Fox News - Top Stories
Fox News - Top Stories
2026-07-09 10:00:23 (1 week ago)
Vanilla Ice says he nearly joined the ‘27 Club’ before quitting drugs for good
Vanilla Ice reveals he wrote a suicide note at 27 during his drug addiction battle, describing how fame from "Ice Ice Baby" nearly destroyed him.
Gazeta do Povo - Mundo
Gazeta do Povo - Mundo
2026-07-09 10:00:19 (1 week ago)
Devido a ataques da Ucrânia, Rússia suspende exportações de diesel; Brasil recorre a outras fontes

Rússia enfrenta problemas de desabastecimento interno devido aos ataques da Ucrânia a refinarias de petróleo russas
The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-07-09 10:00:08 (1 week ago)
As his American Utopia tour film hits cinemas, the musician answers your questions about his Scottish sense of humour, working with Brian Eno and his desire to direct another film
In May 1977, Talking Heads along with Ramones toured the UK starting at Eric’s Club in Liverpool. Did touring as punk exploded have an impact on you? SpiritofWacker
There was something really great about that tour because other than maybe a few singles the audience had never seen us, so there was a lot of curiosity and openness to us and Ramones, as different as we were. Later on, fans kind of decided they liked this band or didn’t like this band, but everything happened very quickly. I remember we did a show at the Roundhouse [in London] where somebody in the audience was gobbing on the bands and, of course, Ramones really didn’t like this. Understandably enough, they didn’t see it as a sign of – ha! – respect: “We’re with you so we’re gonna spit on you.” Ramones got more of that than we did, but at least they had leather jackets. We didn’t.
Ever since the Stop Making Sense tour, it seems to me that your live shows have been a quest to unchain the band from the physical restrictions of the typical rock concert. If that is so, where do you go from here? Lucifer_Sam
From various tours I’d realised that my guitar could be wireless. Then I did a tour with St Vincent where the brass players had started in marching bands, so were used to being mobile. I thought: “OK, what about drums?” I looked at drumline in American football and samba schools in Rio. I asked my longtime percussionist Mauro [Refosco] how many players we’d need to break down the drum kit into components and he said six. I took a big gulp and said: “I think we can afford it.” Then I discovered a Hungarian company which had invented a Midi keyboard on a self-powered rack. Suddenly, the whole band were liberated to move about, which democratised the concert experience for the musicians and the audience, who get to understand what each one does.
The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-07-09 10:00:08 (1 week ago)
Legionnaires’ outbreak rocks New York as experts warn of rising climate threat
Officials say climate crisis ‘worsening our exposure’ to bacteria as at least 28 people sickened in Manhattan
A New York outbreak of legionnaires’ disease, a rare but severe form of pneumonia, highlights the microbe’s growing and disproportionate impacts in a warming climate.
At least 28 people have been sickened in an outbreak on the Upper East Side, a wealthy neighborhood between Central Park and the East River in Manhattan. Health department officials, seeking to stop the outbreak, have sampled water from nearly 160 building cooling towers to test for the bacteria.
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-07-09 10:00:07 (1 week ago)
Park/Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin/Egel
(BIS)
The young violinist pairs contrasting works by Goldmark and Sibelius in engaging and fluid performances
A relative rarity in the concert hall, Karl Goldmark’s 1877 Violin Concerto has nevertheless fared reasonably well on disc. South Korean violinist Sueye Park pairs it here not with another 19th-century staple but with miniatures by Sibelius: the bucolic Suite from 1929, the Two Serious Melodies, written at the outbreak of the first world war, and two of his six Humoresques.
The composers crossed paths when the Finn studied briefly under Goldmark in 1890s Vienna, but despite the polite whiff of folk music that hangs about the Hungarian’s concerto, it has little in common with Sibelius’s unvarnished Nordic nationalism. It makes the album something of a game of two halves, though there’s nothing inherently wrong with that.
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-07-09 10:00:07 (1 week ago)
The Odyssey by Homer audiobook review – a truly fantastic journey
Game of Thrones actor Anton Lesser brings poise and depth to this classic adaptation, conjuring monsters, heroes and Gods
With its gods, monsters and dizzying scale, Homer’s the Odyssey is deemed by many to be unfilmable, though it hasn’t stopped directors from having a go, including Christopher Nolan, whose blockbuster adaptation comes to cinemas next week. An audiobook would seem a smart choice, allowing listeners to deploy their imaginations to conjure dark sorcery, supernatural beasts and epic storms rather than leaning on CGI.
This classic recording, first published in 2006, is based on Ian Johnston’s much-admired translation. It is narrated by the Game of Thrones actor Anton Lesser, who brings gravitas and texture to this tale of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, and his efforts to get home after the 10-year Trojan War. Odysseus’s journey is fraught as he encounters the wrath of the sea god Poseidon in the form of a man-eating monster and a whirlpool that swallows ships. Then comes Calypso, the beautiful goddess-nymph and daughter of Atlas who keeps him on an island for seven years in the hope that he will stay as her husband.
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-07-09 10:00:07 (1 week ago)
Chris Mufarrige has taken aim at Facebook scams and junk fees, but consumer advocates say he has an uphill climb
As the director of the Federal Trade Commission’s consumer protection bureau, Chris Mufarrige is the top enforcer protecting Americans against predatory companies.
He’s got an uphill climb, consumer advocates say.
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The Guardian - World News
The Guardian - World News
2026-07-09 10:00:06 (1 week ago)
Manchester United insist new stadium ‘not vanity project’ despite prospect of more debt
Plan unveiled for ground 350 metres from Old Trafford
Working cost of stadium previously stated as £2bn
Manchester United have said their proposed new 100,000-capacity stadium may lead to further debt being loaded on the club but insisted it will be “a sanity, not vanity project”.
Plans for United’s new home were unveiled on Thursday and showed it would be built 350 metres north-west of the current Old Trafford. The club are about £1.3bn in debt and in March 2025 Omar Berrada, United’s chief executive, said £2bn was the working cost of the stadium.
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Times of India
Times of India
2026-07-09 09:59:40 (1 week ago)
For the very first time, scientists have captured live footage of goblin sharks in their deep-sea environment, revealing new insights into the species. This remarkable finding extends their known depth by almost 700 meters. Observations from two separate instances identified these elusive sharks in previously unknown Pacific Ocean habitats, complemented by archived footage from 2019 that documented an unrecognized encounter. This groundbreaking research broadens the goblin shark's recognized range significantly.
New York Times - World News
New York Times - World News
2026-07-09 09:57:57 (1 week ago)
As More Remains Are Found in Rubble From Venezuela Earthquakes, Horror Becomes Routine
Fearful that officials would tear down damaged buildings without accounting for any remaining bodies, Venezuelans are desperately digging for their relatives’ remains.
Fox News - Video
Fox News - Video
2026-07-09 09:56:14 (1 week ago)
BREAKING: Erika Kirk DEMANDS transparency in new court motion
Erika Kirk filed an urgent legal motion demanding all evidence be made public to prevent 'speculation and conspiracy theories' in the Charlie Kirk murder case.
Fox News - Video
Fox News - Video
2026-07-09 09:55:49 (1 week ago)
Wisconsin judge avoids jail time for helping illegal immigrant evade ICE
Wisconsin judge Hannah Dugan receives a $5K fine but no jail time after being convicted of felony obstruction for helping an illegal immigrant evade ICE. Fox News' Madeleine Rivera reports the latest.
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