
As he returns to.I spent the morning of Januon the phone with one of my sources at Fox - a true conservative who hated what Donald Trump had done to the channel and the Republican party.
#WHO READS THE WEEK MAGAZINE TV#
He conquered the charts with Years & Years, then won acclaim for his performance in the TV drama It’s a Sin. While Johnson’s Tories squabble, British people are going cold and hungry Inequality is driving protests against an authoritarian system Peter LeonardĬolston four’s critics are deluded to think Britain owes no historic apology Nesrine Malik
Comment is free, facts are sacred CP Scott 1918. Macron – and the west – are now prey to France’s toxic populism Will Hutton Young game-makers on the digital platform used by millions of children claim they have been financially exploited, threatened – and even sexually harassed. He and his wife Sara have spent the years since fighting for justice from the oil industry they once trusted When Deepwater Horizon exploded in 2010, Stephen Stone was fortunate to escape with his life. ‘An affront to justice ’ The festering legacy of Guantánamo BayĪ natural film star who quietly pioneered a revolution Sidney Poitier 1927-2022 Does the advent of AI and machine learning mean that the classic scientific methodology – hypothesise, predict, test – has had its day?. Shaken up Belly dancers feel cultural erosion of an art form The mystery of Austria’s silence over dual citizens held in Iran Bioceanic Corridor in the Chaco cuts through fastest-vanishing forest on Earth and its fragile communities. Road to ruin Last refuge of Ayoreo people under threat Western nations like to sell off their mixed recyclables – but much of it ends up rotting in the ports of poorer countries. Waste not? The ugly underbelly of plastics recycling Whether he wins a critical court ruling or not, the prince has damaged the royal family – and it will have to change. ‘The firm’ awaits grim fallout from Andrew’s disgrace Living with Covid Planning beyond virus does not mean dropping all precautions The tennis star was released from detention, having gained a new fanbase of anti-vaxxers and far-right figures. Ukraine talks Can history help find a path to rapprochement with Putin?ĭjokovic furore hides trail of unanswered questions The Trump menace is darker than ever – and snapping at Biden’s heelsįuel to fire How peaceful protests spiralled into bloodshed
Former president and aides using any means possible to stymie committee’s efforts before November midterms. Race against the clock for investigation into storming of the Capitol With the perception of reality between Democrats and Republicans so distorted, could civil war really happen? Some experts doubt an armed conflict could arise – but others foresee a Northern Ireland-style insurgency…. The church, on Romney Marsh, was once part of a village, long since gone. St Thomas Becket church in Fairfield, Kent, got away lightly with a frost last Thursday.
Northern parts of England and Scotland experienced widespread ice and even “thundersnow”. After one of the mildest new year periods on record, in which temperatures reached as high as 16C in parts of the UK, winter returned last week.Threat of US civil war, unrest in Kazakhstan and Deepwater justice Inside, the past seven days' most memorable stories are reframed with striking photography and insightful companion pieces, all handpicked from The Guardian and The Observer.
The Guardian Weekly magazine is a round-up of the world news, opinion and long reads that have shaped the week.