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Lightning conductor
Joana Mallwitz is the first woman to lead a Berlin orchestra. And no, despite the inevitable comparisons, she still hasn't seen the film Tár
A tribal injustice
For his new true-crime drama, Martin Scorsese enlisted a chief of the Osage Nation to make sure it was authentic. Steve Rose talked to them both
The day my mother was murdered
Everyone in Malta read Daphne, the fearless reporter - until a car bomb killed her. Paul Caruana Galizia recalls how her assassination shook his family and shocked the world
UNITED THEY FEEL
WHY DID SO MANY OF THE HUGE STREET PROTESTS OF THE 2010S LEAD TO THE OPPOSITE OF WHAT THEY ASKED FOR?
Pip pip - Time's up for much-loved institution of airwaves
A series of crackly pips and beeps broadcast to radios across Canada outlasted two monarchs, 13 prime ministers, 27 sessions of parliament and various fractures to national unity. They provided a comfort to citizens abroad, and inspired music and art.
Why the world should be wary of 'Wolverine' Javier Milei
40% Argentina’s current poverty rate, with inflation standing at 138%. The prospect of a Milei presidency has seen the peso’s value plunge further in recent weeks
Poles apart? - Xi branches out in bid to build an alternative world order
It was a difficult summer for China's leader, Xi Jinping. He was faced with natural disasters, economic uncertainty and a roster of disappearing ministers.
'Our time will come': Poll winner still hopes to become PM
Pita Limjaroenrat is playing the long game. \"Our time will come,\" he said confidently. Dressed in a crisp striped shirt, the 43-year-old Harvard graduate has a breezy, business-like manner.
Swan songs - At Kharkiv's opera house, the show must go on
Crouched on the edge of a park in central Kharkiv, 30km from the Russian border, the city's vast brutalist opera house resembles a battered spacecraft that has crash-landed after some epic intergalactic battle.
Toxic lake a symbol of Northern Irish decay
It is a grim milestone for Northern Ireland that some of its problems are now visible from space. A vast bloom of blue-green algae is choking Lough Neagh, which supplies 40% of Northern Ireland's drinking water, owing to farm slurry, human sewage discharges and other management blunders.
'Boring' Labour plot a conference course to government
MPs stayed on-message, and businesses queued up to get involved, at a gathering that passed with barely a hitch
Ardern's legacy - Some Labour policies are safe. A lot are on the chopping block
The most common and cutting critique of Jacinda Ardern's Labour government was that it couldn't get anything done.
'A knife in your heart' - Soul-searching over Indigenous vote loss
Heavy referendum defeat seen as a bitter blow in the struggle to advance reconciliation and improve the lives of First Nations Australians
Road to conflict - A long history of occupation, uprising and disputed power
The starting point for many is the 1947 UN vote to partition British Mandate Palestine into two states - Jewish and Arab.
'People are terrified' - Gaza's main hospital near to collapse
At Gaza City's al-Shifa hospital, the living sleep between beds filled with patients, in corridors, and even in the grounds, while the dead overflow the morgue.
Seven days of terror that shook the world and changed the Middle East
Since dawn broke on 7 October, thousands have died and the political fallout has spread across the region. Reporters tell the full story of a week that began in bloodshed and ended in fear
Me, mice elf and I
Sly Stone changed the face of soul when he found fame in the 1960s. Now the highly erratic star opens up on drugs, feuds and his treasure trove of unreleased tracks
Talk of your town
The way we speak still defines who we are and causes others to make assumptions about us. People with distinctive voices reveal how talkin' wiv an accent has shaped their life...
This is Sultan Al Jaber. He is the United Arab Emirates' choice to lead the Cop28 climate talks.
He is also the CEO of a fossil fuel company, Adnoc. What's the problem with that, he asks Fiona Harvey
September's 'bananas' record highs stun climate scientists
Global temperatures soared to a new record in September by a huge margin, stunning scientists. The hottest September on record follows the hottest August and July, with the latter being the hottest month ever recorded. The high temperatures have driven heat waves and wildfires across the world.
'He loves it' - Trump takes 2024 bid into the courtroom
The blue suit, white shirt, red tie, and American flag pin looked familiar. So did the TV cameras following every move and reporters hanging on every word. So did the wild hand gestures as he unleashed a torrent of incendiary rhetoric about the elites supposedly out to get him.
How Dhaka is battling to cool down extreme heat
Set in post-apocalyptic Dhaka, Nuhash Humayun's Moshari became the first Bangladeshi film to qualify for the Oscars last year. The thriller follows two sisters and their fight for survival, but for the film's co-producer, Bushra Afreen, the fiction felt closer to reality.
Paddington's move to Colombia makes fur fly
New legislation to revitalise Peru's film industry has been proposed after the makers of the British comedy Paddington in Peru chose Colombia as the filming location for the section of the movie in which the bear finally returns to his home country.
Graphic tale - Murdered comic writer finds new fans and foes
As Netflix adapts his beloved El Eternauta, Héctor Oesterheld's literary legacy is dragged into a bitter current political fight
Temu is the app that's undersold the world. Can it last?
A chicken-shaped lamp. An apron that catches beard hair during shaving. The list of unusual products goes on.
'I've shed tears over the land I lost to HS2'
Farmer whose fields were bought days before rail route was scrapped fears he'll never be able to buy them back
Red shift - Resurgent Labour could end decade of SNP dominance
Last Thursday was a big day for Scottish Labour. The declaration that Labour had retaken Rutherglen and Hamilton West from the SNP prompted phones and social media to light up with triumphant messages from the winning party. With good reason. This was the best result for Labour in a Scottish byelection since the Second World War, and the worst for the SNP since the independence referendum upended Scottish politics.
Orbán objects as EU strikes a deal over migration law
EU leaders have clashed again with Hungary after the country's prime minister, Viktor Orbán, insisted at a summit in Granada that it would not support proposed laws to deal with migration.
'Last chance' - Liberal Poles face a moment of truth
'I want this message to reach everybody in Poland,' said Donald Tusk, speaking to a . rally of supporters, gathered in a cavernous indoor sports arena in the city of Bydgoszcz. 'This is really the last chance.'
A cycle of violence - Netanyahu's policies of escalation and fear lead back to war
Why is Benjamin Netanyahu still prime minister of Israel? More than any other single political leader, on either side of the Israel-Palestine divide, he is responsible for the spiralling tensions, divisions and anger that preceded this horrific catastrophe. Disastrously, Israelis and Palestinians are again at war. Yet Netanyahu's first duty was to prevent such an eventuality. He has failed miserably, and the measure of his failure is the unprecedented number of civilian dead. He promised security. He created a sea of tears. He should resign immediately.