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Sports Jun 06, 2026

Uruguay World Cup 2026 Team Guide: Bielsa's Squad and Strategy

Uruguay's national football team, led by coach Marcelo Bielsa, is gearing up for the 2026 World Cup…
The PlanMarcelo Bielsa has left his indelible mark on this Uruguay team. His 4-3-3 system is built for direct football, allowing his side to press their opponents high up the field and chase the ball at all times.The CoachAfter the 5-1 humbling by the US, Marcelo Bielsa was seen as the man responsible. Upon their return to Montevideo, Bielsa called a press conference to say he was not resigning, that he had “strength” to continue and admitted he was questioned by his players for his “behaviour”.Star PlayerFederico Valverde. The captain of Real Madrid arrives at this World Cup at his peak; at the age of 27 he is among the best in the world and is starting to be the leader Uruguayans hope can inspire their country to the later stages of the tournament.One to WatchMaximiliano Araújo started his career as a right-back, but earned his first move abroad, to Puebla in Mexico, thanks to his qualities as a winger.Unsung HeroFederico Viñas. The Real Oviedo striker could get his chance to shine due to the dip in form of Núñez, Bielsa’s main goal threat.Probable Starting XI
#Uruguay #World Cup 2026 #Marcelo Bielsa
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Entertainment Jun 04, 2026

Mike D Returns to UK Stage After Two Decades with Uproarious Bingo Hall Performance

Michael 'Mike D' Diamond, of legendary hip-hop group Beastie Boys, made his first UK appearance in …
The Return of a Hip-Hop LegendAdam Yauch AKA MCA's death in 2012 from cancer aged 47 effectively ended the stellar recording and performing career of hip-hop trio Beastie Boys. Since then, bandmates Adam "Ad-Rock" Horovitz and Michael "Mike D" Diamond have made few public appearances but the latter is now back in the fray. His first appearance on a British stage in almost 20 years is in, of all places, a bingo hall in the north east, where he surely becomes the first legendary rapper to yell: "Wassup, North Shields?!"An Unconventional Venue with a Familiar SoundWith turntables on stage, hip-hop clobber in the audience, a six-piece band in matching outfits and bingo tables at the back, this unlikely show feels simultaneously low-key and an event. Mike D is backed by 5D – who include his sons and are more than half his 60 years – whose slamming grooves and crunching guitars aren't Beastie Boys reheated, but certainly have the same inimitable joie de vivre.New Material Takes Center StageRefreshingly and bravely, almost all the setlist is new material, from storming recent single What We Got to an array of tracks from a forthcoming album. Make It Stop doffs a cap to Kraftwerk. True Colours is a huge electronic-rock-rap mashup and the affecting I Don't Care pairs the New Yorker's distinctive reedy wordplay over a hypnotic, minimal groove. There's a loud cheer when Mike D makes a knowing reference to nearby "Newcastle, where the Venom sample comes from," meaning the time the Beasties sampled the geordie metal band on Check Your Head.A Diverse Setlist with SurprisesEvery track sounds different. Crypto samples chinking coins, Switch Up soars over its killer bassline and there's a particularly startling handbrake turn for Thank You, a brilliant ballad in which emotionally sung lines such as "We were just kids, freaking out" seem laden with significance. Late 70s post-punk band Delta 5's Mind Your Own Business makes an unlikely encore before Mike D introduces "something from my own old band", which turns out to be an uproarious So What'cha Want.A Memorable ReturnThere's a chant of "one more song!" to no avail: indeed the only disappointment in this engaging, fun hour-long show is that there isn't any more of it. At 26 Leake Street, London, on 5 and 6 June.
#Beastie Boys #Mike D #5D
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Environment Apr 24, 2026

Nature's Resilience: How a Churchyard Rebirthed After Fire

A churchyard destroyed by fire in 1998 has been transformed into a thriving wildlife habitat throug…
The Phoenix Rising"Please close the door. It conserves heat and keeps the organ in tune," requests the notice inside the church door. It's pleasantly warm inside, on this chilly April morning. But on the night of 16 September 1998, temperatures here exceeded 1,000C, when fire consumed the old organ, along with the floors, window, roof and 900 years of history, leaving a charred shell.Seven years of reconstruction and renewal followed, creating a light, airy interior: simple pale oak has replaced the darker, more intricate furnishings, and a new east window portrays an exotic floral paradise.A Paradise RestoredHelen Whittaker's Paradise window in St Brandon's church. Photograph: Phil GatesHelen Whittaker's vibrant stained glass Paradise window celebrates the quest of the Irish traveller St Brandon, better known as St Brendan, who spent a lifetime searching for an earthly Garden of Eden. Early-morning sunlight, streaming through the glass, casts rainbow shadows of subtropical flowers that he might have encountered: strelitzia, jacaranda, hibiscus and angel's trumpets. Below panes of red, orange, purple and blue, the artist has left clear glass panels, revealing the natural beauty of native trees in the churchyard beyond, itself a paradise for local wildlife.Wildlife SanctuaryFebruary's drifts of the snowdrops and winter aconites, around the grave of Jack Warner – a much-missed former colleague – gave way to daffodils in March. Today, bee-flies are darting between primrose flowers, in longer grass between mown paths. A buff-tailed queen bumblebee, searching for a nest site, explores a vole tunnel around an old tree stump. A seven-spot ladybird ambles across a lichen-encrusted table-tomb. The loudest sound comes from a song thrush. Otherwise, it is so quiet that I can hear the scratchy claws of a treecreeper climbing the bark of an ash tree.Pollen-producing cones on a St Brandon's churchyard yew. Photograph: Phil GatesThe Balance of LifeSympathetic churchyard management like this achieves a fine balance between respect for those whose life journeys ended here and the needs of nature, where another cycle of life is beginning.Pollen of RenewalOne of the ancient churchyard yews is covered in tiny male, pollen-producing cones. On the way out, I give its branch a gentle shake and, for a second or two, a ghostly cloud of yellow pollen is suspended in a shaft of sunlight, then dissolves like smoke in the air as it rises through the branches.
#Churchyard Conservation #Wildlife Habitat #Stained Glass Art
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Technology Apr 16, 2026

UK Prime Minister Pushes for Under‑16 Social Media Ban Amid Growing Safety Concerns

Prime Minister Keir Starmer warned major tech firms that current practices are endangering children…
At a high‑profile meeting in Downing Street, Prime Minister Keir Starmer told senior executives from Meta, Google, TikTok, X and Snap that the status quo "can’t go on like this" and that immediate, tangible steps are needed to protect children online. Government ministers are now weighing a legal under‑16 age restriction for all social‑media platforms, alongside proposals to curb addictive design elements such as infinite scrolling, autoplay videos and push notifications. During the discussion, Starmer urged the tech leaders to act with "more urgency on internet safety for children" and warned that continued inaction places young users at risk. He emphasized that a world where access is limited but safety is ensured is preferable to one where "harm is the price of participation." While the companies present offered no comment, they have already rolled out a suite of child‑safety tools: Meta’s teen‑account option for users under 18, TikTok’s family‑pairing feature that lets parents set screen‑time limits, and compliance with the UK’s Online Safety Act. The legislation obliges platforms to suppress violent, hateful or abusive content and to keep explicit material, self‑harm, suicide and eating‑disorder content off children’s feeds. The government’s child online‑safety consultation has already attracted 47,000 responses. It explores a formal minimum age of at least 16, as well as restrictions on features that encourage endless usage. The consultation closes on 26 May, after which ministers have pledged “swift action” on the findings. In the House of Lords, a peer‑led amendment to the education bill seeks to introduce a default ban, giving ministers a 12‑month window to decide which apps fall under the age limit. Although MPs have rejected the amendment twice, Conservative peer John Nash is pressing to reinstate the clause. Starmer remains cautious about a blanket ban, fearing it could push teenagers onto the dark web or leave them ill‑prepared for responsible digital use at 16. Nonetheless, Australia’s recent nationwide ban has shifted the political calculus: more than 60 Labour MPs signed a letter in January urging the UK to follow suit. Child‑safety advocates are divided. The Molly Rose Foundation, founded after the tragic death of Molly Russell, warns that an under‑16 ban would punish children for industry failures and calls for stronger enforcement of the Online Safety Act instead. Conversely, Esther Ghey, mother of murdered teenager Brianna Ghey, and Children’s Commissioner for England Rachel de Souza support the introduction of smartphones for under‑16s with built‑in social‑media restrictions.
#meta #google #tiktok
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