Vietnam urges work from home amid fuel supply, price crunch in Mideast

Vietnam urges work from home as fuel crisis deepens amid Middle East conflict. Gasoline prices surge 32%, diesel up 56% as supply disruptions hit.
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:37 pm
Ukraine sending drone team to help protect US bases in Jordan at Washington’s request, Zelenskyy says

Ukraine reportedly dispatched interceptor drones and experts to Jordan at Washington’s request to help defend U.S. bases amid escalating Iranian missile and drone strikes in the region.
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:00 am
Trump says it’s an ‘honor’ to keep Strait of Hormuz open for China and other countries

President says he will keep the Strait of Hormuz open for the world, including China, while announcing plans to waive oil sanctions to lower energy prices.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:12 am
Iranian Kurdish fighters say they’re ready to strike Tehran, waiting for opening

Iranian Kurdish opposition groups say they are prepared to challenge Tehran but are holding back as the U.S.-Israel-Iran war continues to unfold.
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:52 pm
Iran’s new supreme leader is ‘his father on steroids,’ experts warn of hardline rule

Mojtaba Khamenei reportedly selected as Iran's new supreme leader in succession move, described as 'his father on steroids' with deeper security ties.
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:52 pm
Hegseth warns ‘more casualties’ expected in Operation Epic Fury against Iran

Secretary of War Pete Hegseth warned more U.S. casualties are expected in Operation Epic Fury in Iran, with seven American soldiers already killed in the military operation.
Published: March 9, 2026, 1:50 pm
Private security firm helping Americans evacuate the Middle East amid war with Iran

A global security firm based in Virginia says it has evacuated more than 4,000 people from the Middle East since the U.S. and Israel launched a joint attack on Iran.
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:25 am
Live Updates: Hegseth Says Tuesday Will Be ‘Most Intense’ for U.S. Strikes on Iran

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said that “the most fighters, the most bombers” would be deployed. A day earlier, President Trump sent mixed signals on when the war might end.
Published: March 10, 2026, 2:06 pm
New Supreme Leader Inherits Sprawling, Secretive Office That Dominates Iran

His father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, had turned what was traditionally a religious affairs office into a shadowy national security juggernaut.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:03 am
Civilians Killed by Strikes in Gulf States Are Almost All Migrant Workers

Since the American-Israeli attack on Iran began, at least 12 civilians have been killed in oil-rich Gulf countries. All but one of them were foreign nationals.
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:18 pm
Who Is Balendra Shah, the Rapper Set to Be Nepal’s Next Prime Minister?

Balendra Shah’s party won a landslide in the election that followed Nepal’s Gen Z revolution. His style is pugnacious.
Published: March 10, 2026, 8:52 am
The Killing Of Haiti’s President Heads to a U.S. Court. What to Know.

Four men are accused in South Florida of plotting to kill President Jovenel Moise in 2021. His death plunged Haiti into chaos that continues today.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:43 pm
Shots Fired at U.S. Consulate in Toronto, Police Say

The police said that there were no injuries. Television footage showed what appeared to be at least two marks left by bullets at the building’s entrance.
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:53 pm
Cost-Cutting Led to South Korean Airport’s Deadly Wall, Report Finds

The concrete runway barrier played a key role in a disaster that killed 179 people. An audit revealed officials skimped on construction fees and then falsified records.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:49 pm
Fear and Hope for Iranians Trapped Between Bombs and Defiant Rulers

Many in Iran feel helpless in the face of their entrenched system, and some are becoming increasingly embittered by the fierce American and Israeli bombardment.
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:47 pm
On the Road With Zelensky, Weathered, Weary and Fighting On

Ukraine’s leader, Volodymyr Zelensky, traveled east to visit frontline troops trying to stave off Russian attacks, and invited reporters for The New York Times to go with him.
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:01 am
Ukraine Helps U.S. Bases in the Mideast With Stopping Drones

As the war in Iran spreads, Kyiv is eagerly offering its hard-won expertise and advanced technology to counter Iranian drones.
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:29 pm
Australia Grants Humanitarian Visas to 5 Members of Iranian Women’s Soccer Team

Concern for the safety of the players had grown after Iranian state media criticized them for not singing the national anthem at a game in Australia.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:19 pm
Is the Trial of Erdogan’s Top Rival More About Corruption or Politics?

Prosecutors accuse the former Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu of leading a criminal scheme. His supporters say Turkey’s president is trying to eliminate a political foe.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:49 pm
Trial of Ekrem Imamoglu, Erdogan’s Rival, Begins in Turkey

Ekrem Imamoglu, the former mayor of Istanbul who stands accused of corruption, clashed with the judge and criticized the trial as baseless.
Published: March 9, 2026, 1:09 pm
The Suburb That Won’t Sleep

Food is bringing thousands of people together to an unexpected place: a plaza west of Toronto. Some fear it’s tearing a neighborhood apart.
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:01 am
The Race to Stop Wildlife Trafficking in Africa

In Nigeria, customs officers and conservationists are confronting the grim impacts of the $20 billion trade.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:14 pm
Pakistan Sends Navy Escort for Its Ships in the Middle East

Pakistan, Iran’s neighbor, has been striving to remain neutral in the conflict. But its government and military have been forced to act to protect its economy.
Published: March 10, 2026, 10:58 am
U.S. Orders Diplomats to Leave Consulate in Southern Turkey

The order came after the interception of two missiles heading toward Turkey, which has a base that hosts U.S. and NATO forces.
Published: March 10, 2026, 10:00 am
Black Rain and Health Fears After Strikes on Iran Fuel Depots

Health experts warn of long-term respiratory and neurological risks as smoke from burning oil spreads across the region.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:03 am
Oil Falls and Stocks Rise After a Day of Drastic Swings

The price of oil had spiked to nearly $120 a barrel on Monday, drawing remarks by President Trump that he believed the war on Iran was “very complete.”
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:53 pm
Here’s the latest.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:48 pm
Cancer Haunts Neighbors of Canada’s Oil Sands Wastelands

Though high rates of the disease persist among the nearby Indigenous communities, the Canadian government is weighing rules that may allow energy giants to release treated mining waste into the river system.
Published: March 10, 2026, 7:00 am
This is what happened on March 9.
Published: March 10, 2026, 4:33 am
U.S. Solar Installations Fell in 2025 as Trump Attacked Clean Energy

More solar energy was added to U.S. grids than any other technology, but the amount installed fell by 14 percent, according to a new report.
Published: March 10, 2026, 4:01 am
Missile in Deadly Iranian School Strike Appears to Be U.S.-Made, Photos Taken by Iran Show
Iranian state media posted mangled remnants it claims were from the Feb. 28 attack in Minab. An analysis shows they have the markings of a missile made by American manufacturers
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:28 am
Trump Seeks to Calm Oil and Gas Markets but Says Iran War Will Go On

The president said the U.S. could accompany tankers through the Strait of Hormuz if necessary to keep oil flowing. “We’ve already won in many ways, but we haven’t won enough,” he said.
Published: March 10, 2026, 3:15 am
Shells Fired From Lebanon Land West of Syrian Capital, Country’s Military Says

The Syrian military accused Hezbollah of targeting Syrian army positions outside of Damascus.
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:24 am
Here’s What Happened in the Conflict on Monday

President Trump gave conflicting signals about a possible end to the war with Iran amid wild gyrations in global markets.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:54 pm
Oil Prices and Stocks Swing Wildly as Iran and Israel Launch New Strikes

Oil prices and stocks initially swung wildly, and Iran’s foreign minister promised “surprises,” calling the strikes against his country “Operation Epic Mistake.”
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:24 pm
Ukraine Lends a Hand

Countries targeted by Iranian drones are eager to tap into Ukrainian expertise to shoot them down.
Published: March 10, 2026, 6:03 am
Oman Becomes Unlikely Hub for Evacuees Fleeing War in Gulf

The international airport in Muscat, the Omani capital, has remained open while fighting in the region has escalated.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:58 am
France Is Sending a Large Naval Force to the Middle East

President Emmanuel Macron said the warships would help protect France’s allies in the region, and could be part of a force to escort ships through the Strait of Hormuz. He said the war could continue for “several days, maybe several weeks.”
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:02 pm
U.S. Reaches Tentative Deal Ending Prosecution of Turkish Bank

Court papers submitted as part of the agreement with Halkbank, which was accused of doing business with Iranian entities, said Turkey’s assistance “was instrumental” in the Israel-Hamas cease-fire.
Published: March 10, 2026, 2:01 am
Iran Choosing Mojtaba Khamenei as Supreme Leader Signals Defiance Amid War

Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei could prove to be even more radical than his father and predecessor, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed by the U.S. and Israel at the start of the war.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:05 am
At a cemetery in Tehran, there are fresh graves and angry slogans.

Published: March 9, 2026, 6:55 pm
Police Rescue 23 People Stranded on Moving Ice in Canada

Nearly two dozen people in Canada were stranded on ice that separated from shore. “We honestly thought we were doomed,” one fisherman said.
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:51 pm
Video Captures Apparent Strike Near Boys’ School in Iran
A communications tower seemed to be the intended target, according to satellite imagery analysis. Iranian state media reported that a boy had been killed in the explosion.
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:34 pm
How The New York Times Reports on War in Iran

Staying safe and corroborating facts are among the challenges for journalists working under intense pressure around the clock and the world.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:57 pm
Countries in Asia Try to Contain the Economic Fallout of the Mideast Conflict

Across Asia, where countries are highly exposed to rising oil and gas costs and tightening supply, governments are acting to mitigate economic harm.
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:44 pm
NATO Intercepts Second Iranian Missile Entering Turkey’s Airspace, Defense Ministry Says

It was the second time in six days that Turkey announced the interception of a missile from Iran.
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:08 pm
Explosion Damages Synagogue in Belgium

Officials described the blast, which caused no injuries, as an antisemitic act, but the exact circumstances were still under investigation.
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:08 pm
Dozens Wounded in Bahrain as Arab States Condemn Iranian Strikes

Key U.S. allies in the Persian Gulf have stepped up their criticism of Iran after facing a barrage of missiles and drone attacks over the past week.
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:30 pm
Ed Davey Wants King Charles to Cancel his U.S. State Visit Over Iran War

Ed Davey, the leader of the Liberal Democrats in Britain, said President Trump does not deserve the “diplomatic coup” of hosting the king for a state visit.
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:10 pm
Israeli Forces Raid New Area in Southern Lebanon, Bombard Near Beirut

Joseph Aoun, the Lebanese president, called for direct talks with Israel to end the fighting. He also leveled blame at Hezbollah, the Iran-backed group, for igniting the war.
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:13 pm
Australia Urged to Protect Members of the Iranian Women’s Soccer Team

The athletes, who are set to head home, were called “traitors” by Iran’s state media after they didn’t sing their national anthem during a match in Australia.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:41 am
Here’s the latest.
Published: March 10, 2026, 2:15 am
Stocks Rebound After Trump Says Iran War Is ‘Very Complete’

The S&P 500 ended slightly higher on Monday as investors interpreted President Trump’s comments as a signal that the conflict could end soon.
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:21 pm
For China, Billions of Dollars Are at Risk From a Widening War

The country found a home in the Middle East for its investments and growing markets for steel, electric vehicles and solar panels. Those are now at stake.
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:55 pm
Glasgow Train Station Is Shut Down After Fire Tears Through Neighboring Shop

The fire started in a commercial building on Sunday afternoon, and firefighters worked through the night to contain it. Train service was disrupted on Monday.
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:39 pm
Democrats Seize on Oil Topping $100 a Barrel, as Trump Downplays Jump

The global oil benchmark topped $100 a barrel late Sunday, putting Republicans on the defensive on an issue at the center of this year’s midterm elections.
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:58 am
U.S. Tomahawk Hit Naval Base Beside Iranian School, Video Shows
The evidence contradicts President Trump’s claim that Iran was responsible for a strike at the school that killed 175 people, most of them children.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:02 am
Iran’s Security Establishment Celebrates Mojtaba Khamenei’s Selection

Opponents of the government, however, worried the new supreme leader, a son of the recently killed Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, would rule with an iron fist like his father.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:23 am
Here’s What Happened in the Conflict on Sunday

Iran named Mojtaba Khamenei, a son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as his father’s successor. The Pentagon announced the death of a seventh U.S. service member.
Published: March 9, 2026, 12:38 pm
Iran Has a New Supreme Leader. What Does That Mean?

Mojtaba Khamenei takes on a role that makes him not only Iran’s spiritual leader but also the highest authority in the land.
Published: March 9, 2026, 12:33 am
Sizing Up Iran’s Elite Guards

Many see the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps as the main barrier to regime change, or any change at all, in Iran.
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:02 am
Trump warns Iran faces strikes 'twenty times harder' if nation refuses to heed warning and more top headlines

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Published: March 10, 2026, 11:52 am
Schools boost antisemitism grades in ADL report but students say hostility persists

ADL's campus antisemitism report card suggests students may not be seeing the full impact of universities' approaches to tackling anti-Jewish hatred.
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:26 am
Oregon judge limits federal agents’ tear gas use at Portland ICE protests

A federal judge restricted federal agents from using chemical munitions at protests at the ICE building in Portland unless there is an imminent threat.
Published: March 10, 2026, 8:14 am
Storage facility raided as feds investigate alleged ISIS-inspired NYC bomb throwers

Federal investigation underway after Pennsylvania students accused of explosive attack outside mayor's residence. ISIS inspiration concerns cited.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:49 pm
Alexander brothers learn fate in federal sex trafficking trial
Real estate moguls Tal, Oren and their brother Alon Alexander were found guilty of sex trafficking in dramatic fall from luxury broker prominence.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:24 pm
Illegal immigrant charged for allegedly voting in every presidential election since 2008

A Mauritanian man allegedly voted illegally in every federal election since 2008 in Philadelphia before arrest on voter fraud charges, Fox News Digital has learned.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:22 pm
Savannah Guthrie spotted in NYC as search for missing mother enters sixth week with few answers

Savannah Guthrie returned to New York as the search for her missing 84-year-old mother enters its sixth week. Investigators are pursuing leads, but no suspects have been named.
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:49 pm
‘90 Day Fiancé’ alum's boyfriend on trial for attempted murder over wild ‘Boca Bash’ accusations

"90 Day Fiancé" star's boyfriend accused of trying to drown her during boat fight. Cole Goldberg faces murder trial after the alleged violent attack.
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:23 pm
Coast Guard cutter Munro returns to California home after record-breaking 11-Ton cocaine seizure

Following a mission in the Atlantic and Pacific, the USCGC Munro crew returns home with record-breaking results in the fight against transnational criminal networks.
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:07 pm
Wife of teacher killed in senior prank makes unexpected request for charged students

A Georgia teacher's wife has asked that charges be dropped against the high school students involved in the fatal toilet paper prank accident that killed her husband.
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:05 pm
Suspect in NYC terror probe planned attack 'bigger than the Boston Marathon bombing,' prosecutors say

Federal prosecutors said on Monday that a suspect in the NYC protest attack planned an assault “bigger than the Boston Marathon bombing."
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:04 pm
Southwest flight diverted after passenger scare as security incidents rattle US airports

Multiple airline security scares disrupted weekend travel across several airports, though authorities found no credible threats in any incidents.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:42 pm
Tankers to resume normal movement in Middle East in 'a few weeks' at worst, Energy sec says, ending oil surge

Oil prices surge 25% amid Trump administration's Iran targeting as Energy Secretary Chris Wright predicts "fear premium" will end in weeks, not months.
Published: March 9, 2026, 1:16 pm
Warrants served in New Jersey, Pennsylvania as feds look into possible NYC terrorism

Federal investigators are probing a possible act of terrorism after explosive devices were thrown during a New York City protest.
Published: March 9, 2026, 12:20 pm
Mojtaba Khamenei named Iran’s new supreme leader after father’s death and more top headlines

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Published: March 9, 2026, 11:53 am
Search for Nancy Guthrie enters 5th week, cadaver dogs on hold

Nancy Guthrie, mother of Today's Savannah Guthrie, remains missing after suspected abduction from Tucson home. $1.2 million reward offered as search continues.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:00 am
Pennsylvania state trooper fatally shot during traffic stop, officials say

A Pennsylvania state trooper was shot and killed on Sunday night while conducting a traffic stop in Chester County, Gov. Josh Shapiro announced.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:39 am
San Francisco Bay Area Residents Weigh Possibility of BART Reductions
The Bay Area Rapid Transit system was once so successful, it could rely mostly on riders to sustain itself. But the pandemic dealt BART an unusually heavy blow.
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:00 pm
Democrats Sued to Find Out Whether Trump Will Send Armed Officers to Election Sites

In a lawsuit filed Tuesday, the D.N.C. sought to compel the government to say whether it plans to deploy armed federal officers in this year’s elections.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:34 pm
As Iran War Spikes Gas Prices, Americans Struggle With the Rising Cost of Living

Shocked by the rapid price increases, many Americans are scrambling to figure out how to stretch their budgets to cover an essential expense.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:03 am
Mississippi and Georgia Elections: What to Watch in Today’s Primaries

It’s Primary Day in Mississippi, where a younger Democrat is trying to oust a House veteran, and in Georgia, where Marjorie Taylor Greene’s former seat is up for grabs.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:35 pm
Unlike in Past Conflicts, Most Americans Oppose Iran Attacks
While the public has historically backed military intervention initially in international conflicts, deep polarization has left the latest strikes against Iran with record-low support.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:01 am
Trump Antisemitism Inquiry Demanding List of Jews at Penn Heads to Court

The Trump administration, which said it is investigating harassment, sued the University of Pennsylvania after it refused a request to provide information about Jewish students and staff.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:01 am
F.A.A. Briefly Halts JetBlue Departures After System Outage
The Federal Aviation Administration issued a ground stop for JetBlue flights early Tuesday at the airline’s request. JetBlue later said a “system outage” had been restored and that operations had resumed.
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:17 am
Trump Seeks to Calm Oil and Gas Markets but Says Iran War Will Go On

The president said the U.S. could accompany tankers through the Strait of Hormuz if necessary to keep oil flowing. “We’ve already won in many ways, but we haven’t won enough,” he said.
Published: March 10, 2026, 3:15 am
Justice Department Says Trump Can Overrule California and Approve Oil Pipeline

The Justice Department said the president has the legal authority to overrule state regulators and reopen an offshore oil pipeline that was shut down after causing a gigantic oil spill.
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:23 am
Two Supreme Court Justices Debate Handling of Trump Emergency Cases

In a rare joint appearance, Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Brett M. Kavanaugh offered sharply different views on how the court should handle emergency requests.
Published: March 10, 2026, 2:44 am
Trump’s War in Iran, and Rising Gas Prices, Collide With Midterm Agenda

The attack on Iran has led to a surge in energy prices at a moment when the cost of living is a major issue heading into the fall elections.
Published: March 10, 2026, 3:32 am
Trump Again Suggests Without Evidence That Iran Struck Elementary School

After a video showed a Tomahawk missile hitting a naval base next to the school, President Trump claimed Iran possesses such weapons. But the U.S. developed the missile and has sold it only to a few close allies.
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:59 am
Murder Charge Is Dropped Against Man Who Fired Gun at Chiefs Super Bowl Parade

Dominic M. Miller, 20, was sentenced to two years in jail as part of a plea agreement related to the 2024 killing of Lisa Lopez-Galvan. He has already served most of his time.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:50 pm
Epstein’s Remote Zorro Ranch Is Searched by New Mexico Investigators

Some of the disgraced financier’s victims have said they were trafficked at the property south of Santa Fe, where the nearest neighbors are miles away.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:39 pm
Iran’s Women’s Soccer Team Offered Asylum by President Trump

The dissonance between the president’s hard-line immigration policies and his offer of asylum to the athletes was striking. Australia took in five players.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:59 pm
Iran War Overshadows Midterms as Democrats Focus on Economy

Democrats are focused on the economy, while Republicans wish they were focused on the economy.
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:12 pm
2 Teen Mariachi Musicians Released From ICE Detention

Representative Joaquin Castro of Texas led a delegation of Democrats to a South Texas detention center to press for the release of the brothers and their family.
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:50 pm
U.S. Reaches Tentative Deal Ending Prosecution of Turkish Bank

Court papers submitted as part of the agreement with Halkbank, which was accused of doing business with Iranian entities, said Turkey’s assistance “was instrumental” in the Israel-Hamas cease-fire.
Published: March 10, 2026, 2:01 am
Alexander Butterfield, Who Revealed Nixon Tapes in Watergate Scandal, Dies at 99

“There is tape in the Oval Office,” said Mr. Butterfield, a former White House aide, in testimony that rocked the Watergate hearings and led to the president’s resignation.
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:18 pm
Casey Wasserman Agency Removes His Name From Company in Epstein Fallout

The sports and marketing agency is contending with the fallout from the Epstein files, and it is continuing to look for a buyer.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:19 pm
Locals in Other States Prepare for ICE With Lots of Rumors and Little Information

After the sprawling and chaotic federal immigration crackdown in Minnesota, jurisdictions in other states have been bracing for a range of scenarios.
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:18 pm
Judge Halts Trump Administration Move to Restrict Immigration Appeals

The ruling is part of a broader dispute between the independent federal judiciary and the executive branch’s immigration court system.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:43 pm
As Kari Lake Sought to Shutter Voice of America, Parent Agency Rebuffed Auditors

A new report says the lack of information provided for a required annual examination was so “pervasive” that auditors declined to opine on the agency’s financial numbers.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:24 pm
Bernard Lafayette Jr., 85, Dies; Civil Rights Leader Helped Plan Selma March

A close associate of Martin Luther King Jr. and John Lewis, he was involved in many of the key moments of the Black freedom struggle in the 1960s.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:06 pm
O.S.U. President Walter Carter Jr. Resigns Over ‘Inappropriate Relationship’

The university said it was investigating a company owned by a podcaster after the president, Walter Carter Jr., said he had “made a mistake.”
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:08 pm
Hip-Hop Icons Tell Justices That Texas Turned Rap Lyrics Into a Death Warrant

Killer Mike, Travis Scott, T.I. and other artists said James Broadnax was sent to death row in Texas based partly on his artistic expression.
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:44 pm
New Lawsuit Challenges Rubio’s Threats Against Foreign Tech Regulators

A lawsuit filed on Monday argues that a State Department’s decision to withhold visas from experts who have pushed for stronger social media regulations is illegal.
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:46 pm
Trump Threatens to Crowd Out Republicans’ Midterm Message

As the G.O.P. gathered in Miami for a party retreat where lawmakers hoped to focus on the economy, the president threatened to block his own party’s legislative agenda.
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:59 pm
Pennsylvania State Trooper Is Fatally Shot During a Traffic Stop

A driver opened fired on Pennsylvania State Police Cpl. Tim O’Connor before killing himself on Sunday night, officials said.
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:40 pm
Democrat lawmaker vows to keep pressure on Trump over Epstein files as searches on Zorro Ranch begin

California Rep. Ro Khanna says securing justice for victims of late sex offender’s abuse is ‘personal’
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:52 pm
Young mother killed saving six-year-old son from attack by three dogs

Emily Panuco, 26, took her son to see puppies at her mother's house when the attack occurred
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:49 pm
Republican congressman slammed for Muslims ‘don’t belong’ in America social media post

Representative Andy Ogles also took a swipe at the United Kingdom and claimed that his post would not have been criticized if he had been referring to Christians
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:34 pm
AI, a dead student, and US airstrikes: How a civilian became caught up in a new age of warfare

As debate grows over the role of AI in military strikes in the bombing of Iran, scrutiny has turned to civilians caught up in the destruction. An investigation by The Independent and conflict monitoring group Airwars explores the death of a 20-year-old killed in US strike in Iraq in 2024 - the first known victim of an airstrike in which the use of AI-assisted targeting was acknowledged. Namir Shabibi and Alex Croft report
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:31 pm
Judge rejects trio of Trump-backed prosecutors for New Jersey US Attorney’s Office

A judge has disqualified a trio of prosecutors the Trump administration tapped to oversee federal prosecutions in New Jersey after his former personal attorney was also barred from the role
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:25 pm
Trump skips latest dignified transfer after being shredded online for wearing hat to first return of fallen soldiers

Trump was pictured wearing his own campaign merch, a white “USA” baseball hat, to the dignified transfer of the first U.S. soldiers killed in the war
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:17 pm
In a time of war with Iran, Americans unite in aggravation over sticker shock at the gas pump

It seems that a country divided on many fronts is finding common ground at the gas pumps
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:14 pm
Live Nation facing new lawsuit after man says he was knocked unconscious by beer can at Jason Aldean show

The man, who attended with his daughter, has suffered a series of medical complications since the event, the lawsuit claims
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:09 pm
Iran-US war latest: Hegseth warns of ‘most intense day of strikes’ after Trump says conflict will be over soon

Hegseth threatened Iran with more strikes as he denied reports that the US is escalating the conflict
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:05 pm
Ukraine-Russia war latest: Trump says he will loosen oil sanctions after ‘very good’ call with Putin

Zelensky says Ukraine sent interceptor drones and operators to US bases in Jordan
Published: March 10, 2026, 1:02 pm
Pope Leo accepts resignation of bishop arrested at US airport accused of stealing $250,000

Hana Shaleta was arrested on March 5 at San Diego's international airport while attempting to leave the U.S., according to a sheriff's office statement
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:57 pm
A tiny island in the Persian Gulf could be Trump’s secret weapon against Iran

Kharg island holds 94 per cent of Iran’s oil exports and could choke off the country’s economy for years
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:54 pm
Nine states broke or tied records for their warmest winter as US saw its second-warmest on record

One region largely missed out on winter altogether this year
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:42 pm
What we know about Rihanna shooting suspect after Ivanna Lisette Ortiz charged with attempted murder

Ivanna Lisette Ortiz allegedly used an AR-15-style weapon during the attack, according to reports
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:35 pm
Australia grants asylum to five Iranian women footballers

Players escorted to safe location in Australia as government finalises humanitarian visas
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:28 pm
Oil prices fall and Asia markets rebound after Trump says Iran war will end ‘soon’

Trump says war against Iran is ‘very complete’ but US and Israel haven’t quite ‘won enough’ yet
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:26 pm
Hegseth boasts about ‘crushing the enemy’ in Iran and promises war will not be a repeat of Iraq

‘We are winning’ Trump’s defense secretary said, describing Iranian leaders as ‘barbaric savages’
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:23 pm
The critical infrastructure that’s so vital to Middle East nations – and vulnerable to Iranian attack

Attacks on desalination plants mark a dangerous escalation in the Middle East conflict. Experts tell Stuti Mishra the Gulf’s most water-scarce nations face an existential threat
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:18 pm
Trump is reportedly gifting $145 dress shoes to his friends and advisers: ‘All the boys have them’

Insiders say the president is ‘obsessed’ with an affordable shoe brand based in Wisconsin — and his courtiers are imitating his habits en masse
Published: March 10, 2026, 12:07 pm
Seventh U.S. service member killed in Iran war identified as soldier, 26, from Kentucky

Sgt. Benjamin N. Pennington died Saturday night after being seriously injured during an attack on Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:50 pm
‘We want to use it for everything’: How Project Maven became central to America’s AI-powered warfare
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Project Maven, launched in 2017, is at the heart of US efforts to integrate AI more deeply into its military
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:54 am
Turning Point USA college president resigns after racist text chat leaks

Ian Valdes, leader of the Florida International University chapter of the conservative youth group, steps down after offensive messages published in which members used N-word more than 400 times
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:37 am
Gasoline prices have already jumped 19% since Iran attacks started with oil prices continuing to soar

President Donald Trump insists rising costs from the Iran conflict are ‘a very small price to pay’ for ‘peace’
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:17 am
Child poisoning cases across the US rise as nicotine pouches flood stores

In partnership with The Independent, Leslie Liang reports for The Examination, a nonprofit newsroom that investigates global health threats, on how the colorful packaging and fruity flavors that make nicotine pouches appealing to adults also make them tempting — and dangerous — for kids
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:04 am
This Republican put a nail in the coffin for Kristi Noem. His next target: Stephen Miller

Thom Tillis may be on his way out. But, writes Eric Garcia, he’s not leaving quietly and has taken on Trump by going on the attack against members of his White House
Published: March 10, 2026, 11:03 am
Megyn Kelly accuses Lindsey Graham of having ‘incredible bloodlust’ after his threats to five world regions in 24 hours

Right-wing broadcaster accuses South Carolina Republican of ‘insatiable bloodlust’ over cheerleading for U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Iran and aggressive stance towards other nations
Published: March 10, 2026, 10:52 am
Iran may have activated ‘sleeper cells’ to carry out attacks around the globe, US officials say

The alert said that there is ‘no operational threat tied to a specific location’
Published: March 10, 2026, 10:30 am
Gamblers can now bet on wars. Here’s why that’s a problem

On one app, bets related to the Iran war total £393 million
Published: March 10, 2026, 10:24 am
Tucker Carlson gives unhinged definition of what ‘unconditional surrender’ means for Iran

President Trump told reporters ‘unconditional surrender’ would mean the destruction of the Iranian military
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:48 am
Vladimir Putin suffers coughing fit in video deleted by the Kremlin

The video of the 73-year-old Russian leader was reportedly posted “by mistake” and then replaced with one without coughs
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:27 am
Indian restaurants warn they could close as Iran war sparks cooking gas shortage

India invoked emergency powers, compelling domestic refiners to boost production for local consumption
Published: March 10, 2026, 9:11 am
RAF fighter jets shoot down drones targeting UK allies in Middle East

Defence secretary John Healey urged for de-escalation in Lebanon and ‘a return to a negotiated process’
Published: March 10, 2026, 8:55 am
Bill Maher clashes with podcast guest over Trump dinner invitation

Bill Maher clashed with a guest on his podcast over his White House dinner with Donald Trump.
Published: March 10, 2026, 8:50 am
Alexander brothers found guilty of sex trafficking following 11 women’s testimony

More than 60 women say they were raped by one or more of the brothers, according to prosecutors
Published: March 10, 2026, 8:45 am
Crowds brave sub-zero temperatures to watch reindeer racing near Russian border

The event drew an international crowd, with attendees travelling from Italy, Germany, and France
Published: March 10, 2026, 7:53 am
Family of girl shot in Canada school sues ChatGPT-maker over ‘knowledge’ of attack

OpenAI came forward to police after Jesse Van Roostselaar killed eight people and then herself last month
Published: March 10, 2026, 7:31 am
Ukraine’s low-cost killers draw both US and Gulf interest. A wartime ban blocks sales

Ukraine could emerge as a new player in modern warfare
Published: March 10, 2026, 7:19 am
Teen mariachi musicians who once performed on Capitol Hill released from ICE detention following backlash

Caleb Gámez-Cuéllar, 14, and Antonio Gámez-Cuéllar, 18, who performed in Washington over the summer, were placed in immigration detention last month
Published: March 10, 2026, 7:10 am
‘I lost my husband in the Ukraine war - I came to Dubai to be safe’

Olga Garbuz tells Anjana Sankar in Dubai how she fled Kharkiv in eastern Ukraine four years ago with her daughter, only to find war following her to the Gulf
Published: March 10, 2026, 6:05 am
The US is not winning this war – Iran’s new supreme leader shows it is little more than Team America: World Police

The election of a new Iranian supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, is a sign that the ayatollahs have survived the first wave of attacks by Trump’s squad and may endure even longer. World affairs editor Sam Kiley looks at whether US foreign policy is now a satire of itself
Published: March 10, 2026, 5:51 am
Iran’s new supreme leader signs his name on missile aimed at Israel

Projectile reads ‘At your service, Sayyid Mojtaba’ as son of Ali Khamenei launches first strikes in power
Published: March 10, 2026, 5:46 am
Who is Mojtaba Khamenei? Iran’s new supreme leader and son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

The 56-year-old Mojtaba Khamenei is set to continue leadership of Iran in the same vein as his father
Published: March 10, 2026, 4:56 am
Can Trump bring back a military draft for the Iran war? Here’s how it works

Conscripting Americans into war remains deeply unpopular and is unlikely to have majority support in Congress
Published: March 10, 2026, 4:09 am
Trump threatens to unleash ‘death, fire and fury’ on Iran if it meddles with flow of oil in Middle East

The post marked Trump’s latest attempt to boost marine traffic through the Strait of Hormuz where its effective closure has sent crude oil prices spiraling past $110 per barrel
Published: March 10, 2026, 3:30 am
Trump holds the Senate hostage over citizenship proof to vote

Trump has turned the Senate into the latest battleground for his agenda with the filibuster in play, Eric Garcia writes
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:58 pm
Majority of American voters oppose military action in Iran and 77% expect it will result in a terror attack on US soil, poll shows

More than 1,200 people in Iran have been killed since the U.S. and Israel began striking the country over a week ago, according to local officials
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:45 pm
Trump says he’s willing to accept more US deaths to ‘finish the job’ in Iran

Trump falsely claims Iran could have used a Tomahawk missile to attack girls’ school and blames Tehran for 2000 attack on American destroyer by al-Qaeda in madcap press conference
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:33 pm
Golden Corral diner suffers ‘irreversible injuries’ after attack by staff who wrongly accused him of dine and dash: lawsuit

Attorney Keith Galliher says his client was left with a ‘traumatic brain injury’ after the incident at the Golden Corral in Henderson, Nevada
Published: March 9, 2026, 11:29 pm
‘Literally Anybody Else’ appears on the ballot for mayoral race in Texas town

Literally Anybody Else also ran for president in 2024 after becoming disillusioned with the candidates
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:57 pm
ICE denies flashy new cars are in hiding as agents say they don’t want them

A multi-million dollar fleet with Trump-inspired paint job is being used ‘across the country,’ agency says
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:30 pm
Stephen A. Smith just shut down talk of a 2028 run for president. Here’s why

Smith has a politics show on SiriusXM and identifies as a centrist and moderate
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:10 pm
WMD-throwing suspects wanted their ‘ISIS-inspired’ plot near Mamdani’s home to rival Boston marathon attack: feds

Two teenagers charged with using a weapon of mass destruction and providing material support to ISIS
Published: March 9, 2026, 10:09 pm
World leaders eye oil reserves, but so far hold off on tapping them

A widening war in Iran has halted oil tankers, made targets of refineries and spooked investors worried about the cascading impact of spiking energy prices
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:58 pm
Concerns over US travel visas sees huge event moved to Europe for first time in 35 years

The 36th annual ceremony, typically held in the US a few weeks before the actual Nobel Prizes, will now take place in Zurich
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:50 pm
12-year-old critically injured in second incident involving a child at a Maine ski resort in a week

Local officials said the child, described as a ‘ski racer’, had hit rough ground and tumbled into the nearby forest at a ‘pretty good rate of speed’
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:39 pm
Airbnb offers new hosts an extra $750 bonus as they scramble for more World Cup accommodations

The U.S. expects up to 10 million international visitors for the 2026 FIFA World Cup
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:36 pm
Artificial intelligence firm Anthropic sues DOJ over ‘supply chain risk’ label

The San Francisco-based tech company was formally designated a risk last week following a public disagreement regarding its AI chatbot in warfare
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:09 pm
Heartbroken mom files lawsuit against school after her 8-year-old son died choking on a piece of pineapple

The lawsuit alleges a school employee failed to recognize obvious signs that Cruzito Ruiz was choking
Published: March 9, 2026, 9:06 pm
Trump team picks little-known companies to spearhead turning warehouses into ICE mass detention centers

ICE is looking to increase detention capacity amid Trump’s massive immigration crackdown
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:53 pm
State trooper shot and killed during traffic stop leaves behind wife and young daughter

Gov. Josh Shapiro ordered flags to be flown at half-staff in O’Connor’s honor
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:40 pm
Massachusetts prosecutors to drop charge against Patriots' Christian Barmore

Massachusetts prosecutors say they will drop a domestic assault and battery charge against Patriots player Christian Barmore because they cannot prove the case
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:30 pm
Judge rules on Camp Mystic fully reopening one year after deadly flood
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The judge ruled that Camp Mystic’s owners must not alter or demolish the cabins where campers were housed during the floods
Published: March 9, 2026, 8:10 pm
Nixon aide Alexander Butterfield who exposed Watergate tapes dies at 99

Butterfield believed he’d had a hand in the president’s fate
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:59 pm
Trump says Iran women’s team will be looked after following anthem protest

US president has intervened after the team refused to sing the country’s national anthem
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:48 pm
Cape Cod officials have spent $1 million to rebuild a small staircase to the beach

Coastal erosion has forced officials to repair the wooden stairway several times in recent years
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:00 pm
Voice actor from Halo video game tells Trump team to cut him from White House clips celebrating Iran strikes: ‘Juvenile war porn’

‘I demand that the producers of this disgusting and juvenile war porn remove my voice immediately,’ Steve Downes, voice of Master Chief, says
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:49 pm
Here are the Iran war's biggest unknowns, from Tehran's new leader to oil prices

Big questions remain about the Iran war as it barrels into week two
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:25 pm
White House says it fired NTSB member over misconduct but Todd Inman denies the allegations

The White House says it fired an NTSB board member for serious misconduct, and he says the claims are false
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:22 pm
Iraq manager urges Fifa to delay his team’s World Cup play-off due to Iran-US war

Iraq are due to play in a World Cup play-off later this month but are struggling to gather their players together amid the ongoing conflict
Published: March 9, 2026, 6:03 pm
Rihanna shooting suspect identified and charged with attempted murder after firing into singer’s home

Ivana Lisette Ortiz remains in custody on a $10 million bail
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:45 pm
From Signalgate to Iran: Half of Republican aides in Congress say Hegseth is hurting Trump’s foreign agenda

Hegseth has presided over a major Signal security breach, faced scrutiny over missile strikes against alleged drug vessels in the Caribbean and is now overseeing Trump’s war in Iran
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:43 pm
Explosives thrown near Mamdani’s home investigated as ‘ISIS-inspired terrorism’

‘I can confirm this morning that this is being investigated as an act of ISIS-inspired terrorism,’ Tisch said
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:37 pm
Son charged with murder after intentionally running over his 89-year-old father, cops say

William Porter, 89, died and his 50-year-old son, Robert Porter, was arrested and charged with murder
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:35 pm
Oil, gas and stocks fluctuate over Iran war – what does it mean for your money, pension and energy prices?

The latest conflict, which is spreading across the Middle East, will have a significant knock-on effect in terms of inflation, interest rates and commodity prices
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:17 pm
Live Nation reaches deal in ticket sales antitrust case - and it could have big changes in how concert seats are sold

Live Nation Entertainment, Inc. could be required to pay out around $200 million in damages to states participating in the case - but will not be broken up
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:09 pm
Mamdani makes defiant statement after explosives thrown near home

New York City mayor Zohran Mamdani has spoken out after improvised explosive devices were thrown near his home on Saturday (7 March).
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:56 pm
Trump Organization wants to trademark president’s name with America’s 250th birthday

Designs for potential logos submitted to U.S. Patent and Trademark Office find President Donald Trump seeking to put himself front and center of summer anniversary celebrations
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:38 pm
Belgium synagogue explosion labelled a ‘despicable antisemitic act’

It comes as multiple countries tighten their security due to the US-Israel war on Iran
Published: March 9, 2026, 4:30 pm
Doctor who performed Epstein autopsy reveals why she didn’t initially rule it a suicide

Jeffrey Epstein was found dead in a New York City jail in August 2019
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:52 pm
Investigation into Swiss bar fire now includes mayor and 4 other officials

The fire that tore through Le Constellation bar on Jan. 1 was one of the worst disasters in modern Swiss history
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:50 pm
Voices: Poll: Should King Charles still visit the US after Trump-Starmer Iran row?
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Have your say: Ed Davey has urged King Charles to scrap his US trip as Trump’s attacks on Sir Keir Starmer put the state visit in question
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:50 pm
Shocking video shows couple telling kids they are lucky ‘ICE isn’t out here’ as they left Chicago dance studio

Tensions over immigration in Chicago have been stoked by the Trump administration’s federal immigration surge across the city
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:40 pm
New footage appears to show US Tomahawk missile strike near girls’ school in Iran

US military investigators say the US was likely responsible for the strike, but Donald Trump has blamed Iran
Published: March 9, 2026, 1:14 pm
East Africa grows millions of flowers sold in UK – but workers ‘suffering’ to make it happen

More than 20 million flowers are set to be sold in the UK for Mother’s Day. Campaigners say that the dire conditions on many flower farms show why the UK needs a new law to ensure workers are protected across entire supply chains. Nick Ferris reports
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:20 pm
Wife of teacher killed in heartbreaking prank-gone-wrong begs for charges to be dropped against teens

Jason Hughes, 40, died after falling into the street and being hit by a car as he chased the students during the prank
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:08 pm
Ride share app launches ‘women-only ride’ amid discrimination lawsuit

The nationwide rollout proceeds despite an ongoing class-action lawsuit in California, which alleges the policy discriminates against men
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:57 pm
Belarus journalist convicted of treason and sentenced to 9 years in prison

Activists say an independent journalist in Belarus has been convicted of treason and sentenced to nine years in prison
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:56 pm
Nigel Farage fails to meet Trump after flying to Mar-a-Lago

Reform UK leader insists he never planned on meeting the president, despite flying to his resort
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:47 pm
Celebrity birthdays for the week of March 15-21 includes Queen Latifah and Matthew Broderick
Celebrities having birthdays during the week of March 15-21 include rapper-actor Queen Latifah, actor-director Eva Longoria and TV personality Rob Kardashian
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:38 pm
Rubio ripped for posing for grinning photo with ex-Proud Boys leader at Florida summit

Tarrio, who was convicted of sedition due to his role in January 6, was pardoned by Trump last year
Published: March 9, 2026, 2:31 pm
How the US far right bought into the myth of white South Africa’s persecution

When Trump granted white South Africans refugee status, he was echoing a falsehood about Black people taking revenge for years of brutality. But no one flourishes in a repressive police state
There’s a little town in the scrub in South Africa – a full day’s drive from the country’s big cities – that has become perhaps the most scrutinised place on earth, given its size. It is 9 sq km (3.5 sq miles) of suburban-style houses harbouring about 3,000 people, with a main drag, a municipal swimming pool, one gas station and some pecan farms. Nothing of consequence ever really happens there, a fact the townspeople take as a point of pride. And yet over the past three decades, dozens of English-language news outlets have made a pilgrimage to it, often more than once. The New York Times alone has run four dedicated profiles. The essays have kept pace year after year, quoting the same people over and over, even as nothing of note occurred. There’s been no war, no disaster.
That changelessness is the point. No people of colour are allowed to live in the town, called Orania. The name is a nod to the river that runs nearby – and to the Orange Free State, the apartheid-era designation for the province in which it lies. Orania’s founders established it in 1991, the year after South Africa’s best-known Black liberation leader (and future president), Nelson Mandela, was freed following 27 years in prison.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 5:00 am
‘Charismatic and extremely confident’: how to recognise – and handle – a psychopath

Psychologist Leanne ten Brinke has spent decades studying toxic personality traits. What are the red flags to look out for among workmates, politicians and potential partners?
Coming face to face with a probable psychopath was enough to make Dr Leanne ten Brinke rethink her career choices. Early in her 20s, while studying forensic psychology in Halifax, in the Canadian province of Nova Scotia, Ten Brinke was volunteering at a parole office, which would hold weekly group meetings for released sex offenders. “Most of the men showed contrition,” says Ten Brinke. “They really seemed to recognise the damage that they had done.” Except for one. The treatment programme seemed “like a game to him”, she says. One week, in a discussion about the impact their crimes had on victims, this rapist stared at Ten Brinke and, smiling slightly, started to say how much his victim looked like her, “and how I was ‘his type’. Clearly he was trying to scare me, and he did.”
It put her off a career working with convicted criminals, but she remained fascinated with “dark personalities” – psychopathy, mainly, but also narcissism, machiavellianism (manipulating and exploiting others) and sadism. From politics to business to the media, it wasn’t as if there was a shortage of people to study. There were selfish, callous, impulsive and manipulative people everywhere, often presenting as gregarious and charming. “It started to occur to me that these traits aren’t just confined to an underworld. These traits appear in all aspects of our lives,” she says.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 5:00 am
Sex with Scorsese, beef with Sondheim … and inventing the moonwalk? The wildest moments in Liza Minnelli’s memoir

From Peter Sellers dressing like a Nazi, to having to manage her mother Judy Garland’s addiction, jaws will drop at Minnelli’s anecdotes
Tuesday marks the publication of Kids, Wait Til You Hear This!, the enormously entertaining memoir by Liza Minnelli, and that title – gossipy, confiding and with no small measure of Broadway panache – sets the tone from the off.
As well as coming across as kind and politically aware, Minnelli is quite heroically unburdened by tact, and as she sketches her life from gilded Hollywood to scrappy New York and on through addiction, ill health and multiple marriages, everyone – most of all herself – is assessed with bracing honesty.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:30 pm
‘I wish I could push ChatGPT off a cliff’: professors scramble to save critical thinking in an age of AI

As AI has upended the way students learn, academics worry about the future of the humanities - and society at large
Lea Pao, a professor of literature at Stanford University, has been experimenting with ways to get her students to learn offline. She has them memorize poems, perform at recitation events, look at art in the real world.
It’s an effort to reconnect them to the bodily experience of learning, she said, and to keep them from turning to artificial intelligence to do the work for them. “There’s no AI-proof anything,” Pao said. “Rather than policing it, I hope that their overall experiences in this class will show them that there’s a way out.”
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:00 pm
Fifty years of sexing up tech: Apple’s epic hits – and misses

Remember the iPod? How about the Pippin? In the half-century since it launched its first PC, Apple has given us some amazing innovations. We round up its biggest triumphs and flops
Fifty years after Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak and Ronald Wayne founded the company in Jobs’ parents’ garage in Los Altos, California, Apple has become a behemoth, and billions of us use its products every day. From the first successful home computers with colour screens, to the iPod, to the smartphone that set the template for the modern mobile era, the company has repeatedly reset consumer expectations.
As a result, the firm occupies a central position in the tech world, initiating trends and popularising products. Here are five of its most influential products from the past half-century – alongside some unusually big misses.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:00 am
Sanctions on Israeli settlements are working – even without the US

As a new West Bank settlement plan gains steam, now is the time for governments to take multilateral economic action
Amid an unforgiving global news cycle – and as nations weigh their options in responding to the yet unbuilt West Bank settlement project that would “bury the idea of a Palestinian state” – a telling sanctions-related development in Israel passed largely unnoticed outside Israeli media. In Tel Aviv, the new year began with a protest by a violent extremist settler group that has faced UK sanctions since October 2024.
The trigger was a new Israeli banking directive, rushed out to placate Israel’s hardliners, that they said did too little to shield Israelis from international sanctions.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:00 pm
Middle East crisis live: Hegseth says today will be the ‘most intense day of strikes’ in war against Iran

The US defence secretary says the military is increasing attacks on the regime
Oil prices drop sharply after Trump moves to reassure markets
Trump says Iran war is ‘very complete, pretty much’ as economic toll rises
How have you been affected by the latest Middle East events?
Investor hopes for a swift resolution to the Middle East conflict propelled Australian shares higher today, with the benchmark S&P/ASX 200 finishing the day up 1.1% and recovering about $35bn in value after yesterday’s $90bn plunge.
Oil prices surged to a four-year high early in the week before coming back down below $US90 a barrel after Donald Trump suggested the Iran conflict would end soon, sending global stock markets higher.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:54 pm
Minab school bombing: what evidence is there that the US was responsible?

Trump has blamed Iran for the mass killing at Shajareh Tayyebeh primary school but geolocation, videos and satellite imagery indicate otherwise
The bombing of a primary school in Minab on 28 February killed scores of people, most of them seven- to 12-year-old girls. The strike is the worst mass killing of the US and Israel’s war on Iran so far – and has been described by Unesco as a “grave violation” of international law.
On Saturday, the US president, Donald Trump, declared that Iran was responsible for the school bombing. “In my opinion, based on what I’ve seen, that was done by Iran … they’re very inaccurate, as you know, with their munitions. They have no accuracy whatsoever. It was done by Iran.”
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 6:00 am
Trump’s ‘free flow of energy’ vow fails to restart shipping in strait of Hormuz

Only two vessels not linked to Iran or Russia have braved ‘chicken run’ since US president’s promise on Friday
Only two vessels not linked to Iran or Russia have made the “chicken run” through the strait of Hormuz since Donald Trump said he would “ensure the free flow of energy to the world”, according to maritime records.
One of those that braved the journey since the US president’s announcement of emergency measures on Friday went “dark” by switching off its transponder and a second signalled it was Chinese owned and crewed.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:26 am
Trump’s Iran war will reinforce North Korea’s view that nuclear weapons are the only path to security

As speculation mounts that Kim Jong-un and Trump could meet this month, analysts say Pyongyang will continue to see nuclear weapons as a matter of survival
North Korea’s launch last week of a missile from a naval destroyer elicited an uncharacteristically prosaic analysis from the country’s leader, Kim Jong-un. The launch was proof, he said, that arming ships with nuclear weapons was “making satisfactory progress”.
But the test, and Kim’s mildly upbeat appraisal, were designed to reverberate well beyond the deck of the 5,000-tonne destroyer-class vessel the Choe Hyon – the biggest warship in the North Korean fleet.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 2:09 am
Bombing of Iran’s oil infrastructure to have major environmental fallout, experts warn

Monitors admit they are struggling to keep track of the environmental disasters arising from widening war
Israel’s bombing of Iran’s oil infrastructure will have major long-term environmental repercussions, experts have warned, as monitors admitted they were struggling to keep track of the environmental disasters arising from the widening war.
Even as Iranians filled the streets to mark the appointment of a new supreme leader, the Shahran oil depot north-east of Tehran and the Shahr-e fuel depot to its south continued to burn on Monday, two days after they were bombed by Israeli warplanes.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 5:00 am
RFK Jr’s pick to review Covid vaccines authored misleading research, experts say

HHS says the MIT professor is ‘more than qualified’ to serve on the agency’s vaccine advisory panel and calls ‘attacks’ on him ‘politically motivated’
The MIT professor who has been appointed by Robert F Kennedy Jr to review the safety of Covid-19 vaccines has failed to meet basic scientific standards in his own research on the topic, according to more than a dozen scientists and public health experts.
Retsef Levi, an operations management professor, is a member of the US health department’s vaccine advisory committee (ACIP) which is meeting later this month and – many experts fear – could seek to rollback recommendations on who should receive Covid-19 vaccines.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:00 am
Georgia votes for successor to Marjorie Taylor Greene after Trump spat – US politics live

Trump’s pick of former prosecutor Clay Fuller likely to face Democrat and retired general Shawn Harris in runoff for House seat
Hegseth says the aftermath of the conflict is “going to be in America’s interests” and says it “will not live under a nuclear blackmail” from Iran.
It comes shortly after the defence secretary reiterated president Donald Trump’s threat that if Iran does anything to prevent the flow of oil in the strait of Hormuz, it will be hit “twenty times harder”.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:55 pm
Thousands of authors publish ‘empty’ book in protest over AI using their work

About 10,000 writers including Kazuo Ishiguro, Philippa Gregory and Richard Osman join copyright campaign
Thousands of authors including Kazuo Ishiguro, Philippa Gregory and Richard Osman have published an “empty” book to protest against AI firms using their work without permission.
About 10,000 writers have contributed to Don’t Steal This Book, in which the only content is a list of their names. Copies of the work are being distributed to attenders at the London book fair on Tuesday, a week before the UK government is due to issue an assessment on the economic cost of proposed changes in copyright law.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 6:00 am
Texas welder called ‘highway hero’ for stopping unconscious driver

Rene Villarreal-Albe averted possible crash by pulling truck up to car and halting it as driver faced medical episode
A Texas man who recently was driving on a highway reportedly pulled his truck out in front of a car with an unconscious man behind the wheel, gradually slowed it down with his back bumper and ultimately stopped it to avert what could have been a major crash.
Rene Villarreal-Albe’s good deed was captured on dramatic cell phone video recorded by his wife, Andrea Walker, and then shared online by his sister, Cortney Trinidad, as the Texas news outlet Kens 5 reported. The video and action-movie-like story behind it gained widespread attention on corners of the internet dedicated to finding positive news, generating some comments that hailed Villarreal-Albe as a “highway hero”.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 9:00 am
Ex-Missouri house speaker sentenced 21 months for misusing Covid relief funds

John Diehl admitted using federal pandemic loans for country club dues, cars and other personal expenses
A former Missouri state house speaker was sentenced Monday to 21 months in prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud for misusing federal Covid-19 relief funds for his personal benefit, including the payments of his country club dues and three cars.
John Diehl, the former Republican house speaker, received about $380,000 in federal loans for his law firm between 2020 and 2022 through a program intended to help cover operating expenses for businesses affected by the coronavirus pandemic.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:22 pm
Shots fired at US consulate in Canada as police investigate incident

No injuries were reported after authorities found evidence of a discharged firearm near the consulate in Toronto
Police in Canada are investigating after shots were fired at the US consulate in Toronto. Officers said evidence was found of a discharged firearm and that no injuries were reported.
Toronto police said in a social media post they responded to the reported shots at 5.29 a.m. (0929 GMT) on Tuesday.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:48 pm
Alexander Butterfield, Nixon aide who disclosed Watergate tapes, dies aged 99

The White House aide who revealed that Richard Nixon had secretly recorded his conversations as president has died
Alexander Butterfield, the White House aide who inadvertently hastened Richard Nixon’s resignation over the Watergate scandal when he revealed that the president had bugged the Oval Office and Cabinet Room and routinely recorded his conversations, has died. He was 99.
His death was confirmed to the Associated Press by his wife, Kim, and John Dean, who served as White House counsel to Nixon during the Watergate scandal and helped expose the wrongdoing.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:17 pm
‘Lack of class’: Quentin Tarantino hits back at Rosanna Arquette over Pulp Fiction N-word criticism

Director rounds on actor, who acted in the cult film, saying he feels disrespected, and claiming cynical reasons behind her recent comments
Quentin Tarantino has responded to Rosanna Arquette’s criticism of his prolific use of the N-word in his films including Pulp Fiction, saying Arquette “show[ed] a decided lack of class”.
In a statement sent to numerous publications including Deadline, Tarantino said: “I hope the publicity you’re getting from 132 different media outlets writing your name and printing your picture was worth disrespecting me and a film I remember quite clearly you were thrilled to be a part of? … After I gave you a job, and you took the money, to trash it for what I suspect is very cynical reasons shows a decided lack of class, no less honour.”
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:21 am
US attorneys handpicked by Pam Bondi were appointed illegally, judge rules

Federal judge said prosecutors picked to replace Alina Habba repeated error of bypassing congressional approval
Three prosecutors installed by Donald Trump’s administration to lead the New Jersey attorney general’s office after the president’s former personal lawyer was disqualified from the role in December were also illegally appointed, a federal judge has ruled.
Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, handpicked the three to replace Alina Habba, who resigned after a succession of district and appeals court rulings that she was serving illegally because she never received Senate confirmation.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:42 pm
Trump cheers FBI subpoena of Arizona 2020 election records

Request for records related to election audit appears latest part of Trump effort to spread false claims about voting
A federal grand jury subpoenaed Arizona’s legislature for records related the state senate’s widely criticized review of the 2020 election, the state senate president said on Monday, in what appears to be the latest part of the Trump administration’s efforts to spread false claims about the 2020 election and voting in the United States.
Warren Petersen, the president of the Arizona state senate, confirmed on X on Monday the legislature had received a subpoena related to records of its review of the election results in Maricopa county, the most populous in the state. He added that “the FBI has the records”.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 7:38 pm
Golf club firm owned by Trump’s sons merges with drone manufacturer

Merger to take drone firm public is latest business move by Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr as father is in White House
A golf club company backed by the sons of Donald Trump is merging with drone manufacturer Powerus in a deal designed to take the drone technology company public.
The merger with Aureus Greenway Holdings is the latest in Eric and Donald Trump Jr’s growing investments in the drone sector, following last month’s $1.5bn tie-up between Israeli drone maker XTEND and Florida-based JFB Construction Holdings. Drones have become a major procurement priority for the Pentagon and are widely used in Ukraine, where dense air defense systems near the frontlines limit the deployment of conventional aircraft.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 6:42 pm
Sheinbaum tells Trump: stop illegal arms trade from the US to Mexico

US president claimed he wanted to eradicate cartels and made comments about Mexico’s president that were deemed sexist in summit speech
Claudia Sheinbaum has responded to Donald Trump’s description of Mexico as the “epicenter of violence,” by calling on the US government to step up efforts to combat gun trafficking.
“There is something that the US can help us a lot with: stop the trafficking of illegal weapons from the US to Mexico,” the president of Mexico said. “If they stopped the entry of illegal weapons from the United States into Mexico, then these groups wouldn’t have access to this type of high-powered weaponry to carry out their criminal activities.”
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 5:33 pm
‘Sounds familiar’: how the US-Israeli war in Iran parallels Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Both campaigns have been framed differently at different times, with dubious claims of defensive action and a curious reluctance to label it war
Shifting goals, unclear timelines and a flimsy pretext: at times, the US-Israel campaign against Iran carries curious parallels of Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine.
The comparison is far from exact. In 2022, Putin sent a massive army across Ukraine’s borders in an unprovoked invasion of a democratic state, a campaign that quickly resulted in heavy losses. The United States has so far largely limited its involvement to airstrikes against Iran’s authoritarian regime.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 6:00 am
Immigrant truck drivers are vital to the economy. ICE crackdown is forcing them off roads

Targeting of foreign-born truckers risks ‘deepening severe labor shortages’ as thousands of drivers have been taken off roads for failing English proficiency requirements
After moving to Ohio in 2013, Ibragim Chakhalidze’s father set up a trucking company just miles from where two of the country’s major road freight arteries – the I-70 and the I-75 – meet.
Formerly farmers who had come to the US from south-east Russia through a government refugee program, he says trucking has been in his family’s and the wider Ahiska Turk community’s blood for decades.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:00 pm
‘Extraordinary cruelty’: images show longterm ‘starvation strategy’ in Sudan

Experts argue sensor and satellite data reveal targeted attacks on farming communities by the Rapid Support Forces were intended to prevent villages producing food
There is strong evidence that the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) committed a war crime by depriving the villagers of north Darfur of the means to produce food, legal experts argue in a new analysis published today calling for the Humanitarian Research Lab’s (HRL) revelations to be used in international courts.
The destruction of the villages, farming equipment and infrastructure all provide strong evidence of a “starvation strategy” against a population already struggling with food insecurity because of the war, says Tom Dannenbaum, a professor at Stanford Law School and a leading expert on the use of starvation in war.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 7:00 am
Twisted Yoga: how a search for enlightenment turned into a dangerous cult

A shocking new Apple series goes behind the yoga camps where women alleged criminal behaviour from a guru wanted for sexual exploitation charges
Practicing yoga has its benefits: the meditative calm, grounded-ness and balance. The devoted pursue transformative spiritual journeys, through poses, chants and breath work. Some followers of tantra yoga take things even further, using sensuality to channel their energy and reach beyond themselves, seeking out of body liberation and enlightenment.
But it’s that very pursuit that has also left hundreds vulnerable to alleged rape and trafficking.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 9:03 am
Gus Van Sant: ‘My assistant wanted to erect a statue of Luigi Mangione. My generation thought: this is murder’

The Milk and Good Will Hunting director’s new film is about ‘a little guy’ taking violent revenge against the system. He talks about the parallels between Dead Man’s Wire and the homicide case currently dividing Gen Z and boomers
In February 1977, a middle-aged Indianapolis businessman named Tony Kiritsis took hostage an employee at his local mortgage brokers, who he was convinced had cheated him out of the profits of a piece of real estate. The system was weighted against the little guy, Kiritsis decided, and he was going to be the one to make it pay. He attached one end of a wire to the trigger of a shotgun, the other to the hostage’s head, and demanded $5m and an admission of guilt from the brokers’ boss. The final moments of the standoff, which lasted 63 hours, were broadcast live on TV.
It has already been the subject of a 2018 documentary (Dead Man’s Line) and a 2022 thriller podcast (American Hostage) which starred Jon Hamm as the DJ who broadcast an interview with Kiritsis live from the crime scene. Now Gus Van Sant, whose 40-year-plus career incorporates queer landmarks (My Own Private Idaho, Milk), mainstream crowdpleasers (Good Will Hunting) and arthouse award-winners (the Columbine-inspired Elephant), is dramatising the events in Dead Man’s Wire. This wry thriller cuts between the volatile captor (Bill Skarsgård) and the media circus swirling around him, which includes the DJ, played here by Colman Domingo, and a female TV journalist (Myha’la) fed up with being fobbed off. Al Pacino has a cameo as the boss of the mortgage company, sunning himself in Malibu and unconvinced he has anything much to apologise for.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 5:00 am
Project Hail Mary review – Ryan Gosling’s charm carries unserious last-ditch space mission

Tale of a brilliant molecular biologist cast into outer space with only a helpful alien for company is a bit silly, but Gosling’s charisma keeps it watchable
This is a movie, adapted from Andy Weir’s sci-fi bestseller, about a desperate astronaut mission of the future, named by Nasa after the “Hail Mary pass” in American football, launched into space in a last-ditch attempt to save Planet Earth, dying because a string of alien microbes are snuffing out the sun.
Hunky high school science teacher Dr Ryland Grace, played with seductive, unruffled good humour by Ryan Gosling, wakes up from his induced coma on this spacecraft, with wacky long hair, straggly beard and zero memory of why he is aboard. The rest of the crew are dead, and Grace must now figure out how he got there and how to rescue humanity.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:00 pm
NFL free agency winners and losers: Ravens shine and what were the Jets thinking (again)?

As the new league year gets underway, we take a look at the best and worst moves heading into the 2026 season
Los Angeles Rams
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:54 am
It’s shock and awe as Trump’s granddaughter does her bit for the war effort. All hail Kai Trump, the shopper-in-chief | Marina Hyde

Yes, many Americans are struggling, but it’s good to know the first family can still afford Earth’s most expensive provisions. Morale is everything, isn’t it?
In the absence of any clearly and consistently stated aims from the US administration, maybe each day of the Iran war just needs a moodboard description. In which case, Sunday was a tale of two nepo babies. In Iran, the high-level executive search for the new ayatollah concluded that the old ayatollah’s son was the best man for the position. It’s not for me to assess his job prospects, but you’d hope his supermarket order doesn’t contain any “ripen at home” pears.
Meanwhile, across the world, in LA, Donald Trump’s eldest granddaughter posted a YouTube video titled “I Brought My Secret Service to Erewhon”. By way of background, Erewhon is Earth’s most pretentiously extravagant hipster food shop, and, as Kai was at pains to brag, “the most expensive grocery store pretty much out there. Everything’s crazy expensive! So we’re going to get my favourite stuff.”
Marina Hyde is a Guardian columnist
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:52 pm
Democrats must defund Trump’s imperial war | David Sirota, Jared Jacang Maher, Laura Krantz and Ron S Doyle

Trump is wielding imperial powers created by a decades-long master plan. The only way to stop his war is to cut off the money
Donald Trump has now ordered military attacks on more countries than any prior president. These assaults do not merely betray his campaign promises. Launched without congressional authorization, Trump’s bombings and incursions also betray the constitution – an inherently anti-monarch document that exclusively vests warmaking powers in the legislative branch in order to prevent such grave decisions from being made by any one person determined to become a king.
Trump clearly perceives himself in such royal terms – he’s said as much. But as we show in the new season of our investigative podcast series Master Plan: The Kingmakers, Trump did not create the kingly authority he is now employing. He is exercising powers concentrated in the executive branch by previous presidents and courts. And if history is any guide, the only weapon that can stop a mad king is Congress’s power of the purse – a power that Democrats once effectively wielded, but today seem hesitant to brandish, even amid a wildly unpopular Iran incursion that some fear is a precursor to the second world war.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:00 am
Who will stand up for the Iranian people as death rains on them from the skies? | Nasrin Parvaz

Calls for a popular uprising and empty promises of help are reckless in the extreme – and no answer to my country’s plight
Nasrin Parvaz is a women’s rights activist and torture survivor from Iran
I have been watching the news from inside Iran, unable to hold in my sorrow. As an Iranian who was imprisoned and tortured by the regime, I have been pleading with the world’s human rights organisations and media to keep a focus on the country’s plight. But now I see US-Israeli bombs falling on Iran, and some Iranians celebrating this war while innocent people die. My heart is breaking for my country.
Let us be clear: when Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu conspired to launch their war, it was not out of a desire to free the Iranian people from the tyranny of the regime. Netanyahu said on the second day of the war: “This coalition of forces allows us to do what I have yearned to do for 40 years.” He has named this operation “Lion’s Roar”. Meanwhile, Iranian monarchists celebrate the carnage, waving the shah’s version of the country’s flag with its crowned lion and sun.
Nasrin Parvaz is a women’s rights activist and torture survivor from Iran. Her books include A Prison Memoir: One Woman’s Struggle in Iran, and the novel The Secret Letters from X to A
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Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 6:00 am
Iran’s new supreme leader is a figure of mystery, but the symbolism is clear: the regime fights on | Sina Toossi

The rarely seen Mojtaba Khamenei is a surprise appointment, but his accession is above all a statement of defiance
When Mojtaba Khamenei was named Iran’s new supreme leader, many observers reacted with surprise. For decades, the son of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei had been a shadowy figure in Iranian politics, rarely seen in public and almost never heard speaking.
He has never given interviews, has held no elected office and appears publicly only on rare ceremonial occasions. Even among political insiders, knowledge of his views is fragmentary. What little is known about him consists of scattered anecdotes: brief involvement in the Iran-Iraq war as a young man, occasional appearances in political circles and a long association with figures inside Iran’s security establishment.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:00 am
One simple way to heal American politics: run more union members | Dustin Guastella

Our research shows that candidates who come from the union movement are exactly what many Americans crave
American politics feels hopelessly broken. Extreme political polarization, enormous amounts of Pac money sloshing around during elections, and the increasing power of the rich make it seem like nothing, and no one, can set the country on the right track. But a new report from the Center for Working-Class Politics looks at a surprisingly simple way that ordinary people might have more influence in our political system: run more union members for office.
The forthcoming CWCP report, co-authored by Jared Abbott, Benjamin Y Fong, Fred DeVeaux, Dustin Guastella and Sam Zacher, and sponsored by Arizona State University’s Center for Work and Democracy, looked at the broad political impact of political candidates with a labor union background. We found that candidates who come out of the union movement are exactly what many people in the country desperately crave: politicians who sound like them, who advocate for working people, and who provide solutions that actually work to fix our broken system.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:00 am
‘Revolutionary’: Ukrainian para-biathlete wins silver using ChatGPT as his coach

Murashkovskyi benefits from artificial intelligence support
‘I used it as a psychologist, coach and sometimes as a doctor’
Team Ukraine have hit the ground running at the Winter Paralympics, standing second in the medal table after three days of competition. Their resolve and determination has been inspirational to many, but one athlete has revealed a secret weapon in their search for a competitive edge.
Maksym Murashkovskyi, who won silver in the men’s visually impaired biathlon on Sunday and did not miss a shot, has been working with OpenAI’s large language model. “For the past six months, I have been training with ChatGPT,” he said. “It was not only tactics. It was half of my training plan, motivation, etc. So it was a huge volume of all of my training. I used it as a psychologist, coach and, sometimes, as a doctor.”
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 6:52 pm
Russia flag raised and national anthem played after first gold at Winter Paralympics

Varvara Voronchikhina wins women’s super-G standing
Russian anthem has not been heard at Games since 2014
The Russian national anthem has been played at the Paralympics for the first time since 2014 as the skier Varvara Voronchikhina claimed gold in the women’s super-G standing.
A tearful Voronchikhina received her medal on Monday afternoon, and the Russian flag was raised, after a dominant performance on the slopes of the Tofane Alpine Skiing Centre. A watching crowd of international fans responded only with polite applause, but Voronchikhina’s success has already been celebrated by Russia’s sports minister.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 12:38 pm
Milano Cortina Winter Paralympics 2026: day three – in pictures

We take a look at the best images from day three of the Games, including skiing, ice hockey and curling
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 12:58 pm
Andreeva ‘not proud’ after Indian Wells title defence ends in smashed racket and gestures at crowd

Russian loses to Katerina Siniakova in three sets
Teenager throws racket on several occasions
Mirra Andreeva’s Indian Wells title defense met a bad-tempered end on Monday as Katerina Siniakova stunned the Russian teenager 4-6, 7-6, 6-3.
The 18-year-old opened her bid to retain her crown with a dominant 6-0, 6-0 demolition of Solana Sierra. But she was in trouble early and often against Siniakova, the world No 44, in a rollercoaster contest that ended with a shot from the Czech that hit the net cord and dribbled over in one last frustrating moment.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:55 pm
NBA’s bizarre ‘tanking’ problem has spewed theories but no solutions | Sean Ingle

Logical situation of losing to get a better pick has led to big fines but June’s superstar draft created a ‘perfect storm’
Imagine you are the director of football at a crisis-stricken Premier League club in a world where relegation doesn’t exist and the planet’s best teenagers become available for free in a draft every June.
In this alternate universe, you are also aware of something else: the 2026 Premier League draft is one for the ages. Barcelona’s Lamine Yamal and Pau Cubarsí are in it. So are Bayern Munich’s Lennart Karl and Real Madrid’s Franco Mastantuono. Sign one of them and the glory days will suddenly beckon again.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 8:00 am
Folding teams, a labor fight, and … expansion? The USL’s structure allows for it all to happen

The organization that runs most of US lower-league soccer is making a big push after the 2026 World Cup – is it a bridge too far?
It’s been years, but Dan Egner’s X profile still shows him planting a kiss on the USL Championship’s silver cup. These days, Egner is an agent with NordicSky, representing clients on both sides of the Atlantic. But in 2019, when that picture was taken, he was the technical director of Real Salt Lake at a time when MLS teams had affiliates in the USL, the umbrella organization that runs much of lower-league soccer in the United States, including the second-division USL Championship.
When Salt Lake’s affiliate Real Monarchs won the final, the glory was sweet, but it was not profitable.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:00 pm
Relegated and then European champions? Have I got Spurs for you | Jon Harvey

It’s been a troubling season at Tottenham and while there is a slim chance it will end in glory, ignominy is looking more likely
How do you solve a problem such as Tottenham Hotspur? They’re the ninth-richest club in the world, who pride themselves on a thrilling style of play – “To dare is to do” – and have been blessed through the years with a pantheon of household names: Blanchflower, Hoddle, Ardíles, Gascoigne, Bale, Kane, Son. Last August they were seconds from beating Paris Saint-Germain to win the Uefa Super Cup, which would have made them – tenuously – the best team in Europe. Seven months later they’ve wilted into a shell-shocked laughing stock careering towards the Championship. They’re the club that launched a thousand memes.
In this most Spursy of seasons, hiring Mr Fixit Igor Tudor as interim manager looks like being the biggest misstep yet. The Croatian hard man has taken a squad who needed an arm round the shoulder and stuck them in a vice-like headlock. He has openly suggested there’s only three things wrong with them: they can’t run, they can’t score and they can’t defend. You could count the number of fans who backed his appointment on the fingers of Captain Hook’s bad hand, and if three crushing defeats are anything to go by, his shock treatment is going down like a cup of cold West Ham lasagne. Is there any way out?
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 8:00 am
The NBA knows how to punish spectacle. Systems are harder | Lee Escobedo

When Ja Morant brandished a gun on social media the league knew how to act. But what happens when complex questions about team ownership arise?
Lately, I’ve been thinking about the job I had two decades ago, when I was a janitor at a machine shop in Fort Worth, Texas. Even as a hungover 20-year-old, my internal monologue would debate the ethics of the parts I packaged. We produced tiny components for Halliburton and Lockheed Martin. Slivers of aluminum machined to tolerances so fine you could miss their imperfections with the naked eye.
Beneath the fluorescent hum of the shipping and handling department, I’d rub a widget between my fingers and imagine the journey it would take: lifted from a Texan warehouse into the Middle Eastern theatre where our nation’s wars burned. Small enough to disappear in my palm, large enough to disappear into someone else’s rubble. Which is why I keep thinking about those widgets as the NBA tries to regulate morality.
The NBA, Memphis Grizzlies and Ubiquiti did not respond to requests for comment on this story.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:00 am
NBA cancels Atlanta Hawks’ theme night with strip club Magic City after backlash

Commissioner: League heard ‘significant concerns’
Spurs’ Kornet had penned post against promotion
The NBA has called off the Atlanta Hawks’ plans for a night celebrating the city’s famed Magic City strip club, saying it did so because of “concerns” across the league.
The Hawks announced the plan last month, saying the team would pay tribute to an “iconic cultural institution” with food – including the club’s famous lemon pepper wings – along with a live music performance by Atlanta native TI and exclusive merchandise.
After the Hawks announced plans for the promotion, San Antonio Spurs center Luke Kornet spoke out about the idea and urged the parties involved to reconsider. And the league evidently heard the same messaging from others.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 9:57 pm
Jack Draper sets up Djokovic clash after beating Cerundolo at Indian Wells

Draper defeats Argentinian 6-1, 7-5 in third round
Cameron Norrie sees off Alex de Minaur 6-4, 6-4
Jack Draper continued his impressive comeback from an arm injury by beating Francisco Cerundolo to set up a last-16 clash with Novak Djokovic at Indian Wells.
Draper rode his luck at the end of the second set to clinch a 6-1, 7-5 win and set up his first meeting with Djokovic since he took the first set off the defending champion on his Wimbledon debut in 2021.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 11:53 pm
Verdict on the start of F1’s new era: five talking points from the Australian GP

Mercedes’ flying start lives up to promise, but new regulations receive scathing reviews
The pre-season favourites had done their level best to play down their expected advantage in the buildup to the Australian Grand Prix, but it was impossible to hide. A dominant one-two by the best part of a second for George Russell and Kimi Antonelli in qualifying was followed by a similarly assured one-two finish in the race.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 3:25 pm
New Mexico authorities launch search of ranch previously owned by Epstein

The so-called Zorro Ranch was the site of numerous alleged abuses, but was not subject to intense scrutiny
New Mexico authorities launched a search of a ranch previously owned by Jeffrey Epstein, state officials announced on Monday.
The late convicted sex offender and financier’s so-called Zorro Ranch was the site of numerous alleged abuses, according to civil and criminal proceedings. But the location was not subject to the same scrutiny as other Epstein properties, and a Guardian investigation in February revealed that federal authorities apparently never searched the New Mexico ranch.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:47 pm
Uruguay’s candombe brings streets to life as the once-banned musical tradition roars back

The Afro-Uruguayan rhythms, born among enslaved Africans and once banned, now draws thousands to public squares and carnival parades
Like the blues in the US, samba in Brazil, rumba in Cuba and plena in Puerto Rico, candombe, Uruguay’s Afro-descendent music, was once reviled, marginalised and even banned – but managed to endure.
But while other such genres have for decades formed part of the cultural mainstream across the Americas, only now is candombe experiencing its peak.
A drone view of the Rueda de Candombe gathering in the streets of Ciudad Vieja in Montevideo, Uruguay.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:00 am
I’ll also be back as Conan: Arnold Schwarzenegger to make third Barbarian film 44 years after original

The 78-year-old has announced a return to the action hero role that made his name in 1982, promising ‘all kinds of madness’
Arnold Schwarzenegger is to return to the role that launched him as a movie star in a belated third instalment of the Conan the Barbarian franchise. The original film, released in 1982 and adapted from pulpy novels by Robert E Howard, saw the then bodybuilder play the chivalric sword-wielder on a quest for revenge against James Earl Jones’ cult leader Thulsa Doom.
Schwarzenegger, 78, whose acting work has slowed since he returned to the profession after his stint as the governor of California, announced at the Arnold sports festival in Columbus, Ohio over the weekend that director Christopher McQuarrie, best known for his work on the Mission: Impossible franchise, would take the reins on King Conan.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:54 pm
Spain to formally pardon 53 women incarcerated by Franco regime

Thousands of girls were locked up by Board for the Protection of Women for ‘rehabilitation’
Spain is to formally pardon a group of 53 women who are among thousands who were incarcerated by the Franco regime on the grounds that they were supposedly “fallen or in danger of falling”.
The women were locked up as adolescents by the Board for the Protection of Women, a collection of institutions run by religious orders. The board, which had echoes of Ireland’s notorious Magdalene laundries, was overseen by Carmen Polo, the wife of the dictator Gen Francisco Franco.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:46 pm
‘Everyone feels like they are being scammed’: can Central America’s small coffee growers survive as global prices fall?

Family-run farms in El Salvador and Honduras face mounting losses, rising costs – and the need to adapt or be left behind
Read more of our Coffee crisis series here
On a steep hillside in western El Salvador, Oscar Leiva watches rainfall in December, a month that once marked the start of the dry season. During this harvest cycle, flowering came early and then stalled. A heatwave followed. What remains of the crop is uneven, lower in quality and more expensive to produce than the last.
For Leiva and his family, coffee has never been just a crop. His mother, Marina Marinero, remembers when the rains arrived on schedule and the harvest could be planned months in advance. Today, the calendar no longer holds. Decisions about pruning, fertilising and hiring labour feel like educated guesses. Each mistake carries a cost the family cannot afford.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:00 am
Missouri drops murder charge against man who opened fire at Super Bowl rally

Man was among at least six people who started shooting outside Union Station in state, which has adopted stand your ground law
A man who initially faced a murder charge for opening fire following the Kansas City Chiefs’ 2024 Super Bowl win was sentenced Monday to two years in prison in a case prosecutors said was complicated by the state’s self-defense laws.
Dominic Miller, who pleaded guilty to a weapons charge as part of a plea deal, was among at least six people to start shooting in the melee that sent players, city officials and hundreds of fans scrambling for cover, according to court records.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:49 pm
VW to cut 50,000 jobs amid Trump tariffs and falling Chinese sales

Car group reports 54% drop in pre-tax profits as it says Iran war could affect demand for Audi and Porsche brands
Europe’s largest automaker, Volkswagen, is to shed 50,000 jobs by the end of the decade, as it faces falling sales in China and North America and punitive US tariffs imposed by Donald Trump.
The 10-brand group, whose luxury subsidiaries Porsche and Audi are also under pressure, said the jobs would go in Germany, affecting the entire group, as part of a restructuring drive in light of the darkening global business climate.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 11:40 am
Testing the waters: can pumping chemicals into the ocean help stop global heating?

To some it was a reckless experiment but scientists hope the dispersal of 65,000 litres of sodium hydroxide into the Gulf of Maine could ease the climate crisis
For four days last August, a thick slick of maroon bruised the waters of the Gulf of Maine. The scene, not unlike a toxic red tide, was the result of 65,000 litres of an alkaline chemical, tagged with a red dye, that had been deliberately pumped by scientists into the ocean.
Though it sounds perverse, the event was part of a scientific experiment that could advance a technology to combat both global heating and ocean acidification. Ocean alkalinity enhancement (OAE), as the approach is called, acts like natural weathering, but on human – rather than geological – timescales.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 6:00 am
Countries can rewild borders to deter invasions, says EU environment chief

Jessika Roswall cites Poland and Finland, which have made border areas near Russia or its allies ‘more hostile’ to cross
Countries should look to rewild their land borders as a deterrence to invasion and build up other geographical defences to attack, Europe’s environment chief has said.
Jessika Roswall, the EU’s commissioner for the environment, water resilience and a competitive circular economy, said nature should be used to improve national security. “Investing in nature and using nature as a natural border control is necessary, and actually increases biodiversity. It’s a win-win,” she said.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 11:17 am
How the ‘Galápagos of west Africa’ is plundered by floating fish factories

A Guardian investigation with DeSmog reveals thousands of tonnes of fish are illegally turned into fishmeal and oil off the coast of Guinea-Bissau
The only ice factory on Bubaque, an island in west Africa’s Guinea-Bissau, is out of service. Local fishers, such as Pedro Luis Pereira, are forced to source ice from factories on the mainland, about 70km away – a six-hour round trip by boat.
“The machines have been broken for months,” Pereira says, as he pulls in his nets on the shore of the island inside the protected Bijagós archipelago. “We’ve alerted the ministry of fisheries, but so far, no one has come to fix them.”
Foreign industrial vessels anchored near the port of Bissau. Photograph: Davide Mancini
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 7:00 am
Alexander brothers, high-profile US real estate brokers, guilty of sex trafficking

Oren, Alon and Tal Alexander convicted in New York after being accused of raping dozens of women
Three brothers, including two of the nation’s most successful luxury real estate brokers, were convicted of sex trafficking charges on Monday after a five-week trial over accusations that they used drugs and force to rape scores of women they had dazzled with their wealth and opulent lifestyle.
The verdict came after 11 women testified they were sexually assaulted by one or more of the brothers: twins Oren and Alon Alexander, 38, and Tal Alexander, 39.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 9:56 pm
Trump threatens not to sign any bills until Congress approves strict voter ID act

Save Act would limit voting access in the US and centers on Trump’s unfounded claims of noncitizens stealing elections
Donald Trump renewed his push Monday for the Save America Act, a curtailment of voting access, after threatening on Sunday not to sign any bills until Congress approves the legislation.
“All voters must show proof of citizenship in order to vote,” Trump said during remarks on Monday at a Republican event in Miami. “No mail-in ballots, except for illness, disability, military or travel.”
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 11:03 pm
Uber launches women-only option across the US

Uber is expanding a pilot program aimed at addressing concerns about the safety of its ride-hailing platform
Uber launched a feature on Monday to allow both female riders and drivers across the US to be matched with other women for trips, expanding a pilot program aimed at addressing concerns about the safety of its ride-hailing platform.
The new feature is being rolled out nationwide despite an ongoing class action lawsuit against the policy in California, filed by Uber drivers who argue that it is discriminatory against men. Rival ride-hailing company Lyft is also facing a discrimination lawsuit over a similar offering that it introduced nationwide in 2024.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 10:45 pm
At least eight people dead after spate of tornadoes across central US

Eighteen tornadoes between Thursday and Saturday resulted in deaths in towns from Michigan to Oklahoma
Communities throughout the central United States were cleaning up and trying to recover after an onslaught deadly tornadoes struck the region over the weekend.
At least eight people had been confirmed dead as of Monday, with dozens more injured.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 4:53 pm
Short films made from brain activity of mice aim to show how they see world

Scientists hope results analysed after the mice watched video footage will help them understand their perceptions
Scientists have reconstructed short movies from the brain activity of mice that watched videos for a project that aspires to lift the veil on how animals perceive the world.
The brief movie clips are grainy and pixellated, but provide a glimpse of how mice processed footage that featured people taking part in various sports from gymnastics to horse riding and wrestling.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 5:00 am
Fears for women’s rights in Chile as anti-abortion president set to take office

José Antonio Kast, who voted against legalising divorce in 2004, has pushed for return to total abortion ban
Women’s rights activists in Chile are bracing as the most conservative president since the Pinochet dictatorship prepares to take office on Wednesday.
José Antonio Kast, a 60-year-old ultra Catholic whose father was a member of the Nazi party, has consistently blocked progressive bids for women’s rights and equality across his three-decade career in politics.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:00 am
China-North Korea trains to restart, six years after Covid brought them to stop

Travel operators say Chinese and North Koreans can now buy tickets for services leaving this week
Passenger train services between China and North Korea are to resume this week, six years after their suspension because of the Covid-19 pandemic, travel operators have said.
Train journeys between the two countries were halted in 2020 as strict border closures were imposed to prevent the virus spreading.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:13 am
Trump ally Lindsey Graham issues threat to Saudi Arabia over Iran war

Republican senator warns of ‘consequences’ if kingdom does not join US strikes against Iranians
Senator Lindsey Graham on Monday questioned whether the United States should honor a long-sought defense agreement with Saudi Arabia, saying the kingdom’s refusal to join military operations against Iran made the partnership difficult to justify given that Americans were dying in a war Graham himself helped push the Trump administration to start.
In a post on X, Graham said the American embassy in Riyadh was being evacuated due to sustained Iranian attacks on Saudi soil, and expressed frustration that Riyadh had declined to participate militarily despite what he described as a shared interest in defeating Iran.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 8:01 pm
Why One Battle After Another should win the best picture Oscar

Paul Thomas Anderson’s capering clash between a demented repressive regime and ragtag freedom fighters is both cartoonish and deadly serious – and perfectly tuned to its times
Viva la revolution and don’t forget your password, your pronouns, your plaid gown and your gun. One Battle After Another, from writer-director Paul Thomas Anderson, is the brawling rebel insider of this year’s Oscar race; a state-of-the-nation Hollywood spectacular that feels as disunited and unstable as the country it depicts. The film hates America and it loves it, too. It’s on the side of the angels even when it’s not quite sure who they are. It lights a candle to curse the darkness, and prays to God it hasn’t picked up a stick of dynamite by mistake.
“We have to stay out of politics,” Wim Wenders advised his fellow directors at last month’s Berlin film festival, and yet One Battle After Another is political to its fingertips, hard-wired to the here and now and perfectly anticipating the tenor of Donald Trump’s second term. Leonardo DiCaprio plays Bob, the one-time firebrand turned burnt-out stoner, who belatedly hauls himself off the couch when his daughter Willa (Chase Infiniti) is captured. Freely adapted from Thomas Pynchon’s 1990 novel Vineland, the film updates the book’s jaundiced post-60s hangover for the ICE-age 2020s as the plot careens from the migrant detention camp to the sanctuary city to uncover a Christian Nationalist cell within the US federal government. The self-styled “Christmas Adventurers” are on a heaven-sent mission to make America great again. They say, “If you want to save the planet, you always start with immigration.”
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 8:00 am
Learning You review – faith-stuffed autism road trip drama sets off to find father-son connection

This sappy and ill-conceived tale about an architect, his autistic son and a lifesize toy bear suffers from sanctimonious religious messaging and dreadful dialogue
Anyone with autism or close to someone with the condition might feel inclined to be forbearing of this family drama about a father and his autistic son, given its plea for acceptance and love. But yikes – it is so sappy, ill-conceived and bloated with sanctimonious religious messaging, it is a slog to get through. If, however, you feel that watching it is almost an act of charity in itself (apparently some of the proceeds will go toward supporting carers), admire this at least for being one of the few feature films that tries to depict more challenged autistic people who need support (also known by the now-contested label of “low functioning”). Also to its credit, the film opens with a disclaimer that acknowledges that “the autism spectrum is wide and varied” and that “this film reflects the individual experiences of two characters and is not intended to represent every autistic story”.
The main character here is Elijah (played as a child by Reece Turley and then as an adult by Caleb Milby), a young man first met just after a violent meltdown that has ravaged the family’s Christmas decorations. Elijah’s father Ty (John Wells) attempts to comfort the distraught teen, with help from Elijah’s favourite stuffed toy, polar bear Nook. Flashforward seven years, and Elijah is now in some kind of secure hospital, barely distinguishable from a jail, partly because his mother Pam (Layla Cushman), divorced from Ty, just wants to offload him on the state and wash her hands of him while Ty struggles to maintain his career as an architect.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 7:00 am
Rooster review – Steve Carell and a naked college president add wisdom to this cringe comedy drama

The master of the everyman gifts us some hard-won parenting insights in this blissfully awkward show about a father and daughter relationship
Humankind, as TS Eliot’s bird said in Burnt Norton, cannot bear too much reality. That feels especially salient now, when we have more reality arriving in a day than we used to have to process in a year.
At the same time, unless you go the whole high-fantasy hog and offer 100% escapism via immersion in a completely alternative world, it is becoming trickier for your audiences to believe in you at all. Programmes set in the real world have to acknowledge the new way of it. Pure, frothy comedy just became that much harder to pull off – and it was never easy. But walking the line between too much reality and not enough is almost as difficult.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 10:40 pm
John Oliver on the demise of USAID: ‘What this administration has done is beyond cruel’

Last Week Tonight host examined the devastating impact of the demise of USAID, the primary federal agency for foreign aid
On the latest Last Week Tonight, John Oliver examined the Trump administration’s gutting of USAID, the international aid agency once described as “the world’s single largest humanitarian donor”. Donald Trump, naturally, called it “a scam” where there was “very little being put to good use”.
“Set aside the irony of Donald Trump, of Trump University, accusing anything of being a fraud,” said Oliver. “You can’t just call something a scam because you don’t like it. I want to call low-rise jeans a scam. I feel like Peppa Pig is a fraud. I believe that radical lunatics run Jamba Juice. But even I acknowledge that my feelings don’t make any of those thoughts true.”
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 3:51 pm
Effi o Blaenau review – Greek myth retelling Iphigenia in Splott becomes blistering Welsh-language film

Leisa Gwenllian is a force of nature as working-class heroine Effi in this big screen version of Gary Owen’s one-woman play
The visceral one-woman play Iphigenia in Splott by Welsh dramatist Gary Owen has overwhelmed audiences and critics since it premiered in 2015, reimagining the sacrificial heroine Iphigenia from Greek tragedy as a young working-class woman in Cardiff who likes a drink and a laugh, defiant in the face of pity, condescension and curtain-twitching. Now it has been recreated as a blistering Welsh-language movie by director Marc Evans, who has co-written the screenplay with Owen, with a live-wire performance from Leisa Gwenllian as Effi, a child of austerity and the Covid lockdown, reclaiming her rights to immediate pleasure and happiness in the face of long-term deprivation.
At times it plays a little broad with the occasional touch of Holby City; and on a factual point, if Effi’s solicitor wanted to dissuade her from abandoning her lucrative negligence case against a hospital, he would emphasise that her payout would come from the hospital’s insurance (though, yes, the resulting increased premiums would punish future patients). Still, Effi o Blaenau is part of a British social realist tradition that extends from Ken Loach’s Poor Cow to Clio Barnard’s The Arbor, and it turns on that kitchen-sink staple no longer often found in modern drama and movies: the unplanned pregnancy. It also has what social realism often doesn’t have: an absorbing, propulsive story that keeps you on the edge of your seat. And it’s a film that doesn’t flinch from the burden of tragedy.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 4:02 pm
‘Cathartic violence’: why Kill Bill: Volume 1 is my feelgood movie

The next in our ongoing series of writers picking their favourite comfort films is an argument that Tarantino’s bloody revenge saga is a feelgood winner
Having older siblings had its upsides. The main one being I had early access to the very best age-inappropriate titles – my brother and sister loved films and our towering DVD collection was a sight to behold. While I can’t remember my exact age when I first watched Kill Bill: Volume 1, I was young, probably too young, and it was awesome.
Unlike most other films I’m fond of that tend to be endlessly quotable, there’s only one line from Kill Bill, emanating from a particularly repugnant character, that I’ve always recalled with clarity (“my name is Buck and I’m here to …” hazard a guess). What is unforgettable is its banging soundtrack and striking imagery – that bright yellow tracksuit splashed in ketchup-red blood – and the dizzying, stylised action that whisks me away from whatever mundane obstacle I’m facing and into a fantastical tale of revenge.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 9:00 am
A loving homage to pop culture’s also-rans: best podcasts of the week

Maisie Adam and Scott Bryan talk comically and sensitively to people who found sudden tabloid and early internet fame in the 00s. Plus, Norse myths and history with Iain Glen from Game of Thrones
It’s all too easy to sneer at pop culture’s also-rans. This series from comic Maisie Adam and journalist Scott Bryan does the opposite, embracing people who found sudden fame – mostly in the 90s and 00s – and telling their stories with humour and care. Guests include Liberty X’s Kelli Young, who thinks she and her bandmates were seen as “too R&B” to win ITV’s Popstars – and is surprisingly grateful to the funk band who sued them. Hannah J Davies
Widely available, episodes weekly
Published: March 9, 2026, 7:00 am
Kids, Wait Till You Hear This! by Liza Minnelli review – a heady brew of gossip, glamour and defiance

Lady Gaga and David Gest are among those who get ferocious dressings-down in this brutally candid memoir
Liza Minnelli’s father, the film director Vincente Minnelli, used to joke that his daughter’s career in show business was preordained. She was certainly familiar with the dark side of the industry from a young age through her mother Judy Garland, who was on the MGM payroll aged 13, before shooting to fame as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz. Garland was famously depressive and addicted to prescription drugs and alcohol. When her daughter was six, she shut herself in the bathroom and made the first of many suicide attempts. Minnelli soon learned to monitor her mother and hide her pill bottles when she saw darkness descending. By 13, she was “my mother’s caretaker – a nurse, a doctor, pharmacologist and psychiatrist rolled into one … Just as the MGM studio system robbed Mama of her childhood, she robbed me of mine.”
In her memoir, Minnelli – who turns 80 this month – recounts how she broke free from her dysfunctional family at 16 and moved to New York to make it as a singer and actor. Little surprise, given her parentage, that her ascent was swift. “I was the original nepo baby,” she observes, gleefully. But if show business was in her DNA, so was addiction. In her 20s she became hooked on Valium, diet pills, cocaine and alcohol. Later, as her career faltered and her private life imploded, her sister Lorna staged an intervention and got her into the first of many rehab programmes.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 12:05 am
‘We all want to know what he was doing in the bedroom’: Kerouac’s unseen archive goes on show in New York

As the original On the Road scroll heads to auction, a new exhibition uncovers the private life of the Beat legend
Among great literary myths, the one of Jack Kerouac is often reduced to a vibe. The open road, a cigarette, a postwar rebel leaning on a beat-up car – a masculine archetype of rebellion and hedonism. Kerouac’s 1957 book On the Road was the bible of the beat generation and chronicles, in startlingly unfiltered prose, his travels across the US with fellow writers Allen Ginsberg, William S Burroughs, and his lifelong muse, the dashing Neal Cassady. The book shifted the course of US literature and captured the imagination of a rapidly changing world. Kerouac was crowned king of the beats, a moniker he later despised.
This, at least, is what many students of US literature know. But a new exhibition Running Through Heaven: Visions of Jack Kerouac at New York’s Grolier Club aims to rehumanize the myth, with letters from Kerouac that have never been publicly viewed before.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 12:11 pm
Love Magic Power Danger Bliss by Paul Morley review – Yoko Ono before the Beatles

A vivid celebration of the artist covers her childhood and breakthrough in New York – while sidelining ‘that other business’
John Lennon once described Yoko Ono as “the world’s most famous unknown artist. Everybody knows her name, but nobody knows what she does.” Others were more vicious, portraying her as a family wrecker (the family being the Beatles), a cultural vandal, an Asian virus, a shrieking harridan. As ventriloquised by Paul Morley in his appallingly titled Love Magic Power Danger Bliss, they saw her as someone whose “sole reason to be on the planet was to drive them up the wall with her lack of talent and decency”. Or, only slightly more generously, a “disorganised diva channelling the assumed genius of male creators”.
Morley’s book focuses on Ono’s life and art before she ran into Lennon at London’s Indica Gallery in 1966. The Beatles he refers to as “that other business”. His Ono is headstrong, questing. Born in 1933, into a wealthy banking family (her schoolmates included the sons of Emperor Hirohito), she survived the firebombing of Tokyo and took refuge in the country where she and her mother, now virtual beggars, were mocked by locals. Later, she would become the first woman to be accepted into the prestigious Gakushuin University philosophy department. She left early, just as she would also leave Sarah Lawrence College in upstate New York after two terms.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 9:00 am
Look What You Made Me Do by John Lanchester review – a battle between millennials and boomers

There are sharply observed pleasures to be found in this black comedy of infidelity, revenge and intergenerational tension – but the plot is both implausible and predictable
John Lanchester has distinguished between his nonfiction and his novels as the line between “things happening in the world” and “the things that won’t leave you alone”. Over the last decade and a half that gap appears to have narrowed. His 2012 bestseller, Capital, used the global economic crisis (explained with characteristic verve and lucidity in the nonfiction Whoops!) to lend a sharply moral edge to a sprawling Dickensian story about the London property bubble, told through the class cross-section of a newly affluent south London street. His 2019 follow-up, The Wall, was a dystopian near-future tale in which rising sea levels have exacted a catastrophic toll: a heavily guarded sea wall encircles a Britain determined to fortify its vanishing coastline and keep out the refugees desperately seeking asylum. In 2019, global sea levels reached a record high.
Lanchester’s satirical chops are on full display in his latest, Look What You Made Me Do, but this time his focus is more personal than political. Set in a recognisably professional – for which read excruciatingly smug – north London peopled by architects and agents, Lanchester’s sixth novel is billed by its publishers as a black comedy.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 7:00 am
Scott Pilgrim EX review – is it time to grow up?

PC, Xbox, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4/5; Tribute Games Inc
A treat for nostalgia fans and completists, but there’s little new in this rehashing of a classic that feels like an add-on rather than a fully fledged adventure
It’s 20XX, and unrepentant slacker Scott Pilgrim and his friends are revelling in the throes of young adulthood. They’re skint, but in a cool way that’s unrecognisable today (not least because nobody can afford to live near downtown Toronto). For many readers, the Scott Pilgrim graphic novels were a cultural touchpoint, a story about emotional immaturity, growing as a person and ultimately defeating youthful arrogance. Having cemented itself as a cult classic with an Edgar Wright movie, a 2010 tie-in game and a Netflix miniseries, it’s now back in the form of a raucous action-adventure game, Scott Pilgrim EX.
This is a homecoming of sorts for developer Tribute Games, which was formed by ex-Ubisoft employees who worked on the 2010 Scott Pilgrim game. Having established themselves as beat ’em up revivalists with Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge and Marvel Cosmic Invasion, the team has stepped up for another crack at this essential coming-of-age tale. Scott Pilgrim EX feels like a passion project, so they have the Powers of Love and Understanding on their side.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 10:55 am
Et tutu, Timothée? Backlash mounts over Chalamet snipes at opera and ballet

Jamie Lee Curtis is among a number of prominent figures to take exception to the Oscar nominee for disparaging artforms ‘no one cares about any more’
The Oscar-winning actor Jamie Lee Curtis has added her disapproval to the chorus protesting against Oscar nominee Timothée Chalamet’s comments about the relevance of opera and ballet.
The star of Marty Supreme has attracted considerable backlash for his remarks during a CNN/Variety video conversation with Matthew McConaughey, which was recorded on 24 February.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 2:58 pm
Pixar chief says LGBTQ+ plot elements cut from Elio as company is ‘not making therapy’

Pete Docter says Pixar will concentrate on more commercially appealing films after staff dissent over deleted scenes that implied lead character was gay
Pixar chief creative officer Pete Docter said that the reason why LGBTQ+ plot elements were removed from the company’s 2025 film Elio was that Pixar is “not [making] therapy”.
Docter was speaking to the Wall Street Journal in the wake of the successful release of Pixar’s latest film Hoppers, which opened at No 1 at the North American box office this weekend.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 11:41 am
‘The smell wasn’t healthy’: the artist who wore 24 nappies to highlight sewage pollution – and fell ill

zack mennell made a costume out of nappies and waded into filthy waterways saying: ‘I’m going to be the parasite.’ The performance artist’s project became more literal than originally intended
On the Deptford foreshore, a ghoulish figure is sinking into the Thames. Performance artist zack mennell (who writes their name in lower case) wades to their belly button as a crowd watches on. As they dip down further, their mutant costume – sewn together from 24 adult nappies – swells with water … and waste.
mennell’s work smears the personal and political across their body. The Thames performance is the finale of a project called (para)site, made in response to revelations of sewage discharge in our waterways and a reaction to the way benefit claimants are labelled as a drain on society. “OK,” mennell thought, “I’m going to be the parasite.” Their taking on of pollution was more literal than they intended; they contracted Weil’s disease from rat urine in the water.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 5:00 am
Rosanna Arquette says Quentin Tarantino’s use of N-word in Pulp Fiction is ‘racist and creepy’

Arquette says 1994 film is ‘great on many levels’ but she ‘cannot stand that [the director] has been given a hall pass’
Pulp Fiction and Desperately Seeking Susan star Rosanna Arquette has said she found Quentin Tarantino’s use of the N-word in Pulp Fiction to be “racist and creepy”.
In an interview with the Sunday Times, Arquette said of the film, in which she plays the tattooed and pierced wife to Eric Stoltz’s syringe-wielding drug dealer: “It’s iconic, a great film on a lot of levels. But personally I am over the use of the N-word – I hate it. I cannot stand that [Tarantino] has been given a hall pass.”
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 2:44 pm
What’s the secret to crisp-skinned fish? | Kitchen aide

High heat and low moisture are key to avoiding a soggy or stuck-to-the-pan mess
When I fry fish, the skin never goes crisp, and instead either sticks, rips or goes limp. What am I doing wrong?
Emily, by email
“The secret to perfectly crisp fish skin is heat,” says Mitch Tonks, founder of Rockfish in south-west England. Well, heat plus a little bit of prep. Fish are, of course, moist things, and moisture is the enemy in the quest for that golden-brown crust, so the first thing Emily is going to need to do is dry that skin out. “If the fish has any moisture on it, it will create steam while it’s being cooked, which, in turn, will make the skin go soggy and inedible, rather than crisp and delicious,” says British fish guru Nathan Outlaw, whose latest book, On Fish: A Seafood Handbook, is published next month. And the best way to do that, Outlaw says, is to wipe and dab the skin with some kitchen paper or a clean tea towel.
Rick Toogood, head chef and co-founder of Prawn on the Lawn in London and Padstow, Cornwall, and Jack Stein, chef director of Rick Stein Restaurants, are simpatico, but Outlaw then goes that one step farther: “Take a second piece of kitchen paper [or another clean tea towel], wrap up the fish in it and leave for a couple of minutes,” he says. “This allows any remaining moisture to be absorbed.”
Got a culinary dilemma? Email feast@theguardian.com
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 1:00 pm
Thomasina Miers’ recipe for stuffed cabbage in white wine and escabeche, with buttered dill and pea rice | Sunday best

I can’t get enough of cabbage right now, and it’s the perfect wrap for this warmly spiced picadillo filling
I love stuffed vegetables. When I was young, I came across a recipe for stuffed aubergines in an old book of my mother’s and must have cooked it a score of times. Later, in the early 1990s and to the echoes of nouvelle cuisine, Delia Smith showed us how we could work similar magic with peppers and tomatoes. Then the technique went deeply out of fashion, but I stayed loyal, and continued quietly stuffing tomatoes, pumpkins and courgettes, all no doubt influenced by my travels in Mexico. Thoday’s stuffed cabbage is inspired by the most delicious tongue in a tantalisingly light escabeche that I once had at Nicos in Mexico City, and also because I can’t get enough of cabbage at the moment.
Continue reading...Published: March 10, 2026, 6:00 am
A perfect pillow, a ‘bargain’ Ikea mattress and more: the best sleep products on sale right now

From a bestselling Coop pillow to the Hatch sunrise alarm clock, these editor-tested picks are discounted for sleep awareness week
‘The most rejuvenating sleep of my life’: 12 products our writers rely on for rest each night
Sign up for the Filter US newsletter, your weekly guide to buying fewer, better things
From mouth taping to the quirky potato bed trend, people seem willing to try anything to improve their sleep.
And at the Filter US, we’re on a mission to help our readers not only get more sleep, but better sleep. Over the past few months, we’ve tried 24 sleep masks, recommended the very best pillows and even asked sleep psychologists for their holy grail products.
Best mattress deal:
Helix Dusk Mattress
Best budget mattress deal:
Ikea Valevåg Pocket Spring Mattress
Published: March 9, 2026, 5:15 pm
I cooked with 10 induction cookware sets for a month – these are the standouts

From Caraway to Our Place and Staub, here are our top-rated picks for the best induction-ready cookware
Induction cooking might feel like a shiny new kitchen flex, but the technology itself has been around since the early 20th century. What is new is how widely it’s catching on. For more and more home cooks, induction cooktops sit at the top of their kitchen upgrade wish lists.
“To be able to control temperature precisely, to be able to boil water rapidly, it’s awesome,” says Joseph DeCasperis of southern California–based home design firm the High End. He estimates that induction stovetops take up a little over a third of his firm’s installations.
Best overall:
Caraway 12-Piece Ceramic Cookware Set With Complimentary Storage
Best budget:
Calphalon Classic Stainless Steel Cookware Set
Published: March 9, 2026, 3:31 pm
Is it true that … if you pluck a grey hair, two will grow in its place?

If plucking made more hairs grow, it would be the solution to thinning, but sadly it can have the opposite effect
‘I wish that by plucking a single hair you would get more to grow back,” says Desmond Tobin, professor of dermatological science at University College Dublin. “It would be a great solution for people who are thinning and unhappy about it.”
Unfortunately, it’s a myth. Our scalp is covered in follicles – essentially tiny hair factories – and each one produces just a single hair shaft. Plucking a hair won’t cause multiple hairs to grow from the same follicle.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 8:00 am
McQueen meets difficult moment with fatalistic glamour at Paris show

Seán McGirr inspired by modern identity and ‘London girls’ in one of strongest collections to date, as brand cuts jobs and struggles for momentum
Beneath the Paris fashion week hoopla – Chappell Roan resplendent in the front row, champagne flowing backstage – there were dark undercurrents at Alexander McQueen’s Paris fashion week show. The brand has seen a 60% decline in turnover over the past three years. Workforce cuts were made in the London headquarters last year, and a third of the brand’s 180 employees in Italy are thought to be at risk of losing their jobs. Fifteen years after the death of Lee McQueen, the brand is struggling to maintain momentum.
The founder is a hallowed name in the fashion industry, and one of the few modern designers to whose character and story the wider public feel a connection. But the generation who wore McQueen’s original bumsters have aged out of shock-value fashion, and the name has less power over younger consumers.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 11:16 am
Now we have proof: dealing with difficult people really does age you

Researchers have found evidence of what many of us always suspected: ‘hasslers’ shorten your lifespan. And they know by exactly how long
Name: Hasslers.
Age: More like ageing.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 5:49 pm
Meal-breakers: can any relationship survive food incompatibility?

It’s not the heart, but the stomach that will sometimes define whether a budding romance proves food for the soul, or reaches boiling point …
For Anna Jones, it’s lemons. For Ben Benton, it’s rice. For Gurdeep Loyal, it’s anchovies on pizza and, for me, it’s Yorkshire Tea in the morning. I could – did – date someone who “didn’t drink hot drinks”, but I would never have married a man I couldn’t make tea for when I woke up, or who couldn’t make me tea in turn.
These are what I’ve come to call “meal-breakers” – mouthfuls whose joys we feel our loved one must share, if we’re to share our lives with them. They are foods and drinks we cleave to as much for what they say about us and our values as we do for their smell, texture and taste. For most, it’s not so much the meal as the principle it conveys; not the anchovies on pizza so much as being with “someone who appreciates food as an act of collective joy – that embraces an ethos of all plates being communal,” says Loyal, author of the cookbook Flavour Heroes. The meticulous divvying-up of brown, salty silvers to ensure an even distribution on each pizza slice: that’s the sharing ethos he looks for in a potential soulmate.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 10:00 am
‘Peas are criminally overlooked!’ Seven fabulous forgotten superfoods

Yes, we all know blueberries and kale are good for us. But what about some of the other less well-marketed food heroes that have fallen out of favour?
Think of a superfood. What comes to mind? Avocado? Turmeric? Quinoa? Many of us will have a grasp of the most mainstream so-called superfoods. The ones that have become dietary superheroes thanks to savvy marketing. Larger-than-life in the public imagination, they walk among us with a sheen: blueberries with their polyphenols; kale and its vitamin K; goji berries and all their antioxidants.
But what is and isn’t a superfood is actually down to trends – take the current resurgence of a previously shunned, tragically uncool food: cottage cheese. Beloved by Richard Nixon with pineapple (the Watergate tapes weren’t just illuminating in the ways Woodward and Bernstein hoped for) and a diet-culture favourite in the 60s and 70s, the creamy, tangy cheese curd concoction is back. And there are other supposed superfoods that are just as nutrient-rich, but that marketing hasn’t (yet) brought to our attention. Once a regular part of the UK diet, they have fallen, perhaps unfairly, out of favour. So which foods with serious nutritional chops have we forgotten? Which should we reintegrate?
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 10:00 am
She was arrested for holding a protest sign in small-town California: ‘This is a testing ground’

Jenny O’Connell-Nowain was put under house arrest, and her husband, Benjamin, lost his job after they protested at board of supervisors meetings
Jenny O’Connell-Nowain was ready to go to jail.
She had been prepared to spend six months in the custody of the Shasta county sheriff’s office. One of the top prosecutors in this part of far northern California had presented the evidence against her in a weeklong trial, and a jury had delivered a guilty verdict. A judge offered probation, but O’Connell-Nowain did not agree to the terms.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 2:00 pm
‘The cover-up is brazen’: one journalist’s tenacious, traumatic fight to expose Ghislaine Maxwell

Lucia Osborne-Crowley has endured threats and sexual harassment to report on Jeffrey Epstein’s chief enabler. Maxwell’s conviction was only the start of the quest for justice, she says
On 9 September 2022, Lucia Osborne-Crowley flew from London to Miami and caught a Greyhound bus north to West Palm Beach. The writer and journalist had arranged to meet Carolyn Andriano, who was abused by Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell from the age of 14 until she was 17, starting in 2001. Andriano had been a crucial witness in the trial against Maxwell in 2021.
When the two women met, Andriano said she had just been visited by a private investigator – a man in his 60s, who had heard she was talking to someone about a book. In a restaurant that afternoon, Osborne-Crowley was approached by a man in his 60s. What was she writing, he wanted to know. He offered her drugs, cash and a meeting with one of Epstein’s pilots, then put his hands under her skirt. When the manager asked him to leave, he waited in the car park; Osborne-Crowley had to escape through a staff exit.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 5:00 am
‘We want to give them their names back’: the team identifying Europe’s forgotten female murder victims

Interpol’s DNA unit is helping bring closure to families of murder victims, whose names may be unknown for decades
In the shadow of Antwerp’s main arena, close to the city’s docklands, runs the Groot Schijn River. It was here that the body of Rita Roberts was discovered in June 1992, floating against the grate of a water treatment plant.
She appeared to have been murdered, but Belgian police were unable to identify her. A tattoo of a black rose with green leaves and initials on her left arm was their only clue.
Continue reading...Published: March 9, 2026, 11:00 am
A giant cat and a Back to the Future reunion: photos of the day - Monday

The Guardian’s picture editors select photographs from around the world
Warning: Gallery contains sensitive images
Published: March 9, 2026, 12:54 pm
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