Son of former Libyan dictator Muammar al-Qaddafi killed by masked men, reps say

Seif al-Islam Qaddafi, son of former Libyan dictator Muammar al-Qaddafi, was reportedly killed by "masked men" in an "assassination," his team says.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:18 pm
Iranian media claims drone shot down by US was conducting surveillance in a 'routine and lawful mission'

A media report described the alleged activities of an Iranian Shahed-139 drone before it was shot down by the U.S. military in the Arabian Sea on Tuesday.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:26 pm
Hamas terrorists use ambulances, schools, hospitals in violation of US-brokered ceasefire, IDF official says
IDF alleges Hamas violated Gaza ceasefire using ambulances to transport weapons and armed operatives. Exclusive footage shows armed terrorists at hospital facility
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:47 pm
Iran bleeds $1.56M every hour from internet blackout restrictions amid economic crisis: analyst

Iran's internet blackout sparked 579% VPN surge as authorities cut communications during January protests, an expert told Fox News Digital.
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:45 am
Musk calls Spanish PM a ‘tyrant’ after Spain announces sweeping social media crackdown

Spain's PM Pedro Sánchez unveiled plans to hold social media executives criminally liable, sparking Elon Musk's profane "tyrant" response on X platform.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:48 pm
Leaked documents expose Khamenei's secret deadly blueprint for crushing Iran protests

Supreme Leader Khamenei approved the strategy giving IRGC full command authority during 'armed security situations' with internet shutdowns, leaked documents show.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:28 pm
Lawmakers question whether US moving fast enough to capitalize on Hezbollah's weakened state

House hearing reveals historic opportunity to weaken Hezbollah in Lebanon following ceasefire, as lawmakers debate whether U.S. policy is moving fast enough.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:44 pm
London police launch criminal investigation into former UK ambassador to US with alleged Epstein ties

Metropolitan Police launched a criminal investigation into Peter Mandelson over alleged Jeffrey Epstein connections and misconduct claims.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:29 pm
Two convicted of terrorism in Denmark for grenade attack near Israeli Embassy

Two Swedish men convicted of terrorism for throwing hand grenades near Israeli Embassy in Copenhagen. One was sentenced to 12 years and the other to 14.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:55 pm
Iran pushes for Friday nuclear talks in Oman amid rising tensions with US forces: source

Iran requests nuclear talks with the U.S. in Oman as diplomatic efforts intensify amid escalating regional tensions and military buildup in the Middle East.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:42 pm
Iran's president strikes softer tone on nuclear talks after Trump's warning that 'bad things would happen'

The Iranian leader who slammed President Donald Trump just days ago said Tuesday that his country is now pursing "fair and equitable negotiations."
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:35 pm
Russia launches record missile barrage against Ukraine one day before peace talks set to resume in Abu Dhabi

Russia launched a massive overnight attack on Ukraine using more than 70 missiles and 450 drones, Zelenskyy said, one day before peace talks resume in Abu Dhabi.
Published: February 3, 2026, 6:16 pm
US military shoots down Iranian drone approaching USS Abraham Lincoln in Arabian Sea, official says

The U.S. military shot down an Iranian drone after it "aggressively approached a U.S. Navy aircraft carrier with unclear intent," a CENTCOM spokesman said.
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:32 pm
UK govt-backed review says Britain’s national parks feel ‘white’ and unwelcoming

Britain's countryside authorities launch new outreach programs targeting ethnic minorities after review finds rural areas perceived as "white" spaces.
Published: February 3, 2026, 4:28 pm
Who is the populist conservative president-elect in Costa Rica?

Laura Fernández Delgado wins Costa Rica's presidential election with roughly 48% of the vote, set to become the country's second female president.
Published: February 3, 2026, 12:40 pm
Australian teen swims 2.5 miles for hours to save family swept out to sea

Teen hero swims 2.5 miles through rough seas to save family swept away by winds off Australia. Police praised the 13-year-old boy's courage.
Published: February 3, 2026, 12:24 pm
Trump to host Colombia’s Petro as drug trafficking expected to dominate high-stakes talks

President Donald Trump and Colombia's Gustavo Petro meet Tuesday at the White House after a year of diplomatic turmoil, from deportation standoffs to visa revocations and trade tensions.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:00 am
Russia and Ukraine Resume Talks After a Huge Attack by Moscow

U.S., Russian and Ukrainian negotiators are meeting in the United Arab Emirates, but Russia continues to pummel Ukraine and has not softened demands that Kyiv calls unacceptable.
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:18 pm
In Afghanistan, a Trail of Hunger and Death Behind U.S. Aid Cuts

Afghanistan has plunged deeper into a crisis marked by levels of child hunger unseen in 25 years and the closure of almost 450 health centers.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:39 pm
South Korea Questions Cram School Culture and Childhood Stress

Academic pressure has become so intense that even preschoolers are taking private extracurricular classes, raising worries about children’s rights.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:12 pm
Gloves Come Off in Gulf as Trump’s Closest Arab Allies Clash

A feud between Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates is reshaping conflicts and alliances across the Middle East and Africa.
Published: February 4, 2026, 9:25 am
For Peace, More Ukrainians Consider the Once Unthinkable: Surrendering Land

Polls show a growing acceptance of territorial concessions among a war-weary public, if Ukraine receives strong security guarantees.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:07 am
At Least 15 Die in Rare Collision Between Migrant Boat and Greek Patrol Vessel

Deadly shipwrecks often occur in the Aegean Sea, which is one of the main maritime routes to Europe, but they generally involve migrant boats sinking in stormy weather.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:28 am
Two Chinese Journalists Are Detained for Reporting on Corruption

The move against the men, who wrote an article that was critical of a local official, demonstrates how the space for independent voices has shrunk in China.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:37 pm
How 2026 Winter Olympics Security Is Preparing For The Opening Ceremony

Thousands of police and security officers will work during the Milan-Cortina Games’ opening ceremony. The involvement of some U.S. ICE personnel has stirred opposition.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:18 am
Bulgarians Adopt the Euro With a Whisper of Melancholy but Few Tears

In a country roiled by political upheaval recently, retiring the longtime currency, the lev, prompted some concern about inflation but little other angst.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:04 am
Here’s How the U.S. Accepted Danish Control of Greenland 100 Years Ago.

In 1917, the United States bought Caribbean islands from Denmark and agreed to respect Denmark’s hold over Greenland. The deal resurfaced with President Trump’s recent threats to seize Greenland.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:01 am
Seif al-Islam el-Qaddafi, Son of Libyan Dictator, Is Killed

Mr. el-Qaddafi, 53, a politician and a son of Col. Muammar el-Qaddafi, was killed after four men stormed his house, the lawyer said. No other details were released.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:24 pm
A Hamas Hostage’s Secret Ordeal

Guy Gilboa-Dalal says he was sexually abused by one of his captors in the tunnels of Gaza and threatened with death if he said anything.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:07 am
Police Search X’s Premises in France as Prosecutors Summon Elon Musk

The move followed a yearlong investigation into X and escalated a wider standoff between European officials and American tech companies over the regulation of social media.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:02 pm
U.K. Investigates Peter Mandelson Over Jeffrey Epstein Ties

Peter Mandelson, a prominent British political figure, faces allegations of “misconduct in public office offenses” over his dealings with Jeffrey Epstein.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:24 pm
Former Prince Andrew Moves Out of Royal Home Amid Fresh Epstein Revelations

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was stripped of his titles last year and told to give up his grand residence because of growing concern over his links to Jeffrey Epstein.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:08 pm
Yair Golan’s Battle for a Two-State Solution and the Future of Israel

To many Israelis, he’s a war hero. To others, he’s a traitor guilty of “blood libel.” Can Yair Golan change politics in Israel?
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:12 pm
A Journalist Who Looks for Clues in Plain Sight
On The Times’s Visual Investigations team, Christiaan Triebert combines social media sleuthing and traditional reporting to piece together complex stories.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
‘Neoroyalism’ and What It Says About Trump

Experts are reaching to divine the president’s approach to global policy and economics, with one theory seeing antecedents in centuries-old dynastic rule.
Published: February 4, 2026, 5:01 am
All About the Epstein Files

Everyone seems to have questions about the sprawling scandal, so we talked to a reporter who’s been following the case for years.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:59 pm
Paris Court Deals Family Blow in Battle for Rent From the French Embassy in Iraq

The court said it was not the right authority to handle the lawsuit for unpaid rent, and the case should be heard in Iraq, where the family’s ancestors had fled persecution.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:42 pm
U.S. Fighter Jet Shoots Down Iranian Drone Amid Heightened Tensions

A U.S. fighter jet shot down the Iranian drone after it “unnecessarily maneuvered” toward the Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:52 pm
Ruptures in China’s Leadership Could Be Due to Paranoia and Power Plays

U.S. intelligence analysts say that Xi Jinping, China’s leader, has a remarkable level of fear. He has carried out mass purges, and surprised many by removing his top general.
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:17 pm
At Least 30 Dead After Weeks of Heavy Snowfall in Japan

Snowfall in parts of Japan has also left about 200 people injured. One city recorded 72 inches of snow, the highest in almost 40 years.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:28 pm
Nepal Arrests 6 Officials, Accusing Them of Fraudulent Everest Rescues

The officials from mountain rescue agencies are accused of carrying out unnecessary helicopter rescues to defraud international insurance companies of nearly $20 million.
Published: February 3, 2026, 4:21 pm
‘Biblical Diseases’ Could Resurge in Africa, Health Officials Fear

Parasites and infections that cause blindness and other disabilities were nearly eliminated in some countries, but drug distribution to prevent and treat them was derailed in many places in 2025 after the U.S. cut aid.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:03 pm
Spain Aims to Ban Social Media for Children Under 16

The announcement is part of a broader push by countries to curb access to online platforms for minors. It also points to Europe’s stricter approach to regulating social media.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:15 pm
What to Know About the Disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s Mom, Nancy

Nancy Guthrie, 84, the “Today” show host’s mother, was last seen on Saturday night, the authorities said. The disappearance is being investigated as a possible kidnapping.
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:14 pm
Son of Norway’s Crown Princess Goes on Trial Over Charges Including Rape

The trial of Marius Borg Hoiby, who has also been accused of assault and other crimes, began as his mother came under pressure over her ties to Jeffrey Epstein.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:17 pm
Palestinians Return to Gaza for First Time in Nearly Two Years

Only 12 returnees were allowed to cross the newly reopened border with Egypt on the first day, far fewer than the expected number.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:22 pm
Iran’s President Backs ‘Fair’ Talks With U.S. as Confrontation Looms

President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Tuesday that he supported “equitable negotiations.” Talks are expected on Friday, as diplomats work to defuse the crisis.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:53 pm
After Maduro’s Capture, Venezuela’s Authoritarian System Shows Signs of Easing

A sweeping amnesty proposal, tests of censorship limits and opposition leaders emerging from hiding are fueling hopes for democratic changes. But skepticism abounds.
Published: February 3, 2026, 4:17 pm
What Do You Get When You Put a Mummy Through a CT Scan?

Experts are using high-res scanners and 3-D printers to illuminate ancient ailments and injuries.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:12 am
This is How Hard It Will Be to Get Around Italy’s Winter Olympics

The Games in northern Italy, which start on Friday, will be spread across 8,500 square miles. Long distances, narrow roads, complex connections and snowfall will make it a logistical nightmare.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:17 pm
Behind the ‘Free Maduro’ Message Spreading in Caracas
Our reporter Anatoly Kurmanaev looks around Caracas, Venezuela, describing how the “Free Maduro” graffiti and billboards around the city, which also appear on Delcy Rodríguez’s social media pages, help her as she balances her ties to Nicolás Maduro with her political rebranding.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:05 pm
Greenland Crisis Has Danes Chuckling, in Their Own Way

A little teasing has helped Danes manage their anger and anxiety over American threats to take a part of their territory. A Trump pincushion, anyone?
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:01 am
On Eve of Peace Talks, Russia Hits Power Plants in Frigid Ukraine

Missiles overnight targeted electrical facilities in Kyiv and other parts of the country, according to local authorities, despite President Trump’s request for a pause.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:55 pm
Trump and India Call Off Their Trade War, but the Terms of Peace Are Murky

Officials and business leaders welcomed lower tariffs, but India has not yet confirmed that it would stop buying Russian oil, which President Trump said Prime Minister Narendra Modi had agreed to.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:32 pm
Trump Announces Initial Trade Deal With India, Cutting Tariffs to 18%

The agreement was short on details, but President Trump said India had promised to stop buying Russian oil and would buy more U.S. farm goods and other products.
Published: February 3, 2026, 12:37 am
Uproar Over Meloni’s Face Painted on an Angel in a Church in Rome

The recent restoration of a chapel came with a surprise: an angel depicted with the likeness of Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni of Italy. Cue the protests.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:06 am
Countries Have Long Tested Their Own Athletes for Doping. That Could Soon Change.

After Chinese swimmers won Olympic gold in 2021 despite having tested positive for a banned substance, the World Anti-Doping Agency is considering whether to have an independent body handle testing before major events.
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:56 pm
Rafah Crossing in Gaza Reopens, Another Step for Fragile Cease-Fire

Israel and Egypt had disagreed for months about how to resume operations at the Rafah border crossing, which has been largely closed since May 2024.
Published: February 3, 2026, 12:50 am
Gun-wielding ICE agents brush back Minneapolis agitators

Images have captured ICE agents in Minneapolis drawing their weapons at agitators who allegedly were trying to obstruct an operation in the Minnesota city.
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:18 pm
Afghan national accused in DC National Guard shooting pleads not guilty, prosecutors may seek death penalty

Afghan national accused of shooting National Guard members in Washington, D.C., pleads not guilty as federal prosecutors weigh seeking death penalty.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:53 pm
Ohio woman convicted in shooting of bystander during New Year’s love triangle dispute

An Ohio jury found a woman guilty of attempted murder after a New Year’s party shooting that left an innocent bystander critically injured.
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:56 pm
New clues raise alarm in disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s mother and more top headlines

Get all the stories you need-to-know from the most powerful name in news delivered first thing every morning to your inbox.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:11 pm
Charlotte rail murder suspect linked to inmate release approved under ex-Dem governor, GOP alleges

The suspect in the Charlotte rail murder case was released from prison during a mass inmate release authorized under a former Democratic governor, state GOP says.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
NBC host Savannah Guthrie’s mother taken from home as expert raises alarming new theories amid lack of leads

Nancy Guthrie missing after alleged abduction from Tucson home as officials say NBC "Today" co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother was physically removed with blood reportedly found inside.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
Judge rules federal agents must limit tear gas at protests near Portland ICE building

A federal judge restricted federal officers from using tear gas on protesters outside the ICE facility in Portland after agents deployed gas at demonstrators.
Published: February 4, 2026, 7:39 am
Girl, 12, dangles from ski chairlift in California before crashing to ground in terrifying video
A 12-year-old girl walked away without major injuries after falling from a ski chairlift at Mammoth Mountain resort in California. The dramatic rescue attempt was caught on video.
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:17 am
Mamdani calls on DA to not prosecute mentally ill man shot by police during alleged knife attack

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said he opposes prosecuting the mentally ill man shot by police after charging them with a knife in Queens.
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:47 am
Trump reacts to NBC host Savannah Guthrie's mother Nancy's mysterious abduction

President Donald Trump vowed to call NBC's Savannah Guthrie after her mother's apparent kidnapping in Arizona. The FBI is assisting with the investigation.
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:16 am
ICE arrests New Orleans police recruit with deportation order who was issued firearm by department

ICE arrested New Orleans police recruit Larry Temah one week before graduation, saying he was issued a firearm despite an active deportation order. The NOPD denied any wrongdoing.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:34 am
Pro-ICE billboard lights up San Francisco streets ahead of Super Bowl LX

ICE billboard appears in San Francisco ahead of Super Bowl LX, displaying football-themed messages supporting Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:07 am
Coast Guard identifies 7 victims on board Gloucester commercial fishing boat that sank off Massachusetts

The Coast Guard identified seven crew members presumed dead after the fishing vessel "Lily Jean" sank off the Massachusetts coast. An investigation was launched into the incident.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:05 am
Chinese-linked biolab discovered in Las Vegas home sparks federal investigation with SWAT response

Las Vegas biolab investigation linked to accused Chinese fugitive facing federal charges in California. Property manager arrested in connection to case.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:53 pm
Families of 3 Massachusetts women who died at Belize resort file $100m lawsuit against hotel, Expedia: report

Families of three Massachusetts women who died from carbon monoxide poisoning at a Belize resort have filed a $100 million wrongful death lawsuit.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:09 pm
12-year-old allegedly alive underwater for minutes before fatal scuba class failure: lawsuit

Parents sue Texas dive shop after 12-year-old Dylan Harrison allegedly drowned during scuba diving class. Lawsuit claims death was entirely preventable.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:21 pm
California approves controversial sharpshooter plan to eradicate invasive deer on Catalina Island

A controversial plan has been approved to remove Catalina Island’s invasive deer using ground-based shooters, following backlash against earlier proposals for aerial shooting.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:07 pm
Authorities 'aware' of reports of possible ransom note in Nancy Guthrie disappearance

The Pima County Sheriff's Department confirmed awareness of a ransom note in the disappearance of Savannah Guthrie's mother, Nancy, 84, who vanished from her Tucson, Arizona, home Saturday.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:09 pm
Four defendants, including 2 Venezuelans, allegedly used 115 stolen identities in massive food stamp fraud

Four people allegedly used 115 stolen identities in $1 million food stamps and pandemic unemployment fraud scheme, including Venezuelan nationals.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:58 pm
Judge orders man accused of spraying Ilhan Omar held before trial, possibly in solitary confinement

Judge orders man who allegedly attacked Rep. Ilhan Omar with apple cider vinegar to remain in custody until trial, citing community safety concerns.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:06 pm
California parents who decapitated 2 children, forced other kids to see bodies learn sentence

California parents Maurice Taylor Sr. and Natalie Brothwell sentenced to life without parole for murdering their two children in their Lancaster home.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:48 pm
Anti-ICE Minneapolis agitators set up checkpoint to track federal agents

Anti-ICE activists allegedly set up unauthorized checkpoints in Minneapolis, stopping cars and questioning drivers to identify federal immigration agents.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:12 pm
Ohio dentist and wife shot 16 times in Columbus home, autopsies reveal

Ohio dentist Spencer Tepe and wife Monique died from multiple gunshot wounds in Columbus home murder, autopsy reveals. Ex-husband charged in deaths.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:10 pm
Jill Biden's ex-husband charged with murder in death of wife

Jill Biden's ex-husband William Stevenson, 77, charged with first-degree murder of wife Linda after Delaware police investigation into domestic dispute.
Published: February 3, 2026, 6:01 pm
Erika Kirk urges court to provide 'meaningful' media access in trial of husband's alleged assassin

Charlie Kirk's widow demands media access in her husband's suspected assassin's trial, filing court documents to ensure proceedings remain open to public.
Published: February 3, 2026, 3:27 pm
Border Czar Says He Is Pulling 700 Immigration Agents Out of Minneapolis

About 2,000 personnel will be left in the city, where the killings of two protesters against President Trump’s immigration crackdown by federal officers have generated outrage.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:57 pm
Lee H. Hamilton, a Foreign Policy Power in Congress, Dies at 94

A moderate Democrat from Indiana for 34 years, he led the House Foreign Affairs and Intelligence committees and helped investigate the Iran-contra scandal and the Sept. 11 attacks.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:29 pm
Trump’s Call to ‘Nationalize’ Elections Adds to State Officials’ Alarm

Some top state election officials, who run voting across the country, worry that the federal government has become hostile to them and their work.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:28 pm
Savannah Guthrie’s Missing Mother Has Nation Fixated on an Arizona Subdivision

The disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of the news anchor Savannah Guthrie, has reporters, neighbors and drones flooding streets and foothills in Tucson, Ariz.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:42 pm
Fulton County in Georgia Challenges the F.B.I.’s Seizure of 2020 Ballots

The county filed a motion demanding the return of ballots and other election materials that were seized by the F.B.I. in a highly unusual move by the Trump administration.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:29 pm
Search for Savannah Guthrie’s Mother Grows More Urgent

The authorities made urgent pleas for help from the public as they tried to locate Ms. Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of the “Today” anchor Savannah Guthrie.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:53 pm
Ex-Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn Seeks Maryland House Seat

Mr. Dunn, who rose to prominence for defending the Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot, will run for a hotly contested Southern Maryland seat.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
A Winter of Anguish for Minneapolis Children

“It’s like living in fear all the time,” a teenager said about the federal raids that have shattered families.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:04 am
Republicans Try to Save John Cornyn From Ken Paxton’s Challenge in Texas Senate Race

Senator John Cornyn, once seen as a potential Republican leader in his chamber, is now depending on wealthy party donors to survive a right-wing challenge.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:04 am
Minneapolis Police Chief Fears Long-Term Damage From Immigration Crackdown

Brian O’Hara, who took over a troubled police force and has spent years rebuilding community trust, fears the long-term damage wrought by federal agents.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:00 pm
How Universities and States Are Increasing Surveillance of Professors

Scrutiny of university classrooms is being formalized, with new laws requiring professors to post syllabuses and tip lines for students to complain.
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
Tyler Robinson’s Lawyers Press to Remove Prosecutors From Kirk Murder Case

Mr. Robinson’s lawyers argue that the entire prosecution team has a conflict of interest because one prosecutor’s daughter was present when Charlie Kirk was killed.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:16 am
Judge releases Venezuelan men charged in ICE shooting in Minneapolis, with conditions.

Published: February 4, 2026, 2:12 am
Racial Debate Rattles Texas Democratic Primary for Senate

State Representative James Talarico used the word “mediocre” in connection with a former House member who is Black. The controversy has repercussions for a key contest.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:53 am
Trump, Changing Course, Throws Harvard Deal Talks Into Chaos

In the latest example of his mercurial negotiating style, President Trump went from dropping his ask for a $200 million fine to demanding $1 billion from the university.
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:14 am
Judge Appears Likely to Curtail Hegseth’s Power to Penalize Kelly for Video

Attorneys for Democratic Senator Mark Kelly argued that Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was brazenly violating the separation of powers by seeking to punish a member of Congress for public statements.
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:15 am
Trump Repeats Call to ‘Nationalize’ Elections, as White House Walks It Back

President Trump’s extraordinary comments were the latest iteration of his unsubstantiated claims that U.S. elections are rigged as Republicans face potentially big losses this fall.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:27 pm
Trump Scolds CNN’s Kaitlan Collins for ‘Not Smiling’

Testy remarks from a president who has frequently singled out female journalists for criticism and personal attacks.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:20 pm
Renee Good’s Brothers Call on Congress to Rein In Immigration Crackdown

At a forum on Capitol Hill held by congressional Democrats, the brothers of the 37-year-old American citizen fatally shot by an ICE agent said immigration enforcement tactics must be dialed back.
Published: February 4, 2026, 9:00 am
Trump Releases Latest Rendering of White House Ballroom Project

President Trump emphasized that the ballroom would not be taller than the Executive Mansion of the White House, as he faces criticism over the size of the project.
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:05 pm
Westminster Presbyterian Church in Minneapolis Is a Place for Protest

In the weeks since ICE agents began conducting operations across the city, Westminster Presbyterian has given its members a place to protest on their own terms.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:52 pm
Court Orders New Trial for Former U.C.L.A. Gynecologist James Heaps

James M. Heaps was sentenced to 11 years in prison in April 2023. A note from the jury to the judge during deliberations was never disclosed, and an appeals court said the case must be retried.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:31 pm
Colombians Rally During Their President’s Meeting with Trump

President Gustavo Petro had asked Colombians to gather around the country during his meeting with President Trump on Tuesday.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:52 pm
U.S. Fighter Jet Shoots Down Iranian Drone Amid Heightened Tensions

A U.S. fighter jet shot down the Iranian drone after it “unnecessarily maneuvered” toward the Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:52 pm
Does ICE Need a Warrant to Enter Your Home?
Up until now, immigration officers were trained that they cannot enter homes without a judicial warrant. But, as our immigration reporter Hamed Aleaziz explains, the Trump administration has a different idea.
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:59 am
Lawsuit Argues Trump Gold Card Visa Program Prioritizes Wealth Over Ability

The suit asks that a judge find the pay-for-play visa program unlawful, casting it as another example of the Trump administration’s seeking to bypass Congress.
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:57 pm
William Stevenson, Jill Biden’s Ex-Husband, Is Accused of Killing His Current Wife
William Stevenson was arrested after being indicted on charges of first-degree murder in the death of his wife in December. He was married to Dr. Biden in the 1970s.
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:13 pm
Michael Parenti, Unapologetic Marxist Theorist and Author, Dies at 92

A prolific writer and lecturer, he viewed U.S. history through the lens of class struggle. But some accused him of defending brutal regimes in the Soviet Union and Serbia.
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:09 pm
Savannah Guthrie to Skip Olympics as Search for Mother, Nancy Guthrie, Yields Few Clues

The “Today” anchor withdrew from NBC’s coverage of the Winter Games in Italy as investigators acknowledged they had few answers about who may have taken her mother, Nancy Guthrie, 84, from her home.
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:35 pm
House Cancels Contempt Vote As Clintons Agree to Testify on Epstein

Bill and Hillary Clinton agreed to be deposed this month by an investigative panel but requested that it be in public, a request that the Republican chairman ignored.
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:29 pm
Trump Signs Bill to Reopen Government

The bill provides money for the Department of Homeland Security just through the end of next week, and the negotiations to curb immigration agents promise to be difficult.
Published: February 4, 2026, 7:49 am
Ruptures in China’s Leadership Could Be Due to Paranoia and Power Plays

U.S. intelligence analysts say that Xi Jinping, China’s leader, has a remarkable level of fear. He has carried out mass purges, and surprised many by removing his top general.
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:17 pm
Video shows trail of blood and missing doorbell camera outside Nancy Guthrie’s house

Investigators say Nancy, who lived alone, has limited mobility but no cognitive issues and would not have left voluntarily. Her cellphone and car were found at her home in Arizona
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:28 pm
‘Bloodbath’ at Washington Post as one-third of staff laid off by Jeff Bezos

About 300 journalists in the newsroom are expected to lose their jobs as part of a ‘broad strategic reset’
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:27 pm
Ransom notes under investigation in disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s mom as no suspects identified: Live updates

The 84-year-old was abducted from her Arizona home, police said
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:26 pm
Stephen Miller is using his social media and Signal messages to get his hardline messaging to Trump, report says
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Deputy chief of staff allegedly uses ‘gory images’ to get his point across to the 79-year-old president
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:17 pm
ICE and Border Patrol in Minnesota are testing whether the Constitution can survive

Forcibly entering homes without a judicial warrant. Arresting journalists who reported on protests. Defying dozens of federal orders. Killing U.S. citizens for noncompliance. Asking constitutionally protected observers this chilling question: “Have you not learned?”
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:08 pm
‘This job sucks’: DOJ lawyer asks to be held in contempt so she can sleep after judge accuses ICE of blowing court orders

Government lawyer says ‘this system sucks’ as federal judge says ICE is detaining too many people to keep up their cases
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:26 pm
Ukraine says Russia is illegally targeting the power grid. Here's what the law says

Russian missiles and drones have pounded Ukraine’s energy grid in recent weeks
Published: February 4, 2026, 4:07 pm
Man once married to Jill Biden held without bail after being charged in wife’s killing

Authorities say a Delaware man who was once married to former first lady Jill Biden remains jailed on first-degree murder charges in the death of his wife
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:58 pm
Trump was told to skip the Super Bowl so he wasn’t booed mercilessly: report

Trump previously said Sunday’s game at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, was ‘just too far away’
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:55 pm
Cracker Barrel clarifies restaurant’s position after employee dining rules go viral

Cracker Barrel said the recent change was to ‘limit reimbursement of alcoholic beverages’ for employees traveling for work
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:55 pm
Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump claims Putin ‘kept his word’ despite massive attack as peace talks begin

Zelensky says Russia's massive attack on Kyiv and other cities has impacted his team's preparations for today's peace talks
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:52 pm
ICE to remove hundreds of officers from Minnesota following two fatal shootings and national outcry

The ‘drawdown’ follows weeks of outrage sparked by the shooting of 37-year-old Alex Pretti by Border Patrol officers
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:43 pm
What to know about Norway's royals as crown princess and her son face new scrutiny

The eldest son of Norway’s crown princess is back in court for Day Two of a trial at which he is facing allegations of multiple alleged offenses, including rape
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:24 pm
Penny the Doberman pinscher secures priceless win at Westminster Dog Show

Andy Linton, the dog’s veteran handler, won the show for the second time, almost four decades after his first victory
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:23 pm
Police officer jumps out the path of out-of-control car while helping stranded passengers

A police officer narrowly avoided being struck by an out-of-control car whilst he was assisting stranded passengers.
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:09 pm
Texas man arrested after getting into fight with high schoolers who walked out of class to protest ICE

Law enforcement say the 45-year-old man was the ‘primary aggressor’ in the fight that went viral
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:09 pm
Poland to investigate Epstein files for potential Polish victims

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk says authorities will analyze Jeffrey Epstein documents to seek potential Polish victims
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:07 pm
German airline confronts its Nazi past on 100th anniversary

The company played a role in the arms industry and supported the Luftwaffe air force
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:02 pm
Trump’s latest White House remake? Adding a Christopher Columbus statue to the grounds

The figure will be a restoration of a Columbus statue that was destroyed by protestors in 2020
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:19 pm
Church angel resembling Giorgia Meloni painted over but mystery lingers

The unexpected depiction, part of recent renovations at the Basilica of San Lorenzo in Lucina, prompted immediate investigations
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:13 pm
Protests, confusion and anxiety: Venezuela a month after Trump seized Maduro

Rachael Pells speaks to people in Venezuela and expatriates fearing for their families in a country where millions still need humanitarian aid. They paint conflicting images – but one thing is sure, uncertainty reigns
Published: February 3, 2026, 3:52 pm
Cracker Barrel introduces strict new dining rule

The Southern chain has been in turmoil since last year’s failed rebrand
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:37 pm
Dad poured scalding water on his baby because he was cold inflicting widespread burns: Cops

Christopher Stum admitted to lying to police about the temperature of the water so that he did not appear to be negligent, according to court records
Published: February 4, 2026, 1:24 pm
The last remaining US-Russia nuclear treaty expires today – risking a new arms race

‘If it expires, it expires,’ Trump shrugged off as experts have warned about the dangers to the world. Maira Butt reports
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:56 pm
Raw milk warning after newborn baby dies from listeria in New Mexico

Death occurred after pregnant mother consumed raw dairy before baby was born
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:46 pm
Austin Appelbee says he feared the worst after four-hour swim to save his family: ‘I thought they were dead’

Doctors told 13-year-old his swim put strain on his body comparable to running two marathons
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:31 pm
Libyan dictator Gaddafi’s son shot dead by armed men at home

Saif al-Islam Gaddafi’s political team say ‘four masked men’ stormed his house in Zintan
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:22 pm
Can Trump nationalize elections? What president’s latest bid to transform US democracy means

'What he is saying is outlandishly illegal', says Chuck Schumer after president urges 'takeover' of electoral administration
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:20 pm
Musk vs Europe: World’s richest man calls Spanish PM ‘fascist’ as X hits out over French office raid

Statement from X accused prosecutors of carrying out an ‘abusive’ raid of its Paris offices
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:13 pm
Greenland faces complex new threat after fending off Donald Trump

Changes to the island are set to have a huge impact on its economy
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:10 pm
Nicki Minaj explains her newfound love for Trump: ‘I couldn’t handle him being bullied’

Nicki Minaj’s conversion to MAGA comes after she was embroiled in a series of controversies and feuds with her fellow stars
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:35 am
Russia and Ukraine envoys meet in Abu Dhabi for US-brokered talks

Envoys from Russia and Ukraine are meeting in Abu Dhabi for U.S.-brokered talks aimed at ending the nearly four-year war
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:28 am
Trump touts Melania’s ‘movie star’ status following weekend documentary release

Melania has bragged that her film was ‘loved by all’ despite it receiving dire reviews from critics
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:27 am
Revealed: Toxic old Iraqi oil barrels being sold as water tanks
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Across the southern province of Maysan, people are storing water in discarded oil field containers sold to them as ‘safe’. Aya Mansour investigates a public health crisis in the heart of the Iraqi marshlands
Published: February 4, 2026, 11:15 am
The former Prince Andrew moves to King Charles III's private estate amid Epstein document uproar

The former Prince Andrew has moved out of his long-time home on crown-owned land near Windsor Castle earlier than expected, after the latest release of documents from the U.S. investigation of Jeffrey Epstein revived questions about his friendship with the convicted sex offender
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:59 am
US military shoots down ‘aggressive’ Iranian drone as nuclear talks loom

Tensions have been ramping up in the region as the US builds up its military presence
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:44 am
Bill Gates speaks out over his inclusion in latest Epstein files release: ‘I regret every minute I spent with him’
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Gates and Epstein had several dinners together after first meeting in 2011, the Microsoft co-founder said
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:03 am
Study points to alarming link between wildfires and children’s mental health
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Findings add to evidence that health impacts of bushfires extend well beyond respiratory illness
Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
JD Vance tears into America’s ‘incestuous elites’ after Epstein files release - but insists Trump isn’t one of them

Multiple high-profile figures including President Donald Trump, Bill Gates and Elon Musk have been mentioned in the files
Published: February 4, 2026, 9:49 am
Man who tried to assassinate Trump facing potential life sentence

Prosecutors will ask that a man convicted of trying to assassinate Trump be given a life sentence
Published: February 4, 2026, 9:41 am
Melinda Gates speaks out after latest Epstein files release details allegations against Bill Gates

Melinda Gates said the case ‘brings back memories of some very, very painful times’ in her marriage
Published: February 4, 2026, 9:22 am
European governments ditch US tech services over security fears

European governments are moving away from US tech giants, opting for domestic or open-source alternatives
Published: February 4, 2026, 8:52 am
Elon Musk’s X offices in France raided by Paris prosecutors

Musk has been summoned to appear at a court hearing in Paris on 20 April
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:05 am
Trump announces US-India ‘trade deal’ that cuts tariffs to 18 per cent

Trump says India will remove trade barriers for American goods and stop buying Russian oil, but there are few details on the exact terms of what has been agreed
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:26 am
Trump escalates his calls for Republicans to ‘nationalize’ elections he claims are riddled with ‘horrible’ corruption

House Speaker Mike Johnson insists that Trump was just ‘expressing his frustration’ with some Democrat-leaning parts of the country with alleged election integrity issues
Published: February 4, 2026, 5:21 am
Trump says Washington has waited 200 years for the arch he wants to build. Not quite

President Donald Trump wants to build a massive arch near the Lincoln Memorial
Published: February 4, 2026, 5:02 am
Trump reveals latest rendering of what he calls: ‘the much anticipated White House Ballroom’

Trump insisted that his new ballroom will be the ‘Greatest of its kind ever built!!’
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:54 am
Senator Mitch McConnell, 83, hospitalized with ‘flu-like symptoms’

McConnell has had several public falls and moments when he froze on camera in recent years, raising concerns about his health
Published: February 4, 2026, 3:36 am
‘Piggy, stupid, incapable’: The times Trump has lashed out at female reporters in recent months

Almost all of those to have provoked the president’s wrath recently have been women, yet the White House has insisted that the insults are ‘nothing to do with gender’
Published: February 4, 2026, 2:01 am
Renee Good’s brother says ongoing ICE crackdown in spite of her death is ‘beyond explanation’
‘In the past weeks, our family took some consolation thinking that perhaps her death would bring about change in our country, and it has not,’ Luke Ganger said
Published: February 4, 2026, 12:29 am
Trump attacks CNN’s Kaitlan Collins again over questions about the Epstein files: ‘I don’t think I’ve ever seen you smile’

Trump said he wants the country to ‘move onto something else’ and quit asking him about Epstein
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:44 pm
Trump brags his polling is the highest he has ‘ever received.’ In reality, his approval rating keeps going down

Trump’s approval rating sits at 40 percent, according to a new poll
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:14 pm
Police admit they ‘don’t know’ where Savannah Guthrie’s mom is as criminal investigation continues

Nancy Guthrie, 84, vanished from her Catalina Foothills home sometime late Saturday night or early Sunday morning
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:39 pm
Renee Good’s brothers say ‘no good’ has come of sister’s death in Capitol Hill address

The brothers of Renee Nicole Good testified in front of lawmakers at a Congressional forum in Washington DC on Tuesday (3 February).
Published: February 3, 2026, 11:00 pm
At least seven more federal prosecutors quit in Minnesota after DOJ’s lack of investigation into agent who shot Renee Good

The new wave of resignations includes that of Dan Bobier who was expected to take over prosecuting fraud in Minnesota
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:48 pm
Democrat says DHS is the greatest threat to America

Congresswoman Delia Ramirez has called for DHS and ICE to be abolished
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:42 pm
What happened to Savannah Guthrie’s mom? Police provide new details as search enters third day

Police have received ‘hundreds of leads’ as they investigate the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today co-host Savannah Guthrie
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:33 pm
House votes to reopen the government – setting up a fight over ICE

The Senate and the White House will now negotiate guardrails for ICE and CBP agents after the killing of Renee Good and Alex Pretti
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:30 pm
Trump administration sued over $1M ‘Gold Card’ visa scheme: ‘Playground for highest bidder’

Trump created an illegal ‘fast lane’ for wealthy foreigners at the expense of qualified immigrants who followed the rules, lawyers say
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:29 pm
CBS pulls Peter Attia segment after Epstein fallout, but Bari Weiss is sticking by him – for now

Noting that the ‘Attia mess is yet another damning indictment of Bari Weiss’ judgment as editor in chief of CBS News,’ a CBS News staffer told The Independent that the editor-in-chief ‘has allowed this to metastasize into a public embarrassment.’
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:13 pm
House lawmaker raises new concerns over FDA's ultra-fast drug review program

A Democratic lawmaker is raising new concerns about a Food and Drug Administration program designed to drastically shorten the review of certain drugs
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:12 pm
Trump appears to suggest Ilhan Omar is linked to ISIS as he escalates feud with Democrat

President used a year-old article as the basis to make baseless accusations against Minnesota congresswoman
Published: February 3, 2026, 10:04 pm
Defense seeks to block Charlie Kirk videos at hearing

The defense also seeks to remove TV and still cameras from the courtroom
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:53 pm
Federal agents storm Los Angeles church grounds and arrest man serving at food bank, report says

The man targeted in the raid has since been deported to Mexico, according to a report
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:52 pm
Families of three American women who died of carbon monoxide poisoning at Belize hotel file federal lawsuit

‘This lawsuit is first and foremost about honoring the lives of our daughters,’ the families said
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:50 pm
‘Don Colossus’ — a 22-foot tall Golden statue of Trump — is set to rise where US will host world leaders for G20

The bronze likeness of the 45th and 47th president was commissioned by a group of cryptocurrency investors
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:44 pm
At least 14 people dead after migrant boat collided with Coast Guard off Greece coast

The complete number of injured survivors among the migrants remains unclear
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:42 pm
New York attorney general to deploy observers to monitor ICE operations
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The move comes amid heightened nationwide tensions surrounding Trump's immigration crackdown
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:34 pm
Watch as Las Vegas ‘biolab’ is busted as SWAT and hazmat teams storm property

A property in Las Vegas was swarmed by law enforcement officials who discovered a possible biological laboratory inside.
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:27 pm
ICE funding and surge across the nation set up Schumer for more shutdown pain

Democrats want ICE reforms but many want steeper changes than party leaders are willing to demand right now, John Bowden writes
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:15 pm
Who is Josh D’Amaro, the man given the keys to the House of Mouse?

The 54-year-old is no stranger to the company having served in many different roles over three decades, most recently as Chairman of Disney Experiences
Published: February 3, 2026, 9:13 pm
Maine plane crash victims worked for luxury travel startup led by Texas lawyer

The six people killed when a private jet crashed in Maine were going to see a property for a luxury travel business led by a Houston lawyer
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:37 pm
Epstein plotted to create ‘superior gene pool’ with victims, documents suggest

In an unverified diary published by the DOJ, a woman wrote that she was forced to carry Epstein’s baby
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:20 pm
Greg Bovino pushed back against ICE order for ‘targeted’ arrests during Chicago raids: report

Trump’s ‘commander-at-large’ for surges in Democratic-led cities allegedly ‘declined’ to follow orders, emails show
Published: February 3, 2026, 8:04 pm
Pope Leo XIV faces first major crisis as traditional Catholics announce plans without Papal consent

For the Vatican, papal consent for the consecration of bishops is a fundamental doctrine, guaranteeing the lineage of apostolic succession from Christ’s original apostles
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:59 pm
Canadian officials can’t explain why Epstein was allowed to enter country after conviction for crimes that should have barred him

Disgraced financier appears to have visited Canada in 2014 — years after he pled guilty to soliciting a minor for prostitution
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:35 pm
Pentagon threatens to pull military support from Boy Scouts unless they restore ‘core values’

In November, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth expressed opposition to Scouting America’s ‘attack on boy-friendly spaces’
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:24 pm
Chick-fil-A franchisee refused to hire ‘ghetto Black’ employees, lawsuit says

Exclusive: In addition, former operations manager Tiffany Lynch claims her boss regularly used the ‘N-word,’ insinuated that Black people ‘smell,’ and that they ‘require extra cleanup,’ according to court filings
Published: February 3, 2026, 7:01 pm
Dates set for Bill and Hillary Clinton testimony in GOP’s Epstein probe to avoid contempt vote

The former president and secretary of state will sit for filmed depositions after bipartisan effort to hold them in contempt of Congress
Published: February 3, 2026, 6:46 pm
Jeanine Pirro sparks MAGA fury for threatening jail time for lawful gun owners traveling to DC: ‘Come and take it!’
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‘You bring a gun into the District, you mark my words, you're going to jail,’ Jeanine Pirro told Fox news this week, adding that she didn’t care ‘if you're a law-abiding gun owner somewhere else.’
Published: February 3, 2026, 6:37 pm
Only five critical Palestinian patients let out of Gaza after Israel reopens Rafah crossing with Egypt

Thousands are awaiting medical treatment, and some are dying while they wait to get it
Published: February 3, 2026, 6:25 pm
Florida man tossed $4K worth of stolen meat when he found his girlfriend cooking with another man, cops say

The meat thief made off with an assortment of meats, including top sirloin, brisket, beef and lamb, authorities said
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:54 pm
Jill Biden’s ex-husband charged with murder for ‘killing his wife during a domestic disturbance’

William Stevenson, 77, was arrested Monday and charged with first-degree murder in the death of 64-year-old Linda Stevenson
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:44 pm
Florida's DeSantis and MLB commissioner support new Rays stadium in Tampa

Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred have expressed support for a new stadium for the Tampa Bay Rays
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:42 pm
Arrested protester reveals pain caused by White House’s AI-generated photo of her crying: ‘Was just so degrading’

Nekima Levy Armstrong, a lawyer and social justice activist, accused the White House of acting like a ‘$2 tabloid’
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:38 pm
Measles is back at Disneyland for the first time in more than a decade

Southern California’s ‘Happiest Place on Earth’ hasn’t seen a case since 2015
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:20 pm
Montreal Canadiens vehemently deny report that team was told not to leave Minnesota hotel over safety fears

Montreal Canadiens officials have strongly denied that their players were told to stay in their hotel and carry their passports at all times while in Minnesota, where they played against the Wild on Monday night
Published: February 3, 2026, 5:03 pm
Teacher in critical condition after being stabbed by teenager at school in southern France

Prosecutors said the art teacher was stabbed in the classroom at school in Sanary-sur-Mer
Published: February 3, 2026, 4:51 pm
Mamdani in fits of laughter after NYC officials flee freezing press conference on rooftop

This is the moment Zohran Mamdani burst into a fit of laughter when New York City officials left a rooftop press conference early due to chilly conditions.
Published: February 3, 2026, 4:41 pm
States push to remove laws that prevent federal officers from being sued after Minnesota shootings

State lawmakers want to make laws allowing residents to sue federal officers
Published: February 3, 2026, 4:30 pm
‘The right has won the family’: why are there so few lefty momfluencers?

The most popular mom content tends to be rightwing tradwife propaganda or just apolitical – pushing progressive creators out of the algorithm
For someone who doesn’t have a marble island in their kitchen I spend a disproportionate amount of time staring at marble kitchen islands, slack-jawed, brain turned half off. That’s because I consume a lot of videos from mommy bloggers, mom influencers, and the like. In kitchen “closing shift” videos, they wipe down their islands and reset by lighting luxury candles, the glow accentuating their respectable cosmetic procedures. Other times I watch them waltz through their morning routines: getting kids out the door, sweating it out in boutique fitness classes, showing off Amazon hauls, or explaining their children’s matching holiday photoshoot outfits.
For better or worse, this is how I have chosen to spend my one wild and precious life: consuming blissfully low-stakes motherhood content on my phone. It is domestically competent ASMR that also satiates my desire to peek into everyone’s bathroom cabinets. I nod in unsolicited approval as a TikTok mom I follow shares her green juice order. Fascinating. I should drink something like that. Another posts timestamps of her baby’s night-time sleep schedule. I, who lives between walls that have never heard the wail of an infant, ingurgitate the entire video.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 4:00 pm
I knew Trump would target Minnesota. I didn’t expect this level of violence | Rachel Leingang

I’m reporting on a political retribution campaign, disguised as immigration enforcement, in the community where I live
I knew they would come here.
If you’re a president hell-bent on retreading 2020 and retaliating against your enemies, the midwestern state that started the George Floyd protests, with a generous social safety net and diverse population, governed by a vice-presidential candidate you vehemently hate, is a certain target.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
From Evil Empire to Super Bowl underdogs: is it OK to like the Patriots now?

Under Tom Brady and Bill Belichick New England were ruthless winners. But new head coach Mike Vrabel has transformed the narrative around the team
There used to be a simple rule: Anybody but the New England Patriots.
From 2001 through 2019, the Tom Brady-Bill Belichick dynasty totaled six Super Bowl titles, 13 conference championship appearances and 17 divisional crowns. They were the Evil Empire, constant contenders in a league designed for parity. It didn’t matter who you were; the Patriots were the final boss.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
‘Our bodies bear traces of all we’ve endured’: exhibition explores bodily photography

A new exhibition at the Phoenix Art Museum looks at how the human body has been captured on film, from athletic portraits to revealing looks at ageing
Photography has a unique capacity to take us right to humanity’s extremes. Whether it’s the outsiders photographed by Diane Arbus, the revelatory motion studies of the human body made by Eadweard Muybridge, views of remote Indigenous communities taken by the Mexican photographer Graciela Iturbide, or in-your-face shots of heated competition from the sports photographer Walter Iooss, photographs can wow us with transformational dispatches from the fringes of the human condition.
All four of those photographers, plus about three dozen more, can be seen at the Phoenix Art Museum’s captivating new show Muscle Memory. It aims to delve into the question of how our human bodies can at once be the focus of so much of our awareness while also being something we frequently ignore.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 10:03 am
Goodbye, breast implants: why I went back to having a flat chest

At 56, I want to age naturally. Having breast implants ran counter to that, so I got explant surgery, which has surged in demand recently
For 22 years, I ran around with small bags of saline water on my chest – a fact I shared with only a handful of close friends. I felt ashamed of having chosen artificial enhancement.
I’m an outdoorsy mountain runner. At 56, I want to model aging naturally, but having breast implants ran counter to that. Now they are gone, thanks to explant surgery – implant removal without replacement.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:00 pm
‘A god-tier new classic’: first reactions to Wuthering Heights praise ‘hot, horny’ Emerald Fennell adaptation

The acclaimed latest version of the Emily Brontë bestseller is, however, not without controversies over race and age
Reviews might be embargoed until next Monday, but Los Angeles social media is getting hot under the collar after an early screening of Emerald Fennell’s highly anticipated adaptation of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights.
“Intoxicating, transcendent, tantalising, bewitching, lust worthy, hypnotic,” wrote Courtney Howard, adding that the film “expertly captures the breathtaking ache and essence of desire” and “is a god-tier new classic”.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 11:24 am
Trump’s border czar says administration will immediately withdraw 700 immigration enforcement officers from Minnesota – live

Tom Homan says ‘around 2000’ immigration officers will remain in Minnesota and that pre-operation the number was between 100 and 150 officers
Tom Homan, the president’s so-called “border czar” is set to speak to reporters in Minneapolis shortly.
A reminder that Homan took over the immigration enforcement operation in Minnesota from senior border official Gregory Bovino, just days after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti and the mounting backlash in the Twin Cities.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 4:02 pm
Revealed: Israel bulldozed part of Gaza war cemetery containing allied graves

Satellite images and witness testimony show destruction as IDF claims it was forced to take defensive measures
Israeli forces have bulldozed part of a Gaza cemetery containing the war graves of dozens of British, Australian and other allied soldiers killed in the first and second world wars, satellite imagery and witness testimony reveal.
Satellite imagery of the Gaza war cemetery in al-Tuffah, a district of Gaza City, shows extensive earthworks in the southernmost corner of the graveyard. Bomb craters can be seen around the cemetery, but in this area the destruction appears to have been more systematic.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:17 pm
Jeffrey Epstein messaged with former CIA director Bill Burns, files show

Spokesperson says Burns ‘deeply regrets ever meeting’ with Epstein and cut ties after learning of his conviction
A new tranche of documents related to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein revealed several communications with William J Burns, a career diplomat who would go on to become the central intelligence director under Joe Biden.
The documents describe the planning for meetings between Burns and Epstein, two of which occurred, and show Epstein texting with Burns and recommending that other people in his orbit meet with him. The meetings and correspondence occurred after Epstein had pleaded guilty to prostitution-related charges in Florida in 2008, including solicitation of prostitution with a minor under the age of 18.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:00 pm
‘It’s an absolute bloodbath’: Washington Post lays off hundreds of workers

Former Post executive editor blasts owner Jeff Bezos’s ‘sickening efforts to curry favor’ with Trump
The Washington Post laid off hundreds of employees on Wednesday, which its former executive editor said “ranks among the darkest days” in the newspaper’s history. Approximately one-third of employees were affected.
Staffers at the Post have been on edge for weeks about the rumored cuts, which the publication would not confirm or deny. “It’s an absolute bloodbath,” said one employee, not authorized to speak publicly.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:39 pm
Ukraine and Russia begin second round of US-led peace talks in Abu Dhabi

Major obstacles to viable deal remain after Volodymyr Zelenskyy accuses Moscow of violating energy truce
Ukrainian and Russian negotiators held the first round of US-led peace talks in Abu Dhabi as Washington seeks a pathway to end the nearly four-year war in Ukraine.
The two-day trilateral talks that started on Wednesday come after Volodymyr Zelenskyy accused Moscow of exploiting a US-backed energy truce last week to stockpile weapons before launching a record number of ballistic missile attacks at Ukraine on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:31 pm
Pentagon threatens to cut ties with Scouting America over ‘core values’

Defense department says it may end support unless youth group abandons inclusivity and returns to ‘God and country’ values
The Pentagon is again threatening to sever ties with Scouting America unless the organization formerly known as the Boy Scouts of America reverts to “core values”, and realigns itself with service to “God and country”.
A warning to end the US military’s long-standing partnership with one of the nation’s largest and most popular youth organizations came in a Monday night post to social media by the Pentagon spokesperson, Sean Parnell, who insisted the scouting movement “lost its way” in a 2025 rebrand that promoted inclusivity and included admitted girls and LBGTQ+ members.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:49 pm
Gunmen have killed 162 people in west Nigeria attack, says Red Cross official

Government blames ‘terrorist cells’ for attack in Woro village, one of country’s deadliest in recent months
More than 160 people have been killed in a village in western Nigeria in the country’s deadliest armed assault so far this year, an aid official and a local politician have said, as communities reel from repeated, widespread acts of violence perpetrated by armed gangs and jihadists.
The death toll from Tuesday’s attack in Woro in Kwara state stood at 162 on Wednesday afternoon, according to Babaomo Ayodeji, the Kwara state secretary of the Red Cross.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:26 pm
Striking Starbucks workers urge customers to delete coffee chain’s app

Unionized baristas continue to fight for a fair contract and ask public for solidarity as strike stretches into third month
Striking Starbucks baristas are calling on customers of the world’s largest coffee chain to delete its popular mobile app in solidarity with their demands for a first union contract.
Starbucks Workers United, which has been coordinating a strike for almost three months, is vowing to press ahead.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
Doberman named Penny takes Westminster’s best in show as Catherine O’Hara honored

Penny the Doberman pinscher named America’s top dog
Linton lands second best in show nearly four decades on
Westminster honors Catherine O’Hara with video tribute
A Doberman pinscher named Penny is America’s top canine after earning the title of best in show on Tuesday night at the 150th Westminster Kennel Club dog show in New York.
Judge David Fitzpatrick tapped the four-year-old female with the mirror-sheen black-and-rust coat from Reseda, California, over a field of six other group champions, among them a Chesapeake Bay retriever named Cota, who was awarded reserve best in show to roars of approval from the crowd. Also making the final lineup were an Afghan hound named Zaida, a Lhasa Apso named JJ, a Maltese named Cookie, a smooth fox terrier named Wager and a popular old English sheepdog named Graham.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:09 pm
US prosecutors seek life sentence for man who tried to assassinate Trump in Florida

Ryan Routh, convicted of attempting to kill the president at a West Palm Beach golf club in 2024, set to face sentencing
Federal prosecutors will ask that a man convicted of trying to assassinate Donald Trump on a Florida golf course in 2024 be sentenced to life in prison at a hearing on Wednesday.
Ryan Routh is scheduled to appear before US district judge Aileen Cannon in Fort Pierce.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:06 pm
Trump’s environmental rollbacks contradict RFK Jr’s healthy America promise, report finds

Dismantling rules will make children vulnerable to chronic diseases ‘make America healthy again’ wants to eradicate
Donald Trump’s aggressive rollback of environmental protections directly contradicts the promises of his “make America healthy again” campaign, according to new research.
Helmed by Robert F Kennedy Jr, Trump’s health and human services department has touted pledges to “transform our nation’s food, fitness, air, water, soil and medicine” and “reverse the childhood chronic disease crisis”. But the president’s Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is pushing the country in the opposite direction, says the new report from the liberal research and advocacy non-profit Center for American Progress (CAP).
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:30 pm
Billionaire US investor Ken Griffin accuses Trump White House of ‘enriching’ itself

Citadel hedge fund boss, Republican donor and vocal Trump critic says administration has made ‘distasteful’ choices not in the public interest
The billionaire investor Ken Griffin has accused Donald Trump’s administration of “enriching” its families, and criticised its interference in American businesses as “distasteful”.
Griffin, who is the chief executive of the hedge fund Citadel and a large Republican donor, rebuked the Trump administration, saying it “has definitely made missteps in choosing decisions or courses that have been very, very enriching to the families of those in the administration”.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:01 pm
Democrats launch aggressive campaign to win back infrequent voters

DNC’s Local Listeners initiative will target one million ‘infrequent’ voters in battleground districts
Democrats are launching an aggressive campaign to win back voters they lost, not to Donald Trump, but to the proverbial “couch,” as they look to regain support ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.
On Wednesday, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) rolled out a new initiative called Local Listeners with the goal of targeting over one million “infrequent” voters in key battleground districts. Seeking to build on the party’s string of off-year election victories, which extended into 2026 with an upset in Texas last weekend, the DNC is betting that early, localized outreach will be crucial in winning back these voters’ trust – and their ballots – this time around.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
Pro-gun groups quickly rallied for Alex Pretti. Why didn’t they do the same for a Black gun owner?

Philando Castile, a lawful gun owner, was shot and killed by a police officer in 2016 – gun rights groups were largely silent
The killing of Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis has sparked a thorny conversation among gun rights groups and Trump administration officials about the second amendment and the right to carry concealed firearms at protests and demonstrations. Among the questions is which cases the movement rallies behind – and which it doesn’t.
In the hours and days after Pretti’s killing, dozens of local national and local gun rights groups lambasted federal officials like Kristi Noem, the homeland security secretary, and Gregory Bovino, a senior border patrol official, who baselessly claimed that Pretti’s carrying of a handgun proved that he planned to harm and kill border patrol agents. Prominent gun rights organizations, including Gun Owners of America (GOA) and the National Rifle Association (NRA), called for an independent investigation into the shooting and defended Pretti’s right to carry a gun.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:00 pm
Ukraine-Russia talks: how close is a peace deal and what does each side want?

Despite Trump-appeasing shows of willingness, a big gap remains between the positions of delegations meeting in Abu Dhabi
Senior Ukrainian and Russian officials are due to meet in Abu Dhabi for a second round of talks brokered by the Trump administration.
The two-day talks are expected to mirror last month’s format, with negotiators from Washington, Kyiv and Moscow in attendance.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:00 am
Relationship Goals review – Kelly Rowland and Method Man flirt through breezy romcom

The Valentine’s Day offerings begin with Amazon’s fast-paced, millennial-coded film that’s a fun enough watch even if its messaging is a little suspect
On its face, Relationship Goals is a classic romcom, calibrated for viewers of a certain generation. The perennially resplendent Kelly Rowland is Leah, a boss babe morning TV producer in line to replace her retiring boss (the omnipresent Matt Walsh) as showrunner. Just as she’s poised to break the glass ceiling, the network higher-ups stick her in a bake-off with Jarrett, a ringer from her romantic past played with devil charm by Method Man. The promise of one of Destiny’s Children playing the will they/won’t they game with the hunk of the Wu-Tang Clan could well prove too strong a lure to stop the scores who grew up on their music from clicking on the Prime Video thumbnail just out of nostalgic curiosity.
It’s a tractor beam made stronger by director Linda Mendoza’s extraordinarily fast pace. I mean, those 90 minutes just breeze by. Relationship Goals’s three-headed writer team – led by Michael Elliott, whose credits include Queen Latifah’s Just Wright and Beyoncé’s Carmen hip-hopera – are bracingly efficient with their paint-by-numbers setup. Leah’s besties – Treese, the tragically single makeup girl (Flamin’ Hot’s Annie Gonzalez); Brenda, the wistful morning anchor (A Black Lady Sketch Show’s Robin Thede), Roland, the omniscient assistant (Pose’s Ryan Jamaal Swain) – helpfully fast-talk through backstory points and punctuate scenes with snappy one-liners and winks at the audience. (Brenda titles her emergency engagement plan: Project Put a Ring on It.) Only Dennis Haysbert slows things down as Leah’s grieving father, but not enough to be a drag.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:21 pm
‘One moment it was a little blip. The next, our friends are dying’: the gay porn soundtrack composers lost to the Aids crisis

Gay porn in the 80s was home to beautifully moody synth music that is only now getting rediscovered – tragically too late for many of its creators
Michael Ely knew from the first moment he met James Allan Taylor that he had found someone special. The pair had separately hitchhiked to a gay bar, with fake IDs, in Sunset Beach, California. They connected, they danced and stepped outside for a kiss in the thick fog. “I was only 18 but I knew I had just met my soulmate,” says Ely.
The pair remained a couple until 2015 when Taylor, who was nicknamed Spider, died from liver cancer. A new collection of Taylor’s music, Surge Studio Music – electronic pieces he composed for gay porn films – has just been released. “I was like: wait, there’s a fanbase for 80s gay porn music?” laughs Ely. “I had no idea. When Josh contacted me, I found the cassette tapes in a box in the back of the closet. They’d been there for ever.”
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:00 pm
Young ladies too tired to stand at a Black debutante ball: Miranda Barnes’s best photograph

‘The girls wait for two or three hours to be introduced. The reason they’re sitting on the ground is because there weren’t any chairs in the waiting room’
My new book Social Season opens with a poem set in the mid-1800s, a time that marked the beginning of a period of increased financial prosperity for some African Americans. Cotillion dances have European origins, but in the poem, Black New Yorkers perform classic dances such as waltzes and quadrilles and are dressed in fine outfits. These Black debutante balls go back a long way, and are one example of African Americans trying to create a better life. Today, they continue to introduce young women into society and retain a strong emphasis on the participants’ education.
Initially, I had been working towards creating a book with a larger overview of Black subcultures in general. I’d photographed cheerleaders, churches, traditional rodeos and other intergenerational community gatherings. I wanted to include a debutante ball in a post-industrial city, and Detroit has a very rich Black history. When I first reached out to the city’s Cotillion Society, I only planned to attend one year’s event. But after that evening in 2022, I realised this was a project in itself and that I was really going to have to work for the images I wanted.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:02 pm
A moment that changed me: I shaved off my hair – and immediately became an invisible woman

Strangers used to open doors, help lift my pram and greet me with approval when I looked ‘like a mum’. After one simple haircut, I was treated very differently
In November 2000, two weeks after giving birth to my first and only child, I found myself collapsed in bed, breastfeeding in front of Top of the Pops, hair matted, sheets dirty, surrounded by sick-soaked muslin rags. I liked it. Or at least, it felt like a perfectly reasonable thing to be doing, until Madonna – who had given birth to Rocco Ritchie only three months earlier – appeared on the screen in a cropped leather jacket, belly bared, sexy-dancing to Don’t Tell Me. Did I feel inspired? Resentful? Brimming with pity for this attention-seeker? For sure, it was all three.
As the weeks wore on, I began to see how it might be possible to shower, put on actual clothes and maybe even pop to the corner shop. Occasional visits to cafes, museums and other warm, baby-friendly spaces soon followed and stopped me from feeling as if I had fallen into a well of loneliness.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 6:55 am
The place that stayed with me: I was cautious in showing my queerness, until a night spent dancing at a Tokyo gay bar

Despite hearing many words of warning about expressing public affection, travelling in Japan with my boyfriend helped me loosen up
The first time I saw gay people on TV, it was during an ABC news package about Sydney’s Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras. My Egyptian parents were chomping through a bag of dried pumpkin seeds when the assault on our eyeballs took place.
Muscle bears in backless chaps, shirtless lifesavers in tiny budgie smugglers, chunky women with buzzcuts and saucer-plate nipples revving their Harley-Davidsons down the strip. It was too much for my father, who announced: “Atstaghfurallah: they should not show such things.” Mum just sucked her teeth in dismay. But the sight of all the handsome, gleaming men sent a hot flush of excitement up my 12-year-old cheeks.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:00 pm
‘She thought it was too sexy!’: portraits of Kate Moss, Grace Jones and a tea-drinking chimp – in pictures

From a gold-covered Dennis Rodman to Jack Nicholson sitting in the snow, Albert Watson has spent a career shooting the stars – as well as the occasional giant coffee spoon
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 7:00 am
When Maga oligarchs control the platforms, it isn’t really a debate about ‘free speech’ | Rafael Behr

Moves to ban under-16s from social media should raise deeper questions about who controls democracy’s digital infrastructure
The last UK general election of the 20th century was also the first to anticipate, albeit faintly, the coming technological revolution. The 1997 Labour and Conservative manifestos both included pledges to connect schools to something they called “the information superhighway”.
That metaphor soon fell out of use, unmourned, although it contains an interesting policy implication. Roads need rules to prevent accidents. Superhighways do not sound like the kind of places where children should play.
Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist
Guardian Newsroom: Can Labour come back from the brink? On Monday 30 April, ahead of May elections join Gaby Hinsliff, Zoe Williams, Polly Toynbee and Rafael Behr as they discuss how much of a threat is Labour from both the Green party and Reform and whether Keir Starmer can survive as leader of the Labour party? Book tickets here or at guardian.live
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 6:00 am
On a street in Minneapolis, two versions of masculinity clashed. One anchored in fear, the other in care | Alexander Hurst

Alex Pretti had courage and empathy. This, not Maga’s conception of male power, is what we must teach young men
The first thing that grabbed me about the Rapture’s 2011 song It Takes Time to be a Man was the warbly, analogue fuzz of its recurring guitar and piano riff. Once that drew me in, what kept me listening were the lyrics’ hard-marriage of masculinity and empathy. In the final verse, Luke Jenner tells us that: “Well there’s room in your heart now / for excellence to take a stand / And there’s tears that need shedding / it’s all part of the plan”.
For the past year, rightwing voices have waged war on empathy. According to Elon Musk, empathy is “the fundamental weakness of western civilisation”. Others go further, calling it “toxic”, “suicidal” and even “sinful”. Certainly, the macho wing of the Maga right sees no place for it amid its (mis)appropriation of medieval history and imagery that is visible everywhere from the face paint and horned headdress of the “QAnon shaman”, convicted for his role in the US Capitol siege, to the tattooed arms and body of Donald Trump’s secretary of war, Pete Hegseth.
And yet, consider the ideal of chivalry held by medieval knights: generosity and suspicion of profit, courtesy, honesty and the bind of your word, hospitality, abiding by the rules of combat and granting mercy to your adversary – whose life a knight takes only as a last resort. I say this not because I think the medieval knight should be the new standard for modern men, but to point out that Maga men would fail, miserably so, to live up to their own ideals.
Alexander Hurst is a Guardian Europe columnist. His memoir, Generation Desperation, is published in January 2026
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Published: February 4, 2026, 5:00 am
Trump 2.0 is proving a challenge for Hollywood – just look at this deeply silly new thriller | Emma Brockes

Anniversary depicts a rightwing takeover of the US inspired by a book of essays. But it’s fuzzy on the bits in between
As we all know from history and the current news cycle, autocracy is bad. But it can also be boring. For every explosive confrontation in Minneapolis, there is a quieter, less tangible threat in the form of Kash Patel’s FBI seizing voting records from Fulton county, Georgia – a state Donald Trump lost by fewer than 12,000 votes in 2020 – or the steady implementation of 900-page manifesto by the influential rightwing thinktank the Heritage Foundation, neither of which lend themselves to blockbuster treatment. And so we have a problem: how to animate the quiet part of what’s happening in the US to reflect a dangerous but tedious reality – namely, that this thing ends not with a bang, but a combination of voter manipulation and federal electoral interference that undermines faith in the democratic process.
I bring this up after a week of watching popular movies that resonate in Trump’s US, most of which go heavy on the firefights and light on the details of how we arrive at them. The latest, Anniversary, which launched this week on Netflix – a streamer increasingly uninterested in the subtleties of any situation, let alone this one – depicts a US in which an evil rightwing genius in the shape of a beautiful young woman talks the country into ditching democracy via the medium of (I love this detail; the sheer optimism of it) a stirring book of essays.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:30 pm
Things reek, stink and pong – but why are there no verbs for describing a delightful odour? | Adrian Chiles

We don’t have a single verb to express smelling something nice. Welsh and Croatian, by contrast, are never caught short when something fragrant gets right up your nose
I remember the first time I remembered a smell. This was remembering to the extent that it stopped me in my tracks, taking me back to a specific moment, a specific place and a specific feeling. The smell was that of a bike shop. Mainly rubber, with notes of oil and plastic and a strong hint of sheer excitement. In that instant I was about 10 years old, in Bache Brothers Cycles at Lye Cross, near Stourbridge, in the West Midlands. My grandad was next to me, with the shop man. I was getting a bike for my birthday.
When I was talking about the power of smell on the radio, Speth, a Welsh speaker from Manchester, got in touch to say that in Welsh you can hear a smell as well as smell it. At first this sounded charming, if far-fetched. But the more I thought about it, the more sense it made. While I can’t – in English, anyway – exactly hear the smell of that Black Country bike shop in 1977, I can smell, hear and see it very clearly. I can feel it too. I can feel the shop man’s grip as he lifts me into the saddle. And I can hear him saying to my grandad: “Blimey, he’s a lump, isn’t he?” Ever sensitive about my weight, that was a sour note. But I’ll let it pass, because all I can feel, then and now, is the general joy.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 4:16 pm
Make the orchestra great again: how a painting of Trump as conductor misunderstands the symphony | Tom Service

A new painting by the maestro of Trumpian kitsch offers a fever dream of musical unity – and fundamentally misunderstands orchestras and conductors. And where are the music stands?
Events in the United States of Trumpland continue to reveal staggering new dimensions to the possibilities of orchestral music. Trump’s announcement that his “Trump Kennedy Center” is to be shut for a refit is a brilliantly cynical way to stop the noise when artists try to cancel their appearances during the rest of his presidential tenure: it’s shut already! Bigly losers, all of you!
But that’s not the new dawn for the artform I’m talking about. I mean the inspirational painting unveiled by the maestro of Trumpian kitsch, Jon McNaughton (and stamped with the presidential seal of approval – ie a post on Truth Social).
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:29 pm
Want to avoid an invitation? Try the 'soft no' | Polly Hudson

I didn’t know how to refuse the offer of a drink without causing offence – until I learned how to kindly demur
Although honesty is the best policy in general, justice for Pinocchio, because it turns out sometimes lying is the only option. In certain situations, if you didn’t smash the glass and break out an emergency fib, you’d simply be cruel. The secret to pulling it off in a way you can live with, as I’ve just learned, is in the branding.
I was faced with a delicate dilemma: an acquaintance I had unwittingly socialised with in a group messaged me, suggesting a drink one-on-one. There is no way of saying thanks but no thanks to that kind of invitation without causing offence. This person is perfectly nice, it’s not like an evening with them would be an ordeal, but I was pretty confident we had more than covered the totality of our common ground during the group hang. Life’s quite short, isn’t it? I really didn’t want to hurt their feelings, but I also really didn’t want to go. However, backed into a corner, I came to the conclusion I’d have to spend time, money and small talk doing it anyway, because of stupid old politeness.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
New York City’s real animal welfare crisis isn’t the Westminster Dog Show | Lauren Caulk

As Westminster week once again put dog breeding under the spotlight, Peta’s messaging remains as incisive as ever. But its moral clarity fades when the conversation shifts to cats
Every February, the Westminster Dog Show arrives in New York City trailing equal parts pageantry, nostalgia and protest. The dogs come to be judged. The owners and handlers come to uphold breed standards. And, almost as reliably as the movie references and the best-in-show ribbon, Peta arrives ready to dominate the conversation.
If there is one certainty about the Super Bowl of canines, it’s that the protest will share the stage with the pageantry. Westminster is an annual collision of tradition, spectacle and dissent, and Peta has become exceptionally good at owning that moment. This year was no different. Two enormous billboards screamed down from across the street of the Javits Center, where breed judging unfolded on Monday and Tuesday ahead of the prime-time sessions at Madison Square Garden. One read: Flat-faced dogs struggle to breathe. NEVER buy them. Another: You can get a nose job. They can’t. DON’T buy breathing-impaired breeds.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:45 pm
Mauricio Pochettino’s odd jab at Tim Weah misread the player and the moment | Leander Schaerlaeckens

The USMNT manager said players should stay out of conversations that don’t deal with soccer
Last week, Mauricio Pochettino began a World Cup year with an unforced error.
At the tail-end of a virtual press conference that covered a wide range of ongoing USMNT business, the 53-year-old Argentine – who has made himself commendably available to the American soccer press – was asked about recent comments by Tim Weah.
Leander Schaerlaeckens’ book on the United States men’s national soccer team, The Long Game, is out on 12 May. You can preorder it here. He teaches at Marist University.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:29 pm
Cool Runnings 2.0: Jamaica’s bobsleigh crew want their own Hollywood ending

Chris Stokes, part of the 1988 team that inspired a film, is setting lofty goals as head of Jamaica’s bobsleigh federation
It did not make so much as a ripple outside of its minor sporting niche, but something particularly unusual occurred in the bobsleigh world earlier this year. Upon turning up in the New York outpost of Lake Placid for their final Winter Olympics warm-up competition, Jamaica’s four-man bobsleigh team were informed they were not allowed to take part. A hat-trick of gold medals over the preceding few weeks had seen them rise too high in the world rankings to take their customary place on the second-tier North American Cup circuit. They had simply become too good.
In the overwhelming majority of countries, the Winter Olympics is an assortment of sporting oddities held in an alternative climate that might pique attention every four years. Rarely does it break through to the mainstream, which is what makes Jamaican bobsleigh such a curious exception.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:00 pm
Ten athletes from Team USA to watch at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics

With the Winter Olympics set to begin in proper on Friday, here’s a look at 10 Americans worth keeping an eye on
Mikaela Shiffrin has surpassed Vonn’s record haul of World Cup wins and staked her claim as the GOAT. But Vonn has a solid claim to be the best ever in the speed events (downhill, super-G), and she has been racing exclusively in those disciplines since returning from retirement, surging to the top of the World Cup downhill standings at age 41. She has a score to settle with the sport’s biggest stage – her lifetime total of three Olympic medals (one gold) would probably be higher if not for a horror crash in practice in 2006 and injuries that either limited or outright excluded her from other Games. After some selection drama in the team combined event in last year’s world championships, it seems inconceivable that Vonn and Shiffrin, both of whom have had some misfortune in the Olympics, would not be paired up to form Alpine skiing’s equivalent of the 1992 basketball Dream Team. Vonn was in a nasty crash last weekend but it seems that she will be fit to take part in Italy.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
Quadruple-chasing Arsenal can dream a micromanaged dream | Barney Ronay

After prevailing in a gristly physical ballet with Chelsea, Arsenal’s season has now reached a point of pre-ignition
Zamina mina. Waka, waka, hé-hé. By the end of this gruelling, bruising, deep tissue ache of a football match, it felt as though the opening 96 minutes had been staged simply as an extended tease for a startlingly carefree final 30 seconds.
Up to that point Arsenal and Chelsea had produced something that felt like the football equivalent of having your eyes descaled with a wire brush. This was a dense, gristly kind of physical ballet. Johan Cruyff once said that in football the clock is never your friend. It’s either moving too fast or too slowly. Here the clock didn’t really seem to move at all, or to be going backwards. The clock hated everyone.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 11:55 pm
Outspoken Cristian Romero brings his own form of leadership to Tottenham

The Spurs captain is driven by an internal fire and is unafraid of dropping truth bombs on the club’s ownership
Cristian Romero had been named as the Tottenham captain, a symbol of a new era, of fresh direction and hope. It was last September, the eve of the club’s Champions League return against Villarreal and it was time for him to speak to the English media. A rare appointment but one that could not be sidestepped given his rise in status.
There had to be a few nerves at Spurs because Romero was not exactly the diplomat over the course of the previous season, dropping his truth bombs, the shrapnel flying at the board and ownership, in particular. It would be a bit awkward in parts but Romero got through it. There were no unwanted headlines.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 8:00 am
Butler did it: 11 years on, was the NFL’s most criticized call actually the right decision?

The last time the Seahawks and Patriots met in a Super Bowl, a dramatic interception by an undrafted rookie changed the history of both franchises
When the New England Patriots faced off against the Denver Broncos in this season’s AFC championship, Malcolm Butler was at home in Houston. He had considered attending the game in Denver or watching on TV in a No 21 Patriots jersey, which he wore in Foxboro for four seasons through the mid-to-late 2010s, but feared he might jinx the outcome. In the end, it was just him and his nerves for company.
Just as Butler was feeling somewhat at peace with that setup, and the Patriots’ prospects, a bad omen intruded: His wifi glitched, delaying the broadcast as the Patriots clung on to a three-point lead in the fourth-quarter. “I was lagging bad,” Butler tells the Guardian. “But I did get the wifi back working. And as soon as I did my phone was ringing like crazy, so I knew something was going right. It’s crazy that we’re back.”
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 10:00 am
Are the Whitecaps about to die? Vancouver sound alarm bells amid difficult sale process

Scheduling and financial impasses at Vancouver’s World Cup stadium are leading down a road the league hasn’t traveled in over a decade
On the surface, Vancouver Whitecaps CEO Axel Schuster’s press conference last week would have felt familiar to almost any North American sports fan. Once again, a team was agitating for more money or a better stadium. Once again, local governments were at least partially to blame.
Some of his comments, though, felt more alien, and raised a question that seemed unfathomable just a couple of months ago: are the Vancouver Whitecaps about to die?
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 5:52 pm
Winter Olympics: full schedule for Milano Cortina 2026

Keep abreast of every event at the Winter Olympics with our day-by-day and sport-by-sport schedules
The Winter Olympics returns to Italy for the first time in two decades. From the fashion capital of Milan to the dramatic peaks of Cortina d’Ampezzo, the Milano Cortina Games – the first to be co-hosted by two cities – will stretch across northern Italy blending world-class winter sport with a strong sense of history and ambition.
Sixteen sports and more than 110 gold medals await, from the raw speed of alpine skiing and bobsleigh to the tactical endurance of biathlon and cross-country. Alpine fans will once again be drawn to Mikaela Shiffrin, still redefining excellence across the technical disciplines.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:00 pm
Skinning, boot-packing and downhill skiing: welcome to skimo at the Winter Olympics

The Games’ newest sport combines the seemingly impossible task of ascending a mountain on skis with hiking and then a rapid descent
No one could suggest that the Winter Olympics are lacking in challenge. Skiers zipping down the slopes and flying through the air. Skeletons hurtling around at more than 100km/h. Ice skaters, metal-bladed, spinning, leaping and twisting. Slopestyle athletes pulling off the most outrageous tricks while landing the biggest air. But everyone from recreational skiers to the most extreme sports enthusiasts knows there is always room for more.
Enter the new kid on the ice block at Milano Cortina 2026: ski mountaineering. The new challenge? How about going up the mountain, hiking a bit, followed by a rapid descent on the tiniest skis possible. Before you ask, “why”? Cast your mind over the other disciplines on the schedule and remember that the answer is almost always, “why not”?
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:00 pm
Lindsey Vonn confident she can compete at Olympics despite ‘completely ruptured’ ACL

Vonn confident despite ACL rupture before Olympics
Will decide after testing knee at race speeds soon
Olympic downhill scheduled for Sunday at Cortina
Lindsey Vonn said she is “confident” she can compete at the Milano Cortina Winter Games despite revealing she has been managing a ruptured ACL, maintaining that her Olympic comeback remains on track after a crash last week raised fresh doubts over her participation.
Speaking on Tuesday, the 41-year-old American said she was approaching the final decision cautiously but remained focused on lining up for the downhill at the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre in Cortina d’Ampezzo, where the Olympic women’s alpine programme opens Sunday.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 3:28 pm
Winter Olympics briefing: final preparations amid the noise for Milano Cortina

What to look out for as the action gets under way in Italy despite the Games not yet beginning until Friday
In my opening briefing last week, I wrote that organisers were banking on the cultural pull of Italy – its architecture, food, history and fashion – to cut through any political noise surrounding the Milano Cortina Games. So far, that has not been the case. And the Olympics have not yet officially begun.
Hundreds of demonstrators gathered in Milan’s Piazza XXV Aprile, named for the day Italy was liberated from Nazi fascism in 1945, to protest against the planned deployment of ICE agents during the Games. The ICE agents to be deployed to Milan are not from the same unit as the immigration agents cracking down in Minneapolis and other US cities.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 8:00 am
This is Muslim New York: artists, thinkers and politicos on defining a new era for the city

A burgeoning set of Muslim creatives and intellectuals are thriving amid the backdrop of Zohran Mamdani’s rise. We ask 18 of them about this historic moment in New York City life
Against the backdrop of Zohran Mamdani’s mayoral rise is a dynamic scene of Muslim creatives and intellectuals who are helping usher in a new era for New York City. Their prominence represents a rebuke of the ugly Islamophobia that defined the period following 9/11, and is in many ways an outcrop of the mass movement for Palestinian rights forged over the last two years. We ask 18 Muslim New Yorkers to discuss their work and what this moment means.
How Muslim New Yorkers are changing the city’s cultural landscape
Published: February 3, 2026, 12:00 pm
Israeli strikes kill at least 21 in Gaza as Rafah patient crossings halted

Six children among dead as Israeli agency restricts evacuations two days after crossing to Egypt reopened
Israeli tank shelling and airstrikes have killed at least 21 people, including six children and seven women, in Gaza, and Israel has halted the evacuation of patients through the Rafah border crossing just two days after it reopened.
Among the casualties was a medic who rushed to the scene to assist the wounded and was killed by a second strike on the same location in the southern city of Khan Younis. Tents in al-Mawasi, an encampment of displaced people in Khan Younis, were shredded by the blasts.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 3:45 pm
Drax insiders privately raised concerns over its sustainability claims, court papers show

Company publicly denied allegations that primary forests were being cut down to fuel UK’s biggest power plant
Senior executives at Drax raised concerns internally about the validity of the energy company’s sustainability claims while it publicly denied allegations that it was cutting down environmentally important forests for fuel, court documents have revealed.
Britain’s biggest power plant assured ministers and civil servants of the company’s green credentials as it scrambled to defend itself against claims in a BBC Panorama documentary that it had burned wood sourced from “old-growth” forests in Canada.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:02 pm
Coroner opens inquest into five babies murdered by Lucy Letby

Cheshire coroner says there is ‘reason to suspect unnatural deaths’, with proceedings to begin in September
A coroner has formally opened inquests into the deaths of five newborn babies Lucy Letby was convicted of murdering.
In a 20-minute hearing at Cheshire coroner’s court, the senior coroner Jacqueline Devonish heard brief details of the deaths before adjourning proceedings until September.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:15 pm
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of ex-Libyan leader, killed, say officials

Dictator’s second son, a key figure in post-2011 Libyan politics, reportedly shot dead at home by masked assailants
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi and for years the second most powerful person in the country, has been killed in a village south-west of Tripoli, officials said on Tuesday night.
The 53-year-old died from gunshot wounds in the town of Zintan, 85 miles south-west of the capital, according to the Libyan attorney general’s office. Gaddafi’s own office said he was killed in his home by masked assailants.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:25 pm
Death of Nigerian singer after snakebite highlights crisis of ‘preventable’ fatalities

Ifunanya Nwangene died in hospital after being bitten in her Abuja home, raising questions about the availability of effective antivenoms
In a last message to her friends, Ifunanya Nwangene wrote: “Please come.”
The 26-year-old singer and former contestant on The Voice Nigeria had been bitten by a snake while asleep in her flat in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja, and was in hospital, anxiously awaiting treatment.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
An ‘amazing feat’: how was 13-year-old Austin Appelbee able to swim for four hours to save his family?

Saltwater, survival backstroke and sheer mind over matter may have helped the teenager save his family, experts say
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An Australian 13-year-old who swam 4km (2.49 miles) to shore and then ran 2km (1.24 miles) to get help for his stranded family has been described as “superhuman”.
Experts say Austin Appelbee’s feat of endurance exceeded the limits of what is normally perceived as possible. So how was the teenager able to save the day, and is there any precedent for it?
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:00 pm
Harry Potter’s Draco Malfoy becomes mascot for year of the horse in China

Mandarin transliteration of character’s name regarded as auspicious, prompting wave of memes and fan art
Draco Malfoy, one of Harry Potter’s most recognisable villains, has become an unlikely lunar new year icon across China, as fans embrace the character for the year of the horse.
In Mandarin, Malfoy’s name is transliterated as “mǎ ěr fú”. The first character means “horse” while the final character, “fú”, means “fortune” or “blessing” – a powerful symbol found across lunar new year celebrations.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 8:47 am
Wildlife photographer of the year – people’s choice 2026

A shortlist of 24 images has been selected for the wildlife photographer of the year people’s choice award. You can vote for your favourite image online. The winner will be announced on 25 March and shown from that date as part of the overall wildlife photographer of the year exhibition, which runs until 12 July at the Natural History Museum in London
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 7:00 am
California officials move forward with plans to exterminate mule deer from island

Conservancy sees nonnative species as major threat to local biodiversity, while residents rally to preserve local identity
California wildlife officials moved forward last week with a plan to eradicate a mule deer herd from Santa Catalina Island: extermination.
The plan has long pitted locals from the island off the coast of Los Angeles against the Catalina Island Conservancy, an environmental non-profit that manages 88% of the island’s terrain. The conservancy sees mule deer, which are not native to the island, as a major threat to local biodiversity, water quality and fire resilience.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 11:05 pm
‘It’s sick’: Trump administration uses mascot called ‘Coalie’ to push dirtiest fossil fuel

Cartoon lump of coal with giant eyes was spotlighted by US interior secretary in X post saying: ‘Mine, Baby, Mine!’
The Trump administration has turned to an unusual weapon in its attempt to resurrect coal mining – a cartoon lump of coal, complete with giant eyes and yellow mining garb, called “Coalie”.
The administration’s new mascot, kitted out with a helmet, boots and gloves, was introduced in a seemingly artificial intelligence-generated picture posted online by Doug Burgum, Donald Trump’s interior secretary.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 10:42 pm
Landslides on one side, floods on the other: the Costa Rican village desperate to escape the climate crisis

With government action stalled and living in ‘inhumane’ conditions, families in San José are making plans to relocate
In Emilio Peña Delgado’s home, several photos hang on the wall. One shows him standing in front of a statue with his wife and oldest son in the centre of San José and smiling. In another, his two sons sit in front of caricatures from the film Cars. For him, the photos capture moments of joy that feel distant when he returns home to La Carpio, a neighbourhood on the outskirts of Costa Rica’s capital.
Delgado migrated with his family from Nicaragua to Costa Rica when he was 10, as his parents sought greater stability. When he started a family of his own, his greatest hope was to give his children the security he had lacked. But now, that hope is often interrupted by the threat of extreme weather events.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 2:00 pm
Charlie Kirk killing: key Utah prosecutor denies conflict of interest

Lawyers for accused Tyler Robinson urge removal because prosecutor’s daughter attended rally where Kirk was killed
A Utah prosecutor involved in the case against Tyler Robinson, the alleged killer of the rightwing activist Charlie Kirk, denied allegations of a conflict of interest in the case during a hearing on Tuesday.
Robinson’s attorneys have argued that a judge should disqualify local prosecutors because the adult daughter of Chad Grunander, a deputy county attorney, was in attendance at the rally on a Utah college campus where Kirk was shot dead. The defense alleges that the office’s move to seek the death penalty just days after Kirk’s killing indicated a “strong emotional reaction” from Grunander, and suggested a conflict of interest.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:49 am
Mitch McConnell admitted to hospital with ‘flu-like symptoms’

Statement says Republican senator, 83, checked himself into local hospital and prognosis is ‘positive’
The Republican senator Mitch McConnell was admitted to a hospital on Monday night due to “flu-like symptoms”, his office said in a statement.
“In an abundance of caution, after experiencing flu-like symptoms over the weekend, Senator McConnell checked himself into a local hospital for evaluation last night,” the statement reads. “His prognosis is positive and he is grateful for the excellent care he is receiving.”
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:54 am
Jill Biden’s ex-husband charged with murder of his wife

Linda Stevenson found unresponsive on 28 December after police responded to domestic dispute
The ex-husband of former US first lady Jill Biden has been arrested and charged with the murder of his wife, officials said on Tuesday.
William Stevenson, 77, was taken into custody on Monday and is facing a charge of first-degree murder in the death of Linda Stevenson, according to a grand jury indictment filed in Delaware.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 7:18 pm
Colombian president and Trump put aside insults for amicable White House meeting

Leaders had been trading hostile remarks for months but Gustavo Petro’s visit ended with warm words from US counterpart
After months of trading insults – from “sick man” and “drug trafficking leader” on one side, to “accomplice to genocide” with a “senile brain” on the other – the first meeting between Donald Trump and Gustavo Petro ended with pleasantries, autographs and a Maga cap.
The Colombian president was received by his US counterpart for a closed-door meeting at the White House, with no press access.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 11:21 pm
‘A small Africa in Colombia’: the palenqueras of Cartagena

In the south American port city, an expressive Black ancestral community live full, self-fashioned lives protected by culture and identity
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Hello and welcome to The Long Wave. This week, it comes to you from Cartagena, Colombia, where I was attending a literary festival but, to be honest, have been mostly eating empanadas. It was my first time in Latin America, and I was not quite ready for a strange sort of culture shock, one that was as much about alienation as it was about recognition. I walked around the city in circles, trying to pound my way into absorbing a place of complex, layered histories.
But it was Cartagena’s racial legacy that, at points, I found overwhelming. It sounds naive, but there is something about travelling halfway across the world to meet others of African descent that brings home the scale of the impact of centuries of enslavement. And it was in the “palenqueras” of Cartagena that I felt that history, in all its contradictions and legacies, resided.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:13 pm
Ugandan opposition leader still in hiding as feud with president’s son escalates

Bobi Wine’s whereabouts unknown since he fled what he said was night raid on his home by police and military
Bobi Wine, Uganda’s most prominent opposition figure, remains in hiding nearly three weeks after a disputed election, as a high-stakes social media feud with the east African country’s military chief escalates.
Wine’s whereabouts have been unknown since 16 January, when he fled what he said was a night raid by the police and military on his home, leaving his family behind.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:07 pm
Wegovy and Ozempic maker forecasts sharp drop in revenue for 2026

Novo Nordisk share price plunges after blaming lower US drug prices, patent protection issues and rising competition
The maker of Wegovy and Ozempic, Novo Nordisk, has predicted a sharp drop in revenues this year owing to what its boss described as a “painful” push by Donald Trump to lower US weight-loss drug prices, rising competition, and the loss of important patent protections.
Denmark’s Novo, once the poster-child for the growth in weight-loss treatments, said sales this year were likely to fall between 5% and 13%, ending years of double-digit gains, despite the promising launch of its new Wegovy pill in the US. Its share price plummeted 17% on Wednesday, erasing all gains so far this year. In the past year the stock has lost nearly 50% of its value.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 10:51 am
Pinterest sacks two engineers for creating software to identify fired workers

Digital pinboard business cutting 15% of workforce as it invests heavily in AI
Pinterest has fired two engineers who created a software tool to identify which workers had lost their jobs in a recent round of cuts and then shared the information, according to reports.
The digital pinboard business announced significant job cuts earlier this month, with the chief executive, Bill Ready, telling staff he was “doubling down on an AI-forward approach”, according to a LinkedIn post by a former employee.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 9:48 am
May-a: ‘I was not in a good place – no one’s in a good place when they get a neck tattoo’

She’s just 24, but Maya Cumming has won the Hottest 100, survived LA, played with Cyndi Lauper – and is only now releasing her first album, which ‘was driven by spite’
At just 24, the Australian singer-songwriter Maya Cumming – known to fans as May-a – has already experienced the promise and heartache of Los Angeles as a star-making town. In 2021, she signed with Atlantic Records in the US ahead of her debut EP, Don’t Kiss Ur Friends – a moment she described at the time as “a dream”. The following February, she featured on Flume’s precision-made festival anthem Say Nothing, which went on to win the 2022 Triple J Hottest 100.
Amid that whirlwind period, Cumming was flown back and forth to LA for arranged studio sessions with producers and artists she felt little connection to, ultimately relocating there in 2024. What should’ve felt like a career arrival was instead a dispiriting eye-opener.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:00 pm
The Investigation of Lucy Letby review – this sensationalist take isn’t what this awful case needs

The broad-brush, emotive telling of the questions around the neonatal nurse’s conviction uses arrest footage that her parents have said ‘would likely kill us’ if they watched. Did her mother’s howl of distress need to be broadcast?
The Investigation of Lucy Letby is at least the fifth documentary that has been produced in the wake of the neonatal nurse’s convictions in 2023 and 2024 on seven counts of murder and seven of attempted murder of babies in her care at the Countess of Chester hospital. Probably the best of them was ITV’s Lucy Letby: Beyond Reasonable Doubt? last summer. It did a fine job of meticulously explaining the evidence against her – and why a growing body of experts believe that at the very least her conviction on the basis of what was gathered is unsafe, and at most that none of the babies were murdered by her, but were victims of a chronically understaffed and mismanaged unit that might have sought to scapegoat an individual for its failings.
The Investigation of Lucy Letby does not compare in its attention to detail, preferring a broader-brush, more emotive telling of the story of either one of the most prolific female serial killers in history or one of the greatest miscarriages of justice in recent times. Its publicity has made much of the fact that it contains hitherto unseen footage of Letby’s arrest at her parents’ home. Her mother and father say they were unaware that it would be shown until Lucy’s barrister told them. “We will not watch it – it would likely kill us if we did.” When the footage is shown, you can hear her mother howl in distress as the police take Lucy away. It is an almost inhuman sound. It is hard to say what value such an inclusion adds except to warn the viewer to brace themselves for sensationalism along the way as the case is pieced together using accounts from the police, people – from both sides – directly involved with the case, Letby’s best friend Maisie and Letby’s current lawyer (not the one who represented her in court), Mark McDonald, along with media reporting from the time and tapes of her interviews with investigators.
The Investigation of Lucy Letby is on Netflix now
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 8:01 am
André Is an Idiot review – a riotously funny, painfully honest film about facing death

A cancer diagnosis becomes the catalyst for gallows humour, rage and hard-won emotional openness in a disarmingly frank film about how to say goodbye
There are about a zillion films – fiction, nonfiction, and everything in between – about people coping with cancer, so kudos to the team behind this one for finding a relatively fresh way to tackle the subject. San Francisco-resident André Ricciardi – a constantly wisecracking former advertising executive, a semi-reformed hard-living hedonist, and father of two teenage girls and loving husband to wife Janice – was only in his early 50s when he realised that he’d made a big mistake when he passed up the chance to have a colonoscopy test with his best friend, Lee Einhorn. Because only a year or so on from when he would have had that colonoscopy, he found out that he has stage four colon cancer which had it been spotted earlier might have been more treatable. Damn.
With assistance from director Tony Benna and a film crew, Ricciardi goes on a mission to create, among other goals, an unconventional public service announcement in the form of this film to persuade (American) viewers not to be idiots like him and get colonoscopies whenever possible after the age of 45. (In the UK, the procedure isn’t automatically offered by the NHS, although home faecal immunochemical tests are recommended every couple of years after a certain age.) At one point, Ricciardi even hooks up with his colleagues at his old advertising agency to advise on a witty PSA campaign using fruit and other everyday objects with vaguely anus-shaped orifices to raise awareness.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 9:00 am
V/H/S/Halloween review – plenty of grisly invention in latest helping of engaging horror anthology

Portmanteau series’ latest instalment has nice touches with eerily jolly villains and haunted soda, but it could use a bit of an edit
This horror bonanza, the eighth instalment in the V/H/S anthology series, is a mixed bag, with some very high highs and regrettably poor lows. This is essentially a collection of Halloween-themed shorts, and while they’re billed as “found footage” in keeping with the conceit of the original, the idea that you’re watching found footage has been more or less worn away to a nub at this point. The series would in all honesty be better off ditching that element, and simply leaning into the broader idea of a regular horror anthology of unsettling short films.
Among the highlights is a riotous and disgusting chapter called Fun Size, made with grisly flair by Casper Kelly, whose viral masterpiece Too Many Cooks took the internet by storm in 2014 and whose feature film Buddy just premiered at Sundance. Fun Size sees a group of young adults stumble into what might best be described as a wrongness zone where they’re pitted against a villain who comes on like the vicious kid brother of the Ghostbusters Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 11:00 am
Jon Stewart on Epstein files: ‘I’m just not sure anybody is going to be held accountable’

Late-night hosts rued the lack of consequences for any rich and powerful men named in the latest batch of documents
Late-night hosts reacted to the latest batch of Epstein files, which failed to redact several victims’ names and photos while still protecting Donald Trump.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 5:02 pm
‘Charisma is a form of psychosis’: inspiring Eric Clapton, having kids at 70 … the irreverent life of post-punk puppeteer Ted Milton

He crossed paths with William Burroughs, Terry Gilliam and Spitting Image while whipping up almighty grooves with his band Blurt. Now 82, he’s back on tour – and bracing for a warts-and-all documentary made by his many children
The big bloke in the khaki suit speaks quietly these days. We are nestled in the corner of Ted Milton’s studio above a rehearsal space in Deptford, London, cocooned by record boxes, poetry books, plus a single big, bright suitcase, and I have to nudge the recorder closer to pick up his voice. Milton – a saxophonist, poet, countercultural survivor and one-time avant garde puppeteer – is 82, and uses a couple of sticks to get around, yet he is once again going on the road across Europe with his long-running band Blurt, as well as releasing a new album with his duo the Odes.
Today, he is making record covers destined for the tour merch table with the help of his old woodblock setup. “That orange suitcase?” he points across the desk. “I just bought it.” He booms out a massive laugh, as if to prove he still has the lung power to command a room. “I’m a fetishist about luggage. I know how to survive touring. Haha!”
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 2:00 pm
On the Future of Species by Adrian Woolfson review – are we on the verge of creating synthetic life?

A genomic entrepreneur’s guide to the coming revolution in biology raises troubling questions about ethics and safety
The prophet Ezekiel once claimed to have seen four beasts emerge from a burning cloud, “sparkling like the colour of burnished brass”. Each had wings and four faces: that of a man, a lion, an ox and an eagle. Similarly, a creature called Buraq, something between a mule and a donkey with wings and a human face, was said to have carried the prophet Muhammad on his journeys; while the ancient Greeks gave us the centaur, the mythical human-horse hybrid recently rebooted by JK Rowling in the Harry Potter books.
“The impulse to blend the anatomical traits of other species with those of humans appears to be hardwired into our imagination,” notes Adrian Woolfson in his intriguing and disturbing analysis of a biological revolution he believes is about to sweep the planet. Very soon, we will not only dream up imaginary animals – we will turn them into biological reality.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 9:00 am
Tantrums, rancid meatloaf and family silver stuffed into underpants: the delicate art of the Holocaust comedy

Making light of one of the darkest horrors of the 20th century is a risky business – but a new generation is taking ownership of family histories by making space for human foibles, says an award-winning graphic novelist
My beloved German-Jewish grandmother Gisela was not an affable person. She enjoyed laughing at her own jokes, revelling in the misfortunes of others, and telling people off. If an event combined opportunities for all three activities, so much the better.
When my father was six, he refused to eat the meatloaf that his mother had given him for lunch. Gisela took the piece of meatloaf, now rapidly turning rancid in the Zimbabwe afternoon heat, and served it to him for dinner, and breakfast, and every subsequent meal until he forced himself to eat it. It was the late 1950s – tyrannical parenting was de rigueur, and uneaten meatloaf was the hill that Gisela was willing to die on.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 7:00 am
Crux by Gabriel Tallent review – a passionate portrait of teenage climbers

The follow-up to My Absolute Darling, this tale of best friends who dream of a better life features exquisite sports writing and a lovable heroine – but the plotting is unconvincing
Tamma and Dan are 17-year-old best friends growing up in a California desert town blighted by the strip-mall nihilism of late capitalism. They’re poor. They’re unpopular. Their families are a wasteland. But they have each other and their great shared passion: trad rock climbing. Whenever they can, they head to a climbing route – sometimes a boulder at the edge of a disused parking lot, sometimes a cliff an hour’s hike into a national park – and climb, often with no gear but their bloodied bare hands and tattered shoes.
This is the premise of Crux, the second novel from Gabriel Tallent, the author of the critically acclaimed My Absolute Darling. At its heart, it’s a sports novel, and Tallent’s prose here is precise and often exquisite, inching through a few seconds of movement in a way that reflects the unforgiving nature of climbing. We get a lot of closeups of granite and faint half-moons in rock that suddenly become “the world’s numinous edge”. The language of climbing – a dialect of brainy dirtbags – is a gift to the writer. Tallent’s characters talk about “flashing bouldering problems” and “sending Fingerbang Princess”; a list of routes with “Poodle” in the title includes Poodle Smasher, Astropoodle, Poodle-Oids from the Deep, A Farewell to Poodles, and For Whom the Poodle Tolls. Tallent also has an extraordinary gift for descriptions of landscape; a road is “overhung with stooping desert lilies, tarantulas braving the tarmac in paces, running full out upon their knuckly shadows, the headlights smoking with windblown sand”.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 7:00 am
The Good Society by Kate Pickett review – the Spirit Level author takes stock

A whistle-stop tour of the greatest hits of progressive policy fails to take account of a central conundrum
If you’ve written a successful book based around one big idea, what do you make the next one about? Back in 2009, Kate Pickett’s The Spirit Level (co-authored with Richard Wilkinson) argued that inequality was the ultimate cause of almost all our social problems, from obesity and teenage pregnancy to violent crime; more equal societies, they claimed, had better outcomes across the board. While criticised – as most “big idea” books are – for overstating the case and cherrypicking evidence, they struck a chord, and some aspects of their thesis are now mainstream.
However, when it comes to the UK, there is an awkward problem, both for Pickett and for economists like me who, while not entirely convinced by The Spirit Level, would still like to see a more equal society. In the first chapter of Pickett’s new book, inequality is once again the root of all (social) evils: “if you know a country’s level of inequality, you can do a pretty good job of predicting its infant mortality rate, or prevalence of mental illness, or levels of homicide or imprisonment”. By contrast, she argues that GDP or GDP growth are very poor measures of overall welfare. Pickett then goes on to list the ways in which the UK has become a worse place to live since 2010 – higher child poverty, flattening life expectancy and child mortality, more people in prison.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 7:00 am
Gaming’s new coming-of-age genre embraces ‘millennial cringe’

Perfect Tides perfectly captures the older millennial college experience, and a time when nobody worried about being embarrassing online
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I’ve noticed an interesting micro-trend emerging in the last few years: millennial nostalgia games. Not just ones that adopt the aesthetic of Y2K gaming – think Crow Country or Fear the Spotlight’s deliberately retro PS1-style fuzzy polygons – but semi-autobiographical games specifically about the millennial experience. I’ve played three in the past year. Despelote is set in 2002 in Ecuador and is played through the eyes of a football-obsessed eight-year-old. The award-winning Consume Me is about being a teen girl battling disordered eating in the 00s. And this week I played a point-and-click adventure game about being a college student in the early 2000s.
Perfect Tides: Station to Station is set in New York in 2003 – a year that is the epitome of nostalgia for the micro-generation that grew up without the internet but came of age online. It was before Facebook, before the smartphone, but firmly during the era of late-night forum browsing and instant-messenger conversations. The internet wasn’t yet a vector for mass communication, but it could still bring you together with other people who loved the things that you loved, people who read the same hipster blogs and liked the same bands. The protagonist, Mara, is a student and young writer who works in her college library.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 12:35 pm
New home, new outlook? What’s next for the Sundance film festival?

The final Utah edition of the hub for American independent film saw slow sales and a mixed bag of movies but a future in Colorado could bring a refresh
Sundance is over. Well, not quite. The Sundance we all know, with Robert Redford as its head and Park City, Utah, as its location, is over. The festival’s beloved founder died last year months after the festival also opted for a move to Boulder, Colorado.
But on the alarmingly snow-light ground, there was also chatter about what would become of Sundance as a whole, once the shining beacon of American independent cinema, after it entered a new phase. There were standout films as ever but again not quite enough to override concerns over what the festival now represents in a harsh new world where it’s arguably easier to make an indie (or whatever cobbling together bits of AI slop might be called) but harder to get it sold.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 5:52 pm
‘Playing a god became a safety net’: Chris Hemsworth opens up about Thor, money and his insecurities

In the Marvel films he was unassailable, but in real life the actor says he’s more like the anxious thief he plays in Crime 101. He and its writer/director Bart Layton talk midlife angst, imposter syndrome – and Alzheimer’s
‘It’s like a therapy couch,” says Chris Hemsworth, as he takes a seat on a chaise longue in the London hotel room where we’re meeting. He laughs, but it quickly becomes clear the Australian actor is more than ready to examine his life and the image he has long presented to the world.
As Thor, the God of Thunder, Hemsworth has come to embody a certain idea of masculinity: invulnerable, assured, unshakeable. The role, which spanned nine films, put him up among the world’s highest paid actors and made him a global pin-up. Yet the confidence was, in part, a construction. “The character you see in interviews,” he says, easing into the chaise longue, “and the presentation of myself over the last two decades working in Hollywood, it’s me – but it’s a creation too. It’s what I thought people wanted to see.”
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 4:14 pm
Marwan Barghouti, ‘Palestine’s Mandela’, to publish book from prison

Unbroken: In Pursuit of Freedom for Palestine is a collection of writings by the Palestinian political leader, who has been held in Israeli prisons since 2002
A collection of writings by the imprisoned Palestinian political leader Marwan Barghouti will be published in November, bringing together prison letters, interviews, personal material and documents from the last three decades of Barghouti’s political life and incarceration.
As deadly attacks on Gaza continue despite a nominal ceasefire, the 66-year-old is seen by many as the best hope for a leader of any future Palestinian state.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 3:49 pm
‘Pain is a violent lover’: Daisy Lafarge on the paintings she made when floored with agony

Suffering from a connective tissue disorder and enduring endless calls to try and get benefits, the poet and novelist turned to painting – resulting in work that could change perceptions of disabled people
Daisy Lafarge was lying on the floor in excruciating pain when she started her latest paintings. A severe injury, coupled with a sudden worsening of her health, had left her unable to sit upright, while brain fog and fatigue made reading and writing impossible. So the award-winning novelist and poet fell back on her art school training, using the energy and materials she had to hand to create impressionistic paintings of her surroundings – her cat Uisce, her boyfriend’s PlayStation controller – alongside unsettling imagery of enclosed gardens and flowers decaying.
“Making the paintings was a way of coexisting with pain,” says the 34-year-old. “I was on my living room floor in agony for a few hours, but I wanted to get something out of that time. I’ve always been fascinated by artists and writers who turn limitations into formal constraints. I see the paintings as my attempt at that.”
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 3:54 pm
‘Demand has increased, without a doubt’: the shocking rise of personal protection dogs

Pets trained to bite, hold and release on command are growing ever more popular in the UK. But why – and at what cost to the animals and their owners?
Even if you’re not afraid of dogs, you might be a little intimidated by Butch Cassidy. His tail may be wagging, but the Belgian shepherd weighs 40kg and moves with awesome agility. Even a casual brush of his body could knock you off your feet if you weren’t expecting it. “I don’t for a minute think he’s going to bite anyone,” said his owner Grahame Green earlier. “Although he would, if I asked him to.” Now Green’s about to demonstrate.
He brings Cassidy to heel, and gets him to sit. Facing them is another man, Florin, already braced and wearing a protective arm sleeve. The dog is visibly quivering with excitement, so keen is his anticipation for what comes next. Green gives a one-word command, in German. Cassidy darts forward, an auburn arrow, and in that split-second clamps on to Florin’s forearm. Florin is engaging every muscle to remain upright, but Cassidy does not let go until Green gives the word.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 5:00 am
‘I think we feel stuck’: Kate Pickett on how to build a better, fairer, less stressed society

In her new book, the co-author of The Spirit Level gathers jaw-dropping facts about the inequality crisis in the UK – and explores creative ways to address it
There was a moment when reading Kate Pickett’s new book that I realised I was underlining something on nearly every page. Occasionally it was an exclamation mark, or a star. Other times, she herself was doing something similar. “I’m sorry to say that is not a typo,” she writes, at one point. And then, in a later chapter, “I’m going to have to put this in bold …”
It wasn’t stylistic commentary, although The Good Society is well written. Nearly every scribble was next to a fact. Pickett is a social epidemiologist, and deals in facts: “In the decade from 2011 to just before the pandemic, total spending on preventive services for families declined by 25%”, for instance. Or that half of children born in Liverpool in 2009 and 2010 had been referred to children’s services by the time they were five. Or that in 2023-4, England’s local authorities had only 6% of the childcare places they needed for children with disabilities (that was the bit Pickett wished to point out wasn’t a typo).
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 10:00 am
Black sesame is growing more popular in the US. Is it actually good for you?

The nutty seed is an essential dessert flavor in Asia and is now forecasted to be a top food trend in the US this year
In many parts of Asia, black sesame is an essential dessert flavor. The nutty, mildly bittersweet seed appears in ice-cream parlors and doughnut shops alongside matcha and ube – offerings as standard as chocolate, vanilla, and strawberry are stateside, says Sophie Hung, a California-based registered dietitian nutritionist who grew up in Hong Kong.
Now, black sesame’s popularity is growing in the US, with Yelp naming it a top food trend for 2026 based on user data (searches for “black sesame matcha” are up almost 150% since 2023). Yet, beyond its appealing flavor and striking color, what exactly are you getting nutritionally when you add black sesame to your diet?
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 5:00 pm
A romance fraudster ruined my life – how I survived two years with a psychopath

At first, Mike made Tamsin feel good about herself – and his love-bombing led her to leave her family and resign from her job. Soon she had lost her car, phone and all her money
Tamsin met Mike in the summer of 2022. He was a mechanic in a garage that she walked past twice each day between home and work. After a while, he’d call out “good morning” or “good evening” and she’d wave and smile back. Then the exchanges got a little longer. (“Hard day?” “Looking forward to dinner?”) Six months later, Mike and Tamsin exchanged numbers.
Within two years, her life was wrecked. She had left her marriage, lost her home, quit her job, and sold her car and her phone, spent all her savings and racked up tens of thousands in debt. (Under her current repayment plan, it will take another eight and a half years to pay back her creditors.) Tamsin’s story seems scarcely credible and she is mortified to have to tell it. She stumbles through, piles of notes on her lap and a support worker from Victim Support at her side. Every few minutes, she breaks off to say, “It sounds so stupid”, “I sound like an absolute nutter” or “Where was my head?” In truth, she spent two years in the company of a psychopath, a master manipulator. He is in prison now, serving a 22-year sentence, but not for romance fraud, or anything involving Tamsin. Her experience, police have told her, “would not stand up in court”.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 5:00 am
Jess Cartner-Morley on fashion: lift your winter look with a pop of white

Like the first cluster of snowdrops, a burst of white is a reminder to focus on the positive – just don’t go full snowman
Everyone knows that the prettiest scraps of winter are the precious snow days. At this time of year, when it feels like we’ve been scurrying around in near-constant darkness like moles for as long as we can remember, we crave the brightness you get with snowfall – and the glamour of it, too. The disco-ball sparkle of frost is a counterpoint to chapped lips and three-week sniffles that won’t budge.
We can’t make it snow, but we can create our own little flurry. A pop of snowy white is the best boost you can give an outfit right now. White is to January what rust and orange are to October: a colour pulled from nature to remind us of the best bits of the season. After all, autumn has grey skies and muddy puddles too, but we ignore them and lean into its gorgeous falling-leaf colours instead.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:00 pm
Breathwork has its uses – but when it comes to ‘unlocking your fullest human potential’, beware the puffery | Antiviral

While some benefits such as stress relief are backed by solid evidence, they can be achieved without expensive hyped-up courses
Read more in the Antiviral series
In the 2012 film adaptation of the Dr Seuss book The Lorax, a fable about capitalist greed, air is a commodity.
The mayor of Thneedville deprives the city’s residents of trees so a company he heads can sells bottles of air. He has, as one advertising lackey puts it, “gotten rich selling people air that’s ‘fresher’ than the stinky stuff outside”.
Donna Lu is an assistant editor, climate, environment and science at Guardian Australia
Antiviral is a fortnightly column that interrogates the evidence behind the health headlines and factchecks popular wellness claims
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 2:00 pm
How to make moreish cookies from store-cupboard odds and ends – recipe | Waste not

Almost anything goes with these thrifty and delicious cookies
I often eat a bag of salty crisps at the same time as a chewy chocolate bar, alternating bite for bite between the two, because the extreme contrast of salt from the chips and the sweetness of the chocolate fire off each other and create an endorphin rush. The same goes for these cookies, adapted from a recipe by Christina Tosi at New York’s legendary Milk Bar.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:00 pm
Fairphone 6 review: cheaper, repairable and longer-lasting Android

Sustainable smartphone takes a step forward with modular accessories, a good screen and mid-range performance
The Dutch ethical smartphone brand Fairphone is back with its six-generation Android, aiming to make its repairable phone more modern, modular, affordable and desirable, with screw-in accessories and a user-replaceable battery.
The Fairphone 6 costs £499 (€599), making it cheaper than previous models and pitting it squarely against budget champs such as the Google Pixel 9a and the Nothing Phone 3a Pro, while being repairable at home with long-term software support and a five-year warranty. On paper it sounds like the ideal phone to see out the decade.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 7:00 am
Women behind the lens: ‘I met 14-year-old Arti a day before her wedding. Her suicide six years later hit home’

Despite being illegal, child marriage is still common in much of India. Saumya Khandelwal, a photojournalist, followed one girl’s tragic story
In 2013, I came across a pamphlet from an organisation working on child marriage in the north-eastern India-Nepal border region of Shravasti. Statistics showed that 25% of girls in Shravasti, in Uttar Pradesh, were married by the time they reached 19. The figures were appalling, not only because of how rampant child marriage was in the region, but also because the practice is illegal in India.
I decided to visit Shravasti, which is less than 90 miles from my home town. My first impression was that in a place with high rates of migration among men, young women lived with their in-laws and managed their households while their children cried and played in their arms. After that first visit it became a stop for me every time I went home.
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 7:45 am
‘The smart, the rich, the powerful’: Epstein associated with Silicon Valley elite years after his release from prison

Billionaires and intellectuals attended events with the disgraced financier years after he served time for sex offense, files reveal
Newly released emails and travel itineraries appear to show that for years after Jeffrey Epstein served time for procuring underage girls for prostitution, he continued to attend exclusive dinners alongside Silicon Valley’s most famous billionaires.
The emails, part of a trove released by the Department of Justice on Friday, show that as late as 2018, Epstein was invited to or attended dinners alongside the likes of Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin, Twitter co-founder Evan Williams, Microsoft founder Bill Gates, and Google vice-president and later Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 11:41 pm
The criminalizing of protest and dissent has a long history in America

Trump administration is accusing protesters of ‘domestic terrorism’ but this brazen tactic is as old as the country itself
When federal immigration agents shot and killed ICU nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis on 23 January, the homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, wasted no time claiming to the press, without credible evidence, that Pretti had been engaged in “domestic terrorism”. Though the administration seems to be trying to soften that initial response after fierce backlash, it’s an accusation that members of the Trump administration have been leveling at wide swaths of people beyond Pretti – including Renee Nicole Good, another Minnesotan killed by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents two and a half weeks prior, and Marimar Martinez, who survived being shot by ICE agents in Chicago in October – as part of an ongoing strategy to criminalize dissent.
It’s a claim ICE agents themselves have started to make directly in confrontations with citizens, seemingly to try and intimidate legal observers, sometimes known as ICE watchers. In one recent video from Portland, Maine, an ICE officer told an observer to stop recording him on her phone, and when she wouldn’t, he took her information down and said: “We have a nice little database … and now you’re considered a domestic terrorist.”
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 3:00 pm
Music and dancing signify defiance at celebratory funerals of Iran’s protesters

Euphoric scenes are a snub to theocracy’s culture of piety, say analysts, and carry message of rebellion
Iranians killed in recent protests that rocked the country have been laid to rest in boisterous funerals featuring loud pop music and dancing, apparently intended to convey defiance to the ruling Islamic regime.
Instead of holding sombre traditional mourning ceremonies presided over by a Shia cleric, bereaved relatives are turning the burials into exultant celebrations of the lives of their loved ones in what analysts say is an intentional snub to the culture of piety demanded by Iran’s theocracy.
Continue reading...Published: February 3, 2026, 5:00 am
Dancing robots and a military parade: photos of the day – Wednesday

The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world
Continue reading...Published: February 4, 2026, 1:27 pm
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