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A new flagship Huawei Kirin chip can deliver 20% performance boost – Huawei Central
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H5N1 Symptoms: H5N1 outbreak: Cambodia reports 12th case this year; early symptoms to watch for |
Cambodia’s health ministry just reported another human case of H5N1 bird flu this year—this time, it’s a 5-year-old boy from Kampot province, Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy (CIDRAP), University of Minnesota said citing a Facebook post that has translated and posted the information. This is the 12th case of H5N1 infection from Cambodia, this year.H5N1, also known as avian influenza or bird flu is originally found in birds, it has occasionally crossed over to humans, usually through close contact with infected poultry. Though rare, human infections tend to be serious and sometimes even deadly. Despite its severity, many people are still unaware of how it presents in humans. Here’s what you should know.
It starts like any flu, but don’t be fooled
The early signs of H5N1 infection can look just like the seasonal flu. That’s why it often goes unnoticed in the beginning.H5N1—also known as bird flu—isn’t your average flu. It usually spreads from infected birds to people (think chickens, ducks, even cows lately), and while human cases are rare, they can be serious. So what should you watch out for if you’ve been around birds or on a farm?At first, H5N1 can look a lot like the regular flu. You might get:
- A high fever
- Chills
- Body aches
- Cough
- Runny nose
- Sore throat
Sounds familiar, right? But here’s where it gets intense:For some people, symptoms ramp up quickly. That means:
- Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing
- Chest pain
- Fatigue that wipes you out
- Diarrhea, nausea, or even vomiting
- And in some serious cases—confusion, seizures, or coma
Unlike seasonal flu, H5N1 often goes straight for the lungs. It can cause pneumonia or even acute respiratory distress, which is why many people who get really sick end up in the ICU.The tricky part? Symptoms can take 2 to 8 days to show up after exposure, so you might feel fine at first—then suddenly not.
H5N1 outbreak in the US
H5N1 bird flu has been spreading across U.S. farms since early 2024, with about 70 human cases—mostly from direct animal exposure—and a first fatality in Louisiana in January 2025. The virus, especially the new D1.1 strain, has jumped into dairy cows, sparking concern over potential mutations that could boost human-to-human spread. While the CDC still rates overall risk as low, it warns that reduced surveillance and ongoing mammal infections make the situation unpredictable.
When should you see a doctor?
If you’ve recently handled poultry, been in live bird markets, or live in an area where bird flu has been reported, you need to be cautious even if your symptoms seem mild at first.Seek medical attention immediately if:
- Your fever doesn’t go down after 48 hours
- You’re short of breath, or breathing feels harder than normal
- You have chest pain or pressure
- Your cough gets worse and includes blood
- You feel confused, very sleepy, or unusually weak
- You’ve had direct contact with birds in the past 10 days
Even if it turns out to be another illness, it’s always better to rule out something serious early.
Treatment and why timing matters
It’s also worth noting that antibiotics won’t help, because H5N1 is caused by a virus, not bacteria. Only targeted antiviral treatment can assist, alongside rest, hydration, and hospital support in severe cases.Pay attention to your body. If you feel worse than usual, if your symptoms escalate fast, or if you have any exposure to birds, don’t wait it out. Get checked. Most of all, take your health seriously. Your body often tells you when something’s wrong, you just have to listen closely.
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At least 23 girls are missing from Camp Mystic after floods ravage Texas
KERRVILLE, Texas (AP) — Texas parents frantically posted photos of their young daughters on social media with pleas for information as at least 23 campers from an all-girls summer camp were unaccounted for Friday after floods tore through the state’s south-central region overnight.
At least 24 people were dead and many missing after a storm unleashed nearly a foot of rain just before dawn Friday and sent floodwaters gushing out of the Guadalupe River, Kerr County Sheriff Larry Leitha told reporters Friday evening. The flood-prone region known as Hill Country is dotted with century-old summer camps that draw thousands of kids annually from across the Lone Star State.
State officials said 23 to 25 girls from Camp Mystic, a riverside Christian camp in Hunt, Texas, still were unaccounted for. They declined to estimate how many people were missing across the region but said a massive search was underway, with 237 rescued so far.
“I’m asking the people of Texas, do some serious praying,” Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick said. “On-your-knees kind of praying that we find these young girls.”
A helicopter flies over the Guadalupe River after a flash flood swept through the area, Friday, July 4, 2025, in Kerrville, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Rescuers evacuate some campers by helicopter
First responders scan the banks of the Guadalupe River for individuals swept away by flooding in Ingram, Texas, Friday, July 4, 2025. (Michel Fortier/The San Antonio Express-News via AP)
Texas Game Wardens said Friday afternoon that they had arrived at Camp Mystic and were starting to evacuate campers who had sheltered on higher ground.
Elinor Lester, 13, said she was evacuated with her cabinmates by helicopter after wading through floodwaters. She recalled startling awake around 1:30 a.m. as thunder crackled and water pelted the cabin windows.
Lester was among the older girls housed on elevated ground known as Senior Hill. Cabins housing the younger campers, who can start attending at age 8, are situated along the riverbanks and were the first to flood, she said.
Families are reunited at a reunification center after flash flooding hit the area, Friday, July 4, 2025, in Ingram, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Campers in lower cabins sought shelter up the hill. By morning, they had no food, power or running water, she said. When rescuers arrived, Lester said they tied a rope for the girls to hold as they walked across a bridge with floodwaters whipping up around their calves and knees.
“The camp was completely destroyed,” she said. “It was really scary. Everyone I know personally is accounted for, but there are people missing that I know of and we don’t know where they are.”
Her mother, Elizabeth Lester, said her son was nearby at Camp La Junta and also escaped. A counselor there woke up to find water rising in the cabin, opened a window and helped the boys swim out. Camp La Junta and another camp on the river, Camp Waldemar, said in Instagram posts that all campers and staff there were safe.
Elizabeth Lester sobbed when she finally saw her daughter, who was clutching a small teddy bear and a book. She said a friend’s daughter, who was a counselor for the younger children at Camp Mystic, was among the missing.
“My kids are safe, but knowing others are still missing is just eating me alive,” she said.
Families of missing campers worry
Dozens of families shared in local Facebook groups that they received devastating phone calls from safety officials informing them that their daughters had not yet been located among the washed-away camp cabins and downed trees.
Camp Mystic said in an email to parents of the roughly 750 campers that if they have not been contacted directly, their child is accounted for.
At an elementary school in nearby Ingram that was being used as a reunification center, more than a hundred people stood around a courtyard Friday afternoon with hopes of seeing their loved ones emerge from buses dropping off those who had been evacuated. One young girl wearing a Camp Mystic T-shirt stood in a puddle in her white socks, sobbing in her mother’s arms.
Many families hoped to see loved ones who had been at campgrounds and mobile home parks in the area.
Families line up at a reunification center after flash flooding it the area, Friday, July 4, 2025, in Ingram, Texas. (AP Photo/Eric Gay)
Camp Mystic sits on a strip known as “flash flood alley,” said Austin Dickson, CEO of the Community Foundation of the Texas Hill Country, a charitable endowment that is collecting donations to help nonprofits responding to the disaster.
“When it rains, water doesn’t soak into the soil,” Dickson said. “It rushes down the hill.”
State officials began warning of potential deadly weather a day earlier. The National Weather Service had predicted 3 to 6 inches of rain in the region, but 10 inches fell.
The Guadalupe River rose to 26 feet within about 45 minutes in the early morning hours, submerging its flood gauge, Patrick said.
Decades prior, floodwaters engulfed a bus of teenage campers from another Christian camp along the Guadalupe River during devastating summer storms in 1987. A total of 10 campers from Pot O’ Gold Christian camp drowned after their bus was unable to evacuate in time from a site near Comfort, 33 miles (53 kilometers) east of Hunt.
Flood turns Camp Mystic into a horror story
Chloe Crane, a teacher and former Camp Mystic counselor, said her heart broke when a fellow teacher shared an email from the camp about the missing girls.
“To be quite honest, I cried because Mystic is such a special place, and I just couldn’t imagine the terror that I would feel as a counselor to experience that for myself and for 15 little girls that I’m taking care of,” she said. “And it’s also just sadness, like the camp has been there forever and cabins literally got washed away.”
Crane said the camp, which was established in 1926, is a haven for young girls looking to gain confidence and independence. She recalled happy memories teaching her campers about journalism, making crafts and competing in a camp-wide canoe race at the end of each summer. Now for many campers and counselors, their happy place has turned into a horror story, she said.
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Schoenbaum reported from Salt Lake City.
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‘Brace yourself for Siraj storm’: Video montage celebrates Mohammed Siraj’s fiery spell at Edgbaston | Watch | Cricket News
NEW DELHI: As Mohammed Siraj carved his name into Indian cricket history with a scintillating six-wicket haul against England in the second Test at Edgbaston, the moment was immortalised in a gripping video montage shared by the official broadcaster.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!Titled “Brace Yourself for Siraj Storm! From the gullies of Hyderabad to shaking England’s batting order,” the video captured the emotion, effort, and fire behind Siraj’s finest Test performance away from home. Backed by pulsating music and roaring commentary, it showcased the wickets – from Joe Root and Ben Stokes falling off successive deliveries to the final strikes that polished off the tail.
“Mohammed Siraj on fire!” screamed the commentator in the montage, as visuals cut between his powerful deliveries and emotional celebrations.WATCH:The video also featured a moving visual of Siraj himself: “Na shoes, na coach, na paisa. Dad auto chalate the. Kuch aisa dimaag mein nahi tha ki India khelunga,” – a humble reminder of his inspiring journey from the streets of Hyderabad to cricket’s grandest stages.
Poll
What was your initial reaction to Mohammed Siraj’s six-wicket haul against England?
Siraj’s figures of 6/70 made him only the fourth Indian bowler to take a five-wicket haul at Edgbaston, joining the ranks of Kapil Dev, Chetan Sharma, and Ishant Sharma. It was also the best bowling performance by an Indian at the venue since 1986 and the first six-for by any visiting pacer at the ground in over three decades.“It’s unbelievable because I was waiting for this for a long time,” said Siraj. “I love responsibility and I love the challenge.”His spell not only dented England’s top order but also showcased his rise as a potent member in India’s pace battery.
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Ólafur Arnalds on finishing Eoin French’s final album – ‘A lot of the time I could feel him next to me ’ – The Irish Times
Ólafur Arnalds had a cold knot of dread in his stomach when he flew to Cork to say farewell to his friend and musical collaborator Eoin French – aka Talos – shortly before his death, last August.
“He was in his last few days – a week – and we knew it was nearing the end. I was so nervous. I was kind of crying the whole way on the plane. I was shaking, walking into the room to come talk to him,” Arnalds, the composer, producer and DJ, says from his studio in Reykjavík.
He was struck by French’s positivity at their final meeting at Marymount Hospice – how at peace he was with the world. “I walked out of that room laughing. That’s the kind of a guy he was. He was the one on death’s door. But he cared about making me feel good on our last meeting. He cared that I would walk out of there with a good memory of our relationship.
“He asked me, ‘How are you doing?’ I was, like, ‘F**k that. How are you doing? Are you okay, man?’ He took this with the grace of a god. Sorry to use such a big word, but that’s the kind of a person he was.”
With such a wide range of musical interests and inspirations, he found a kindred spirit in French, who, across his three albums as Talos, incorporated influences as far-flung as Sigur Rós (from Arnald’s native Iceland), Bon Iver, Frank Ocean and Cocteau Twins.
[ Talos: To listen to Eoin French’s music was to be transported to a hauntingly beautiful parallel dimensionOpens in new window ]
As French’s health declined, he and Arnalds met to finish a series of compositions they had worked on the across the previous several years. Those songs are being released this month under the title A Dawning. It is a beautiful tribute to French, a songwriter from just outside Cork city, whose hazy, dreamlike music was punctuated with bursts of wonder, like rainbows followed by a sudden downpour of emotion.
Powerful feelings likewise ripple through A Dawning, whether via the ambient throb of Signs, which features a tender vocal from French, or the haunting We Didn’t Know We Were Ready, a sobbing acoustic number in which the Irish singer looks forward to the “peace that breaks at dawn”.
As is inevitable given the circumstances in which it was made, the album arrives with an aura of sadness. Yet for Arnalds it is not a project about death so much as an outpouring of joy and an acknowledgment of the preciousness of life – a point the musician, with Nordic directness, is eager to get across.
“Enough for the death questions, because, actually, we made this record while he was very much alive,” Arnalds says. “You’re now looking at it with the perspective of [French’s death]. But, the record, it’s not about that: the record is a celebration of life. It’s a trap, a little bit, for us, you know – me and you talking in an interview, or for a listener, for fans, for journalists – to kind of put this record always within that box, to always frame it [with death].
“I’ll tell you, when we wrote those songs we were having the best time of our lives. We were having a beautiful time together. We were communicating as friends through some of the best music both of us felt like we had ever done – and that’s what this record celebrates.”
Arnalds and French were introduced by the festival programmer and artistic curator Mary Hickson, who brought them together for Sounds from a Safe Harbour, in Cork.
Arnalds has a lump in his throat as he remembers their first meeting against the unglamorous backdrop of a hotel conference room. Despite the inauspicious setting, they had a creative spark from the outset. The collaboration continued after French received a cancer diagnosis in November 2023. He died on August 11th, 2024, at the age of 36, survived by his wife and daughter.
“It was the hottest day of the year in Cork, and we were doing this kind of artistic residency connected to the Sounds from a Safe Harbour festival,” Arnalds says of their first get-together. “We wrote the first songs in a conference room on the second floor of the hotel. It was pretty bare bones, very institution-like. But with an upright piano. That was wonderful. We had our laptops and a couple of microphones. We would have to turn off the AC while recording anything. [It was] sticky and sweaty and [we were] drinking copious amounts of coffee.”
The death of a friend is never easy, but Arnalds was struck by Irish people’s openness about the subject.
“Iceland is Protestant – in its modern roots, anyway.” Ireland and Iceland “both had the same kind of old pagan traditions. Today we’re Protestant, and death is not something you face. You don’t look at that in the eyes. And it was eye-opening for me to be in Ireland for a wake. There’s just dancing and singing. I was absolutely fascinated by it, and very impressed.
“And I wish we had even half of that here. I feel like here, someone dies … they get kind of removed very quickly. We wait maybe two weeks or so, until a convenient day for the funeral. We might have a little open casket for the closest people the night before. Then the funeral will happen in the daytime, and afterwards people will eat some cake and go home.”
Much of the album was put together at French’s house near Clonakilty, in west Cork. The landscape reminded Arnalds of home, Ireland and Iceland being, he says, two hunks of rock plonked into the North Atlantic. He also felt parallels between the Irish language and Icelandic, both under threat in a globalised world – albeit for different reasons.
“It’s no wonder that we connect quickly to Irish people. We didn’t have our language taken away from us in the same way Ireland did. But we are currently fighting not to lose it in a different way – through globalisation and social media and just technology that always is in English. Kids are starting to speak English instead of Icelandic sometimes now. So we are also fighting a fight for our language.
“It was fun to discuss that with Eoin and talk about those things. And I’ve been very impressed meeting so many Irish people in the last couple of years and seeing the revival of the Irish language. I find it absolutely beautiful. Look at Kneecap,” he says, referring to the Belfast-Derry group who rap largely in Irish.
Arnalds is polite and thoughtful but not a chatterbox. French operated on a similar wavelength. Both were comfortable in silence, which perhaps explains why they worked so well together.
“It is something we felt like the music is partly about. How much can be said in the silence. How brotherhood goes deeper than [chatter]. We would talk all the time, of course. But it never felt like we had to. And there would be whole evenings, whole days sometimes, where we would say, like, four words. We would just focus on the music we were making, or, on some occasions, just the books we were reading separately.
“There’s some kind of a magic that often happens with music – when you are doing music together, you are speaking to each other, you are communicating to each other. It just doesn’t have to be big discussions.”
Since French’s death Arnalds has been tweaking the album. He is glad it is coming out into the world and is looking forward to returning to Sounds from a Safe Harbour, where he will participate in a tribute to French at Cork Opera House on September 11th – having already delivered a musical elegy to the Corkman on The Tommy Tiernan Show last January, when he performed We Didn’t Know We Were Ready, alongside its co-composers Niamh Reagan and Ye Vagabonds. They were joined by other acquaintances of French, including the Watford sisters The Staves, Kate Ellis of Crash Ensemble, the Cork singer Laoise Leahy and the superstar Dermot Kennedy.
Honouring his friend’s memory has been immensely emotional. That said, Arnalds has understandably had some anxiety in the run-up to the release. Finishing the LP in his studio, he would sense French at his side.
“I would miss him a lot. I would feel nervous. Am I doing the right thing? I can’t ask him does he like this. I would feel self-conscious around our friends or family, me being given the role of representing him in this way.
“On the other hand, there is no better place to channel your grief. I feel extremely fortunate to have this. I’m very glad I have this as a way to channel my emotions. A lot of the time I could feel him next to me working on this. We were still having a good time together, in some way.”
Olafúr Arnalds & Talos: A Dawning is released by Deutsche Grammophon on Friday, July 11th. Remembering Talos is at Cork Opera House on September 11th, as part of Sounds from a Safe Harbour
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vivo WATCH GT Lands in Pakistan with Sleek Design and 21-Day Battery
Marking its official entry into the smart accessories segment in Pakistan, vivo has today unveiled its latest smartwatch offering, the vivo WATCH GT, now available locally for Rs. 34,999. With the brand tagline “Power Your Healthy Life”, the WATCH GT targets style-conscious fitness enthusiasts seeking intelligent wellness and activity tracking.
Multi‑Style Trendy Design
Crafted for aesthetics and comfort, the WATCH GT features a square, borderless 2.5D curved 1.85‑inch AMOLED display, encased in a matte-aluminum alloy frame with a stainless-steel rotating crown. At just 33 g, the watch is lightweight and comfortable. Available in Summer Black and Cloud White variants, it includes diverse watch faces and strap options, ensuring a look for every mood and outfit.
Ultra‑Long Battery Life
Remarkable battery endurance is a key highlight. On Bluetooth-only mode, users can enjoy up to 21 days of use. This longevity ensures users stay powered through long workouts, travel, and busy routines without daily charging.
100+ Sports Modes
Designed for active lifestyles, the WATCH GT supports over 100 sports modes across nine categories from running, cycling, swimming, to racket sports like badminton and tennis with pro-grade performance insights. The WATCH GT is built to track a wide range of physical activities making it a reliable companion for both casual workouts and fitness enthusiasts.
AI‑Powered Health Monitoring
Underneath its sleek exterior, the WATCH GT hides powerful AI health tools. It features 24/7 heart‑rate monitoring, continuous SpO₂ tracking, sleep and stress tracking, and environmental noise alerts, while the rotating crown.
The vivo WATCH GT enters Pakistan as a compelling blend of modern design, remarkable endurance, extensive fitness functionality, and AI-driven health insight all wrapped in one sleek, wearable device. Perfectly aligned with its tagline, it truly aims to “Power Your Healthy Life” by merging style and wellness into everyday living.
Also Read: vivo T4 Lite Launched with Powerful Battery and Dimensity 6300 Chipset — Coming Soon to Pakistan?
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‘As Johnny Depp says, if Pacino comes to you and says do something it’s better you do it’ – The Irish Times
Riccardo Scamarcio pops up on my Zoom screen at a roadside cafe with a curtain of blue behind him. Darkly handsome in a crisp white shirt, he puffs on a cigarette – very old school – while answering in the most cleanly perfect English. He is crossing the mountains to Tuscany. The spirit of classic Italian cinema could hardly be better honoured if he were rendered in black and white.
I mention this as his appearance reminds me of how Johnny Depp came to cast him as Amedeo Modigliani in the American actor’s second feature as director. Modì: Three Days on the Wing of Madness follows the painter and sculptor as he cavorts through an earthily rendered version of early 20th-century Paris. There is a great deal of arguing in bars and necking in graveyards.
Depp had arranged to talk to Scamarcio early in the evening, but he was forced to knock the meeting back by three hours. At that point the Italian was driving with his daughter and the nanny. He called into a petrol station. Happily, the staff recognised the star and allowed him to use a side building for the Zoom.
Riccardo Scamarcio in a heavily romanticised Paris of 1916 in the film “We were talking, and after a while Johnny says, ‘Hey, man. Can I say something? Where are you?’ There was stuff around for cars, oil, strange tools around me. I said, ‘I’m sorry, Johnny, but I’m in the gas station. I was driving, and this is the only place I could stage the Zoom call.’ He says, ‘In a gas station!’ I didn’t know this at the time, but the producer was there off-screen. And Johnny said, ‘He is in a gas station. This is my man!’”
This is how the business now works. You do press interviews in hillside cafes and take auditions in petrol stations.
“Yeah, it was rock’n’roll,” he says. “Johnny is a very special person. He is very sweet and very gentle and very kind to every single one. He is a person who likes paradox.”
Scamarcio, now in his mid-40s, has been exhaustingly busy in Italian cinema and TV for more than 20 years. Back in 2005 he was rough-hewn in the epic gangster flick Romanzo Criminale. He has worked with Abel Ferrara and Costa-Gavras. You can see him in Paolo Sorrentino’s Loro, about Silvio Berlusconi, and Nanni Moretti’s Three Floors. He doesn’t need to stretch into English-language productions, but he, nonetheless, has been happy to show off his polyglottal talents in films such as John Wick: Chapter 2 and Kenneth Branagh’s A Haunting in Venice.
“It’s very important to work in other countries,” Scamarcio says. “In English you have more opportunities. The market is bigger. I speak very fluent French too. So I’ve been shooting films in France. I’m very known in my country. When you work outside your country it’s fantastic, because people don’t know you, so nobody cares. They have no expectation from you, right? There is another level, which is the language. Acting in another language is like having a mask.”
The long faces of Modigliani How familiar was Scamarcio with Modigliani before coming to the film? The elongated faces and mournful eyes that characterise his work are – though, as the film explains, underappreciated in his life – now an immovable part of the culture. That must be even more so in the artist’s native Italy.
“Yes, of course. My mother is a painter,” Scamarcio says. “I was obsessed with this big book that had pictures of his paintings and sculptures. My mother was always saying, ‘Why is this boy so obsessed with this book?’ Maybe it was a sign. I knew, of course, he had a very, very tough life.”
It hardly needs to be said that Depp is currently a controversial character. The Kentucky actor – somehow now 62 – has been a ubiquitous presence since the late 1980s. He was Jack Sparrow. He was Sweeney Todd. He was in a rock “supergroup” called Hollywood Vampires. (Three Days on the Wing of Madness is dedicated to late guitarist Jeff Beck.)
Over the past decade, however, he has drawn more attention for an acrimonious split with Amber Heard that led, in 2022, to Depp suing his then former wife, who had accused him of physical abuse, in the United States, for defamation. Heard was found liable. Two years earlier he had lost in the British courts after suing News Group over allegations of abuse against Heard published in the Sun newspaper. The dispute has, to say the least, caused some division on social media.
[ Who Trolled Amber? review: Relentless dig beneath Johnny Depp vs Amber Heard libel case makes a staggering revelationOpens in new window ]
When the mess went away (for then, anyway) Depp returned to a project he had first discussed with Al Pacino decades earlier: a study of Modigliani adapted from a play by Dennis McIntyre. Indeed, Pacino, who has an amusing role in Three Days on the Wing of Madness as a flamboyant art dealer, had been toying with the idea way back in the 1970s. Martin Scorsese, Bernardo Bertolucci and Francis Ford Coppola were all involved in conversations about it.
“Pacino was supposed to direct this project, and then he didn’t,” Scamarcio says. “It was his passion project since when he was young. Then he met Johnny in Donnie Brasco and they become friends. Pacino says, ‘I have this project. Maybe you could be perfect to play Modigliani.’ So Pacino was supposed to direct the film and Johnny to play Modigliani. It didn’t happen.”
Scamarcio is politely euphemistic about his director’s recent complications.
‘I felt that my director, Johnny Depp, trusted me very much’: Johnny Depp and Riccardo Scamarcio. Photograph: Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for The Red Sea International Film Festival “Johnny had his problems that we all know,” he says. “When he won the case and he was back, Al says, ‘I think the moment is now correct for you to direct the film. I’m too old. I don’t want to do it. You should do it.’ And, as Johnny says all the time, if Pacino comes to you and says do something it’s better you do it.”
The resulting film is an amusing, anarchic romp through a highly romanticised version of Paris in 1916. As you might expect from Depp, there are a few rock’n’roll touches. At one stage The Black Angel’s Death Song, by The Velvet Underground, and Tom Waits’s Tom Traubert’s Blues vie for our attention. None of this gets in the way of a hugely charismatic turn from Scamarcio. He does good work as a misunderstood master who can barely scrabble together a few sous for artworks that would later sell for millions.
It is more than 28 years since The Brave, Depp’s indifferently received directorial debut. Did Scamarcio feel he had what it takes behind the camera?
“Basically it is about trust,” he says. “I felt that my director, Johnny Depp, trusted me very much. That is what it is all about. This is what an actor needs from his director. He needs to be loved and trusted. We did this journey together – experimenting things, changing, just trying to get some special life there.
“He was talking about Marlon Brando, when they were friends. We were talking about all the processes of being a cinema actor. For me, it confirmed all the things I believed when I think about my job. My job is to create an atmosphere.”
For all the flash and bang of Three Days on the Wing of Madness, it is at its best in the conversational duel between Pacino and Scamarcio. The older actor is a marvel. After a few decades of chewing the scenery, he seems to have recovered an inner calm.
“He’s still there, fighting as an actor and an artist,” Scamarcio says. “But with the simplicity and the fairness and the honesty of a 20-year-old actor.”
I wonder if Scamarcio could sense Pacino’s Italian roots. The American is, after all, only one generation distant from Sicilian origins.
“Oh, yeah. Because, well, you can take away an Italian man from Italy, but you can never take Italy away from an Italian. You know what I’m saying?”
Scamarcio does not seem to sleep. Early previews of the current film will feature a conversation, filmed at Tate Modern in London, between Scamarcio, Depp, the art critic Waldemar Januszczak and British artist Polly Morgan. He has another three Italian productions on the go. Will we hear him in English again soon?
“There is the international language – which is acting,” he says with a charming smile. “Being alive on scene – and being obscene. Being obscene, which means ‘out of scene’. It comes from the Greek.”
I’ll take his word for it. Educated man.
Modì: Three Days on the Wing of Madness is in cinemas from Friday, July 11th, with previews on Thursday, July 10th
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PSG vs Bayern preview: Clash between two elite pressing teams leaves no margin for error
Two of the teams at the FIFA Club World Cup who are best at pressing will meet on Saturday when Paris Saint-Germain take on Bayern Munich in the quarter-finals at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta.
PSG have recorded a PPDA (passes per defensive action) of 7.3 across four games, meaning they wait for the least amount of opposition actions in possession before trying to win the ball back. Bayern are just behind on 7.8 and marginally edge PSG in possessions won in the attacking third (28 to PSG’s 26).
Despite the on-ball quality of both teams, the defining theme of the match in Georgia could be their out-of-possession activity. Here, The Athletic explains why.
Bayern and PSG have already met once this season. That Champions League league-phase clash in Germany ended 1-0 to Bayern, with Kim Min-jae scoring the game’s only goal from a corner in the 38th minute. The winner was created by Bayern crowding the six-yard box to create chaos, a PSG weakness that Arsenal also targeted in the semi-finals.
Bayern scored their first against Flamengo in the last 16 of the Club World Cup on June 29 — an Erick Pulgar own-goal — from a similar situation. The match was a testament to Bayern’s pressing ability too, with both of Harry Kane’s goals coming from forcing turnovers in Flamengo’s defensive third.
Bayern’s pressing structure saw Kane operate as the focal point in a system that aimed to compress space and divert Flamengo to the wings. In this example from the 25th minute, Joshua Kimmich joins Michael Olise and Kane to create a numerical superiority on the right wing. Left-back Josip Stanisic’s positioning in-field allows Kimmich to wander forward, while right-back Konrad Laimer presses the retreating Luiz Araujo.
Laimer harries Araujo back to near his own box and stretches to win the ball, with the move ending in a shot (second frame below).
Bayern used a similar approach in the November meeting against PSG. Jamal Musiala, who will be fit for Saturday’s match, leads the press while Kane drops to mark Vitinha. PSG’s centre-backs Marquinhos and Willian Pacho are some distance away from goalkeeper Matvey Safonov, whose only option is to lob a pass to Achraf Hakimi.
Safonov overhits the pass — a theme throughout the game due to Bayern’s pressing — but Hakimi may have struggled anyway with Kingsley Coman in close vicinity. Any pass to Warren Zaire-Emery in midfield is difficult too, due to Kim pushing out of defence.
Vitinha eventually began dropping deep to receive from Safonov, but Bayern were prepared. Below, Musiala presses him again while Leon Goretzka and Kimmich can mark Fabian Ruiz and Joao Neves respectively due to Alphonso Davies inverting to switch onto Zaire-Emery (like Stanisic does above with Gerson). Laimer (not in frame) and Coman are ready to pounce on PSG’s full-backs.
PSG have looked susceptible at the back at times at the Club World Cup, giving the ball away in their defensive third 10 times across four matches. Bayern will punish any such lapses of concentration.
So, what is the solution?
The full-backs are crucial to Bayern’s out-of-possession set-up and Flamengo found a way to eliminate their impact. In this example, Gerson and Araujo occupy Stanisic and Laimer, while Gonzalo Plata and Giorgian de Arrascaeta do the same to their centre-backs. That leaves Goretzka in an odd position and with Serge Gnabry shifting towards the left, Pulgar has space to receive and turn.
The pinning technique worked further up the pitch, too. In the seventh minute, Gerson receives with Stanisic closing him down and passes back into midfield. With Gnabry focused on an open player in midfield and Coman trying to double up on Gerson, two passes to find right-back Wesley’s run turns this into a transition-like situation.
Flamengo used a variation of the same in Bayern’s box to score their opener. As Araujo crosses from the left, De Arrascaeta is in space in the box due to Goretzka and Bayern’s defensive line dropping too deep. Gnabry is ball-watching, which allows Gerson to meet De Arrascaeta’s flick-on and score with a first-time shot.
PSG’s midfielders have a goalscoring knack and will punish these situations if they arise.
After the November loss to Bayern, Luis Enrique admitted that PSG “struggled under the pressure of our opponents”. A simple tweak that should help — as it has since the turn of the year — is keeping their defenders closer to goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma.
Inter Miami, their round-of-16 opponents at the Club World Cup, struggled to cope with PSG’s build-up shape and the constant movement of their midfielders.
Miami’s press lacks cohesion and shifts to defensive mode as soon as Fabian collects the ball and turns forward.
Bayern will not make it this easy, but PSG’s strength is in their versatility.
In the Champions League final, Inter man-marked Vitinha and Joao Neves but Donnarumma simply lobbed a pass to Khvicha Kvaratskhelia on the wing, with Fabian in between the lines to collect.
The alternate strategy was similar to Flamengo’s ploy that hurt Bayern. Against Arsenal, one of Europe’s best teams out of possession, in the Champions League semi-finals, Vitinha and Joao Neves were once again marked tightly.
While PSG’s midfield all moved into central areas in the November meeting against Bayern, this time, they completely vacate that space, which is filled by Ousmane Dembele.
That drags a centre-back and forward out of the pressing shape, freeing up Joao Neves to receive and pass out wide.
There is also PSG’s suffocating press to be considered. Enrique’s side squeeze teams by pushing forward in unison and remove any inside options, often forcing teams to go long, backwards or risk giving the ball away at the back.
This was on show against Atletico Madrid in their Club World Cup opener in which they won possession back eight times in the attacking third.
This example in the moments prior to one of them details how PSG suffocate teams by positioning players in areas that allow them to cover multiple zones.
Atletico are forced back, and PSG apply the squeeze again. As goalkeeper Jan Oblak receives the pass, Desire Doue curves his run based on Oblak’s body shape to put him off passing down the middle. Senny Mayulu initially jogs towards the expected recipient, Clement Lenglet.
Mayulu closes Lenglet down before he can pass, controls the ball, and wins a corner.
While Bayern’s defence is secure on the ball, they have not faced a press this suffocating so far at the tournament. Their backline and midfield pivot lacks explosive speed, which may be crucial to breaking past the PSG press, so head coach Vincent Kompany will need to find innovative solutions while ensuring Bayern’s press from the front is perfect.
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VBTV to offer free access on World Volleyball Day
VBTV will offer free access to all fans on 7 July 2025 as part of the inaugural World Volleyball Day, giving viewers around the world the chance to watch top competitions including the Volleyball Nations League and the Beach Pro Tour at no cost.
The one-day offer is available through VBTV upon signing up.
World Volleyball Day invites the global volleyball community to unite in celebration of the sport. From beaches and courts to parks and playgrounds, players and fans are encouraged to showcase how volleyball inspires, unites and empowers communities everywhere.
Supporters can also share videos of their favourite moments, best plays or what the sport means to them. By posting with the hashtag #WorldVolleyballDay, fans can take part in the global conversation. Highlights will be shared on Instagram throughout the day.
Fans can also win prizes by uploading their videos here and taking part in the celebration.
In addition, fans can enjoy 10% off all merchandise at the Volleyball World Shop on 7 July only. The discount will be applied automatically at checkout.
For more information, visit World Volleyball Day.
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