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‘We will not stay silent’: Ariana Grande and Pedro Pascal among supporters of LGBTQ+ suicide lifeline

4 days ago
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Pedro Pascal, Ariana Grande and Jamie Lee Curtis are among the names included on an open letter aimed at protecting federal funds for LGBTQ+ suicide prevention.In collaboration with nonprofit organisation The Trevor Project, the letter has been released during Pride month and also features names such as Dua Lipa, Daniel Radcliffe, Troye Sivan, Sabrina Carpenter and Nathan Lane.“As artists, creators, and public figures, our platforms come with responsibility,” the letter reads.“And today, that responsibility is clear: we must speak out to protect the mental health and lives of LGBTQ+ youth.We will not stay silent.

”It follows reports of a proposal to eliminate funding for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline’s LGBTQ+ youth specialized services.Since its implementation in 2022, it’s provided help to over 14m people.LGBTQ+ people are roughly four times more likely to kill themselves than their peers.“This is about people, not politics,” the letter reads.“At a time of deep division, let this be something we as people can all agree on: no young person should be left without help in their darkest moment.

Stripping away this lifeline leaves LGBTQ+ youth with the message that their lives are not worth saving.We refuse to accept that message.”The letter calls on the administration and Congress to “restore and protect” funding in the 2026 budget.“You may be hurting,” the letter reads.“You may be scared.

You may feel like no one hears you – but we do.We will keep showing up and speaking out.We will not stop fighting for you.”Pascal, Grande and Curtis have all been vocal allies with LGBTQ+ family members.Pascal, who has a transgender sister, recently called JK Rowling a “heinous loser” in response to her transphobic views.

The list of names on the letter, which also includes Diplo, Sarah Paulson and Cara Delevingne, will continue to be updated on a rolling basis,In a statement, Trevor Project CEO Jaymes Black added: “I am deeply grateful to the influential voices in entertainment who are speaking out and reminding the public that suicide prevention is about people – not politics,”
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Appleby and Buick eye final step in rare sporting journey to complete Classics set

For both Charlie Appleby and William Buick, membership of one of Flat racing’s most exclusive clubs will be an added incentive when Desert Flower, the 1,000 Guineas winner and favourite, canters to post before the Oaks at Epsom on Friday afternoon.Since the end of the second world war, only eight jockeys and 11 trainers have managed to get their names on the roll of honour for all five English Classics, and both lists are a roll call of racing legends. Vincent O’Brien, Sir Henry Cecil and Aidan O’Brien are among the trainers to have completed the full set, while an even shorter list of riders includes Lester Piggott, Steve Cauthen and Pat Eddery, and, since the turn of the century, only Frankie Dettori and Ryan Moore.And while it is 15 years since Buick’s first Classic victory, aboard Arctic Cosmos in the 2010 St Leger, Appleby could be about to complete the set in only eight. Masar, in the 2017 Derby, was the trainer’s first Classic winner, Hurricane Lane took the St Leger in 2021 and the Guineas victories of Notable Speech, in 2024, and Desert Flower, at Newmarket last month, have now left him with only an Oaks winner to find

about 17 hours ago
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Sabalenka ends Swiatek’s reign on clay to set up French Open final against Gauff

After successfully devoting the past few years of her life to becoming a more well-rounded player and mentally durable individual, Aryna Sabalenka arrived on court for her second French Open semi-final certain that she was finally ready for more. No challenge, not even the task of ending an era of total dominance at Roland Garros, felt beyond her.In the face of her greatest rival on the court Iga Swiatek has made her own, Sabalenka converted her phenomenal form and fortitude into one of the most significant victories of her career, as she held her nerve in three delicious, tension-filled sets to topple the four-time French Open champion 7-6 (1), 4-6, 6-0 and reach the final at Roland Garros for the first time.Saturday’s final will be a tussle between the top two players after Coco Gauff, the No 2 seed, put an end to Loïs Boisson’s fairytale run to the semi-finals by ruthlessly dismantling the local wildcard 6-1, 6-2 to reach her second French Open final and third major final overall.Having entered her first grand slam tournament with a wildcard and a modest ranking of No 361, Boisson has produced one of the most surprising grand slam runs in history, defeating the world No 3, Jessica Pegula, and the No 6, Mirra Andreeva, en route to the last four

about 17 hours ago
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Lizzie Deignan’s farewell tour off to tricky start on Yorkshire home roads

There was personal celebration but professional frustration for Lizzie Deignan on the opening day of her final Tour of Britain when her Lidl-Trek team failed to stop the Mauritian national champion, Kim Le Court, taking the first stage win and overall race lead in Redcar.Deignan’s valedictory race on ­British roads began with a fast 85.6km opening stage, from Dalby Forest to the beachfront in Redcar, and took in some of her longstanding ­training roads within an hour or so of her home in Otley, West Yorkshire.But although her team had strength in depth in the 20-rider pursuit of the day’s breakaway, they proved unable to close down Le Court and Kristen Faulkner, the Olympic champion, who stayed clear to ­contest the ­seaside finish.“We had a clear plan and executed it exactly as we wanted,” said Le Court, riding for the AG Insurance-Soudal team

about 17 hours ago
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French Open semi-finals: Sabalenka dethrones Swiatek, Gauff routs Boisson – as it happened

And here’s Tumaini’s take on today’s action. A bientot!C’est tout! Many thanks for your company today, Daniel will be back tomorrow with coverage of Jannik Sinner v Novak Djokovic and Carlos Alcaraz v Lorenzo Musetti.That was a business-like performance from Gauff, who silenced any doubts after her unconvincing quarter-final win over Madison Keys, and well and truly silenced the crowd with the calmest and most mature performance you could see from a 21-year-old playing against 15,000 fans. She didn’t give them – or Boisson – anything to get into. I hope the disappointment doesn’t last too long for Boisson

about 17 hours ago
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England line up Jofra Archer return for second Test against India

Jofra Archer is being primed to make a comeback in the second Test against India at Edgbaston – his first appearance in whites for four years – with England’s stable of fast bowlers under strain before the start of this summer’s marquee series.Naming a 14-man squad for the first Test at Headingley that starts on 20 June, Luke Wright, who is part of the selection panel, confirmed Gus Atkinson is ruled out with a hamstring injury. In come Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse and Jamie Overton, likewise Jacob Bethell to offer competition among the batting spots.But perhaps more eye-catching was the news that Archer is back playing second XI cricket for Sussex with a view to turning out at Durham in the round of County Championship fixtures that begins on 22 June. Get through that game and, like Atkinson, the second Test in Birmingham could be a realistic target for a return

about 20 hours ago
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Djokovic has nowhere to hide against relentless Sinner in Paris showdown

‘These kind of matchups and challenges in a way extract the best out of me,” said Novak Djokovic, smiling, as the clock ticked into the early hours of Thursday morning. Djokovic had demonstrated that sentiment in real time as he spectacularly rose to the occasion against the third-best player in the world, utilising the full breadth of his complete, unprecedented game to defeat Alexander Zverev and return to the semi-finals of the French Open, where he will face Jannik Sinner.“Playing best-of-five, late stages of a grand slam against No 1 in the world, you can’t get more motivated than that for me at this age,” said Djokovic.Although this performance had been preceded by a barren run of form on the ATP tour that included numerous early losses, the grand slam tournaments are now the sole source of Djokovic’s motivation. No matter how he performs elsewhere, the 38-year-old has continually shown he still steps up on the biggest stages

about 20 hours ago
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The ones we love: all 16 of REM’s albums – ranked!

about 21 hours ago
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‘My biggest fear’: the artist spending three days banged up in a jail cell

about 21 hours ago
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Footballer, Bachelor star … fantasy writer? The TikTok furore over Luke Bateman’s book deal

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel: ‘We are living in the golden age of stupid’

2 days ago
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He’s been hanged, stabbed and cut in galleries – now artist Carlos Martiel is being buried alive

2 days ago
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‘Tudor high drama’: English Heritage looks for descendants of abbey rebels

2 days ago