From Prada’s Sequel to Punk’s Rage: How Culture Mirrors the UK’s Climate Cracks The Devil Wears Prada 2’s $24 tweezers and Brazil’s punk resurgence reveal how art and activism are responding to climate chaos and corporate greed.
Malaria breakthrough, AI art detectives and Ofsted’s war on headteachers From a life-saving malaria treatment for infants to AI solving art mysteries and Ofsted’s brutal inspections—why innovation isn’t always progress.
Survival, silverware and the Premier League’s European nightmare Leeds’ escape from relegation masks a deeper crisis: English football’s elite are falling behind Europe’s best. From Arteta’s Champions League lament to Fifa’s World Cup cash grab, the cracks are showing.
Malaria, AI workslop, protests: The UK’s quiet societal fractures From WHO-approved malaria drugs for infants to AI-generated office drudgery and Starmer’s protest crackdown, the UK’s societal cracks deepen—quietly, but relentlessly.
Crypto, AI and war: how Britain’s economy is being reshaped by fear From Farage’s crypto ties to Google’s AI planning tool, the UK’s economic landscape is being redrawn by geopolitical shocks, tech disruption and regulatory blind spots.
Gaza’s Rats, Malaria Babies, and the UK’s Shifting Moral Compass From Gaza’s disease-ridden camps to malaria’s infant toll and King Charles’s US history lesson, the UK confronts its role in global crises—and its own contradictions.
Blackouts for lower bills? The UK’s energy gamble that splits the nation Octopus Energy’s CEO suggests Britons might accept power cuts to slash costs—but the proposal exposes deeper fractures in the UK’s energy strategy, from grid neglect to political cowardice.