Your Guardian Sport weekend: Premier League, WCL final, Monaco GP and French Open

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As Manchester City bids the fondest of farewells to Kevin De Bruyne, Simon Hattenstone offers his own heartfelt tribute to the player dubbed Pinky – and explains why KDB is the exception to the rule that you should never meet your heroes.In a weekend dotted with finals, Will Magee considers what could be the latest in a series of spectacular upsets, this time in Germany where the dream DFB-Pokal run of Arminia Bielefeld, the third division champions, reaches its conclusion on Saturday against Stuttgart of the Bundesliga.Join Emillia Hawkins and Rob Smyth for our special liveblog covering all the breathless buildup to the afternoon’s big games: the Scottish Cup final that pits Aberdeen against Celtic (3pm); the Championship playoff final at Wembley as Sheffield United and Sunderland face off for a place in the Premier League (3.01pm); and the Women’s Champions League final, with Arsenal taking on serial European champions Barcelona in Lisbon at 5pm.Ben Fisher checks in from the Championship playoff final at Wembley and is ready to answer your questions on the so-called richest game in football.

Email him at matchday.live@theguardian.com.It’s day three of the one-off Test, the first between England and the tourists in 22 years.The first Test of summer looked like a mismatch on paper, Zimbabwe having lost heavily to an inexperienced county XI last week, and the hosts have so far lived up to lofty expectations at Trent Bridge.

Tim de Lisle and James Wallace are on hand for over-by-over coverage, with Ali Martin and Andy Bull offering reports and analysis from the ground.We’ve got the domestic scene covered too, as Tanya Aldred roves across the County Championship fixtures with our rolling live blog.Northampton are aiming to lift the Champions Cup for the first time in a quarter of a century with victory over Bordeaux-Bègles in Cardiff and, after their stunning 37-34 semi-final win against the tournament favourites, Leinster, in Dublin, Saints fans are rightly dreaming of a first European crown since edging out Munster at Twickenham 25 years ago.Still, Bordeaux will present Saints with another stern test of their trophy ambitions, having reached the final with a 35-18 victory over the defending champions, Toulouse.Join Daniel Gallan for updates on the unfolding action, then our rugby experts Robert Kitson and Michael Aylwin at the Principality Stadium with reports, news and comment.

This weekend sees the F1 circus roll into Monte Carlo for the sport’s blue riband event and a race that the Monaco resident Oliver Bearman was supposed to be relishing.The 20-year-old British driver was thrust into the F1 spotlight in March 2024 when he was parachuted into Carlos Sainz’s Ferrari seat at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix after the Spaniard was struck by appendicitis, finishing seventh on debut.His performances were enough to earn him a permanent seat with Haas … but his return to his “home” track got off to a terrible start, with a 10-place penalty imposed on Friday for overtaking under a red flag during practice.Keeping a watchful eye on qualifying will be John Brewin, with our F1 reporter Giles Richards in Monte Carlo to report on the race for pole.One of theses two will play Premier League football next season and this is the game where the winner takes all – and them some.

The Black Cats – who finished one place but 14 points behind the Blades after 46 regular games – have spent eight seasons outside the top flight, four of them in League One.Chris Wilder’s United are favourites to earn an instant return and in so doing end their playoff hoodoo at the 10th attempt, with nine previous playoff campaigns – including three Championship finals – having ended in defeat.Rob Smyth is your live host, with Ben Fisher and Paul MacInnes our reporting team at Wembley.Arsenal have made it back to the final as part of an impressive turnaround this season under Renée Slegers, who took charge – initially on an interim basis and then permanently – after Jonas Eidevall resigned in October.The Gunners produced second-leg fightbacks to get past Real Madrid in the quarter-finals and Lyon in the semis, the latter a stunning 4-1 win in France but Barcelona, whose squad features the double Ballon d’Or winners Aitana Bonmatí and Alèxia Putellas, are heading into their sixth final and fifth in a row, having won the last two to add to their maiden success in 2021.

Pere Romeu’s side opened their campaign with a 2-0 defeat by Manchester City, but they have been in ruthless form since, thrashing Wolfsburg 10-2 and Chelsea 8-2 on aggregate in the last eight and semi-finals respectively.It’s certain to be a compelling finale, with Sarah Rendall keeps you up to date with the latest action, while Suzanne Wrack, Jonathan Liew and Tom Garry deliver reports, news and analysis from Lisbon.Join Taha Hashim and Emillia Hawkins for the latest news and buildup to Sunday’s final round of Premier League fixtures – 10 games all kicking off at 4pm.The biggest game of the day? Jacob Steinberg believes that would be Nottingham Forest against Chelsea, where a place in the Champions League is the big prize.He’ll be checking in from the City Ground to set the scene.

With seven British players taking their places in the Roland Garros singles draw, there’s plenty for Daniel Harris to keep a watchful eye on as our liveblog keeps tennis fans up to date with day one’s action in Paris.Jack Draper, Cameron Norrie, Jacob Fearnley, Sonay Kartal, Jodie Burrage and Emma Raducanu all launch their campaigns on the red clay courts.Join Daniel Gallan and James Wallace for more live updates from England v Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge.There’s plenty of interest in the county scene too, and Tanya Aldred helms our liveblog from Northampton’s County Ground.An all-London final and Charlton are one win away from a return to the Championship five years after they were relegated.

The Addicks’ manager, Nathan Jones, lasted just three months in the Premier League at Southampton, and collapsed to his knees in tears at the final whistle after the 1-0 win over Wycombe in the semi-final second leg.Charlton have come a long way in just over a year, having been 18th when Jones took over in February 2024.Leyton Orient survived a shootout to reach Wembley.The east London club prevailed 4-1 on spot-kicks after an absorbing semi-final with Stockport ended 3-3 on aggregate.Richie Wellens’ side qualified for the playoffs in sixth after a late charge, winning their last six matches of the regular season, and are one game away from playing in the second tier for the first time since 1982.

Taha Hashim follows the action live while John Brewin reports from Wembley.The jewel in the F1 crown and undoubtably the most famous event on the 24-race calendar but the prestigious venue, where the cars hurtle past Casino Square, round the famed Fairmont hairpin, through the tunnel and along the principality’s yacht-lined harbour, rarely tends to lend itself to great racing.So the FIA has imposed a minimum two pit stops for the 82nd staging of this year’s race in an attempt to mix up strategies and offer more entertainment.Luke McLaughlin brings you the lap-by-lap action.Five clubs will battle over three available Champions League slots on the last day of the top-flight season, and Scott Murray keeps the updates flowing as fifth-placed Chelsea visit seventh-placed Nottingham Forest, who are just a point below them.

Chelsea still have a chance to finish in the top three, with third-placed Manchester City only two points above them,But a loss or draw could force them out of the league’s top five,Rob Smyth and Sarah Rendell return to bookend our weekend football coverage – and it’s an all-action card in the Premier League,As well as the abovementioned Forest v Chelsea game, there will be updates from around the grounds as Liverpool finally get to lift the trophy at Anfield with goals, news, reaction and more,
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The Guide #192: How reality TV and streaming has shaped 21st-century TV

To try to get our heads round the fact that we’re somehow a quarter of the way into the 21st century, the Guide is running a miniseries of newsletters looking at how pop culture has changed over the past 25 years. We tackled music last month and we’ll be looking at the state of film next month, before sharing our favourite culture of the century so far, and asking for yours too, in July.Today, we’re taking the temperature of TV. Like the music industry, television has seen its entire business model upended by the streaming revolution this century. That has meant what was once a universal activity – an entire nation sat around the glow of the old cathode ray tube – has been replaced by people watching a galaxy of different shows, or watching the same show but at completely different times

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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s tax bill: ‘If this is the beautiful bill, I’d hate to see the ugly one’

Late-night hosts tore into the House’s all-nighter session to pass Donald Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful bill” of Republican talking points.Thursday marked “another wildly destructive day in Washington DC”, said Jimmy Kimmel that evening. “They pulled another all-nighter in the House last night, where they passed Trump’s big, beautiful bill. And man oh man, if this is the beautiful bill, I’d hate to see the ugly one.“I’m not sure which part of the bill is the most beautiful – the part where we take food from hungry kids?” he continued

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Sónar festival hit with artist boycott over alleged links to Israel

Sónar, one of Europe’s leading electronic music festivals, is under threat after dozens of musicians and DJs announced a boycott over the event’s parent company KKR’s alleged links to Israel.More than 70 artists signed an open letter to the festival, which is due to take place in Barcelona from 12-14 June, stating that “we oppose any affiliation between the cultural sector and entities complicit in war crimes”.The boycott from artists such as Kode9, Lolo & Sosaku, Juliana Huxtable and Sunny Graves comes amid claims that KKR is linked to housing developments in the illegally occupied West Bank, in addition to other business interests in Israel. This claim is based on the fact that KKR is a major investor in the German media company Axel Springer, which runs ads for developments in the occupied territories on Israel’s Yad2 classified ad site, owned by Springer.In June 2024, KKR, a US investment company with an estimated $710bn (£526bn) in assets, paid €1

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Jimmy Kimmel on Republicans’ mega-bill: ‘Takes from the poor and gives to the rich, brazenly’

Late-night hosts dug into Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” mega-bill and the US homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, not knowing the meaning of habeas corpus.Republicans are “hard at work in Washington right now”, said Jimmy Kimmel on Wednesday evening, “working late, struggling to pass Trump’s big, beautiful budget bill”.“He’s even having a hard time getting the Republicans onboard with this one,” Kimmel noted, as according to the congressional budget office, the bill would add trillions of dollars to the national debt. “But Trump has a plan for that too,” said Kimmel. “He’s going to fire all the people who keep track of the national debt

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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’: ‘Like the husky guy at a male strip club’

Late-night hosts talked congressional Republicans squabbling over Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” mega-bill and Trump’s two-hour phone call with Vladimir Putin.On Tuesday, Stephen Colbert took a break from Donald Trump to focus on “all the terrible stuff they’re doing in Congress”. This week, congressional Republicans are fighting over “his heartless tax cut boondoggle”, which Trump has been calling his “big, beautiful bill”.“It really sounds less like legislation and more like the husky guy at a male strip club – ‘OK, ladies, coming up on the main stage is Big, Beautiful Bill,’” the Late Show host joked.The bill’s tax cuts for the wealthy would add roughly $3

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‘I’m still standing’: Kevin Spacey makes his comeback at chaotic Cannes gala

Kevin Spacey’s Cannes comeback is a discreet, low-key affair. The promenade is home to a gaggle of evening sunbathers while the steps to the beach club contain neither fans nor protesters. It is what is known in the trade as a soft relaunch.Spacey is guest of honour at the Better World Fund’s gala dinner, where he is receiving a lifetime achievement award for “excellence in film and television”. It marks a return to the limelight for the two-time Oscar-winner, whose career stalled after allegations of sexual assault and misconduct by more than 30 men