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Sports Apr 15, 2026

England's Fringe Lionesses Seize Opportunity in World Cup Qualifying

England's women's football team continues to impress in World Cup qualifying, with fringe players s…
England's women's football team is on a roll, maintaining a 100% record in their World Cup qualifying group after a win against Spain. While their target is to win a first world title, the journey is long, and several players have enhanced their prospects of selection. Eight players from the recent match against Spain look set to be in the first-choice XI for the World Cup, including Hannah Hampton, Lucy Bronze, and Lauren Hemp. Senior players like Leah Williamson and Ella Toone will also be key when they return from injuries. Three players who started against Spain have significantly boosted their chances. Centre-backs Esme Morgan and Lotte Wubben-Moy were exemplary, helping England keep a clean sheet against the world champions. Morgan, 25, and Wubben-Moy, 27, have had to be patient during Sarina Wiegman's tenure but did not look out of place. Morgan said she was proud of the team's concentration and organisation, while Wiegman praised them, saying, 'They showed up today. It says a lot about them. They should be proud of themselves.' Another player who impressed was Lucia Kendall, the 21-year-old Aston Villa midfielder tasked with taking on Barcelona's Patricia Guijarro. Despite a quiet evening, Kendall worked hard and nearly scored from close range. Wiegman also displayed trust in Laura Blindkilde Brown, who came on as a 72nd-minute substitute to help close out the victory. Her contributions to Manchester City's likely title success will enhance her chances for 2027. The upcoming match against Iceland will provide further opportunities for players like Jess Park, who has been in inspired form for Manchester United. New faces Erica Meg Parkinson and Keira Barry have received their first senior call-ups and will look to make an impression.
#England Lionesses #Emma Hayes #FIFA Women's World Cup 2027
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Technology Apr 15, 2026

BBFC Deploys AI Tool to Age-Rate TV Shows, Including The Pitt and Game of Thrones Spinoff

The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) has developed an AI tool to help flag contentious s…
The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) has begun using an AI tool to help identify content that triggers compliance issues, such as violence, nudity, and bad language, in TV shows.The technology was used to classify the UK catalogue of HBO Max, including The Pitt and a Game of Thrones spinoff, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms. The Pitt received a 15 rating, while A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms received an overall rating of 18, with most episodes rated 15.The AI tool was built especially for HBO and helps direct compliance officers to the most contentious moments, doing "a lot of the heavy lifting," according to David Austin, the BBFC chief executive. However, he emphasized that human review is still crucial, as the AI tool was initially too cautious, mistakenly flagging an on-screen splash of red paint as human blood.The BBFC system, trained on the regulator's guidelines, produced a time-coded report that a human compliance officer then reviewed. The organization completed the classification of HBO Max's entire catalogue in six months, a process that would have normally required over four years of viewing by a compliance officer.
#bbfc #content #hbo
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Music Apr 15, 2026

Leeds Song Festival Pushes Boundaries with Haunting and Innovative Performances

The Leeds Song Festival continues to innovate with two vastly different concerts, showcasing the vo…
The Leeds Song Festival, a top-tier celebration of the vocal arts, continues to push the envelope with its innovative performances. Director Joseph Middleton's determination to think outside the box while honoring the festival's roots in traditional recitals is evident in two vastly different concerts.The first, 'Haiku', premiered last year in Minnesota and features eight poems taken from a collection of haiku written by Japanese Americans interned during World War II. Baritone Roderick Williams and pianist Iain Burnside brought these distilled musical morsels to life, exploring themes of exile, detention, and deportation.Williams, a master storyteller, breathed life into the songs with his warm vocal embrace and expressive physicality, bringing pain and pathos, wit and wisdom to a kaleidoscopic array of songs. Burnside was his equal, providing a generous and supportive piano accompaniment.The program included highlights such as Gerald Finzi's setting of Thomas Hardy, 'Waiting Both', and Joan Trimble's 'My Grief on the Sea', a delicate Irish love song. The evening ended with Maria Grever's rumba-inflected 'What a Diff'rence a Day Made', a perfect laid-back note.The second concert, 'Dunwich', a festival commission, stretched the idea of a traditional recital to the limit. This haunting soundscape combined field recordings made at the site of Dunwich's last remaining gravestone with Martin Iddon's shape-shifting writing for piano. The piece featured slyly sinister accounts of local ghost stories, delivered by speaker Gillian Jane Lees, and eerie black-and-white videos by Adam York Gregory.
#williams #song #festival
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Politics Apr 15, 2026

EU's New Entry-Exit System Causes Travel Delays of Up to Three Hours

The EU's new entry-exit system (EES) has caused travel delays of up to three hours at some European…
The EU's new entry-exit system (EES) has caused significant delays at several European airports, with travellers waiting up to three hours at border checks. The system, which came into effect on Friday in the Schengen countries, requires passengers from non-EU countries to register their personal information and biometrics at the border.Passengers in airports in countries such as France, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain, and Greece are experiencing several hours of waiting at border checks, according to the Airports Council International (ACI) body. Olivier Jankovec, the director of the ACI European division, warned that the situation will be "simply unmanageable" in the coming weeks and peak summer months.The EES has been gradually introduced since October and has already caused long delays at some airports. On Sunday, the BBC reported that more than 100 passengers were unable to board an easyJet flight from Milan to Manchester before it took off due to delays at passport desks.Airport representatives and the European Commission held a meeting to discuss problems with the system on Tuesday. The ACI has asked to extend existing exemptions and the power to fully suspend the new checks. Jankovec told the FT that the ACI needed the ability to "fully suspend EES registration whenever there are excessive waiting times at border control that are just unmanageable".A spokesperson for the European Commission said that the system is working well, with an average registration time of 70 seconds per passenger. However, the ACI has claimed that it can take up to five minutes. The commission said that there were a "few member states where technical issues have been detected" but that they "are being addressed".The EES has registered more than 52m entries and exits, as well as more than 27,000 refusals of entry, since its introduction in October. Almost 700 people were identified as posing a security threat.
#European Union #European Commission #Entry-Exit System
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Politics Apr 15, 2026

The Unfair U.S. Tax System: A Barrier to Equality

The U.S. tax system perpetuates inequality, with the super-rich paying lower effective tax rates th…
The United States is grappling with unprecedented levels of income and wealth inequality. The average household income in New York City stands at $131,000, yet this figure belies the stark reality that a small elite captures a disproportionate amount of wealth, leaving millions struggling to make ends meet. This extreme inequality has far-reaching economic, political, and social consequences, eroding trust in institutions and leading people to believe that the system is rigged. The issue is not unique to the U.S., as nearly one-fifth of the world's super-rich live in New York, but it is more pronounced in the U.S. than in almost any other advanced economy. A recent global inequality report found that between 2000 and 2024, the richest 1% captured 41% of all new wealth, while the bottom half of humanity received just 1%. The concentration of wealth is staggering, with billionaires now owning 16% of global GDP, up from 3% in 1987. The main driver of this trend is the failure to effectively tax the super-rich. Research has shown that in the 1960s, the 400 richest Americans paid about 50% of their income in taxes, but today they pay around 24%. This pattern is not unique to the U.S., as similar trends have been observed in Europe and other countries. Experts argue that a progressive tax system is necessary to address this issue. A minimum tax of 2% on the wealth of the super-rich has been proposed as a straightforward way to ensure they meet their obligations to society. Several countries, including Spain and Brazil, have committed to implementing this tax, and other nations are considering similar measures. In the U.S., there are signs of a paradigm shift. California voters will consider a tax on billionaire wealth this November, and Washington state has approved a 9.9% income tax on million-dollar incomes. In New York, there are calls to increase taxes on the rich and large corporations to fund essential public services. The authors of the article, Joseph E. Stiglitz, Zohran Mamdani, and Gabriel Zucman, emphasize that the idea of billionaires paying higher tax rates than working people is not radical, but rather a necessary step towards restoring a basic social principle: that those with the most should contribute their fair share so that everyone can live with dignity.
#IRS #progressive taxation #wealth inequality
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Commentisfree Apr 15, 2026

Keir Starmer's Brexit U-Turn: UK Seeks Closer EU Ties Amid Global Uncertainty

The article discusses the UK's shift in approach to Brexit, with Prime Minister Keir Starmer seekin…
The Brexit debate has taken a significant turn, with Keir Starmer's government now openly acknowledging the need for closer ties with the EU. This shift in approach comes as the UK faces increasing global uncertainty, including Vladimir Putin's territorial aggression, Donald Trump's geopolitical vandalism, and China's emergence as a superpower.In opposition, Starmer had pushed Brexit to the margin of debate. However, in government, he has learned that Europe is central to Britain's interests, whether discussed or not. The avoidance of painful arguments from the past has turned out to be a handicap when making plans for the future.Labour's 2024 general election manifesto had pretended that Brexit was a historical event, something Boris Johnson got 'done' in 2020. However, the relationship with the EU cannot be settled due to its evolving nature and the UK's position as an ex-member on its border.The options are now more Brexit or less, never a steady state. Johnson's Brexit deal was structured to accelerate separation over time, with the theory that divergence from EU rules would give Britain a competitive advantage. However, this Eurosceptic fantasy has been exposed as wrong, with the UK now seeking to put Johnson's divergence ratchet into reverse.Downing Street's acceptance of this logic has been flagged by a gradual change in rhetoric, with the prime minister now listing Brexit as an affliction in the same category as the Covid pandemic. The chancellor, Rachel Reeves, identifies closer integration with Europe as 'the biggest prize' in a dash for growth.To facilitate a more intimate relationship, the government proposes legislation that will give ministers open-ended powers to adopt EU standards for various sectors of the economy. This 'dynamic alignment' is supposed to make it easier for businesses to move goods into the single market and make Britain a more attractive destination for investment.However, the Conservatives and Reform UK are appalled, objecting to the circumvention of future legislative scrutiny by the use of so-called Henry VIII powers. The real grievance is the old ideological one, equating any application of single market rules to colonisation by Brussels.As Starmer tries to go in this direction, he will collide with familiar Brexit obstacles. The European Commission will insist there can be no 'cherrypicking' from the single market; that non-member states wanting to enjoy the benefits of a European club can expect to pay subscription fees into European budgets.Opinion polls routinely show a clear majority of voters think Brexit has gone badly. The logic of pooling resources with continental neighbours can only grow in the light of wildfires started by Trump along the international horizon.Starmer knows these conditions permit a more assertive agenda of EU integration. However, it is hard to take bolder strides within red lines – no free movement; no single market membership; no customs union – drawn when Labour's Europe policy was defined by the preference to change the subject.
#brexit #starmer #more
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Health Apr 15, 2026

Parisian Software Engineer Wins €1m Picasso Painting in Charity Raffle

A software engineer from Paris, Ari Hodara, has won a 1941 Picasso painting, 'Head of a Woman', wor…
A Parisian software engineer, Ari Hodara, has won a €1m Picasso painting in a charity raffle. The painting, 'Head of a Woman', was created by Pablo Picasso in 1941 and is part of the artist's collection.Hodara purchased a €100 ticket for the '1 Picasso for €100' lottery, which aimed to raise funds for Alzheimer's research. He was informed of his win via a video call from Christie's auction house in Paris and initially questioned whether it was a hoax.The raffle, organized by French television producer Péri Cochin, sold 120,000 tickets, generating €12m in revenue. Of this amount, €1m will be donated to the Opera Gallery, which owned the painting.The painting, 'Head of a Woman', is a portrait of Picasso's longtime muse and partner, Dora Maar. It was painted in the same studio where Picasso created his 1937 masterpiece, Guernica.This is the third iteration of the Picasso raffle, which has raised over €10m for cultural and humanitarian causes in previous years.
#Ari Hodara #Picasso #Head of a Woman
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Film Apr 15, 2026

Brian Cox’s Directorial Debut ‘Glenrothan’ Offers a Heartfelt Scottish Family Tale Featuring Alan Cumming

Brian Cox’s first film as a director, Glenrothan, blends comedy and drama in a warm‑hearted story a…
Brian Cox steps behind the camera for the first time with Glenrothan, a sentimental comedy‑drama that paints a broad, colour‑rich portrait of family ties in rural Scotland. The screenplay, penned by David Ashton, follows the uneasy reunion of two brothers against the backdrop of a lucrative, family‑run whisky distillery.Cox portrays Sandy, the stern yet ailing chief of the distillery, a business that anchors the local economy. His sister‑in‑law Jess, played by Shirley Henderson, runs the operation with unflinching competence. Sandy’s younger brother Donal, embodied by Alan Cumming, has been living in Chicago, managing a blues bar with his daughter Amy. When the bar falters, Donal receives a plaintive invitation to return home, prompting a journey that includes his granddaughter Sasha.The film juxtaposes the gritty world of Chicago blues with the serene, panoramic vistas of the Scottish Highlands, delivering visual moments that are both expansive and intimate. Whisky expertise becomes a narrative thread as Sandy, aware of Donal’s superior palate, grapples with the future of the family business and the inevitable question of succession.Humorous touches—such as Donal’s disastrous attempt at making porridge and his nostalgic discovery of a bedroom frozen in time with Buzzcocks posters—lend the story a comforting, almost TV‑night feel without sacrificing depth.Glenrothan opens in UK cinemas on 17 April and reaches Australian screens on 25 June, offering audiences a gentle, well‑acted exploration of brotherly bonds, legacy, and the pull of home.
#glenrothan #whisky #highlands
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World Economy Apr 15, 2026

Big Oil Reaps $30m Hourly Windfall from War-Driven Price Surge

The world's top 100 oil and gas companies are making enormous profits due to the surge in oil price…
The ongoing conflict in Iran has led to a significant increase in oil prices, with the world's top 100 oil and gas companies reaping enormous profits. In the first month of the war, these companies banked more than $30m every hour in unearned profit, according to exclusive analysis for the Guardian. This translates to estimated windfall profits of $23bn for the month of March, with Saudi Aramco, Gazprom, and ExxonMobil among the biggest beneficiaries.The surge in oil prices to an average of $100 (£74) a barrel has resulted in a substantial increase in profits for these companies. If the oil price continues to average $100, the companies are expected to make $234bn by the end of the year. The analysis uses data from a leading intelligence provider, Rystad Energy, analysed by Global Witness.The excess profits come from the pockets of ordinary people as they pay high prices to fill up their vehicles and power their homes, as well as from businesses incurring higher energy bills. Dozens of countries have cut fuel taxes to help struggling consumers, but this has resulted in reduced revenue for public services.Pressure is growing for windfall taxes on the war profits of oil and gas companies, with the European Commission considering a request from the finance ministers of Germany, Spain, Italy, Portugal, and Austria. The ministers argue that this would help ease the burden on the general public and finance temporary relief measures.Aramco is expected to make a war profit of $25.5bn in 2026 if the oil price averages $100. This is on top of the huge profits habitually made by the majority state-owned Saudi company – $250m a day between 2016 to 2023. ExxonMobil, which has a long record of denying climate change, will take in $11bn in unearned war profits in 2026 if the $100 price endures.The impact of the Iran war is likely to be long lasting, with the head of the International Energy Agency, Fatih Birol, describing it as the biggest shock ever to the global energy market. The UN's climate chief, Simon Stiell, warned that fossil fuel dependency is ripping away national security and sovereignty, and replacing it with subservience and rising costs.
#oil #war #energy
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