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Entertainment Apr 29, 2026

Leaving Neverland Director Slams Michael Jackson Biopic for Distorting Abuse Claims

Director Dan Reed, who made the documentary *Leaving Neverland*, denounced the new Michael Jackson …
Reed’s Public Rebuttal of the Biopic’s NarrativeIn a Variety interview, Dan Reed—the filmmaker behind the 2019 documentary that chronicled accusations by Wade Robson and James Safechuck—condemned the newly released biopic Michael for portraying the accusers as “liars” without explicitly stating it. Reed argued the film reduces Jackson to an “asexual plastic action doll” and sidesteps the well‑documented allegations of predatory behavior, claiming the movie “flips the truth on its head.”Box‑Office Success Amidst ControversyThe film opened to record biopic numbers, grossing $217 million (£161 million) worldwide in its opening weekend across the US and UK. Despite the financial triumph, critics note the earnings contrast sharply with the fact that the accusers have seen “no penny” from the venture, highlighting a profit disparity that fuels Reed’s outrage.Industry and Cultural RepercussionsReed’s critique underscores a broader tension in Hollywood: the balance between commercial storytelling and ethical responsibility when depicting real‑life figures accused of serious crimes. The director’s comments also revive discussions about racial double standards in media coverage, echoing co‑director Antoine Fuqua’s remarks linking the controversy to systemic bias.Potential Fallout for Future BiopicsAnalysts predict that studios may face heightened scrutiny over narrative framing in biographical projects, especially those involving contested legacies. Legal experts suggest that families of accusers could pursue claims if they can demonstrate that the film’s portrayal materially harms their reputations or financial interests.Looking Ahead: What This Means for Jackson’s LegacyAs the debate intensifies, Jackson’s estate stands to profit substantially, while the accusers’ voices risk being further marginalized. The clash between commercial success and moral accountability may shape how future documentaries and biopics address allegations of abuse, potentially prompting more rigorous fact‑checking and stakeholder consultation before release.
#Michael Jackson #Dan Reed #Antoine Fuqua
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Entertainment Apr 29, 2026

Robert Wilson's Moby Dick: A Theatrical Odyssey

Renowned theater director Robert Wilson's posthumous production, Moby Dick, brings Herman Melville'…
The Legacy of Robert Wilson Not far into Herman Melville's 1851 epic novel Moby-Dick, a shipowner describes the man who will take their whaler on a tragic quest. Captain Ahab, he says, is 'a queer man … a grand, ungodly, godlike man.' The same might be said of Robert Wilson. By the time he died last July at the age of 83, Wilson had transformed himself from a stuttering, gay son of conservative southern Baptist parents in Waco, Texas, into New York City's titan of experimental theatre, opera and dance. Wilson's Final Masterpiece Wilson launched many of these theatrical explorations from the Brooklyn Academy of Music (Bam), from 1970's almost-silent play The Life and Times of Sigmund Freud to 2016's Letter to a Man, starring Mikhail Baryshnikov as Vaslav Nijinksy. This spring, his final work will reveal itself to his hometown crowd after an initial 2024 presentation in Düsseldorf. In Moby Dick, Melville's wild rumination on global capitalism, obsession, masculine intimacy and fate comes to life on a stage at Bam defined by many of Wilson's signature gestures. The Collaboration There is Wilson's astonishing use of bands of light, for example, and his demands on performer's bodies to somehow do nothing and everything at once. There's a collaborator, too – in this case, the accomplished British musician Anna Calvi, who's written a raucous and glamorous suite of songs for the show. It's their second collaboration, following 2017's The Sandman. ' David Byrne put me in touch with him,' Calvi says via email, knowing she was a fan of Wilson's work with Tom Waits. '[Byrne] wrote to me, saying, 'Are you ready to go down the rabbit hole?' Which is a very good description of working with Bob!' The Impact of Wilson's Work In many ways, though, Wilson harpoons expectations for what might happen when a god of American theater hunts down a Great American Novel. Wilson's Moby Dick is short, sleek and almost sentimental. And it reminds us that ambition might sometimes have lethal costs, but that life isn't worth living without it. 'All the things that made him Bob Wilson are represented in this project,' says Bam artist director Amy Cassello, who worked with him for decades. The Future of Wilson's Legacy Indeed, Wilson and Calvi largely jettison Melville's notoriously verbose texts, building sea-shanty glossolalia into little cabins for all you need to know about, for example, a bar full of sailors, or how it feels to walk a plank. 'I loved how he always got me to do things I would never normally do,' says Calvi. 'I remember being at a casting and at one point, at Bob's request, I was rolling around on the floor with the other actors!' Moby Dick is at Brooklyn Academy of Music from 29 April to 3 May.
#Robert Wilson #Moby Dick #Brooklyn Academy of Music
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

Luka Dončić and the Manosphere: The Never-Ending Scrutiny of His Body

This article examines how NBA star Luka Dončić has faced intense scrutiny over his physique, drawin…
The Manosphere's Influence on Sports CultureIn Louis Theroux's Netflix documentary "Inside the Manosphere," he interviews podcasters, streamers and influencers from across the Red Pill ecosystem. But the most profound moments are when he speaks with their followers. Regular, everyday American men who struggle to make a living, find love, get laid and start a family.One of them is a Latino man in his 20s living in Miami. He explains that Andrew Tate's message helped pull him out of homelessness. What stuck with him wasn't Tate's aggressive bravado or rampant misogyny, but a simple idea: as a man, you start with no inherent value – you have to build it. On its face, it sounds like basic self-help. Beneath it is something harsher: a belief among those in the manosphere that worth is conditional, something that must be earned through performance, discipline and visible results. Under their logic, a "successful" man has a harem of women, luxury cars and a body bulging with muscles.The Physical Scrutiny of Modern AthletesThat message doesn't just live online. You can see it in sports, especially in how we talk about athletes' bodies. This kind of scrutiny isn't new in sports. For decades, female athletes have lived under a similar microscope. Evaluated not just for what they do, but how they look while doing it. Now, men are being pulled into the same dynamic. The standards aren't identical, but the mechanism is.Luka Dončić has become one of the clearest subjects of the scrutiny. Ever since he entered the NBA in 2018, it's been clear that the Slovenian is a Hall of Fame talent. But for all his ability, conversation around him has drifted away from what he does on the court and toward what his body – Dončić has never had the ripped physique of the stereotypical athlete – supposedly says about him.The Performance Standards in Professional BasketballIn Dallas, he led – some would say carried – the Mavericks to the 2024 NBA finals. But long before then, the whispers had started about his "conditioning" and "durability". It began with chatter about his love of hookah and fluctuating weight while in Dallas, before being used as the raison d'être for the since-fired Mavericks general manager, Nico Harrison, trading him to the Los Angeles Lakers.Dončić is far from a perfect player. He argues with refs, confronts opponents, is suspect on defense and has a propensity for hero-ball and, yes, is prone to niggling injuries. But the extra weight he carried – for an athlete mind you, not for a guy off the street – was seen as a symbol of his flaws. Just like the manosphere influencers, the basketball world portrays his supposed physical imperfections as proof of some internal failing.The Media Narrative and Public PerceptionBut the Red Pill race is unwinnable: there's always one more bodybuilding supplement to buy, one more luxury car to show you've made it to the top of the pyramid. And this twisted logic is played out more widely in how Dončić is viewed. At the start of this season, there was a frenzy after he appeared on the cover of Men's Health displaying the kind of body we were told he should have had all along. He went on to play like a demon, leading the NBA in points per game.But even then, Dončić could not win. In February, on The Hoop Collective podcast, Tim MacMahon discussed the Lakers' problems this season, saying: "If there's a 'blame pie', [Dončić] can have a slice of it, but there's plenty to go around." His co-host, Brian Windhorst, joked: "Luka likes pie." There was still gossip about a custody battle with his former partner over their children. Then, when Dončić strained his hamstring as the playoffs approached, and reportedly scoured Europe for a cure, the narrative flipped from "he's lazy" to "he's too driven". The injury brings the vultures back to the carcass. If he rushes back and fails, they will blame his "conditioning". If he stays out to protect his future, they will blame his "heart".The Future of Athlete Evaluation and Cultural ShiftsWhich brings us back to the man in Miami. He is attracted to figures like Tate because he wants to be seen. He is told he can gain worth and value if he just works hard, gets ripped and keeps grinding. But even a millionaire athlete can't win that war in the modern landscape. In sports, out of sports, people are drifting apart. To make it worse, we don't even have a common language to talk about any more. Everything has become a political statement. Look at Dončić. He can weave through double teams and control the entire court, yet we get stuck arguing about his body fat. Yapping about his relationship troubles.In that sense, the manosphere and the sports mainstream are not so far apart. In both, value is something that must be constantly demonstrated – and is just as easily called into question.
#Luka Dončić #NBA #Manosphere
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Health Apr 29, 2026

UK’s Generational Smoking Ban Emerges as Public‑Health PR Triumph

The UK Parliament approved a tobacco and vapes bill that will raise the legal purchase age each yea…
A Gradual Path to a Smoke‑Free Generation Gains Broad SupportThe new tobacco and vapes bill sets a yearly increase in the minimum legal age for buying tobacco, meaning anyone born on or after 1 January 2009 will never be able to purchase cigarettes or vapes legally. From 2027 the age will rise by one year annually, creating a permanent generational line that will eventually eliminate legal sales across the UK. How the Bill Phases Out Legal Sales by Birth YearThe legislation does not criminalise smoking; it places the burden on retailers. Over time two adults of similar age could receive different treatment based solely on birth year – a deliberate mechanism to drive an invisible decline in smoking prevalence. Public Opinion Numbers and NHS Cost Savings Highlight Policy Appeal52% of smokers support raising the age each year (YouGov 2024).78% of the general public back the idea of a smoke‑free generation.The NHS incurs roughly £2.6bn annually in smoking‑related treatment costs, with broader societal costs estimated at £11bn per year. Why the Incremental Ban Is Reshaping UK Public Health and Political ConsensusDespite a polarized political climate, the bill enjoys cross‑party backing from Conservatives, Labour and Liberal Democrats, and even strong support from many smokers who regret starting early. By targeting the supply side rather than criminalising users, the policy aligns with broader goals of reducing preventable disease burden on an overstretched NHS. Future Outlook: Global Watchers and the Road to a Smoke‑Free UKOther nations, such as the Maldives, are monitoring the UK experiment as a potential template for gradual tobacco phase‑outs. If successful, the approach could inspire similar generational bans worldwide, ultimately delivering a public‑health victory that eliminates legal tobacco sales without direct confrontation. Key TakeawaysLegal purchase age rises by one year each calendar year starting 2027.Broad public and cross‑party support underscores the policy’s political viability.Projected NHS savings and reduced smoking‑related mortality bolster the economic case.International health officials are watching the UK as a pioneering case study.
#UK #Smoking Ban #Tobacco Legislation
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Business Apr 29, 2026

Is India's Chabahar Port Dream Dead After US Sanctions?

The US waiver on sanctions for India's Chabahar Port project has expired, potentially killing India…
The Uncertain Future of Chabahar Port Relations between the United States and India are at a crossroads yet again: this time, over New Delhi's decade-long investment in Iran's Chabahar Port. India's most ambitious connectivity project in its extended neighbourhood now potentially faces a dead end after a US waiver on sanctions imposed on the project expired on Sunday, with no signs of its revival from Washington. What's at Stake for India in Chabahar Port? The Chabahar port, located in southeastern Iran on the Gulf of Oman, comprises two terminals: Shahid Kalantari and Shahid Beheshti. India has been involved in the Shahid Beheshti terminal and has invested at least $120m in equipping it. The port has been hailed as a cornerstone of India's economic and strategic ambitions over the last two decades, because of its geography. The Data Behind India's Investment India invested $120m in equipping the Shahid Beheshti terminal. The port is a key part of the International North-South Transport Corridor (INSTC), a 7,200km network of railroads, highways, and maritime routes that connects Russia and India through Iran. The Impact of US Sanctions on Chabahar Port The US has been pressuring Iran's economy towards collapse through an aggressive sanctions regime aimed at choking off its revenue streams, under its 'maximum pressure' campaign. Despite this, the US Treasury Department had initially exempted Chabahar from sanctions in 2018. However, in September 2025, the US announced that it was revoking all exemptions to Iran-related sanctions, including for Chabahar. India's Options Moving Forward New Delhi has reportedly been looking to transfer the stake of government-owned India Ports Global Ltd (IPGL) Chabahar Free Zone to an Iranian entity for operations. However, no deal has been reached yet. Analysts say such a transfer could allow India to return to its role in managing port operations whenever sanctions are lifted on Iran in the future.
#India #Iran #Chabahar Port
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

Kevin Keegan’s ‘Love It’ Rant: How a 1996 Outburst Shaped Newcastle’s Title Chase

Thirty years after Kevin Keegan’s infamous “I will love it” outburst, the moment is revisited as a …
On Monday 29 April 1996, Newcastle United’s 1‑0 win at Leeds set up a dramatic finale to the Premier League season. Manager Kevin Keegan exploded on live TV, declaring he would “love it” if Manchester United slipped, a line that has become folklore in English football. The 1996 Newcastle‑Leeds Showdown and Keegan’s Live Retort Newcastle’s victory, courtesy of Keith Gillespie, moved them three points behind Manchester United with two games left. Before the match, Sir Alex Ferguson had hinted that Leeds and Nottingham Forest would not try as hard against Newcastle as they did against United, planting a psychological seed. In the post‑match interview with Sky Sports’ Richard Keys and Andy Gray, Keegan seized the bait, delivering the now‑legendary tirade. Keegan’s exact words: “I will love it if we beat them. Love it.” The interview was recorded in a cramped broadcast hut plagued by a foul smell, only salvaged by a player’s deodorant. Fans outside Elland Road reacted by honking horns and shouting “Love it!” as the clip aired. Points, Positions and the Title Race Math The standings after the Leeds game were: Manchester United: 84 points (already crowned champions after beating Middlesbrough 3‑0). Newcastle United: 81 points, with a final‑day draw against Tottenham leaving them on 82. Leeds United: 81 points after a 1‑1 draw with Newcastle. Even if Newcastle had won their last two fixtures, United’s superior goal difference would have kept them ahead, but the psychological edge gained from Keegan’s outburst is argued to have contributed to the team’s inability to clinch the title. Psychological Warfare: Ferguson’s Mind Games vs Keegan’s Fury Ferguson’s pre‑match comments were a classic example of “dark arts” mind‑games, aiming to sow doubt in Newcastle’s confidence. Keegan’s fiery response turned the tables, exposing the tension between the two managerial styles. Former players recall the interview energising the fanbase but also adding pressure on the squad. Gillespie later said the passion showed “absolutely brilliant reaction”. Keegan later dismissed the incident as “nothing to do with mind games”, blaming Ferguson’s habit of finding excuses. Legacy of the ‘Love It’ Moment in Modern Football Culture Three decades on, the phrase is invoked whenever a rival club’s fortunes waver. It has become a cultural touchstone for passionate, outspoken managers and is frequently referenced in media retrospectives. Keegan, now 75 and recovering from cancer treatment, continues to appear at events, reminding fans that the spirit of that night endures. Looking ahead, the episode underscores how media moments can amplify on‑field narratives, a lesson modern managers heed in an era of instant‑share social platforms.
#Kevin Keegan #Newcastle United #Sir Alex Ferguson
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Sports Apr 29, 2026

Giuliano Simeone: Following Father's Footsteps to Atlético Destiny

Giuliano Simeone has followed in his legendary father Diego's footsteps, transitioning from ballboy…
The Simeone Legacy Continues At the beginning of the final training session before their biggest game in a decade, Atlético Madrid's players lined up by the centre circle at the Metropolitano and waited for their coach to come. Diego Simeone arrived and ran through the middle of them, from Juan Musso and Jan Oblak at one end to Antoine Griezmann and Ademola Lookman at the other. As he passed, head down, they cheered and hit him – if not quite as hard as they do when it's a player's turn. Gauntlet run, applause echoed round the empty stadium. Happy birthday, mister. Simeone turned 56 on Tuesday. He has spent almost 20 of those here: first as the captain who won the double, then the coach who lifted Atlético's next league title, 18 years on, and now leads them into his fourth and their seventh European Cup semi-final, nine years since the last. What do you get the man who has it all? "Buah! You can't imagine how good it is to be in the four best teams in Europe," he said after the quarter-final; "I have no birthday wish," he said before this semi-final, "just pure gratitude to be able to be with my three sons on my birthday, with my two daughters, my mum, my wife, my lifelong friends." From Ballboy to Professional One of the sons was hidden in the crowd somewhere, hitting him. The day that Simeone bade farewell to the Vicente Calderón as a player in December 2004, he carried his youngest son, two-year-old Giuliano, in his arms. The days before he came back to Madrid as coach in December 2011, he stopped in a cafe in Mar del Plata and, over a croissant and a glass of milk, asked Giuliano, then eight, what he thought. "You're going to coach [Radamel] Falcao?!" the kid replied, excitement giving way to reality. "But … if it goes well, you won't come back." It did and he didn't, but that was all right. Fourteen years later, Giuliano's dad is still there – no manager in Spanish history has lasted longer – and now so is he. Born in Italy in December 2002, Giuliano grew up in Argentina with his elder brothers, Giovanni and Gianluca, but they visited often and their dad visited them too. They would eat "together" via an iPad on matchday mornings. Football was their thing, of course, bound by a shared passion. Glasses would be moved round the table in formation and they would find bits of paper all over the house, Gio recalled: tactical scribblings their dad did. The Making of a Footballer During celebrations after Atlético's 2012 Europa League title, Simeone Sr was caught on camera excitedly talking on the phone: "And did you see Falcao's goal?!" On the other end was Giuliano. The night Atlético won the Copa del Rey in 2013, it was a school night, too late, but the brothers went through the usual routine at home, scarves draped around the room. When Atlético won the derby in January 2015, a tiny ballboy in a white bib and long hair came racing along the touchline – something he was going to be very good at – and leaped into the coach's arms. That was Giuliano too. As a ballboy he was invariably by the bench and, yes, there were times his dad told him to slow down a bit if they were winning. He would visit training at Cerro del Espino in Majadahonda near the family home and have a kickabout. "It was crazy seeing the players up close," he has said. "I always thought: 'Imagine being out there; that would be mad.'" After Falcao, his idol became Antoine Griezmann. Overcoming the Family Legacy Competition came closer to home. "They would kick me, throw me to the floor, and if I cried, I couldn't play with them any more; I learned to be tougher," Giuliano said of playing with his brothers. Gianluca and Gio were good, becoming professionals like their dad, and they suspected Giuliano would be good too. Just maybe not this good. He was 16 when he left River Plate's academy and crossed the Atlantic to join Atlético's youth system, living with his dad, watching him pore over formations every morning. When he turned 18, though, Simeone Sr kicked him out; it was time to be a man. Now, his dad is his manager and his hero is his teammate. Which might make it sound easy, but it hasn't been – in part precisely because it might sound easy. In a recent interview with Jorge Valdano, Giuliano admitted: "At times, it can feel strange to me, wondering what others might think." When Valdano joked that the best thing is, when your teammates speak badly of the manager, speak even worse. The reply came back rapidly: "No doubt!" Giuliano admitted that had affected him when he was younger, telling Cadena Ser: "When I was 12 people said I was playing because I was my father's son. I try to isolate myself from [that]. I know I won't be gifted anything." The Father-Son Dynamic Quite the opposite. Simeone Sr once said that there was no way he would sign his son because of the baggage it would bring: the suspicion, the pressure. "I don't want to say never, but …" he said. "It would be very difficult to have a son in the dressing room. Very difficult for him, for the relationship, for everyone." But he said that about Gio not Giuliano, and Atlético didn't sign the latter nor really plan for father and son to coincide. He was just another kid from the academy, trying to prove himself.
#Diego Simeone #Atlético Madrid #Giuliano Simeone
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Politics Apr 29, 2026

Two Kashmir Brothers Killed 26 Years Apart: Rebel Raid and Alleged Army Encounter Expose Ongoing Conflict

In 2000 armed rebels killed Ishfaq Mughal in a home raid, and 26 years later his brother Rashid Mug…
The Mughal Family’s Double Tragedy Over 26 YearsTwo brothers from the Gujjar community of Chunt Waliwar village were killed in starkly different circumstances—first by insurgents in January 2000, then by the Indian army in a claimed encounter on 31 March 2026. Their deaths encapsulate the lingering human cost of the Kashmir conflict.From Rebel Raid to Alleged Army Encounter: The Two Killings2000 Rebel Raid: Around midnight, a dozen armed men forced entry into the Mughal home, seeking Ishfaq Ahmad Mughal, who worked for the Indian army. He was shot while trying to flee and his body was taken away.2026 Alleged Army Encounter: Security forces launched an operation in the Arahama area of Ganderbal after “specific intelligence”. The army says Rashid Ahmad Mughal was killed in a firefight, but residents label it a staged extrajudicial killing and protest the burial of his body 80 km away in Kupwara.Numbers Behind the Violence108 rights‑violation cases (2008‑2018) ordered for probe but never prosecuted (JKCCS data).8,000‑10,000 disappearances since the 1989 insurgency (APDP).33 custodial deaths reported between 2016‑2021 (Parliament data).38 alleged extrajudicial killings recorded in 2022 (NHRC).Since 2021, Kashmir has recorded the highest annual arrests under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act for five consecutive years.Impact on the Gujjar Community and the Wider ConflictThe Mughal brothers belong to the Gujjar tribe, historically aligned with Indian forces as “eyes and ears”. Post‑2019 revocation of Article 370 has seen at least 11 Gujjars killed in alleged encounters and dozens more injured, eroding trust and fueling resentment.Protests after Rashid’s death underscore growing community anger over perceived impunity, quota changes, and forced evictions that threaten their livelihood.Looking Ahead: Accountability and Peace ProspectsMagisterial inquiries ordered after the 2026 killing have yet to produce a report, reflecting a pattern of ineffective investigations. Human‑rights experts call for judicial‑level probes answerable to high courts to break the “culture of impunity”.If accountability mechanisms remain weak, the cycle of retaliatory violence is likely to persist, further destabilising an already fragile region and deepening alienation of marginalized tribes such as the Gujjars.
#Kashmir #Rashid Mughal #Indian Army
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Education Apr 29, 2026

UK Report Warns 'Relentless' Literacy Focus Undermines Children's Reading for Pleasure

A recent report warns that the UK's focus on measuring literacy progress in schools is undermining …
The Decline of Reading for Pleasure A new report has found that the 'relentless' focus on measuring literacy progress in schools has pushed reading for pleasure to the margins. The study, which analyzed survey data on reading trends among UK children, revealed that daily reading for pleasure among five to 17-year-olds fell from 39% in 2012 to 25% in 2025. Key Findings and Trends Daily reading for pleasure among five to 17-year-olds declined from 39% in 2012 to 25% in 2025. The proportion of children who rarely or never read for pleasure tripled from 5% to 15%. However, daily and weekly reading for pleasure increased among 11- to 17-year-old boys and girls between 2024 and 2025. For 14- to 17-year-old boys, those who never read fell from 36% to 30% year-on-year. The Impact of Social Media and Screens Social media is helping teenagers discover books they enjoy, with the proportion reporting finding books via BookTok rising from 23% in 2024 to 27% in 2025 among 14- to 17-year-olds. However, screens are also a barrier to children reading for pleasure. Recommendations for Parents and Schools Removing pressure and making reading a social activity could encourage children to pick up a book more often. Researchers suggest that being read to throughout childhood has a significant impact on a child's reading habits. Parents need to understand 'the difference between literacy and reading for pleasure.' The Importance of Reading Aloud Children who are read to daily are three times more likely to choose to read independently, daily, than if they are read to weekly by their parents. The report emphasizes the importance of reading to children beyond the age when they can 'decode' the language themselves.
#UK Education #Literacy #Reading for Pleasure
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