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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Reuters)
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Barcelona’s spending cap raised by €800m after sale of club assets
La Liga brings limit to €656m for the 2022-23 seasonTebas warns club need to reduce outgoings furtherLa Liga has raised Barcelona’s spending limit by €800m (£700m), bringing it out of a spending deficit after the Catalan side sold off chunks of assets to patch up its finances, the Spanish league said.Barcelona were given a cap of €96m last year, which was slashed by January to minus €144m – meaning the team had to find savings elsewhere to sign new players – after they ran up debts and future li
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Daniel Sailofsky)
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NFL season is here but I won’t be following anymore. I can’t un-see the harm it causes
After 20 years as a fan, I can’t justify supporting the ongoing carnage in football. As a sociologist who studies violence, gender and labor in sports, perhaps it was just a matter of timeOn Sunday, the NFL season will kick off in earnest. Sports news websites, team message boards and social media are already awash in coverage. To the unbridled joy of many, football is back. But for the first time in almost 20 years, I won’t be following.This summer, I decided I’m out – done with football. I can
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Fiona Sturges)
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Emily in Paris’s Lucas Bravo: ‘People loved it or loved to hate it’
The ‘hot chef’ sensation of Darren Star’s romantic comedy has roles in two new films that offer the chance to show he’s more than a heart-throbLucas Bravo, the French actor who shot to fame in 2020 playing Gabriel, AKA the “hot chef”, in Netflix’s Emily in Paris, would like to put a few rumours to bed. The first concerns his bank balance. “I saw on the internet the other day that my net worth is $1m,” he says, with incredulity. “Imagine! There’s this impression that you do just one project and h
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Ian Sample Science editor)
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Politicians must do more to guard their children’s mental health, says historian
Professor finds pattern of wellbeing problems in political families, often linked to parents’ workProminent politicians must do more to protect the mental wellbeing of their children, according to a leading historian whose research has revealed the enormous pressures faced by those with parents in the government.Prof Elizabeth Hurren, the chair in modern history at the University of Leicester, found a troubling pattern of mental health and wellbeing problems in children of politicians, which wer
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Lisa Allardice)
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Author Orhan Pamuk: ‘I used to have three bodyguards, now I have one’
Nobel prize winner Orhan Pamuk on Salman Rushdie’s attack, responding to extremism in Turkey – and his new, oddly prophetic, pandemic novelThe Turkish Nobel prize‑winning novelist Orhan Pamuk never sleeps for more than four hours at a time. He likes to read and maybe write a bit when he wakes. So it was the middle of the night when he learned the news about the attack on Salman Rushdie in the US last month. Like Rushdie, who has needed protection since a fatwa was decreed following the publicati
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rob Davies)
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‘She offered an island of certainty and continuity’: the Queen and the City
London’s finance hub has changed enormously in 70 years, but royal relationship is woven into its fabricIn the shadow of the Bank of England, in the beating heart of the City of London, workers are jet-washing a statue of the Duke of Wellington. Mobilised after the death of the Queen Elizabeth II, they are readying the commercial hub known as the Square Mile to stage an event unprecedented in the lives of all but the most senior City veterans.In less than 24 hours, at the Royal Exchange, Charles
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (David Cannadine)
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Elizabeth: Seven dutiful decades of national transformation and imperial retreat
Queen Elizabeth’s achievement was to adapt the monarchy to sweeping change without ever letting on what she was doingWhen the future Queen Elizabeth II was born in 1926, her great-great-grandmother, Queen Victoria, had been dead for scarcely a quarter of a century, and it was less than 30 years since the spectacle and splendour of her diamond jubilee. Viewed from the vantage point of 1897 or 1901, the long years of Victoria’s reign had given the British much to feel proud of and be grateful for:
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Aika Levins)
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Aika Levins’ recipes for a hybrid Japanese/Middle Eastern barbecue
Japan meets the Middle East in this fusion trio of chicken kebab in oyster sauce, flatbreads flecked with seaweed and sesame, and smacked cucumber on tahiniAt home, I nearly always prefer to cook something easy, and invariably turn to the comforting Japanese flavours of my childhood. Since starting work at the Barbary in London, however, I often find myself incorporating live-fire cooking and the flavours of the Middle East and north Africa. These are the sort of dishes I make at home for an imp
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Camera Press)
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The Queen – a life in official portrait photos
Some of the world’s most illustrious photographers, including Cecil Beaton, Karsh and Lord Snowdon, have photographed the Queen as princess and monarch Continue reading...
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Sep 10, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tom Gauld)
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Tom Gauld on the library’s new cataloguing system – cartoon
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