• TVLine

    We Don’t Want So You Think You Can Dance to End — But It Can’t Go On Like This

    There’s a dance-based competition show currently airing Mondays at 9 pm. New episodes land on Fox. Cat Deeley’s the host. And yet, despite those familiar trappings, or the title that runs across the screen at the start of each episode, I’m having trouble believing that the show in question is actually So You Think You […]

  • ‘You can’t love something that isn’t there’: readers on how the sounds of nature have changed around them

    Swallows, cuckoos, curlews – so many species have dwindled or disappeared

  • Ctrl+Alt+Del: I can’t quit PlayStation – Steam on Xbox won’t change that

    OPINION: I've been a "PlayStation gamer" since around halfway through the PS3 and Xbox 360 generation when I decided to ditch my 360 for Sony's offering. But, like many I suspect, I'm questioning the value that the PlayStation 5 offers. I don't know what may finally make me switch, but it won't be Steam coming to Xbox. To varying levels, it feels like I've spent the last year or so pondering if it's time to switch from PlayStation to Xbox. I'm in the enviable position of having an Xbox Series...

  • Columbine High School survivors can’t believe that the shootings haven’t stopped 25 years later

    Since 1999, the name of a Colorado high school has been tragically enshrined in the public consciousness – and has become synonymous with mass shootings. But those left reeling by the massacre at Columbine have watched in horror as mass shootings are replicated over and over again across the US, writes Sheila Flynn

  • Lawfare crises: Impartial jury possible? How can Jack Smith nail Trump if he can’t leave NYC?

    by WorldTribune Staff, April 18, 2024 One of the dismissed jurors in Donald Trump’s hush money case in New York said it likely is not possible to seat an impartial jury. Reports from the fourth day of the proceedings noted that it may take at least two weeks to seat the full jury of 12 […]

  • What's up with the Rangers' 'hit and miss' offense?

    ARLINGTON -- For the second night in a row, the Rangers’ offense was left without answers for a Reds’ starting pitcher for much of the night. In Saturday’s 8-4 loss, Texas fell at the hands of Hunter Greene, who fired off seven scoreless innings with six strikeouts. The Rangers' offense

  • Thoughts on an 8-4 Rangers loss

    That was quite a bleah game. At least the Rangers didn't get shut out. At

  • Stallions can’t overcome mistakes

    Wendy Alexander/The Madera TribuneMadera South libero Isaac Colmenares gets the dig to start the Stallions’ offense during their loss to Sanger West.The Madera South Stallions needed to play a really good game against North Yosemite League leaders Sanger West on April 9 at home. However, a mistake-filled first set led to a four-set loss to the Hornets. In the first set, the Stallions had just four kills, and 14 mistakes helped lead to a 25-14 loss.

  • Browns draft wide receiver to bolster offense

    He spent the first four seasons of his college career at Georgia State before transferring to Louisville.

  • What to wear now you can’t wear Sambas

    Rishi Sunak has killed them off, at least for now. So while your Sambas take a breather and wait for the storm to pass, here are some other looks led by trainers not yet tainted by having cropped up in the halls of government Continue reading

    • GQ

    Now You Can Live Like Thom Browne, Too

    On a sunny Tuesday morning in Milan, Thom Browne dropped by his menswear store in the city’s historic shopping district. In one of the terrazzo-floored rooms sat a tiny twin bed designed by the French modernist Jacques Adnet in the 1950s, the bedspread so taut it could have been folded by a drill sergeant. The crisp white linens were made by Frette as part of the new Thom Browne home line the designer was set to unveil with a special performance at Salone del Mobile, the international furniture...

  • Can granting ‘personhood’ to nature stem biodiversity loss?

    Biodiversity is declining at rates unprecedented in human history. This suggests the ways we currently use to manage our natural environment are failing. One emerging concept focuses on giving legal rights to nature. Many Indigenous peoples have long emphasised the intrinsic value of nature. In 1972, the late University of Southern California law professor Christopher Stone proposed what then seemed like a whimsical idea: to vest legal rights in natural objects to allow a shift from an...