Blog

  • Summer McIntosh targets third title in 200 butterfly, Leon Marchand to break world record again? – live updates

    Summer McIntosh targets third title in 200 butterfly, Leon Marchand to break world record again? – live updates

    Summer McIntosh‘s push for five individual titles at the 2025 World Aquatics Championships continues on Thursday, 31 July, with the women’s 200 butterfly final on Day 5 of the swimming competition.

    The Canadian star, who has already bagged the 400 freestyle and 200 IM titles in Singapore, is the reigning Olympic champion in the event, and it would take something special to stop her in Singapore.

    Later, Paris 2024 Olympic hero Leon Marchand will hope to land his first medal of the event in the men’s 200 IM.

    The Frenchman smashed the world record in yesterday’s semi-finals, and may well do it in the final with the likes of Olympic silver medallist Duncan Scott pushing him on.

    Expect a race for the ages in the men’s 100 freestyle final with newly-crowned 200 free world champion David Popovici and Rio 2016 Olympic gold medallist Kyle Chalmers the favourites.

    Regan Smith will go head to head with USA teammate Katharine Berkoff in the women’s 50 backstroke final, before the grand finale: the women’s 4×200 freestyle relay final.

    In this morning’s qualifying session, Mollie O’Callaghan of Australia closed on her second world championships sprint double with the top 100 freestyle qualifying time, while fellow Olympic gold medallist Kate Douglass of the US secured the second-quickest qualification time in the women’s 200 breaststroke. Both women progress to this evening’s semi-finals.

    In the men’s 200 backstroke, Paris 2024 Olympic champion Hubert Kos of Hungary progressed to this evening’s semis in the ninth-quickest time of 1:56.71.

    The World Aquatics Championships — previously known as the FINA World Championships and often referred to as the World Swimming Championships — have been held since 1973. The Singapore edition marks the 22nd staging of the event.

    Follow our live updates across the five finals.

    Continue Reading

  • Rogue planets could form their own miniature solar systems

    Rogue planets could form their own miniature solar systems

    Astronomers have uncovered a stunning cosmic twist: planets don’t need stars to build their own worlds.

    New research led by the University of St Andrews has revealed that rogue planets – giant, free-floating bodies adrift in the galaxy – may be capable of forming their own miniature planetary systems.

    Using the advanced infrared capabilities of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), scientists have, for the first time, detected signs of dusty disks around these solitary giants – the very structures where new planets are born.

    This discovery not only challenges traditional ideas about how planetary systems form, but also opens an entirely new window into the diversity of worlds that may exist in the Universe.

    Lead author Dr Belinda Damian from the University of St Andrews, said: “These discoveries show that the building blocks for forming planets can be found even around objects that are barely larger than Jupiter and drifting alone in space.

    “This means that the formation of planetary systems is not exclusive to stars but might also work around lonely starless worlds.”

    What are rogue planets?

    Rogue planets are planetary-mass bodies that drift through space untethered to any star. With masses estimated between five and 10 times that of Jupiter, these objects mirror the size and structure of giant planets.

    However, unlike Jupiter or Saturn, they float freely in the void, not orbiting a parent star. Their elusive nature and faint glow, primarily in infrared wavelengths, make them incredibly difficult to detect and study.

    Despite their obscurity, rogue planets are thought to play a pivotal role in our understanding of planetary formation.

    Some scientists believe these objects are the smallest products of star-like formation processes, emerging from the collapse of massive gas clouds. Others propose that they may originate in star systems and be violently ejected due to gravitational interactions.

    Unprecedented observations from JWST

    To explore these mysterious worlds, an international team of researchers from the UK, USA, Italy, Ireland, and Portugal conducted in-depth observations of eight young rogue planets.

    Using the JWST’s powerful infrared instruments, they collected spectroscopic data between August and October 2024. This marked the first time that planetary-mass objects had been studied with such high resolution and sensitivity in the infrared spectrum.

    The data confirmed that all observed objects are of planetary mass – similar in size to Jupiter – and that six of them exhibit strong infrared emission from surrounding warm dust.

    This excess radiation is a signature of circumplanetary disks: flattened rings of dust and gas that are known to be cradles for planet formation around stars.

    Evidence of early planet formation

    Perhaps the most exciting discovery was the detection of silicate grain emission within these disks.

    These grains show clear signs of growth and crystallisation – the critical first steps in forming rocky planets.

    While silicate signatures have been found around stars and brown dwarfs before, this is the first time they have been observed around rogue planets.

    This research builds upon earlier work from St Andrews, suggesting that such disks can persist for millions of years – long enough for new planets to emerge.

    Dr Aleks Scholz, the Principal Investigator of the project, added: “Taken together, these studies show that objects with masses comparable to those of giant planets have the potential to form their own miniature planetary systems.

    “Those systems could be like the Solar System, just scaled down by a factor of 100 or more in mass and size. Whether or not such systems actually exist remains to be shown.”

    The findings challenge long-held beliefs that a central star is necessary for planetary formation. As research continues, rogue planets may redefine our understanding of how and where planets and possibly life can form in the Universe.

    Continue Reading

  • Fresenius Medical Care’s Third-Party Clinical Research Organization Frenova Announces Strategic Collaboration Advancing Genomics-Driven, Precision Kidney Disease Care

    • Frenova and Nephronomics, a renal precision company co-founded by Fresenius Medical Care, initiate collaboration with GENEWIZ by Azenta Life Sciences 
    • Provides vital insights through sophisticated genomic sequencing and analysis of Frenova’s My Reason® genomic and clinical data registry
    • Paves way for advances in precision kidney disease care, novel therapies, and diagnostics

     

    Bad Homburg (July 31, 2025) – Fresenius Medical Care today announced that Frenova, the company’s third-party clinical research organization, along with Nephronomics, a renal precision medicine company, and GENEWIZ by Azenta Life Sciences, have entered a collaboration to advance the genomic analysis efforts for Frenova’s transformative My Reason® genomics research program. This strategic collaboration aims to leverage cutting-edge technologies to better understand kidney, cardiovascular, and metabolic diseases while driving advancements in precision medicine for patients worldwide.

    Genomics-driven medicine, also known as personalized medicine or precision medicine, uses an individual’s genetic information, specifically their genome, to guide medical decisions. This approach uses genomic analysis to understand a patient’s unique biological makeup, enabling more targeted and effective treatments, diagnostics, and preventative strategies.

    “Kidney disease affects each individual differently, shaped by their unique biology and genetic makeup,” said Frank Maddux, M.D., Global Chief Medical Officer and member of the Management Board at Fresenius Medical Care AG. “These differences influence not only how the disease manifests, but also which treatments and therapies are most effective. By harnessing advanced genetic and molecular insights, we can transform kidney care—making it more personalized, precise, and responsive to each patient’s distinct needs. This collaboration paves the way for innovative diagnostics and therapies, enabling truly individualized clinical interventions and redefining what it means to be patient centric.”

    Frenova’s My Reason® genomics research program is a kidney-focused data registry composed of genomic and clinical patient data designed to uncover insights into the genetic mechanisms underlying kidney disease. To date, more than 35,000 participants have been registered in the program and provided biospecimens, with a goal of reaching 50,000 participants over the next two years. The collaboration provides the analysis and gene sequencing necessary to extract the data’s rich insights. 

    “This large-scale whole genome sequencing initiative marks a pivotal milestone in our journey to build the most comprehensive genotype-phenotype database for patients with cardiovascular, kidney, and metabolic diseases,” said Jan Walter, President of Frenova. “We are excited to collaborate with Nephronomics on the interrogation of the Nephronomics Atlas to unlock unprecedented insights that could transform patient care.”

    “The My Reason® dataset, built through Frenova’s unparalleled reach and expertise in nephrology care, represents the world’s most robust end-stage kidney disease cohort, where many genetic signals are strongest,” said James Sietstra, Founder of Nephronomics. “This collaboration will enable us to unlock new insights that not only advance scientific understanding but also translate into genetically informed therapeutics in the cardio-kidney-metabolic field.”

    “We are thrilled to partner with Frenova and Nephronomics and contribute to the My Reason® research program,” said Ginger Zhou, President, GENEWIZ. “This collaboration represents a significant step forward in our shared mission to advance precision medicine and improve outcomes for patients.”

    Nephronomics holds exclusive commercial rights to the My Reason® dataset, which anchors the Nephronomics Atlas, a resource of deep clinical and genomic cardio-kidney-metabolic (CKM) disease data. Nephronomics aims to develop targeted therapies and redefine CKM disease care through precision medicine insights. By leveraging proprietary artificial intelligence (AI)/machine learning (ML) models trained on this comprehensive dataset, Nephronomics identifies novel disease subtypes, protective genetic variants, and therapeutic targets.

    As part of this collaboration, GENEWIZ will apply its validated DNA sequencing technologies and expertise, to generate large-scale genomic data from biospecimens collected through Frenova’s extensive nephrology research network. In addition to sequencing, Azenta will also provide long-term storage of samples through its global biorepository network. With over 25 years of experience in DNA sequencing and multiomics analysis, Azenta is uniquely positioned to provide end-to-end solutions for complex research programs.

     

     

    About Fresenius Medical Care:
    Fresenius Medical Care is the world’s leading provider of products and services for individuals with renal diseases of which around 4.2 million patients worldwide regularly undergo dialysis treatment. Through its network of 3,675 dialysis clinics, Fresenius Medical Care provides dialysis treatments for approx. 299,000 patients around the globe. Fresenius Medical Care is also the leading provider of dialysis products such as dialysis machines or dialyzers. Fresenius Medical Care is listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange (FME) and on the New York Stock Exchange (FMS). 

    About Frenova:
    Frenova is a Fresenius Medical Care company that operates as a global Site Management Organization (SMO) dedicated to the management and execution of third-party clinical trials focusing on Cardio-Kidney-Metabolic (CKM) related therapeutic areas. Leveraging our relationship with Fresenius Medical Care’s global dialysis clinics and partner nephrology practices, Frenova provides access to a global site network, streamlined procedures, and technology-enabled subject screening and enrollment. Frenova also offers data analytics and licensing services, with access to one of the nephrology industry’s largest longitudinal patient databases.

    For more information visit the company’s website at www.frenova.com.

    About Nephronomics:
    Nephronomics, a joint venture between Mechanica Partners and Fresenius Medical Care, isassembling the world’s largest vertically integrated cardio-kidney-metabolic (CKM) disease database and deep learning model with >35,000 patients consented. The Nephronomics Atlas contains matching whole genome and longitudinal clinical data of patients with advanced CKD and ESKD including comprehensive laboratory data, diagnosis histories, treatments, and raw radiology images.

    For more information, please visit www.nephronomics.com.

    About Azenta Life Sciences:
    Azenta, Inc. (Nasdaq: AZTA) is a leading provider of life sciences solutions worldwide, enabling life science organizations around the world to bring impactful breakthroughs and therapies to market faster. Azenta provides a full suite of reliable cold-chain sample management solutions and multiomics services across areas such as drug development, clinical research and advanced cell therapies for the industry’s top pharmaceutical, biotech, academic and healthcare institutions globally. Our global team delivers and supports these products and services through our industry-leading brands, including GENEWIZ, FluidX, Ziath, 4titude, Limfinity, Freezer Pro, and Barkey. Azenta is headquartered in Burlington, MA, with operations in North America, Europe, and Asia.

    For more information, please visit www.azenta.com.

    Disclaimer:
    This release contains forward-looking statements that are subject to various risks and uncertainties. Actual results could differ materially from those described in these forward-looking statements due to various factors, including, but not limited to, changes in business, economic and competitive conditions, legal changes, regulatory approvals, impacts related to the COVID-19 pandemic results of clinical studies, foreign exchange rate fluctuations, uncertainties in litigation or investigative proceedings, and the availability of financing. These and other risks and uncertainties are detailed in Fresenius Medical Care’s reports filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Fresenius Medical Care does not undertake any responsibility to update the forward-looking statements in this release.

    Continue Reading

  • Rolls-Royce shares soar to new record high; anger over Shell $4.3bn profits – business live | Business

    Rolls-Royce shares soar to new record high; anger over Shell $4.3bn profits – business live | Business

    Key events

    Rolls-Royce valuation soars to record £90bn as shares gain 10%

    Rolls-Royce’s share price has soared by 10.5% in early trading this morning, to a new record high – with the company’s valuation breaking the £90bn mark for the first time.

    The jet engine manufacturer was valued at £83bn yesterday evening, so another 10% gain puts its valuation at more than £92bn. Its market value has almost doubled over the course of 2025 – an astonishing run for a company that faced an existential threat during the coronavirus pandemic.

    The company’s turnaround has so far been a triumph for chief executive Tufan Erginbilgic, who ruffled feathers on taking over the business in 2023 by saying it was on a “burning platform”.

    Since then Erginbilgic has cut costs, and pushed customers to pay more for its products through renegotiating contracts for maintaining jet engines that go on widebody planes such as the Airbus A350 and Boeing’s 787.

    The company also received a recent boost from the UK government’s decision to choose it to deliver the first small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) – factory-produced nuclear power stations that aim to cut costs.

    Rolls-Royce said the SMR business – which it hopes could eventually be bigger than the existing revenues – should be “profitable and free cash flow positive by 2030” – ahead of delivery of the first SMRs a couple of years later.

    Share

    Updated at 

    Continue Reading

  • ASUS ProArt Monitor Lineup Expanded with Two New 4K Displays

    ASUS ProArt Monitor Lineup Expanded with Two New 4K Displays

    ASUS has expanded their ASUS ProArt Display lineup with two new 4K displays designed for creative professionals. The PA27UCGE and PA32UCE offer factory calibration, wide color gamut coverage, and pro-level connectivity. Whether you’re in video post, photo retouching, or motion graphics, these monitors aim to bring more accurate color and workflow flexibility to your desk without breaking the bank.

    When you’re editing or color grading video, the accuracy of your monitor isn’t just important. It is everything. A screen that is properly calibrated and able to display the full color gamut can save you hours of second-guessing. It helps you trust what you’re seeing, whether you’re matching cameras, fixing skin tones, or applying a final grade. That is why having a display designed for content creation can make such a huge difference.

    Built-in motorized flip colorimeter | Image credit: ASUS

    These new models follow ASUS’s recent push into the creator display space. Back in March, we covered the ProArt PA32UCDM, a 4K OLED monitor aimed at HDR workflows. You can read that article here.

    The PA27UCGE and PA32UCE take a different approach with high-quality IPS panels and more accessible pricing.

    One standout feature on both monitors is the built-in motorized flip colorimeter, which enables hands-free self-calibration for consistent color accuracy over time. Just the idea of not having to get my X-Rite off the shelf before I finish a project is a game-changer to me.

    Let’s see what else they’ve got to offer.

    Image credit: ASUS

    ASUS ProArt Display PA27UCGE – key features

    • 27-inch 4K UHD IPS display (3840 x 2160)
    • 98 percent DCI-P3 and 100 percent sRGB coverage
    • Up to 160 Hz refresh rate
    • Delta E less than one factory calibration, Calman Ready
    • Built-in motorized colorimeter and auto calibration support
    • 600 nits typical brightness, VESA DisplayHDR 600 certified
    • Variable refresh rate up to 160 Hz with Adaptive Sync
    • USB-C with 96-watt power delivery, DisplayPort, HDMI, RJ45, USB hub
    • Anti-glare coating, ambient light sensor, and an Auto KVM switch

    The PA27UCGE aims to deliver professional color accuracy in a compact form. It covers 98 percent of DCI-P3 and comes factory calibrated with Delta E less than 1. It includes a built in colorimeter for automated calibration and supports Calman workflows.

    The panel reaches 600 nits typical brightness and meets the VESA DisplayHDR 600 certification. Motion performance is smooth with up to 160 Hz variable refresh rate and Adaptive Sync. Ports include USB-C with 96-watt power delivery, HDMI, DisplayPort, RJ45 passthrough, and a USB hub. Ambient light sensing, anti-glare coating, and Auto KVM round out the feature set.

    Image credit: ASUS

    ASUS ProArt Display PA32UCE – key features

    • 31.5-inch 4K UHD IPS display (3840 x 2160)
    • 98 percent DCI-P3 and 100 percent sRGB coverage
    • 60 Hz refresh rate
    • Delta E less than one factory calibration, Calman Ready
    • Built-in motorized colorimeter and auto calibration support
    • 600 nits typical brightness, VESA DisplayHDR 600 certified
    • Supports HDR10 and HLG formats
    • Thunderbolt 4, USB-C with 96-watt power delivery, DisplayPort, HDMI, RJ45, USB hub
    • Anti-glare coating, ambient light sensor, Auto KVM switch

    The PA32UCE builds on the same foundation as the 27-inch model but adds more screen space and advanced connectivity. It matches the same color accuracy and hardware calibration tools, including the motorized colorimeter. Brightness reaches 600 nits typical, and the monitor is VESA DisplayHDR 600 certified.

    It also supports HDR10 and HLG formats for more flexible grading environments. Thunderbolt 4 adds daisy chaining and high-speed data options, while USB-C, HDMI, and DisplayPort give creators multiple ways to connect. Like the smaller model, it also includes anti-glare coating, light sensors, and Auto KVM switching.

    Both monitors also include a complimentary Adobe Creative Cloud subscription trial, available upon product registration through ASUS.

    Image credit: ASUS

    Monitor specs vs. real-world needs

    On paper, both monitors offer excellent specs. You get 4K resolution, wide gamut color, hardware calibration, and flexible I/O. These displays should satisfy most working creators, especially editors, motion designers, and content producers who want reliable visuals without paying for top-tier reference gear.

    Image credit: ASUS

    But these are not true reference monitors. A brightness level of 600 nits is perfectly fine for SDR work and HDR previews, but it may not be enough for users who prefer higher brightness for HDR mastering. Personally, I like to see at least 1000 nits in a display if I’m working on serious HDR content. If you regularly deliver for platforms with strict HDR spec requirements, you may want something brighter and more specialized.

    Still, the built-in calibration tools, color accuracy, and extended color space coverage are strong. For the price, these displays strike a solid balance between performance and affordability.

    Image credit: ASUS

    Price and availability

    These monitors are available to purchase now from B&H. The ASUS ProArt 27″ PA27UCGE is priced at $949, and the ASUS ProArt 32″ PA32UCE is listed at $1,199.

    For more information about these monitors, visit ASUS’s product page for the 27″ PA27UCGE and the 32″ PA32UCE.

    Do you have thoughts about these new ProArt monitors? Let us know in the comments below.


    Continue Reading

  • First NHS AI-run physio clinic in England halves back-pain waiting list | NHS

    First NHS AI-run physio clinic in England halves back-pain waiting list | NHS

    The first NHS AI-run physiotherapy clinic has halved the waiting list for back pain and musculoskeletal services, according to the NHS trust where the pilot has taken place.

    More than 2,500 patients living in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough were able to access Flok Health, a physiotherapy platform run by AI, over a 12-week period starting in February.

    The platform, which was created using video footage of a human physiotherapist, provides same-day automated video appointments with a digital physiotherapist via an app that responds to information given by a patient in real time.

    When the clinic was first launched in Cambridgeshire, waiting times for elective community musculoskeletal (MSK) services in the region were about 18 weeks.

    The waiting times for all MSK conditions decreased by 44% over the course of the 12-week period due to the use of Flok combined with other initiatives such as community assessment days, according to Cambridgeshire Community Services NHS trust (CCS), which deployed the services in those areas of England.

    Regarding back pain, the Flok AI clinic alone reduced waiting lists for the condition by 55% and saved 856 hours of clinician time a month, according to the company.

    “Seeing the impact our service has had in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough, which is also where our team lives and works, has been incredibly meaningful,” said Finn Stevenson, the co-founder and chief executive of Flok Health.

    Anna-Marie Cooper, from Cambridge, had a positive experience using Flok despite being initially sceptical when she was referred to the AI physio for her back pain.

    “I have used private physiotherapy services in the past, but I found my experience with the AI physio as good as, if not better than any care I’ve received before,” she said. “Flok’s service was so intuitive, and having the flexibility to schedule and rearrange appointments whenever I wanted really suited me.”

    But the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP) said that although AI holds great potential for the future of healthcare treatments, it was concerned about widening health inequalities for other patients who couldn’t or didn’t want to access physiotherapy care via an app.

    John Cowman, the chief executive of the CSP, said: “When tackling the problem of waiting times, it is important to address the root causes, one of which is the recruitment freezes currently stopping graduate physiotherapists from finding work in the NHS. We have a workforce ready to provide proven, safe care which will help cut waiting times and ensure people get the appointments they need.

    skip past newsletter promotion

    “AI will certainly play an increasing role in healthcare in the coming years as a tool to support services, but should be run in conjunction with increasing the physiotherapy workforce.”

    The AI-clinic is due to be rolled out across more NHS trusts across England, according to Flok Health.

    Mike Passfield, the deputy director from Cambridge Community Services NHS trust, said: “We’re proud to have been the first NHS organisation in England to deploy Flok Health’s AI-powered physiotherapy clinic at scale.

    “This pilot has demonstrated how innovation, when safely and thoughtfully integrated into NHS pathways, can dramatically improve access, outcomes and patient experience. We look forward to working with Flok to explore how this service can be scaled across our region to benefit even more people.”

    Continue Reading

  • Security Alert: U.S. Consulate General Karachi, Pakistan (July 31, 2025) – U.S. Embassy & Consulates in Pakistan (.gov)

    Security Alert: U.S. Consulate General Karachi, Pakistan (July 31, 2025) – U.S. Embassy & Consulates in Pakistan (.gov)

    1. Security Alert: U.S. Consulate General Karachi, Pakistan (July 31, 2025)  U.S. Embassy & Consulates in Pakistan (.gov)
    2. Threat in Pakistan? US asks officials to limit visits to high-end hotels in Karachi  The Times of India
    3. US limits official visits to Karachi hotels after threat report  Hindustan Times
    4. US Issues Alert For American Citizens, Officials In Pakistan; Warns Against Visiting THESE Areas In Karachi  Zee News
    5. UK advises against travel to parts of Pakistan  Reuters

    Continue Reading

  • Canada to recognize State of Palestine at UN meeting in September

    Canada to recognize State of Palestine at UN meeting in September

    Listen to article

    Canada plans to recognize the State of Palestine at a meeting of the United Nations in September, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced on Wednesday, ratcheting up pressure on Israel as starvation spreads in Gaza.

    The announcement came after France said last week it would recognize a Palestinian state and a day after Britain said it would recognize the state at September’s UN General Assembly meeting if the fighting in Gaza, part of the Palestinian territories occupied by Israel, had not stopped by then.

    Carney told reporters that the reality on the ground, including starvation of people in Gaza, meant “the prospect of a Palestinian state is literally receding before our eyes.”

    “Canada condemns the fact that the Israeli government has allowed a catastrophe to unfold in Gaza,” he said.

    Carney said the planned recognition was based in part on repeated assurances from the Palestinian Authority, which represents the State of Palestine at the UN, that it was reforming its governance and is willing to hold general elections in 2026 in which Hamas “can play no part.”

    The announcements by some of Israel’s closest allies reflect growing international outrage over Israel’s restrictions on food and other aid to Gaza in its war against Hamas, and the dire humanitarian crisis there. A global hunger monitor has warned that a worst-case scenario of famine is unfolding in the enclave.

    The Gaza health ministry reported seven more hunger-related deaths on Wednesday, including a two-year-old girl with an existing health condition. The Hamas-run government media office in Gaza said the Israeli military killed at least 50 people within three hours on Wednesday as they tried to get food from UN aid trucks coming into the northern Gaza Strip.

    Israel and its closest ally, the US, both rejected Carney’s statements.

    “The change in the position of the Canadian government at this time is a reward for Hamas and harms the efforts to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza and a framework for the release of the hostages,” the Israeli foreign ministry said in a statement. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made similar comments after the French and British announcements.

    A White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said President Donald Trump also sees recognition of the State of Palestine as wrongly “rewarding Hamas.”

    US Senate rejects bids to block arms sales to Israel

    Two resolutions that would have blocked arms sales to Israel in response to civilian casualties in Gaza were blocked in the US Senate on Wednesday, although they garnered more support than similar measures earlier this year.

    Read: UAE begins Gaza water pipeline project

    The two resolutions were introduced by Senator Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent aligned with Democrats. They failed by 73 to 24 and 70 to 27 in the 100-member chamber in voting late on Wednesday night.

    Similar measures, also introduced by Sanders, failed by 82-15 and 83-15 in April.

    A decades-long tradition of strong bipartisan support for Israel in the US Congress means resolutions to stop weapons sales are unlikely to pass, but backers hope raising the issue will encourage Israel’s government and the US administration to do more to protect civilians.

    All of the votes for the resolutions came from Democrats, with all of President Donald Trump’s fellow Republicans opposed. Sanders said in a statement he was pleased that a majority of the Democratic caucus had backed the effort.

    “The tide is turning. The American people do not want to spend billions to starve children in Gaza,” Sanders said. “The Democrats are moving forward on this issue, and I look forward to Republican support in the near future.”

    Senator Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, was one of the Democrats who opposed the Sanders-backed resolutions in April but voted for them this time.

    Shaheen said in a statement that Israel has a right to defend its citizens, but added: “it is clear that the Government of Israel has not conducted its military operations in Gaza with the necessary care required by international humanitarian law. It is also clear that the Government of Israel has failed to allow adequate humanitarian assistance into Gaza, resulting in unbelievable suffering.”

    The resolutions would have blocked the sale of $675 million in bombs and shipments of 20,000 assault rifles.

    US special envoy Steve Witkoff is due to travel to Israel on Thursday to discuss Gaza. Trump said this week he expected centers to be set up to feed more people in the enclave.

    The State of Palestine has been a non-member observer state of the UN General Assembly since 2012, recognized by more than three-quarters of the assembly’s 193 member states.

    Jonathan Panikoff, former deputy US national intelligence officer on the Middle East, said recognition of Palestine is intended “to increase pressure on Israel to compel it to return to a two-state paradigm.” But he said Canada’s announcement is “unlikely to be anything more than symbolic and risks undermining their relationship with a longtime ally in Israel.”

    French President Emmanuel Macron, who spoke with Carney before Canada’s announcement, said the recognition of Palestine will “revive a prospect of peace in the region.”

    Read more: Britain warns Israel it will recognise Palestinian state as Gaza starvation spreads

    Israeli security cabinet member Zeev Elkin said on Wednesday that Israel could threaten to annex parts of Gaza to increase pressure on Hamas, eroding Palestinian hopes of statehood on land Israel now occupies.

    Mediation efforts to secure a 60-day ceasefire and the release of remaining hostages held by Hamas ground to a halt last week.

    In Gaza, resident Saed al-Akhras said the recognition of Palestine by major powers marked a “real shift in how Western countries view the Palestinian cause.”

    “Enough!” he said. “Palestinians have lived for more than 70 years under killing, destruction and occupation, while the world watches in silence.”

    Families of Israeli hostages still held in Gaza appealed for no recognition of a Palestinian state to come before their loved ones were returned.

    “Such recognition is not a step toward peace but rather a clear violation of international law and a dangerous moral and political failure that legitimizes horrific war crimes,” the Hostages Family Forum said.

    Netanyahu said this month he wanted peace with Palestinians but described any future independent state as a potential platform to destroy Israel, so control of security must remain with Israel.

    His cabinet includes far-right members who openly demand the annexation of all Palestinian land. Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich said on Tuesday that reestablishing Jewish settlements in Gaza was “closer than ever,” calling Gaza “an inseparable part of the Land of Israel.”

    Aid going in but not enough

    A 2-year-old girl being treated for a build-up of brain fluid died overnight of hunger, her father told Reuters on Wednesday.

    “Doctors said the baby has to be fed a certain type of milk,” Salah al-Gharably said by phone from Deir Al-Balah. “But there is no milk. She starved. We stood helpless.”

    The deaths from starvation and malnutrition overnight raised the toll from such causes to 154, according to the Gaza health ministry, including at least 89 children, since the war’s start, most of them in recent weeks.

    Israel said on Sunday it would halt military operations for 10 hours a day in parts of Gaza and designate secure routes for convoys delivering food and medicine.

    The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the United Nations and its partners had been able to bring more food into Gaza in the first two days of pauses, but the volume was “still far from enough.”

    Gaza death toll climbs 

    At least 34 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces across Gaza since dawn, including 15 people reportedly seeking aid, according to medical sources speaking to Al Jazeera Arabic.

    The rising death toll comes as US special envoy to the Middle East, Steve Witkoff, arrived in Israel for meetings aimed at addressing the situation in Gaza.

    Citing Hebrew-language media, The Times of Israel reported that Witkoff is also expected to visit Gaza during his trip. He will reportedly inspect humanitarian aid distribution sites operated by the GHF, a group supported by both the US and Israeli governments.

    US officials said Witkoff will meet Israeli officials “to discuss next steps in addressing the situation in Gaza.”


    Continue Reading

  • Sex and murder are everywhere in 'The Hunting Wives' : Pop Culture Happy Hour – NPR

    Sex and murder are everywhere in 'The Hunting Wives' : Pop Culture Happy Hour – NPR

    1. Sex and murder are everywhere in ‘The Hunting Wives’ : Pop Culture Happy Hour  NPR
    2. ‘The Hunting Wives’ Is Soapy, Sultry Fun  The New York Times
    3. Netflix Is Making “Vulgar Viewing” Popular as the Raunchiest Release of the Summer Dominates Streaming  MovieWeb
    4. Netflix’s New 81% Rt Mystery Crime Series Becomes Global Streaming Hit Days After Release  IMDb
    5. ‘Hunting Wives’ Ending: Who Kills Abby (And Everyone Else)?  TODAY.com

    Continue Reading

  • ‘It’s the best monster ever invented’: Noah Hawley on bringing Ridley Scott’s Alien to TV | Television

    ‘It’s the best monster ever invented’: Noah Hawley on bringing Ridley Scott’s Alien to TV | Television

    When it was first announced in 2013, the thought of Fargo being reimagined as a TV miniseries felt practically sacrilegious. The 1996 neo-noir starring Frances McDormand as a kindly Minnesota police chief was a singular film that had won two Oscars. Surely its distinctive Coen brothers vibe would get shredded in the woodchipper of TV adaptation?

    Back then, Noah Hawley, the screenwriter who took on the job, would have agreed. “It seemed like such a terrible idea,” he says via video call from a Long Island holiday bolthole. “Which is sort of why I liked it. The risk/reward was really high.”

    If his take on Fargo had sullied the original, Hawley jokes, he would have been “burned at the stake”. But his approach was more mindful reimagining than direct adaptation, with Billy Bob Thornton and Martin Freeman leading a new small-town tale of malevolence and haplessness that perfectly captured the Coens’ essence. Fargo won three Emmys in 2014 – including outstanding limited series – and has continued as a star-studded anthology for another four seasons, with showrunner Hawley finding an intriguing new angle each time.

    What on Earth? … (from left) Sydney Chandler, Essie Davis, Noah Hawley and Timothy Olyphant on the set of Alien: Earth. Photograph: Patrick Brown

    If taking on Fargo was a big swing, Hawley’s latest franchise remix is a literal beast. Alien: Earth is a prequel series to the durable sci-fi franchise that began with Ridley Scott’s clammy 1979 horror. Despite numerous Alien movie sequels, crossovers and spin-offs, this is the first time the hissing, nightmarish xenomorph – “Maybe the best monster ever invented, cinematically,” Hawley suggests – has attempted to colonise TV.

    The approach had to be different from last year’s successful offshoot Alien: Romulus, a back-to-basics slasher picking up plot threads from Scott’s original. “An Alien movie is a two-hour survival story, so the monsters can just be monsters,” says Hawley. “But in a 10-hour, 30-hour, 50-hour show the monsters have to exist for a reason. You’re also not killing everybody off, so there has to be a continuing serialised story in which the monsters fit.”

    With the critical acclaim that greeted Fargo and his 2017 series Legion – a subversive take on the X-Men comic-book mythos that ran for three trippy seasons – Hawley has helped elevate expectations for small-screen offshoots of existing intellectual property. “The question is always: why are we doing this?” he says. “And if you can’t answer the ‘why?’ question with something other than ‘money’ then probably you should stop.” What used to be cash-grab brand extensions now increasingly strive to be prestige projects, as evidenced by recent blue-chip TV efforts such as HBO’s The Penguin and politically charged Star Wars hit Andor.

    Hawley is technically on holiday when we speak: he, his artist wife Kyle and their two teenage kids have swapped the summer heat of their Austin, Texas base for New York state. The 58-year-old looks beach-ready in a casual short-sleeve shirt, but is happy to dig into the guts of his own summer blockbuster. It has been gestating since 2018 when, after the success of Legion, the FX channel asked how he might approach an Alien show. “If you ask me if I have an idea, I’m gonna have an idea,” he says.

    From the lofty prequel Prometheus to a shlocky crossover in Alien vs Predator, the franchise timeline has become cluttered over the past 45 years. Hawley’s pitch zeroed in on unexplored territory: what was happening on Earth in the years just before the events of Alien. The result is a mashup of Peter Pan dreaminess and heavy metal doom, with a sprawling ensemble cast including Babou Ceesay as a poker-faced security officer and Timothy Olyphant as a blond android “synth”. It is set in 2120 – a couple of years before Sigourney Weaver and her blue-collar crew of space truckers will have their fateful close encounter – and the Earth has, rather plausibly, been carved up by a cabal of all-powerful tech corporations.

    Weyland-Yutani, the franchise’s longstanding corporate baddy, is obviously in the mix. But a pushy rival called Prodigy has secretly cracked transhumanism, decanting consciousness into powerful synth bodies. The catch is that only young minds are flexible enough for the process, so terminally ill kids are being reborn as herculean but emotionally immature “hybrids”. “If you’re telling a story about humanity there’s nobody more human than a child,” says Hawley. “They don’t know they’re bad liars, they can’t pretend they’re not scared and they learn to be cynical. So that was interesting to me.”

    Beast mode … Alex Lawther, Diêm Camille and Moe Bar-El in Alien: Earth. Photograph: Patrick Brown/FX

    When a hulking research vessel carrying unpleasant cosmic beasties crash-lands on a hi-tech city in Thailand, the hybrids are deployed on a search-and-rescue mission. “We’re fast, we’re strong and we don’t break,” points out lead hybrid Wendy, played with suitably childlike glee by Sydney Chandler (Pistol, Sugar). The stage is set for a corporate turf war amid a citywide state of emergency.

    Coming up with new aliens that could exist alongside the familiar xenomorph was “daunting” for Hawley. The aim was to evoke the feeling of watching Alien for the first time. “They don’t have to carry the day,” he says. “They just have to offer that feeling of unpredictability. By introducing these other creatures, I am able to give you a sense of: well, now I don’t know what’s going to happen.”

    After the fraught terrain of Fargo and Legion, where an emotional gut punch never felt far away, Alien: Earth feels like Hawley in a brasher, more swaggering mode. Classic Black Sabbath was a touchstone. “I wanted this show to be completely entertaining from start to finish,” he says. “It’s complex and layered but it’s also a cliffhanger show and you get those big feelings from hard rock and driving guitars. I want you to come out of each episode going: yeah, come on!”

    skip past newsletter promotion

    Synth band … (from left) Jonathan Ajayi, Adarsh Gourav, Sydney Chandler, Timothy Olyphant, Kit Young, Erana James and Lily Newmark in Alien: Earth. Photograph: FX

    Hawley was born and grew up in New York City (he has a twin brother, Alexi, who has carved out his own career as a TV writer and producer). It was a creative household: his mother, Louise Armstrong, was a writer, painter and activist; his father trained as an actor. “We grew up in the West Village in the 70s and 80s when the only people down there were artists,” he says. “It was not the billionaire row that it is today.”

    After studying political science, Hawley worked as a paralegal while also playing in rock bands and dabbling in creative writing. At 27, he had moved to San Francisco and published his first novel. Despite getting a two-book deal he was struggling with the follow-up. “My editor had left, and the publisher wasn’t really interested in the book that I wrote,” he says, “so I was in kind of a desperate moment.” Helping a friend refine a screenplay led to him pitching and selling his own projects: “Within six months I went from someone who basically didn’t know how I was going to keep the lights on until the end of the year to this whole other career.”

    He has continued to write novels in parallel with his showrunner career – his sixth, Anthem, was published in 2022 – and made his feature directorial debut in 2019 with the astronaut psychodrama Lucy in the Sky, starring Natalie Portman. If this magpie approach suggests a certain creative restlessness – he also provided vocals for Legion’s spacey soundtrack of retro covers – it has also been a conscious attempt at diversifying. “It’s given me a lot of options, which as an artist translates into a modicum of control over your own destiny,” he says.

    Ice work … Martin Freeman in Noah Hawley’s 2014 TV adaptation of Fargo. Photograph: Channel 4/Sportsphoto/Allstar

    One unexpected early influence is British comedy. After studying theatre in London, his father returned with Goon Show LPs that Hawley and his brother could soon recite by heart. “I just wore those records out,” he remembers. He also devoured NPR repeats of the BBC’s 1978 radio adaptation of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, and enthuses about seeing The Young Ones at an impressionable age.

    That meant the casting of Adrian Edmondson as a sinister aide-de-camp in Alien: Earth was a real full-circle moment. “I told Adrian that there was a moment on The Young Ones [in the episode Flood] that informs everything you need to know about me as a storyteller,” he says. “It was when his character, Vyvyan, walked into the closet and ended up in Narnia. I must have been in my teens when I saw it and it was such a mind-blowing thing, that you could have magical realism in a comedy about roommates.”

    What was it like meeting his childhood hero? “I’ve found with a lot of comedic actors that their downtime persona is very different. Adrian is very measured, you know.” Hawley laughs. “He’s much more like his character in our show than Vyvyan.”

    Alien: Earth launches 13 August on Disney+ in the UK.

    Continue Reading