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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-05-13 06:21:25 (1 week ago)

Carla Simón: ‘In Spain people use words like shame and blame. But my parents just had bad luck‘

The rising star of Spanish cinema discusses being orphaned at six, new feature Romería and why she always works with children

Family reunions in European arthouse cinema are almost always unhappy events, on a scale of strife that ranges from simmering resentment (Louis Malle’s Milou in May) to spectacular score-settling (Thomas Vinterberg’s Festen). There are still splatters of bad blood on the Sunday best in the films of Carla Simón, but the Spanish director has a rare gift: she makes you leave the cinema with renewed faith that having relatives and keeping in touch with them may actually be a wonderful thing.

Indeed no film-maker working in Europe now is as capable of turning birthday gatherings, garden parties or poolside barbecues into thrillingly sprawling canvases of human virtue and vice as this 39-year-old rising star. From a riotous water fight in the Berlinale Golden Bear-winning farming drama Alcarràs to a foul-mouthed dinner table singalong in her new film Romería, Simón directs kinship meetings with the attention to detail that other film-makers may invest in action sequences or dance routines.

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Fox News - Sports

Fox News - Sports

2026-05-13 06:21:10 (1 week ago)

Ronda Rousey reveals what inspired her to end nine-year MMA hiatus for one final fight

Ronda Rousey will return to the octagon after nine years for a farewell fight against Gina Carano, saying she feels better than ever physically and mentally.

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Fox News - Video

Fox News - Video

2026-05-13 06:19:26 (1 week ago)

President Trump looks for deals on agriculture during China trip

President Trump highlights the significance of trade ahead of his U.S.-China summit with President Xi Jinping. Mitchell Brown, a GOP pollster and former Trump administration official, discusses the electoral impact of agricultural deals on farmers.

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Globo News - Mundo

Globo News - Mundo

2026-05-13 06:19:05 (1 week ago)

Crise no Reino Unido: ministro da Saúde prepara renúncia para concorrer contra Starmer, diz imprensa britânica


Ministro da Saúde do Reino Unido, Wes Streeting, próximo à residência oficial do premiê Keir Starmer antes de reunião em REUTERS/Jaimi Joy O ministro da Saúde do Reino Unido, Wes Streeting, está se preparando para renunciar para concorrer contra o primeiro-ministro Keir Starmer, afirmaram nesta quarta (13) o tabloide britânico "The Times". Streeting pode deixar o cargo já na quinta-feira, segundo a reportagem. ✅ Siga o canal de notícias internacionais do g1 no WhatsApp A renúncia de Streeting tem o potencial de agravar ainda mais a crise no governo Starmer (leia mais abaixo). O próprio premiê vem enfrentando diversos pedidos públicos para entregar o cargo nos últimos dias, porém ele disse a seus ministros na terça que não renunciará. A notícia de que Streeting está preparando sua renúncia ocorreu poucos minutos após uma breve reunião do ministro com Starmer. Aliados do ministro afirmaram ao "Times" à emissora britânica BBC que Streeting disse a Starmer que ele está determinado a desafiá-lo pelo cargo de primeiro-ministro por meio de eleições parlamentares. Com isso, um mecanismo formal dentro do Partido Trabalhista deve ser acionado nos próximos dias para abrir caminho para o pleito. Segundo o "Times", Streeting já prepara de documentos de nomeação para que parlamentares apoiem uma disputa pela liderança do governo britânico. Vídeos em alta no g1 Um porta-voz de Streeting desconversou sobre a renúncia em nota ao "Times": “Wes é o secretário de Saúde, tem orgulho de seu histórico de redução das filas de espera e de um NHS em recuperação. Ele não pretende dizer nada após sua reunião com o primeiro-ministro que possa desviar a atenção do Discurso do Rei.” A reunião entre Streeting e Starmer nesta quarta durou menos de 20 minutos, e o ministro da Saúde não falou com a imprensa nem na chegada à residência oficial do governo britânico na Downing Street nem na saída da reunião. LEIA TAMBÉM: Starmer desafia pedidos de renúncia e diz a ministros que não entregará o cargo Quem poderia substituir Keir Starmer como primeiro-ministro do Reino Unido Crise no governo Starmer Primeiro-ministro do Reino Unido, Keir Starmer, no Parlamento britânico para discurso do rei Charles III em 13 de maio de 2026. REUTERS/Toby Melville/Pool O premiê Starmer enfrenta uma crise política que se intensificou após derrotas de seu partido em eleições regionais em 7 de maio, o que deixou seu mandato em risco. Desde então, ele vem recebendo diversos pedidos públicos de políticos de seu partido para renunciar ou apresentar um plano de transição de poder. Inclusive, seis ministros de alto escalão de seu governo, entre eles Wes Streeting, iriam pedir a renúncia de Starmer em uma reunião de gabinete emergencial na terça. Porém, antes desse movimento dos ministros, Starmer disse a eles que não entregará o cargo e desafiou aos presentes para desafiar sua liderança por meio de um mecanismo de sucessão dentro do partido, porém ninguém se manifestou naquele momento. Segundo a emissora britânica BBC, ao menos 81 dos 403 parlamentares trabalhistas já pediram que ele entregue o cargo imediatamente ou apresente um prazo para deixar o governo. Esse número é o mínimo necessário para desafiar o premiê, porém é preciso haver um nome em consenso para o candidato.

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Fox News - Video

Fox News - Video

2026-05-13 06:17:03 (1 week ago)

Ronda Rousey discusses her comeback after nearly 10 years away from the octagon

Ronda Rousey spoke to Fox News Digital about returning to the octagon for the first time in 10 years in what she says will be her final bout.

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ABC News - International News

ABC News - International News

2026-05-13 06:16:15 (1 week ago)

Some Japanese snack packages are turning black-and-white as Iran war depletes ink supply

The packaging on some snacks in Japan is turning a somber black-and-white, as the war in Iran disrupts the supply of an ingredient in colored ink

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ABC News - International News

ABC News - International News

2026-05-13 06:16:05 (1 week ago)

Japanese automaker Nissan reduces losses and expects to return to profit

Japanese automaker Nissan says it reduced losses for the fiscal year through March

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Fox News - Sports

Fox News - Sports

2026-05-13 06:13:24 (1 week ago)

Netflix co-CEO clarifies streaming giant’s live sports strategy amid NFL lineup expansion, federal scrutiny

Ted Sarandos says Netflix is not pursuing full-season sports rights as the streaming giant expands its live NFL and sports event offerings in 2026.

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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-05-13 06:10:32 (1 week ago)

Zineb Sedira review: A chic ode to revolutionary cinema, brainy boozers – and exceptional berets

Tate Britain, London
The Franco-Algerian artist’s exploration of radical film-making in the 1960s and 70s is so seductive it makes you wish the crowd was livelier and the wine was flowing

‘WHEN WORDS FALL SILENT, CINEMA SPEAKS …” announces a giant sign. “CINEMA AS A WEAPON” is among the slogans pinned to a board. So it is clear from the start that Zineb Sedira’s exhibition at Tate Britain is intended as a manifesto as much as an aesthetically pleasing arrangement of films and sculptures. And these phrases raise questions: if art is a weapon, then who gets to use it, what war is being fought, and is it any longer effective? What silence is being maintained, and who is speaking out against it?

To answer these questions, Sedira presents a case study of La Cinémathèque Algérienne, which became a mecca for leftist African film-makers after its foundation in 1965. Screened in a model movie theatre complete with flip-down seats, this short documentary film revolves around the cinema’s director, Boudjemaâ Karèche. That he wears a beret very well might tell you something, and this something is confirmed by his accounts of the cinema during its heyday in the 1970s. Here was a place in which clever and idealistic young people could meet to watch important works of revolutionary art, argue about how to construct a better world, and hope to sleep with other clever and idealistic young people.

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Fox News - Video

Fox News - Video

2026-05-13 06:08:50 (1 week ago)

ICE cracking down on fraud within student job program

Former Acting ICE Director Jonathan Fahey joined 'Fox & Friends First' to discuss how the agency is taking action to crack down against fraud within a student job program and new charges filed connected to the Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse.

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The Guardian - World News

The Guardian - World News

2026-05-13 06:07:57 (1 week ago)

1MDB financier Jho Low seeks pardon from Donald Trump

Fugitive faces charges including corruption and money laundering in US and Malaysia for role he allegedly played in scandal

The fugitive Malaysian financier Jho Low, a central figure in the multibillion-dollar scandal at the state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB), is reportedly seeking a pardon from the US president, Donald Trump.

Low faces multiple charges including corruption and money laundering in the US and Malaysia for the important role he allegedly played in the misappropriation of at least $4.5bn (£3.3bn) from 1MDB.

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Le Monde - World News

Le Monde - World News

2026-05-13 06:07:27 (1 week ago)

Cannes Film Festival opens with politically-charged speech by Eye Haïdara and honorary Palme d’Or for Peter Jackson

The hostess paid tribute to those who 'resist, here and elsewhere,' lending a political note to her speech on Tuesday, while New Zealand filmmaker Peter Jackson, creator of the 'Lord of the Rings' trilogy, received an honorary Palme d'Or for his life's work.

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