Category: 5. Entertainment

  • ‘Completely radical’: how Ms magazine changed the game for women | Documentary films

    ‘Completely radical’: how Ms magazine changed the game for women | Documentary films

    The first of July marks the anniversary of Ms magazine’s official inaugural issue, which hit newsstands in 1972 and featured Wonder Woman on its cover, towering high above a city. Truthfully, Ms debuted months earlier, on 20 December 1971, as a forty-page insert in New York magazine, where founding editor Gloria Steinem was a staff writer. Suspecting this might be their only shot, its founders packed the issue with stories like The Black Family and Feminism, De-Sexing the English Language, and We Have Had Abortions, a list of 53 well-known American women’s signatures, including Anaïs Nin, Susan Sontag, and Steinem herself. The 300,000 available copies sold out in eight days. The first US magazine founded and operated entirely by women was, naysayers be damned, a success.

    The groundbreaking magazine’s history, and its impact on the discourse around second-wave feminism and women’s liberation, is detailed in HBO documentary Dear Ms: A Revolution in Print, which premiered at this year’s Tribeca film festival. Packed with archival footage and interviews with original staff, contributors, and other cultural icons, Dear Ms unfolds across three episodes, each directed by a different film-maker. Salima Koroma, Alice Gu, and Cecilia Aldarondo deftly approach key topics explored by the magazine – domestic violence, workplace harassment, race, sexuality – with care, highlighting the challenges and criticisms that made Ms. a polarizing but galvanizing voice of the women’s movement.

    Before Ms launched, the terms “domestic violence” and “sexual harassment” hadn’t yet entered the lexicon. Women’s legal rights were few, and female journalists were often limited to covering fashion and domesticity. But feminist organizations like Redstockings, the National Organization for Women, and New York Radical Women were forming; Steinem, by then an established writer, was reporting on the women’s liberation movement, of which she was a fundamental part. In Part I of the documentary, Koroma’s A Magazine for all Women, Steinem recalls attending a women’s liberation meeting for New York magazine. Archival footage discloses what was shared there, and other meetings like it: “I had to be subservient to some men,” says one woman, “… and I had to forget, very much, what I might have wanted to be if I had any other choice.”

    The response to Ms was unsurprising, its perspective so collectively needed. “A lot of these articles could still be relevant,” Steinem muses in Part I. But, says the publication’s first editor, Suzanne Braun Levine, “I don’t think we all were prepared for the response. Letters, letters, letters – floods of letters.” Koroma unveils excerpts of those first letters to the editor, vulnerable and intimate: “How bolstering to find that I am not alone with my dissatisfaction that society had dictated roles for me to graduate from and into.” By the time Ms was in operation, the staff was publishing cover stories on Shirley Chisholm, unpaid domestic labor, and workplace sexual harassment. “Who is it you’re trying to reach?” a journalist asks Steinem in an interview back then. She replies: “Everybody.”

    “They tried to be a magazine for all women,” explained Koroma in a recent interview, “and what happens then? You make mistakes, because of the importance of intersectionality.” In an archival audio clip, the writer and activist (and close friend of Steinem’s) Dorothy Pitman Hughes says: “White women have to understand … that sisterhood is almost impossible between us until you’ve understood how you also contribute to my oppression as a Black woman.” Marcia Ann Gillespie, the former editor in chief of Essence and later Ms’s editor in chief, confides to Koroma: “Some of the white women had a one-size-fits-all understanding of what feminism is, that our experiences are all the same. Well, no, they’re not.” Alice Walker, who became an associate editor, shared her own writing and championed others’, like Michele Wallace’s, in the publication’s pages before quitting in 1986, writing about the “swift alienation” she felt due to a lack of diversity.

    Wallace recounts her experience as a Ms cover girl, her braids removed, her face caked in make-up. She adds: “I want to critique [Ms], but they were very supportive of me. I don’t know what would’ve become of me if there hadn’t been a Ms magazine.” She left, too. “I was not comfortable with white women speaking for me.” Levine admits, “We made a mistake,” featuring Black writers but having few Black cover stars and no Black founding staff.

    “The work still needs to be done; we’re always going to have to rethink things,” Koroma says. It’s a running thread in Dear Ms, one that creates a rich and ultimately loving picture of the magazine. “Ms. is a complex and rich protagonist,” Aldarondo reflected. “If you only talk about the good things and not the shadow, that’s a very one-dimensional portrait. One of the things that makes Ms so interesting and admirable is that they wrestled with things in the pages of the magazine.” For Part III, No Comment (named for Ms’s column that called out misogynistic advertising), Aldarondo chronicles its contentious coverage of pornography, which the staff primarily differentiated from erotica as inherently misogynistic, many of them aligning with the Women Against Pornography movement.

    In an episode that opens with unfurling flowers and the words of the delightful porn star, educator, and artist Annie Sprinkle, Aldarondo depicts the violence of the era’s advertising and pornography, and the women who were making – or enjoying – pornography and sex work, proudly and on their own terms. In a response to the 1978 cover story Erotica and Pornography: Do You Know the Difference? Sprinkle and her colleagues, the writers and adult film actors Veronica Vera and Gloria Leonard, led a protest outside the Ms office. The staff hadn’t “invited anyone from our community to come to the table”, says Sprinkle, despite adult film stars’ expertise about an exploitative industry they were choosing to reclaim. “To see these women as fallen women,” says Aldarondo, “completely misses the mark.”

    Suzanne Braun Levine, Gloria Steinem and Letty Cottin Pogrebin. Photograph: HBO

    Behind the scenes, the staff themselves were at odds. Former staff writer Lindsy Van Gelder states: “I knew perfectly good feminists who liked porn. Deal with it.” Contending with the marginalization faced by sex workers, Ms ran Mary Kay Blakely’s cover story, Is One Woman’s Sexuality Another Woman’s Pornography? in 1985. The entire issue was a response to activists Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon’s Model Antipornography Law, which framed pornography as a civil rights violation and which Carole S. Vance, the co-founder of the Feminist Anti-Censorship Task Force, describes in Dear Ms as “a toolkit for the rightwing” that ultimately endangered sex workers. Dworkin, says Vance, refused a dialogue; instead, the magazine printed numerous materials, the words of opposing voices, and the law itself to “reflect, not shape” readers’ views, says founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin. The hate mail was swift – including Dworkin’s, once a staff colleague: “I don’t want anything more to do with Ms – ever.”

    Gu reveals something far more frightening than hate mail, a horror that didn’t make its way into the film: death threats and bomb threats, which the staff received in response to their most controversial stories. “There was actionable change that happened because of what these women did,” says Gu. “The danger they put themselves in is not to be discounted. I get emotional every time I talk about it … I have benefited largely from the work of these women, and I’m very grateful.”

    That actionable change refers to the legislative reforms prompted by Ms’s coverage of domestic violence and workplace harassment. In A Portable Friend, Gu examines the 1975 Men’s Issue, the 1976 Battered Wives Issue, and the 1977 issue on workplace sexual assault. “Back then, there was no terminology if a woman was being hit by her partner at the time,” says Gu. She spotlights heartbreaking archival footage of women sharing their experiences with abuse: “If it’d been a stranger, I would have run away.” Van Gelder herself reflects on the former partner who hit her. “Did you tell anyone?” Gu asks. “Not really.”

    In an archival clip, Barbara Mikulski, former Maryland senator and congresswoman, says: “The first legislation I introduced as a congresswoman was to help battered women. I got that idea listening to the problems of battered women and reading about it in Ms” Adds Levine: “We brought it into the daylight. Then there was the opening for battered women’s shelters, for legislation, for a community that reassured and supported women.” The same idea applied to workplace sexual harassment: “If something doesn’t have a name, you can’t build a response,” Levine exclaims. “The minute it had a name, things took off and changed.”

    Gloria Steinem and staff. Photograph: Jill Freedman/HBO

    Gu shared that while “there’s a little bit of questioning as to whether it was Ms who coined the term [domestic violence], they were certainly the first to bring the term into the public sphere and allow for a discussion”. The Working Women United Institute eventually collaborated with Ms on a speak-out on sexual harassment.

    Despite obstacles, the scholar Dr Lisa Coleman, featured in Part I, describes the publication as one “that was learning”.

    “It’s easy to be critical at first,” says Koroma, “but after talking to the founders, you realize that these women come from a time when you couldn’t have a bank account. It’s so humbling to talk to the women who were there and who are a large part of the reason why I have what I have now.” Gu noted that the lens of the present day can be a foggy one through which to understand Ms — which, in truth, was “completely radical,” she says. “You weren’t going to read about abortion in Good Housekeeping. You have to plant yourself in the shoes of these women at that time.”

    Our elders endured different but no less tumultuous battles than the ones we face now, many of which feel like accelerated, intensified iterations of earlier struggles. “Talk to your moms, to your aunts and grandmas,” Koroma added. Aldarondo agreed: “One of the great pleasures of this project, for all of us, was this intergenerational encounter and getting to hear from our elders. It’s very easy for younger people to simply dismiss what elders are saying. That’s a mistake. I felt like I already understood the issues, and then I learned so much from these women.”

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  • Allies of BBC chief Tim Davie fear latest controversy may damage his leadership | BBC

    Allies of BBC chief Tim Davie fear latest controversy may damage his leadership | BBC

    Allies of Tim Davie fear a mounting list of problems could affect his leadership of the BBC for weeks to come, as Labour continues to press the corporation over its livestreaming of Bob Vylan’s Glastonbury performance.

    Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, is understood to have presented BBC executives with a list of questions about the handling of the event at a meeting on Tuesday. It comes after Bobby Vylan, whose real name is Pascal Robinson-Foster, one of the punk-rap duo, led chants of “Death, death to the IDF”, referring to the Israel Defense Forces, on Saturday.

    Ministers want to know how the BBC deems an event suitable for a live stream, as well as who has the final say on cutting a feed. Similar questions were also submitted to the broadcaster by the Commons culture select committee.

    Davie has come under increased pressure since it emerged he was at the festival on Saturday evening and was informed about the events that unfolded on stage. He decided the performance should not feature in any further BBC coverage, but it remained on the iPlayer service for several hours.

    It is understood that there were technical obstacles to removing the content from the platform once it had been broadcast, with no instant way of removing it.

    However, those sympathetic to Davie now fear a series of other problems could further destabilise the corporation. Nandy has already turned her fire on the BBC director general, stating that one editorial error was “something that must be gripped. When you have several, it becomes a problem of leadership”.

    Bob Vylan frontman, Bobby Vylan, crowd surfs during his performance on the West Holts Stage, during the Glastonbury festival. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA

    On Wednesday, Channel 4 will broadcast a documentary about the plight of medics in Gaza that was dropped by the BBC, which said showing the film “risked creating a perception of partiality”. The film has significant support among BBC staff.

    Meanwhile, a report on the making of another Gaza documentary is expected within weeks. The BBC pulled the programme How to Survive a Warzone in February after it emerged its 13-year-old narrator was the son of a Hamas official.

    It is also awaiting the outcome of an inquiry into allegations of inappropriate behaviour by the MasterChef presenter Gregg Wallace. While the investigation has been ordered by Banijay UK, MasterChef’s production company, it could have implications for the BBC.

    Wallace’s lawyers have said it is entirely false that he engages in behaviour of a sexually harassing nature.

    Sources said the BBC board would also be alarmed at the events at Glastonbury and the backlash since. “The danger is not the optics of this single issue, but the three or four things coming down the road,” said a source. “It’s just whether these things get seen through a leadership prism.”

    The viewing numbers of the Bob Vylan performance on the live stream were understood to have been low, with the West Holts stage they appeared on experiencing the lowest demand of all five live streams – though the corporation has not given an exact figure. Nevertheless, clips of the performance were soon widely shared on social media.

    There has been significant fallout for the band. Avon and Somerset police are investigating their performance, as well as that of Irish rap group Kneecap, who appeared directly after Bob Vylan and led chants of “Free Palestine”. Kneecap’s set was not livestreamed.

    Bob Vylan have had their US visas withdrawn ahead of a planned tour. The band said they had been “targeted for speaking up” over Gaza, adding: “Silence is not an option.”

    “Today, a good many people would have you believe a punk band is the number one threat to world peace,” they said in a statement online. “We are not for the death of Jews, Arabs or any other race or group of people.

    “[We] are not the story. We are a distraction from the story. And whatever sanctions we receive will be a distraction. The government doesn’t want us to ask why they remain silent in the face of this atrocity? To ask why they aren’t doing more to stop the killing? To feed the starving?”

    Sir Ephraim Mirvis, the UK’s chief rabbi, said the event was a “national shame”. He wrote on X: “The airing of vile Jew-hatred at Glastonbury and the BBC’s belated and mishandled response, brings confidence in our national broadcaster’s ability to treat antisemitism seriously to a new low.

    “It should trouble all decent people that now, one need only couch their outright incitement to violence and hatred as edgy political commentary, for ordinary people to not only fail to see it for what it is, but also to cheer it, chant it and celebrate it. Toxic Jew-hatred is a threat to our entire society.”

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  • Kitakami Unmasked in Pokémon Horizons: Season 2—The Search for Laqua

    Kitakami Unmasked in Pokémon Horizons: Season 2—The Search for Laqua

    The first season of Pokémon Horizons: The Series featured the debut of the Paldea region in the Pokémon animated TV series. Many beloved settings originally introduced in the Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet games, like Cabo Poco and Artazon Gym, shone brightly as a backdrop of the Rising Volt Tacklers’ adventures.

    In Pokémon Horizons: Season 2—The Search for Laqua, the journey continues with the animation debut of the stunning land of Kitakami. Fans of Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet will recognize several key Paldea and Kitakami locations from the games, while fans of the Pokémon Gold and Pokémon Silver games will be delighted for a glimpse of jaunty Johto. Here are six locations visited by Liko, Roy, and Dot over the course of Season 2 that you can also find in the video games!

    We got a brief glimpse of Naranja Academy in Season 1 after the Brave Olivine first arrived in Paldea. But with Liko, Roy, and Dot enrolling in Tera Training at Naranja Academy, we finally get a deeper dive into the school that plays such a major role in Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet. Unlike the video games, where the player is enrolled as a full-time student, Liko, Roy, and Dot are temporary additions to the student population. But there’s still plenty of fun to be had at Naranja Academy, especially in the schoolyard, where the real action (battling) happens.

    It’s always exciting to catch a glimpse of Pokémon Gym Leaders and their Gyms in the animation after seeing them in the video games, and seeing Cortondo Gym Leader Katy is no exception. Of course, Liko, Roy, and Dot are also drawn to Patisserie Soapberry, the bakery that sells the sweet treats made by Katy. Between the thrill of battling a Gym Leader and the mouthwatering appeal of snacking on expertly made desserts, Cortondo is an undeniably appealing location in the animation and the video games.

    Roy suggests visiting Paldea’s Highest Peak as a method of cheering up Liko, who has suffered a crushing defeat in a Pokémon battle. And to Roy’s credit, Liko is eventually enthralled by the incredible views of the Paldea region…even if the Trainers did have to hike to the summit of Glaseado Mountain to get there. But if you happen to be playing Pokémon Scarlet or Pokémon Violet, you can visit Paldea’s Highest Peak via Flying Taxi. In fact, you can reach each of the Ten Sights of Paldea via Flying Taxi, from the sunny Secluded Beach to the intense Fury Falls, as long as you’ve visited them at least once before.

    The Rising Volt Tacklers finally arrive in Kitakami, where they find themselves enjoying the magic of a harvest festival at Kitakami Hall. Decked out in festive attire, the Rising Volt Tacklers gleefully embrace everything the festival has to offer, from delicious food stalls to challenging games. Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet players might recognize the colorful celebration, although it happens to be called the Festival of Masks in the video games. Whatever you prefer to call it, Kitakami Hall is a happening destination in both the animation and video games.

    Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet boast 23 unique biomes with different types of Pokémon appearing in each. The bamboo forest biome occurs in both Paldea and Kitakami, filled with lush vegetation. In the animation, Liko, Roy, and Dot have an intense showdown with Kleavor, who lures the trio into a bamboo thicket to gain the advantage in its battle against them. Kleavor cleverly uses the sound generated within the unique environment to avoid attacks from opposing Pokémon, proving that there’s more to the bamboo biomes than pretty scenery.

    After adventuring across Kitakami, the Rising Volt Tacklers find themselves in Olivine City in Johto, which happens to be Ludlow’s hometown. The Brave Olivine is docked beside the iconic Olivine Lighthouse. The striking structure doesn’t play a major role in this episode of the animation, but if you happened to play Pokémon Gold or Pokémon Silver, you might recall that this was where the player first met Jasmine, the Olivine Gym Leader. Jasmine was at the lighthouse caring for an Ampharos named Amphy, who served as the lighthouse’s beacon.

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  • Jennifer Aniston to star in Jennette McCurdy’s ‘I’m Glad My Mom Died’

    Jennifer Aniston to star in Jennette McCurdy’s ‘I’m Glad My Mom Died’

    Jennifer Aniston will star in the series adaptation of Jennette McCurdy’s bestselling memoir, “I’m Glad My Mom Died.”

    The book, published in 2022, details McCurdy’s time as a child actor on Nickelodeon and her fraught relationship with her mother, who died in 2013. The 10-episode Apple TV+ dramedy “will center on the codependent relationship between an 18-year-old actress in a hit kid’s show and her narcissistic mother who relishes in her identity as ‘a starlet’s mother,’” per the logline. Aniston will play the mother.

    McCurdy, who starred in Nickelodeon’s “iCarly” and “Sam & Cat,” is writing, executive producing and showrunning the Apple TV+ series with Ari Katcher, best known for “Ramy.” Aniston, who currently stars in the Apple TV+ series “The Morning Show” alongside Reese Witherspoon, is also an executive producer.

    “I’m Glad My Mom Died” spent more than 80 weeks on the New York Times Best Sellers list and sold 3 million-plus copies.

    In addition to chronicling her troubled relationship with her mom, McCurdy describes her experience with a man she calls “the Creator.” She alleges that he pressured her to drink while underage and gave her massages, and that Nickelodeon offered her hush money to not talk about her experiences. Notably, McCurdy did not return for the “iCarly” reboot in 2021.

    The 2024 docuseries “Quiet on Set: The Dark Side of Kids TV” detailed the alleged abuse and discrimination behind some of Nickelodeon’s most beloved shows, such as “All That,” “The Amanda Show” and “iCarly,” including at the hands of prolific TV creator Dan Schneider.

    Aniston will return for Season 4 of “The Morning Show” on Sept. 17. She was nominated for an Emmy last year for her role as Alex Levy in the show.

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  • BTS plots comeback with new album and tour in 2026

    BTS plots comeback with new album and tour in 2026

    BTS is back.

    Having each completed their country’s mandatory military service, the members of the hugely popular Korean boy band said Tuesday that they were starting work on a new album and would tour next year.

    The announcement came in a livestream on the Weverse platform in which the group’s seven members — Jin, Suga, J-Hope, RM, Jimin, V and Jung Kook — appeared together for the first time since 2022. According to a representative, the livestream was viewed by more than 7.3 million people.

    “We’ll be releasing a new BTS album in the spring of next year,” the group said in a statement. “Starting in July, all seven of us will begin working closely together on new music. Since it will be a group album, it will reflect each member’s thoughts and ideas. We’re approaching the album with the same mindset we had when we first started.” The members added that they were planning a “massive world tour” to accompany the new album.

    BTS’s most recent LP, “Proof,” came out in June 2022; the band last performed in October of that year in Busan, South Korea. Each member has released solo material since then, including Jung Kook’s song “Seven,” which topped the Billboard Hot 100 in 2023, and RM’s “Right Place, Wrong Person,” which reached No. 5 on Billboard’s album chart last year.

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  • Ivysaur Wearing a Party Hat Debuts in Pokémon GO’s Ninth Anniversary Event

    Ivysaur Wearing a Party Hat Debuts in Pokémon GO’s Ninth Anniversary Event

    Pokémon GO is celebrating its anniversary, and you’re invited to the 9th Anniversary Party from July 1 at 10:00 a.m. to July 6, 2025, at 8:00 p.m. local time! New costumed Pokémon debut, and there will be unique bonuses each day of the event. Ivysaur and Venusaur came dressed to the nines with party hats. Trainers might also find Gimmighoul holding a 9th anniversary coin—if they’re lucky, they may even encounter a Shiny one! Trainers might also find 9, 99, or even more Gimmighoul Coins when they spin a PokéStop with a Golden Lure Module.

    The fun doesn’t stop there. Event bonuses include an increased chance to become Lucky Friends, an increased chance to get Lucky Pokémon in trades, and friendship levels increasing faster than usual. PokéStops may turn gold without a Golden Lure Module, and Trainers will have an increased chance of encountering Shiny Pikachu wearing a cake hat and Shiny Eevee wearing a party hat from raids.

    The party keeps going—check out these event bonuses for certain days of the event.

    • July 1 at 10:00 a.m. to July 3, 2025, at 10:00 a.m. local time: 1/2 Egg Hatch Distance

    • July 3 at 10:00 a.m. to July 5, 2025, at 10:00 a.m. local time: 2× XP for catching Pokémon

    • July 5 at 10:00 a.m. to July 6, 2025, at 10:00 a.m. local time: 2× Stardust for catching Pokémon

    The following Pokémon will be partying—er, appearing—more frequently in the wild.

    • Bulbasaur wearing a party hat

    • Charmander wearing a party hat

    • Squirtle wearing a party hat

    If you’re lucky, you may even encounter a Shiny one!

    The following Pokémon will appear in one-star raids, and they might just be Shiny.

    Event-themed Field Research tasks will be available throughout the entire event period, so don your party hats and get ready to research! Completing Field Research tasks can earn you items and encounters with event-themed Pokémon—including Gimmighoul holding a 9th anniversary coin.

    Both free and paid Timed Research opportunities will be available. Free Timed Research rewards include XP, Stardust, and encounters with event-themed Pokémon, including Bulbasaur wearing a party hat, Wobbuffet wearing a party hat, Gimmighoul holding a 9th anniversary coin, and more!

    Paid Timed Research is available for US$1.99 (or the equivalent pricing tier in your local currency), and rewards include a Super Incubator, a Max Mushroom, an encounter with Gimmighoul holding a 9th anniversary coin, and more! The rewards for Timed Research expire, so be sure you complete the tasks and claim your rewards before Sunday, July 6, 2025, at 8:00 p.m. local time.

    If you want a party favor for a friend, you can purchase and gift tickets to any of your Pokémon GO friends that you’re Great Friends or higher with.

    For US$4.99 (or the equivalent pricing tier in your local currency), you can pick up a Masterwork Research story, Wish Granted, which leads to an encounter with Shiny Jirachi. Ticket holders who open Pokémon GO at any point during the ninth anniversary event will gain access to the Masterwork Research story, which they can then complete at any time.

    If you have already obtained the Masterwork Research story Wish Granted, you will not be able to purchase it again. However, Trainers who purchase this Masterwork Research story or have previously received the Masterwork Research: Wish Granted can enjoy the following bonuses for the duration of the event.

    Here’s to another great year, Trainers!

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  • Six night-defining moments from Black Coffee’s residency in 2025

    Six night-defining moments from Black Coffee’s residency in 2025

    Afro House titan, Black Coffee, has returned to Hï Ibiza for the 8th year, reaffirming his status as one of the island’s most powerful musical forces. We went along to investigate the magic behind the world’s number-one club’s very first resident – a title he’s carried with consistent class, curation, and cultural influence since the club opened its doors – to find out what tunes are burning up his dancefloor this summer.


    Sunrise Generation (feat. Fink) [Meera Remix] | Damien Lazarus | Crosstown Rebels

    Paying homage to Lazarus in the club room next door, Black Coffee announced his arrival in a blizzard of gold confetti, unleashing this hypnotic blend of tribal percussion, floaty melodic lines, and ethereal vocals. Meera’s remix transforms Lazarus’s original into a shamanic groove — cinematic, immersive, and deeply transportive.


    Like Dat (Ape Drums Remix) | MAAURA & Danidane | Klub Record

    Ape Drums injects this one with a pulsing buzz-saw lead and a high-octane swagger. The hook, “like dat, like dat” — loops like a mantra while razor-sharp percussion keeps the momentum. It’s stripped back, percussive, and built for late-night chaos, it absolutely lit up the crowd!


    Innerbloom (Imad & Denis Louvra Remix) | Rufus Du Sol | Sweat It Out!

    A personal favourite, and easily one of the most recognisable moments of the night. The Imad & Dennis Louvra remix delivered a delicate yet driving rework, lush pads, stripped-back grooves, and just the right emotional pull. Familiar, hands in the air, yet refreshing, it gave the dancefloor a collective goosebump-inducing and euphoric moment as the iconic lead synth swept the room.


    Riviera | OBESTÄLLT | Sven Records

    A slice of feel-good euphoria, Riviera rolls in with bouncy piano chords, a punchy kick, and irresistible groove. Strings glide in and build up with perfect timing, adding a lift without losing the track’s dancefloor focus. It’s crisp, confident, and got bodies moving, a no-frills, feel-good house cut with serious replay value.


    Trippy Yeah | Jimi Jules & Black Coffee | Innervisions

    Another late-night groover with a hypnotic edge. Trippy Yeah moves with intent, led by a gritty sawtooth synth and stripped-back percussion. A staple of many of Black Coffee’s sets, the drop doesn’t explode, but subtly distorts and deepens, pulling you further into the track’s atmosphere.


    Yamore (FNX Omar Remix) | MoBlack, Salif Keïta, Cesária Évora, Benja (NL), Franc Fala | MoBlack Records

    FNX Omar’s remix transforms the original into a spacious and immersive soundscape, blending shimmering textures with evolving melodies and precise, rhythmic loops. The track balances a bittersweet mood with reflective tones, inviting listeners into a deeply emotional and meditative experience. Pulsing basslines and dynamic shifts carry the mix forward, creating a powerful yet intimate journey for those of us knee-deep in the groove.


    If you need your annual fix of Black Coffee’s magic, scroll down to find out who will be joining him for the remainder of this season.

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  • this meaty restaurant drama is still an enticing bingeable prospect

    this meaty restaurant drama is still an enticing bingeable prospect

    Take a soupçon of identity crisis, a pinch of perfectionism, a scoop of burnout and mix thoroughly with a large measure of fraternal grief and sear over a hot grill and voilà! You have The Bear, a perfectly blended drama about a chef on the edge, driven by relentless ambition and exacting standards as he turns his family’s humble sandwich shop into a fine-dining restaurant.

    This intoxicating family drama was eaten up by critics and audiences alike in 2022, its first season garnering a rare perfect 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes, the subsequent two reaching scores of 99% and 89% respectively. It’s certainly a hard act to follow for season four.

    The first ten minutes of The Bear’s pilot episode thrillingly defined what was to come in high-octane style and scene-setting detail. The first season delivered a clever mix of authentic dialogue and setting, relatable family dysfunction and dynamic production style.

    Showstopping scenes of stressful kitchen heat were served up alongside a delectable range of new and established talent in the form of Jeremy Allen White (Carmy), Ebon Moss-Bachrach (Richie), Ayo Edebiri (Sydney) and Oliver Platt (Cicero/Uncle Jimmy).


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    In charge is showrunner Christopher Storer, who came up with the concept after being inspired by his friend’s father Chris Zucchero, the owner of Chicago sandwich joint Mr Beef.

    With his professional chef sister also serving as a consultant, Storer succeeded in creating a deliciously authentic and intensely real drama. Buoyed along the way by 21 Emmys and five Golden Globes, Storer also watched his cast ascend, the tortured-soul performance of White garnering particular praise.

    Testing the parameters of a long-running show, Storer focused in on the entire cast of characters and their backstories, a successful tactic used by shows such as Orange is the New Black to keep the drama – largely confined to a kitchen set – fresh.

    Pulling in Hollywood die-hards Oliver Platt and Jamie Lee Curtis for familial tough-love roles further enriched the mix, often using a non-chronological timeframe to go back to moments of family turbulence and tension. This made for three-dimensional characters and enabled evolution around difficult themes such as the aftermath of suicide and generational trauma.

    The Bear has come a long way in three seasons, starting with a spit and sawdust establishment serving up the lunchtime beef sandwiches for its working customers.

    Carmy’s experience and longing for the high-end restaurant of his dreams hurtled forward in season two, as he sent his core crew off in different directions to hone their skills and help form his vision. A restaurant trying to win success but plagued with challenges, there were exhausting familial tensions embedded in every episode of season three.

    Several themes play out in The Bear: love, family, loyalty, community and purpose. The relationship between Carmy and cousin Richie (not a real cousin, but a term of endearment) is key to linking past and future. Richie provides some of the highlights of comedy and pathos as he spits truth bombs, most frequently at talented sous-chef Syd.

    It is Syd who follows Carmy’s aspirations for gastronomic perfection but can’t abide the lack of order or the intense highs and lows that inevitably go hand in hand with his talent. And this is one central question to consider for the latest series: just how long will the audience remain loyal to Carmy and his endless quest for artistry in a high-failure rate industry?

    It’s all in the sauce

    Storer begins season four with a ghost. Carmy and his dead brother Mikey (Jon Berthal) banter in a seven-minute scene, with Carmy ultimately confiding the dream of a restaurant as Mikey watches him make tomato sauce (“too much garlic”). The tomatoes resonate: Mikey left behind money hidden in tomato cans that ended up saving Carmy’s sanity and his dream of a proper restaurant.

    Just as oranges represent death to Frances Ford Coppola, Storer uses tomatoes to underscore themes; here they symbolise familial loyalty and history, a solid base to a meal, a core ingredient. Mikey was one of the core ingredients in Carmy’s life, and now he’s gone.

    A young black woman chef standing at a stove looking watchful and nervous.
    Ayo Edebiri as Sydney Carmy’s second in command who’s trying to counter the highs and lows of The Bear’s kitchen.
    Album / Alamy

    Carmy awakens to a rerun of Groundhog Day on late-night TV and fittingly, we too are back – same dish, now more seasoned and enriched with its core ingredients and ready to serve up a big bowlful of family, love, ambition, strife and grief.

    The episode furthers the theme of loyalty as the restaurant receives The Tribune’s review – the cliffhanger of the season three finale. Naturally, Storer doesn’t let up – the food critic highlights “dissonance” and Carmy is back in emotional chaos, with Syd urging him to lighten up and lose the misery.

    In truth, this series could do with adding some more humour in the mix; the teasing and frivolous banter of season one has got somewhat lost in the seasons that followed.

    Storer ramps up the tension, setting several ticking clocks in place: chiefly Uncle Jimmy’s notice period for the business to turn a profit is literally installed on a digital clock in the kitchen. Then Syd’s headhunter calls, offering her desired autonomy and an exit strategy from the chaos.

    And Carmy raises the stakes with an intention to gain a Michelin star. Thus a heroic journey is set in place for the whole cast, with future battles both internal and external laid out.

    There’s too much going on at this feast and the feeling of being stuffed full of story is tangible by the end of the first episode. Still, with a season lining up more emotional turbulence steered by White, more celebrity cameos (Brie Larson and Rob Reiner are lined up) and the excellent cinematography and performances that we have come to expect, Storer stirs his secret sauce.

    The Bear still offers an entertaining and enticing proposition, bingeable and mostly satisfying.

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  • Cancelled Liverpool Pride 2025 back on after charity steps in

    Cancelled Liverpool Pride 2025 back on after charity steps in

    Laura O’Neill

    BBC News, Liverpool

    BBC Pride parade goers with angel wings in the style of the rainbow flag.
BBC

    The event has become a popular part of Liverpool’s annual party calendar

    Liverpool’s annual Pride celebrations are back on after a charity stepped in to run the event, which was cancelled last month amid financial pressures.

    Original organisers LCR Pride Foundation said it was “with great sadness” the 26 July party and parade would not go ahead due to rising costs and difficulty securing funding.

    Sahir House, the city’s oldest LGBTQ+ charity, now said it had “stepped up” to run the event after widespread disappointment.

    “Thanks to the passion, determination and sheer graft of local artists, activists, organisations and allies, we’ve turned things around to make Pride happen,” the charity said.

    “This year, we’re proudly calling it Liverpool’s Pride – with an apostrophe and an ‘s’ – because this Pride belongs to all of us.

    “It’s Liverpool’s moment to come together, celebrate loudly, protest proudly, and reclaim our Pride with love, resilience and joy.”

    ‘Organisational challenges’

    In a statement on its website, LCR Pride Foundation said it had “listened to the community” and was “pausing to take a breath” and let another group step in to take things forward after a “myriad” of stumbling blocks with this year’s event planning.

    At the time the event was cancelled, it said: “In recent months the charity has faced significant financial and organisational challenges, which have impacted timescales and resulted in it reverting to an almost entirely volunteer-led operation.

    “This, combined with rising costs and difficulty securing national and local funding, has made it impossible to bring Pride in Liverpool to the city this year.

    “We are devastated we will not be able to march together this year, at a time when coming together to stand in solidarity, protest and celebration is needed more than ever, and we understand how difficult this will be for our community.”

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  • Katy Perry Cries at Australia Concert Amid Orlando Bloom Split

    Katy Perry Cries at Australia Concert Amid Orlando Bloom Split

    The singer cried while thanking the crowd for “always being there” for her before closing out the set with “Firework”

    Less than two weeks before Katy Perry kicked off the Lifetimes Tour, the singer was relentlessly criticized for taking an 11-minute trip into suborbital space, where she attempted to reveal the tour setlist. Still, she powered through the criticism while completing the first North American leg of the tour. In June, she headed to Australia for a 15-date run that concluded with an emotional address to the crowd as she weathers an entirely different hardship: her split from Orlando Bloom.

    “Thank you for always being there for me, Australia. It means the world,” Perry said at the Adelaide Entertainment Centre, her voice slightly cracking. After blinking away the tears, she added, “Now let’s sing ‘Firework.’”

    The moment seemed reminiscent of a scene in her 2012 documentary Part of Me, when she broke down backstage over the dissolution of her marriage to then-husband Russell Brand. Given the option to cancel the show or put her best foot forward, Perry put on a smile and emerged from the stage to perform “Teenage Dream.”

    Reports of Perry’s split from Bloom surfaced last week. Days later, it was reported that the couple ended their engagement after nine years together. Neither have publicly addressed the breakup, which was confirmed by People and first reported by TMZ. Perry and Bloom briefly split in 2017, but reunited one year later. They announced their engagement in 2019. In August 2020, the couple welcomed their daughter, Daisy Dove.

    Trending Stories

    People reported that Perry and Bloom’s relationship had been “breaking down the last couple of months and isn’t looking good,” after the singer was “stressed” about the reception of her album 143. “Perry seems aware of her unmoored state on 143, but that doesn’t stop her from trying to reclaim the cultural spot that she had in in the late ‘00s and early ‘10s through tricks — cheap if hooky affirmations, broad appeals to the male gaze — that worked back then,” Rolling Stone wrote in a review of the record.

    The Lifetimes Tour will resume in North America on July 10 with a show in Denver. The tour is scheduled to run through early December. Perry will perform in South America, Europe, and Asia for a total of 89 shows.

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