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Sports Jun 01, 2026

Premier League 2025-26 Season Highlights in 100 Photos

The Premier League 2025-26 season has begun with exciting matches, including Liverpool's late win a…
The Premier League 2025-26 Season Kicks OffThe Premier League 2025-26 season started with a bang, featuring several thrilling matches. Reigning champions Liverpool began their campaign with a late 4-2 win over Bournemouth at Anfield, their first game back following the death of Diogo Jota. The Reds then secured narrow victories against Newcastle and Arsenal, with Dominik Szoboszlai scoring a stunning free-kick against Arsenal that won goal of the month.Meanwhile, Manchester City suffered a difficult start, losing 2-0 at home to Tottenham and 2-1 away at Brighton. Everton marked the opening of their new home stadium, Hill Dickinson Stadium, with a win. Sunderland, back in the top flight, made a strong start with two wins from their first three matches.Key Matches and MomentsAugust 15: Fans pay tributes to Diogo Jota near Anfield.August 16: Martin Dubravka of Burnley fails to reach a Richarlison strike at Tottenham Hotspur Stadium.August 16: Diego Gómez of Brighton gets involved in a 1-1 draw with Fulham.August: Riccardo Calafiori scores for Arsenal against Manchester United at Old Trafford.
#Premier League #Liverpool #Manchester City
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World Wide Jun 01, 2026

Iran's IRGC Launches Retaliatory Strike Against US Forces

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) launched a retaliatory strike on a US base in respo…
The Retaliatory Strike Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says it launched a retaliatory strike on a base used by US forces that it claims was used for an attack on an Iranian communications tower. The IRGC Aerospace Force fighters targeted the airbase where the aggression originated, and the predicted targets were destroyed. The Escalation The attacks come after the United States said it carried out strikes on Iran this weekend in response to 'aggressive Iranian actions that included the shootdown of a US MQ-1 drone that was operating over international waters.' US fighter aircraft swiftly responded by eliminating Iranian air defenses, a ground control station, and two one-way attack drones that posed clear threats to ships transiting regional waters. The Fragile Ceasefire The attacks, the latest in several exchanges of fire in recent days, come as indirect negotiations between the US and Iran to formalize a fragile ceasefire that took effect in April continue. There have been mixed signals about whether the two sides are close to an agreement to extend the fragile truce. The Potential Memorandum of Understanding The two sides have reportedly been reviewing a potential memorandum of understanding (MoU) that would extend the ceasefire for a further 60 days and begin negotiations to end the war permanently. The MoU will state that shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is to be 'unrestricted,' meaning there will be no tolls, no 'harassment,' and that Iran will have 30 days to remove all sea mines. Iran's Response Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmaeil ‌Baghaei said on Monday that any delay ⁠in ⁠the diplomatic process to end the war can ⁠be explained by a lack of trust, ⁠Washington's contradictory positions and Israel's attacks on Lebanon. Negotiations have started amid severe suspicion and mistrust, and the exchange of messages is taking place in ⁠this atmosphere. Trump's Statement US President Donald Trump said in a statement on his Truth Social platform late on Sunday, Tehran 'really wants to make a deal' and that whatever deal is reached will 'be a good one' for the US 'and those that are with us.' He lashed out at domestic critics for 'negatively 'chirping'' about his handling of the war but made no mention of the US strikes on Iran.
#Iran #US #IRGC
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Politics Jun 01, 2026

US Commentators Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker Barred from UK over Israel Remarks

US political commentators Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker have been barred from entering the UK due to t…
The Ban on Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker US political commentators Cenk Uygur and Hasan Piker have been barred from entering the United Kingdom. British authorities cited their public comments about Israel as the reason for the decision. The Event Details Uygur, co-founder of The Young Turks, learned of the restriction while trying to board a flight to London. He was scheduled to attend the SXSW London festival and deliver a speech at Oxford University. Piker, a staunch supporter of Palestine and one of the internet's biggest political streamers, also had his UK visa revoked as he prepared to travel to the same event. The Reason Behind the Ban According to Uygur, British authorities told him he is considered "a serious risk to the public order" due to his criticism of Israel. He claimed that the government stated his comments about Israel's influence on the American government are antisemitic. Piker also stated that the UK used the terminology "not conducive to the public good" when denying him entry. The Impact on Free Speech The restrictions have sparked concerns about free speech and the influence of Israel advocacy organizations on public discourse. Piker stated that "Israel advocacy organisations have unbelievable amounts of power over what even the United Kingdom has to say and do; if you are an avowed anti-Zionist, your travel will be restricted." The Future Implications This incident comes weeks after British authorities barred US rapper Ye from entering the country, citing his history of anti-Semitic remarks. The decision has raised questions about the UK's stance on free speech and its relationship with Israel.
#Cenk Uygur #Hasan Piker #Israel
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Politics Jun 01, 2026

Washington Proposes De-escalation Roadmap as Israel Deepens Lebanon Offensive

Washington has proposed a de-escalation roadmap for Lebanon amid Israel's deepest military push int…
The Lead: US Intervention Amid Escalating Conflict Washington has put forward a proposal to de-escalate hostilities in Lebanon, a United States official has told Al Jazeera, adding that Secretary of State Marco Rubio has held separate talks with Lebanese President Joseph Aoun and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The statement comes as Israel's military has taken over the medieval Beaufort Castle just north of the Litani River in southern Lebanon, conducting its deepest push into the country in decades. The US De-escalation Proposal: Conditions for Ceasefire The US official told Al Jazeera on Sunday that under the proposed "roadmap", Hezbollah would halt all attacks on Israel in exchange for Israel refraining from further escalation in the Lebanese capital, Beirut. The US proposal aims to create a conducive environment for a gradual de-escalation and a complete, comprehensive cessation of all hostilities, the official added. Human Cost of Escalation: Casualties and Displacement More than one million people have been forcibly displaced across Lebanon since the fighting between Hezbollah and Israel escalated on March 2. According to the latest figures from the Lebanese Ministry of Public Health, more than 3,412 people have been killed and 10,269 wounded in Israeli attacks since March 2. Israeli forces killed at least 12 people and wounded 35 in more than 36 attacks across southern Lebanon on Sunday alone, according to an Al Jazeera tally. International Response: Global Condemnation Countries across the world have slammed Israel's escalation of its offensive on Lebanon. French President Emmanuel Macron said "nothing justifies" it. United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper called on Israel to halt its military activity in Lebanon, saying its escalation had "eroded space for diplomacy". Qatar condemned Israel's continuing attacks on Lebanon and the expansion of its ground offensive in the south, describing the campaign as a serious escalation and violation of international law. Path Forward: Mixed Signals and Continued Tensions Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who promised to push deeper into Lebanon and called Sunday's operation a "dramatic shift" in the campaign against Hezbollah, ordered the military on Monday to attack targets in Beirut's southern suburbs, known as Dahiyeh, a stronghold of the Lebanese group. The US official placed responsibility for the current round of fighting squarely on Hezbollah and accused it of following Iran's directives without regard for Lebanese interests. "The quickest way to protect civilians and reduce escalation is for Hezbollah to cease fire immediately," the official said, adding that Washington does not expect Israel to tolerate continued attacks on its civilians.
#Marco Rubio #Benjamin Netanyahu #Hezbollah
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Science Jun 01, 2026

Bird Masturbation Proven Natural, Experts Urge End to Punitive Practices

A new study of 120 bird species finds that masturbation is a common, healthy behavior, especially i…
Executive Summary: Masturbation Recognized as Natural Avian BehaviorA collaborative survey of 120 bird species shows that self‑pleasuring is widespread, more frequent in the wild than in captivity, and poses no health risk. The findings challenge long‑standing advice to discourage or punish the behavior and call for a shift in veterinary guidance.Comprehensive Survey Highlights Widespread Onanism Across Diverse SpeciesThe research, led by Dr Chloe Heys (University of Lancashire) and co‑author Dr Matilda Brindle (Oxford University), combined expert interviews, online keeper communities, and published literature. Species documented include parrots, ducks, turkeys, chickens and numerous others, with both males and females engaging in the activity.Quantitative Findings Underscore Higher Incidence in Wild Populations120 bird species examined, spanning captive and wild individuals.Incidence reported as higher in wild birds than in captivity.Male birds were slightly more frequently mentioned, but female participation was notable.Repercussions for Veterinary Practice and Bird WelfareVeterinarians are urged to reassure owners that the behavior is normal and not a sign of distress. Interventions such as perch removal, hormonal treatments, or even surgical de‑sexing are deemed unnecessary except in rare pathological cases. Dr Ana Basto (University of Lancashire) emphasizes that the study will help vets provide evidence‑based advice.Projected Shift Toward Non‑Interventionist Care in Avian HusbandryAs the scientific community accepts masturbation as a natural component of avian sexual repertoires, bird‑keeping guidelines are expected to evolve. Future husbandry practices will likely focus on monitoring for genuine health issues rather than attempting to suppress a harmless behavior, fostering better welfare outcomes for both captive and wild birds.
#Chloe Heys #Ana Basto #Matilda Brindle
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Lifestyle Jun 01, 2026

Dance Festival Immersion: From Terrified Novice to Weekend Warrior

A first-time dancer chronicles their experience taking multiple dance classes at Melbourne's Rising…
The Dance Challenge: A Weekend Immersion As I wait for my first Cuban salsa class to begin, I have the distinct feeling that I am poorly prepared. I'm wearing heavy jeans, a bulky woollen sweater and boots. I have never done a dance class in my life – or any kind of exercise class. I don't know anything about salsa, Cuban or otherwise. Standing alone, I notice that everyone has come with at least one friend, and begin to suspect that it takes two to Cuban salsa. This year, Rising festival – Melbourne's winter arts offering – has consolidated its longstanding dance focus into a mini-festival: the inaugural Australian Dance Biennale, showcasing Australian and international work. There's also a series of dance classes, romantically titled The Land of 1000 Dances, held in the romantically decrepit Flinders Street Ballroom. Running daily until 7 June, with classes costing $29 a pop, the diverse schedule includes Afro-fusion, ballroom, voguing, waltz and K-pop for teens and tweens. From Salsa to Shuffle: A Dancer's Journey As an audience member, I am an avid appreciator of dance; as a participant, I can most kindly be described as "curious" but uncoordinated. What if I went to a bunch of dance classes and then wrote about it? Precisely 24 hours before my first class, the misgivings begin – doing my first dance class while dressed for the show I'm seeing directly afterwards sounds like a bad idea. At the ballroom, I am briefly reassured: the crowd is a diverse mix of ages, genders and bodies, and hardly anyone is wearing dance-appropriate clothing. But the class itself is a blur – sometimes literally – as I try to learn and enact the cucaracha, the guapo and other basic Cuban salsa moves; attempt to locate the beat, my hips, any sense of coordination at all. Every time I feel as though I'm starting to get the hang of something, the instructor adds a new step. Then he corrals us into pairs – and a series of new moves, yelling "change partners!" every three minutes. Going solo, it turns out, is fine: everyone is friendly; many seem as unsure as I am. Some are nailing it but there's a sense of camaraderie: we're all in this together. That said, we're all a bit too sweaty to be holding each other. The Social Dynamics of Dance Classes I move from absolute befuddlement, through occasional moments of triumph, to a sense of quiet despair. A move that involves a 360-degree rotation to an eight-count almost breaks my spirit and I consider quitting. To my surprise, this awakens a latent fighting spirit: screw the rules, I'm doing it my way. I experience brief elation. Then we change partners and I find myself in a cursed duet involving four left feet. The elation shrivels. The class ends and I run to the theatre feeling like a dank, demoralised biohazard. I spend the next hour watching a show by the Irish choreographer Oona Doherty featuring a mix of professional, student and untrained dancers – and I mentally salute them all, with a newfound appreciation for the dark art of dance. Finding Joy in Movement I approach my next class, Melbourne shuffle, with a sense of dread. Not only do I now know how bad I am but I have agreed to be photographed. And I made the choice without knowing anything about the Melbourne shuffle, mistakenly assuming it was somewhere in the ballpark of the city's other great cultural tradition. This feeling I am experiencing, I discover, is known as "endorphins". The physical exertion, the mental focus required, the social connection – it all combines to create a chemical cocktail that makes the experience worthwhile despite the occasional humiliation. By the end of my dance weekend, I haven't become a dancer, but I've gained a profound respect for those who are. The Australian Dance Biennale and The Land of 1000 Dances offer not just entertainment, but an invitation to participate, to challenge oneself, and to discover new dimensions of movement and expression.
#Rising Festival #Australian Dance Biennale #Melbourne
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Entertainment Jun 01, 2026

Audience Member Steals the Show in La La Land Concert

A 21-year-old audience member, Sterling Nasa, stepped up to play piano during a La La Land concert …
The Unplanned Performance La La Land is a much adored homage to Hollywood, where dreamers take chances and seize unexpected moments. On Saturday night at the ICC’s Darling Harbour theatre, that idea became a reality for a 21-year-old university student who was thrust into the spotlight at a live performance of the movie’s score – and saved a concert from derailment. The Keyboardist's Sudden Illness Sterling Nasa was in the audience at La La Land in Concert, a touring production where the movie – which features Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone – is projected on to a screen while a live orchestra plays the musical score in synchronisation with the film. The performance proceeded normally until the interval, which stretched out to 40 minutes. Then the film’s Oscar-winning composer and conductor, Justin Hurwitz, walked out alone to address the audience. The Call for a Pianist The orchestra’s keyboardist had suddenly fallen ill. Was there by any chance a pianist in the house? And one with exceptional sight-reading skills? Nasa, who plays piano and organ and is the bagpipes tutor at his old school, Scots College, hesitated when the call went out. The Impromptu Performance Nasa told the ABC he was thinking the same thing when he saw the complex score. “I saw it on the score and I thought, oh, I don’t know if I’m going to be able to sight-read that in one go,” he said. Like Gosling’s jazz-pianist character Sebastian, the student had to decide whether to stay in the shadows or take a monumental leap of faith. With no time to overthink, he chose to trust his instincts. The Audience's Reaction The gamble paid off, carrying the orchestra through the number – and earning Nasa a resounding ovation from the audience. “He saw it coming up … and he just improvised,” Hurwitz said. “That is a whole other skill on top of sight-reading. To be able to play a really cool solo in the right key, in the right scale, on the fly with no rehearsal – it was remarkable.” The Future Performance While the production team is now scrambling to rehearse new keyboardists for the upcoming Melbourne and Brisbane legs of the tour, Nasa will be heading back to his regular university lectures. La La Land in Concert will play at the ICC Sydney on Monday, at the Brisbane Convention & Exhibition Centre on Wednesday and at the Hamer Hall in Melbourne from Friday 6 to 8 June.
#La La Land #Sydney #Justin Hurwitz
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Lifestyle Jun 01, 2026

Norwegian Children’s Books Break Taboos from IVF to Incest

Norwegian authors are publishing children’s books that confront topics like IVF, adoption and inces…
How Norway’s Children’s Books Are Redefining TabooSwedish‑born author Anna Fiske and fellow illustrators are publishing picture books that openly discuss subjects traditionally considered off‑limits for young readers, from assisted reproduction to sexual abuse. The approach has earned them awards, strong sales, and, in some markets, fierce opposition.Anna Fiske’s ‘How Do You Make a Baby?’ Triggers International ControversyFiske’s 2019 title Hvordan Lager Man en Baby? (How Do You Make a Baby) illustrates IVF, insemination and the mechanics of intercourse. Distributed in English‑speaking territories by a New Zealand publisher, the book attracted death threats in Canada, was labeled pornographic in the US and banned from several school libraries, yet it also sparked vital conversations about sexual education.Sales Milestones and Awards Highlight Market Reception100,000+ copies sold of Fiske’s “How to” series in Norway.2025: Fiske receives the Honorary Brage award, one of Norway’s top literary honors.Norwegian festival of literature in Lillehammer showcases dozens of titles on exclusion, bullying, queer literature, climate, mental health and forced migration.State Support and Cultural Attitudes Fuel Literary FreedomNorway’s publishing model purchases a large stock of every new title for national libraries, insulating authors from pure market pressure. Government grants further enable writers to experiment without fearing commercial failure. Culturally, Scandinavian views treat children as autonomous individuals, encouraging open dialogue about risk and hardship.Global Publishers May Follow Norway’s ModelAs controversy in North America highlights the limits of censorship, the Norwegian example suggests a viable path for other markets: combine public funding with a cultural ethos that respects children’s capacity to engage with difficult topics. If other countries adopt similar policies, we could see a surge in globally distributed children’s literature that tackles previously taboo subjects.
#Anna Fiske #Svein Nyhus #Lillehammer Literature Festival
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Lifestyle Jun 01, 2026

Chelsea Flower Show Garden Celebrates Life on the Edge

The Chelsea Flower Show features a garden called 'On the Edge', designed by Sarah Eberle, which hig…
The Concept of 'On the Edge'The garden, named 'On the Edge', is a celebration of the often-overlooked urban edgelands, those unprotected and modest places that exist on the fringes of towns and cities. Designed by Sarah Eberle, it marks the centenary of the Campaign to Protect Rural England and the launch of the first interactive map of England's countryside edges.The Design and FeaturesThe garden features a naturalistic design with a variety of plants, including herb robert, plantain, bramble, and nettle. A drystone wall is woven with dog roses and willow, representing the hair of Gaia, a giant sleeping figure carved from fallen redwoods. The garden also includes a concrete farm trough, which has been transformed into a beautiful and serene feature with leaf shadows moving over its surface.The Significance of the GardenThe garden's design and features are meant to evoke a sense of wildness and neglect, highlighting the beauty of these often-overlooked areas. The garden's creator, Sarah Eberle, aims to raise awareness about the importance of preserving these urban edgelands and the role they play in supporting local wildlife. The garden's success is evident in its gold and best in show awards at the Chelsea Flower Show.The Future of Urban EdgelandsThe 'On the Edge' garden serves as a reminder of the importance of preserving and protecting urban edgelands. As urban areas continue to grow and expand, these areas are often threatened with development, making it crucial to raise awareness about their value and significance. The garden's message is clear: these areas are not just neglected spaces, but vibrant and beautiful parts of our urban landscapes that deserve our attention and protection.
#Chelsea Flower Show #Campaign to Protect Rural England #Gardening
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