A painfully funny cartoon about a neurotic graphic artist deftly explores the themes of self-obsession and ecological disasterEnter the Faber/Observer/Graphica graphic short story prize 2024I’ve read Luke Healy’s new graphic novel twice: first, on screen last October (which was long before we asked him to be a judge of this year’s Faber/Observer graphic short story prize) and then in hardback a couple of weeks ago. The mark of a truly good book is that it’s even better second time around, and...
Health Secretary Victoria Atkins has today announced proposed changes to the NHS Constitution, in the matter of recognising the importance of biological sex.
MailOnline's Shivali Best went behind-the-scenes at the latest race in Monaco to find out how Formula E has maintained its position as the global leader for sustainability in sport.
By Jason Powell, ProWrestling.net Editor
One day, should humanity be blessed enough to continue upon its current collective perch, the old op-ed pages of national newspapers will provide their own records of our social temperature in these charged times. Future generations, then, will get to judge—perhaps harshly—the nature of our collective preoccupations. But another, far more telling inventory will be recorded, in the form of (largely) genre films and TV shows that aim to unpack the warped, dystopian ways in which we harm each...
The UK has reached a tipping point after the release of the Cass Review, with the NHS moving quickly to reverse pro-transgender policies that have crept in over the past decade and purging LGBT activist words like ‘chestfeeding.’
Boy Kills World, 2024. Directed by Moritz Mohr. Starring Bill Skarsgård, Jessica Rothe, Famke Janssen, Michelle Dockery, Sharlto Copley, Brett Gelman, Isaiah Mustafa, Andrew Koji, Yayan Ruhian, H. Jon Benjamin, Quinn Copeland, Nicholas Crovetti, Cameron Crovetti, Inge Beckmann, Jane de Wet, Shane John Kruger, Martin Munro, Kevin Otto, and Frances Sholto-Douglas. SYNOPSIS: A fever dream […] From blockbuster Hollywood movies to independent and British cinema, Flickering Myth has you covered. Read...
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Kansas lawmakers were unable to override a veto from Governor Laura Kelly on a bill that would ban gender-affirming care for anyone under the age of 18. The override was approved
Exclusive: Study will be aimed at improving medics’ working lives by reducing frequency and repetition of coursesThe amount of time doctors have to spend doing compulsory training will be cut as part of an NHS drive to improve medics’ working lives, the Guardian can reveal.Concern that doctors have too heavy a burden of mandatory training has prompted NHS England to commission a review, which it is expected to announce imminently. Continue reading
Although “Stereophonic” is not a musical, it’s easy to get swept up by the terrific original rock songs that throb through it. And as writer David Adjmi’s play, which opened Friday night at the John Golden Theatre, is set during the mid 1970s, Will Butler’s music sounds authentically of that edgier era. Almost eerily so.