• Th chevron_right

      TV tonight: Alison Hammond finally gets her own interview series

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    The Brummie is brilliant as she spends weekends with celebrities, starting with Perrie Edwards. Plus: Martin Clunes straps into a drysuit. Here’s what to watch today

    8.30pm, BBC One
    Alison Hammond is a pro at getting laughs out of celebrities, but this new series – in which she spends a weekend at a star’s house – proves she’s a brilliant interviewer too. Who else could get away with asking Little Mix’s Perrie Edwards if she needs to take a pregnancy test? The laughs are always there, but there’s depth too when Edwards talks about anxiety and panic attacks. Hollie Richardson

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      ‘Now my kids have a future’: Syrians dare to dream again after years as a pariah state

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    Promise to lift US sanctions brings closer the opportunity for fresh start that began with toppling of Bashar al-Assad

    In 2006, Ahmed al-Sharaa was sitting in a US prison in Iraq, then an al-Qaida fighter waging jihad against what he viewed as an American occupation of the Middle East. Nearly two decades later, on Wednesday, he posed for a photo with the US president Donald Trump in Riyadh after discussing normalising ties with Israel and granting US access to Syrian oil.

    The transformation of Sharaa over the last 20 years from al-Qaida fighter to the president of Syria , sharing the world’s stage with foreign leaders like Trump, is staggering. For Syrians, the pace of change has been whiplash-inducing.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Republican Texas is a surprising model for solving the UK’s prison crisis – but it just might work | Gaby Hinsliff

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025 • 1 minute

    Jails in England and Wales are in overcrowded meltdown, but justice secretary Shabana Mahmood has a rare chance to flip the script. She should

    What should become of the two idiots who took a chainsaw to the beloved Sycamore Gap tree ? Obviously it was thuggish, a pointless desecration of something that gave countless people joy, judging by the outpouring of unexpectedly deep emotion that followed. Landscapes work their way into the soul. But so does the thought of two children whose father is about to be jailed for what the judge warned would be a “lengthy period”. Though a line obviously has to be drawn, is this really the best way we can think of to punish a heartless act that nonetheless posed no danger to human life?

    Now is the perfect time to wrestle with questions such as this, about whom we send to prison and why, and whether doing it differently would lead to a more humane but more effective prison system and ultimately cut crime. For this government is – shock, horror – finally about to do something liberals might actually like. Next week the justice secretary, Shabana Mahmood, is due to publish a review of sentencing commissioned from one of her Tory predecessors, David Gauke, expected among other things to recommend that inmates be allowed to earn freedom after serving only a third of their sentences by good behaviour, or by engaging with work and education that will help them get jobs on release. It’s something progressives have wanted for years but which government after government has nervously backed away from, fearful of being branded soft on crime – though the inspiration was tough, Republican-governed Texas, where reoffending rates have fallen by nearly a third since similar reforms were introduced. Unfortunately, a crisis left by the last government means this one now looks as if it’s not exactly acting out of choice.

    Gaby Hinsliff is a Guardian columnist

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      ‘Bittersweet’: plaque unveiled for black footballer whose England call-up was rescinded

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    It will be a day of mixed emotions for family of late, great Jack Leslie when ceremony is held in Plymouth

    It will be a day of mixed emotions for the family of the late, great Jack Leslie.

    There is pride at the unveiling of a plaque on the Devon house in which he lived while becoming the first black player to captain an English football league team. But sadness too, because it takes place 100 years after his call-up for England was rescinded because of his colour.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for lemon, pistachio and white chocolate cake | The sweet spot

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    This lemon cake will whack up the wow factor, while the filling and topping are a lot less fiddly and involved than they at first appear

    When I’m entertaining, I like a dessert that’s going to bring the wow factor, can be partially made ahead and isn’t too faffy. This nutty citrus cake ticks all of those boxes; it’s also baked in one tin and then cut into strips for layering. I use shop-bought lemon curd to save on time and, instead of making a ganache, I simply fold finely chopped white chocolate into whipped cream.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Low emission zones are successful in cutting air pollution, study finds

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    Team in Belgium find improvement in air quality after launch of traffic measures in Brussels, Antwerp and Ghent

    Low emission zones are successful at reducing air pollution and its effects on health, researchers have found.

    The team, working for the Belgian mutual health insurer Mutualités Libres, were looking at the best ways to cut air pollution and its impact on health.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      From early setbacks to a storming Springsteen show: Co-op Live, a year on

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    CEO of company behind arena in Manchester says he’s ‘proud of the bet we made’ as economic boost revealed

    When Bruce Springsteen opened his European tour at Manchester’s Co-op Live arena on Wednesday night, it went off without a hitch.

    Thousands of fans belted out the lyrics to Dancing in the Dark with not an empty seat in sight, and the show was met with glowing reviews.

    Continue reading...
    • Th chevron_right

      Nasal tanning sprays linked to skin cancer, trading standards officers warn

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian • 16 May 2025

    Demand for ‘dangerous and unregulated’ tan-enhancing sprays being driven by influencers, watchdog says

    Nasal tanning sprays linked to cancer and respiratory problems and other unsafe cosmetic products pose one of the biggest threats to consumers, trading standards officers have warned.

    Demand for these “dangerous and unregulated” tan-enhancing sprays, which is being driven by influencers on social media, could mirror the rapid rise of youth vaping, the Chartered Trading Standards Institute (CTSI) said.

    Continue reading...