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Sports Jun 01, 2026

NSW Makes History with First Women's State of Origin Clean Sweep

New South Wales has made history by securing the first clean sweep in Women's State of Origin since…
The Historical Clean SweepNew South Wales has secured the first whitewash in Women's State of Origin since the series shifted to three matches in 2024, after grinding out a 12-4 victory over Queensland on the Gold Coast in game three. The scoreline flattered the home side, who were clearly second best against the shield holders, and have now lost back-to-back series. But they hung with the Blues until Jayme Fressard's try with 17 minutes to go which proved to be the match-winner.The Decisive MomentThe Blues' fifth-tackle spread looked to be going nowhere, but when the imperious Isabelle Kelly off-loaded to her winger, Fressard capitalised on the Maroons' tired defense. She surged down the inside, slicing up the Queenslanders and sliding across to trigger the Blues' celebrations. The winger told Channel Nine she wanted to make up for an earlier missed opportunity. "I'd seen a few Queenslanders and a big space, and I thought, you know, just back yourself, you've got the speed, so I wasn't bombing that one," Fressard said.Series Statistics and PerformanceThe series result represented an unfortunate opening to the Origin coaching career of Queensland's Nathan Cross, who was brought in this year to replace Tahnee Norris. Despite the 3-0 result, the Maroons were in each contest, and the combined margin across the three matches was just 17 points. Instead, the sweep was another endorsement for John Strange, who has now won five of six matches in the series.Impact on Women's Rugby LeagueEven after Fressard's try pushed the lead to eight, the Blues still had work to do. With seven minutes to go, the Maroons had three successive sets on the Blues line, and both Blues wingers – Fressard and Jaime Chapman – prevented the Maroons from turning grubbers into tries. Though her fellow Blues forward Yasmin Meakes won the player of the series award, lock Olivia Kernick had a night to remember, topping counts for tackles (33) and run metres (199).Future Outlook for Both TeamsDespite the result, the Maroons can have cause for optimism. Five-eighth Chantay Kiria-Ratu only became more confident in her first Origin series, and on Thursday her ball-playing and running began to match her already elite kicking and defense. NSW dominated the first half but took 26 minutes to find the opening try, with Kelly – named player of the match on Thursday – crossing after Southwell ran deep into the Maroons' retreating goalline defense.
#State of Origin #Women's Rugby League #NSW Blues
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Environment Jun 01, 2026

Guinea's Bauxite Boom: Mining Wealth vs. Local Livelihoods

Guinea's vast bauxite reserves have attracted global mining interests, but local communities face e…
The Global Bauxite Rush and Guinea's ContradictionIn the small village of Bembou Silaty, northwestern Guinea, 38-year-old Mamadou Aliou embodies the central contradiction of Guinea's bauxite boom. Working in the environmental health and safety department for a mining company while simultaneously advocating for his community's rights, Aliou represents the complex relationship between global resource demands and local realities."Before these companies arrived, we cultivated our land, and it sustained us," Aliou told Al Jazeera. "We could cover our daily needs, especially food. But now, when a piece of land is registered and belongs to a mining company, you have nothing there any more."The Strategic Value of Guinea's Bauxite ReservesGuinea holds the world's largest reserves of bauxite, the ore that becomes alumina and ultimately aluminum—a metal essential for car and aircraft frames, windows, wind turbines, and solar panels. Over the past three decades, the country has multiplied its bauxite production tenfold, with more than a dozen ongoing projects currently operating.As the global energy transition demands ever more aluminum, Guinea has found itself in a strategically crucial position. Approximately 75 percent of the bauxite exported by the country over the past decade has ended up in China, which produces 60 percent of the world's aluminum. Companies from Russia, the United States, and the United Arab Emirates have also established significant operations in the country to secure this valuable resource.Economic Disparities and Compensation ChallengesIn the traditional bauxite heartlands of Kindia and Boke, the main roads are notably well-maintained, and steady jobs in technical roles or transport logistics have created economic opportunities for some Guineans. In Bembou Silaty, however, the situation remains starkly different—a quiet village without electricity, where farming methods remain untouched by mechanization.People working in technical roles at the mine can earn up to about $300 a month, a significant sum in Guinea. For other locals who make a living from farming, most don't have a regular wage and rely on the yield from their crops. Across Guinea, an estimated half of the population depends on agriculture for their livelihood.Locals in Bembou Silaty say every hectare claimed by mining is a hectare lost to farming, in a country that spent more than $500m importing rice in 2024. "They give you compensation for your land, but it's not enough, and in the end, it's mismanaged," Aliou said. "Within a month or two, someone who received 50 or 100 million Guinean francs ($5,700-11,400) has nothing left. No land, no money. They have to start over, from below zero."Environmental Degradation and Water ContaminationThe environmental impact of bauxite mining in communities like Bembou Silaty has been profound. Not all homes in the village of about 5,000 have indoor toilets and plumbing. While a new water point serves nearly all residents, the water contains iron contamination.In neighboring villages, the situation is even more dire. "Since the mining companies came, we've had this problem with the water. The children get sick, and the parents too," said Mariama Kindi Diallo, a farmer. "The doctors tell us not to drink the rain or river water. There are no roads, no school, no phone signal. What are we supposed to do? We are asking for help to have a dignified life."Environmental concerns extend beyond water contamination. Surgical holes drilled into the ground mark where mining companies have tested for bauxite—a reminder to farmers that the impact on the land is felt even before extraction begins. In a recent report, Djami Diallo, the Guinean minister of the environment and sustainable development, stated that each year, certain companies had their impact studies and evaluation reports rejected for failing to comply with environmental standards.The Government's Push for Value AdditionTo address these challenges and increase the benefits for Guinea, the government of Mamady Doumbouya, which came to power in a 2021 coup, is attempting to reorganize the mining sector. It is pressing investors to process bauxite within Guinea, ensuring a portion of the value stays in the country.Processing bauxite into aluminum can multiply its price by 37 times. Instability in Iran amid the US and Israel's war has contributed to rising aluminum prices, which surpassed $3,600 per tonne in April. Doumbouya is set to lead the country for the next seven years, after winning the December 2025 elections with nearly 87 percent of the vote.Achieving this transformation, however, requires a huge increase in electricity generation—power that is non-existent in villages like Bembou Silaty and unreliable even in the capital, Conakry. Guinea is working with neighboring Senegal on a solution: Using Senegalese gas to generate enough electricity to process its bauxite on African soil.The Global Trail of Bauxite and MigrationThe story of Guinea's bauxite extends far beyond its borders. More than 3,000km away, in Parets del Valles, Spain, the journey's end plays out. For Spain, Europe's largest consumer of Guinean bauxite, more than 90 percent of its imports come from Guinea.The aluminium produced there feeds the automotive industry and serves both industrial and domestic purposes. In Spain, there is light, hot water, paved roads—all the base elements of a decent life that remain elusive in many parts of Guinea.Increasingly, more boats are leaving directly from Guinea, towards the Canary Islands and on to mainland Europe. According to Frontex, the European Union border security agency, more Guineans arrived in the Canary Islands, Spain, in 2023 (2,324) than in the previous 13 years combined. In 2024 and 2025 combined, another 6,000 Guineans arrived.Many left, following the bauxite trail, hoping to find something more in the places where their resources are both enjoyed and exploited. "If you compare the bauxite we export with what we get in return, the difference is enormous," Aliou reflects. "We gain almost nothing. Just enough to survive."
#Guinea #Bauxite Mining #Environmental Impact
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Entertainment Jun 01, 2026

007 First Light: A Triumphant James Bond Game Made by Obsessive Fans

007 First Light successfully revitalizes the James Bond video game franchise, offering fans an imme…
The Lead007 First Light successfully revitalizes the James Bond video game franchise after years of absence, offering fans an immersive experience that captures both the action and sophistication of the iconic spy. Developer IO Interactive demonstrates their passion for the Bond universe through meticulous attention to detail and creative gameplay mechanics that honor the franchise's legacy.Gameplay Mechanics and DesignGiven how open-ended Hitman is, it's surprising how well IO has taken to linear storytelling. There are still moments of the "social stealth" that defines the studio's other games, but it's been repurposed for cinematic forward thrust, and blended together with plenty of action. It seems lazy to pigeonhole First Light as Hitman meets Uncharted, but when you see Bond leap on to a cliff edge and scurry along rocky handholds, your mind can't help but go there.You are often playing through moments that would be cutscenes in another game. Sometimes that's as simple as a dramatic approach to a level; driving round a bend to reveal a sprawling Slovakian castle, say. More ambitiously, one whole chapter is given over to a glorified training montage that whips you back and forth between getaway driving, stealth and gunplay, all while charting thawing relations between our fledgling 00 candidates. This is on-rails storytelling done right.Character Development and StorytellingWe join young Bond in his pre-00 days, as a petulant, belligerent rule-breaking trainee. Actor Patrick Gibson begins as a cookie-cutter insubordinate, but warms to the role once he's bouncing off M (herself a green leader looking to make her mark), and an enjoyably urbane Q who drops the frustrated quartermaster routine and introduces Bond to the wonders of vinyl. A scene where he teaches our agent to tie a bow tie is a perfect bit of prequelcraft: arriving at an iconic look through a lovely character touch.In contrast to previous Bond games, First Light understands that action is only a part of the Bond fantasy. He's as much schmoozer as bruiser, and there's plenty of the former here, with socialising setpieces at a chess tournament or swanky product launch. The staging and atmosphere of these rooms is exemplary, but the work mostly boils down to eavesdropping on guests to discover a keycard's location, before shooting its keeper with a toxic dart.Technical Execution and VisualsAs Bond himself is learning the ropes, it sometimes feels as if the developers are feeling their way towards something. Guns are enjoyably punchy, but scripted fights always emphasise explosive theatrics over strategy. Gas tanks erupt, walkways tumble, cranes collapse: you enter fights looking for the red barrel that will trigger a chain of collateral damage. Fail to quell numbers this way and you're quickly overwhelmed.Fist fights are more enjoyable – not because they are any more sophisticated, but because of the commitment of their virtual stuntmen. Bond is a barroom brawler, barging bodies into clattering bookshelves and battering enemies with mugs and keyboards lying around. In the same way that waist-high cover always alerts you to an incoming fight in Gears of War, you learn to eye crockery or wine bottles with suspicion here. If it's not stuck down, you'll be smashing it into a mercenary's face within the next two minutes.Fists and guns are what happen when sneaking goes wrong. On this front, IO finds a punchy take on its classic lurking. A hacking watch introduces some Home Alone hijinks as you lure guards towards misbehaving photocopiers, before electrocuting the device with a laser beam. Gadgets let you run circles around enemies – though you have to accept some silliness as you refuel those toys with batteries stolen from TV remotes, or globs of hand sanitiser. It's hard to picture Daniel Craig scavenging for Carex.Legacy and Future of Bond GamesOn a visit to a Mauritanian market and a luxury hotel getaway, however, there is space to roam, and you're reminded how few developers can tap into that aspirational tourist fantasy. Plenty of games have let us be a gun-toting version of Bond, but this is the first opportunity we've had to be a Bond relaxing beside a glittering infinity pool in Vietnam, or a Bond trying to get one over on a shell game hustler. Games are now much more capable of taking us to specific places than they were in the time of GoldenEye on the N64.It's that full Bond immersion that 007 First Light will ultimately be remembered for, more so than the odd wonky setpiece scene. I have no doubt that this was made by excitable Bond geeks throwing "what if" moments at a whiteboard. What if you got to explore Q Lab watching underlings test malfunctioning prototypes? What if you were tied to a torturer's table and had to talk your way out? What if you found yourself at 15,000ft with no parachute? And what if you had access to John Barry's classic scores and could deploy a staggering needle drop out of nowhere?Very few fans get to play in the sandbox of their obsession like IO has here. As far as Bond video games go, nobody has done it better.
#007 First Light #James Bond #IO Interactive
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Entertainment Jun 01, 2026

Recent Translated Fiction Review Roundup

A review roundup of recent translated fiction, including 'Sisters in Yellow' by Mieko Kawakami, 'Al…
Translated Fiction Review Roundup A collection of recent translated fiction has been reviewed, showcasing the diversity and complexity of global literature. The reviews include: 'Sisters in Yellow' by Mieko Kawakami Sisters in Yellow by Mieko Kawakami, translated by Laurel Taylor and Hitomi Yoshio (Picador, £16.99) Kawakami’s latest opens with a bang, as narrator Hana learns that her old friend Kimiko has been charged with abduction. This MacGuffin takes us to their friendship in late-1990s Tokyo, when teen Hana and the older woman open a bar called Lemon: “Yellow attracts money.” But it’s a turbulent ride and soon Hana is in a world of organised crime. “The world is crazy. I feel like I’m living in a manga.” She’s not the only one, and you need an appetite for Kawakami’s style, which prefers to explore rather than explain – people come and go, buildings burn down, cancer is diagnosed, almost at random – but the relentless rush means there’s no time to get bored. At its best – as in a scene where Hana’s unreliable mother wants to borrow 2m yen for investment in lingerie that helps “your spine and organs move back to where they’re supposed to be” – this is a story both absurd and horrifying. 'All Flesh' by Ananda Devi All Flesh by Ananda Devi, translated by Jeffrey Zuckerman (Pushkin, £12.99) “Forgive me for starting this story with bodily, unpalatable origins.” You may as well – it’s all like that. In an unnamed European country, a schoolgirl “born with no urge but to consume” is getting bigger and bigger. “My gut, my ass, my thighs – they were all set on reaching the farthest corners of the world.” She blames her gluttony on the need to silence the voice of her dead twin sister, who was “absorbed into my tissues” in the womb. She hates school, where other kids mock her, as though her own self-disgust weren’t enough. After a blackly comic scene where she gets stuck in her bedroom doorframe like “an uncooperative cork”, she falls in love with the lonely carpenter who arrives to widen the door – but there are more twists to come. This powerful story is deeply physical, but driven by a compelling voice describing the torment of a girl who is “the psychical mirror of our time … immoderation made manifest”. 'The White Desert' by Luis López Carrasco The White Desert by Luis López Carrasco, translated by Rosalind Harvey (Granta, £14.99) This unpredictable book, comprising five linked stories about a Spanish couple, opens with the end of the world and gets weirder from there. A balloon debate about a post-apocalyptic scenario turns nasty when one participant pulls a knife, or thinks he does. A plane crash-lands on an island. “Can [we] go and get our luggage … Lots of people have, you know, soiled themselves.” What links the scenes is a sense of disconnection in our connected world, but the book subverts expectations: when a group of people celebrating New Year’s Eve go missing, it turns out to be a game of hide and seek. Footnotes peppered throughout suggest we’re viewing all this from the future (“Emirates was a well-known passenger airline …”), and discovering what the white desert is turns everything on its head. For readers who like to do their own joining up, and who want a playful, original take on our precarious lives, this is a thought-provoking treat. 'The Home of the Drowned' by Elin Anna Labba The Home of the Drowned by Elin Anna Labba, translated by Elizabeth Clark Wessel (Harvill, £16.99) “You could have waited, you bastards.” In 1942 Lapland, a village occupied by the semi-nomadic Sámi people is flooded by a new hydroelectric plant’s dam. One family watch as their goahti (peat-covered hut) disappears under the water. “It wasn’t the nicest goahti,” says Ánne. “No, but it was mine,” says her sister Rávdná. When Rávdná wants to build a house to replace it, the authorities refuse permission: the Sámi way of life has been rejected but alternatives are not permitted. A local newspaper half-heartedly offers to publicise their case, but “we receive a lot of angry letters if we use any foreign words”. When the government tells local people the new dam “will lift us out of poverty and injustice”, the words reek with irony. This intimate story of infuriating discrimination is, Labba says, based on real events in Sweden.
#The Guardian #Translated Fiction #Book Review
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Entertainment Jun 01, 2026

Russell T Davies's 'Tip Toe' Drama Explores Rising LGBTQ+ Hatred in Digital Age

Russell T Davies's new Channel 4 drama 'Tip Toe' explores how political rhetoric and online bullyin…
The Lead: A Drama Reflecting Modern HateRussell T Davies's new Channel 4 drama 'Tip Toe' presents a chilling portrayal of how political rhetoric, toxic online bullying, and misinformation can escalate neighborhood conflicts into dangerous confrontations. Set on Manchester's Canal Street—the same location as Davies's groundbreaking 'Queer As Folk'—the series follows an escalating feud between gay bar manager Leo (Alan Cumming) and his reserved, judgmental neighbor Clive (David Morrissey). Unlike the hopeful future depicted in 'Queer As Folk,' 'Tip Toe' captures the current reality where increased visibility has paradoxically led to increased hostility toward LGBTQ+ individuals.The Drama's Core Message: Questioning Post-Visibility SocietyDavies explains that he has never written so furiously in his life, with the central question running through all five episodes being: if inclusion and representation are now a given, what if other people don't like what they see? The drama explores how LGBTQ+ people can find themselves in the firing line, with the election of Trump now giving permission for anyone who is angry to express their views without consequences. As Davies states, "This isn't exclusively a gay problem, but nonetheless we're an easy focus for it. Whatever this anger is, we're a target."The Digital Hate Landscape: Online Bullying and Real-World ConsequencesThe drama's title itself reflects the fear of being able to express oneself in public. "I used to walk into a room and go: 'Ta-da!'" says Melba (Paul Rhys), a close friend of Leo's, in episode one. "Now I tip toe. Just in case." Davies reveals the extent of online abuse he personally faces: "The amount of times online I'm called a groomer and a paedophile [for his support of trans rights] is shocking and maybe actionable, except I think if I took action, I'd make it even worse." This digital harassment fuels real-world tensions, as demonstrated in the escalating conflict between Leo and Clive.The Characters' Complexity: Beyond Simple VillainyUnlike typical portrayals of hate, 'Tip Toe' offers nuanced character development. "We're very, very fair to Clive in this," says Davies. "He's not just the monster next door." The series explores Clive's perspective in episode three, revealing his unhappiness in marriage, financial struggles, and isolation from colleagues. "Instead of having friends and reaching out, he finds validation online," explains David Morrissey, who plays Clive. "They go: it's those people. They're taking your job. It's reinforcing something that he had all the time. So he just becomes angrier and angrier and angrier." This complexity prevents the drama from reducing its characters to simple archetypes.The Cultural Context: From 'Queer As Folk' to 'Tip Toe'The location of 'Tip Toe' on Manchester's Canal Street won't be lost on viewers of Davies's 1999 classic 'Queer As Folk,' which regularly featured scenes shot in the same area and followed the lives of three gay men in a way that not only made being gay seem cool but also reflected a new era of tolerance. Viewers took from it that the future could only be bright. Now, as Davies observes, "We've got this slide back into something as bad as I can remember, if not worse, because now people know what they're doing. In the old days when we used to preach about visibility, if someone punched you in the face, or excluded you... you had the excuse of saying they were ignorant. They were in the dark and we must be visible. And now they've seen us, and now I think that anger and that violence is on the rise."The Future of Representation: Why Dramas Still MatterAlan Cumming defends the need for dramas that remind people of ongoing challenges. "No, because I think that's what dramas are for," he says. "Why do we do the Greeks? Why do we read Shakespeare? They have things to say, and we need to keep hearing the same stories and allegories, because they're important for us as a culture, to hear and to understand and to reinterpret." The series was inspired by Davies's personal experiences of feeling unsafe in his own home after a fan recognized his address from a BBC documentary. "I was fascinated by how startling that was, how porous your house feels," he says. "If it's reaching me, what the fuck is it like on levels where you have less defence and less ability to move and less money, frankly?" This personal concern elevates 'Tip Toe' beyond mere entertainment into a vital cultural commentary on the state of modern society.
#Russell T Davies #Tip Toe #LGBTQ+
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Politics May 31, 2026

Iranians' Anger Over Food Inflation Erupts as Internet Restrictions Lifted

Partial lifting of internet restrictions in Iran reveals widespread public anger over soaring food …
The Partial Internet Restoration Reveals Public AngerThe partial lifting of internet restrictions in Iran has revealed a rising tide of anger about food price inflation as ordinary Iranians decry annual price increases of 308% for vegetable oil, 190% for chicken, and 170% for rice. Iranian authorities began restoring the connection to the global internet that was severed on the first day of the US-Israeli war against the Islamic Republic on 28 February, as it had been during mass protests in January.Connectivity Remains Limited Despite Partial RestorationConnectivity remained patchy on Wednesday, with mobile internet still largely disconnected and many sites remaining restricted. But even the partial restoration was enough to reveal an outpouring of anger over price inflation and food shortages. "Everything is so expensive. It has become a disaster," wrote one user on social media. "You leave the market with a broken heart after spending all your savings. It is unbearable. We have no patience left to lead a normal life."Government Response and Blame-ShiftingPresident Masoud Pezeshkian, who has been given some credit for lifting the internet restrictions, blamed the US for Iran's economic woes, saying Washington "had moved to economic warfare after failing to bring the government down." In a lengthy statement, the ministry of intelligence revealed its concerns that internet freedom could be used for "cognitive warfare", warning that Iran's adversaries aimed to "incite protesters and drag them on to the streets."Hyperinflation Data Reveals Economic CrisisThe government announced the launch of a "resistance economy committee" to crack down on price gouging and address surging shortages, but hyperinflation is now endemic in Iran owing to trade sanctions, exchange rate pressure, and moves taken to reduce subsidies given to traders in January. Data from the International Monetary Fund showed food inflation had risen to between 140% and 200%, pushing overall inflation to 70%. Support for continuing internet restrictions was put at just 9% in a survey published on Wednesday.Government Propaganda and Public ResponseIn an attempt to forestall support for Reza Pahlavi, the son of the late shah, government backers tried to flood the internet with claims directed at "youngsters returning to the internet" that Pahlavi had openly applauded the attacks mounted by Israel and the US. Others expressed simple relief that they could now talk to the wider world. The human rights activist Emadeddin Baghi wrote: "Three bloody months have passed, but not for those who lost a loved one or had their home destroyed. In this period our voices found no echo except on some internal platforms and to the best of our ability we spoke and wrote in defence of the rights of the voiceless."Future Outlook: Digital Rights and Economic InstabilityThe prominent rapper Toomaj Salehi, who was sentenced to death in 2024 for supporting protests in 2022 but was later released, said being connected to the internet was "not a favour to us – it is our right. And without filters as well. Like free elections, freedom of expression, freedom of assembly, freedom of parties, and many other freedoms, these are our rights and not favours," he wrote on X. With public sentiment increasingly turning against the government and economic conditions worsening, Iran faces a precarious future balancing between maintaining control and addressing growing public discontent.
#Iran #Internet restrictions #Food inflation
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Environment May 31, 2026

Should I Get Air Conditioning in the UK and Can It Be Green?

As the UK experiences more frequent heatwaves, many homeowners are considering installing air condi…
The Need for Air Conditioning in the UK British homeowners are rapidly acquiring air conditioners as the climate crisis superheats our summers. An estimated 4m homes have an air conditioner, double the figure from three years ago. Can Air Conditioning Be Green? Because air-conditioning units use more energy than other cooling devices, this results in more carbon emissions. Using a portable unit for an average of eight hours a day during the summer would result in about 4.87kg of CO2 emissions, roughly equivalent to driving 18 miles. Options for Greener Air Conditioning One approach could be running it only when there is a high level of renewable energy on the grid – for example during the sunniest part of the day. You may choose to pre-cool rooms before the evening peak in electricity demand. Or you could power the air conditioner with a home battery that charges up during renewable energy surpluses, helping you make the most of renewables without owning them yourself. Types of Air Conditioning It’s important to note that not all air conditioners are alike. Portable versions were relatively inefficient. If you invest in built-in air conditioning, make sure you get the right size unit for the room you’ll be cooling. A wall-mounted unit powerful enough (12,000 BTU) to cool the average British bedroom costs about £750, plus £1,150 for installation. Alternative Cooling Methods Air conditioners work using the same principle as heat pumps – they move heat from one place to another with the help of a refrigerant fluid. But the devices generally referred to as “air-to-air heat pumps” are reversible and can provide heating as well as cooling. Homeowners who switched from oil or gas heating to an electric-powered air-to-air heat pump, and used it for winter heating and summer cooling, were decarbonising their homes.
#Air Conditioning #UK #Sustainable Cooling
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Entertainment May 31, 2026

Marilyn Monroe's Closest Confidants Share Their Stories

The article discusses Marilyn Monroe's friendships with women, including Amy Greene, Milton Greene'…
Marilyn Monroe's Inner Circle Marilyn Monroe's life and legacy have been extensively documented, but her friendships with women are often overlooked. The article explores her relationships with those closest to her, revealing a more nuanced side to the iconic actress. Female Friendships Monroe had many female friends, including Amy Greene, the widow of photographer Milton Greene. Greene shared her home with Monroe for several years in the mid-1950s and remembers the scrutiny they faced: "Girlfriends would say, 'Are you out of your mind to have that woman in your house?' I'd say, 'What's wrong with you? There's nothing there. They're business partners!'" The Power of Platonic Relationships Monroe's friendships with women like Lauren Bacall and Betty Grable are well-documented, particularly in films like How to Marry a Millionaire and Gentlemen Prefer Blondes. Her relationship with Jane Russell, her co-star in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, was particularly significant, with Russell recalling a day at the beach with close female friends: "[We] had wine, music and more talk by the fire … I thought of Marilyn. I wished I had her phone number, because I knew she belonged there, where we were all laughing about our problems." Male Friends and Collaborators While Monroe's relationships with men like John F. Kennedy have been widely reported, her platonic friendships with men like photographer Lawrence Schiller were also important to her. Schiller worked with Monroe on a nude photoshoot, one of the most scandalous of her career. A More Nuanced Legacy The article highlights the complexity of Monroe's relationships and challenges the notion that she was solely a sex symbol. Her friendships with women, in particular, reveal a more vulnerable and human side to her personality.
#Marilyn Monroe #The Guardian #Film
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World Wide May 31, 2026

Austrian Man Jailed 15 Years for Plotting Taylor Swift Concert Attack

An Austrian man, Beran A, has been sentenced to 15 years in prison for plotting an attack on a Tayl…
The Foiled Attack on Taylor Swift's Concert An Austrian man who admitted planning a foiled attack on a Taylor Swift concert in Vienna has been sentenced to 15 years in prison after being found guilty of various mainly terrorism-related offences. The Trial and Charges The state court in Wiener Neustadt on Thursday found the 21-year-old defendant, an Austrian citizen known only as Beran A – in line with Austrian privacy rules – guilty on charges including those related to the concert. Beran A was arrested on 7 August 2024, the day before the first of three planned concerts by the US pop star in the Austrian capital. All three dates were then cancelled, to the dismay of fans and Swift, who wrote afterwards that it was “devastating”. The Planned Attack and Investigation Beran A pleaded guilty to charges related to the planned attack, which carried a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison. He covered his face with a ring binder as he entered the courtroom to avoid being identifiable in pictures. “I would just like to say that I am sorry,” he said in a final statement after closing arguments on Thursday. Beran A was found to have tried but failed to illegally buy weapons including a machine gun and hand grenade, and followed instructions in an Islamic State video entitled “Make a bomb in the kitchen of your mom” to produce a small amount of the explosive triacetone triperoxide (TATP). The Impact on the Community Neither Swift nor any of her fans appeared at the trial in Wiener Neustadt, a town south of the capital. The jury, however, found him guilty on all but two of 15 points put to it, including providing moral support to a third man who was arrested in Mecca on suspicion of stabbing a security official at the city’s Grand Mosque. His lawyer, Anna Mair, repeated that her client did not provide material support to the third man, and if anything it was the other way around. The Future Outlook The sentencing of Beran A and his co-defendant Arda K to 12 years in prison highlights the ongoing threat of terrorism and the importance of vigilance in the community.
#Taylor Swift #Austria #Terrorism
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