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Entertainment May 19, 2026

Clint Eastwood's iconic cannon from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly found in Spanish museum

The iconic cannon used by Clint Eastwood in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly has been rediscovered in…
The Cannon's RediscoverySixty years after Clint Eastwood used a cannon to fell a fleeing Eli Wallach in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, the iconic weapon has been found in a museum in south-east Spain. The artillery piece, a 75mm cannon made in Manchester by Whitworth in 1873, was lent to Sergio Leone's production team by the Spanish military and was returned to the army museum in Madrid after filming.The Cannon's HistoryThe Sad Hill Cultural Association, a group of volunteers dedicated to restoring the graveyard near Burgos, northern Spain, built for the climax of the film, tracked down the cannon. They came across images of the cannon in a book on the film and set about trying to trace some of the weapons used in preparation for the 60th anniversary of the movie's release later this year.The Data AnalysisThe cannon was made in Manchester by Whitworth in 1873.The cannon is now on display at the military history museum in Cartagena, south-east Spain.The Impact AnalysisThe rediscovery of the cannon has generated significant interest, with the city council using its fame to draw more visitors to the museum. The museum's director, Lt Col Ernesto Terry, said the cannon's fame was already causing a stir, with many people ringing to ask about it.The PredictionWhile the Sad Hill Cultural Association would love to borrow the cannon and temporarily reinstall it in the Burgos landscape, where it last stood 60 years ago, its protected heritage status means that will not be in time for the anniversary. However, they plan to try to get hold of the piece and bring it to Burgos in the future.
#Clint Eastwood #The Good, the Bad and the Ugly #Spanish museum
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Lifestyle May 18, 2026

At 65, I dedicated myself to saving soil – and a life of wild adventure began

Sousan Samadani, 65, embarked on a journey to save soil after watching a YouTube video about soil d…
The Call to Action Sousan Samadani was watching videos on YouTube one day when she came across a post about how the world’s soil was degrading so rapidly that it was in danger of extinction. The video – posted by the Save Soil movement – “was like a shock for me”, Samadani says. “I thought: ‘How is it possible that the soil that gives us food is dying?’” Embarking on a Journey Samadani made a decision in that moment: she was “going to be with this movement, fully, 100%”. According to Unesco, 90% of global soil could be degraded by 2050. Save Soil was launched by the spiritual leader “Sadhguru” Jaggi Vasudev, who announced a trip in 2022 to raise awareness: a 19,000-mile motorbike ride through Europe, the Middle East and India. A team of volunteers had already been booked to accompany Vasudev – so Samadani, 65, who lives in Utrecht in the Netherlands, decided to make her own shadow journey. While Sadhguru travelled to 27 countries, Samadani made it to all those and more, continuing on to Nepal, Suriname, Guyana and French Guiana, helping out at campaign events. A Life of Adventure Samadani had never even been involved with activism before. So why soil, and why now? Ever since she was a child growing up in Iran, Samadani says, she has felt huge empathy for others – her stomach would churn at the idea of others suffering whenever she heard an ambulance, and she would pick up banana skins from the ground so people wouldn’t slip on them. Her newfound love of campaigning has been transformative. “It’s where my life of adventure started,” she says. To raise awareness, she has skydived and cycled almost 400 miles from Chennai to Coimbatore in southern India. Biking around her home city of Utrecht, she wears her Save Soil T-shirt, and enjoys every interaction with curious passersby. A Dream to Return Home But there is one country she wants to take the campaign to. “My wish is to bring safe soil to Iran, because it needs it very, very badly,” Samadani says. She has not been back to her home country in 31 years. As a child, she used to pray for “a world without war … I will go back when this regime is not there any more,” she says. “I am just waiting.” And when she gets there? “My dream is to have a garden like my parents’. I believe that I will make it.”
#Save Soil #Sadhguru Jaggi Vasudev #Soil Degradation
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Environment May 17, 2026

'Green Card for the Planet'? FIFA's World Cup on Pace to Be a Climate Catastrophe

The 2026 FIFA World Cup is projected to be the most polluting tournament in history, generating app…
The Climate Crisis of the World CupThe 2026 FIFA World Cup is shaping up to be not only the most politically combustible tournament in modern history but also potentially the most environmentally damaging. As soccer fans increasingly watch preparations through their fingers amid controversies over ticket prices, Iran's participation, and ICE's role, a more long-term peril is being overlooked: the tournament's staggering contribution to climate change.The Environmental Footprint of Expanded TournamentScientists conservatively project that the 2026 World Cup will generate around 9 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent, nearly double the historical average for tournaments between 2010 and 2022. Air travel comprises approximately 7.7 million tons of this carbon budget—more than four times that of the average for previous tournaments. The worst-case upper estimate for air transport is about 13.7 million tons of CO2.This environmental disaster stems from FIFA's decision to expand the tournament from 32 to 48 teams while selecting three host countries—Canada, Mexico, and the US—that encompass a massive geographical expanse. The distances fans and teams need to travel make less carbon-intensive forms of transportation impractical, even with improved infrastructure.The Carbon Cost of FIFA's GreenwashingFIFA has long been a shameless purveyor of greenwashing. Ahead of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, FIFA President Gianni Infantino implored soccer fans to "raise FIFA's green card for the planet" by recording messages about environmental preservation. In reality, the Qatar tournament was a "carbon bomb in sporty form" that necessitated more than 1,000 daily flights, used an energy-intensive desalination system, and relied largely on bogus carbon-offset schemes.The 2026 tournament is even worse. Scholar Tim Walters argues that this World Cup is the deadliest sporting event in history due to increased greenhouse gas emissions causing premature deaths—a sign of FIFA's "abject misanthropy."Travel Nightmares and Environmental HypocrisyThe geographical challenges are staggering. Bosnia and Herzegovina's squad will have to travel more than 5,000km from Toronto to Los Angeles to Seattle, with their training camp in Salt Lake City adding additional carbon miles. Algeria will rack up about 4,800km journeying from Kansas City to San Francisco and back. Czechia starts in Guadalajara before heading to Atlanta and then Mexico City, notching more than 4,500km.Lacquer on top of this is FIFA's sponsorship deal with Aramco, the state-owned Saudi energy behemoth that is the largest corporate greenhouse gas emitter on earth, responsible for more than 4% of all emissions since 1965. More than 100 professional female footballers, including some of the biggest names in the game, signed a letter condemning the partnership, citing environmental impacts as a serious problem.Extreme Heat Threatens Player and Fan SafetyPlayer safety is also in jeopardy thanks to extreme heat brought on by climate change. The National Weather Service is warning that every single region of the US will experience temperatures that exceed historical averages during the tournament. A Guardian analysis found that "high levels of heat and humidity will impact the ability of teams to perform on the field," with 26 matches likely to be played when the temperature is at or above 26C (78.8F) WBGT—a threshold beyond which cooling breaks are necessary.An academic study found that 14 out of 16 host cities are likely to experience average WBGTs that exceed 28C (82.4F) in June and July. While three of the cities most exposed to dangerous heat—Houston, Dallas, and Atlanta—have air-conditioned stadiums, the energy needed to power that cooling doesn't help climate change.The Path Forward for Sustainable SportsDr. Madeleine Orr of the University of Toronto, one of the authors of the heat study, noted the "lack of commonsense preparations by event organizers to keep people safe in extreme weather conditions." She added, "The only interest is in protecting athletes on the field, with basically no consideration for fans, staff, the media and volunteers working in the stands or on the streets."As climate litigation against unrepentant greenwashers continues to rack up wins, FIFA faces increasing pressure to align its actions with its environmental rhetoric. The 2026 World Cup represents a critical juncture for global sports organizations to either continue down a path of environmental destruction or begin implementing meaningful sustainability measures that address the climate crisis head-on.
#FIFA #World Cup 2026 #Climate Change
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Environment May 16, 2026

Thames Gains First Designated Bathing Site, Marking a Win for Swimmers and Clean‑Water Advocates

London’s River Thames has become the capital’s first officially designated bathing water, a victory…
The Lead: Thames Swimmers Celebrate First Designated Bathing SiteFor the first time in London, a stretch of the River Thames has been officially recognised as a designated bathing water. The decision, driven by local activists such as Marlene Lawrence and the Teddington Bluetits, is hailed as a community triumph over private‑sector pollution and a boost for cold‑water swimming enthusiasts.Community‑Led Designation and On‑Ground RealitiesThe newly approved spot sits near Teddington, where volunteers have long measured contamination and petitioned against sewage discharges. Swimmers describe the experience as a mental reset, with the icy water “rebooting the mind” and offering a palpable sense of achievement.Location: Teddington, southwest LondonKey organisers: Marlene Lawrence (founder of the Bluetits)Supporters: local residents, regular swimmers, and environmental journalistsData‑Driven Pressure on Thames WaterThe Environment Agency will now be required to test water quality “rigorously and regularly”. Recent investigations have highlighted that Thames Water’s outflows have included sewage releases up to 300,000 times in a single year, underscoring the need for tighter monitoring.Broader Impact on Urban River ManagementDesignating a bathing site signals a shift in how urban waterways are managed. It raises public expectations for cleaner rivers, forces utilities to address pollution, and encourages other cities to consider similar designations.Looking Ahead: More Swims and Cleaner Rivers?Activists hope the success at Teddington will inspire additional bathing‑water designations along the Thames and other UK rivers. Continued community monitoring and stricter enforcement could gradually transform the capital’s waterways from “dirty and cold” to safe, health‑promoting public spaces.
#Thames #Marlene Lawrence #Bluetits
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Science May 15, 2026

The Cuckoo's Call: A Bird's Eye View of Summer's Arrival

The article describes a personal encounter with a cuckoo on Murlough beach in Ireland, highlighting…
The Cuckoo's Enchanting Song Sheltered from the Irish Sea by the towering white foredunes of Murlough beach, I follow a trail through the heather and scrub. In the distance, the Mourne mountains slip in and out of view, already charred by this year’s wildfires. My attention turns to the season’s happier signs: sand martins chittering overhead; the scratchy cries of a whitethroat deep in the gorse; a meadow pipit stuttering into song flight. And now, the chant that clinches summer’s arrival. Encountering the Cuckoo I follow the cuckoo’s call and find him perched in a stunted sycamore. Through binoculars, I meet his orange eye. As he leans into his song, his jaunty tail and drooping wings make a fin for the long torpedo of his body – the ideal form for a life lived on the move. The Cuckoo's Unique Behavior Despite his hawkish plumage and yellow legs, his bill’s nib betrays that he is no raptor – the cuckoo feeds mainly on invertebrates. Still, he is a source of morbid curiosity for the steady stream of small passerines – pipit, stonechat, linnet, willow warbler – that pass through the twigs to get a good look at him. They sense his threat. The Art of Brood Parasitism In the bird world there are many different kinds of parental care and, depending on the species, either sex, or both, may brood and raise a pair’s young. However, as a brood parasite, the cuckoo takes the “neither” option. This equal opportunity form of parental “selfishness” is a gamble that can be highly productive. The Cuckoo's Reproductive Strategy The female cuckoo “farms” small passerines, like the meadow pipit, by laying up to 20 eggs (one per host nest) across her large territory. If her egg deceives, her chick ejects its “step-siblings” from the nest, so its hapless foster parents devote themselves solely to raising their enormous changeling. Meanwhile, the biological parents skive off back to Africa. A Lasting Fascination Possibly I should feel conflicted about the cuckoo but, as he keeps up the fluting metronome of his song, head bobbing with all the mechanical emphasis of the eponymous clock, I find I’m charmed. Note after note. Year after year. Hatched out of abandonment. Fledged in trust. This story of spring is so well known, but that doesn’t make it any less extraordinary.
#Cuckoo #Birdwatching #Murlough beach
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Environment May 15, 2026

Britain Launches First‑Ever Vote to Crown Its Favourite Butterfly

The charity Butterfly Conservation has opened a nationwide poll to decide which of the 60 native sp…
The Inaugural Nationwide Butterfly Vote OpensFor the first time, the charity Butterfly Conservation has opened a public poll to decide which of the 60 native species will be crowned Britain’s favourite butterfly. The vote runs until 7 June and is being promoted as a celebration of the country’s long‑standing affection for these insects.Poll Mechanics and Participation Figures60 species eligible, ranging from the iconic purple emperor to the once‑common small tortoiseshell.Voting is hosted at britainsfavouritebutterfly.co.uk and is free for anyone in the UK.A recent Butterfly Conservation survey identified butterflies as the most‑loved childhood creatures, providing a strong base of potential voters.Why the Vote Matters for ConservationThe poll builds on previous citizen‑science initiatives such as the Big Butterfly Count and the “favourite bird” competition, turning public enthusiasm into measurable support for habitat protection. By highlighting species that are thriving (e.g., the purple emperor) alongside those in decline (e.g., the small tortoiseshell), the campaign aims to channel attention and donations toward targeted conservation actions.Potential Outcomes and Future ImplicationsBeyond the headline winner, the vote is expected to generate:Increased traffic to Butterfly Conservation’s educational resources.Higher volunteer sign‑up rates for upcoming counts and habitat‑restoration projects.Data that could inform policymakers about public priorities when allocating funding for biodiversity.Looking Ahead: What Comes After the Vote?After the poll closes on 7 June, the charity plans to publish a “Britain’s Favourite Butterfly” report, featuring regional breakdowns and recommendations for protecting the highlighted species. The momentum may also inspire similar polls for other invertebrates, reinforcing the role of citizen engagement in the UK’s broader environmental strategy.
#Butterfly Conservation #Purple Emperor #Small Tortoiseshell
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Politics May 14, 2026

Ultranationalist Chants Spark Tensions During Jerusalem Day Parade

During the annual Jerusalem Day march, Israeli ultranationalists shouted overtly racist slogans in …
The annual Jerusalem Day parade turned violent as Israeli ultranationalists chanted hostile slogans such as “Death to Arabs” and “May your villages burn”, prompting widespread shop closures and confrontations with Palestinian residents and volunteers protecting them. Racist Chants Echo Through Jerusalem’s Old City Thousands of participants—many teenagers and young adults—marched through the Old City, celebrating the 1967 “reunification” of Jerusalem. The route passed densely populated Palestinian neighborhoods where many shopkeepers shut their doors, while some volunteers from Standing Together kept a few stores open under protection. Scale of Participation and Business Closures Tens of thousands of Israelis took part in the march. Most Palestinian shopkeepers removed metal shutters and vacated narrow alleyways by late morning. A small number of shops remained open, guarded by volunteers led by co‑director Rula Daoud. Journalists reported being shoved and blocked from filming by march participants. Escalating Sectarian Tensions Amid Ongoing Conflict The chant‑filled march occurred against the backdrop of Israel’s broader war with Iran and a fragile “ceasefire” in Gaza, marked by frequent violations. International bodies, including the United Nations, continue to deem Israel’s annexation of East Jerusalem illegal under international law, a point underscored by the overtly racist rhetoric on the streets. Potential Fallout and Calls for International Scrutiny Human‑rights observers and local activists warn that the increasing violence each year could draw renewed international criticism and pressure on Israeli authorities to enforce stricter policing of hate speech. If unchecked, the pattern may embolden further attacks on Palestinian businesses and journalists, deepening mistrust between communities and complicating any diplomatic efforts toward a lasting ceasefire.
#Israel #Jerusalem Day #Palestinians
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Environment May 14, 2026

The Lost Giants Revive Britain’s Giant‑Making Tradition

A Cornish art collective, The Lost Giants, is breathing new life into the centuries‑old British tra…
The New Year’s Eve Giant Parade in LostwithielOn New Year’s Eve 2025, environmentalist Lisa Schneidau welcomed 2026 amid a spectacular procession of handcrafted giants, lights, drums and music in the town of Lostwithiel, Cornwall. The event marked the latest public celebration organized by the art collective The Lost Giants (TLG), showcasing giants built from wooden frames, cloth, papier‑mâché and card. How The Lost Giants Recreate Traditional Processional GiantsFounded three years ago by theatre designer Ruth Webb and illustrator Amy Webb, TLG draws on medieval guild traditions where villages crafted enormous mascots for festivals. Their repertoire includes the lantern parade giant in Tregona, a harvest procession for Hauser & Wirth’s Somerset gallery, and the iconic Peter – the first giant to parade Lostwithiel’s streets in 1990. Funding and Community Support Driving the RevivalGrant from the Ffern Folk Foundation (2026) to develop the Big Folk Archive and fund a new giant for a southwest environmental campaign.Community‑based creation model: local volunteers and artists pool skills, materials and ideas for each giant.Public call‑out for environmental groups to commission bespoke giants, emphasizing the “spirit of the land.” Why Giant‑Making Resonates with Modern Environmental ActivismTLG’s giants carry ecological messages – from the sisal mountain goat Ooelle to Old Crockern, a vengeful guardian spirit used in a Dartmoor re‑wilding protest. By giving land a “personhood” through towering figures, the collective helps campaigns visualise and vocalise otherwise abstract environmental concerns. Future Prospects for Community Giants Across the UKWith growing interest in seasonal celebrations and folk theatre, TLG expects more environmental groups to commission giants, expanding the practice beyond Cornwall into other regions. The online Big Folk Archive will document the movement, potentially inspiring a new generation of community‑driven, activist art.
#The Lost Giants #Lisa Schneidau #Ruth Webb
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Health May 13, 2026

Prenatal Veggie Exposure May Shape Kids' Taste Preferences, Study Finds

A small study led by Prof Nadja Reissland at Durham University found that fetuses exposed to kale o…
Study Shows Fetal Exposure to Vegetable Flavours Influences Post‑Birth PreferencesThe research team gave pregnant volunteers powdered kale or carrot capsules during the third trimester and later measured their children’s facial reactions to the same smells. Reactions were recorded via ultrasound before birth, repeated at three weeks, and again when the children were about three years old.Methodology: Kale and Carrot Powder Capsules Administered to Expectant MothersParticipants were asked to swallow a capsule each day containing either kale or carrot powder. The study avoided large volumes of juice, which many volunteers found unpalatable, opting for a low‑cost capsule format.Capsules administered in late pregnancy (around 32 weeks gestation).Initial chemosensory response captured with ultrasound imaging.Follow‑up assessments at 3 weeks and 3 years post‑birth.Sample Size and Observed Reactions Reveal Early Flavor MemoryAlthough the cohort was modest, the findings were consistent:12 children were observed at age three.Infants exposed to carrot powder smiled when presented with a carrot scent and grimaced at kale, and vice‑versa for the kale group.The same preference pattern was evident in the ultrasound scans before birth.These results suggest that flavour exposure in utero can create a durable chemosensory memory.Potential Public‑Health Benefits of Early Dietary ConditioningIf replicated on a larger scale, the approach could offer a low‑cost strategy for improving population nutrition:Reducing childhood resistance to vegetables may lower long‑term risks of obesity and diet‑related diseases.Capsules are inexpensive and could be integrated into routine prenatal supplements.The concept is adaptable to different cultural diets, as noted by the researchers’ interest in fish‑rich Japanese diets.Next Steps: Larger Trials and Cross‑Cultural ApplicationsThe authors acknowledge the need for a bigger, funded study to confirm the effect across diverse populations. Future research aims to:Expand the sample size to hundreds of mother‑child pairs.Test additional flavours and odourants, including artificial sweeteners.Explore policy pathways for incorporating flavour‑exposure capsules into prenatal care guidelines.Published in Developmental Psychobiology, the paper titled “Do Human Fetuses Form Long‑Lasting Chemosensory Memories?” opens a new avenue for early nutritional interventions.
#Durham University #Prof Nadja Reissland #prenatal nutrition
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