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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Guardian Staff)
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K-everything: the rise and rise of Korean culture
From music to movies, technology to food, the world has fallen in love with everything South Korean. Ahead of a big London exhibition, Tim Adams visits Seoul in search of the origins of hallyu – the Korean waveOur critics on where to start with Korean music, film and TVLast week, I was standing in a huge dance studio – one of 12 – near the top of a funky new office tower just north of the Han River in the South Korean capital, Seoul. The building is home to a company called SM Entertainment, whi
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Eva Wiseman)
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Vogue editor Edward Enninful: ‘Impostor syndrome is what drives me’
Fashion has to be fun, says Edward Enninful, but it can also bring about change. He talks to Eva Wiseman about how being gay, Black and an immigrant guide his visionOne Wednesday morning in 2020 the editor-in-chief of British Vogue was on his way to work. It was a warm day and London was quiet, that uncanny stillness as people crept awkwardly back to life – this was the first time Edward Enninful had been into the office since lockdown. He was there to finish Vogue’s September issue – . The them
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Rhik Samadder)
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Rising to the Surface by Lenny Henry review – there’s nothing very funny about fame
In his often moving second memoir, the comedian reflects on his unlikely journey from seaside summer seasons to award-winning elder statesman of TV – and why he feels he failed his motherLenny Henry has always received more than his fair share of criticism, from racists, whose opinion can be discounted, but also from liberal activist types decrying the regressive buffoonery of his early work and comedy fans who simply find him unfunny. In his uneven second autobiography, following Who Am I, Agai
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jon Ungoed-Thomas)
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Miracle ‘farm dust’ pill could prevent childhood allergies
Treatments based on barnyard material and unprocessed milk may be developed by 2027An international team of scientists is working on a “farm dust” treatment to stop children developing allergies as research reveals the protective benefits of being brought up on a farm can last into adulthood.The study has found evidence that children brought up on family farms have greater protection into early adulthood from allergic rhinitis, a reaction that can cause a runny nose, sneezing and red eyes. Conti
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Tim Adams)
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The big picture: the healing power of connection
Photographer Greg Turner’s tender portraits of Ivan explore the pair’s overlapping personal strugglesGreg Turner first met Ivan on Horsham High Street in 2017. Turner was taking pictures of passersby and Ivan stopped to ask him about them. Something about Ivan intrigued Turner. “He gave the impression of being homeless,” he suggests, “but also he clearly looked after himself.” Turner took Ivan’s picture and over the year or two that followed the pair would see each other quite often. Turner got
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jon Ungoed-Thomas)
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Revealed: levelling up fund allocated south-east twice as much as north-east
New figures raise further questions about failure of government fund to reach the poorest areas of UKThe south-east of England, the most affluent region in Britain outside London, last year received almost twice as much money as the north-east from the government’s levelling up fund aimed at boosting deprived areas.Projects in the south-east benefited from £9.2m from the fund in the year to 31 March 2022. By comparison, the north-east only received £4.9m, despite being the poorest region in Brit
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jo Peters)
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Brighton beautiful: a lavish renovation of a Regency townhouse
A once dilapidated period home by the sea is now bursting with exotic murals and ornate furnishingsYou can tell someone’s heart and soul has gone into this busy but beautiful family home in Brighton. “I love collecting things, I love shopping and I love clutter,” says owner and designer Kate Powell. She admits these are some of the reasons she opened a shop, after running out of space at home. Upcycled, restored, reclaimed, inherited are all key to her distinctive style.Kate and her husband, Tob
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Jon Ungoed-Thomas)
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US leant on Britain to jail detainees freed from Guantánamo Bay
Blair officials saw intelligence files showing ‘no evidence’ against UK detainees, according to a new bookTony Blair’s government was given special access to US intelligence files on Guantánamo Bay which revealed there was no credible evidence against the British detainees, a new book has claimed.US officials hoped that any British detainees released from the notorious prison camp would be detained once they set foot in the UK or placed under strict surveillance. But officials who examined files
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Nina Lakhani climate justice reporter and Shah Meer Baloch in Islamabad)
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Rich nations owe reparations to countries facing climate disaster, says Pakistan minister
Sherry Rehman, the country’s climate change minister, insists rich polluters must pay their due as country is deluded by devastating floodsRich polluting countries which are predominantly to blame for the “dystopian” climate breakdown have broken their promises to reduce emissions and help developing countries adapt to global heating, according to Pakistan’s minister for climate change, who said reparations were long overdue.More than 1,200 people are dead and a third of Pakistan is under floodw
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Sep 04, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Clive Myrie)
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Opinion is cheap and easy. The BBC’s mission is to deliver facts and evidence | Clive Myrie
The corporation is under attack for losing its edge. One of its leading voices defends its distinct roleIndulge me for a few seconds and close your eyes. Now, imagine a world without the BBC. What’s it like in the darkness? No EastEnders or RuPaul’s Drag Race. No Newsnight or Question Time. No Snog, Marry, Avoid? or Ten O’Clock News. No Glow Up or Strictly, no Proms, no Radio 4 or 3 or iPlayer. No World Service, no Line of Duty or Peaky Blinders, no Attenborough and Planet Earth and, heaven forb