Gary ‘Mani’ Mounfield death: Stone Roses and Primal Scream bassist dies aged 63
Musician’s death was announced by his brother on social media

© PA
Musician’s death was announced by his brother on social media

© PA
Author said she no longer recommends the book because Justin Baldoni and Blake Lively’s lawsuit ‘overshadows’ her work

© Getty Images
Gary 'Mani' Mounfield, bassist for the Stone Roses and Primal Scream, recounted his infamous bass-throwing incident just weeks before his death at the age of 63.

© PA
BBC’s Strictly Come Dancing star Nikita Kuzmin has issued a heartfelt message to those diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes.
.png?width=1200&auto=webp&trim=0%2C115%2C0%2C85)
© The Independent/Getty Images
‘Moana 2’ was released in theaters last year

© Disney
Motown singer has denied all allegations against him

© Getty

© CJ Rivera/Invision/AP
Matt LeBlanc starred in the ill-fated sitcom

© Bros Tv/Kobal/Shutterstock

Après le président Snow, c'est au tour d'Haymitch d'être le héros de son propre préquel, nommé Lever de soleil sur la moisson. Casting, date de sortie, bande-annonce, histoire... Voici tout ce que l'on sait déjà sur le prochain film de la saga Hunger Games.
The ‘2024 period piece’ stars the Grammy-winning musician with Kylie Jenner, Rachel Sennott and Alexander Skarsgård
Charli xcx’s 2026 big screen onslaught is set to kick off with The Moment, a mockumentary starring the musician as a self-described “hell version” of herself.
The film, based on an idea by the Grammy winner, is fiction but Charli has called it “the realest depiction of the music industry that I’ve ever seen”.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: YouTube

© Photograph: YouTube

© Photograph: YouTube
An auction in New York today is almost certain to make the celebrated artist a record-breaker. But, overshadowing what could be a $60m sale, are questions about works that have allegedly disappeared
This may well be Frida Kahlo’s biggest year yet. There’s the recent opening of a museum in Mexico City celebrating her life and work. There’s the Art Institute in Chicago exhibiting her work for the first time. And then, in Shenzhen, there’s the show that marked her Chinese debut. All this “Fridamania” tucks in between last year’s big screen documentary Frida and next year’s exhibitions in London and the US.
What’s more, to cap it all, a Sotheby’s auction in New York today is almost certain to make Kahlo a record-breaker. Her 1940 painting The Dream (The Bed) is forecast to fetch between $40-$60m, which would dwarf the previous record for a female artist, set in 2014 by Georgia O’Keeffe’s Jimson Weed/White Flower No 1, which sold for $44.4m.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Courtesy Sotheby’s

© Photograph: Courtesy Sotheby’s

© Photograph: Courtesy Sotheby’s
Rebecca Lowman narrates a superb, claustrophobia-inducing plunge into a relationship descending from bad to worse
Halfway through Liars, the story of a new relationship that becomes a marriage, our protagonist, Jane, is asked by a neighbour: “Why are you with him?” It’s a question that has been on the listener’s mind for some time.
Jane’s partner, John, lies about his feelings, his financial status, where he is going and where he has been. He is chaotic, lazy, resentful, entitled and given to getting drunk and spending money he hasn’t got. At the start of their marriage, Jane’s career as a writer and academic is on the up, while John – a visual artist and aspiring film-maker – has hit a professional wall. Time and time again, he insists they move cities for better work opportunities, which soon puts a spanner in his wife’s working life. It comes as no surprise that, after their son is born, Jane is left to do the parenting while her husband absents himself from his responsibilities.
Available via Picador, 6hr 7min
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Dan Tuffs/The Observer

© Photograph: Dan Tuffs/The Observer

© Photograph: Dan Tuffs/The Observer
Brendan Carr, head of FCC, asks if programme ever aired in US which is seen as key to any future litigation
A US media regulator led by a close ally of Donald Trump is examining whether an edition of the BBC’s Panorama broke US regulations in the way it edited one of the president’s speeches.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), led by Brendan Carr, has written to the BBC’s outgoing director general, Tim Davie, asking whether the programme was ever aired in the US.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

© Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters

© Photograph: Toby Melville/Reuters
(Deutsche Grammophon)
Olafsson’s account of Beethoven’s Op 109 is one of the most beautiful on record, the centrepiece of a recording that links the composer to Bach and Schubert
Disinclined to follow the herd and record Beethoven’s three final piano sonatas as a job lot, Víkingur Ólafsson has chosen to circle one of them, No 30 in E major, Op 109, locating it in a musical timeline that reflects both the composer’s past and the Viennese milieu of the early 18th century.
For Ólafsson, looking backwards means turning to Bach, whose musical fingerprints he detects all over late Beethoven. The latter’s uninhibited invention, he argues, has its roots firmly in the baroque with its improvisatory elements and enthusiasm for the dance.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Ari Magg

© Photograph: Ari Magg

© Photograph: Ari Magg
The acclaimed documentarian’s latest epic series has been in the works for a decade and features A-list contributions from Meryl Streep to Tom Hanks
Ken Burns is no longer a mere documentarian; he is a brand, a franchise, a one-man industrial complex. When he has a new project heading for the small screen, everybody wants a part of him.
Burns has done “more fucking podcasts than I ever thought possible”, he says, nearing the end of nine-month promotional tour that included 40 cities, 80 screenings and hundreds of interviews. “I think there are 340.1m podcasts, one for every American, and I’ve done half of them.”
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Boston Globe/Getty Images

© Photograph: Boston Globe/Getty Images

© Photograph: Boston Globe/Getty Images
Lucia Braham has spent 10 years documenting women in motorcycle culture in Australia and the US. Her new exhibition in conjunction with the 2025 Head On photo festival’s Open Program is on now until 30 November at the Enmore Hotel, Enmore
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Lucia Braham

© Photograph: Lucia Braham

© Photograph: Lucia Braham
It is book week here at Physics World and over the course of three days we are presenting conversations with the authors of three fascinating and fun books about physics. Today, my guest is the physicist Daniel Whiteson, who along with the artist Andy Warner has created the delightful book Do Aliens Speak Physics?.
Is physics universal, or is it shaped by human perspective? This will be a very important question if and when we are visited by an advanced alien civilization. Would we recognize our visitors’ alien science – or indeed, could a technologically-advanced civilization have no science at all? And would we even be able to communicate about science with our alien guests?
Whiteson, who is a particle physicist at the University of California Irvine, tackles these profound questions and much more in this episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast.
This episode is supported by the APS Global Physics Summit, which takes place on 15–20 March, 2026, in Denver, Colorado, and online.
The post Talking physics with an alien civilization: what could we learn? appeared first on Physics World.
Musician’s Brixton and Dublin performances go viral after she performs Sinéad O’Connor’s anti-racism anthem Black Boys on Mopeds
The UK and Ireland are entering a “dark time”, according to the singer Joy Crookes, who said the influence of far-right ideology on mainstream politics was comparable to the 1970s when the National Front was at its peak.
Crookes, who has just played two sold-out shows at the O2 Academy in Brixton, said the recent wave of nationalism and the far-right march through central London in September made her feel unsafe in the UK.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Gus Stewart/Redferns

© Photograph: Gus Stewart/Redferns

© Photograph: Gus Stewart/Redferns
As the veteran actor turns 100 he reveals that he was approached to play the British spy in the early 60s, but realised his accent wouldn’t have been up to scratch
For more than six decades, the actor Dick Van Dyke has been pilloried for his attempts at a British accent in Mary Poppins (1964). Now, the actor who has since apologised for the “most atrocious cockney accent in the history of cinema” as chimney sweep Bert in the Disney classic has revealed he was in the running to play another UK icon on screen: James Bond.
Speaking on the Today TV programme in the US, Van Dyke, who turns 100 next month, said that Bond producer Albert Broccoli approached him to ask if he fancied the role of the British spy in his first big screen outing.
Continue reading...
© Photograph: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP

© Photograph: Matt Sayles/Invision/AP