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Expelled Texas State student who reenacted Charlie Kirk’s assassination in front of crowd claims he ‘made a mistake in heat of the moment’
After vendettas, espionage and ransom reveals, what's next in the Vatican's financial whodunnit?
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Iraq's first industrial-scale solar plant opens in Karbala desert to tackle electricity crisis
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Pentagon Introduces New Restrictions on Reporter Access
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Eerily dressed Tyler Robinson seen in newly released police bodycam 3 years before Charlie Kirk’s assassination
I always thought narcissism was just a buzzword – until I read a book and realised I was a hapless victim
After reading a new book, ‘My Parent the Peacock’, Charlotte Cripps realised that narcissistic parenting may well have been at play in her large family. She explains how she was cast in the role of the ‘golden child’, and the impact of this on her later life
© Charlotte Cripps
How TV became a major political battleground in the US
Jimmy Kimmel’s axing by ABC indicates that American television has truly become the new front of the culture wars, writes Nick Hilton
© AP
On the front line of Congo’s conflict, a trauma center tells a story of horror and survival
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Steve to Joy Crookes: the week in rave reviews
Cillian Murphy shines in a brutal yet hopeful high school drama, while the singer-songwriter from south London returns with her streetwise swag. Here’s the pick of the week’s culture, taken from the Guardian’s best-rated reviews
Continue reading...© Composite: Netflix/PA
© Composite: Netflix/PA
© Composite: Netflix/PA
Andy Burnham, the man who would be king
The Greater Manchester mayor has made no secret of his Labour leadership ambitions, but faces significant obstacles
When Andy Burnham addressed a gala dinner this week, he was as coy as he could have been in a week when speculation about his future ambitions were in overdrive. “I love this job,” the mayor of Greater Manchester said. “I am very happy where I am. I have no ambition to be … ambassador to Washington.”
It was a gag that got a big laugh. Burnham has never played the game of pretending that he doesn’t seek to enter No 10. But he also does not give the standard ambitious politician’s response of saying that no vacancy is available.
Continue reading...© Composite: Guardian Design / Getty Images
© Composite: Guardian Design / Getty Images
© Composite: Guardian Design / Getty Images
Meera Sodha’s golden mile pizza – recipe
A vegetarian delight that’s the perfect dinner solution for when you can’t decide between Indian or Italian
Would you like Italian tonight, or Indian? Thanks to this pizza, you can have both. This recipe is written in memory of the beloved pizza of my youth: a vegetarian delight that I ate on the regular with my cousins at one of the many Indian-Italian restaurants on Leicester’s Belgrave Road (AKA the Golden Mile) circa 1990, right before washing it down with Rubicon mango juice and doing handbrake turns in a nearby car park.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Louise Hagger/The Guardian. Food styling: Emily Kydd. Prop styling: Jennifer Kay. Food styling assistant: Aine Pretty-McGrath.
© Photograph: Louise Hagger/The Guardian. Food styling: Emily Kydd. Prop styling: Jennifer Kay. Food styling assistant: Aine Pretty-McGrath.
© Photograph: Louise Hagger/The Guardian. Food styling: Emily Kydd. Prop styling: Jennifer Kay. Food styling assistant: Aine Pretty-McGrath.
Blind date: ‘The restaurant staff reacted with glee when told them we were going on somewhere’
Niamh, 27, who works in classical music, meets Harry, 30, a public sector consultant
What were you hoping for?
A pub quiz partner who is witty, well dressed and preferably Irish. It’s where my family is from originally and my mum’s dream is for me to settle down back over there.
© Composite: Graeme Robertson/Alicia Canter
© Composite: Graeme Robertson/Alicia Canter
© Composite: Graeme Robertson/Alicia Canter
‘I don’t want to stop believing in humanity’: Matthew McConaughey on faith, fame and the shocking incident that defined him
He was once so stoned he missed his own birthday party, but the Oscar-winning actor has swapped pot for poetry. He reveals the trauma and triumph that taught him why it’s more important to be a good man than a nice guy
“Simon!” Matthew McConaughey barks. “How do, sir?!” Matthew McConaughey could not be more Matthew McConaughey if he tried. And he’s only said four words. Charming, sincere, intense, 100% Texan and 101% eccentric.
Five years ago, the Oscar-winning actor wrote a memoir called Greenlights. It wasn’t a conventional memoir, more a collection of life lessons, bullet-point anecdotes and gnomic philosophies. Now he has written a book of poetry called Poems & Prayers. For McConaughey, the two are interchangeable. It’s another memoir of sorts – this time, a portrait of his faith and its impact on his everyday life. In it he addresses faith in the broadest sense. There’s plenty of talking to God as he searches for the divine in himself, loads of Amens, but it’s also about faith in himself, his family, his career, the world, the works.
Continue reading...© Photograph: Derek Shapton/The Guardian
© Photograph: Derek Shapton/The Guardian
© Photograph: Derek Shapton/The Guardian
Tim Dowling: we’re low on milk … the kids must have moved back home
Having flown the nest, two of our sons are now back under our roof – and the third lives just around the corner
It is late on Saturday morning, and the oldest one and I are sitting opposite one another at the kitchen table, staring at our laptops in silence. We are silent because we are both working on the same puzzle, and neither of us wants any help from the other at this point.
The front door opens and my wife comes in, bringing with her the middle one and all his worldly possessions. Only the youngest one, the last to leave, has yet to return home, but he lives just minutes away and, like the other two, he has a key.
Continue reading...© Illustration: Selman Hosgor/The Guardian
© Illustration: Selman Hosgor/The Guardian
© Illustration: Selman Hosgor/The Guardian
How do weight loss medications affect our relationship with food?
From reduced hunger to a changing palate, weight loss jabs can alter our experience and enjoyment of food
The revelation that the chef Heston Blumenthal has created a tasting menu for people on weight loss jabs may have raised eyebrows, but there is scientific evidence that drugs such as Wegovy and Mounjaro not only make you less hungry, but change what you want to eat.
So what do we know about how weight loss medications affect your relationship with food?
Continue reading...© Photograph: Anna Ivanova/Alamy
© Photograph: Anna Ivanova/Alamy
© Photograph: Anna Ivanova/Alamy
Six great reads: my Couples Therapy hell, the plot to dethrone Keir Starmer and a ‘creepy’ AI toy
Need something brilliant to read this weekend? Here are six of our favourite pieces from the last seven days
Continue reading...© Composite: Guardian Design
© Composite: Guardian Design
© Composite: Guardian Design
A dog’s life … is cushier than mine: the Edith Pritchett cartoon
© Illustration: Edith Pritchett/The Guardian
© Illustration: Edith Pritchett/The Guardian
© Illustration: Edith Pritchett/The Guardian
‘Just add water’: how to bring back ancient plants in a Norfolk ghost pond
An expert team are resurrecting ice age ponds and finding rare species returning from a ‘perfect time capsule’
If you glanced into a green field and saw a yellow digger tearing into the turf, you might assume it was another site for new houses. But the two circle-shaped scars of dark soil on a Norfolk pasture are ghost ponds being brought back to life by an innovative and cheap form of nature restoration.
“It looks awful now. ‘What have they done? It’s a disaster!’” says Carl Sayer, a professor of geography at UCL, who is dancing with glee around the bleak-looking, freshly dug hole. “The colonisation is so quick. Within a year, it is full of water plants. Within two years, it looks like it’s been there forever. It’s a spectacular recovery, and you’re truly recovering ancient assemblages of plants.”
Continue reading...© Photograph: Ali Smith/The Guardian
© Photograph: Ali Smith/The Guardian
© Photograph: Ali Smith/The Guardian
I’m a British MP, a doctor and Jewish. This is what happened when I tried to enter Israel | Peter Prinsley
Barred from entry on ‘public security’ grounds, I had a moment to reflect on how far the country has fallen
Earlier this week, I was denied entry into Israel while on a humanitarian parliamentary delegation organised by the Council for the Advancement of Arab-British Understanding (CAABU). The NGO is one of the most active and respected bodies working on the Middle East in the British parliament. It promotes conflict resolution, human rights and civil society.
The purpose of my visit, alongside my parliamentary colleague Simon Opher, a doctor like me, was to begin to understand the state of healthcare for Palestinians in the West Bank. Unfortunately, we never set foot in Israel, let alone visited any hospitals in the occupied territories.
Peter Prinsley is the Labour MP for Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket
Continue reading...© Photograph: Nasser Nasser/AP
© Photograph: Nasser Nasser/AP
© Photograph: Nasser Nasser/AP
Mark Ronson: ‘I used to try to hide the fact that I came from money’
The hit producer finds himself nostalgic for his party days as a ‘celebrity DJ’ in Nineties New York City as he talks to Hannah Ewens about antisemitism, being motivated by fear, and why he decided to include P Diddy and his privileged upbringing in his new memoir, ‘Night People’
© Collier Schorr
Mazda CX-30 Homura: A lot more fun than it looks
Mazda’s new compact SUV boasts a new powertrain that helps it outstrip expectations on the road, while offering excellent fuel economy and low emissions, writes Sean O’Grady
© Sean O’Grady
From Nosferatu to True Grit: 13 great film remakes, ranked
Remakes are inescapable these days, with major studios now churning out fresh takes on popular classics every yea. Kathryn Vann picks out 13 of the best
© Warner Bros
Photo highlights from Day 8 of the world athletics championships in Tokyo
This photo gallery, curated by AP photo editors, features highlights from Day 8 of the world athletics championships in Tokyo.
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