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Cocktails and checkmates: the young Britons giving chess a new lease of life

about 11 hours ago
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One of the liveliest spots on a Tuesday night in east London’s Brick Lane isn’t a restaurant or a streetwear brand pop-up, it’s a chess club – or chess club-nightclub hybrid, to be exact,Knight Club is the unlikely crossover between chess and London’s fervent nightlife scene,It was started by Yusuf Ntahilaja, 27, who began his first chess club in August 2023 at a smaller bar in Aldgate, not too far from the current location at Café 1001 on Brick Lane,“I wanted to make chess clubs for people who look like me and people my age,” he said,“Typically, chess is only put in spaces that are full of older people, which isn’t diverse enough.

”On the first night, there were only eight boards between 16 people.Now, a “good night” at the weekly Knight Club will attract about 280 people.At first glance, Knight Club feels more like a DJ event than a chess club.Cocktails are flowing and music is playing, but the chessboards on every table aren’t just ornamental or there as a gimmick: they are all occupied and surrounded by a queue of onlookers waiting for their turn.Jimmy Ifenayi, 24, has been attending Knight Club regularly for the past four months.

“I had no knowledge of chess before I came here, and the first time I ever played, I played a game against a grandmaster.It was a quick win, but it made me intrigued to learn and keep playing chess,” she said.“The event is about 50% social and 50% people actually wanting to play chess … It’s a nice way to decompress, which doesn’t involve going to a club to see other people my age.”In recent years, chess has been cemented in the cultural zeitgeist.The popularity of online chess proliferated during the pandemic, making it one of the fastest-growing internet games in the world.

In popular culture, the Netflix series The Queen’s Gambit, as well as Sally Rooney’s recent novel Intermezzo, have created a certain iconography surrounding the game, which has drawn in a new generation of players.But much of this newfound appeal of the chess club isn’t necessarily about the technicalities of the game; rather, it is the ease of social interaction that it facilitates, by pulling up a chair and playing with someone who may be a total stranger.“It’s a great Trojan horse,” said Jonah Freud, co-founder of Reference Point in London, a bookstore, library, cafe and bar, which has hosted a popular chess club every Wednesday since it opened four years ago.Freud’s aim is to “take chess off a pedestal and make it feel like pool in a dive bar”.“It’s a really easy vehicle to meet people.

It kind of takes the weight of the necessity of conversation away from interacting with people.You can do the uncomfortable bit of introducing yourself and talking to someone over a board rather than with no kind of context around it.”In Birmingham, Chesscafé is a regular chess night held at York’s Cafe, just outside the city centre.“We found that people are looking for spaces where you can go out, socialise and have a good time outside of going to a bar or club,” said its founder and organiser, Karan Singh, 21.Alongside his friend Abdirahim Haji, 21, Singh bought chessboards, printed flyers and began the chess club in January, during his final year of university.

In less than a year, Singh said Chesscafé has grown to attract more than 100 young players to its events.“A chess club has a specific connotation to it, about it being quiet.We really try to go the opposite direction; it’s a social party with chess involved,” he said.For many, chess clubs are an introduction to the game.Zoë Kezia, 27, is learning how to play chess with other attenders of chess night at Reference Point.

Her interest in the game was piqued after an enjoyable night dancing and playing chess at one of Knight Club’s events,“It’s a strange concept, but it works,” she said,“It encourages face-to-face interactions rather than screen-based activities,It’s a free third space to meet new people,It’s welcoming, you don’t have to necessarily be good at chess.

”Kezia jokingly likened the popularity of chess among young people to the facade of the “performative male”, an attempt to feign intellectualism while signalling the veneer of “coolness”.Whether the chess trend has fostered a genuine interest in the game isn’t something she’s quite convinced by.“It’s a wholesome trend, but it’s very much a trend,” she said.“When you’re playing against people who are really serious about it, it quickly becomes less enjoyable.”It may all be a bit of fun and games for those looking to use a chessboard as a social vehicle, but serious players do have their place, albeit off the dancefloor.

Lucia Ene-Lesikar, 22, who helps organise Knight Club,says that more competitive attenders have formed a league table.“People who are in the league will play each other, we’ll go to quarter-finals, semi-finals, and then we’ll finally have a league winner.”Ryames Chan, 23, is a competitive player and chess teacher.He has been in the league for about a year and plays at the club almost every week.“This is a nice alternative to playing serious chess; it gives a sense of community,” he said.

“It’s interesting to see how it becomes more of a social activity, because previously the only people who played chess were people who didn’t go outside; they just stayed home.It’s usually just two people playing on a chessboard …“The thing I like about here is that you’re not actually facing the computer, you’re facing real people.”
cultureSee all
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Jimmy Kimmel on government shutdown: ‘There is no Republican plan for healthcare’

Late-night hosts recapped Donald Trump’s state visit to Japan as the government shutdown continued into its fourth week.On Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the comedian checked in on Trump’s visit to Japan this week. “You know, when Trump visits, you have to find something to do with him,” he said. “You can’t just take him for a stroll around town.“So instead, you take him for a stroll inside a palace, where he gets uncomfortably close to the band,” he said over footage of Trump wandering aimlessly through a ballroom with the Japan’s prime minister, Sanae Takaichi

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Steve Coogan says Richard III film was ‘story I wanted to tell’ as he agrees to libel settlement

Steve Coogan has said his film about the discovery of the remains of Richard III was “the story I wanted to tell, and I am happy I did” after he and two production companies agreed to pay “substantial damages” to settle a high court libel claim over the film’s portrayal of a senior university administrator.Richard Taylor, deputy registrar at the University of Leicester at the time of the find, sued Coogan, his production company Baby Cow, and Pathe Productions for libel over his portrayal in the 2022 film The Lost King, which follows the amateur historian Philippa Langley and her search for the king’s skeleton.Taylor’s lawyers had asserted previously that he was portrayed in the film as “devious”, “weasel-like” and a “suited bean-counter”.Judge Lewis had ruled previously that the film portrayed Taylor as having “knowingly misrepresented facts to the media and the public” about the find, and as being “smug, unduly dismissive and patronising”, which had a defamatory meaning.The case was due to proceed to trial, but lawyers for Taylor read an agreed statement to the court on Monday saying the parties had settled the claim

8 days ago
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From White Teeth to Swing Time: Zadie Smith’s best books - ranked!

How do you follow a smash hit like White Teeth, which, as everyone now knows, sold for a six-figure sum while the author was still at university, and turned Zadie Smith into a literary superstar and poster girl for multi­culturalism at 24? With a novel about a pot-smoking Chinese‑Jewish autograph hunter, the dangers of fame and the shallowness of pop culture, of course.The Autograph Man begins in full wisecracking throttle with three boys in the back of a car on their way to watch a wrestling match between Big Daddy and Giant Haystacks at the Royal Festival Hall. As 12-year-old Alex-Li Tandem gets Big Daddy’s autograph (the start of an obsession), his own daddy drops dead from a brain tumour. Unfortunately, the rest of the novel doesn’t quite live up to the prologue. The critical heavyweights of the time didn’t pull their punches: “A poky, pallid successor” (Michiko Kakutani, who had rapturously reviewed White Teeth, in the New York Times), “cartoonish” and full of “misplaced ironies and grinning complicities” (James Wood in the LRB)

8 days ago
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Nobody Wants This to Lily Allen: the week in rave reviews

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Stephen Colbert on ex-prince Andrew: ‘Pervert formerly known as prince’

Late-night hosts spoke about Donald Trump’s trip to Asia and how he refuses to accept criticism while also reacting to ex-prince Andrew being stripped of his royal title.On the Late Show, Stephen Colbert spoke about Trump’s recent trip to parts of Asia, including South Korea where he negotiated tariffs with Xi Jinping, China’s president.Colbert played awkward footage of the two in front of cameras, adding that he was “not confident we’re gonna win this one”.The talks ended up with both sides agreeing to what amounted to a pre-tariff status quo yet Trump has been “telling everyone he won the negotiations big time” saying that he would rank the meeting as a 12 out of 10.Colbert joked that he “must have been insufferable as a teenager” telling friends he went to 14th base with girls which means “over the bra, under the hat”

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A third of people in England believe in ghosts, survey finds

It is the time of the year when the veil between the living and the dead is at its thinnest, and spirits walk the Earth once more.But it appears you are more likely to be visited by a ghost if you are under 35 years old, while spiritual creatures tend to avoid those who live in the East Midlands.New research from the National Folklore Survey has found that, across England, more than a third of people believe in ghosts and supernatural beings, but belief in the paranormal varies according to age and geography.Led by academics from Sheffield Hallam University, the University of Hertfordshire, and Chapman University in the US, the survey is the first of its kind since the last Survey of English Language and Folklore more than 60 years ago.Just over one in three people in England said they believed in ghosts or the spirits of the deceased, with younger people (aged 25-34) most likely to believe in the paranormal, which also includes magical beings, possession, spells, psychics, angels and demons

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