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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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Entertainment May 19, 2026

Kraftwerk’s Belfast Concert Shows Their Futuristic Sound Still Rules After 55 Years

At the Civic Hall in Belfast, Kraftwerk proved that their pioneering techno still feels ahead of it…
Lead: A Half‑Century of Techno Supremacy Still Sounds Future‑ReadyThe Guardian’s review of Kraftwerk's Belfast show highlights how a band formed 55 years ago can still command a stage with music that feels designed for a world that hasn’t yet arrived.Live Re‑creation of the ‘Computer World’ EraThe concert opened with three tracks from the 1981 Computer World album—“Numbers,” the title track, and “Computer World 2”—delivered by Hütter and his live‑band crew. The performance blended the original electro‑pop precision with live‑room improvisation, such as an extended breakdown of “Autobahn” where Hütter warped arpeggios in real time.Numbers that Matter: Age, Album Anniversaries, and Tour ScopeBand formation: 55 years ago (1971)Computer World anniversary: 45 yearsRalf Hütter: 79 years old, the sole original member on stageTour dates: Belfast show on 21 May 2026, followed by UK dates through 9 JuneWhy Kraftwerk’s Sound Continues to Shape Electronic MusicThe review notes that the band’s “Rosetta Stone” for new wave, techno, electro, industrial, house and beyond was read aloud again, confirming their foundational role. Elements like the Chicago‑inspired hi‑hats on “The Robots” illustrate how Kraftwerk’s minimal‑techno DNA still informs contemporary production.Looking Ahead: What the Next Decade Could Hold for the PioneersGiven the enthusiastic reception and the band’s willingness to blend strict sequencer patterns with live improvisation, it is likely that Kraftwerk will continue to tour major venues, possibly integrating newer visual technologies to match their futuristic ethos. Their ability to honor past milestones while sounding forward‑looking suggests they will remain a touchstone for emerging electronic artists for years to come.
#Kraftwerk #Ralf Hütter #Computer World
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Health May 19, 2026

WHO Calls Emergency Committee Meeting as Ebola Death Toll Rises to 131

The World Health Organization will convene an emergency committee as the Ebola outbreak in the Demo…
WHO announced that an emergency committee will convene later Tuesday to evaluate the rapidly worsening Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) as the death toll rises to 131 among 513 suspected cases. WHO Schedules Emergency Committee to Address Escalating Ebola Outbreak Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told the World Health Assembly that he is “deeply concerned about the scale and speed of the epidemic.” The committee, composed of international experts, will provide technical advice to the WHO chief. Death Toll Climbs to 131 Amid 513 Suspected Cases 131 estimated deaths (up from 91 previously reported) 513 suspected cases (up from 350) Fatality rate of the Bundibugyo strain can reach up to 50% Regional Spread and Lack of Countermeasures Heighten Global Concern The outbreak’s epicenter is in the Ituri province on the border with Uganda and South Sudan, and the virus has already been detected up to 200 km from ground zero, including spill‑over into neighbouring provinces. No approved vaccine exists for the Bundibugyo strain, though the Merck‑produced Ervebo vaccine for the Zaire strain shows some protective evidence in animal studies. Six tons of personal protective equipment and medical supplies are arriving in the DRC, supplementing an earlier shipment of 12 tons. What the Next Weeks May Hold for the DRC Outbreak The emergency committee will discuss possible vaccine deployment, including the potential use of Ervebo, and other containment measures. International assistance is already mobilising, with Germany preparing to treat a U.S. citizen infected in the DRC and the WHO coordinating supply deliveries.
#WHO #Ebola #DRC
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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 Unemployment Unexpectedly Rises to 5% Amid Iran War Economic Pressure

UK unemployment has unexpectedly risen to 5% as firms face mounting pressure from the Iran war, wit…
The Unexpected Rise in UK UnemploymentUK unemployment has unexpectedly risen to 5% while wage growth has slowed, according to official figures, in the first snapshot of how companies are reacting to the impact of the Iran war. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) reported that the rate of unemployment increased in the three months to March, from 4.9% in February, a rate that City economists had expected to remain stable.Employment Data Shows Sharp DeclineMore up-to-date tax data revealed that the number of payrolled employees dropped sharply in April, falling by 100,000, after a 28,000 decline in March. This indicates that employers are already responding to economic pressures stemming from the Middle East conflict.Wage Growth Slows Amid Economic PressureExcluding bonuses, wage growth was 3.4% year on year in the three months to March, down from 3.6% in February. While this matched economists' expectations, it was still the slowest growth since the three months to October 2020. After accounting for inflation, wages grew by just 0.3%, indicating a significant decline in purchasing power for workers.When including bonuses, wages increased by 4.1%, up from a rise of 3.8% in the previous quarter, suggesting that employers are using bonus payments to compensate for base wage stagnation.Iran War's Impact on UK EconomyThe Iran war, which began on February 28, has caused global oil and gas prices to rise sharply due to the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz. This has created a mixed economic picture for the UK since the conflict began.Surveys indicate consumers are fearful of rising inflation and are cutting back on discretionary spending, while businesses report sharp increases in input costs. However, the UK economy unexpectedly grew by 0.3% in March and by 0.6% over the first quarter, leading the International Monetary Fund to increase its UK growth forecast for 2026 from 0.8% to 1%.Future Economic OutlookThe Bank of England expects unemployment to continue rising, projecting it will hit 5.1% by the middle of 2026 and then increase to between 5.5% and 5.6% by the summer of 2027. These forecasts are based on current estimates of how the Iran war might affect the UK economy, suggesting that the full impact of the conflict may not yet be reflected in current data.
#UK economy #unemployment #Iran war
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Economy May 18, 2026

Rising Prices Top Britons' Money Worry as Inflation Stays High, Survey Finds

A monthly S&P Global consumer confidence survey shows rising prices have become the top financial w…
Survey Shows Rising Prices Overtake All Financial ConcernsRising prices have become the leading money worry for British households, according to the latest S&P Global consumer confidence survey released ahead of official inflation data.Consumer Sentiment Index Drops to 42.1 in MayThe Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 42.1 in May from 42.3 in April, marking the lowest reading since July 2023 when inflation surged after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The index aggregates views on household spending, financial wellbeing, savings, debt and employment.Survey of 1,500 adults across the UK.Score of 42.1 – lowest since July 2023.Confidence decline coincides with higher fuel prices linked to Middle‑East tensions.Numbers Reveal Deepening Savings Erosion and Interest‑Rate AnxietyBritons reported a "substantial decline" in household savings in May, the fastest pace since July 2023, driven by soaring energy costs.Savings falling at a rate not seen since 2011 (excluding the pandemic).51% of respondents expect interest rates to rise – the highest proportion in two‑and‑a‑half years.Bank of England warned energy bills could rise 16% to £1,900 by summer and food prices 7% by year‑end.Implications for UK Household Spending and Economic GrowthThe combination of squeezed finances, job insecurity (highest since March 2023) and pessimism about big purchases is likely to curb consumer spending, which could dampen overall economic growth.Job insecurity at its highest level since March 2023.Attitudes toward major purchases among the most downbeat in almost three years.Outlook: Inflation Persistence and Potential Policy ResponsesOfficial CPI data showed inflation at 3.3% in March, up from 3% in February, with April figures expected to edge down to around 3% – still above the Bank of England’s 2% target. If global oil prices remain elevated, the Bank may be forced to raise rates later in 2026, further tightening household budgets.Economist Maryam Baluch of S&P Global Market Intelligence cautioned that the current environment “is deterring spending to a degree rarely witnessed by the survey, which in turn looks set to dampen economic growth.”
#S&P Global #UK inflation #Bank of England
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Health May 18, 2026

Psilocybin Shows Promise as Single-Dose Treatment for Cocaine Addiction in Clinical Trial

A new clinical trial published in JAMA Network Open demonstrates that a single dose of psilocybin, …
The Breakthrough in Addiction Treatment Results from a new clinical trial published in JAMA Network Open this month show that a single dose of psilocybin could be an effective treatment for cocaine addiction. The study found that 19 participants who received psilocybin were more likely to abstain from cocaine than 17 participants who received a placebo of diphenhydramine, a common antihistamine. Participants in both groups worked with therapists to process their experiences, highlighting the importance of the therapeutic context alongside the medication. The Urgent Need for Cocaine Addiction Treatments Dr. Peter Hendricks, a behavioral health professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham and lead author of the study, emphasized the critical need for effective treatments. Currently, there are no FDA-approved medications for addiction to cocaine or other stimulants like methamphetamine. Overdoses involving stimulants are killing more Americans, and according to the latest UN global drug report, cocaine deaths are rising globally as cocaine production reaches an all-time high. Understanding the Mechanism Experts believe psilocybin works by increasing neuroplasticity and psychological plasticity – the ability to change thinking and behavior. Addictions inherently involve resistance to changing rigid, impulsive behaviors, which psychedelics may help overcome. Unlike traditional addiction medications that target the same neurochemical systems as the substance itself, psilocybin produces a profound altered state of consciousness within a structured psychotherapy context. It acts more like a catalyst within a therapeutic process rather than a maintenance medication. Addressing Cocaine Withdrawal Symptoms Cocaine withdrawal symptoms are primarily psychological rather than physically painful, including bad dreams, agitation, depression, and cravings. This psychological nature may make psilocybin particularly effective for cocaine addiction, as it can facilitate shifts in perspective and self-compassion that help people change their behavior. The therapeutic framework allows individuals to process their experiences and develop new insights about their addiction patterns, potentially breaking the cycle of craving and use. Diverse Clinical Trial Participation This study is notable as the first psychedelic clinical trial to include a majority of Black participants. While many spiritual rituals involving psychedelics originated in Indigenous societies in Latin America and Africa, US psychedelic culture today is often associated with Silicon Valley and elite, white personalities. Dr. Hendricks specifically recruited participants who were dependent on cocaine and wanted to stop, rather than advertising for psychedelic enthusiasts. This approach likely reduced the "expectation effect" and produced more generalizable results. Future Research Directions A critical commentary published alongside the study noted that the results might not be generally applicable because the study excluded people with comorbid depression and anxiety. However, experts point out that psilocybin shows promise for treating both conditions. The success of this trial is a clear indication that psilocybin for cocaine use disorder is a promising treatment that should proceed to larger-scale clinical trials. As research continues, the medical community may gain more insight into how psychedelics can be integrated into addiction treatment protocols.
#Psilocybin #Cocaine Addiction #Clinical Trial
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Environment May 18, 2026

Electric Trucks Challenge Diesel Dominance in Australia Amid Rising Fuel Costs

Electric truck manufacturers are making significant inroads into Australia's transportation sector,…
The Lead Electric trucks are increasingly challenging diesel's dominance in Australia's transportation sector, with manufacturers demonstrating impressive capabilities while the country faces rising fuel costs and energy security concerns. The Electric Truck Performance Breakthrough Electric truck manufacturers like Windrose have conducted successful trials in Australia, including an extreme test pulling 68 tonnes up the notorious Mount Ousley escarpment from Port Kembla to Sydney. Bo Christensen, a fleet electrification specialist who followed the Windrose prime mover in last year's trial, noted: "It's a very tough run, but we were overtaking pretty much all the trucks going up the hill. We did it pretty comfortably." Windrose trucks claim a range of almost 700 kilometers and can be recharged from zero to 60% in about 35 minutes, with planned upgrades expected to improve these specifications in the next two years. The Financial Impact Analysis The ongoing geopolitical tensions, particularly the US-Israel war on Iran and conflicts over the Strait of Hormuz oil shipping route, have sent diesel prices soaring and highlighted Australia's reliance on imported fuel. In response, the Australian government announced a $10 billion fuel security package, including $3.2 billion to store a billion more liters of diesel and jet fuel. Meanwhile, Windrose has already sold 10 electric trucks in Australia at $450,000 each, with the company's founder Wen Han aiming to sell "hundreds" more this year and 20,000 by 2030 as part of a global target of 100,000 trucks. The Industry Transformation Australia's transportation landscape is experiencing a significant shift with multiple electric truck manufacturers entering the market. Research from Mov3ment shows Volvo, Sany, Daimler, Foton and Deepway are all selling in Australia, with 332 electric trucks and vans sold in Australia last year—triple the previous year. Major companies including Ikea, Woolworths, Australia Post, Coles, Coca-Cola and Temple & Webster have introduced electric trucks, partnering with logistics firms like Linfox, Toll and ANC. Zenobē is also deploying a new fleet of 30 trucks in Melbourne and Sydney for Winnings. The Future Outlook Despite the growing presence of electric trucks, Australia has "radically fallen behind" global adoption rates, with only 0.7% of new truck sales being electric compared with 20% in China, 7% in Germany and 2% in the UK. The Energy Futures Foundation estimates that up to 80% of Australia's truck fleet could be electrified with existing technology, with more than half of Australia's diesel trucks set to reach their usual replacement age in the next five years. Bruce Hardy, executive director of the Energy Futures Foundation, warns: "If we don't offer a meaningful pathway [to electric] then we lock-in diesel trucks for another 15 years."
#Windrose #Electric Trucks #Australia
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Entertainment May 18, 2026

Einstürzende Neubauten Reinvents Their Legacy with New Bassist Josefine Lukschy

German industrial pioneers Einstürzende Neubauten have announced bassist Josefine Lukschy as their …
Lead: Einstürzende Neubauten’s New Chapter in 2026The legendary Berlin outfit Einstürzende Neubauten closed the 15th Rewire festival with a surprise announcement: bassist Josefine Lukschy joins the band, marking the first personnel change since 1997. Frontman Blixa Bargeld assured fans that the group will continue recording, dispelling rumours that the 2024 album Rampen might be their swan song.Band Milestone: Adding Bassist Josefine Lukschy After Four DecadesAfter Alexander Hacke announced his exit in April 2025, the band conducted a discreet audition process, ultimately selecting Lukschy, a Berlin‑based musician known for the sludge‑rock project Crashpad. Their public introduction came in late March 2026, a year after Hacke’s departure. The new lineup debuted on stage at the Rewire festival, complete with the band’s signature tools—shopping trolleys, pipes, and metal sheets.Numbers that Frame the Journey1980: Band founded in West Berlin.1997: Last major lineup expansion (Jochen Arbeit, Rudolph Moser).2022: Live improvisations later used as foundations for Rampen.2024: Release of Rampen, the latest studio record.2025: Hacke’s departure after 45 years with the group.2026: Lukschy becomes the first non‑male member since the early co‑founders.Why This Matters for Berlin’s Cultural LandscapeThe addition of Lukschy reflects a broader shift in Berlin’s artistic scene, which has been grappling with budget cuts and debates over its global status. As a band that helped define the city’s industrial sound—later influencing acts like Nine Inch Nails and Swans—their evolution mirrors Berlin’s own transition from post‑war DIY rebellion to an established cultural institution. Bargeld’s recent Order of Merit underscores the band’s integration into the national cultural fabric, while Lukschy’s presence signals a new, more inclusive generation.Looking Ahead: What’s Next for the Iconic Industrial Pioneers?With a refreshed lineup, the group has hinted at a new record that will build on the improvised material from their 2022 shows. Fans can expect further festival appearances across Europe in 2026‑27, and potentially a collaborative project that blends Lukschy’s sludge‑rock sensibilities with the band’s signature metal‑scrap sound. Their continued relevance may also inspire a resurgence of experimental venues in Berlin, reinforcing the city’s reputation as a haven for avant‑garde music.
#Einstürzende Neubauten #Blixa Bargeld #Josefine Lukschy
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