Footballer, Bachelor star … fantasy writer? The TikTok furore over Luke Bateman’s book deal
Hello Caitlin. I hear people on TikTok are up in arms over a Queensland farmer/Canberra Raiders player/Bachelor star scoring a book deal. Who is this modern day Renaissance man?Julia, a colleague described Luke Bateman’s four years with the Raiders as the one of an “honest toiler, who always played above his weight”, and to be frank, it’s a fairly apt description for the guy.The Toowoomba countryman grew up as the typical sports-playing boy. On his now famous TikTok account, he has spoken earnestly about reading books in a toilet cubicle as a child so his peers wouldn’t witness his sensitive side
Jimmy Kimmel: ‘We are living in the golden age of stupid’
Late-night hosts looked at the latest mistakes made by the Trump administration while expressing fear at the president’s sinister new portrait.On Jimmy Kimmel Live! the host spoke about how “stupid” is the through-line of both that night’s show and the moment.He said that we are “living in the golden age of stupid right now” while talking about those who refuse to believe scientific fact and the rise in measles down to fewer vaccinations.“The only thing we learned from Covid is how to make sourdough bread,” he joked and said that “people who do their own research always do it wrong”.This week has also seen Donald Trump continuing to war with Harvard and with the writer Michael Wolff after he claimed that the reason behind all of this was that the president didn’t get accepted when he applied years ago
He’s been hanged, stabbed and cut in galleries – now artist Carlos Martiel is being buried alive
In 2022 in a Los Angeles gallery, Carlos Martiel placed a noose around his neck and suspended his nude body from a rope tied to the ceiling. The piece was titled Cuerpo, Spanish for “body”, and the photographs and footage alone are shocking, mournful and distressing, as volunteers take turns holding his body aloft to prevent the real risk of asphyxiation.In conceiving the work, the Cuba-born, New York-based Afro-Latinx artist viewed hundreds of photographs of public lynchings from across the US – a brutal history of normalised extrajudicial violence that has moved artists from Billie Holiday to film-maker Steve McQueen. Those lynchings were also a kind of public performance: of terror, dehumanisation and white supremacy.“I couldn’t put into words everything I thought and felt during the development of the work; it was a very profound and intense experience for me,” Martiel says, over email
‘Tudor high drama’: English Heritage looks for descendants of abbey rebels
They included a brewer, a tailor and a shoemaker – a hardy bunch of craftspeople prepared to stand up to the might of the Tudor regime to try to save their local monastery.Exactly five centuries on, English Heritage is appealing for people who think they may be descendants of those who took part in the uprising against Cardinal Thomas Wolsey’s closure of Bayham Abbey to come forward.The idea is to get some of them together for a commemorative event this summer to mark the Bayham Abbey uprising, which took place on 4 June 1525 and is seen as a precursor to the turbulent years of religious reform that followed.Michael Carter, an English Heritage historian, described the Bayham Abbey uprising as a moment of “Tudor high drama”.He said: “It is a fascinating precursor to Henry VIII’s religious reforms – a harbinger not only of the dissolution of the monasteries 10 years later but also of the Pilgrimage of Grace, a major revolt against the reforms in the north of England in 1536 and 1537
Jon Stewart on Elon Musk: ‘Doge has finally rooted out one of America’s least efficient government workers’
Late-night hosts celebrated the end of Elon Musk’s tenure with the Trump administration as the head of the “department of government efficiency” (Doge).On Monday evening, Jon Stewart marveled at an important announcement from the so-called Doge. “Doge has finally rooted out one of America’s least efficient government workers and marked him for dismissal,” the Daily Show host said.That worker would be Elon Musk, the Tesla billionaire and Donald Trump-appointed chainsaw to the civil service, who said he would be stepping back from the administration after his deeply unpopular cuts.Trump sent Musk off with a final meeting in the Oval Office on Friday, where the South African-born billionaire appeared with a shirt saying “the Dogefather” and a black eye
Edinburgh fringe event organisers urged to capitalise on Oasis and AC/DC gigs
Organisers of Edinburgh fringe events have been urged to be “pretty smart” and capitalise on the decision by Oasis and AC/DC to play gigs in the city midway through the festival.There was surprise and irritation when it emerged the bands would be staging four concerts at Murrayfield stadium in mid-August when the world’s largest arts festival is in full flow.Tony Lankester, who recently took over as the Fringe Society’s chief executive, said fringe companies should see the concerts as an opportunity rather than fret about downsides.About 75,000 fans are expected for each concert – three by Oasis and one by AC/DC, putting the city’s trains, buses and trams under even greater strain, with visitors competing for already scarce and expensive hotel beds.Lankester, who previously ran South Africa’s national arts festival, said fringe venues should tempt Edinburgh residents who may “want to hide” when the concerts take place with discounted tickets or free wine
Contraception warning over weight-loss drugs after dozens of pregnancies
People with cancer face ‘ticking timebomb’ due to NHS staff shortages
Women and ethnic minorities less likely to be treated after diagnosis of deadly heart disease in England, study finds
Rape victims can challenge CPS if cases dropped under pilot scheme
Free school meals extended but winter fuel changes could tax dead pensioners’ families
Police investigate heart surgery patient deaths at East Yorkshire hospital
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