The unlikely Christian conversion of Russell Brand
The problem is that this new chapter looks very like a man spying an opportunity to air his ego
The problem is that this new chapter looks very like a man spying an opportunity to air his ego
Russia’s ‘Red Ripper’ Andrei Chikatilo was convicted of fifty-two murders in 1992
His ‘jokes’ were excused because his audience regarded themselves as cynical, worldly sophisticates
Joni Mitchell was able to detach the maker from the made. Should we do the same?
A jury awarded the writer $5 million in damages
My digital stalker had killed a woman, before removing her limbs with a chainsaw
The Trial of Julian Assange: A Story of Persecution by Nils Melzer reviewed
Peng Shuai seems to have retracted her allegations against a senior CCP politician
With each ham-fisted attempt to assure the world about her safety, the CCP have made the story stranger
Those who made money from him must have been aware of the allegations
It might seem a bit of a stretch to see deep similarities between Michaela Coel (young, female, black and currently very fashionable indeed) and the late Philip Roth (increasingly discredited as an embodiment of all those phallocentric white guys who once ruled American fiction merely because they were great writers). Nonetheless, this week’s television made it hard not to. On Tuesday night, as an adaptation of Roth’s The Plot Against America began on Sky Atlantic, Coel’s I May Destroy You was serving up a dazzling final episode that confirmed how Rothian the series has been. For one thing, the main character Arabella, played by Coel herself, was — like many