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Tech Jun 10, 2026

Sony WH‑1000XX The Collexion Review: Luxury Comfort Meets Premium Sound

Sony’s limited‑edition WH‑1000XX “The Collexion” blends ultra‑plush materials with the brand’s late…
Sony unveiled the WH‑1000XX “The Collexion”, a limited‑edition, ultra‑luxury version of its flagship 1000X series, priced at £549 and targeting audiophiles who value comfort as much as sound quality. The Collexion Edition Marks a Decade of Sony’s 1000X Line The new model celebrates ten years of the 1000X family, pulling together refinements from six previous iterations. While it does not replace the current flagship WH‑1000XM6, it offers a sleeker silhouette, slimmer 5.3 mm ear‑cup profile and a non‑folding, travel‑light form factor that feels more like a premium accessory than a typical headphone. Pricing and Spec Sheet Position the 1000XX in the Luxury Segment At £549 (≈€629/$649/A$1,000), the Collexion sits above the standard 1000XM6 (£349) and directly rivals Apple’s AirPods Max 2 (£499), B&W’s Px8 S2 (£629) and other boutique offerings. Its key specifications are: Weight: 320 g Drivers: 30 mm Connectivity: Bluetooth 6 with multipoint, 3.5 mm jack, USB‑C charging Supported codecs: SBC, AAC, LDAC, LC3 Battery life: 24 h with ANC on, 32 h with ANC off; 5‑minute quick charge adds 90 min playback Design Choices Redefine Premium Comfort in Noise‑Cancelling Headphones The headphones abandon hard‑plastic housings for high‑quality pleather wraps and sandblasted stainless‑steel arms, delivering a tactilely softer feel. The redesigned ear cups provide extra internal space and plush cushions that distribute pressure evenly, matching the comfort levels of top‑tier Bose models while maintaining a slimmer profile. Sound‑wise, the 1000XX inherits the QN3 chip and noise‑cancelling hardware from the 1000XM6, delivering strong low‑mid attenuation but slightly weaker performance on high‑frequency chatter compared with the XM6. The real highlight is Sony’s AI‑driven DSEE Ultimate upscaling, powered by a new V3 companion chip, which restores detail lost in compressed streams and improves the listening experience for both LDAC‑enabled Android devices and AAC‑based iOS sources. Future Outlook: How Sony’s Luxury Push May Shape High‑End Audio By positioning the Collexion as a premium, design‑focused alternative, Sony signals a willingness to compete beyond pure performance metrics, targeting consumers who view headphones as a status accessory. If the market responds positively, we can expect a broader rollout of luxury‑grade materials across Sony’s lineup and further integration of AI‑based audio enhancement, potentially raising the baseline for high‑end consumer headphones in the next 12‑18 months.
#Sony #WH-1000XX #The Collexion
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Entertainment Jun 10, 2026

Spyro the Dragon Returns After Almost Two Decades with New Game

The beloved purple dragon Spyro returns with a new original game, 'Spyro: A Realm Beyond,' after al…
The Return of a Gaming IconAfter nearly two decades of absence, one of PlayStation's most beloved mascots is making a triumphant return. Spyro the Dragon, the purple hero who captured the hearts of millennial gamers in the 1990s, is set to soar once again with a brand-new original title. Announced at the Xbox Game Showcase, Spyro: A Realm Beyond marks the first original Spyro game since 2008, ending a long hiatus for the franchise that defined childhood for many gamers.The Next Chapter for SpyroSpyro: A Realm Beyond is being developed by California-based studio Toys for Bob, which previously created the well-received Spyro Reignited Trilogy in 2018. The game features a freshly redesigned Spyro with his trademark quiff, voiced by Tom Kenny, the original voice actor from the classic titles. Unlike previous Spyro games where flight was limited, players will now be able to take flight at any time, with creative director Lou Studdert explaining that players will make decisions about how they fly, dive to sustain speed, and use fire-breath to create updrafts for lift.Development Journey and Studio LegacySpyro's original developer in the 1990s was Insomniac Games, which now works on Marvel's Wolverine under Sony. Toys for Bob, which has since become an independent studio, also developed the popular 2010s Skylanders series—a toy-and-game franchise that started as a Spyro spin-off under Activision. Longtime studio boss Paul Yan expressed enthusiasm for returning to the types of games the developer is "most passionate about, and that were best known for."Bridging Generations: Appealing to Nostalgia and NewcomersThis new Spyro game faces the challenge of appealing to both the original audience—now in their 30s—and a new generation of children. Toys for Bob appears well aware of this demographic reality, with Yan stating they wanted to make sure this is a "welcoming entry point for all players: young, old, those familiar with the game or the franchise and those new to it as well." The studio emphasizes creating "positive, optimistic, joyful experiences" with colorful characters in handcrafted worlds, appealing to "the inner child in all gamers."The Changing Landscape of Family-Friendly GamingColorful family-friendly platform games like Spyro were much more numerous in the 90s than they are today, with relatively few developers beyond Nintendo making games for a broader audience. Yan believes Spyro represents something the world needs: "A game that is full of optimism and positivity." He sees this as part of a potential wider return to the friendlier gaming tone of Spyro's heyday, stating, "It's our studio mission to inspire love, joy and laughter in the games that we make. And if the tide is turning and the trends are putting a spotlight on that, we're all for it."Future of the FranchiseWith Spyro: A Realm Beyond scheduled for release in spring 2027 on Xbox, PlayStation 5, PC, and Nintendo Switch 2, the purple dragon is poised to once again become a central figure in family-friendly gaming. The game's development comes as gaming companies increasingly recognize the value of reviving beloved franchises to capture both nostalgia and new audiences. If successful, this could signal a resurgence of optimistic, colorful platformers in an industry often dominated by darker, more mature content.
#Spyro #Toys for Bob #Xbox
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Sports Jun 10, 2026

Williams F1 Team Ownership Dispute Escalates as Former Executive Files Lawsuit

A bitter legal battle has erupted between the Williams F1 team's parent company Dorilton and former…
The Legal Battle at Williams F1 On the track, the Williams Formula One team are attempting to revive former glories through their talented driving team of Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz and the team principal, James Vowles. However, away from the track, the team and their parent company, Dorilton, are embroiled in a messy dispute with a former executive, Claudia Schwarz, who was dismissed in 2022. In court filings, she alleges she was fired after raising concerns about sexism towards her and racism, with claims drawing in Lewis Hamilton's foundation and the artists Wyclef Jean and Shaggy. Allegations of Fraud and Misconduct Schwarz was fired as Williams's chief marketing officer in November 2022. According to Schwarz, who is sharing her side of the story for the first time with the Guardian, no reason was given for her dismissal at the time. She says she agreed to a severance package shortly after that, which was never fulfilled, and a few months later she sued for breach of contract. In May 2023, the dispute escalated when Dorilton filed a lawsuit in New York claiming Schwarz illicitly took $6.9m in expenses and inflated fees and that Darren Fultz, CEO of the race team's holding company, looked the other way on the alleged fraud. These were costs such as flight and hotel reservations and fees she billed Dorilton for services provided by her own agency, Stilus. The Question of True Ownership The ultimate ownership of the Williams team is questioned by the former executive, who makes a hotly contested claim that the team are controlled by Peter de Putron, a billionaire based in Jersey with close links to the Conservative party. They in turn accuse the executive of fiddling her expenses, charging inflated fees and defrauding the company in cahoots with a former CEO of Williams's parent company. Schwarz claims in her lawsuit she was fired after clashes with Dorilton executives and De Putron. She alleges De Putron is the real owner of Dorilton and its subsidiary, Williams Grand Prix Racing. Dorilton's position is that De Putron, a donor to the Conservative party and Eurosceptic thinktanks, is a passive investor in its motorsport holdings. Defamation and Industry Fallout A few months after Dorilton sued her, the UK-based Business F1 magazine published a story headlined: "A vixen who infiltrated Williams". She was described in terms more suited to National Enquirer-style scandal sheets. "Dark haired, displaying a vixen like attractiveness combined with extreme confidence, she uses her feminine wiles to get a foot through the door and when she has a man in her sights they had better look out because when in charm mode she has an irresistible aura," the magazine wrote. Schwarz says that when Business F1 published allegations "the consequences for me were immediate. I lost the business I had built over 25 years and had to let go of everyone working in my companies." In August 2023, Schwarz filed a lawsuit in Florida for defamation against Dorilton, Business F1 and the Formula One company itself for apparently licensing its name to the publication. F1 later settled Schwarz's case under terms that remain confidential. Future Legal Proceedings In late 2025, Schwarz countersued Dorilton over her dismissal and added De Putron as a defendant, claiming he interfered with her contract and oversaw the Business F1 piece because she declined to carry out orders from her that she considered discriminatory and kept asking questions about Williams Racing's Bermuda operations. There are two cases going on in the same New York state court. In one, Dorilton is suing Schwarz for breach of contract and fraud, alleging she improperly charged them $6.9m (£5.13m). In the other, Schwarz is suing Dorilton, De Putron and Williams IP Holdings for libel and complaints arising from her dismissal and the Business F1 piece. In April, Schwarz revived her action against Business F1, filing a standalone libel lawsuit in Florida. The Florida court has scheduled a trial date in June 2027.
#Williams F1 #Claudia Schwarz #Dorilton
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Sports Jun 10, 2026

The Four-Try Masterclass: Moloney-MacDonald Powers Exeter to Semi-Final

Claudia Moloney-MacDonald delivered a record-breaking performance with four tries to lead Exeter Ch…
The Four-Try Masterclass: Moloney-MacDonald Powers Exeter to Semi-Final Claudia Moloney-MacDonald delivered a record-breaking performance, scoring four tries to lead Exeter Chiefs to a dominant 50-24 victory over Sale Sharks. This emphatic win not only secured a spot in the Premiership Women's Rugby semi-finals against Saracens but also showcased the England international's peak form at a critical juncture of the season. Exeter's Dominant Display Against Sale The match at Sandy Park saw Exeter overcome a competitive Sale side, who started brighter but were overwhelmed in the second half. Claudia Moloney-MacDonald was instrumental, beginning the comeback with a crucial try and adding a spectacular effort by chasing a kicked ball before it went out of play. The hosts led 24-12 at halftime and pulled away in the final 40 minutes. Final Score: Exeter 50 - 24 Sale Attendance: 2,543 (Best of the season for Exeter) Key Scorers: Moloney-MacDonald (4), Tuttosi, Rogers (2), F. Robinson Moloney-MacDonald's Season-Topping Scoring Rate Moloney-MacDonald’s four-try haul took her season tally to 14 scores in the PWR, underlining her status as the league's premier attacking threat. Alongside her, Flo Robinson became the fourth woman to reach 100 appearances for the club. Sale, despite the loss, recorded their best league table finish since the 2022/23 season, with standout performances from Holly Aitchison and Amy Cokayne. Shifting Power Dynamics in the PWR The result solidifies the semi-final picture, pitting Exeter against defending champions Saracens. Meanwhile, Sale is aggressively reshaping its squad for next season, having announced the signings of England internationals Zoe Stratford, Tatyana Heard, and Sarah Beckett from Gloucester. This influx of talent suggests Sale is positioning itself as a serious contender for the title in the coming years. Semi-Final Outlook and Future Implications With the playoffs underway, the focus shifts to the upcoming semi-finals. Exeter will travel to StoneX Stadium to face a high-flying Saracens side, while the other semi-final features a potential upset scenario with Trailfinders facing top-of-the-table Gloucester-Hartpury. If Moloney-MacDonald’s current form continues, Exeter will be a dangerous proposition in the final, while Sale’s recruitment drive hints at a challenging season ahead for their rivals.
#Claudia Moloney-MacDonald #Exeter Chiefs #Sale Sharks
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Culture Jun 10, 2026

Preserving the Legacy of HBCU Radio Stations

The HBCU Radio Preservation Project is working to save the archives of radio stations at historical…
The HBCU Radio Preservation Project In the 1960s and 1970s, Black students demanded a voice on radio, leading to the launch of radio stations at historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs). These stations not only provided a platform for students to share their experiences but also served as a vital resource for the surrounding community. However, with the changing media landscape, many of these stations have ceased operations or are struggling to stay afloat. Preserving the Archives The HBCU Radio Preservation Project was established to ensure that the archives of these radio stations are preserved for future generations. The project, led by Jocelyn Robinson, surveys HBCU radio stations to identify their collections and provides training on audio-visual preservation. So far, the project has digitized over 1,125 hours of archival audio and visited nearly two dozen HBCU campuses. The Impact of the Project The project not only preserves the history of HBCU radio stations but also provides a platform for storytelling and cultural expression. The project's oral history component has captured the experiences of over 90 individuals, providing a unique insight into the emergence of Black radio on HBCU campuses. The project's partnership with the Margaret Walker Center at Jackson State University makes these oral histories accessible to a wide audience. Returning the History After digitizing the archives, the project returns the materials to the institutions, along with a plaque acknowledging their investment in preserving their legacy. For example, Shaw University's radio station, WSHA, had 46 digitized episodes of its weekly talk show, 'Traces of Faces and Places,' returned to the institution.
#HBCU Radio Preservation Project #Black US culture #Historically Black Colleges and Universities
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Entertainment Jun 10, 2026

The Podcast Explaining America Through 100 Unlikely Items

Roman Mars, creator of the popular podcast 99% Invisible, is launching a new podcast called A Histo…
The Lead Roman Mars, the creator of the popular podcast 99% Invisible, is launching a new podcast called A History of the United States in 100 Objects. This new podcast explores American history through unusual items, shedding light on the country's past and its cultural significance. The Event Details Mars's new podcast is a co-production between BBC Studios, SiriusXM, and 99% Invisible. It is a sequel of sorts to the series A History of the World in 100 Objects, which aired on Radio 4 in 2010. The podcast comprises 100 episodes airing across two years, each highlighting objects and designs that tell the broader story of the United States. The Data Analysis Mars mentions that some of the early themes of the podcast include the screw thread, the spiral groove on screws that allows metal-on-metal fastening, and its standardization across the industrial US and, later, the world. Other objects featured in the podcast include the Bundy Clock, used by shift workers to punch in and out; a gold coin recovered from the SS Central America, which sank in 1857 and sparked a gold crisis; and the Billy Possum, a soft toy named after president William Howard Taft that tried and failed to replace the Teddy Roosevelt-inspired teddy bear. The Impact Analysis Mars believes that his broadcasting career would not have taken off were it not for the rise of podcasting. He notes that his voice isn't a good fit for traditional radio, which prefers a clear and clipped tone as opposed to the mellow Mars vibe. Nonetheless, he says: "I found my voice and I became very relaxed behind the microphone. Now I am more comfortable talking into a microphone than I am talking to humans." The Prediction Mars doesn't believe his broadcasting career would have taken off without podcasting, and he's excited to continue creating engaging audio content through his new podcast. He says: "I just think it's way more interesting to make the best possible audio show than the shittiest television show."
#Roman Mars #99% Invisible #A History of the United States in 100 Objects
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Entertainment Jun 10, 2026

Milo Rau's Moral Judgment on Trial as Theatre Director Faces Backlash

Swiss theatre-maker Milo Rau, artistic director of Vienna's Wiener Festwochen, faces criticism afte…
The LeadMilo Rau, once the enfant terrible of continental European theatre, finds himself in an uncomfortable position. As the artistic director of Vienna's Wiener Festwochen festival, he has done something he explicitly hates: canceling a guest. The Swiss theatre-maker first invited, then disinvited American tech billionaire Peter Thiel, calling it a decision that made a wall visible. This controversy has placed Rau's own moral judgment on trial, raising questions about the boundaries of political theatre in an increasingly polarized world.The Political Theatre ExperimentSince taking over the Vienna festival in 2023, Rau has transformed one of Europe's major multi-arts festivals into a highly politicized forum for debate. While concerts, dance performances, and traditional theatre still form the core of the program, Rau has rebranded the Festwochen with a conceptual framework as the "Free Republic of Vienna." At its core sits a format he invented almost two decades ago with his production company The International Institute for Political Murder: the "tribunal." Rather than putting on conventional plays, Rau organizes staged hearings featuring real witnesses, real arguments, and symbolic judgments handed down at the end.The power of Rau's early tribunals was founded in the Brechtian idea of the dramatic stage as a forum for critical thinking: theatre, it asserted, can provide a more structured arena for debate than talkshows or podium discussions. "Theatres are not only reserved for art," says Wolfgang Höbel, theatre critic of Der Spiegel. "In that sense Rau is the most important political theatre-maker in Europe today."The Thiel ControversyThe motto of this year's Vienna festival is "Republic of Gods." Peter Thiel, the German-born co-founder of PayPal and Palantir, a longstanding supporter of Donald Trump's political universe and a man with a taste for apocalyptic theology and far-right ideas, initially seemed a perfect fit for the theme. However, many disagreed. "I was faced with the threat of boycotts," Rau admits. Several productions threatened to pull out if Thiel were to attend. "I had to react to that as festival director, so I cancelled my own panel and disinvited Thiel."The Austrian weekly Falter called it a fiasco. Exactly who threatened to boycott the Vienna festival in the event of a Thiel appearance remains a mystery. Vienna's cultural politics are dominated by the Social Democrats, and many of their more conservative voters certainly did not relish the prospect of a Trump-supporting tech billionaire being welcomed at a publicly funded festival. Rau has said that his advisory body, the Council of the Republic, supported the invitation and did not want to cancel it.The Evolution of Rau's MethodRau's tribunal format became his calling card, but more recently it has started to look like the cause of perennial trouble. At the 2013 Moscow Trials, he brilliantly exposed the absurdity of Putinist justice by turning the show trial against Pussy Riot back on itself. The feminist punk collective had been sentenced to two years in a Russian penal colony for performing a protest song against Vladimir Putin in Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Saviour. "It was a surreal experience to see Putin's priests and gay activists sit next to each other on stage," remembers Rau: "Today this would be impossible."In 2015, the Congo Tribunal was rough, experimental theatre with a political charge: a grassroots civil court investigating war, extraction and the involvement of mining companies in eastern Congo. The Guardian called the Congo Tribunal one of the most ambitious pieces of political theatre ever. A mining minister and an interior minister of one of the Congo provinces resigned after the performance.The Critics' PerspectiveNot everyone has been convinced by Rau's approach. Esther Slevogt, editor in chief of the online theatre magazine Nachtkritik, called it "artivism." Rau himself has placed his tribunals in the tradition of the Nuremberg trials. "I found his arrogance striking," says Slevogt today. "These are different things." She is troubled by a format that, in her view, blurs the line between fiction and reality. "In times when everything is already simulation, we don't need more of it."Recently, not just the relationship between Rau and theatre critics but also with his audiences seems to have soured. In Hamburg this winter, his Trial Against Germany at the Thalia theatre became a scandal in its own right. Rau had assembled a jury that was asked to consider over three days whether the far-right Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party was unconstitutional and should be banned. But the jury included many familiar faces who already get to regularly air their views on television and in print, as well as a former co-leader of the AfD, Frauke Petry. Rather than using the theatre to concentrate debate, it seemed to amplify the hubbub of content swirling around outside it.The Future of Political TheatreRau seems to have answered his critics by becoming even more productive. While in the middle of his third year as festival director in Vienna, he is also trying to attend performances of The Pelicot Trial, which he developed with the French dramaturg Servane Dècle. The production is now touring, with dates in Bergen, Oslo and Copenhagen. It pays tribute to Gisèle Pelicot, who, Rau says, has become "an icon of resistance" against sexual violence committed by men. He claims that the real Pelicot came to see the performance in New York and told him: "The actress plays me better than I could do it myself."Not all French reviewers have applauded his re-enactment. "I saw the research and the synthesis, but I did not see a reflection," says Anne Diatkine, a theatre critic for the French daily Libération. She found the production "superficial and opportunistic … He did not add anything to what we knew already from the real trial."Still, Rau's mock trials run and run. The debates are real, and the stage gives radically different voices a curated setting in which no opinion is excluded. Except now Peter Thiel's, of course. The acclaimed Austrian film-maker Ruth Beckermann, listed as a member of Rau's advisory council, admires his tribunal concept but believes he should have stuck with the invitation. "Rau should have stuck with the invitation of Peter Thiel and not buckled," she says. "She would have liked a debate in which Thiel had to discuss his ideas on equal terms with others."
#Milo Rau #Wiener Festwochen #Peter Thiel
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Entertainment Jun 10, 2026

The Blobaissance: Why Mr Blobby Is Back and What It Means for British Pop Culture

Mr Blobby, the 1990s pink‑and‑yellow TV monster, has resurfaced on primetime shows, merchandise sta…
The Blobaissance: Mr Blobby’s Unlikely ComebackThe iconic inflatable Mr Blobby has leapt from 1990s Saturday night sketches back onto today’s TV screens, music stages and retail shelves, sparking a fresh wave of nostalgia that some are dubbing the “Blobaissance”. From 1990s TV Sidekick to 2026 Nostalgia IconOriginally created for Noel Edmonds’ Noel’s House Party in 1992, the character became a cultural fixture through slapstick chaos, merchandise, and a chart‑topping Christmas single. After the show’s 1999 cancellation, Blobby faded, only to re‑emerge on The Claudia Winkleman Show, a surprise SNL UK sketch, and a duet with singer‑actor Self Esteem at the Hammersmith Apollo. Merchandise Sales and Media Appearances Reach New HeightseBay listings show Blobby costumes changing hands for thousands of pounds.Blobby‑shaped iced biscuits at Bayne’s bakers in Scotland have become a “cult bestseller”, rivaling local favourites.The character appeared on a GQ cover alongside Emma Thompson, Ian Wright and Brian Cox.Television cameos include Josh Widdicombe on The Claudia Winkleman Show and a terrified Dan Levy hiding behind a sofa. What the Blobby Revival Says About Britain’s Pop‑Culture MoodCommentators such as comedy writer Joel Morris and cultural historian Dr Matthew Sweet argue that the resurgence reflects a “nation gone soft” and a craving for “idiotic times” – a collective turn toward simple, absurd icons amid a perceived cultural decline. The character’s “stupid relentlessness” offers a comedic safety valve, allowing audiences to laugh at a deliberately low‑brow figure while also critiquing contemporary media saturation. Future of the Pink Monster in a ‘Blobaissance’ EraIndustry insiders predict that Blobby’s momentum will continue, with more high‑profile TV spots, limited‑edition merchandise drops and possible collaborations with major brands. As the 2026 “Blobaissance” unfolds, the character may become a staple reference point for British humor, cementing his place as both a nostalgic relic and a modern cultural touchstone.
#Mr Blobby #Noel Edmonds #Claudia Winkleman Show
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Sports Jun 10, 2026

Guardian Launches Free Recap Newsletter for Daily Sports Highlights

The Guardian introduces a free daily email called Recap, delivering concise sports highlights to su…
Free Recap Newsletter Aims to Centralize Daily Sports Highlights The Guardian is rolling out a new, free email service—Recap—that bundles the day’s most compelling sports moments into a single, easy‑to‑read newsletter. Launched on 2026-06-09, the offering promises to cut through the noise of fragmented sports coverage. How Recap Curates and Delivers Content Automated editorial workflow pulls highlights from football, cricket, tennis, and other major leagues. Each edition includes a brief video clip, a headline summary, and a link to the full article. Subscribers receive the email each morning, timed for peak readership. Early Adoption Metrics Signal Strong Interest Within the first 48 hours, the newsletter recorded: 5,000 sign‑ups, surpassing the internal benchmark for a pilot launch. Open rates of 42%, notably higher than the industry average for sports newsletters. Potential Ripple Effects Across the Sports Media Landscape By offering a free, curated digest, the Guardian could shift audience expectations toward concise, email‑first delivery. Competing outlets may feel pressure to launch similar services or enhance their push‑notification strategies. What’s Next for Recap and Its Subscribers? The editorial team plans to expand coverage to emerging sports and introduce personalized sections based on reader preferences. If adoption continues, Recap could become a staple touchpoint for daily sports consumption, influencing how media brands structure their digital newsletters.
#Guardian #Recap Newsletter #Sports Highlights
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