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Entertainment May 11, 2026

Super Furry Animals' Stirring Reunion Showcases Immaculate Songcraft

After a decade-long hiatus, Super Furry Animals return to the stage with a stirring performance tha…
The Triumphant ReturnIn the gloom of an underlit Barrowlands stage, a man in black is holding a large inflatable phone to his ear and chanting these words: "SFA OK. SFA OK." The man is Gruff Rhys. The band is Super Furry Animals. And the song, Wherever I Lay My Phone (That's My Home), allows them to reintroduce themselves at this, their second gig after 10 years away.Not that they need much introducing. This Glasgow date sold out fast, mostly thanks to fans – going by the age of the crowd – who loved them first time around. Signed to Creation, the label flush with Oasis money, they came to prominence in the mid-90s goldrush.The Britpop OutsidersAlan McGee thought he had found his own version of Blur, but their Welshness and weirdness put them at odds with Britpop orthodoxy. That madcap reputation has tended to obscure what they really are: a formidable songwriting force.Confirmation of their immense skill and range comes when they perform Run! Christian, Run! followed by Juxtapozed with U. The former is 70s-style country rock, the latter an immaculately crafted soul tune. Both are wonderful.The Vocal MasteryIt doesn't get said enough that Rhys is a beautiful singer. Live performance makes this clear. His voice is essentially mournful, but the songs are so sweet with melody that the impression is of Eeyore transcendent – becoming Tigger through the transforming power of pop.He's not much of a showman. Likewise the rest of the band. Mostly they let the songs sell themselves. Yet they have their moments. At the noisy climax of Receptacle for the Respectable, Rhys, Huw Bunford and Guto Pryce gather centre stage, guitars aloft, and press the necks together. It's a bit Status Quo, a bit rutting giraffe, more than a bit thrilling.The Epic PerformanceAs the two-hour show builds to its peak, they lean into epics: Mountain People, Slow Life and, of course, traditional set-closer The Man Don't Give A Fuck, extended tonight to 12 minutes. A singalong protest song against whatever evils of the world you want it to be about, it has lost none of its cathartic anger and vulgar cheer.The Road AheadThe Super Furry Animals have announced additional dates following their successful Glasgow return. Fans can catch them at Venue Cymru, Llandudno, 14 and 15 May; before they continue touring the UK. This reunion not only satisfies longtime fans but also introduces a new generation to their unique musical blend that defies easy categorization.
#Super Furry Animals #Gruff Rhys #Music Review
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Sports May 11, 2026

England Squeak Past New Zealand in First Women's ODI

England won the first women's ODI against New Zealand by one wicket, with Charlie Dean leading a ca…
The Thrilling Finish England's women's cricket team secured a nail-biting one-wicket victory over New Zealand in the first ODI at Chester-le-Street. The hosts chased down a modest target of 211 runs, thanks to a composed performance by stand-in captain Charlie Dean, who remained unbeaten on 31 runs. England's Struggles and Recovery England's batting lineup struggled, losing six wickets for 149 runs. However, Freya Kemp's 30 runs and Maia Bouchier's half-century helped England stay in the game. Bouchier's 59 runs was the highest score for England. The Data Analysis England chased down 211 runs to win by one wicket. Charlie Dean finished unbeaten on 31 runs. Maia Bouchier scored 59 runs, the highest for England. New Zealand's Maddy Green scored 88 runs. The Impact Analysis This win is significant for England as they look to build momentum for the upcoming World Cup. The team's performance was marked by some nervous moments, but the young players, including debutants Tilly Corteen-Coleman, Jodi Grewcock, and Dani Gibson, showed promise. The Prediction England's women's cricket team will look to build on this win in the upcoming matches against New Zealand. With the World Cup on the horizon, this series will be crucial for the team's preparation and momentum.
#England Women's Cricket #New Zealand Women's Cricket #Charlie Dean
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Politics May 10, 2026

Trump's Beijing Summit: Xi Holds the Cards as US Position Weakens

Donald Trump arrives in Beijing for a critical summit with Xi Jinping from a position of significan…
The Lead: Trump's Fragile Position in Beijing Like an out-of-control wrecking ball, swinging wildly back and forth, Donald Trump smashes up the international order without much thought for the consequences. Lacking coherent strategies, workable plans or consistent aims, he power-trips erratically from one fragile region, tense warzone and complex geopolitical situation to another, leaving misery, confusion and rubble in his wake. The president will bulldoze into another international minefield this week – the fraught standoff between China and Taiwan – when he travels to Beijing for a two-day summit with President Xi Jinping. The Geopolitical Chess Game: Trump's Desperate Need for Xi's Help After a string of humiliating policy implosions over Ukraine, Gaza, Nato, Greenland, and now Iran and Lebanon, needy Trump craves a diplomatic success to flaunt at home. But his hopes of vote-winning trade pacts are overshadowed by his latest war of choice. He needs Xi's promise not to arm Iran if all-out fighting resumes – and Xi's help keeping the strait of Hormuz open as part of a mooted framework peace deal. The weakness of Trump's position going into the summit is fuelling speculation that reduced US support for Taiwan may be Xi's price for playing nice. The Power Dynamics: How Trump's Failures Strengthen Xi's Position Xi knows the Iran war is deeply unpopular with US voters. Trump is universally blamed for pushing up global energy, food and medicine prices. European allies have refused to bail him out, Russia is undeservedly benefiting from inflated oil prices – and poorer countries bear the brunt. Trump is not winning militarily, either, as shown by his half-baked, on-off Project Freedom. For China, Trump is the gift that keeps on giving. Thanks to him, the US is increasingly viewed internationally as an aggressive potential enemy or unreliable friend, much given over to treachery. The Taiwan Factor: Xi's Ultimate Priority Xi's top external priority is not the Middle East. It is the unification of communist China with a de facto independent, democratic Taiwan – a personal legacy project that he has repeatedly threatened to pursue by force. Pentagon planners believe China's ever-expanding military could be ready to launch an invasion next year. Taiwan's forces are vastly outnumbered, while its fractious political parties are as divided as ever about increased defense spending and the wisdom or not of seeking closer ties with Beijing. The Iran Conflict: A Double-Edged Sword for China The downside for Xi is the negative impact of the war on energy prices, global trade and export demand at a time when China's economy is already struggling. Last year, about 80% of Iranian oil shipments were bought by China – shipments the US navy is now blocking. So far, Beijing has largely managed to offset supply shortfalls from the Gulf by drawing on reserves, capitalising on green energy and buying more oil from countries such as Brazil and Russia. But for the world's largest importer of crude oil, safe and reliable navigation through the strait of Hormuz is critical. The Strategic Implications: US Military Resources Diverted from Asia The Iran impasse is drawing US forces away from Asia – it now has two aircraft carrier strike groups in the Middle East – and reducing its military capacity to defend Taiwan and regional allies from future Chinese aggression. China is urging both sides to embrace a negotiated settlement. It hosted direct talks last week with Iran's foreign minister, Abbas Araghchi, and is backing Pakistani intermediaries. Recalling China's successful 2023 fence-mending between Saudi Arabia and Tehran, anxious Gulf states are counting, like Trump, on Beijing's ability to influence its Iranian ally. The Future Outlook: A Potential Taiwan Compromise? Trump seems aware of this risk. He wrote to Xi last month, asking him not to supply weaponry to Tehran – and said he had received assurances China would not do so. But the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, a conservative US research institute, claims China already provides Iran with dual-use precursor chemicals for its ballistic missiles, satellite intelligence about US military movements, assets and bases, and help with sanctions evasion and money laundering. For a man who likes to boast he holds all the cards, the US president may find himself seriously short of trumps when he sits down with Xi.
#Donald Trump #Xi Jinping #China-US Relations
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Business May 10, 2026

Stonewood Capital’s Seven‑Figure Bet on the Cornish Pirates

Stonewood Capital, led by Kenn Moritz and John H Tippins, has taken a strong minority stake in the …
Stonewood Capital, a US private‑equity firm, has committed a seven‑figure cash injection to the Cornish Pirates, a second‑tier English rugby club that was on the brink of collapse two years ago. The investment follows a Guardian story that caught the eye of the firm’s senior partners, marking a rare transatlantic bet on a regional sport.How a Guardian article sparked a transatlantic investmentThe catalyst was a December 2025 Guardian piece profiling the Pirates’ search for fresh capital. Kenn Moritz says the article “gave me an insight into what was going on in English rugby and piqued my interest.” Within five months, Stonewood secured a “strong minority interest” on the club’s board alongside local owners.December 2025 – Guardian article published.May 2026 – Stonewood announces investment.Current – Board seat taken; plans for stadium upgrades and academy development underway.Seven‑figure injection and ownership stakeThe firm has pledged an initial investment in the low‑seven‑figure range (estimated between £1 million and £5 million), securing a minority share and a strategic voice in club decisions. The capital is earmarked for:Stadium facility upgrades at Mennaye Field.Establishing a women’s team and youth academy.Strengthening the senior squad to compete for promotion.Both investors, in their 60s, come from industrial sectors, noting that “rugby is much more interesting than, say, manufacturing fibreglass fabric” and offers better “cocktail conversation.”What the deal means for English rugby’s second tierThe injection arrives as overseas interest in English rugby grows, with recent purchases of Exeter Chiefs and Newcastle Red Bulls. Stonewood’s entry highlights several trends:Second‑tier clubs are viewed as “fertile, low‑cost” assets compared with Premiership sides.US investors see the 2031 Rugby World Cup in the United States as a runway for brand exposure.Local debt burden is minimal thanks to former owner Sir Richard Evans, making the Pirates an attractive, low‑risk proposition.Analysts predict that such capital could lift the overall valuation of the RFU Championship, encouraging more private‑equity participation.Future outlook: ambition for Premiership and beyondClub chief executive Sally Pettipher envisions a five‑year plan that could see the Pirates “Prem‑ready” if the right conditions align. Key milestones include:Completion of stadium enhancements by 2028.Launch of a women’s side and academy by 2027.Targeting promotion to the Premiership within five years, contingent on sustained investment and on‑field success.With Stonewood’s capital and strategic guidance, the Cornish Pirates aim to transform from a near‑folded club into a flagship example of how targeted private‑equity can revitalize regional sport.
#Cornish Pirates #Stonewood Capital #Kenn Moritz
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Tech May 06, 2026

Finnish AI Lab QuTwo Reaches $380M Valuation with Angel Round

QuTwo, a Finnish AI lab founded by Peter Sarlin, has reached a $380 million valuation after raising…
QuTwo's Quantum Leap in Valuation QuTwo, the Finnish AI lab founded by former AMD Silo AI CEO Peter Sarlin, is now valued at €325 million (approximately $380 million) after raising a €25 million ($29 million) angel round. It’s a sign of enduring tailwinds for AI, quantum computing, and sovereign tech, especially for Europe-made companies. The Intersection of AI and Quantum Computing QuTwo’s name is a nod to quantum computing, but it hasn’t gone all in on quantum. Its core product, QuTwo OS, is an orchestration layer that directs tasks to classical, quantum, or hybrid architectures — with the idea that enterprise use cases are often best served by “quantum-inspired” computing, which uses classical chips to simulate quantum behavior on more reliable hardware. Enterprise AI as the Primary Focus Enterprise AI will be QuTwo’s bread and butter. The company already secured some $23 million in committed revenue thanks to design partnerships with the likes of retail giant Zalando, for which it helped develop AI assistants. “AI is the north star that we will continue to aim for. Quantum is just a new type of compute,” said Sarlin, who is adamant that QuTwo is an AI company. The Funding and Future Plans QuTwo's valuation and round size are modest compared to other AI startups. The company wants the freedom to think long term, with a five- to 10-year horizon. QuTwo secured funding from angel investors, including Yuri Milner, Xavier Niel, Nico Rosberg, Dieter Schwarz, and Niklas Zennström. The Impact on Europe's AI Landscape Momentum has been building around Europe-based AI labs, and several of them have become overnight unicorns. QuTwo’s connection with IQM, a Finnish quantum company set to go public, is a reminder that the company believes we are about to enter the quantum era. The Road Ahead QuTwo recently expanded into Sweden and has been hiring. According to Sarlin, some 50 quantum and AI scientists have joined the team. The company aims to build the globally leading AI company for the next paradigm, given that Europe did not succeed in building the AI company for this era.
#QuTwo #Peter Sarlin #AI
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Sports May 02, 2026

Jule Brand's Late Winner Sends OL Lyonnes to Women's Champions League Final

OL Lyonnes defeated Arsenal 3-3 on aggregate with Jule Brand scoring a late winner, sending them to…
The Drama Unfolds: Jule Brand's Late Winner Renée Slegers conceded OL Lyonnes were the better team after Jule Brand’s late winner settled an absorbing semi-final to end Arsenal’s defence of their Women’s Champions League title. It will be Lyonnes 12th European final, extending their own record. The Event Details: A Nail-Biting Encounter With the tie level at 3-3 on aggregate after Alessia Russo’s goal for Arsenal and seemingly heading for extra time, Brand collected Melchie Dumornay’s chipped through ball and tucked a neat finish into the far corner. The goal was initially disallowed for offside, but after a three-minute video assistant referee check the goal was given, sparking joyous celebrations by the home supporters. The Impact Analysis: Lyonnes' Dominance Lyonnes were deserved winners, thanks largely to inspired performances from Dumornay and Kadidiatou Diani. Slegers said: “Lyon raised their levels. They came out really strong. They had Selma Bacha and Melchie Dumornay back in the side, who are world-class players. The Data Analysis: Key Statistics Lyonnes' 12th European final appearance Jule Brand's late winner secured the win Melchie Dumornay's inspired performance Kadidiatou Diani's pace on the right wing caused Arsenal problems The Prediction: What's Next OL Lyonnes will face either Barcelona or Bayern Munich in the Women's Champions League final in Oslo on 23 May. Lyonnes coach Jonatan Giráldez said: “Losing the first leg was tough, but the important thing was to bounce back. We played great football and we deserved the win.”
#OL Lyonnes #Arsenal #Jule Brand
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Sports May 02, 2026

Alex Zanardi, former F1 driver and Paralympic champion, dies at 59

Alex Zanardi, a former Formula One driver and Paralympic champion, has died at the age of 59. Zanar…
The Life and Legacy of Alex Zanardi Alex Zanardi, the former Formula One driver who lost both legs in a racing crash and went on to win Paralympic gold medals, has died at the age of 59, his family said on Saturday. Early Career and Accident Zanardi, from Bologna, made his F1 debut in 1991 and later achieved success in the Cart series in the United States, winning back-to-back championships in 1997 and 1998. His life took a dramatic turn in September 2001 when he was involved in a high-speed crash during a Cart race in Germany that led to the amputation of both legs. Paralympic Success Zanardi refused to end his sporting career and instead turned to para-cycling, becoming one of Italy's most successful Paralympic athletes. He won four gold medals and two silver medals across the 2012 London and 2016 Rio Games. Tributes and Legacy “It is with deep sorrow that the family announces the passing of Alessandro Zanardi, which occurred suddenly yesterday evening, 1 May,” his family said in a statement. “Alex passed away peacefully, surrounded by the love of his family and friends. “The family would like to express their heartfelt thanks to all those who are showing their support at this time and asks that their grief and privacy be respected during this period of mourning.”
#Alex Zanardi #Paralympic Games #Formula One
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Lifestyle Apr 29, 2026

Inside Classic Football Shirts' Vault of Vintage Gear

Discover the inner workings of Classic Football Shirts, a company renowned for its extensive collec…
The Vault of Vintage Football Treasures Classic Football Shirts has become a household name for football enthusiasts and collectors alike, thanks to its impressive array of vintage football gear. The company's vault serves as the epicenter of its operations, housing some of the most valuable and sought-after football memorabilia. The Significance of the Vault The vault is more than just a storage facility; it's a treasure trove of football history. With an extensive collection of vintage shirts, scarves, and other football-related items, the vault provides a unique glimpse into the past, allowing fans to relive iconic moments in football history. Curating the Vault The curation of the vault is a meticulous process, involving careful selection and preservation of each item. The team at Classic Football Shirts works tirelessly to ensure that every piece in the vault is accurately documented and maintained, making it a valuable resource for football historians and enthusiasts. The Impact on Football Culture The vault's existence has a profound impact on football culture, as it helps to preserve the sport's rich history. By providing access to vintage gear, Classic Football Shirts inspires a new generation of football fans to appreciate the sport's heritage. The Future of the Vault As the company continues to grow and expand its operations, the vault is likely to remain at the heart of its mission. With plans to digitize the collection and make it more accessible to the public, Classic Football Shirts is poised to share its incredible resource with an even wider audience.
#Classic Football Shirts #Vintage Football Gear #Football Memorabilia
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Sports Apr 28, 2026

Arsenal's Quest for Champions League Glory Faces New Test Ahead of Atlético Semi‑Final

Arsenal’s 4‑0 demolition of Atlético Madrid in the Champions League group stage showcased their ear…
Lead: Arsenal’s early‑season swagger meets new semi‑final challengeArsenal entered the Champions League third‑round tie against Atlético Madrid with a burst of confidence, delivering a 4‑0 victory that seemed to cement their claim as Europe’s most exciting side. Six months later, as they prepare for the semi‑final first leg at the Metropolitano, that same swagger is being tested by a goal‑scoring drought and growing anxiety among fans.Dominant 4‑0 win over Atlético Madrid in the league phaseThe October encounter was a showcase of Arteta’s tactical arsenal: a bolted‑door defence, furious counter‑press, physicality, speed and set‑piece efficiency. After Gabriel Magalhães opened the scoring in the 57th minute, Arsenal rattled off three more goals by the 70th, leaving Atlético battered and bruised.Goal‑scoring drought and points cushion: the numbers since MarchOnly 5 goals in 7 games since the 22 March 2026 Carabao Cup final loss to Manchester City.Despite a recent defeat to Bournemouth, Arsenal remain nine points clear at the top of the Premier League, albeit having played two extra games.In the Champions League quarter‑final, Arsenal drew 0‑0 at home to Sporting, advancing on a 1‑0 aggregate thanks to the first‑leg away win.Psychological shift: confidence to anxiety as the season progressesThe early‑season conviction has given way to nervousness. Fans booed the side after the Bournemouth loss, and even a narrow 1‑0 win over Newcastle sparked more unease than celebration. Arteta himself admitted the team felt “as if they were struggling in the bottom three,” despite being on the brink of a historic season.Looking ahead: what the semi‑final means for Arsenal’s title bidA victory in the semi‑final could cement Arsenal’s status as genuine contenders on both domestic and European fronts. However, the added fixtures risk fatigue and could jeopardise the Premier League lead. If Arteta can restore the early‑season belief while managing squad depth, Arsenal may finally break their 22‑year league title drought and add a long‑awaited Champions League trophy to their cabinet.
#Arsenal #Atlético Madrid #Mikel Arteta
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