Category: 5. Entertainment

  • Oasis drone display appears above Principality Stadium ahead of Cardiff gig

    Oasis drone display appears above Principality Stadium ahead of Cardiff gig

    Illuminated drones were flown above the Principality Stadium to create the Oasis logo

    A large drone display showing the classic Oasis logo appeared above Cardiff’s Principality Stadium on Wednesday night ahead of the band’s heavily anticipated reunion tour.

    Illuminated drones were flown in formation to produce the logo against the night sky.

    The one-night display has added to the buzz as Liam and Noel Gallagher prepare to kick off their 41-gig reunion tour with two nights at the Welsh stadium on Friday and Saturday.

    It has been almost 16 years since Oasis last performed live following their dramatic split in 2009 after a backstage bust-up.

    @Joey2Steezy Noel Gallagher on a platform at Cardiff Central Railway Station. He is wearing a black, collared T-shirt and black sunglasses with clear frames. There are three unidentifiable people around him as he walks through a crowd and white brick walls are behind him@Joey2Steezy

    Fans spotted Noel Gallagher arriving in Cardiff by train on Tuesday

    After kicking off with two nights in Cardiff, Oasis will head to Manchester for five nights before moving on to London, Edinburgh and Dublin.

    The band will then fly to Toronto, Canada, to begin the international leg of their tour.

    The band’s last studio album, Dig Out Your Soul, was released in October 2008 just months before a backstage row at Paris’ Rock en Seine festival.

    Oasis split and years of public feuding between Noel and Liam followed, but last August the brothers announced they would be making a comeback.

    The display on Thursday night came two days after Noel chose to arrive in the city by train, sparking surprise among his fellow commuters.

    A graphic showing an aerial view of Cardiff's city centre with the gig's key locations and the roads that are going to close. The Principality Stadium and Cardiff Central Station have been labelled in red. Scott Road, Wood Street, Park Street, St Mary Street, Castle Street and Westgate Street have been labelled in white. All the streets have been coloured in according to their closing times.

    A full Cardiff city centre road closure will be enforced from 12:00 BST until midnight

    Cardiff council said there would be a full road closure around the stadium on both 4 and 5 July from 12:00 noon until midnight.

    The affected roads are Duke Street, Castle Street, High Street, St Mary Street, Caroline Street, Wood Street, Central Square, Westgate Street, Quay Street, Guildhall Place, Golate, and Havelock Street.

    The council said Scott Road and Park Street would also be closed from 07:00.

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  • The Sussex sommelier! Meghan Markle announces an exciting update following the launch of her sell-out rosé

    The Sussex sommelier! Meghan Markle announces an exciting update following the launch of her sell-out rosé

    Meghan went as far as to suggest that ‘a scarcity mentality at the beginning might be a hook for people,’ comparing sell-out products to ‘a sneaker drop’. However, she emphasised that in terms of long-term customer experience, it’s not ideal. ‘I don’t want you to eat that jam once every six months. I want that to be on your shelf all the time,’ she said. In an interview with business magazine Fast Company in May, Meghan hinted that while she might restock the As Ever website soon, any new launches would be months away – in the first quarter of 2026, at least.

    The Duchess has certainly kept fans on their toes, however: just days weeks later, she made a swift U-turn, announcing on Instagram that the brand’s products would be replenished, alongside new launches. ‘To all who’ve been wondering and waiting, thank you!’ she wrote. ‘Your favourites are returning, plus a few NEW things we can’t wait to show you. Coming this month… get excited!’ The rosé is the latest in that line of new products, and it seems that Meghan’s fans just can’t get enough.


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  • If You Like Zohran Mamdani, You’re Going to Love His Dad

    If You Like Zohran Mamdani, You’re Going to Love His Dad

    After years of becoming accustomed to the taste of defeat, perhaps even starting to enjoy it, the Anglosphere left is on the verge of seizing power in the epicentre of global capitalism. When Zohran Mamdani clinched victory in the Democratic primary for mayor of New York, it marked more than just a stunning upset of the establishment candidate Andrew Cuomo and the most well-financed super PAC in the city’s political history. It was offered a model of politics that could capture the imagination of the disenfranchised, disillusioned and destitute masses of Europe and North America who have found their cost of living squeezed beyond all limits ever since the 2008 financial crisis. Mamdani’s politics and persona synthesised a tech-savvy, cosmopolitan western millennial and a tradition long marginalised in the Anglosphere: one rooted in the postcolonial interrogation of power, citizenship and material justice.

    In his victory, here was a representative of this much maligned generation of the millennial left turning away from the safe confines of liberal identity representation toward a politics of economic redistribution, equality of citizenry and international solidarity with victims of colonial violence like the people of Gaza. Here is his father’s son.

    Mamdani is not just a member of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). He is also the son of the influential Ugandan scholar Mahmood Mamdani. And whilst we shouldn’t reduce anyone to their parents, there is a line that connects Mahmood’s writings on the limits of liberal platitudes of representation in the postcolonial state to his son’s successful pushing of the millennial left beyond a politics of representation into material concerns like rent freezes, universal childcare, free public transport and publicly owned grocery stores. Viewing Zohran through the lens offered by Mahmood’s work, we can glimpse what the 20th-century postcolonial tradition still has to offer a 21st century in which life, even in the imperial metropolis, has become virtually unliveable for the majority.

    Mahmood Mamdani is best understood as part of an older postcolonial tradition somewhat forgotten in recent years as “decolonisation” became the buzzword, mainly used to describe diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) initiatives, representation in popular culture and endless arguments about individual experiences of identity. Mamdani Sr instead follows other postcolonial writers like Walter Rodney, Michael Manley or Kwame Nkrumah, who saw political freedom for the global majority as hollow without economic justice.

    In his landmark book Neither Settler Nor Native, Mahmood argues that the foundational violence of the modern state is the binary of citizen and subject. Mahmood argued that this binary was crystallised by colonialism, which relegated vast swathes of the global population to subjects with no rights or sovereignty. The postcolonial state, Mahmood argues, continued to be structured along the lines of this systemic exclusion unless it dismantled the architecture it inherited from its colonial predecessors. This created permanent minorities, and the inability to constitute a new political imaginary that Mamdani Sr saw as crippling the postcolonial state. Particularly incisive was Mamdani’s critique of South Africa’s move beyond apartheid. Whilst the rest of the world was dancing with Nelson Mandela and falling in love with the romanticism of the rainbow nation, Mamdani warned that in its rush to move on from a period of intense racial violence, post-apartheid South Africa was minimising the importance of addressing material harm to celebrate symbolic reconciliation. When it came to South Africa’s much-lauded Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC), Mamdani saw its focus on a Christian ethics of forgiveness, compassion and absolution as a material failure that allowed those who got rich off apartheid to keep their wealth as long as they apologised: “It [the TRC] identified the victims of South Africa’s conflict but didn’t focus its energies on tracking down the beneficiaries of the violence.”

    The TRC, for all its moral symbolism and global acclaim, delivered what Mahmood Mamdani called “a diminished truth”. In its eagerness to inaugurate a new era of peace, the Commission narrowed the parameters of truth-seeking. It focused almost exclusively on investigating acts that were illegal under apartheid – torture, extrajudicial killings, and other direct forms of state violence – but left untouched the legal but equally devastating apparatus of forced removals, land dispossession and economic exploitation. South Africa changed the laws of racial segregation but left intact the economic structures that had produced and sustained it.

    This is the crucial insight that Mamdani Sr brought to the analysis, not just of post-apartheid South Africa but of the postcolonial state in general: that justice cannot end with liberal representation or recognition of harms. It must continue into the realm of redistribution. It must look at how society divides those who belong from those who don’t – not just through overt political violence, but through economic structures that appear neutral, legal, even benevolent.

    It is this lineage that Zohran Mamdani taps into, consciously or not. His campaign was not about adding one more brown face to the managerial class. It was not about securing a “seat at the table” or breaking a “glass ceiling.” It was about transforming the table itself. His policies are not just bold. They are, in a deeply Mamdanian sense, attempts to reconstitute the very terms of citizenship. Who gets to live in the city? Who gets to belong? Who gets to flourish?

    By echoing the postcolonial tradition of his father for the new millennium, Zohran Mamdani is not just the anti-Trump. He is also the anti-Obama. Obama was always keen to fold his story into the triumphalist promise of the American dream, distancing himself from any suggestion that he sought to challenge the given structures of the land of the free. Obama’s narrative was America’s apotheosis: finally, even the Black man could be included in the American dream. Mamdani Jr is telling his audience to wake up – the dream isn’t real. Obama often stressed that he wasn’t anything as scary as a Muslim or a socialist he was accused of being. Mamdani Jr is both, and embraces it. Obama used the story of his African father to craft a narrative of individual uplift, a personal ascent from the “dreams of my father” to the country’s highest office through personal excellence. Mamdani Jr uses the story of his African father to situate himself in a tradition of collective struggle and political critique. In doing so, Zohran Mamdani reactivates a decolonial grammar of justice that, in the west, has been buried under the rubble of liberal multiculturalism and corporate diversity schemes.

    What Zohran Mamdani shows is that the tradition his father represents – a postcolonial critique that is sceptical of moralism, wary of elite consensus, attentive to material structures – is not necessarily an anachronism, but can be a blueprint for the future. Zohran understands how to use social media to spread Mahmood’s critique beyond the classroom or conference: that the project of decolonisation was not about dividing society into the righteous and the wrong, but about imagining a different kind of society altogether.

    As we teeter on the edge of ecological collapse, fascism and economic despair, the Anglosphere left must ask itself whether it wants to shore up a dying system or build something new. In Zohran Mamdani’s victory, we see the first serious effort in a long time to do the latter.

    Kojo Koram is a reader in law at Birkbeck College, University of London and the author of Uncommon Wealth: Britain and the Aftermath of Empire.

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  • Fans say CD copies of Virgin don’t work

    Fans say CD copies of Virgin don’t work

    Getty Images Singer Lorde wears a white t-shirt and trousers in front of a turquoise curtain on-stage. She's holding a microphone and smiling.Getty Images

    Lorde recently performed a not-so-secret set at Glastonbury

    Fans of singer Lorde say copies of her latest album won’t work in CD players.

    Virgin, the newest release from the New Zealand-born star, came out last Friday, the same day as a “secret” Glastonbury performance.

    Lorde fan Max tells BBC Newsbeat they pre-ordered a copy of the CD version, which comes on a transparent disc.

    But when they put it into their stereo system, it didn’t work.

    Record Label Universal Music Group (UMG) has been approached for comment.

    CDs, or compact discs, usually have a printed side and a shiny side, which reflects lasers used by CD players to read the data they contain.

    Max, who uses gender-neutral pronouns, says the clear CD looks “really cool”.

    “I’m all for it being an aesthetic thing,” they say.

    Max realised they might not be the only one having an issue when they shared their experience online.

    “I thought I’ll record a Tiktok about it and it’s got 200k views,” says Max.

    “So I was like, maybe it isn’t just me.”

    Some fans have been able to get the CD to work.

    One, writing on Reddit, said: “It plays on my Playstation, so the CD does work.”

    Max Gowers A hand holds a transparent CD in front of the camera. In the background, the green grass of a garden is visible, and can also be seen through the CD itself.Max Gowers

    X-ray vision: Max says the CD is completely see-through

    Transparency is a recurring theme where Virgin, Lorde’s fourth studio album, is concerned.

    The CD album artwork shows an X-ray of a pelvis, believed to be the singer’s, with a contraceptive “coil” visible in the image.

    While the vinyl version features a photo of a woman, also thought to be Lorde, wearing see-through trousers.

    While Max appreciates Lorde’s commitment to the theme, they are also frustrated.

    “I don’t buy CDs to look at them, I buy them to play,” says Max.

    “It’s just frustrating buying something and then it not just working straight out of the box.

    “I just think that this wasn’t very well planned.”

    Lorde previously shunned a CD release for her 2021 album Solar Power, citing environmental concerns, although she says copies of Virgin use recyclable materials.

    Max says Univeral Music Group’s support team offered a return when they got in touch with the label.

    But they are still hoping for a copy they can hear.

    “If I can get another print of it on a proper CD then I would really like that,” they say.

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    Listen to Newsbeat live at 12:45 and 17:45 weekdays – or listen back here.

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  • Charlize Theron shares rare personal insights in new podcast appearance

    Charlize Theron shares rare personal insights in new podcast appearance

    Charlize Theron shared personal reflections on dating and relationships during her appearance on the Call Her Daddy podcast.

    In a moment of openness, the 49-year-old actress spoke about having a recent one-night stand with a 26-year-old, calling it “really f—— amazing.”

    “I think I’ve had three one-night stands in my life,” she said. “It’s not my thing, but this one was just… I was in a different place.”

    She also spoke about dating in her forties, describing it as the first time in her life she’s felt truly comfortable being single. According to Theron, age has brought a new level of confidence and clarity around her wants and boundaries.

    On dating apps, she called the exclusive platform Raya “a f—— clown show,” and advised men to avoid clichés like Burning Man photos, pictures with exes, or vague job titles.

    Theron reiterated her long-standing stance on marriage, stating she has no interest in getting married and values the freedom to leave a relationship when it no longer serves her.

    She also briefly revisited a sexual harassment experience involving an unnamed director, revealing he had later sent her a letter, though she chose not to name him.

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  • Deepika Padukone reacts to Hollywood Star honour with one-word

    Deepika Padukone reacts to Hollywood Star honour with one-word



    Deepika Padukone reacts to Hollywood Star honour with one-word

    Bollywood superstar Deepika Padukone has a one-word response to her Hollywood Walk of Fame selection.

    On Wednesday, July 2, the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce shared a video montage on Instagram featuring the Pathan actress as part of the 2026 class to receive a star on Hollywood Boulevard’s iconic Walk of Fame.

    Deepika Padukone reacts to Hollywood Star honour with one-word

    The following day, July 3, shortly after making headlines for her induction, the Dilwale star took to Instagram to share a minimal reaction filled with thankfulness.

    She just wrote the word “Gratitude…” over a solid black background.

    This achievement makes Padukone, 39, the first Indian actress to be honoured with the most coveted feat, joining the ranks of Demi Moore, Timothée Chalamet, Emily Blunt, Gordon Ramsay, and 30 other prominent individuals and groups.

    Padukone, who co-starred with Vin Diesel in XXX: Return of Xander Cage, was selected in the Motion Picture category.

    In addition to the Padmaavat actress, thirteen other actors and actresses were named in the same category, including Blunt (Oppenheimer), Chalamet (A Complete Unknown), Chris Columbus, Marion Cotillard, Keith David, Rami Malek, Rachel McAdams, Demi Moore, Franco Nero, Carlo Ramboldi, Molly Ringwald, Tony Scott, and Stanley Tucci.

    It is pertinent to note that this is not the first international acclaim for Ranveer Singh’s wife. 

    In 2018, Padukone was named one of TIME magazine’s 100 most influential people in the world and later received the TIME100 Impact Award for her advocacy in mental health.

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  • Tom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang

    Tom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang

    Tom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang - Image 2 of 17Tom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang - Image 3 of 17Tom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang - Exterior Photography, Wood, ConcreteTom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang - Exterior PhotographyTom Lee Park / SCAPE + Studio Gang - More Images+ 12