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  • Martin Zubimendi signs for Arsenal | News

    Martin Zubimendi signs for Arsenal | News

    We’re delighted to announce that Spain international Martin Zubimendi has joined us on a long-term contract.

    The 26-year-old arrives from Real Sociedad, for whom he made 236 appearances in all competitions at first-team level after graduating from the club’s academy. In April 2021, Martin helped Sociedad win the delayed 2019/20 Copa del Rey against intercity rivals Athletic Club, alongside current Gunner Mikel Merino. 

    He was then ever-present in 2022/23 as Real Sociedad secured their highest league finish in recent history, ending the season in fourth place to secure Champions League football for only the third time, and the first in 10 years. 

    A Spnaish international, Martin started all five games in the 2020 Olympic Games as they claimed silver in Tokyo and has gone on to make 19 senior appearances for La Roja, winning the 2023 UEFA Nations League as well as helping his country defeat England 2-1 to win Euro 2024, coming on as a half-time substitute.

    Martin said: “This is a huge moment in my career. It’s the move I was looking for and one I wanted to make. As soon as you set foot here, you realise how big this club and this team are.

    “I set my sights on Arsenal because their style of play is a good fit for me. They have shown their potential recently and the best is yet to come.”

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    Zubimendi: “I set my sights on Arsenal”

    Sporting Director, Andrea Berta, added: “We are so happy to bring Martin to Arsenal and have a lot of pride in finalising this transfer. Martin was a key target for us and we all know that he is a perfect fit for our squad with the high quality he has. 

    “We welcome Martin and his family to the club. We look forward to him settling in with his teammates and are very excited to see him playing in an Arsenal shirt.”

    Mikel Arteta added: “Martin is a player who will bring a huge amount of quality and football intelligence to our team. He will fit in really well and he has all the attributes to be a key player for us. 

    “The standard he has consistently performed at over the last few seasons for both club and country is exactly why we are so excited to have him with us. We all welcome Martin and his family to the club.”

    Martin will wear the number 36 shirt and will join up with his new teammates at the Sobha Realty Training Centre when the team report for pre-season.

    Everyone at Arsenal welcomes Martin to the club.

    The transfer is subject to the completion of regulatory processes.

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    Get to know Zubimendi with these 12 fun facts

    Copyright 2025 The Arsenal Football Club Limited. Permission to use quotations from this article is granted subject to appropriate credit being given to www.arsenal.com as the source.

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  • ISS astronaut captures a rare phenomenon from orbit — a giant ‘sprite’ above a thunderstorm

    ISS astronaut captures a rare phenomenon from orbit — a giant ‘sprite’ above a thunderstorm

    U.S. astronaut Nichole “Vapor” Ayers captured a spectacular view of a phenomenon known as a “sprite” blazing to life above an intense thunderstorm — and she did this while orbiting 250 miles (400 kilometers) above Earth aboard the International Space Station (ISS).

    “Sprites are TLEs or Transient Luminous Events, that happen above the clouds and are triggered by intense electrical activity in the thunderstorms below,” wrote Ayers in an X post showcasing the image. “We have a great view above the clouds, so scientists can use these types of pictures to better understand the formation, characteristics, and relationship of TLEs to thunderstorms.”


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  • Edible Microlasers Could Revolutionize Food Tracking and Safety

    Edible Microlasers Could Revolutionize Food Tracking and Safety

    In a delicious turn of events, scientists succeeded in taking the optics of olive oil to create the first-ever microlaser made entirely from edible materials. If commercialized, they could offer an easy and safe way to monitor food or medications from inside your body.

    The technology, introduced earlier this month in the journal Advanced Optical Materials, exploits an interesting tendency for droplets of common cooking oils, which emit a photon of light when subjected to a certain amount of energy. Arrange multiple droplets in a room full of mirrors, and together they shine more brightly—like a concentrated beam of light. 

    The researchers tested more than a dozen different types of materials—sunflower oil, cooked butter, plain water, and more—to see which would generate the cleanest laser. And the winner was olive oil. 

    One prominent component of olive oil is chlorophyll, the molecule most commonly known to make plants green. In this case, the chlorophyll molecules, trapped in the sticky surface of olive oils, generated photons in a chain reaction of sorts, transforming the droplet of olive oil into a laser. 

    The brightness of the chlorophyll changes in accordance with the size and density of the oil droplets, making the laser highly sensitive to environmental conditions, according to the study. For example, adding it to different dishes of food and observing changes in the  laser allowed the researchers to measure things such as sugar concentration or acidity

    What’s more, the researchers were able to encode data within the droplets akin to the lines of a barcode, into a peach compote. Surprisingly, the data—the specific date of April 26, 2017, which happens to be the first international Stop Food Waste Date—remained intact for over a year, demonstrating the microlaser’s potential to safely carry information, such as the identity of a manufacturer or an expiration date. 

    “Since this is the first such study, there are many possibilities for developing various edible lasers and their applications, which could ultimately find their way to everyday use,” the study authors concluded.

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  • Paula Bomer: ‘If you describe yourself as a victim, you’re dismissed’ | Books

    Paula Bomer: ‘If you describe yourself as a victim, you’re dismissed’ | Books

    When I arrive at Paula Bomer’s apartment building in south Brooklyn I am briefly disoriented in the lobby, until I hear the yapping of dogs and amid them, her voice calling my name. Bomer is tall and striking, in her mid-50s. I met her last year at a reading in Williamsburg, Virginia, where she seemed like someone who cared almost manically about literature and also like someone who would be fun to hang out with, two qualities not always confluent. I had heard of these anxious dogs before, when she and I met for dinner a few months ago, and she disclosed that her life was now spent managing canine neuroses.

    “I got them when my dad died,” she says, in between offering me matcha, coffee, tequila or wine (it’s 2.30pm on a Sunday; Bomer doesn’t drink any more, save a glass of champagne on selling her book, but doesn’t mind if others do). “The dogs were a mistake,” she says, “But that’s OK, I’ll survive it.”

    Bomer was involved with the cohort of mid-2000s US writing broadly characterised as “alt lit”, an irreverent internet vernacular-driven movement personified by Tao Lin. She published anonymously on the website HTML Giant and had her first novel, Nine Months, in a drawer for 10 years. Mark Doten of Soho Press picked it up in 2012. Since then she has been widely admired in the literary world for her transgressive, vivid work, which often examines women at points of great pressure from an uncanny perspective – her fans include Sam Lipsyte and Jonathan Franzen. This admiration has not yet fully broken through to a mainstream audience, but her new book looks set to do so.

    Bomer’s latest novel, The Stalker, is all about the nastiest, most parasitic kind of survival. Its antihero, Robert Doughten Savile or “Doughty”, is the bearer of an entitlement so groundless and infinite that it obliterates anyone he approaches. Born to a once-wealthy Connecticut family but now without material means, he uses his charisma and total confidence to live in New York as he believes he deserves. He lies effortlessly, inventing lavish real estate deals while in fact whiling away his afternoons watching George Carlin specials, smoking crack in the park, and allowing older men to perform oral sex on him in Grand Central for a little extra cash. In the evenings, meanwhile, he is primed to identify and zone in on women who may prove useful.

    This is Doughty’s great gift, knowing what a woman needs and what she will tolerate to get it, how his cruelty is best deployed or concealed. To nauseating effect, his skill escalates operatically as the book continues. It’s a knockout novel, one I’ve passed around to friends, scenes from which I still feel a thrill of horror to recall.

    “Originally I wanted him to be the devil,” she says. “The actual devil, evil incarnate. But then I found myself humanising him. And I kind of regret it.” By the simple relentlessness of his presence, his unwillingness to allow the women enough space or thought to disengage from his influence, he comes to represent male intrusion on female life.

    “On a daily basis, if you leave your building you are dealing with some shitty man spewing garbage,” she says. “It wears on us, and that’s why I have a problem with critics being weary of the survivor-victim thing: ‘Oh just get over it, it’s boring, you can be strong.’ It’s like, I did try that. I did that: ‘I’m strong. I’m going to shoot pool with the guys.’ Although, I really do like to shoot pool.” We derail here while she leads me to her office, pleasantly cluttered with paintings like the rest of the flat, so that she can show me her pool cue, which she has had since she was 19. I ask if she was good. “You rank ’em out of six, I was a solid three. But on a good day I could beat a six.”

    We return to the question of victim fatigue, something that has been on my own mind lately, having just read a brilliant memoir called Trauma Plot by Jamie Hood, which exists partly in conversation with the cultural malaise around making art about having survived violence and abuse. Both Hood’s book and Bomer refer to a New Yorker essay by Parul Sehgal titled The Case Against the Trauma Plot, which argues that overuse of trauma as a narrative device has led to constricted, rote work. Sehgal subsequently panned Sarah Manguso’s autobiographical divorce novel, Liars, describing it as “thin and partial”, and asking: “What is this vision of womanhood, of sexually indiscriminate infants running households?” Bomer, on the other hand, was so moved by Manguso’s depiction of infidelity and the violence of being lied to that she wrote Manguso a fan letter (one of seven she has written in her life, Philip Roth and Franzen among recipients of the others).

    “Sehgal misses the entire point of the book, which is that Manguso is now free – not bitter, free. Whenever you describe yourself as a victim, you’re immediately dismissed … I feel like finding Doughty’s voice in my book was my way, hopefully, to be heard – in the way that no one wants to fucking hear another story about women. And yet he’s such an everyman. So it’s like, here’s your cliche then.”

    Bomer was raised in Indiana by a French professor father and an Austrian mother who was a translator and a painter: “She refused to become an American citizen, for political reasons. Which really makes sense now, right? She was ahead of her time in a million different ways.” Her childhood was marred by the worry and dread following her father’s suicide attempt when she was five; she went on to study psychology in what she describes as “an attempt to cure” her father.

    She was married for 20 years and raised two children, writing as much as possible. When pressed for her strategy there she replies, “I had no social life and my house was a mess.” In 2011, she published her first story collection, Baby; her second, Inside Madeleine, followed in 2014. All were warmly received, but her moment of success around the publication of Inside Madeleine could not take hold fully because, in her words, she “disappeared”. Her father had killed himself not long before, and her mother was in the last stages of a long illness. “My father’s death was horrific and violent. My mother’s was slow. There was no way to process. People don’t want to be around you when you’re suffering.”

    Bomer was divorced 10 years ago, and describes The Stalker as a sort of divorce book, “but not divorcing a particular man, it’s divorcing men – a kind of man,” she says, before instantly discluding her two sons and her many friends. After our meeting, she emails me to clarify some of her comments and concludes: “We don’t believe people the first time they hurt us, or the second, or the third – until we do. Because we want to have compassion and believe that if we show love and kindness … we will reap it back. And that is where we are wrong. Many, many people are ciphers. They will add nothing to your life, and they will leave with so much of you.”

    It’s difficult to reconcile the blunt fatalism of a statement like that one, or indeed the exhilaratingly ghastly novel she has written, with the generous and joyful woman I met. But perhaps the exorcism she has performed with this marvel – a divorce book with no divorce; a book called The Stalker with not that much stalking in it; a book by a middle-aged woman that, following five others, looks set to become her breakthrough hit – has made her so. Not bitter, as she says, but free.

    The Stalker by Paula Bomer is published by Soho Press. To support the Guardian, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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  • Mercury’s ‘missing’ meteorites may have finally been found on Earth

    Mercury’s ‘missing’ meteorites may have finally been found on Earth

    Most meteorites that have reached Earth come from the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter. But we have 1,000 or so meteorites that come from the Moon and Mars. This is probably a result of asteroids hitting their surfaces and ejecting material towards our planet.

    It should also be physically possible for such debris to reach the Earth from Mercury, another nearby rocky body. But so far, none have been confirmed to come from there — presenting a longstanding mystery.

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  • How America’s economy is dodging disaster – The Economist

    How America’s economy is dodging disaster – The Economist

    1. How America’s economy is dodging disaster  The Economist
    2. Economists raise alarm over economy  WCCB Charlotte
    3. The Outlook Really Is Very Cloudy  Bloomberg.com
    4. Economy Enters Second Half Facing Tight Fed, Trump Tariffs – But the Stock Market Is Roaring  U.S. News & World Report
    5. Billionaire Ken Fisher Warns Trump Tariffs Could Trigger Recession  MSN

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  • Pokémon fan goes viral for claiming Pope Leo signed his Popplio card

    Pokémon fan goes viral for claiming Pope Leo signed his Popplio card

    Pope Leo has unexpectedly become a trending topic among Pokémon fans after viral images surfaced claiming he signed a Popplio Pokémon card.

    The surprise moment originated from a social media post on X by user @ItsMeKingTheo, who wrote, “MY HOMIE GOT HIS POPPLIO POKEMON CARD SIGNED BY POPE LEO.”

    The post included three images: one showing a standard Popplio card, another showing a man meeting Pope Leo, and the last appearing to display the Pope’s signature on the card itself.

    While no official confirmation has been made, the internet was quick to respond with a mix of amusement and amazement.

    Popplio, a water-type starter from the seventh generation of Pokémon games, first appeared in Pokémon Sun and Moon on the Nintendo 3DS.

    The card, now allegedly graced by the Pope’s signature, has been dubbed “blessed” by fans in jest.

    It’s unclear what the Vatican’s stance is on Pokémon, but the moment has already sparked countless memes and speculation about which Pokémon might be next to receive papal approval.

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  • Ian Rush Pays Emotional Tribute to Jota Amid Heartbreaking Double Loss

    Ian Rush Pays Emotional Tribute to Jota Amid Heartbreaking Double Loss

    Club Legend Ian Rush Reflects on Tragedy

    Liverpool icon Ian Rush has expressed his deep sorrow following the tragic passing of Diogo Jota and his brother, André Silva. The pair were killed in a car accident in the early hours of Thursday morning, leaving the football world in mourning. Rush, Liverpool’s all-time leading goalscorer, spoke emotionally about the loss, comparing the grief to past tragedies that have tested the unity of the club.

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    Despite being invited to Jota’s funeral in Gondomar, Portugal, Rush was unable to attend due to the passing of his own brother, Gerald. He admitted that juggling his own family loss while processing the death of Jota had been overwhelming. “It hasn’t really hit home yet,” he said. “Diogo was a great player—probably the best finisher at the club—and more importantly, a wonderful person.”

    Mourning a Team-Mate and Friend

    The Liverpool squad flew to Portugal to pay their respects in person, with players and staff attending Jota’s funeral. The sight of so many current and former Reds gathered in Gondomar captured the strength of Liverpool’s sense of family—an ethos long spoken about by players past and present.

    Rush, reflecting on the emotional toll, added: “At Liverpool, we’ve always seen ourselves as one big family. When one of us goes, we rally around. That’s what we’ve always done, and that’s what we’ll do now.”

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    He drew parallels with the unity shown in the aftermath of Hillsborough—an enduring moment in the club’s history—and highlighted how the Liverpool community instinctively comes together in the face of grief. “It doesn’t matter whether you’re a player or a supporter—we all stick together,” he said.

    Jota’s Legacy Beyond the Pitch

    Jota’s impact at Liverpool was clear, not just in his goals and performances but in the way he carried himself. Rush was unequivocal in his praise: “He always gave 100 percent. He could change a game whether he started or came off the bench. He never craved headlines, and that was just as true off the pitch.”

    Described as a “real gent” by those who knew him, Jota was someone who earned respect quietly. His work ethic, humility, and professionalism left a mark on the dressing room, making his death all the more difficult for those preparing to return for pre-season.

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    “It’s hard to just get back to training and act like everything is normal,” Rush said. “Footballers are human too. For some, it’ll take time for the full weight of this tragedy to be felt.”

    Pain Shared Across the Liverpool Family

    As the days go on, the Liverpool squad—alongside staff, fans, and club legends—will try to process the loss of a team-mate, a brother, and a friend. Rush believes that while grief often comes in waves, the bond between those in the Liverpool family will be the difference in helping people heal.

    “You try to move on, but it’s not easy,” he concluded. “Diogo will never be forgotten. He truly embodied everything Liverpool stands for.”

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    This tragedy has shaken Liverpool to its core, but in the spirit of solidarity that defines the club, the memory of Diogo Jota will continue to inspire those who wear the shirt he once wore with pride.

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  • Ringo Starr reveals changes he made to Sam Mendes’s Beatles script

    Ringo Starr reveals changes he made to Sam Mendes’s Beatles script

    Written by Jez Butterworth, Peter Straughan and Jack Thorne, the films will explore many elements of each Beatles member’s personal lives, including the relationship between Starr and his first wife, Maureen Starkey Tigrett.

    Harris Dickinson, Paul Mescal, Barry Keoghan and Joseph Quinn. Sony

    On that relationship, Starr claimed he asked for certain elements of the story to be changed so that they better reflected reality.

    “He had a writer — very good writer, great reputation, and he wrote it great, but it had nothing to do with Maureen and I,” Starr told The New York Times.

    “That’s not how we were. I’d say, ‘We would never do that.’”

    After some tweaks, Starr admits he is now happy with the script, which will see Irish actor Barry Keoghan portray the Liverpudlian.

    While some have argued that the roles could have gone to lesser-known actors – particularly those with strong links to the city of Liverpool – Starr has started working closely with Keoghan to help his portrayal of the drummer.

    Speaking on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Keoghan revealed: “I met Ringo the other day, in his house. I didn’t just meet him at his house, had to go up, and he let me in.

    “I met him at his house and he played the drums for me. He asked me to play, but I wasn’t playing the drums for Ringo.

    “It was sort of just one of those moments where you’re just in awe and you’re just frozen.”

    Playing the other Beatles will be Paul Mescal as Paul McCartney, Harris Dickinson as John Lennon, and Joseph Quinn as George Harrison.

    Mendes has confirmed that the four separate biopics will all be released in April 2028.

    The Beatles films will be released in April 2028.

    Check out more of our Film coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

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  • After 9,000 Layoffs, Microsoft Boss Has Brutal Advice for Sacked Workers

    After 9,000 Layoffs, Microsoft Boss Has Brutal Advice for Sacked Workers

    Microsoft has laid off about 9,000 workers in the midst of a newly-announced $80 billion AI investment — and apparently, those who just lost their jobs should be talking to ChatGPT about it.

    As Aftermath reports, an executive producer at Microsoft-owned Xbox ended up with egg on his face after suggesting that laid off workers pour their hearts out to AI.

    “These are really challenging times, and if you’re navigating a layoff or even quietly preparing for one, you’re not alone and you don’t have to go it alone,” that producer, Matt Turnbull, said in a since-deleted LinkedIn post that Aftermath thankfully screenshotted for posterity. “No AI tool is a replacement for your voice or your lived experience. But at a time when mental energy is scarce, these tools can help get you unstuck faster, calmer, and with more clarity.”

    “I know these types of tools engender strong feelings in people, but l’d be remiss in not trying to offer the best advice I can under the circumstances,” he continued. “I’ve been experimenting with ways to use [large language model] Al tools (like ChatGPT or Copilot) to help reduce the emotional and cognitive load that comes with job loss.”

    Yes, you read that right: a Microsoft boss was telling those just laid off by the tech giant that they should use chatbots — run or funded by the company that just fired them — to avoid crying on a company shoulder.

    Following that phoned-in introduction, Turnbull offered a few potential prompts for AI as a job loss grief counselor, including those that help with career planning, resume-building, networking, and, our personal favorite, “emotional clarity [and] confidence.”

    “I’m struggling with imposter syndrome after being laid off,” Turnbull’s “clarity” prompt reads. “Can you help me reframe this experience in a way that reminds me what I’m good at?”

    It comes as little surprise, given how absolutely tone-deaf those suggestions are, that folks on social media had quite a lot to say to the Xbox executive.

    “The new Severance season is insanely good,” joked one commentator on X-formerly-Twitter.

    As another irked observer wrote on the r/gaming subreddit, “anyone that tells people who were fired to talk to a computer chat algorithm for therapy is insane.”

    Indeed, gamers seem to be the most affronted by Turnbull’s attempt at sensitivity and advice, with another X commentator remarking that his response to those layoffs was one of “the most tone-deaf and cruelest things” they’d ever seen.

    “I hope this finally shatters the illusion for some people that Xbox is not your good buddy,” that same user quipped.

    Though it’s hard to say whether the Xbox producer’s sentiments were sincere or not, it’s clear from the subsequent deletion of the post that he was made to feel some type of way about it after putting it out into the world — and honestly, that potential embarrassment is the most we can hope for with these sorts of tech bros.

    More on AI: Journalists Just Roasted Sam Altman To His Face

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