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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Zoe Williams)
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‘We thought Bake Off was the most boring thing we’d ever done’: Mel Giedroyc on cake, comedy and Sue Perkins
How did a struggling standup become one of the best-loved names on TV? The star of GBBO, Light Lunch and Unforgivable talks about the despair that almost broke her – and the big break she struggled to believe inMel Giedroyc is just finishing a photoshoot in a studio in south-west London, and rushes up to greet me, apologising that she has to get changed before we talk, because she’s in ridiculous clothes. So she goes off in an I [heart] New York T-shirt, and then comes back in her own clothes: d
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Amelia Abraham)
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‘The inclusive, pansexual 90s seem a long way away’: Wolfgang Tillmans gets retrospective
Exhibition To Look Without Fear at New York’s Museum of Modern Art displays a staggering 417 pieces from 30 years of artist’s careerExperimental photographer, social commentator, musician, writer. “Which Wolfgang do I prefer?” This has been the question on the mind of the German artist Wolfgang Tillmans, as he has spent the three few weeks installing much of his life’s work for his first ever New York museum survey. Throughout the process, it’s been bracing to realise that he might have already
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Peter Bradshaw)
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Lights, camera, corgis! How movies tackled the enigma that was Elizabeth II
Wise, witty, patient, crisp, faintly martyred or skydiving with James Bond … our film critic looks at how cinema portrayed the monarch – and recalls the night she put him on the spot at Windsor CastleOnly very recently did the Queen make her screen breakthrough. Like British Shakespearean stage veterans who suddenly find themselves in a huge movie franchise late in life, the monarch found herself knocking it out of the park with a superstarring role in the 2012 London Olympics, opposite Daniel C
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Alex Lawson Energy correspondent)
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Energy bills: Britons urged to pull together to prevent ‘cost of lives crisis’
World Energy Council says while help from government is needed, communities must play their partBritons must develop a spirit of “radical generosity” to prevent lives being lost because of soaring gas and electricity bills this winter, the head of the World Energy Council (WEC) has warned.Angela Wilkinson, the secretary general of the WEC, said that failure to get communities across Britain pulling together over the colder months would “move [this] from a cost of living crisis to a cost of lives
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Helen Davidson in Taipei)
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Xinjiang lockdown: Chinese censors drown out posts about food and medicine shortages
‘Internet commentary personnel’ told to deluge social media with thoughts on anything from cooking to their personal moodSee all our coronavirus coverageChinese censors have reportedly been ordered to flood social media with innocuous posts about Xinjiang to drown out mounting complaints of food and medication shortages in a region under lockdown for more than a month.The Ili Kazakh autonomous prefecture, also known as Yili, is home to about 4.5 million people, and is believed to have been firs
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Angelique Chrisafis in Paris)
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Bestselling novel forces France to reckon with #MeToo movement
Virginie Despentes’ book Cher Connard pushes problem of sexual harassment back into spotlightA novel depicting France’s #MeToo movement by the French punk feminist writer Virginie Despentes, irreverently titled Cher Connard – which roughly translates as Dear Arsehole – has become a bestseller, prompting a debate about sexual harassment and equality in the social media age.The story opens as Oscar, a novelist in his 40s, insults an actor on Instagram about the way she has aged. The film star, Reb
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Melissa Davey)
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Johnson & Johnson reaches $300m settlement over pelvic mesh implants
Settlement of two Australian class actions is largest in country’s history and subject to federal court approvalFollow our Australia news live blog for the latest updatesGet our free news app, morning email briefing or daily news podcastPelvic mesh implant manufacturer Johnson & Johnson group has reached a $300m settlement in two class actions, after thousands of women worldwide reported complications from the mesh products including chronic pain, painful sexual intercourse and incontinence.
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Warren Murray)
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‘Her final journey begins’: the front pages as Queen’s coffin arrives in Edinburgh
Same scenes fill UK front pages: the Queen’s coffin, draped in the royal standard, being borne to HolyroodhouseLatest updates as the Queen’s final journey beginsScenes of the late Queen’s coffin being borne towards the Palace of Holyroodhouse after a slow journey from Balmoral feature on the newspaper front pages on Monday.Scotland’s Daily Record says “Ma’am of the people – 1000s line streets for monarch’s final journey”. Crowds are shown flanking Edinburgh’s Royal Mile as the hearse passes. Con
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (PA Media)
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The Queen to lie in state in London: everything you need to know
The public will be invited to view the Queen’s coffin in Westminster Hall from Wednesday afternoon to the morning of her funeral on Monday Latest news: Queen’s coffin at rest in Palace of HolyroodhouseThe Queen will lie in state at Westminster Hall in London from Wednesday at 5pm until 6:30am Monday 19 September. Here’s what that means and how you can be involved.What exactly is meant by the term “lying in state”?Lying in state is usually reserved for sovereigns, current or past queen consorts,
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Sep 12, 2022
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The Guardian - Top Stories (Presented by Nosheen Iqbal with Jonathan Freedland, produced by Joshua Kelly and Thomas Glasser, sound design by Axel Kacoutié; the executive producer is Nicole Jackson)
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What does the Queen’s death mean for the United Kingdom? – podcast
The Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland looks at why the death of Queen Elizabeth II will have a seismic impact on the country, and what the era of King Charles III might bringThe Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland talks to the Today in Focus host Nosheen Iqbal about why the loss of Queen Elizabeth II, a figure of continuity when all around was in constant flux, will have such a big impact on the United Kingdom. The foundational event of modern Britain was the second world war, he says – an