CATEGORIES

What do chefs eat on their night off? The answer is surprisingly simple
The Guardian Weekly

What do chefs eat on their night off? The answer is surprisingly simple

I've often wondered what chefs eat for dinner on their night off - I'm in need of easy, delicious meal ideas!

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
People who crave cocaine rarely consider who really pays for it
The Guardian Weekly

People who crave cocaine rarely consider who really pays for it

What happened in Ecuador a few weeks ago, when the country descended into gang violence and TV journalists were seen by millions cowering in front of people pointing high-powered weapons W at their heads, was described in many ways.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
NOT GOING OUT
The Guardian Weekly

NOT GOING OUT

Is a misspent youth a thing of the past? How teens and twentysomethings became the homebody generation

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10+ mins  |
February 16, 2024
"WE ALL LOST.THAT'S WHERE HATRED LEADS"
The Guardian Weekly

"WE ALL LOST.THAT'S WHERE HATRED LEADS"

In 2014, terrorists took US photojournalist the Syrian desert, decapitated him then shocked the world with video footage of his death. A decade on, his mother Diane talks about her doomed attempts to save her son and the meeting that has helped her to heal By Emma Brockes James Foley into

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10+ mins  |
February 16, 2024
The small town racing to salvage a mystery shipwreck
The Guardian Weekly

The small town racing to salvage a mystery shipwreck

Freezing waves crashed into Shawn Bath and Trevor Croft as they braved the unforgiving swells of the north Atlantic. Snow fell as the two local men took turns with a hacksaw: one cutting through the planks of a centuries-old shipwreck while the other kept a close watch on the cresting breakers.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Memory fail Brutal week that Biden, and voters, won't forget
The Guardian Weekly

Memory fail Brutal week that Biden, and voters, won't forget

For those campaigning to bring Donald Trump back to the White House, last week saw much to celebrate. For those concerned for the health of American democracy, it felt like a disaster.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
A year after Gabrielle, coastal town struggles to find its feet
The Guardian Weekly

A year after Gabrielle, coastal town struggles to find its feet

Last year, Wairoa, a small farming community on New Zealand's east coast, closed its only retirement home. It had been badly damaged in February's Cyclone Gabrielle and the cost to repair it, along with the risk of future flooding, was deemed too high.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Long player New chord in John Cage gig with just 616 years left
The Guardian Weekly

Long player New chord in John Cage gig with just 616 years left

When Halberstadt's St Burchardi church opened its doors for a oncein-a-lifetime musical experience last Monday, some of the spectators streaming into the 11thcentury building had booked their tickets years in advance and crossed continents to get there. But none of them were demanding an encore.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Influencers and litterers mar boom in tourism
The Guardian Weekly

Influencers and litterers mar boom in tourism

At the height of the pandemic, the restaurateurs and shopkeepers of Tsukiji market in Tokyo must have dreamed of days like these. Columns of visitors shuffle along the narrow streets, pausing to inspect hand-forged kitchen knives and tsukemono pickles, and to sip gratis samples of green tea. Restaurants tempt the crowd with sticks of grilled wagyu and boiled crab legs.

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Will the Year of the Dragon bring about a baby boom?
The Guardian Weekly

Will the Year of the Dragon bring about a baby boom?

The traditional desire for a 'superior' dragon baby may not be enough to sway young couples

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Shortage of royals tests monarchy's fragility
The Guardian Weekly

Shortage of royals tests monarchy's fragility

Cover for an incapacitated King Charles is looking rather thin, especially with William facing his own problems

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
'Bombproof Labour's green U-turn reflects readiness for May election
The Guardian Weekly

'Bombproof Labour's green U-turn reflects readiness for May election

Labour has spent the past few weeks performing U-turns on policies as it finalises its manifesto, culminating in last Thursday's announcement of a big cut to its £28bn ($35bn) green spending plans.

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Remarks by Trump'risk US and EU soldiers' lives'
The Guardian Weekly

Remarks by Trump'risk US and EU soldiers' lives'

The Nato chief, Jens Stoltenberg, said any attack on the western military alliance would be met with a \"united and forceful response\" after Donald Trump invited Russia to attack member countries that he perceived as not meeting their financial obligations.

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Shell shocker Can Russian advance be halted if American military aid dries up?
The Guardian Weekly

Shell shocker Can Russian advance be halted if American military aid dries up?

Ukraine began 2024 on the defensive and Kyiv's battlefield prospects are dimming further as Republicans in the US Congress seem increasingly intent on blocking future military aid. If Europe does not plug the gap, Ukraine risks slowmotion defeat from 2025.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Salgado's dramatic images of our planet
The Guardian Weekly

Salgado's dramatic images of our planet

At 80, the legendary Brazilian photojournalist reflects on his career, and why the natural world became his focus

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Seeking justice for Del Monte farm deaths
The Guardian Weekly

Seeking justice for Del Monte farm deaths

As families of the dead men question the company's version of events, friends say the food firm bribed them

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Company distances itself from farm violence
The Guardian Weekly

Company distances itself from farm violence

Fresh Del Monte has claimed it should not be held liable for a civil lawsuit alleging killing, rape and violence by security guards at its Kenyan pineapple farm because it is domiciled in the Cayman Islands.

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2 mins  |
February 16, 2024
A hostile state How military tried to stifle Imran Khan's PTI party
The Guardian Weekly

A hostile state How military tried to stifle Imran Khan's PTI party

For months, police blocked Arsalan Hafeez from entering the Pakistani constituency where he stood for election last week. Since he put himself forward as the candidate for Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), the political party led by Pakistan's now incarcerated former prime minister Imran Khan, Hafeez alleges that the state's machinery did everything to prevent him from contesting his district of Narowal in the state of Punjab.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Turmoil as voters deliver a rebuke to the generals
The Guardian Weekly

Turmoil as voters deliver a rebuke to the generals

Police fired teargas to disperse supporters of Imran Khan last weekend as protests broke out across Pakistan amid allegations of widespread vote-rigging targeting the former prime minister's political party and other nationalist groups in the general election.

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4 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Fragile front Israel's assault is rocking the foundations of liberal politics
The Guardian Weekly

Fragile front Israel's assault is rocking the foundations of liberal politics

Something odd is happening. A sort of glitch or malfunction. Liberal politicians who refuse to call for a ceasefire in Gaza or halt support for Israel's assault are no longer making sense, and increasingly seem as though they are going through a crisis.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Rafah release Netanyahu uses hostage rescue to justify strikes as support dwindles
The Guardian Weekly

Rafah release Netanyahu uses hostage rescue to justify strikes as support dwindles

Israel's prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, was early this week deploying the successful rescue of two Israeli hostages to justify continued military pressure on Rafah, even as Israel came under intense international pressure not to launch a ground offensive against the southern Gaza city.

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Rafah on the edge
The Guardian Weekly

Rafah on the edge

As Israel threatened a ground operation in Gaza's southernmost city, panic and despair set in among a population with nowhere to left to turn

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3 mins  |
February 16, 2024
Smoke Screens Mental Health Apps Under Scrutiny
The Guardian Weekly

Smoke Screens Mental Health Apps Under Scrutiny

As experts worry over privacy issues, effectiveness and even harm, the UK is looking at how to regulate the plethora of smartphone-based mental health tools

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5 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Russia Looms Large Over Nato's Borders - But US Help Is Not Assured
The Guardian Weekly

Russia Looms Large Over Nato's Borders - But US Help Is Not Assured

In 1905, in the Finnish city of Tampere, Vladimir Lenin met Joseph Stalin for the first time. They and two dozen or so revolutionaries began to map out plans to overthrow the tsar and bring down the Russian empire.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Keep Calm And Carry On? Health Fears Could Reshape The King's Role
The Guardian Weekly

Keep Calm And Carry On? Health Fears Could Reshape The King's Role

Last Monday, King Charles emerged from a private clinic alongside Queen Camilla to wave to a small crowd. The message that Buckingham Palace wished to convey was obvious: the monarch is strong and will carry out his duties despite the health setback.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Can Anything Stop The Deepfakes?
The Guardian Weekly

Can Anything Stop The Deepfakes?

With Taylor Swift the latest victim of Al-generated porn, pressure is growing on social media companies to start taking it seriously.

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10 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Amazon, Joyce and the circus
The Guardian Weekly

Amazon, Joyce and the circus

As part of the centenary of Ulysses, German circus company Rimini Protokoll provocatively enacts the hyper-consumerism and physical exertion that drive the online retail giant

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024
Pop star or 'election psyop'? US conspiracists tout Swift as Pentagon asset
The Guardian Weekly

Pop star or 'election psyop'? US conspiracists tout Swift as Pentagon asset

Taylor Swift is a \"Pentagon asset\", an \"election interference psyop\" who, with unnamed left-leaning forces, has conspired to \"rig\" the Super Bowl and endorse Joe Biden in the presidential election.

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2 mins  |
February 09, 2024
PRECIPICE OF FEAR
The Guardian Weekly

PRECIPICE OF FEAR

Jérémie Heitz has pushed freeriding to breathtaking, beautiful new extremes. But as the risks get bigger, the questions do, too

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10+ mins  |
February 09, 2024
Joe's burden Primary win reveals more about the changing face of America
The Guardian Weekly

Joe's burden Primary win reveals more about the changing face of America

Surprise! Joe Biden won the Democratic presidential primary in South Carolina with a high-90s percentage that would make even Vladimir Putin or Kim Jong-un blush.

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3 mins  |
February 09, 2024