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Tech May 19, 2026

South Asian Entrepreneurs Fueling UK Hate Speech with AI-Generated Content on Facebook

Young entrepreneurs from South Asia are creating and profiting from AI-generated hate speech target…
The Rise of AI-Generated Hate OperationsScroll through any Facebook feed in Britain and, between the baby announcements and petty neighbourhood beefs, you're likely to come across an account with a union jack profile picture and a vague, generic name like Britain Today. These accounts – and there are hundreds, possibly thousands of them – present themselves as the work of British patriots. In one typical, AI-generated video, a middle-aged man claims his local cafe "has stopped serving pork, bacon and sausages just to avoid offending people". Another post from the same account includes a sepia-tinted set of images of Victorian London, mourning a time when the city "was English, first-world and beautiful". Alongside this type of reactionary nostalgia, it's not unusual to see memes that call Islam a "cancer", decry Muslims praying in public as an "invasion of the west" or promote the "great replacement theory".The Financial Incentives Behind AI Hate ContentFor the past seven months, I have been investigating who is really behind pages like these. The answer, it turns out, is often young, entrepreneurial men from south Asia. They tend to have zero interest in UK politics, but the content they create often boosts far-right talking points in Britain and contributes to the increasingly hostile atmosphere for immigrants and British Muslims. They're part of a booming cottage industry producing commercial AI slop.The financial incentives for creating this kind of content are huge, particularly for creators in the global south. At the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, we looked in detail at two very successful "sloperations" targeting British audiences from Pakistan and Sri Lanka. They make money from the online ads that Meta places next to high-performing content. Meta shares a proportion of the ad revenue with the creators and also makes direct payments to creators to reward posts that receive a lot of engagement.Once you hone your algorithmic rage bait, there's very good money to be made from slop. The Pakistani creator, a devout Muslim who we are not naming for his own safety, told us he makes $1,500 (£1,119) a month from one of his pages alone; Geeth Sooriyapura, the Sri Lankan creator, claimed to have made $300,000 over the course of his Facebook career. We weren't able to verify these figures, but both men were certainly making many times the average income in their countries.The Economic Impact of AI-Generated PropagandaTheir success represents the seductive promise of "passive income" culture, a pervasive modern gospel that says you should quit your job and make easy money online. The proponents of this philosophy also often sell courses as an additional revenue stream: Sooriyapura claimed that 2,500 people, mainly other Sri Lankans, have graduated from his content academy.Rightwing propaganda and Islamophobia are, of course, not new. But two key structural factors have made it particularly pervasive on social media.The Technological and Policy EnablersFirst, the wide availability of generative AI tools. These are used at every stage of the content creation process: to brainstorm ideas, to write captions and, most importantly, to create compelling images and videos. This is particularly helpful if, like the Pakistani creator, you do not speak English well. In one video we reviewed from Sooriyapura's Facebook course, he told his students that AI-generated videos can help political content go viral up to 10 times faster.Second is Meta's retreat from content moderation. Over the past couple of years, the major social platforms have made mass redundancies on the trust and safety teams that monitored and took down harmful content. This was partly motivated by pressure from the Trump administration, which believed that platforms had engaged in heavy-handed censorship of content during the Biden presidency.Social media companies justify the moderation job cuts by pointing to their use of AI to find harmful content more efficiently. But our reporting shows there is masses of deeply offensive content on there which anyone could find in a few minutes, if they bothered to look.The Future of Online Hate Speech and Platform AccountabilityAfter we spoke to the Pakistani creator, he said it was a "good thing" we had informed him about the nature of his posts and he deleted many of them. Sooriyapura told us that he did not encourage his students to "spread violence" and that he just educates "people on Facebook monetisation and audience-targeting".The Pakistani creator didn't cover his tracks particularly well. It took me a couple of hours and a little help from Osint Industries, a platform that collates information on social media accounts, to definitively confirm that the person who ran the Islamophobic slop account also had personal accounts in his own name sharing verses from the Qur'an. These are actions that Meta easily could have taken itself. But why would it spend good money implementing its own policies when there is so little political or regulatory pressure to do so?When we contacted Meta in both these cases, it took down many of their pages and sent a one-line statement: "We have clear community standards that prohibit hate speech, harassment, harmful misinformation and inauthentic behaviour and we have removed these accounts for violating our policies." I've been a tech journalist long enough to have been through this process with Meta and other social platforms many times before. The Sri Lanka network is, depressingly, back up and running, having faced minimal consequences after a bit of downtime.Meta can, and should, be doing more to take these kinds of accounts down. But as long as its core product is an algorithmic feed that financially rewards content that provokes extreme emotions, others will always appear in its place.
#Facebook #Meta #AI
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Sports May 19, 2026

Scotland World Cup Squad: Ross Stewart Recalled After Four-Year Absence

Scotland's manager Steve Clarke has included striker Ross Stewart in the 26-man squad for the upcom…
The Recall of Ross Stewart Scotland's manager Steve Clarke has included striker Ross Stewart in the 26-man squad for the upcoming World Cup, marking his return to international football after a four-year absence. Stewart's recent form for Southampton, scoring five goals in 10 games, prompted his recall. Scotland's World Cup Squad The squad features a mix of experienced players and young talents. Goalkeepers include Craig Gordon, Angus Gunn, and Liam Kelly. Defenders are Grant Hanley, Jack Hendry, Aaron Hickey, Dom Hyam, Scott McKenna, Nathan Patterson, Anthony Ralston, Andy Robertson, John Souttar, and Kieran Tierney. Goalkeepers: Craig Gordon, Angus Gunn, Liam Kelly Defenders: Grant Hanley, Jack Hendry, Aaron Hickey, Dom Hyam, Scott McKenna, Nathan Patterson, Anthony Ralston, Andy Robertson, John Souttar, Kieran Tierney Midfielders: Ryan Christie, Findlay Curtis, Lewis Ferguson, Ben Gannon-Doak, Billy Gilmour, John McGinn, Kenny McLean, Scott McTominay Forwards: Ché Adams, Lyndon Dykes, George Hirst, Lawrence Shankland, Ross Stewart The Impact of Stewart's Recall Stewart's inclusion is a significant boost to Scotland's attacking options. His recent form for Southampton has been impressive, and Clarke believes he can make an impact in the World Cup. The World Cup Campaign Scotland's World Cup campaign kicks off against Haiti in Boston on 13 June, followed by matches against Morocco and Brazil. The team will also play pre-tournament friendlies against Curaçao and Bolivia.
#Scotland #World Cup #Ross Stewart
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Sports May 19, 2026

Wembanyama's Historic 41-24 Performance Powers Spurs to Double-Overtime Victory Over Thunder

Victor Wembanyama delivered a historic 41-point, 24-rebound performance to lead the San Antonio Spu…
The Historic Double-Double PerformanceVictor Wembanyama delivered one of the most remarkable individual performances in NBA playoff history, scoring 41 points and grabbing 24 rebounds to lead the San Antonio Spurs to a thrilling 122-115 double-overtime victory over the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals. At just 22 years and 134 days old, Wembanyama became the youngest player in NBA history to achieve at least 40 points and 20 rebounds in a playoff game, silencing the Thunder crowd and establishing himself as the centerpiece of this series.Game-Changing MomentsThe French superstar sealed the victory with a pair of dunks in the final minute, including one that resulted in a three-point play. However, it was his clutch three-pointer from well beyond the arc in the first overtime that truly shifted momentum, tying the game and forcing a second overtime period. Without that shot, there likely would not have been a second overtime. The Spurs dominated the boards, outrebounding the Thunder 61-40, and Wembanyama altered countless other shots while blocking three official rejections.Thunder's Streak SnappedThe defeat ended Oklahoma City's nine-game playoff winning streak that dated back to Game 7 of last season's NBA finals. Despite the loss, Thunder players showed resilience, with Alex Caruso scoring 31 points off the bench – the second-highest scoring game of his career. Jalen Williams returned from a six-game absence due to a hamstring strain and contributed 26 points, while reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander managed 24 points and 12 assists despite shooting just 7 for 23 from the field.Spurs' Supporting Cast Steps UpWhile Wembanyama dominated the headlines, his teammates provided crucial support. Dylan Harper finished with 24 points and a team playoff-record seven steals, while Stephon Castle added 17 points. Devin Vassell and Keldon Johnson each scored 13 points, and Julian Champagnie contributed 11 points. The Spurs were missing De'Aaron Fox due to ankle stiffness, but the remaining players stepped up in his absence to secure the road victory.What's Next in the SeriesGame 2 is scheduled for Wednesday at Oklahoma City, with the Thunder looking to even the series on their home court. The Spurs have now beaten the Thunder five times in six meetings this season, establishing clear dominance in the matchup. Wembanyama's performance has set an extremely high bar for the remainder of the series, with both teams knowing they'll need to bring their best to advance to the NBA Finals.
#Victor Wembanyama #San Antonio Spurs #Oklahoma City Thunder
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Entertainment May 19, 2026

Tycoon: Charlotte Zhang's Dystopian Vision of Corporate-Controlled Los Angeles

Charlotte Zhang's debut film 'Tycoon' presents a dystopian vision of 2028 Los Angeles where a megac…
The Dystopian Vision of 2028 Los AngelesBrimming with indelible images, Charlotte Zhang's brilliant debut locates the roots of a dystopian future in the here and now. Set around the 2028 Summer Olympics, the film imagines a Los Angeles gripped by paranoia and conspiracies; and a livestock disease has led to a ban on all meat production, leaving the main source of protein distribution – powdered insects – in the control of a megacorporation called Ootheca Inc. Ironically enough, a cockroach infestation has taken over several local neighbourhoods, making Ootheca's monopolising greed even more insidious.A Human Story of Survival Amid Corporate ControlAll of this might sound pretty out there, yet the heart of Tycoon is a deeply human story of survival. Both hustlers up for any challenge, Lito (Miguel Padilla-Juarez) and Jay (Jon Lawrence Reyes) take advantage of the widespread chaos to embark on a series of petty crimes, including breaking into an Ootheca trailer to steal boxes of the precious protein powder. Their escapades are dynamically rendered on a variety of formats including handheld DV camera and Super 8, as well as Xerox art. But compared to other film-makers who favour this DIY style, Zhang is beautifully attentive to blocking and composition. Scenes of house parties, twilight rides against the setting sun, or high-rev street drifting harmonise into a stunning city symphony, in which a visual rhythm gradually emerges from disorder.Political Implications in a Corporate-Dominated WorldBeneath the seemingly casual tone of the visuals, there are also serious political implications. As Latino men living in a time of state-sanctioned racial violence, Lito and Jay are enfolded in economic precarity and constant surveillance. That they choose to game the system rather than waiting to be squashed by it – like Ootheca's crushed insects – is wonderfully empowering. Zhang occasionally makes explicit these political allusions by way of text intertitles, which sometimes feel a little awkward; still, when is a better time to deliver a manifesto than in one's first film?Where to Experience This Visionary DebutTycoon is at the ICA, London from 22 May.
#Charlotte Zhang #Tycoon film #dystopian
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Entertainment May 19, 2026

From TV Icon to Therapist: Daniela Nardini’s Mid‑Life Reinvention

Actress Daniela Nardini, best known for playing Anna Forbes in the 1990s BBC drama This Life, has r…
From Anna Forbes to Glasgow Therapist: A Personal JourneyThe Guardian revisits Daniela Nardini nearly three decades after her breakout role as Anna Forbes in This Life. Once a cultural touchstone of late‑90s Britain, she now runs a therapy practice in the West End of Glasgow, offering a quiet contrast to the sharp, messy character that once defined her.Viewership Numbers and Awards Highlight Nardini’s Early Impact3.5 million viewers tuned in to This Life at its peak, making the series a BBC Two hit.1998: Nardini earned a BAFTA for her performance.2009: She won a Scottish BAFTA for the film New Town.These figures cemented her status as a role model for a generation of young women navigating the “work‑hard, play‑hard” ethos of the era.How Mid‑life Transitions Reshape Identity in the Public EyeAfter the series ended, Nardini faced a series of personal upheavals: the death of her father Aldo, the dissolution of her marriage to restaurateur Ivan Stein, and a breast‑cancer diagnosis that required a mastectomy and reconstruction. The experience prompted her to retrain as a therapist seven years ago, a shift she describes as more than a simple “pivot.”Her clients, predominantly women in midlife, benefit from her lived experience of grief, loss and bodily change, giving her practice a uniquely empathetic edge.What Lies Ahead for Nardini’s Dual Career PathLooking forward, Nardini plans to continue blending her artistic sensibility with therapeutic work, using creative outlets such as painting to process trauma. While she does not anticipate a resurgence of Anna Forbes‑related clientele, she remains open to occasional acting projects that align with her new perspective.As she approaches her 60th birthday, Nardini embodies a narrative of resilience: “quite a lot happened in my 50s,” she reflects, suggesting that the next decade will be defined by the strength she has cultivated through both fame and personal adversity.
#Daniela Nardini #This Life #BBC
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World Wide May 19, 2026

San Diego Mosque Shooting: Three Dead in Suspected Hate Crime Attack

Two teenage gunmen killed three people at the Islamic Center of San Diego before taking their own l…
The San Diego Mosque Attack: A Tragedy UnfoldsTwo teenage gunmen opened fire at the Islamic Center of San Diego on Monday, killing three men before later killing themselves, according to police. Authorities are investigating the attack as a possible hate crime, which occurred just before the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha and the annual Hajj pilgrimage.Chronology of the Mosque ShootingAt about 9:42am local time on Monday, police received a call from a mother reporting a "runaway juvenile." The caller shared information that her son was suicidal, several weapons were missing, and her vehicle was missing. Roughly two hours later, at about 11:43am local time, officers responded to reports of an active shooter at the Islamic Center of San Diego.When officers arrived, they found three people dead outside the building, prompting an "active shooter response" inside the complex. As police secured the area, gunfire erupted a few blocks away, where a landscaper was shot at but not injured. The suspected attackers were later found dead inside a vehicle stopped on a nearby road.Victims Identified and RememberedAmong the deceased victims was a security guard who worked at the center and "played a pivotal role" in preventing the attack from being "much worse," officials said. "It's fair to say his actions were heroic," said San Diego Police Chief Scott Wahl. "Undoubtedly, he saved lives today."Authorities have not yet publicly identified all three victims, but community leaders have identified the guard as Amin Abdullah. Local media reports suggested he was a father of eight.Attackers' Profile and MotiveThe two suspects found dead inside a vehicle were teenagers, aged 17 and 19 years old. Police said the mother who contacted authorities earlier in the day told investigators the pair were dressed in camouflage clothing and traveling together in a vehicle that had been reported missing."There was definitely hate rhetoric that was involved," Wahl said, though there was no specific threat against the Islamic Center of San Diego. Authorities said the teenagers killed three people, including the security guard, before later killing themselves.Community and Official ResponseThe Council on American-Islamic Relations condemned the shooting, with CAIR-San Diego Executive Director Tazheen Nizam stating: "No one should ever fear for their safety while attending prayers or studying at an elementary school."California Governor Gavin Newsom released a statement saying he was "horrified by today's violent attack," adding that "hate has no place in California." New York City's first Muslim mayor, Zohran Mamdani, commented that "Islamophobia endangers Muslim communities across this country" and called for standing together against "the politics of fear and division."Rising Tide of Islamophobia in AmericaUS civil rights advocates have for years warned about rising Islamophobia, linking it to the aftermath of the September 11, 2001 attacks, the so-called war on terror, anti-immigration rhetoric, white supremacist movements, and tensions surrounding Israel's war on Gaza.CAIR reported recording 8,683 anti-Muslim and anti-Arab complaints in 2025, the highest number since the organization began publishing data in 1996. A separate study published in April by the Center for the Study of Organized Hate found a sharp rise in anti-Muslim rhetoric from Republican elected officials since early 2025.Historical Context: Mosque Attacks in the USRights groups have pointed to growing threats and attacks against mosques, Islamic schools, and Muslim community centers across the US in recent years. In February 2026, shots were fired at the Pike County Islamic Center in Matamoras, Pennsylvania, during the holy month of Ramadan. In October 2023, six-year-old Palestinian American boy Wadea Al-Fayoume was killed in Illinois in what authorities described as a hate crime linked to the war on Gaza.Aftermath and InvestigationAuthorities have reduced the "Genasys advisory zone" around the Islamic Center of San Diego as the investigation moves from the emergency response phase into what officials described as the "investigative phase." The restricted area has now been narrowed to Eckstrom Avenue, Cosmo Street, Balboa Avenue, and Hathaway Street.Police have encouraged residents to download the Genasys Protect app to receive emergency and public safety alerts directly for their area. The investigation continues as authorities work to determine what led to the shooting and whether it was indeed a hate crime.Path Forward for Muslim CommunitiesThe attack has raised concerns about the safety of Muslim places of worship and community centers across the United States. As the investigation continues, Muslim community leaders are calling for increased protection of religious institutions and a broader societal conversation about combating Islamophobia and hate crimes.The Islamic Center of San Diego, the largest mosque in San Diego county serving a congregation of more than 5,000 people, has vowed to continue its mission of serving the religious needs of San Diego's Muslim community while supporting and educating the wider public, despite this tragic incident.
#San Diego #Mosque Shooting #Hate Crime
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World Wide May 19, 2026

Jerusalem Day Fuels Surge in Settler Violence, Legislative Shifts and Gaza Humanitarian Crisis

Jerusalem Day on May 14 sparked massive ultra‑nationalist marches in East Jerusalem and ignited a w…
Jerusalem Day March and Ultra‑Nationalist ProvocationsOn May 14, Israel marked Jerusalem Day, commemorating the 1967 capture of East Jerusalem. Tens of thousands of ultra‑nationalist Israelis marched through the Old City, chanting hostile slogans such as “death to Arabs” and “may your villages burn.” The march turned violent, with attacks on Palestinian shops and residents.Itamar Ben‑Gvir, Israel’s far‑right National Security Minister, raised the Israeli flag inside the Al‑Aqsa Mosque compound, declaring “the Temple Mount is in our hands.” Fellow legislator Yitzhak Kroizer prostrated before the Dome of the Rock and called for the removal of mosques to construct a Temple.Israeli authorities barred men under 60 and women under 50 from entering Al‑Aqsa that morning.More than 2,200 settler incursions were reported in the Old City during the week, violating the site’s “status‑quo” arrangement.Escalation of Settler Attacks in the West BankThe week’s most lethal settler assault occurred on May 13 when dozens of settlers, under military protection, attacked the villages of Jilijliya, Sinjil and Abwein. Youssef Kaabneh, a 16‑year‑old, was shot in the chest and died after ambulances were blocked by Israeli military vehicles.Additional violent incidents included:Killings of 16‑year‑old Fahd Awais in al‑Lubban ash‑Sharqiya (May 16).Stabbing of Jaber Shabaneh in Sinjil.Arson attacks on mosques, vehicles and olive trees across dozens of villages (Jibiya, Shaqba, Beit Ummar, etc.).Seizure of hundreds of sheep and two tractors, escorted by soldiers.Legislative Moves and Political ManeuveringIsrael’s government enacted a death‑penalty law targeting Palestinians convicted of “terrorism” in the West Bank, a measure condemned by UN experts as potentially constituting a war crime.The coalition also submitted a bill to dissolve the Knesset, triggering elections by late October. Opposition leader Avigdor Lieberman warned that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu might launch a military operation for electoral gain.Additional approvals included:Construction of a military complex on the former UNRWA headquarters in Sheikh Jarrah.Seizure plans for historic Palestinian properties in the Bab al‑Silsila neighbourhood adjacent to Al‑Aqsa.Military orders to confiscate land in Jenin and Qabatiya.Humanitarian Crisis Deepens in GazaOn Nakba Day (May 15), Israel killed Hamas armed‑wing chief Izz al‑Din al‑Haddad in a strike that also killed his wife, daughter and four civilians in Gaza City. Netanyahu later claimed Israel now controls roughly 60 % of the Strip, beyond the “yellow line” cease‑fire boundary.Subsequent strikes killed civilians in Jabalia, Deir al‑Balah and Khan Younis, including three community‑kitchen workers—a target the Hamas health ministry labeled a “deliberate war crime.”The humanitarian situation remains critical:Only 1 in 2 aid trucks from Egypt managed to off‑load at Israeli crossings in the first 11 days of May (OCHA report).Over 43,000 people in Gaza have life‑changing injuries, one‑quarter of them children (WHO estimate).Sewage pumping stations in Khan Younis have ceased due to oil shortages, causing flooding.What the Week Signals for Future Conflict DynamicsThe convergence of Jerusalem Day provocations, a surge in settler‑driven violence, aggressive legislative actions, and intensified military strikes in Gaza points to a sharpening of Israel’s “facts on the ground” strategy ahead of the upcoming elections. If unchecked, these dynamics risk further destabilising the West Bank, deepening the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and complicating any diplomatic pathways toward a cease‑fire or political settlement.
#Israel #Palestine #Jerusalem Day
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Literature May 19, 2026

The Art and Challenge of Translating Shakespeare Across Languages and Cultures

Daniel Hahn's 'If This Be Magic' explores the complex art of translating Shakespeare's works across…
The Challenge of Translating ShakespeareThe great Argentine writer Jorge Luis Borges, who translated William Faulkner, André Gide, Franz Kafka and Virginia Woolf into Spanish, drew the line at Shakespeare. Speaking of the moment when Hamlet asks the ghost why it returns to haunt "the glimpses of the moon", Borges commented: "I don't think it can be translated. Perhaps the words can be translated. Certainly Shakespeare cannot be translated. 'The glimpses of the moon' means exactly 'the glimpses of the moon'."All, however, is not lost. "It has been said that Shakespeare cannot be translated into any other language," Borges added. "But Shakespeare cannot be translated into English, either, since he wrote what [Robert Louis] Stevenson called 'that amazing dialect, the Shakespeare-ese'." This might not be entirely true, as the translator Daniel Hahn points out in this superbly diverting book. Recalling a hip-hop production of Romeo and Juliet he once saw, he persuades us instantly that "the phrase 'Do you kiss your teeth at me, fam?' proved to be a perfect translation of 'Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?'"Shakespeare Across LanguagesAnd if into English, then why not into Portuguese, or French, or Māori? Hahn's project is to argue that "Shakespeare with every word changed can still be great, and can remain Shakespeare", and to that end he reproduces chunks of Dutch, Russian, Welsh, Thai, Arabic, Japanese, and a dozen other languages, betting that by simply counting syllables or observing alliteration in a language one doesn't understand (as he cheerfully admits, he doesn't understand Danish), one can learn something about the quality of a translation. I wasn't convinced that wager worked much of the time, but the typesetters, as you can imagine, were certainly getting a decent workout, and the gambit does finally pay off when a long passage from Twelfth Night is annotated by boxes mentioning dozens of different translators' choices.Cultural Adaptations in TranslationWhat really illuminates the book are Hahn's conversations with his fellow translators, who can explain their choices directly. In Māori, we learn, Lady Macbeth's question to her husband, "Are you a man?", makes no sense at all, so the translator Te Haumihiata Mason renders it as something roughly meaning "Have you got balls?" – "which is," Hahn notes contentedly, "exactly what Lady M is asking." Meanwhile, Prince Hal's name means "fish" in Hungarian, which would be unhelpfully distracting, so it gets changed to Riki, short for Henrik.Hahn also offers many asides about the annoyances and pleasures of translation in general. "The word 'literal' is annoyingly overused to suggest a sort of 'neutral' translation, which cannot exist," he complains; and he shows that, in many cases, a non-literal choice would be better. When Mark Antony imagines Caesar's spirit to "cry 'Havoc'", for example, the closest Portuguese word is the rather weak-sounding "devastação"; a better choice, Hahn shows, is "matança" (killing), because it's shorter and more easily shoutable.Translating Verse and JokesEach chapter addresses a different question translators face, for example whether to translate into verse (careful: as one French translator observes, you risk making "a genius into a talented versifier"), or how to translate jokes: it's usually best, everyone agrees, to create an entirely new joke – "being faithful to the laugh", as Hahn calls it. In a German Midsummer Night's Dream, to preserve the doggerel rhymes, we are promised not that Thisbe will be in "mulberry shade" but that she will be "hiding like a newt". Translators might even embrace the possibility of a joke where none previously existed – which Hahn illustrates brightly by mentioning that the "sorting hat" in Harry Potter has become, in French, le choixpeau (the chapeau that chooses).Poetic Elements and Title AdaptationsCan you even preserve alliteration? Sometimes, if you're lucky: Love's Labour's Lost received the surely unimprovable Greek title of "Agapēs Agōnas Agonos" ("the struggles of love are barren"). But when no such fortunate tricks are available, you can simply replace one idiom with another: so, in Spanish, Much Ado About Nothing is often called "A lot of noise, not many nuts".There are quibbles to be made here and there. Hahn calls a line from Richard III "irregular" after counting syllables, but it's a perfectly regular line that begins with an anapest (da-da-dum). And when Juliet says to Romeo "You kiss by th'book", Hahn glosses this as her approvingly noting his "formal courtship", but she is surely issuing a flirtatious challenge. And – this being the publisher's rather than the author's fault – the book has been produced, inexplicably, without an index.The Value of TranslationAll may be forgiven, though, for the delight and endless curiosity displayed in these pages. "In Shakespeare, people get sad with precision," Hahn enthuses. And he is cherishably bitchy about certain literary "translators" who somehow produce new English versions of Chekhov or Ibsen without speaking the source language – the process being, as he surmises, "a sort of high-status prettying up of a so-called 'literal' translation". By the end of the book, Hahn has amply demonstrated not only the treasures of other languages, but also the rich and strange inexhaustibility of Shakespeare himself.
#Shakespeare #Translation #Daniel Hahn
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Economy May 19, 2026

UK Labor Market Deteriorates as Unemployment Rises and Wage Growth Slows Amid Iran War Fallout

UK unemployment unexpectedly rose to 5% while wage growth slowed to 3.4%, with businesses reacting …
The Labor Market Shift Amid Geopolitical Tensions The UK labor market has taken a significant turn for the worse as unemployment unexpectedly increased to 5% in the three months to March, up from 4.9% in February. This development comes as businesses face mounting pressure from the Iran war, which has driven energy prices higher and created widespread economic uncertainty. The Office for National Statistics reported that regular wages, excluding bonuses, rose by just 3.4% year-on-year in the three months to March, down from 3.6% in February, and after accounting for inflation, real wage growth was minimal at just 0.3%. Sharp Decline in Payroll Employment The labor market deterioration is most evident in the payroll data, which showed a dramatic 100,000 drop in April—the largest monthly decline since the early days of the pandemic in May 2020. Excluding the Covid period, this represents the biggest monthly fall since records began in 2014. Martin Beck, chief economist at WPI Strategy, noted that this decline has left total headcounts 210,000 lower than a year earlier. The reduction in payrolls indicates that businesses are actively responding to economic pressures by reducing their workforce rather than freezing hiring. The Generational Divide in Employment The labor market slowdown is not affecting all workers equally. Since payroll employment peaked in October 2024, the number of employees aged 34 and under has fallen by 296,000, while employment among those aged 35 and over has actually risen by over 18,000. This generational divide suggests that younger workers are bearing the brunt of the economic uncertainty, potentially facing longer-term career impacts as they enter the workforce during a period of contraction. Employer Caution and Shifting Labor Market Dynamics Employers are clearly becoming more cautious in their hiring practices, with vacancies falling to 705,000 in April—a five-year low. This represents a 28,000 decrease from the previous quarter and brings vacancies to around 15% below their pre-pandemic level. The number of unemployed people per vacancy has risen to among the highest levels since 2020, indicating a significant shift in the balance of power in the labor market away from workers and toward employers. This trend is likely to continue as businesses scale back hiring plans in response to economic uncertainty. Central Bank Monitoring and Future Economic Outlook The Bank of England is closely monitoring these labor market developments, particularly wage growth, to assess the extent to which higher consumer prices are feeding through the economy. Several central bank policymakers believe the slowdown in wage growth since early 2025 is likely to continue due to the Iran war's impact on hiring and the wider economy. This moderation in wage growth could potentially influence the Bank's monetary policy decisions, though the current inflationary pressures from energy costs remain a significant concern. The labor market deterioration suggests the UK economy may face a more challenging period ahead as geopolitical tensions continue to impact business confidence and investment decisions.
#UK economy #unemployment #wage growth
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