music

Sean Combs sex trafficking jury ends first day without decision

BY MAGGY DONALDSON

  • The eight men and four women must reach a unanimous decision, deciding either a guilty or not guilty verdict on each count. mdo/sms/jgc
  • The jury in the sex trafficking trial of Sean "Diddy" Combs ended its first day of deliberations Monday without reaching a decision on whether the rap mogul used his wealth and influence to force women into drug-fueled sexual performances with escorts.
  • The eight men and four women must reach a unanimous decision, deciding either a guilty or not guilty verdict on each count. mdo/sms/jgc
The jury in the sex trafficking trial of Sean "Diddy" Combs ended its first day of deliberations Monday without reaching a decision on whether the rap mogul used his wealth and influence to force women into drug-fueled sexual performances with escorts.
The New York jury will reconvene Tuesday at 9:00 am (1300 GMT).
Jurors are tasked with weighing evidence presented over the trial's past seven weeks, ranging from lurid testimony about sex sessions to stacks of phone and financial records.
Combs, 55, faces life in prison if convicted on five federal charges that include racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation for purposes of prostitution.
The producer and entrepreneur, once one of the most powerful people in the music industry, denies the charges.
On Friday, his lawyer vied to skewer the credibility of his accusers -- namely two women he dated for years -- saying they were out for money, while rejecting any notion that the musician led a criminal ring.
But in their final argument, prosecutors tore into the defense, saying Combs's team had "contorted the facts endlessly."
Prosecutor Maurene Comey told jurors that by the time Combs had committed his clearest-cut offenses, "he was so far past the line he couldn't even see it."
"In his mind he was untouchable," she told the court. "The defendant never thought that the women he abused would have the courage to speak out loud what he had done to them."
"That ends in this courtroom," she said. "The defendant is not a god."
Defense attorney Marc Agnifilo scoffed at the picture painted by prosecutors of a violent, domineering man who fostered "a climate of fear."
Combs is a "self-made, successful Black entrepreneur" who had romantic relationships that were "complicated" but consensual, Agnifilo said.

Manipulation

The defense has conceded that Combs at times beat his partners -- but insisted the domestic violence does not amount to the sex trafficking or racketeering he is charged with.
Key to the prosecution's case were witnesses Casandra Ventura and a woman who testified under the pseudonym Jane, both of whom described abuse, threats and coercive sex in wrenching detail.
In their closing arguments, the defense dissected their accounts and at times even mocked them, insisting the women were adults making choices that were best for them.
Prosecutor Comey snapped back at that notion, saying the women were "manipulated" into "brazen" acts of sex trafficking.
Ventura and Jane both said they experienced emotional manipulation and threats that made them feel obliged to meet Combs's sexual demands.
Throughout the trial, jurors were shown voluminous phone records, including messages from both women that Agnifilo argued implied consent.
But prosecutors said those messages did not paint the whole picture, and referenced testimony from a forensic psychologist who explained to jurors how victims become ensnared by abusers.
Central to their case is the claim that Combs led a criminal enterprise of senior employees who "existed to serve his needs" and enforced his power with offenses including forced labor, kidnapping, bribery, witness tampering and arson.
But Agnifilo underscored that none of those individuals testified against Combs, nor were they named as co-conspirators.
Many witnesses were given immunity orders so they could speak without fear of incriminating themselves.
To convict Combs on racketeering, jurors must find that prosecutors showed beyond reasonable doubt that he agreed with people within his organization to commit at least two of the eight crimes forming the racketeering charge.
The eight men and four women must reach a unanimous decision, deciding either a guilty or not guilty verdict on each count.
mdo/sms/jgc

television

NASA eyes summer streaming liftoff on Netflix

  • Programming will include "jaw-dropping Earth views from the International Space Station (ISS), astronaut spacewalks that make your palms sweat" and rocket launch livestreams, according to Netflix.
  • Streaming giant Netflix said Monday it will soon allow viewers to binge rocket launches and spacewalks through a partnership with US space agency NASA. "Whether you're a die-hard space nerd or someone who just really, really enjoys seeing Earth glow from 250 miles up, the countdown has officially begun," Netflix said in a blog post announcing the new NASA+ feed.
  • Programming will include "jaw-dropping Earth views from the International Space Station (ISS), astronaut spacewalks that make your palms sweat" and rocket launch livestreams, according to Netflix.
Streaming giant Netflix said Monday it will soon allow viewers to binge rocket launches and spacewalks through a partnership with US space agency NASA.
"Whether you're a die-hard space nerd or someone who just really, really enjoys seeing Earth glow from 250 miles up, the countdown has officially begun," Netflix said in a blog post announcing the new NASA+ feed.
Programming will include "jaw-dropping Earth views from the International Space Station (ISS), astronaut spacewalks that make your palms sweat" and rocket launch livestreams, according to Netflix.
NASA said its partnership with the entertainment company, which reported over 300 million subscribers in December, aims to "bring space a little closer to home."
"Our Space Act of 1958 calls on us to share our story of space exploration with the broadest possible audience," wrote Rebecca Sirmons, general manager of NASA+.
The stream is committed to "inspiring new generations -- right from the comfort of their couch or in the palm of their hand from their phone," she added.
NASA+ programming will remain free of charge for viewers on the NASA.gov website and the agency's mobile app.
Netflix announced a similar partnership with French television group TF1 earlier this month, its first such deal with a major traditional broadcaster anywhere in the world. 
That programming is slated to launch in summer 2026, giving Netflix subscribers in France access to five TV channels and a streaming platform.
The terms of the Netflix deal were not made public, but follow in the footsteps of other partnerships to expand its content offerings.
The company entered new territory at the end of 2024 by livestreaming two NFL games and a boxing match between YouTube personality Jake Paul and retired professional boxer Mike Tyson. 
cha/sla/des

Glastonbury

Kneecap, Bob Vylan Glastonbury sets spark police probe and global criticism

BY JAMES PHEBY

  • Avon and Somerset Police in southwest England said a "criminal investigation is now being undertaken" after reviewing "video footage and audio" of both Kneecap and Bob Vylan.
  • UK police on Monday launched a criminal investigation into remarks made by rap groups Kneecap and Bob Vylan during the Glastonbury festival, as the US revoked visas for the latter after its frontman led an anti-Israel chant.
  • Avon and Somerset Police in southwest England said a "criminal investigation is now being undertaken" after reviewing "video footage and audio" of both Kneecap and Bob Vylan.
UK police on Monday launched a criminal investigation into remarks made by rap groups Kneecap and Bob Vylan during the Glastonbury festival, as the US revoked visas for the latter after its frontman led an anti-Israel chant.
Bob Vylan, a London-based duo which often tackles racism in its tracks, was slammed by international and British politicians after the group led the crowds in chants of "Death to the IDF" -- the Israeli military.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said after the show there was "no excuse for this kind of appalling hate speech".
Avon and Somerset Police in southwest England said a "criminal investigation is now being undertaken" after reviewing "video footage and audio" of both Kneecap and Bob Vylan.
"The investigation will be evidence-led and will closely consider all appropriate legislation, including relating to hate crimes," police said in a statement.
The BBC apologised for not pulling the live stream of Bob Vylan's performance at the festival over the weekend.
"With hindsight we should have pulled the stream during the performance. We regret this did not happen," the broadcaster said.
It added that the "antisemitic sentiments expressed by Bob Vylan were utterly unacceptable and have no place on our airwaves".
Media watchdog Ofcom said it was "very concerned" and the BBC had questions to answer. 
"We have been speaking to the BBC over the weekend and we are obtaining further information as a matter of urgency," it added.
Israel's deputy foreign minister Sharren Haskel called for the public broadcaster to be investigated over the time it took for the video to be removed from the BBC's online streaming platform.
"I think that the latest (BBC) statement is absolutely pathetic," Haskel told Times Radio.

'Not welcome visitors'

Controversy descended on this year's festival before it even began over the inclusion of Kneecap, one of whose members was recently charged under terror legislation. 
During their show on Saturday, one Kneecap member also wore a T-shirt dedicated to the Palestine Action Group, which is about to be banned under UK terror laws.
The chants about Israel's military were led by Bob Vylan's frontman who goes by the stage name Bobby Vylan, and were broadcast live on the BBC.
Bob Vylan also chanted "free, free Palestine" and "from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free" -- an expression which some see as a call for Israel's destruction, but others say demands an end to Israeli occupation in Gaza and the West Bank.
The United States on Monday said it would revoke visas for Bob Vylan's members, ahead of its American tour dates scheduled later this year.
"Foreigners who glorify violence and hatred are not welcome visitors to our country," Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau posted on X.

'Crossed a line'

Causing a possible political headache for the UK, the Israel embassy issued a statement saying "it was "deeply disturbed by the inflammatory and hateful rhetoric expressed on stage at the Glastonbury Festival".
US ambassador to the UK Warren Stephens slammed the chants as "anti-Semitic" and a "disgrace".
Glastonbury's organisers said the the comments had "very much crossed a line".
"We are urgently reminding everyone involved in the production of the festival that there is no place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence," the festival said in a statement.
Kneecap, which has made headlines in recent months with its pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel stance, also led crowds in chanting abuse against Prime Minister Starmer.
Starmer and other politicians had said the band should not perform after its member Liam O'Hanna, known by his stage name Mo Chara, was charged with a terror offence.
He appeared in court this month accused of having displayed a Hezbollah flag while saying "Up Hamas, Up Hezbollah" at a London concert last year.
The Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah and the Palestinian militants Hamas are banned in the UK, where it is an offence to express support for them.
jwp/tw/aks/am/phz

amusement-park

Nigeria theme park offers escape from biting economy

BY NICHOLAS ROLL

  • She paid the 1,500 naira ($1) entry fee, but seemed less keen on buying ride tickets.
  • Guests poured in through an entry gate on the ground floor of a castle.
  • She paid the 1,500 naira ($1) entry fee, but seemed less keen on buying ride tickets.
Guests poured in through an entry gate on the ground floor of a castle. Inside, vendors dressed as medieval court jesters sold balloons.
At Magicland, a privately owned theme park in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, the country's recurrent crises -- from galloping inflation to armed insurgencies -- fade into the background, at least for one afternoon.
Nigeria's fragile middle class has been battered by two years of soaring prices amid the country's worst cost-of-living crisis in a generation.
At Magicland, one content creator from Borno state -- where international headlines typically centre on jihadist attacks -- filmed TikTok dances as a brightly coloured big wheel towered behind her.
Others took to the carnival rides, including 26-year-old public health worker Mary Adeleke, who said she'd once been an adventurous person.
"But as I grew up, with how the country's structured and all the struggles, I lost that part of me," she said, adding she was on a quest to regain it, one roller coaster at a time.
The west African nation is, by some metrics, a success story: a tech powerhouse, a major exporter of global cultural staples like Afrobeats, and the continent's leading oil producer.
But rampant inflation, a cost of living crisis and continued insecurity have proven hard for much of the country's 228 million people.
Walking out of a swinging pendulum ride, Victor Bamidele, 28, offered a review.
"I thought it was something that would take my soul out of my body," the medical device supplier said in typically colourful Nigerian English.
"But it definitely did not," he added. "It was quite enjoyable."
Victoria Friday drove 30 minutes from Nasarawa state. She paid the 1,500 naira ($1) entry fee, but seemed less keen on buying ride tickets.
In a move relatable to budget-conscious young people the world over, the 20-year-old stylist said she "just came to snap my friend" -- taking photos for social media among the colourful backgrounds.
"Our prices are still very low," said park manager Paul Oko.
"Those who don't earn much can still come," he added, though he admitted the number of visitors has declined.
nro/sn/djt

Oasis

Oasis ride Britpop revival as 90s make nostalgic comeback in UK

BY CAROLINE TAÏX

  • Pulp recently returned to the top of the charts for the first time in 27 years with their new album "More".
  • With "Britpop" bands Oasis and Pulp topping the charts and filling concert halls, a 90s vibe is floating over the UK this summer amid nostalgia for a "cooler" time when people seemed "happier".
  • Pulp recently returned to the top of the charts for the first time in 27 years with their new album "More".
With "Britpop" bands Oasis and Pulp topping the charts and filling concert halls, a 90s vibe is floating over the UK this summer amid nostalgia for a "cooler" time when people seemed "happier".
A trip to high street retailer Marks and Spencer, popular with older shoppers, feels like stepping back 30 years, with Oasis T-shirts flying off the shelves. 
But they're also on sale at Urban Outfitter, a retailer favoured by teens and young adults. 
One crop top reads "Oasis, Live Forever", a tribute to one of the band's most famous songs. 
On Instagram and TikTok, young people are filming themselves styled like the band's brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher. 
The band's reunion, 16 years after the brothers' messy split, has generated huge enthusiasm across the generation gap. 
Tickets for the UK and Ireland tour, which kicks off on July 4 in Cardiff, were snapped up at the end of last August. 
And Liam and Noel aren't the only ones making a comeback. 
Pulp recently returned to the top of the charts for the first time in 27 years with their new album "More".
At the band's concerts, the first notes of most famous hit "Common People" are greeted with the kind of delirium last seen when it was released in 1995. 
Suede will release an album in September and Supergrass are touring this summer to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the band's debut album.
The only band missing is Oasis's arch-enemies, Blur, but they already sold out Wembley Stadium in July 2023. 

Cool Britannia

What is behind the resurgence? 
"Everyone likes an anniversary, don't they?" said Glenn Fosbraey, a popular music academic at Winchester University. 
In particular, 1995 was "a great year for music" with the release of Oasis album "(What's the Story) Morning Glory?" said the 42-year-old lecturer, who grew up with Britpop. 
"It's a nice opportunity to relive our own youth and secondly to introduce this to the next generation," as he is doing with his teenage daughter. 
In recent years, he's noticed students rank Oasis among their favourite bands.
Fosbraey admits he was more a fan of Blur during the notorious 1995 Britpop chart war with Oasis, and won't be going to see the Manchester rockers, although has been to see Pulp. 
He noted a broader nostalgia for the second half of the 1990s, a period known in the UK as "Cool Britannia", marked by a cultural, artistic, and political revival. 
In 1996, England reached the semi-finals of the Euro football championships on home soil and Labour's Tony Blair came to power on a wave of positivity a year later. 
Britpop's infectious optimism sound-tracked it all. 
"Everyone seemed to be happier," recalled Fosbraey. 

Baggy jeans

The nostalgia for the 1990s doesn't just affect those in their forties, but also Gen Z, young people born between 1997 and 2012, added James Hannam of Solent University in Southampton. 
They perceive those times as "less stressful" than the ones they face, weighed down by concerns about climate change, war and artificial intelligence, he added. 
The music industry economics professor has noticed a return of 90s fashion among his students for several years now, with a return of baggy jeans and bucket hats, a staple of Liam Gallagher's wardrobe at the height of his fame. 
Several of Hannam's students will be going to the Oasis concert. 
Both young and old appreciate that "Noel and Liam Gallagher were much more honest in interviews", he told AFP.
"They would say offensive things. There are lots of music stars who are quite media trained and maybe you don't have the very amusing, honest responses," added Hannam.
Julie Whiteman, a marketing professor at the University of Birmingham, was 20 in 1995 and was never a fan of Oasis. 
She said it was "hard to escape" the 90s revival, but there was little nostalgia on her part. 
"It was a pretty misogynistic, pretty intolerant time," she told AFP.
"It was quite an unpleasant time for a lot of people, if you were a woman or if you were an ethnic minority or if you were not heterosexual," she said. 
"It was not so straightforward, as in just like a really cool time."
ctx/jwp/fg

women

Kenyan women jockey for place at DJ turntables

BY JULIE CAPELLE AND EDEN EZRA

  • I can mix, I can beat-match.
  • Headphones on her head, fingers on the controls, eyes fixed on the mixing software, Kwem Kimtai strung together Afro house beats during her DJ training in Nairobi.
  • I can mix, I can beat-match.
Headphones on her head, fingers on the controls, eyes fixed on the mixing software, Kwem Kimtai strung together Afro house beats during her DJ training in Nairobi.
Kimtai gushed over the skills she learnt on the intensive four-week course at the Santuri Electronic Music Academy (SEMA), which she hopes will help her thrive in a world historically dominated by men.
"I can do everything. I can mix, I can beat-match. I can assess the energy level of music," said the 32-year-old aspiring DJ. 
Established in 2021 and named after the Swahili word for vinyl, the academy sees itself as a hub for musical innovation and inclusion. 
"Prior to this I was just a lover of music," said Kimtai, whose stage name is Tawa.RaR. 
"But I wanted to be able to fuse different genres -- travel across different worlds."
Carving out a place in the electronic scene remains a challenge for Kenyan women.
The organisation that runs the academy interviewed dozens of artists in 2020 for a study and found women were gaining visibility as DJs in east Africa.
Yet they remained marginalised and paid significantly less than men, while music production was also male-dominated and training costs too high for many. 
SEMA has since trained hundreds of people in production, mixing, DJing and other elements of the business.
Besides encouraging women and minorities to take part, the academy also raises sponsorship funding for those who need it. 
"When I started DJing, I would have really liked to have had something like this because the teachers I had were all men," said DJ Shock, who was leading a class on the commercial side of the business during a visit by AFP. 
She only knew two other female DJs when she started out 20 years ago, and said the men would "gatekeep" the art. 
"It was a bit of a struggle to get them to share information equally," she said.

'Equal dopeness'

At the back of the classroom, speakers were stacked behind a turntable, while trainees tapped away on mixing software in preparation for an imminent final presentation.
"We're the people who are going to make spaces get safer for everyone," said Daisy Nduta, 28, a recent sound engineering graduate.
She was excited to be DJing live soon under her stage name Naniwho.
Santuri organises frequent events for the students to test their skills. 
"We welcome everybody the same... We put anybody prime time who we feel can do the spot well," said DJ Shock, denouncing the way clubs often relegate women to play the opening slots when audiences are sparse. 
Things are rapidly improving for women who DJ in Nairobi, however.
Women are earning headline slots at major clubs while collectives like "Sirens" organise women-centric events.
That success is part of a global pattern. 
Industry network "female:pressure" says the number of women performing at electronic music festivals rose from just over nine percent in 2012 to 30 percent in 2023. 
In Kenya, "there are more and more female DJs coming up... They're getting more confident, which I love," said Tina Ardor, who regularly performs at Muze, a Nairobi electro mecca. 
She said there was still a widespread, often unconscious, favouritism toward men. 
But the SEMA course, which she did two years ago, is helping to change attitudes.
"I'm not a fan of pulling the gender card," said Ardor, hoping the scene soon gets to a point where there is "equal opportunity and equal dopeness" for everyone.
ee-jcp/jf/er/sbk

fashion

Late fashion icon Lagerfeld's discreet villa near Paris goes under hammer

BY JULIETTE VILROBE

  • - Candle auction - With a style of which the late designer may himself have approved, the sale will take place, according to the traditional notary auction method, as a so-called "candle auction".
  • A villa outside Paris owned up until his death by the fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld, which shows both luxury and discretion, is to be sold at auction Tuesday under a traditional method where time is counted by candles.
  • - Candle auction - With a style of which the late designer may himself have approved, the sale will take place, according to the traditional notary auction method, as a so-called "candle auction".
A villa outside Paris owned up until his death by the fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld, which shows both luxury and discretion, is to be sold at auction Tuesday under a traditional method where time is counted by candles.
Bought in 2010 by Lagerfeld, who died in 2019, the villa in Louveciennes in the Yvelines region some 15 kilometres (9 miles) west of Paris is to be sold at notarial auction with an initial asking price of 4.6 million euros ($5.4 million).
A two-hectare park contains three separate houses, a swimming pool and a tennis court, surrounded by trees or walls ensuring "discretion and anonymity", said Jerome Cauro, of notaries Arias, the firm handling the sale.
The main building is classical on the outside and understated on the inside. The designer's studio occupied a large part of the first floor of the house.
"It's a property that was the showcase for his furniture," said Arno Felber, also a notary at Arias. 
"He put everything into this last house; he really loved it. He called it 'the true version of himself'" his muse and right-hand woman, Amanda Harlech, told Vogue in 2021.
The iconic former Chanel creative director even had his childhood bedroom recreated in a small room with leopard-print walls.

'Loved entertaining'

Legend has it that he only slept there for one night, that he hosted a grand reception in honour of Princess Caroline of Monaco, and that he readily lent it to his friends.
"He loved coming here during the day to create and he loved entertaining," said Cauro. The three living rooms and the kitchen, equipped with four ovens, five sinks, two refrigerators, and two fryers, can accommodate dinners for 100 people.
According to Arias, the fashion legend carried out "colossal works" on this property, which belonged to the 19th century poet Leconte de Lisle and members of the Rothschild family in the first half of the 19th century.
"We don't have the bill, but we estimate that the cost of the work is close to the asking price" of 4.6 million euros, said Arno Felber.
Abandoned after the death of the "Kaiser," the house was purchased in 2023 by a real estate company that took over its upkeep and put it back up for sale.

Candle auction

With a style of which the late designer may himself have approved, the sale will take place, according to the traditional notary auction method, as a so-called "candle auction".
In such a candle auction, which is still commonplace in France, the auction time is defined by the burning of two small candles, each lasting about fifteen seconds.
In March 2024, Lagerfeld's futuristic three-room Paris apartment was sold for ten million euros by the notary firm Althemis, twice its asking price.
With his powdered white pony tail, black sunglasses, and starched high-collared white shirts, Lagerfeld, who died aged 85, was as instantly recognisable as his celebrity clients.
Having pushed Fendi into the big league, he was brought in to save Chanel in 1983 when only its celebrated range of perfumes was making money.
Despite being at the centre of fashion's social whirl and lavishing millions on art, furniture and homes, Lagerfeld was however always a solitary figure.
mdv-jvi-sjw/gv

Kashmir

India-Pakistan conflict hits shared love of film, music

BY SHROUQ TARIQ

  • Pakistan denied the allegation and, after tit-for-tat diplomatic retaliation, their militaries fought for four days before a ceasefire was reached.
  • While conflict raged between the powerful militaries of India and Pakistan, a battle was also fought on the cultural front lines despite years of shared love for films and music.
  • Pakistan denied the allegation and, after tit-for-tat diplomatic retaliation, their militaries fought for four days before a ceasefire was reached.
While conflict raged between the powerful militaries of India and Pakistan, a battle was also fought on the cultural front lines despite years of shared love for films and music.
The deadly fighting in early May -- the worst in decades -- affected artists previously untouched by animosity between their leaders.
Ali Gul Pir, a Pakistani rapper and comedian with a huge Indian following, released a song years ago mocking Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
While he was spared consequences then, in May his YouTube channel and Instagram profile were blocked in India. 
"Indians now recognise that the digital space serves as a bridge between Pakistanis and Indians, and they seem intent on severing that connection," Pir told AFP.
The collapse in bilateral relations was caused by a deadly April attack on tourists in India-administered Kashmir, which New Delhi blamed on Islamabad. 
Pakistan denied the allegation and, after tit-for-tat diplomatic retaliation, their militaries fought for four days before a ceasefire was reached.
The conflict hit the music industry for the first time, with Pakistani singer Annural Khalid also remembering how her Indian following dropped off. 
"Delhi was my top listening city before the ban," said Khalid, who has 3.1 million monthly listeners on Spotify.
"I suffered a great loss in the audience" from India, she told AFP. 
"Listeners were deprived of content because music was turned into something it is not," Khalid added.  
The conflict also scrubbed out some prior exchanges, such as the soundtrack of the 2017 film  "Raees" on Spotify in India. 
It now shows only Indian actor Shah Rukh Khan, without his Pakistani co-star Mahira Khan. 

'The same traumas'

With Pakistan producing just a handful of movies each year under strict censorship rules, Bollywood has always proven popular among viewers. 
"I grew up watching Bollywood. We have the same traumas, we have the same history, we have the same stories," said Pakistani film critic Sajeer Shaikh. 
Pakistani actors and directors have for decades seen making it to Bollywood as the ultimate recognition. 
But this month, Indian star Diljit Dosanjh announced his latest movie, "Sardaar Ji 3", which features four Pakistani actors, would be released "overseas only", after New Delhi banned Pakistani content and artists from productions. 
"Abir Gulaal", a love story starring Pakistan's Fawad Khan and Indian actor Vaani Kapoor, was scheduled to hit Indian cinemas on May 9 but the release was postponed. 
Even some in the industry who had previously backed the cross-border artistic trade changed their tune last month.
"Everything should be banned... cricket, films, everything," said Indian actor Suniel Shetty, who has a big fan following in Pakistan. 
He starred in the 2004 movie "Main Hoon Na", which subtly promotes peace between India and Pakistan. 
"It's something really unfortunate about politics, creating that rift and putting boundaries around art," said Dua Zahra, assistant manager at Warner Bros South Asia's music label in Pakistan.  

'Let's just make art'

As part of its measures in the wake of the Kashmir attack, New Delhi's ban on some Pakistani YouTube channels included private broadcaster HUM TV. 
The channel, which says around 40 percent of its viewers are from India, simply told its fans to use a VPN to continue watching.  
Since Modi took office more than a decade ago, many Indian critics and filmmakers have warned that Bollywood is now increasingly promoting his government's Hindu nationalist ideology.
While the conflict has created divisions on the cultural scene, there are signs that the trade will endure. 
Over a month after the ceasefire, three Indian films were in the top 10 on Netflix Pakistan, while the top 20 trending songs in India included two Pakistani tracks. 
Pir, the rapper and comedian, vowed to "bridge gaps".
"Let's not make war, let's just make art," he said. 
"Let's just not bomb each other." 
stm/rsc/lb/sco

Glastonbury

UK PM condemns 'death to the IDF' chants at Glastonbury Festival

BY JESSICA HOWARD-JOHNSTON WITH PETER HUTCHISON IN LONDON

  • Prime Minister Keir Starmer told The Telegraph Sunday that "there is no excuse for this kind of appalling hate speech".
  • UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Sunday added his voice to those condemning a British punk-rap group for anti-Israel remarks at the Glastonbury music festival, an incident that has already sparked a police inquiry.
  • Prime Minister Keir Starmer told The Telegraph Sunday that "there is no excuse for this kind of appalling hate speech".
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Sunday added his voice to those condemning a British punk-rap group for anti-Israel remarks at the Glastonbury music festival, an incident that has already sparked a police inquiry.
Bob Vylan led crowds in chants of "Death, death to the IDF", a reference to the acronym for the Israeli military, during their set on Saturday.
British police officers are also examining comments by the Irish rap trio Kneecap, whose members have also been highly critical of Israel and its military campaign against the Palestinian militant group Hamas in the Gaza Strip.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer told The Telegraph Sunday that "there is no excuse for this kind of appalling hate speech".
"I said that Kneecap should not be given a platform and that goes for any other performers making threats or inciting violence," he added.
"The BBC needs to explain how these scenes came to be broadcast," he said, referring to the country's national broadcaster.
One of Kneecap's members wore a T-shirt dedicated to the Palestine Action Group, which is about to be banned under UK terror laws.
The festival's organisers said Bob Vylan's comments had "very much crossed a line".
"We are urgently reminding everyone involved in the production of the festival that there is no place at Glastonbury for antisemitism, hate speech or incitement to violence," the festival said in a statement.
Avon and Somerset police said Saturday that video evidence would be assessed by officers "to determine whether any offences may have been committed that would require a criminal investigation".

'Life is sacred'

The chants about Israel's military were led by Bob Vylan's frontman Bobby Vylan, and were broadcast live on the BBC, which airs coverage of Britain's most popular music festival.
"I thought it's appalling," Wes Streeting, the Labour government's health secretary, said of the chants.
"I think the BBC and Glastonbury have got questions to answer about how we saw such a spectacle on our screens," he told Sky News.
The Israel embassy said in a statement late Saturday that "it was "deeply disturbed by the inflammatory and hateful rhetoric expressed on stage at the Glastonbury Festival".
But Streeting also took aim at the embassy, telling it to "get your own house in order".
"I think there's a serious point there by the Israeli embassy. I wish they'd take the violence of their own citizens towards Palestinians more seriously," he said, citing Israeli settler violence in the West Bank.
Festival-goer Joe McCabe, 31, told AFP that while he did not necessarily agree with Vylan's statement, "I certainly think the message of questioning what's going on there (in Gaza) is right".
A spokesperson for the BBC said Vylan's comments were "deeply offensive" and the broadcaster had "no plans" to make the performance available on its on-demand service.
While the BBC reported that Kneecap's set was not broadcast live over editorial concerns surrounding impartiality, it announced Sunday that an edited version was made available on iPlayer.
It said the edits ensured the content fell within the "limits of artistic expression" in line with its editorial guidelines, and they had put warnings for strong language in the video.

'A joke'

Kneecap, which has made headlines in recent months with its pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel stance, also led crowds in chanting abuse against UK Prime Minister Starmer.
Starmer and other politicians had said the band should not perform after its member Liam O'Hanna, known by his stage name Mo Chara, was charged with a terror offence.
He appeared in court this month accused of having displayed a Hezbollah flag while saying "Up Hamas, Up Hezbollah" after a video resurfaced of a London concert last year.
The Iran-backed Lebanese force Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas are banned in the UK, and it is an offence to express support for them.
O'Hanna has denied the charge and told the Guardian newspaper in an interview published Friday that "it was a joke -- we're playing characters".
The group, which regularly leads crowds in chants of "Free Palestine" during its concerts, apologised this year after a 2023 video emerged appearing to show one singer calling for the death of British Conservative lawmakers.
Israel began its offensive against Hamas in the Palestinian territory of Gaza after the militants launched an attack that resulted in 1,219 deaths, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.
Israel's retaliatory military campaign has killed at least 56,412 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to Hamas-run territory's health ministry. The United Nations considers these figures to be reliable.
bur-gv/jj/tc/dhc

Canada

Brad Pitt's 'F1' cruises to top of N.America box office

  • Rounding out the top 10 were: "Lilo & Stitch" ($6.9 million) "Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning" ($4.2 million) "Materialists" ($3 million) "Ballerina" ($2.1 million) "Karate Kid: Legends" ($1 million) bur-sst/md
  • "F1: The Movie," starring Brad Pitt as a washed up Formula One driver who gets one last shot at redemption, sped to the top of the North American box office in its debut weekend with $55.6 million in ticket sales, industry estimates showed Sunday.
  • Rounding out the top 10 were: "Lilo & Stitch" ($6.9 million) "Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning" ($4.2 million) "Materialists" ($3 million) "Ballerina" ($2.1 million) "Karate Kid: Legends" ($1 million) bur-sst/md
"F1: The Movie," starring Brad Pitt as a washed up Formula One driver who gets one last shot at redemption, sped to the top of the North American box office in its debut weekend with $55.6 million in ticket sales, industry estimates showed Sunday.
"This is an outstanding opening for an original action sports drama," said David A. Gross of Franchise Entertainment Research, noting that both critics and audiences have loved the racing film from Apple and Warner Bros.
"How to Train Your Dragon," Universal and DreamWorks Animation's live-action reboot of the popular 2010 film, slipped to second place with $19.4 million, according to Exhibitor Relations.
The family-friendly film tells the story of a Viking named Hiccup (Mason Thames) who strikes up a friendship with Toothless the dragon.
In third place was Disney/Pixar Animation's latest original film "Elio," at $10.7 million in the United States and Canada.
"Elio" tells the story of a young boy who is mistaken by aliens as an intergalactic ambassador for Earth. The voice cast includes Oscar winner Zoe Saldana.
"M3GAN 2.0," the sequel to Universal's 2022 film about a murderous doll, opened in a disappointing fourth place with $10.2 million. 
"The idea of a child-sized humanoid robot doll powered by AI generated a lot of interest the first time, but that interest has fallen apart," Gross said.
In fifth place was Columbia Pictures' zombie sequel "28 Years Later," which took in $9.7 million.
Critics' reviews and audience ratings have been strong for the Danny Boyle-directed threequel, which picks up -- as the title suggests -- more than a generation after the initial outbreak of the Rage Virus.
Rounding out the top 10 were:
"Lilo & Stitch" ($6.9 million)
"Mission: Impossible -- The Final Reckoning" ($4.2 million)
"Materialists" ($3 million)
"Ballerina" ($2.1 million)
"Karate Kid: Legends" ($1 million)
bur-sst/md

Glastonbury

Irish rappers Kneecap perform controversial Glastonbury set

BY JESSICA HOWARD-JOHNSTON

  • But Glastonbury organisers defied Starmer who had said it was not "appropriate" for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
  • Irish rap trio Kneecap took aim at UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a defiant performance Saturday at Britain's Glastonbury festival, which also saw Britpop legends Pulp wow fans with a surprise show.
  • But Glastonbury organisers defied Starmer who had said it was not "appropriate" for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
Irish rap trio Kneecap took aim at UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer during a defiant performance Saturday at Britain's Glastonbury festival, which also saw Britpop legends Pulp wow fans with a surprise show.
Kneecap has made headlines in recent months with their pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel stance.
One of their members has been charged with a "terror" offence for allegedly supporting Hezbollah, leading Starmer and other politicians to call for them to be dropped from the line up. 
In front of thousands of fans, many waving Palestinian flags, Kneecap led the crowd in chanting abuse about Starmer. 
"Glastonbury, I'm a free man", said member Liam O'Hanna, who appeared in court earlier this month accused of having displayed a Hezbollah flag while saying "Up Hamas, Up Hezbollah" after a video resurfaced of a London concert last year.
The Iran-backed Lebanese force Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas are banned in the UK, and it is an offence to express support for them.
O'Hanna, known by his stage name Mo Chara, has denied the charge.
"This situation can be quite stressful but it's minimal compared to what the Palestinian people are (facing)," said O'Hanna, wearing his trademark keffiyah.
O'Hanna also gave "a shout out" to Palestine Action Group, which interior minister Yvette Cooper announced last week would become a banned group under the Terrorism Act of 2000.
Fellow band member DJ Provai wore a t-shirt dedicated to the campaign group, whose prohibition comes after its activists broke into a British Royal Air Force base and vandalised two planes.

'Playing characters'

Before Kneecap took to the stage, rap punk duo Bob Vylan led the crowd in chants of "Death, death to the IDF", a reference to the Israeli Defence Forces. 
Israel's embassy to the UK said it was "deeply disturbed by the inflammatory and hateful rhetoric" in a post on X following the event. 
"It raises serious concerns about the normalisation of extremist language and the glorification of violence," it said, calling for festival organisers, artists and UK officials to denounce the remark. 
Local police said they were assessing videos of comments made by both groups to decide whether any offences may have been committed, UK media reported.
Formed in 2017, Kneecap is no stranger to controversy. To their fans they are daring provocateurs who stand up to the establishment; to their detractors they are dangerous extremists.
Their Irish and English lyrics are filled with references to drugs, they repeatedly clashed with the UK's previous Conservative government and have vocally opposed British rule in Northern Ireland.
The group apologised this year after a 2023 video emerged appearing to show one singer calling for the death of British Conservative MPs.
Two MPs have been murdered in Britain in the past nine years and many of them worry about their safety.
But Kneecap deny the terrorism charge and say the video featuring the Hezbollah flag has been taken out of context.
Asked whether he regretted waving it, and other comments caught on camera, Chara told the Guardian in an interview published Friday: "Why should I regret it? It was a joke -- we're playing characters."
Chris Jeffries, a 32-year-old analyst at a bank, told AFP that Kneecap's performance at Glastonbury made him proud to be a fan.
"They're one of the only bands here that are actually preaching about Palestine," said Jeffries, wearing an Irish tricolour balaclava. 

Glastonbury rejects criticism

Since O'Hanna was charged, the group has been pulled from a slew of summer gigs, including a Scottish festival appearance and various performances in Germany.
But Glastonbury organisers defied Starmer who had said it was not "appropriate" for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
"People that don't like the politics of the event can go somewhere else," Michael Eavis, co-founder of the festival said in an article published in a free newspaper for festival-goers.
Public broadcaster the BBC faced pressure not to air the concert.
In a statement Saturday, a spokesperson for the broadcaster said the performance would not be shown live but would likely be available on-demand afterwards.
Pulp, led by Jarvis Cocker, had fans bouncing to '90s anthem "Common People" after being listed on the lineup as "Patchwork".
"Sorry to the people who were expecting Patchwork," the frontman joked.
Headline acts at the festival which finishes Sunday include Neil Young and Olivia Rodrigo, with other highlights including Charli XCX and Rod Stewart.
vid-pdh/giv/ecl

conflict

Russia's 'Mr Nobody' gambles all with film on Kremlin propaganda

BY ANNA SMOLCHENKO

  • "Looking at this propaganda every single day was a lesson in how desensitised you can become to it."
  • When Moscow invaded Ukraine, Pavel Talankin, a staff member at a secondary school in Russia's Ural Mountains, was ordered to film patriotic lessons, songs and morning drills. 
  • "Looking at this propaganda every single day was a lesson in how desensitised you can become to it."
When Moscow invaded Ukraine, Pavel Talankin, a staff member at a secondary school in Russia's Ural Mountains, was ordered to film patriotic lessons, songs and morning drills. 
Talankin, the school's event organiser and also a keen videographer, found the propaganda work so depressing that he wanted to quit his job in the industrial town of Karabash. 
Then he received what he says was the strangest message of his life. 
A Europe-based filmmaker got in touch, offering to collaborate on a project to document the abrupt militarisation of Talankin's school in the wake of Russia's February 2022 invasion of its neighbour.
Talankin had earlier seen a post from a Russian company looking for people whose jobs had been affected by the war. Talankin said he was ready to talk. 
After receiving the foreigner's offer Talankin did not sleep all night.
The project changed his life forever. 
After teaming up with David Borenstein and shooting many hours of footage, Talankin last summer fled Russia with seven hard discs, leaving behind his mother, brothers and sisters and the town he loved. 
Using the smuggled-out footage Borenstein, a Denmark-based US filmmaker, directed what became "Mr Nobody Against Putin", an award-winning 90-minute documentary which exposes the intensity of the propaganda at Talankin's school and throughout Karabash. 
It premiered at the 2025 Sundance film festival in January.
- 'Persona non grata' - 
The project cost Talankin dearly. Local officials banned his former colleagues from contacting him, he became a hate figure for supporters of the war and his school librarian mother was upset.
"I have become a persona non grata," Talankin, 34, told AFP from Prague, where he is now based.
Russia outlawed all criticism of the Russian military and the Kremlin and Talankin knew he had taken huge risks. 
But he has no regrets.        
"I would do it all over again."
He has been buoyed by the support of people featured in the film including those who lost their loved ones in the war. 
One former colleague said she became ashamed that she, too, was "part of the system."
The documentary reaped awards at festivals and the film crew hopes it will be available to wider audiences in Europe later this year. Borenstein said the film's success had been a "relief" because the multi-national crew overcame numerous obstacles including communication and security. 
But above all he was "really scared" that if the film flopped Talankin's sacrifice would come to nothing.
"I knew the whole time that Pasha would have to leave Russia to make this project happen," Borenstein told AFP, referring to his co-director by his diminutive.
"That is a huge sacrifice for him, because his mum is there, his whole life is there, he does not speak English, not at that time."
Talankin has not been able to join the crew to present the film at the Sundance festival in Utah and elsewhere due to paperwork issues, but the team hopes this will soon change.
For now he is learning English and adjusting to his new life in Prague.

'Like musketeers'

Talankin said he was heartened by the reactions at the screenings.
One viewer in the Czech Republic said he hated Russians but the film made him reconsider. "We knew nothing about what was happening to you," Talankin quoted the Czech as saying.
"It is a powerful and poetic piece of cinema," said producer Alexandra Fechner, who is promoting the film in France.
"This film shows the hidden side of propaganda in Russia, which targets the youngest members of society, children who are being taught a rewritten version of history and given guns!" she said.
With the war in its fourth year, Moscow has put society on a war footing and leveraged the educational system to raise a fiercely pro-Kremlin generation.
The film features Wagner mercenaries telling children about hand grenades and teachers calling Ukrainians "neo-Nazi", and includes an audio recording of a wailing mother at her soldier son's funeral.
But critics also point to the documentary's empathy and light touch.
In one episode, a history teacher tells pupils that the spiralling prices could soon make gas unaffordable for Europeans.
"The French will soon be like musketeers, riding horses, and the rest of Europe too," he said.
Borenstein said that by viewing the footage sent by Talankin nearly every day, he understood the effect of the dehumanising war-time propaganda.
While at the beginning he found some of the clips shocking, months later his mind had become so used to the onslaught of the propaganda that he did not see the footage depicting the Wagner mercenaries as something abnormal. 
"I was able to replicate among myself some of the feelings that maybe the students and people in the school felt," he said. "Looking at this propaganda every single day was a lesson in how desensitised you can become to it."
A lot of the footage had not made it into the film, including the school's preparations for the possibility of a nuclear attack.
Karabash is located close to one of Russia's most sensitive sites, the Mayak nuclear reprocessing plant.
Talankin said Borenstein did not want the viewers to "drown in the enormous amount of negative material."
"I have plans for this footage," Talankin said. "Sooner or later I will start slowly releasing it."
as/sjw/sbk

men

Colour and ease lift Paris Men's Fashion Week

BY MARINE DO-VALE, MEHDI CHERIFIA

  • "There's a sort of nonchalant elegance in having a very fluid yet thoughtfully designed silhouette," Communier said.
  • Colours ran wild and silhouettes softened at Paris Men's Fashion Week, which ends Sunday, as designers brought a rare breath of fresh air to a gloomy fashion climate.
  • "There's a sort of nonchalant elegance in having a very fluid yet thoughtfully designed silhouette," Communier said.
Colours ran wild and silhouettes softened at Paris Men's Fashion Week, which ends Sunday, as designers brought a rare breath of fresh air to a gloomy fashion climate.
Despite the heavy news cycle and economic turbulence affecting the luxury sector, this Fashion Week was a "shot of creativity that felt incredibly good", Alice Feillard, men's buying director at Galeries Lafayette, told AFP.
The spring-summer 2026 season "is much more creative than the previous ones, which were a bit duller", said Adrien Communier, the fashion editor at GQ France.
Both experts observed a more relaxed vibe, with Feillard pointing to "good humour" and "optimism", while Communier noted a "lighter mood".
"With so many debuts, there was a sense of renewal. And so, I found that people were more curious," he added.
After a notable women's show in March, Julian Klausner made waves Thursday with his first menswear show for Dries Van Noten, while Jonathan Anderson's long-awaited debut at Dior drew applause on Friday.
A renewed burst of creativity lit up the runways, most visibly through bold colour choices. Brown tones and pastels made way for a richer, more saturated palette for next summer.
Saint Laurent opened the week with violet, navy, orange and moss green, while Pharrell Williams at Louis Vuitton channelled Indian motifs and hues.
Dries Van Noten made a splash with bold fuchsia and blood red, while Kenzo exploded with candy pink, aquatic blue and chick yellow.

'nonchalant elegance'  

Dior Homme took a more restrained approach, showcasing rich tones like a deep forest green on structured pieces.
The tones sometimes appeared as prints -- tiger at Kenzo, childlike safari at Louis Vuitton and floral at Dior.
At Comme des Garcons Plus, prints leaned into pop-style 1970s geometry -- a look also seen at Amiri, Saint Laurent and Junya Watanabe, who embraced flared trousers.
Stripes were ubiquitous but subtle, adding detail without overwhelming.
Designers leaned into fluidity with flared trousers, long jackets, open shirts and an ongoing pyjama trend.
"There's a sort of nonchalant elegance in having a very fluid yet thoughtfully designed silhouette," Communier said.
Last season's neo-dandy look is now much more relaxed.
"Tailoring is still omnipresent in the collections, but it's becoming more fluid. There's still formality, but it's far more relaxed and remains very elegant," said Feillard.
Bags were omnipresent, from clutch to shoulder, styled for both casual outings and evening occasions.
Finally, flip-flops made a major comeback, seen at Officine Generale, Auralee and even Hermes, "worn in an almost formal way", said Communier. A perfect example of relaxed chic.
mdv/srg/gv/tc

painting

'Cezanne at home': show retraces artist's roots in southern France

  • The vivid southern French countryside provided most of the inspiration for Cezanne's works, composed mainly of still lifes and landscapes.
  • A city in southern France is celebrating its most famous local painter Paul Cezanne with an exhibition showcasing his works inspired by the sun-drenched landscapes of the Provence region.
  • The vivid southern French countryside provided most of the inspiration for Cezanne's works, composed mainly of still lifes and landscapes.
A city in southern France is celebrating its most famous local painter Paul Cezanne with an exhibition showcasing his works inspired by the sun-drenched landscapes of the Provence region.
Paintings by Cezanne, created in his hometown of Aix-en-Provence and at his family estate, went on display Saturday at the Granet Museum in the city for the over three-month exhibition, which is expected to draw hundreds of thousands of visitors.
The theme of the exhibit is "Cezanne at home," said the city's mayor Sophie Joissains. 
The vivid southern French countryside provided most of the inspiration for Cezanne's works, composed mainly of still lifes and landscapes.
But the artist, known as one of the fathers of modern art, was hated by critics and shunned by his native city during his life and even years after his death.  
"As long as I live, no Cezanne will enter the museum," then-conservator of the Granet Museum Henri Pontier promised after Cezanne died in 1906.
For decades, "a modest copy of a classic male nude, made during his studies, was the only work of Cezanne's in the museum of his city," said Bruno Ely, current director of the museum and the exhibit's curator.
The century-long rift between Cezanne and his native city came to an end in 2006 when the Granet Museum held its first exhibition of the artist's work.
The city has since declared 2025 "Cezanne's Year," organising a series of events celebrating his work and leaving any historical estrangement firmly in the past.
The "Cezanne au Jas de Bouffan" (Cezane at the Jas de Bouffan) exhibit displays 135 paintings, drawings and etchings, originating from museums and collectors from over a dozen different countries.
The evolution of Cezanne's painting style will be on display, from his earlier darker works featuring thick paint spread with a palette knife to impressionism to a pre-cubist style.
Though the Provence region where Cezanne roamed was "tiny," it was "enough for him to reinvent painting", said Ely.
The exhibition comes alongside major restoration efforts at the three-storey Jas de Bouffan manor home, where the Cezanne family lived in the late 19th century. 
Young Cezanne adorned the estate's living room with colourful frescos, perhaps with the intention of impressing his banker father, who had wanted his son to be a lawyer or a financer. 
The exhibition runs to October 12.
so-alc-jpa/mct/ekf/sjw/gv

Glastonbury

Irish rappers Kneecap perform controversial Glastonbury set

BY JESSICA HOWARD-JOHNSTON

  • But Glastonbury organisers defied Starmer who had said it was not "appropriate" for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
  • Irish rap trio Kneecap staged a defiant performance at Britain's Glastonbury Festival Saturday, days after Prime Minister Keir Starmer said they should not be performing there.
  • But Glastonbury organisers defied Starmer who had said it was not "appropriate" for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
Irish rap trio Kneecap staged a defiant performance at Britain's Glastonbury Festival Saturday, days after Prime Minister Keir Starmer said they should not be performing there.
The group has made headlines in recent months with their pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel stance, and one of their members has been charged with a "terror" offence for allegedly supporting Hezbollah.
"Glastonbury, I'm a free man", said Liam O'Hanna, who appeared in court earlier this month accused of having displayed a Hezbollah flag while saying "Up Hamas, Up Hezbollah" at a London concert last year.
The Iran-backed Lebanese force Hezbollah and the Palestinian militant group Hamas are banned in the UK, and it is an offence to express support for them.
O'Hanna, known by his stage name Mo Chara, has denied the charge.
"This situation can be quite stressful but it's minimal compared to what the Palestinian people are (facing)," O'Hanna, wearing his trademark keffiyah and black sunglasses told thousands of cheering supporters, many waving Palestinian flags.
O'Hanna also gave "a shout out" to Palestine Action Group, which interior minister Yvette Cooper announced last week would become a banned group under the Terrorism Act of 2000.

'Playing characters'

Fellow band member DJ Provai wore a t-shirt dedicated to the campaign group, whose prohibition comes after its activists broke into a British Royal Air Force base and vandalised two planes.
Before Kneecap took to the stage, rap punk duo Bob Vylan led the crowd in chants of "Death, death to the IDF", a reference to the Israeli Defence Forces. 
Later, Kneecap led the crowd chanting abuse directed at Starmer.
Formed in 2017, Kneecap is no stranger to controversy. To their fans they are daring provocateurs who stand up to the establishment; to their detractors they are dangerous extremists.
Their Irish and English lyrics are filled with references to drugs, they repeatedly clashed with the UK's previous Conservative government and have vocally opposed British rule in Northern Ireland.
The group apologised this year after a 2023 video emerged appearing to show one singer calling for the death of British Conservative MPs.
Two MPs have been murdered in Britain in the past nine years and many of them worry about their safety.
But Kneecap deny the terrorism charge and say the video featuring the Hezbollah flag has been taken out of context.
Asked whether he regretted waving it, and other comments caught on camera, Chara told the Guardian in an interview published Friday: "Why should I regret it? It was a joke -- we're playing characters."

Glastonbury rejects criticism

Since O'Hanna was charged, the group has been pulled from a slew of summer gigs, including a Scottish festival appearance and various performances in Germany.
But Glastonbury organisers defied Starmer who had said it was not "appropriate" for Kneecap to perform at Glastonbury, one of the country's biggest and most famous music festivals.
"People that don't like the politics of the event can go somewhere else," Michael Eavis, co-founder of the festival said in AN article published in a free newspaper for festival-goers.
Public broadcaster the BBC faced pressure not to air the concert.
In statement Saturday, a spokesperson for the broadcaster said the performance would not be shown live but would likely be available on-demand afterwards.
vid-pdh/jj

music

Trout Fresh, Waa Wei win Taiwan's top music awards

  • "Mom, this is the closest I've ever been to Jay Chou," Trout Fresh told a cheering crowd in the Taipei Arena, referring to one of Taiwan's biggest pop stars. 
  • Taiwan's hip hop singer Trout Fresh and songstress-DJ Waa Wei won top honours at the Golden Melody Awards for Mandarin chart music in Taipei on Saturday.
  • "Mom, this is the closest I've ever been to Jay Chou," Trout Fresh told a cheering crowd in the Taipei Arena, referring to one of Taiwan's biggest pop stars. 
Taiwan's hip hop singer Trout Fresh and songstress-DJ Waa Wei won top honours at the Golden Melody Awards for Mandarin chart music in Taipei on Saturday.
"Mom, this is the closest I've ever been to Jay Chou," Trout Fresh told a cheering crowd in the Taipei Arena, referring to one of Taiwan's biggest pop stars. 
The singer, whose real name is Lu Shih-hsuan, beat better-known rivals including China's Li Ronghao and Hong Hong's Terence Lam to win best male singer. 
He also bagged the best Mandarin album award for the track "Good Sound with Attitudes".
Wei saw off Singapore's Tanya Chua and Malaysia's Penny Tai to be crowned best female singer for the second time. 
"I still want to give it a try and I still want to challenge myself... I think the hardest thing is not to give up," said Wei.
"Thank you to the judges and thank you for this award. It lets me know that I can still do it. So when I sing, I really feel loved."
Late Hong Kong-American singer Khalil Fong was awarded best composer for his track "Twenty Three". 
Fong, who passed away in February, also received the jury award for another album "The Dreamer".  
K-pop group Hyukoh teamed up with Taiwanese indie band Sunset Rollercoaster and took the best music video prize for the song Antenna, in their album "AAA".
Singers, songwriters and composers from Taiwan, China, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea competed in more than 20 categories at the 36th edition of the awards.
aw/st

Global Edition

Fans celebrate 'Squid Game' finale with Seoul parade

  • Along with filmmaker Bong Joon-ho's Oscar-winning 2019 thriller "Parasite" and K-pop sensation BTS, "Squid Game" is considered one of the most powerful examples of South Korea's rise as a global cultural force.  cdl/rsc/js
  • Thousands of fans gathered in Seoul on Saturday to celebrate the final "Squid Game" season, ending a global Netflix hit that is seen as a symbol of South Korea's cultural clout.
  • Along with filmmaker Bong Joon-ho's Oscar-winning 2019 thriller "Parasite" and K-pop sensation BTS, "Squid Game" is considered one of the most powerful examples of South Korea's rise as a global cultural force.  cdl/rsc/js
Thousands of fans gathered in Seoul on Saturday to celebrate the final "Squid Game" season, ending a global Netflix hit that is seen as a symbol of South Korea's cultural clout.
The third and final season was released Friday, concluding the series that sees desperate people compete in deadly versions of traditional children's games for a massive cash prize. 
Director Hwang Dong-hyuk said he had "poured everything" into the series, which launched nearly four years ago. 
"So while it's sentimental to see it end," he said, "there's also a sense of relief". 
Fans gathered near Seoul's Gyeongbokgung Palace, led by marchers dressed in the bright pink uniforms worn by the show's mysterious masked agents. 
They were followed by others carrying oversize toys from one of the games featured in the series, along with the show's flag. 
Park Sang-gyu, a fan who stayed up all night watching the final season, said the dystopian drama was "ultimately a story about people". 
"As you watch, you realise it's not just about the games -- it reflects many aspects of real life." 
The walls of the Seoul Metropolitan Library were lit up with key scenes, including Young-hee -- the giant motion-sensing animatronic doll featured in one of its brutal games. 
Lee Byung-hun, who played the masked Front Man overseeing the competition, said the show had become "something of a cultural phenomenon". 
"One that has drawn one of the boldest lines in the history of Korean content," he said. 
The first two seasons of the series are among Netflix's most-watched shows, and in 2022, Hwang and the show's leading actor, Lee Jung-jae, became the first Asian men to win Emmy Awards. 
The final season follows its hero Gi-hun, played by Lee, as he returns to the ultra-violent games to dismantle them from within after surviving the first round. 
Along with filmmaker Bong Joon-ho's Oscar-winning 2019 thriller "Parasite" and K-pop sensation BTS, "Squid Game" is considered one of the most powerful examples of South Korea's rise as a global cultural force. 
cdl/rsc/js

music

'Not a god': arguments end in Combs trial ahead of deliberations

BY MAGGY DONALDSON

  • Central to their case is the claim that Combs led a criminal enterprise of senior employees -- including his chief-of-staff and security guards -- who "existed to serve his needs."
  • Sean "Diddy" Combs's lawyer aimed Friday to skewer the credibility of the music mogul's accusers, saying in closing arguments they were out for money while rejecting any notion he led a criminal ring.
  • Central to their case is the claim that Combs led a criminal enterprise of senior employees -- including his chief-of-staff and security guards -- who "existed to serve his needs."
Sean "Diddy" Combs's lawyer aimed Friday to skewer the credibility of the music mogul's accusers, saying in closing arguments they were out for money while rejecting any notion he led a criminal ring.
But in their rebuttal -- the trial's final stage before jurors are tasked with deciding the verdict -- prosecutors tore into the defense, saying Combs's team had "contorted the facts endlessly."
Prosecutor Maurene Comey told jurors that by the time Combs -- once among the most powerful people in music -- had committed his clearest-cut offenses, "he was so far past the line he couldn't even see it."
"In his mind he was untouchable," she told the court. "The defendant never thought that the women he abused would have the courage to speak out loud what he had done to them."
"That ends in this courtroom," she said. "The defendant is not a god."
For most of Friday's hearing defense attorney Marc Agnifilo picked apart, and even made light of, the testimony of women who were in long-term relationships with Combs, and who said he had coerced them into drug-fueled sex parties with paid escorts.
Agnifilo scoffed at the picture painted by prosecutors of a violent, domineering man who used his employees, wealth and power to foster "a climate of fear" that allowed him to act with impunity.
Combs, 55, is a "self-made, successful Black entrepreneur" who had romantic relationships that were "complicated" but consensual, Agnifilo said.
In his freewheeling, nearly four-hour-long argument, Agnifilo aimed to confuse the methodic narrative US attorney Christy Slavik provided one day prior.
She had spent nearly five hours meticulously walking the jury through the charges and their legal basis, summarizing thousands of phone, financial, travel and audiovisual records along with nearly seven weeks of testimony from 34 witnesses.
Central to their case is the claim that Combs led a criminal enterprise of senior employees -- including his chief-of-staff and security guards -- who "existed to serve his needs."
But Agnifilo underscored that none of those individuals testified against Combs, nor were they named as co-conspirators.
"This is supposed to be simple," the defense counsel told jurors. "If you find that you're in the weeds of this great complexity, maybe it's because it just isn't there."
If convicted, Combs faces upwards of life in prison.

'Brazen'

Casandra Ventura and a woman who testified under the pseudonym Jane described abuse, threats and coercive sex in excruciating detail.
Combs's defense has conceded that domestic violence was a feature of the artist's relationships, but that his outbursts did not amount to sex trafficking.
The defense insisted the women were consenting adults.
Prosecutor Comey snapped back that they were being "manipulated" into "brazen" acts of sex trafficking, reiterating once again for jurors what the government says are the clearest-cut examples.
Agnifilo pointed to Ventura's civil lawsuit against Combs in which she was granted $20 million: "If you had to pick a winner in this whole thing, it would be Cassie," he said.
Comey called that notion insulting: "What was her prize? Black eyes? A gash in her head? Sex for days with a UTI?"
The prosecutor also pointed to a violent episode between Combs and Jane, when she says she struck him in an argument before he brutally beat her, knocked her down in the shower, and then forced her into giving an escort oral sex.
"Jane may have started that fight, but he finished it with a vengeance," Comey said, calling that incident the most obvious sex trafficking case and saying he had "literally beaten her into submission."
Throughout the trial, jurors were shown voluminous phone records, including messages of affection and desire from both women -- and Agnifilo emphasized the love and romance once again.
Both prosecutors said taking those words literally, and in isolation, doesn't paint the whole picture. They also referenced testimony from a forensic psychologist who explained to jurors how victims become ensnared by abusers.
"The defense is throwing anything they can think of at the wall, hoping something will stick," Comey said.
On Monday, Judge Arun Subramanian will instruct jurors on how to apply the law to the evidence for their deliberations. Then, 12 New Yorkers will determine Combs's future.
But Combs's legal worries may not end there, after three new sexual assault lawsuits were filed against him this week. 
One was by a woman who alleged the rapper's son, Justin, lured her from the southern state of Louisiana to Los Angeles where she was held captive, drugged and gang raped by three masked men in 2017. One of the men was allegedly Sean Combs.
The other two cases were filed by men who accuse the rapper and his team of drugging and sexually assaulting them at parties in 2021 and 2023.
mdo/sla/acb

music

Springsteen digs into the vault to rewrite his 'lost' '90s

BY ISSAM AHMED

  • But the greatest spotlight falls on the 1990s -- a decade long seen as a wilderness period for the New Jersey native, who was said to be struggling to find a solo identity during his hiatus from the E Street Band.
  • Conventional wisdom among Bruce Springsteen fans holds that the 1990s were his "lost" decade -- a period where he struggled to chart a new course after parting ways with his longtime collaborators, the E Street Band.  
  • But the greatest spotlight falls on the 1990s -- a decade long seen as a wilderness period for the New Jersey native, who was said to be struggling to find a solo identity during his hiatus from the E Street Band.
Conventional wisdom among Bruce Springsteen fans holds that the 1990s were his "lost" decade -- a period where he struggled to chart a new course after parting ways with his longtime collaborators, the E Street Band.  
It turns out "The Boss" never bought into that narrative, and now he's aiming to overturn it with a new collection of unreleased material, "Tracks II: The Lost Albums," released on Friday.
"I often read about myself in the '90s as having some lost period," the 75-year-old rocker said in a 17-minute documentary released last week.
"Actually, Patti and I were parenting very young children at the time, so that affected some of your workout," he conceded, referencing his wife and E Street Band member, Patti Scialfa. 
"But really, I was working the whole time." 
During the Covid pandemic, Springsteen returned to his archives and "finished everything I had in my vault."
The result is a sprawling box set compilation of 83 songs organized thematically into seven albums, spanning his output from 1983 to 2018.
But the greatest spotlight falls on the 1990s -- a decade long seen as a wilderness period for the New Jersey native, who was said to be struggling to find a solo identity during his hiatus from the E Street Band.
Springsteen first burst onto the national scene in the '70s as a would-be heir to Bob Dylan, hit new commercial heights in the '80s with "Born in the USA," and delivered what many view as the definitive artistic response to the 9/11 attacks with "The Rising."
One album in the box set revisits the "Streets of Philadelphia Sessions," evoking the namesake hit with a moody blend of synthesizers and pulsing drumbeats as he explores dark emotional terrain.
"I'd made three albums about relationships, I had a fourth one," Springsteen said. "It was particularly dark, and I just didn't know if my audience was going to be able to hear it at that moment."
Another record, "Somewhere North of Nashville," is a rollicking, country-rooted romp. A third, "Inyo," recorded in the late '90s along California's borderlands, is an ode to Mexican-American culture.
Springsteen is far from the first major artist to unearth new material from songs that were originally shelved, following a tradition established by Dylan's "Bootleg Series" in 1991.
"Tracks II," as the name suggests, is a sequel to 1998's "Tracks" -- and "Tracks III" is set to follow.
Over the years, critics have often argued there's a reason some tracks remain unreleased -- with "new" Beatles songs based on the late John Lennon's homemade demos often cited as proof that not every vault needs to be reopened.
So far, however, "Tracks II" has been received favorably by many reviewers.
"For any fan, it's a revelation to hear the secret mischief that Bruce Springsteen was making in the shadows, during his most low-profile era -- the music he made for himself, after years of making music for the world," wrote Rob Sheffield in Rolling Stone.
ia/jgc

wedding

Bezos, Sanchez say 'I do' in a divided Venice

BY LISA DUSO WITH ELLA IDE IN ROME

  • The couple exchanged vows at a black-tie ceremony on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore Friday afternoon, according to Italian media reports.
  • Amazon tycoon Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez tied the knot Friday at a sumptuous ceremony with the rich and famous on an island in Venice's lagoon, out of the sight and sound of protesters.
  • The couple exchanged vows at a black-tie ceremony on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore Friday afternoon, according to Italian media reports.
Amazon tycoon Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez tied the knot Friday at a sumptuous ceremony with the rich and famous on an island in Venice's lagoon, out of the sight and sound of protesters.
"This city seems impossible! It can't exist and yet, here it is!" an enchanted Bezos told a La Repubblica journalist Thursday who got close to the magnate as he whizzed around the canals by boat.
But protesters had a different view, wondering how long Venice can endure: While the billionaires party, activists say the fragile city is sinking, overrun by tourists, and a victim of depopulation as locals unable to pay soaring rents are forced out.
"No Kings, No Bezos" read a sign in green neon projected on the St Mark's Campanile tower on Thursday night.

Serenaded

Sanchez late Friday posted a photo on Instagram -- under a new name, laurensanchezbezos -- showing her in a long flowing white dress and him in black tie, though it did not provide any indication where it was taken.
Bezos and Sanchez, a former news anchor and entertainment reporter, celebrated their nuptials with guests including Kim and Khloe Kardashian, Oprah Winfrey and Orlando Bloom.
The tech magnate, 61, and Sanchez, 55, are staying at the Aman hotel, a luxury 16th-century palazzo on the Grand Canal with a view of the Rialto bridge.
Other A-list guests are staying at the Gritti Palace and the St. Regis.
The couple exchanged vows at a black-tie ceremony on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore Friday afternoon, according to Italian media reports.
The wedding is thought to have taken place in a vast open-air amphitheatre on the island, which sits across from Venice's iconic St Mark's Square.
The newlyweds were to be serenaded by Matteo Bocelli, son of the famed opera singer Andrea Bocelli, reports said.
Michelin-starred chef Fabrizio Mellino prepared the wedding dinner, while the cake has been made by French pastry chef Cedric Grolet, the Corriere della Sera said.
Sanchez is alleged to have prepared 27 outfits to wear during the festivities.

'Enchanted'

Wedding guests snapped by paparazzi as they hopped into boats included Jordan's Queen Rania, French luxury goods executive Francois-Henri Pinault, American football player Tom Brady, US fashion designer Spencer Antle, the singer Usher, and Ivanka Trump, daughter of US President Donald Trump, and her husband Jared Kushner.
The guests reportedly lunched Thursday in the gardens of Villa Baslini, on the islet of San Giovanni Evangelista.
The celebrations are set to end Saturday with a party likely at the Arsenale, a vast shipyard complex dating back to when the city was a naval powerhouse.
Bezos and Sanchez are donating three million euros ($3.5 million) to the city, according to Veneto's regional president Luca Zaia, and are employing historic Venetian artisans.
Venice's oldest pastry maker Rosa Salva is baking 19th-century "fishermen's biscuits" for party bags that will also contain something by Laguna B, renowned for its handblown Murano glass.
Trump and her family visited a glass-blowing workshop on the small island of Murano on Wednesday, according to the owner.
"They were amazed and enchanted by the magic of glass," Massimiliano Schiavon told the Corriere della Sera, adding that the family had a go at blowing glass.
Venice, home to the oldest film festival in the world, is used to VIPs whizzing around in speed boats, and happily hosted the star-studded nuptials of Hollywood actor George Clooney in 2014.
Some say this wedding too brings good business.
Italy's tourism ministry said Friday it expected the wedding to bring the city nearly one billion euros, with about 895 million of that estimated to come from the "media visibility" generated.
But critics say Bezos, one of the world's richest men and founder of a company regularly scrutinised for how it treats its workers, is different.
"Tax Billionaires", read protest signs along canals.
"In the time it takes you to read this, Jeff Bezos's wealth has increased by more than your monthly salary", they read in English and Italian.
Environmental activists have also pointed to the carbon footprint of the mega yachts and dozens of private jets -- at least 95 -- bringing the rich and famous to the city.
But Samuel Silvestri, a 55-year-old salesman, welcomed the extravaganza.
"Over-tourism is caused by those people who come with a backpack and their own food, and contribute very little," he said, "not those who transform Venice into a mini-Monte Carlo. This marriage helps the image of the city."
Italy's health ministry has issued a red heat alert for Venice for the weekend, part of a heatwave affecting much of southern Europe.
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