From Song Sung Blue to Theatre Picasso: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead


Tell us: what questions do you have about fasting for health reasons?
The team from our It’s Complicated Youtube channel are looking at how eating throughout the day has become normal in many Western contexts, what that might be doing to our bodies, and whether this new wave of wellness fasting really does what it claims.We’d like to know what you want explained. If you could sit down with a leading expert on fasting, what would you ask them? Send us your questions, large or small via the form below. Your questions could help shape our reporting and be featured in the show.You can post your question using this form

‘We were sitting with our calculator saying “we can afford that!”’ Joy for families as cystic fibrosis drug prices fall within reach
Seven-year-old Grant Leitch had an important question for his mother. He asked if his little brother, Brett, who has cystic fibrosis (CF), was going to die.The South African family, like tens of thousands around the world, have been priced out of access to modern cystic fibrosis therapies, and if Grant had asked at the start of 2025, he might have received a less optimistic answer.But as the new year begins Carmen Leitch has fresh hope to offer her sons. A “revolutionary” treatment sold by pharmaceutical company Vertex for $370,000 (£274,000) a year will be available for as little as $2,000 a year from a generic manufacturer

‘It takes a town to raise a family’: the community sponsors supporting refugees in the UK
“Our children correct us when we don’t pronounce some words with the proper Derbyshire accent,” says Samir*, an Afghan refugee whose family have settled into their new lives in the north of England.Initially, he says, it was difficult for the family to get used to rural life in Derbyshire, but after a while they had integrated into the local community so well that his children, who have adopted the Derbyshire accent, tease him about his.“Now our community is turning into a diverse community,” says Samir, who along with his family was relocated to the UK after Afghanistan fell to the Taliban in August 2021.Part of the ease with which they have settled into the community is down to support from a community sponsorship scheme. It provides refugees withwraparound support from a group of residents who agree to fundraise, source affordable accommodation, and help with the basic challenges of life in a new country such as learning English, accessing work, study or benefits, and registering with a GP and dentist

‘Catastrophic’ MoJ leasing of jail with toxic gas set to cost more than £100m
A “catastrophic” decision by the Ministry of Justice to sign a 10-year lease on a prison where high levels of a poisonous gas had been detected is expected to cost the UK taxpayer more than £100m, parliament’s spending watchdog has concluded.The public accounts committee said the 2022 deal to rent HMP Dartmoor from the Duchy of Cornwall was signed “in a blind panic” by senior civil servants looking to guarantee prison places.The category C prison, which held many sex offenders, was closed in 2024 after levels of radon up to 10 times higher than the recommended limit were recorded in some areas. The government has since admitted that it was aware that “elevated readings” of the gas were found in 2020.Radon, a colourless and odourless radioactive gas, causes about 1,100 lung cancer deaths in the UK every year, according to the Health Security Agency

Dame Gillian Wagner obituary
Gillian Wagner, who has died aged 98, spent more than 30 years raising the standard of residential care in Britain, the most neglected and maligned and the least appreciated area of social care.It was her appointment in 1986 to chair what became known as the Wagner committee into residential care that projected her on to the national stage at a time when the service was undervalued and a poor relation to the NHS, with low-paid staff.While residential care is in many ways still neglected and under-resourced, the Wagner recommendations did much to change how standards of care were judged.While the report into community care carried out by Sir Roy Griffiths, also published in 1988, was quickly translated into legislation by the Thatcher government, keen to create the market-driven social services system that Griffiths recommended, Gillian’s report received no such official action.The Wagner committee wanted residential care to be “a positive choice”, part of a spectrum and not a last resort

Banaz Mahmod was murdered 20 years ago; the fight for a law on ‘honour’-based abuse goes on
“I’m always looking over my shoulder. I’m never going to let my guard down,” Bekhal Mahmod said.For two decades she has been in hiding, living under a new identity, away from her Iraqi-Kurdish family. In 2007 Bekhal testified in the trial of her father and uncle for the “honour”-based murder of her sister Banaz Mahmod.Banaz, 20, had left her arranged marriage and wanted to marry another man

The Spin | Revealed after 100 years: how a corrupt official robbed Percy Fender of the England captaincy

Jacob Bethell plays starring role in Ashes Wars Episode 5: A New Hope | Barney Ronay

Bethell’s elegant first Test century presses pause on Australia’s Ashes party

Beau Webster steps off the sidelines into the light as promise of Cameron Green wilts | Geoff Lemon

Australia v England: fifth Ashes Test, day four – as it happened

John Harbaugh fired by Baltimore Ravens after 18 seasons in charge