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Sports May 10, 2026

Shankland’s Goal Keeps Hearts Ahead in Scottish Premiership Title Race

Hearts earned a vital point at Motherwell thanks to a half‑time strike from Lawrence Shankland, ext…
Hearts Secure Crucial Point at MotherwellHearts drew 1‑1 with Motherwell at Fir Park, ensuring a minimum one‑point cushion heading into the penultimate round of the Scottish Premiership. The result keeps them four points clear of Celtic, who still have a chance to narrow the gap.Shankland’s Half‑Time Strike Offsets Own‑GoalThe match opened with a setback for the visitors when Stephen Kingsley inadvertently turned an Emmanuel Longelo cross into his own net, marking the fifth consecutive game Hearts have fallen behind early. Lawrence Shankland restored parity just before the break, heading in a cross to make it 1‑1.Later, Derek McInnes protested a denied penalty after Alexandros Kyziridis went down in the box, but referee Steven McLean upheld the decision.Points Gap and Title MathematicsHearts: 71 points (after the draw)Celtic: 67 points – can reduce the deficit to one point by beating Rangers on SundayRemaining matches for Hearts: two (against Falkirk and one other)Remaining matches for Celtic: two (vs Rangers and final game)Implications for Celtic, Rangers and the Title ChaseThe draw means Celtic must win their upcoming clash with Rangers and hope Hearts drop points to keep the title within reach. A win for Rangers would further widen the gap, potentially handing the championship to Hearts before the final round.Injury concerns also loom large: defenders Craig Halkett and Marc Leonard left the Motherwell game with serious‑looking injuries, likely sidelining them for a significant period.What Lies Ahead for Hearts and Their Injured DuoManager Derek McInnes emphasized that the squad cannot dwell on the missed penalty or the injuries. If Hearts can maintain their form and secure a win against Falkirk, they could clinch the title with a game to spare.However, the loss of Halkett and Leonard will test the team’s depth, especially in a defensive unit that has been pivotal throughout the season.
#Hearts #Motherwell #Lawrence Shankland
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Sports May 10, 2026

Crystal Palace to Offer Andoni Iraola Lucrative Deal to Succeed Oliver Glasner

Crystal Palace are set to offer Andoni Iraola a lucrative three-year contract to succeed Oliver Gla…
The Managerial Shake-Up at Crystal Palace Crystal Palace are stepping up their attempts to convince Bournemouth’s Andoni Iraola to take over from Oliver Glasner and are set to offer him a lucrative three-year contract. Iraola's Potential Move to Selhurst Park It is understood that Palace have made Iraola, who confirmed last month that he will be leaving Bournemouth at the end of the season, their preferred target and held initial talks with the Spaniard’s camp in the past few weeks. The Appeal of European Football Palace are aware that the 43-year-old has plenty of other suitors from the Premier League, including Chelsea, but hope that the lucrative contract offer and the potential of European football next season should they win the Conference League could help to lure him to Selhurst Park. Oliver Glasner's Future Glasner’s side face Rayo Vallecano in the final on 27 May in Leipzig, with the winners qualifying directly for the Europa League. The Austrian revealed in January that he will depart Selhurst Park when his contract expires this summer despite leading them to the FA Cup last year – the club’s first major trophy. Other Candidates for the Job Coventry’s Frank Lampard Kieran McKenna of Ipswich Thomas Frank, former Brentford and Tottenham manager Marcelino García Toral, who is leaving Villarreal
#Crystal Palace #Andoni Iraola #Oliver Glasner
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Sports May 10, 2026

Premier League Live: Barkley Equalizes for Villa as Sarr Shines for Palace

Premier League action heats up on Sun 10 May 2026 with three crucial fixtures. Ross Barkley salvage…
Premier League Action Heats Up on Matchday 38The Premier League enters its final stretch on Sun 10 May 2026, with three high-stakes fixtures determining the trajectory of several clubs. As the season reaches its climax, every point is vital for teams battling for European qualification and avoiding relegation.Barkley's Late Header Rescues Point for VillaIn a tense encounter at Turf Moor, Aston Villa looked to be trailing but found an equalizer in the 45th minute. Ross Barkley rose highest to head in a right-wing corner, ensuring the visitors leave with a 1-1 draw. This goal is crucial for Villa's hopes of securing a top-half finish.Sarr's Clinical Turnaround in the 35th MinuteOver at Selhurst Park, Crystal Palace faced a difficult start against Everton. Ismaila Sarr demonstrated incredible composure, initially striking a weak left-foot shot that hit a defender. However, he quickly recovered to slot home a composed right-foot finish, sparking celebrations among the home faithful.Shifting Dynamics in the Race for European SpotsAston Villa: The draw keeps them in contention for a Champions League spot, though the margin is narrowing.Crystal Palace: Sarr's goal provides a massive psychological boost in their fight against relegation.Burnley & Everton: Both sides will feel they dropped points in a game they needed to win.Final Weekend Implications Loom LargeWith the season drawing to a close, the pressure is mounting. The results from these fixtures suggest that the final matchday will be decisive, with several teams still mathematically in the hunt for survival or European qualification.
#Premier League #Ross Barkley #Aston Villa
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Entertainment May 10, 2026

Keith Haring's Personal Works Reveal Intimate Friendship as Sotheby's Auction Unseen Pieces

Keith Haring's childhood best friend Kermit Oswald is auctioning 20 personal works by the iconic ar…
The Lead: Personal Artworks Reveal Hidden Keith HaringThe story of how Keith Haring came to paint a crib began on a quiet, ordinary afternoon in 1986. His best friend's wife was pregnant, and the couple didn't have the money to buy a new crib for their home in New York City's Greenpoint neighborhood. "I called my parents to ask if my old crib was still in the attic," says artist Kermit Oswald, Haring's friend since childhood. "I got it and I painted it yellow, then Keith came over, we had a few beers and he painted the rest of it."The Exhibition: Haring's House at Sotheby'sOswald's collection of Haring's work is now on display in Haring's House: Works From the Collection of Kermit Oswald, a public exhibition at Sotheby's New York this month, with the works going to auction in two sales on 14 and 15 May. The most surprising item is the crib. It's taxi-cab yellow with paintings of dachshunds (the Oswald family dog) and two figures representing Oswald and his wife, Lisa.The Auction Valuation: Market Value of Personal ConnectionsIt's one of 20 Haring works going to auction. The marquee lot is a 1985 self-portrait, one of only six the artist ever painted on canvas. The auction estimates are $3m-$5m, with the crib alone estimated at $250,000 to $350,000. With many items never seen publicly, it shows a personal side to one of the most iconic gay artists in history.The Friendship: Childhood Bond to New York Art SceneOswald knew Haring since they were five years old. They met by passing notes at church in their home town of Kutztown, Pennsylvania. As boys, they shared a passion for "creating things" and started drawing together. "We rode bicycles and played baseball, though on different teams, and were always in each other's homes," he says. They delivered their paper routes together; the loser of the morning race had to buy ice-cream.The Artistic Process: Influences and TechniquesHaring's early untitled works on paper from the late 1970s and early 1980s often used cut-up newspapers and Xeroxed clippings, a practice influenced by William Burroughs' cut-up technique. The two met in 1983 and collaborated on Apocalypse, a series of silkscreen prints with text by Burroughs, in 1988, the year Haring tested positive for HIV.The Legacy: Beyond Public PersonaWhen asked what Haring would be like now, Oswald says: "It was a more analog world then. If you wanted to comment on the news, you had to put ink on paper. In today's lexicon, Keith would be a blogger and definitely a news junkie." They both moved to New York in 1978 to study at the School of Visual Arts. Oswald built the workshop in Haring's studio, every frame Haring used and installed Haring's exhibitions.The Future: Auction and Art Market ImpactBy 1985, Haring was famous and painted his self-portrait from a Polaroid, his face on the body of a sphinx. He invited Oswald to the studio and told him to take any work he wanted. Oswald chose that one. The pair called Haring's mounting fame "the tiger." "You work and work and work thinking you can finally climb on the tiger and ride it," Oswald says. "But once it actually happens, you just have to hold on for dear life, and the best you can do is hope to steer it a bit."
#Keith Haring #Kermit Oswald #Sotheby's
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Entertainment May 10, 2026

Charli XCX’s “Rock Music” Stirs Debate Over Pop‑to‑Rock Pivot

Charli XCX’s recent Vogue interview claimed she was making "rock music," igniting a firestorm of sp…
Charli XCX’s Vogue Interview Sparks Rock RumorsLast month Charli XCX sat down with Vogue and hinted that the follow‑up to her 2024 album Brat would sound "markedly different" – even suggesting the "dancefloor is dead" and that she was now making rock music. The headline "CHARLI XCX CONFIRMS ROCK ALBUM" spread across social feeds, prompting heated online debate and a tongue‑in‑cheek video from the singer clarifying that the track titled “Rock Music” was, in fact, not a rock song.The Reality Behind the “Rock Music” TrackListening to the two‑minute single reveals distorted guitars and live‑drum‑like hits, but the production is unmistakably pop: glossy synths, chopped vocals and a sudden, engineered cut‑off. The lyrical swagger – "Wow, I’m really banging my head…" – feels more akin to LCD Soundsystem or The Killers than to classic rock anthems from AC/DC or Kiss. In short, the song is a self‑aware pastiche that pokes fun at rock authenticity while staying firmly in pop territory.Streaming Era Pressures and Genre ExpectationsIn 2023, rock accounted for just 5% of global album streams, down from 12% in 2015.The top‑selling rock albums that year were legacy releases from Arctic Monkeys, Linkin Park, Queen and Oasis, not new‑era rock acts.Algorithms on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music prioritize familiar sonic signatures, making genre‑bending releases riskier for chart performance.Against this backdrop, a pop megastar publicly declaring a rock pivot feels both bold and risky, highlighting the tension between artistic experimentation and algorithmic predictability.What This Means for Pop‑Rock FusionThe episode underscores a broader industry trend: rock artists increasingly borrow pop production tricks, while pop stars flirt with rock aesthetics. Charli’s move could encourage more high‑profile pop acts to experiment with guitar‑driven textures without abandoning their core sound, potentially revitalising rock‑adjacent sub‑genres in the streaming era.Looking Ahead to the Untitled AlbumFans are left wondering whether the rest of Charli’s upcoming album will lean further into guitar‑heavy arrangements or revert to the hyper‑pop formula that defined Brat. The Guardian notes that, despite the rock‑flavored veneer, the track retains the confrontational attitude that made her previous work stand out, suggesting the album may occupy a hybrid space that challenges genre labels.
#Charli XCX #Vogue #Rock Music
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Music May 10, 2026

Discover Frances Chang's Magnetic Songwriting and This Week's Best New Tracks

Explore the enchanting music of Brooklyn-based musician Frances Chang, known for her magnetic and u…
The Rise of Frances Chang's Unique Sound Frances Chang, a Brooklyn-based musician, is gaining attention for her distinctive songwriting style, which is both magnetic and uncanny. Her music is often compared to artists like Cate Le Bon, Astrid Sonne, and Julia Holter. Exploring Chang's Musical Style Chang's songs are characterized by their internal logic, evoking a sense of uncanny domesticity. Her music features casual piano refrains, rainy percussion, and softly flaring synths. Her new single, 'No Avatar,' showcases her conversational and serene vocals. This Week's Best New Tracks Lambchop – Weakened: A simple yet beautiful ballad featuring Kurt Wagner's vocals, backed by guitar, choir, and Justin Vernon on banjo. Silvana Estrada and PabloPablo – Antes de Ti: A elegant song featuring Estrada's cuatro and a liquid, orchestral pivot. Josh da Costa – Proving Me Right: A new wave anthem with a chorus reminiscent of Sparks. Martin Brugger – Knees, Hands, Shoulders, Teeth: Ambient music with softly clanking, mournful sounds and traces of Kentucky post-rock. Bedouine – On My Own: A ballad with classic piano-driven MOR and affecting vocals. Resonant Bodies – Failed Hornpipe for Jacken: A refined and hopeful song featuring nyckelharpa and hammered dulcimer. Liz Lawrence – Exploded Into Flowers: A powerful tribute to her sister, with a robust repeating melody. Discover More New Music Subscribe to the Guardian's rolling Add to Playlist selections on Spotify or transfer it to Apple, Tidal, or other services to explore more new music.
#Frances Chang #The Guardian #New Music
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Entertainment May 10, 2026

Bank of Dave: The Musical review – a ebullient local hero story bursts into song

Bank of Dave: The Musical is a tremendously likable show based on the true-life story of Dave Fishw…
The Musical Review Bank of Dave: The Musical is a tremendously likable show. The source material is the feelgood true-life story of Dave Fishwick (Sam Lupton), the Burnley businessman whose egalitarian conscience led him to step in where others had failed. Seeing his fellow townsfolk being held back for want of money, he determined to set up a non-profit bank that would treat them with trust and respect. The Story Unfolds Presented as a David and Goliath battle between an impoverished former mill town and a self-serving banking sector, it is an underdog tale with a happy ending. Following the fictionalised outline of the 2023 Netflix film, starring Rory Kinnear, it has two big plus-points for a musical: a community that pulls together and a romantic subplot between a buttoned-up London lawyer (Lucca Chadwick-Patel) and a no-nonsense local doctor (a star performance by Lauryn Redding). The Performance Director Nikolai Foster fashions an ebullient, if a tad overheated show, forever erupting into big chorus numbers on Amy Jane Cook’s amorphous bar-room set with its backdrop of Lancashire chimneys and neat integration of Duncan McLean’s video designs. Pippa Cleary’s songs are bright and engaging, drawing on gospel, soul, hip-hop and Broadway golden age. The Verdict Like the film, the north-south divide is overegged – there is even an apology for the “southern saviour narrative” – and the honest-to-goodness characters flirt with cliche. Unlike the film, it comes clean about the story’s fabrications. Such honesty is consistent with a determinedly down-to-earth show that rails against inequality while championing the possibility of change. Show Details At Lowry, Salford, until 16 May then at Curve, Leicester, 20–30 May
#Bank of Dave #The Musical #Rob Madge
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Film May 10, 2026

The Unseen Robin Hood: Director John Irvin on His Anti-Thatcher Film

Director John Irvin reflects on his 1991 film 'Robin Hood' starring Patrick Bergin and Uma Thurman,…
The Unseen Robin Hood: Director John Irvin on His Anti-Thatcher Film Thirty-five years ago, two films about the legend of Robin Hood – stealer from the rich, giver to the poor – met and duelled in cinemas; we all know who won, Kevin Costner’s big-budget blockbuster, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves. But what about the other one? It was titled simply Robin Hood, directed by John Irvin and starring Patrick Bergin in the title role alongside a pre-Pulp Fiction Uma Thurman as Maid Marian. The Aim Was to Give Kevin Costner's Version a Good Kicking “It was very much a stand-alone film with the aim of giving Kevin Costner’s version a good kicking if we could,” says Irvin, now 85. “The studio wanted to go immediately because they wanted to pre-empt Costner.” The Data Analysis: A Modest Budget and Box Office Return The film had a modest budget and was released internationally, but in the US it premiered as a three-hour TV film in May 1991. Costner’s film took just short of $400m in worldwide receipts and became the year’s summer blockbuster. The Impact Analysis: Anti-Thatcherism and Social Commentary Irvin admitted: “The production was tricky. It was cold and wet. It was winter, so Robin Hood couldn’t be in ‘Merry England’. All the trees were bare, so nobody could hide and ambush people. “Quite serendipitously, we found in Cheshire, near the castle, a whole warren of salt mines. I thought it was perfect because it was underground. It was my attempt to give a more honest version of Robin Hood during the middle ages. Around the time of the film there were poll tax [protests] in England. There is a sort of underlying current of anti-Thatcherism in the movie, which was picked up by one or two critics. We tried, without being too on-the-nose, to make it relevant to Thatcher’s England. It was subversive, but in a very, I hope, subtle and nuanced way.” The Prediction: A Legacy Reevaluated “I think it holds up well. The story of Robin Hood seems to be woven into our national psyche. When there’s a sense of oppression, it’s good to have a saviour like Robin Hood, who’s going to give two fingers to the establishment.”
#John Irvin #Robin Hood #Kevin Costner
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Entertainment May 10, 2026

TV tonight: Jeff Pope's drama about the women who reported rapist John Worboys

The article discusses the TV schedule for the evening, highlighting Jeff Pope's drama 'Believe Me' …
The Lead The TV schedule for tonight features a range of dramas and live sports. One of the standout shows is 'Believe Me', a Jeff Pope drama about the women who reported rapist John Worboys. Jeff Pope's Drama: Believe Me Sunday, 9pm, ITV1 'Believe Me' tells the story of Sarah Adams, played by Aimee-Ffion Edwards, who takes a taxi after a night out and is raped by John Worboys, played by Daniel Mays. The drama explores the aftermath of the assault and the challenges faced by victims of rape in reporting their crimes. Other TV Highlights Bafta Television Awards 2026, 7pm, BBC One: The TV gongs are presented by Greg Davies, with a double battle for lead and supporting actress awards between Aimee Lou Wood and Erin Doherty. The Great Celebrity Bake Off for Stand Up to Cancer, 7pm, Channel 4: The charitable baking competition features Adam Buxton's edamame crumpets and Self Esteem's beans on toast crumpets. Cruising to the End of the Earth, 8pm, Channel 4: A family from Preston takes their first journey together since a bereavement and explores Alaska. The Cage, 9pm, BBC One: Tony Schumacher's thriller follows crooked casino employees Leanne and Matty as they navigate conflicting loyalties. Trading Places, 9pm, Channel 5: A new life-swap series immerses participants in different realities, starting with shopaholic youngsters Saffron, Umar, and Bridie. Film Choice The Iron Claw, 10pm, BBC Two This biopic tells the story of the Von Erich family of wrestlers in Texas, focusing on eldest son Kevin and his struggles for success in a sometimes pitiless sport. Live Sport Women's FA Cup Football: Liverpool v Brighton, noon, Channel 4/TNT Sports 1 Premier League Football: Nottingham Forest v Newcastle, 2pm, Sky Sports Main Event
#Jeff Pope #John Worboys #ITV1
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