Dominic Dromgoole | Stage | The Guardian
2024-04-18
To mark the Globe’s 20th birthday, we raid the Guardian archives to see how it has divided critics, sparked academic arguments, faced down political protests – and weathered the British summertime Published: 13 Jun 2017 ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaKuklrSme8OopKKmmZh6pb7Opp6op5ya
Haroon Janjua | The Guardian
2024-04-18
He has reported for The Times, Fox News, Huffington Post, Refugees Deeply, Los Angeles Times, Nikkei Asian Review, Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, Dawn, The Nation among others. He is recipient of 2015 United Nations Correspondents Association Award and tweets at @JanjuaHaroon
ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaKiipLOquMRon5qqn6S7brbAp6GumQ%3D%3D
TV and radio blogTelevisionIt's being hailed as the most incredible TV moment for years, a six-minute tour de force that brings episode four to a climax. Here the director tells us how it was done The greatest long tracking shots on TV
Read the full interview with Cary Fukunaga in a forthcoming feature with the Guardian Guide
Before I even started working on True Detective, I made a point of telling Nic Pizzolatto, the creator, that one of my priorities as director was to defend craft despite the constraints on my time and budget.
OpinionSocial media This article is more than 4 years oldParents: don't panic about Momo – worry about YouTube Kids insteadThis article is more than 4 years oldKeza MacDonaldOne turns out to be a viral hoax. The other is a major platform that is still rife with distressing and disturbing content I first heard about Momo in my local parents’ WhatsApp group. Someone had screenshotted a Facebook post about a creepy puppet that supposedly appeared in unsuspecting children’s phone messages and spliced into YouTube videos, dispensing advice on self-harm and violent acts.
MusicLast year the Canadian musician scored a global hit with Death Bed (Coffee for Your Head) – now he’s finally ready to meet his fans
For the lockdown superstar, omnipresent fame feels very much like obscurity used to. “I’ve been waiting a long time to go play with the fans,” says Powfu – AKA 22-year-old, Canadian lo-fi rapper Isaiah Faber – gazing around at the same four walls he was staring at before his breakthrough track Death Bed (Coffee for Your Head) unexpectedly racked up 360m YouTube streams, 4bn TikTok plays in March 2020 alone, and major chart placings worldwide at the very start of the pandemic.
Film This article is more than 8 years oldQuentin Tarantino has 'destroyed his career', says rightwing host Bill O'ReillyThis article is more than 8 years oldFox News commentator blasts director for appearing at a New York rally to highlight police killings less than a week after an NYPD officer was shot dead Rightwing US commentator Bill O’Reilly warned Quentin Tarantino that he has “ruined his career” after the Oscar-winning film-maker spoke at a protest against police brutality in New York this weekend.
RapInterviewRadical rapper Jpegmafia: 'Black people have things to be mad about'Sheldon PearceWith militant politics and a mandate to provoke, Jpegmafia is the US Air Force veteran who makes outsider rap to mosh to
It’s a balmy autumn afternoon and Jpegmafia is laughing about the many online, white alt-right men who seem to be triggered by lines such as “Pistol whip ’em, I can’t waste the bullet in a poser/Incels gettin’ crossed ’cause I crossed over/How they go from Anne Hathaway to Ann Coulter?
Pennsylvania This article is more than 9 years oldState supreme court justice resigns over pornographic email scandalThis article is more than 9 years oldPennsylvania’s Seamus McCaffery steps down over involvement in growing email scandal that included ‘obscene video of woman in congress with a snake’
A Pennsylvania supreme court justice caught up in a government porn email scandal stepped down Monday after nearly eight years on the state’s highest court, and a judicial ethics board said it would drop its investigation of him as a result.
AntisemitismLettersAntisemitic cartoon was appalling and avoidableReaders respond to the Guardian’s publication of a cartoon that contained racist tropes, which was later withdrawn with an apology
It seems that, far too often, Jews need to point out obvious examples of egregious racism directed at them. The fact that we need to do this in supposedly liberal, anti-racist spaces makes it all the more appalling. Martin Rowson’s cartoon (Journal, 29 April), which he has fully apologised for, contained trope after trope – Jews with grotesque features, money, power and puppeteering.