Scientists retrace steps of Dutch tourists as Argentina expands hantavirus probe
Argentina is expanding its investigation into a hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship
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Argentina is expanding its investigation into a hantavirus outbreak on a cruise ship
Paul Quinn, 52, to serve 24 years for attack that led to one of worst miscarriages of justice in modern British history A man who evaded justice for nearly two decades has been jailed for 21 years for a โsavageโ rape for which Andrew Malkinson was wrongly imprisoned. Paul Quinn, 52, was found guilty of the 2003 attack in Salford after a fresh forensic analysis found traces of his DNA on the victimโs clothing. Continue reading...
On the latest episode of the Daily Mail's Deep Dive podcast, reporter Darren Boyle retraces the Nazi ratlines that smuggled war criminals out of post-war Europe.
It takes a brave person to write about a gang of 20-somethings navigating life and love in neighbouring Manhattan apartments. Sadly this is not an instant classic โ itโs a slice of schmaltzy pudding flopping on to a plate More than three decades after Friends launched, it is still a brave writer who puts out a show about a gaggle of twentysomethings learning to navigate life and love in a brace of unfeasibly palatial apartments in Manhattan. Brave or, perhaps, foolish. The new sitcom from Mindy Kaling (who began her writing and acting career on the US version of The Office and most recently created high school comedy Never Have I Ever and university sitcom The Sex Lives of College Girls) gives us five rather than six friends split between two apartments across a hallway. Two of them are people of colour rather than maintaining the Kauffman-Cranesโ now infamously melanin-free approach to city life, but the keen eye can still trace the ancestry. The ear may have more trouble. Kalingโs scripts try hard but rarely shine, let alone dazzle as the Friendsโ dialogue almost unfailingly did. Continue reading...
The BBC presenter has a horrific illness which leaves her and so many other women in a lifelong hell with no cure in sight. Barnett is at the absolute end of her tether โฆ can she change millions of lives? Endometriosis is like someone taking a drill to your organs. The pain resembles a tsunami in every one of your cells โ or the movement of tectonic plates inside your body. Years spent contending with the condition is โnot lifeโ. Endometriosis may not literally kill you, but suffering from it can feel like a living death. In Emma Barnett: Fighting Endometriosis, the Today presenter provides all these unflinching insights and many more into the condition, which involves cells resembling those that line the uterus growing elsewhere in the body. There is no cure, the only available treatment is hormones (predominantly the contraceptive pill), to mask symptoms, or surgery โ including a total hysterectomy, although that wonโt necessarily provide relief on a permanent basis. Endometriosis is extremely painful and little understood. Itโs also incredibly common: one in 10 women of reproductive age in the UK have it. Continue reading...
The body of a missing nuclear lab worker has been found, 11 months after she vanished without a trace under disturbing circumstances and fears she held classified secrets.
Pivotal figures in Hitler's genocidal regime wanted to establish new lives in South America and beyond, aware that the international community would seek retribution and justice for their war crimes.
Hosting provider pulled the plug after police traced 200 servers to the Netherlands
Police traced a number of expensive assets to the late crime boss Matteo Messina Denaro
In addition to filling the home with furniture from the luxury Soho Home, Harry and Meghan joined the two pre-existing semi-detached houses into one big family home.
In the Middle Ages, rumours spread across Europe of a strange hybrid creature, half-animal, half-plant, known as the Vegetable Lamb of Tartary. A hoax based on fern rhizomes? A euphemism for culled fetal lambs? Or perhaps a medieval misapprehension of cotton? Thom Sliwowski traces the roots of this fabled zoophyte.
Poignant, hilarious, loaded with a super-sharp script โฆ the second outing for this midlife comedy is even more fantastic than the first Middle age is a brutal time of life. As those of us mired in it know, itโs perfectly suited to being mined for laughs (the unhinged type of laughs that are bound up with tears, crisis, and, inevitably, death.) But still too few comedy series take this pressured segment of time and squeeze it for all its acidic worth. Enter middle-aged joke machine Tina Fey, who with The Four Seasons โ her zippy 2020s update of the 1980s film of the same name, co-created and written with Tracey Wigfield and Lang Fisher โ has triumphed once again. The second season of her midlife comedy drama is even more perspicacious, poignant and hilarious than the first. Again there are four fancy holidays split across the seasons, each one given two gag-packed episodes โ a rigid but neat structural device that allows the big moments to happen off-screen. Meanwhile we get the aftermath soundtracked by an avalanche of Vivaldi and bracing jokes about sad lonely donkeys, secret vapes mistaken for thumb drives, and the tragicomedy of being an angry, unravelling fiftysomething man in a T-shirt printed with โKeep Calm and Fuhgeddaboutitโ. Continue reading...
The couple spent ยฃ2.4million on renovations to join the existing swo semi-detached houses into one big family home after the late Queen gifted the property to them as a wedding present in 2018.
New details have emerged about a missing Air Force general and the secret meeting he had just hours before he vanished without a trace.
John Pisano Jr disappeared without a trace in 2001 at age 39. Decades later, police finally made a break through when a car was pulled from an Illinois pond with a body inside.
His starring role in Richard Gaddโs brutal toxic masculinity series is a far cry from his days as Billy Elliot. The actor opens up about gruelling shoots, dancing on toilets โ and why he canโt ever just chill out Not many actors are relieved when they have to film an eye-poppingly explicit sex scene, but that was the case with Jamie Bell on Half Man. His role involved chemsex in saunas, dogging in car parks and illicit quickies in library loos. โHonestly, I was so grateful to be shooting that stuff and not fucking 16-page dialogue scenes, where youโre emoting and itโs so intense,โ says Bell. โOn days when my character had to have sex with random people, Iโd think: โThank God!โ Frankly, it came as a welcome reprieve.โ Richard Gaddโs first TV show since the Emmy-gobbling global Netflix hit Baby Reindeer, Half Man chronicles the combustible, codependent relationship between two โbrothers from another loverโ. Niall (Bell) is bookish, bullied and closeted. Ruben (Gadd) is the swaggeringly violent ex-con son of his motherโs girlfriend. The six-part drama โ which reaches its devastating finale next week โ traces the inseparable duoโs toxic relationship across three decades. Continue reading...
Nobody quite recovers from being a child: the asymmetry of power between parents and children always leaves a trace - by Tom Wooldridge Read on Aeon
Enthusiasts track down weapon used to fell fleeing Eli Wallach amid preparations for 60th anniversary of filmโs release Six decades after Clint Eastwood nonchalantly used a cigar to light its fuse and fell a fleeing Eli Wallach, the Manchester-made cannon that appeared in the Good, the Bad and the Ugly has been rediscovered in a museum in south-east Spain. The artillery piece was tracked down by the Sad Hill Cultural Association, a group of volunteers dedicated to restoring the graveyard near Burgos, northern Spain, built for the climax of Sergio Leoneโs seminal spaghetti western. Continue reading...
YouGov polling reveals support for prospective challenger, with members believing Starmer could not secure another victory Just under half a million children living in poverty in the UK are in households where there is at least one person working full-time, the Press Association reports. The data is from the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) thinktank. PA says: The IPPR said barriers related to work and childcare mean many families are still struggling and end up โwatching their children grow up in povertyโ despite their best efforts. The IPPR analysed official figures published by the government earlier this year and found around 460,000 children were living in poverty in 2024/25 despite being in full-time working households, either in a two-parent or single parent household. Parents are doing everything weโve asked of them โ working full time and juggling childcare โ yet many are still watching their children grow up in poverty. Thatโs not a failure of individual families, itโs a sign the system is no longer delivering on its basic promise. Except that it purports to claim that the area (Makerfield) has been a victim of 40 years of Thatcherism (thatโs what Burnham seems to be running against, which means heโs also running against the Blair-Brown government, of which he was a part). Yet the backdrop to his wandering shows rows of neat, well-kept, substantial semi-detached homes, with plenty new cars in the driveways and a vibrant high street, despite all the road works improving it. Oh yes and a state school so good he sent his kids to it. Put simply โ the pictures clash with his words of victimhood and deprivation. You need to get out of London, Andrew. Youโve clearly got no idea how much people here are struggling. And, yes, a lot of it can be traced back to Margaret Thatcher. Continue reading...