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Tour de France reveals the six UK stage plans for historic 2027 Grands Départs

about 12 hours ago
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The men’s Tour de France will start in Scotland for the first time in 2027 and make its first visit to Wales when Britain stages the Grand Départ of the men’s and women’s races in the biggest festival of elite cycling on the isles since London 2012.Across six days of racing on British roads, the men’s Tour will visit Edinburgh, Carlisle, Keswick, Liverpool, Welshpool and Cardiff, while the Tour de France Femmes races from Leeds to Manchester, then to Sheffield and also includes a central London stage.On Thursday night all host cities were illuminated by yellow beams in recognition of them staging the Tour.Simon Morton, UK Sport’s director of events, said that the ambition was “to host a massive sporting event that would genuinely thread together the countries, cities, and communities of Great Britain.“The route details do just that, enabling us to reach, unite, and inspire people right across the country – providing moments of joy for millions, bringing communities together, and delivering lasting benefits beyond race day.

”The Tour’s last British Grand Départ, in 2014, followed Tour wins by Bradley Wiggins and Chris Froome and was a resounding success that drew an estimated 3.5 million people to the roadsides and fuelled £128m of economic benefit.Jon Dutton, chief executive of British Cycling, said that they expected to see 10 million people at the roadside in 2027.The double-headed Grand Départ is far more ambitious than 2014 and will be easily the biggest logistical undertaking in the history of the Tour.It is also the first time that men’s and women’s Grands Départs have been hosted by the same country, outside France.

“The UK has always welcomed the Tour with passion and pride, and the route details reflect the beauty and diversity of Britain’s terrain,” said Christian Prudhomme, the director of the Tour.“Bringing both Grands Départs here is a testament to the strength of our partnership with British Cycling and the enthusiasm of the UK.”The two Tour visits will be the cornerstones of a summer of cycling that will traverse Britain from north to south.The men’s race starts in Edinburgh on Friday 2 July with a first stage through the Scottish Borders to Carlisle.Stage two takes the peloton from Keswick to Liverpool, while the third stage starts in Welshpool and finishes in Cardiff, after a long stage through the Welsh Valleys that takes in eight climbs in the final 50 miles.

“Wales is proud to host a stage of the Tour for the first time, which will be a fantastic opportunity to showcase our stunning landscapes,” said Eluned Morgan, the first minister of Wales.“Hosting the final UK stage of the men’s race will raise Wales’ profile as a world-class destination for cyclists and other visitors, while inspiring more people to get active and deliver lasting benefits for Wales.”Four weeks on, the Tour de France Femmes starts in Leeds on 30 July with a first stage to Manchester and a second stage through the Peak District to Sheffield.The final day of Tour racing is in London on 1 August, although exact route details are yet to be specified.“Racing the Tour de France Femmes has been one of the highlights of my career, and seeing the women’s edition go from strength to strength has been genuinely inspiring,” the former world champion Lizzie Deignan said.

“This is a huge moment for the sport and an opportunity that will inspire countless women and girls to get on their bikes.”British Cycling is also expecting the two Grands Départs to have wider and long-lasting benefits.“This is a once‐in‐a‐generation chance to build a healthier, more active and more connected nation,” Dutton said.“It shows the power of major events when they’re done right, to help deliver a legacy that will be felt long after the peloton has left UK shores.”
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Jewish American columnist Thomas Friedman says he was uninvited from 2024 Adelaide writers’ week over ‘timing’

A New York Times columnist at the centre of a second controversy engulfing Adelaide writers’ week has said he was uninvited from the event in 2024.Thomas Friedman, who is Jewish, confirmed to Nine newspapers on Thursday that after he agreed to appear in a video link session, he was subsequently notified “that the timing would not work out”.Earlier this week, former festival board member Tony Berg, who is of Jewish heritage, made an extraordinary accusation of “hypocrisy” against the director of Adelaide writers’ week, Louise Adler, saying she had lobbied for the removal of Friedman from the festival lineup.Sign up: AU Breaking News emailAt the time, a group of 10 academics had signed a petition demanding Friedman’s removal due to a controversial column he had written in the New York Times days earlier, which compared the Middle East conflict to the animal kingdom. The Palestinian author and academic Randa Abdel-Fattah, who was uninvited from this year’s writers’ week, was among the group

about 23 hours ago
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Star Trek: Starfleet Academy review – Holly Hunter is a transgressive thrill in this horny high-school spinoff

This hormone-fuelled tale of the training college for space voyagers is like Grange Hill, with phasers – and it has a female lead unlike any captain beforeThe original Star Trek TV series debuted in 1966, so trying to get your head round all the sequels, prequels and timeline-splitting spin-offs can often feel like homework. It was only a matter of time before the venerable sci-fi franchise used a school as a setting. But Starfleet Academy, the latest streaming series, is not some random cosmic polytechnic for aliens to study humanities or vice versa. This is the oft-referenced San Francisco space campus sited right next to the Golden Gate Bridge. With James T Kirk and Jean-Luc Picard on the alumni list, it is basically Hogwarts for wannabe starship captains

1 day ago
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Adelaide festival apologises to Randa Abdel-Fattah and invites her to participate in 2027 writers’ week

The new Adelaide festival board has issued a public apology to Palestinian Australian academic Randa Abdel-Fattah, and has promised she will be invited to Adelaide writers’ week in 2027.Abdel-Fattah immediately accepted the apology, posting on Instagram that it was a vindication “of our collective solidarity and mobilisation against anti-Palestinian racism, bullying and censorship”.She said she was still considering the board’s invitation to appear at the 2027 event.In a statement on Thursday morning, Adelaide Festival Corporation acknowledged they had previously said they would exclude Abdel-Fattah from this year’s event “because it would be culturally insensitive to allow her to participate. We retract that statement”

1 day ago
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Churchill’s desk and rare artwork among items donated to UK cultural institutions

Winston Churchill and Benjamin Disraeli’s desk, a painting by Vanessa Bell and a rare artwork by Edgar Degas are among the items of cultural importance saved for the nation this year.The items, worth a total of £59.7m, will be allocated to museums, galleries, libraries and archives around the UK as part of Art Council England’s cultural gifts and acceptance in lieu schemes.Some items were accepted for their outstanding rarity, cultural value or technical skills, while others offer insights into the UK’s history through some of the nation’s most renowned public figures.The Regency mahogany standing desk used by Churchill and Disraeli during their times as prime minister has been allocated to the National Trust’s Hughenden Manor, Disraeli’s former country house

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on ICE shooting of Renee Good: ‘They’re investigating the victims instead of the perpetrator’

Late-night hosts responded to the Trump administration’s escalation of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) action in Minneapolis and its criminal investigation into the Fed chair, Jerome Powell.Jimmy Kimmel opened Tuesday’s monologue with a summary of “another bananas speech” by Donald Trump – this time at the Detroit Economic Club, where he tried to convince attenders that the protests in Minneapolis over the ICE shooting of Renee Good were “fake”.“They’re not riots, they’re real,” Kimmel responded. “First they want us to believe that we did not see what we all saw happen to Renee Good. Now he wants us to believe that the protests aren’t real

1 day ago
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‘A very tough moment’: how Trump has put museums in jeopardy

From Times Square to the Washington Monument, America saw in the new year with a bigger bang than usual, celebrating the fact that 2026 marks the nation’s 250th birthday. Yet as the US looks back, precious repositories of the nation’s history are facing an uncertain future.Museum attendances are down. Budgets are precarious. Cuts in federal funding are taking their toll

3 days ago
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