Emma Raducanu opened her grass-court season with a heartening 6-1, 6-4 win over Ena Shibahara in the first round of the Rothesay Open – and
Author: Sarah Mitchell
‘Don’t worry about AI. People want bodies in a room’: Faithless on the eternal power of rave – and the death of Maxi Jazz
In 2002 Faithless were granted a sunset slot on Glastonbury’s Pyramid stage, and attracted close to 100,000 people. “England had actually just lost the football,
Battlefield deaths from global conflicts hit 30-year high, study finds
Deaths from civil conflicts and battles across the world over the past three years have risen to the highest level in three decades, according to
Malawi vice-president and nine others killed in plane crash
Malawi’s vice-president, Saulos Chilima, and nine other people have been killed in a plane crash, the country’s president, Lazarus Chakwera, said in a live televised
Revealed: drug cartels force migrant children to work as foot soldiers in Europe’s booming cocaine trade
Hundreds of unaccompanied child migrants across Europe are being forced to work as soldiers for increasingly powerful drug cartels to meet the continent’s soaring appetite
War, disastrous sex and a lot of lawsuits: the chaotic aftermath of Motown’s peak years
Motown Records famously churned out songs like cars on an assembly line, and songwriting team Holland-Dozier-Holland (HDH) – brothers Eddie and Brian Holland, and the
From stealing to Spotify: the story behind how music got free
Back in the 90s, when Stephen Witt was attending the University of Chicago, he stumbled on to something many kids did at the time. “One
The Moor review – Yorkshire-set missing-kids chiller is formidable folk horror debut
Looking for a group of long-missing children on a patch of moorland, podcaster Claire (Sophia La Porta) thinks she has defined her search area. But
Genetic testing company 23andMe investigated over hack that hit 7m users
The California genetic testing company 23andMe faces investigations by the data watchdogs of the UK and Canada over a security breach affecting nearly 7 million
Hong Kong is ‘slowly becoming a totalitarian state’, says UK judge
A British judge has described the “paranoid atmosphere” in Hong Kong as he explained his decision to step down from the territory’s top court. Jonathan