough has become a Yankees rotation savior with tweaked pitch
ICE sweeps through LA businesses as local Democrats cry foul over Trump administration's enforcement actions
Novak Djokovic hints at retirement after French Open defeat to Jannik Sinner
Mets still searching for answers to solve woes with runners in scoring position: ‘S–t happens’
Dragonfly review – haunting, genre-defying drama of lonely city living
Tribeca film festival, New York
Brenda Blethyn and Andrea Riseborough, along with a very alarming dog, are superb as two neighbours thrown together by their neglected circumstances
Twenty years ago, Paul Andrew Williams announced himself as a smart new British talent with his ferocious gangland picture London to Brighton, and his creativity has continued in film and TV ever since. His new film is a haunted, social-realist drama with elements of Mike Leigh but also moments of thriller and even horror. Williams isn’t shy of stabbing us with an old-fashioned jump scare towards the end, which in fact challenges the audiences with its refusal of categorisation. There are two superb lead performances from Andrea Riseborough and Brenda Blethyn and an outstanding supporting turn from Jason Watkins.
Dragonfly is about loneliness and alienation and about the eternal mystery of other people, the fear of intimacy and the unknowable existence of urban neighbours. Elsie, played by Blethyn, is an older woman who is quite capable of independent living in her bungalow, but a recent fall and an injured wrist has meant that her middle-aged son (Watkins), all too obviously to compensate for not visiting that often, has paid for daily visits from a private agency nurses. They are overworked and not doing an especially good job. Really, she doesn’t need these nurses and by enduring them, Elsie is shouldering the burden of her son’s guilt.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Lissa Haines-Beardow/ Two Bungalow FilmsLtd
© Photograph: Lissa Haines-Beardow/ Two Bungalow FilmsLtd
TSA tells Americans their Costco cards won't fly at airport security despite love for hot dogs
Novak Djokovic admits his French Open loss ‘could have been the last match I ever played here’
Missing in the Amazon: the disappearance – episode 1
Three years ago the British journalist Dom Phillips and the Brazilian Indigenous defender Bruno Pereira vanished while on a reporting trip near Brazil’s remote Javari valley. The Guardian’s Latin America correspondent Tom Phillips investigates what happened in the first episode of a new six-part investigative podcast series. Find episode 2 – and all future episodes – by searching for ‘Missing in the Amazon’
Continue reading...© Composite: Guardian Audio
© Composite: Guardian Audio
Trump announces China will restart rare earth mineral shipments to US after productive call
The horse Bobby Flay couldn’t sell is giving the celebrity chef a long-shot Belmont Stakes dream
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce spotted at his cousin’s Nashville wedding
A rogues’ gallery of speed-demon city politicians