Politics
Tired of Habitica? Try These 3 Cheaper and More Engaging Habitica Alternatives
Once upon a time, a productivity app called Habitica turned the industry of productivity apps upside down. It turned routine tasks that people were bored with doing into a game. And voila! Millions of people found it saving!
I was one of them and have used Habitica for quite some time now. Not to lie, the app really works. But since it was launched, almost 15 years have passed! The industry evolved, and productivity apps are not limited to gamifying habits.
There are thousands of Habitica alternatives, but these 3 work for me like a charm. They’re cheaper, more comprehensive, and nicer to look at.
Why Seek a Replacement for Habitica?
Habitica is a pioneer in the industry of productivity apps. It became successful due to its strong concept. But user experiences on Trustpilot, Reddit, the App Store, and Google Play collectively report several problems with the app:
- Technical issues. There have been no significant updates to the app in years, and hence, many users experience slow loading, and the app simply turns off.
- Rude staff. User feedback on Reddit frequently highlights that moderators within the app are no help, to the point that staff were posting threatening messages. We’ll return to the matter of Habitica’s staff later.
- More distracting than helpful. Yes, tracking habits is important, but what’s more important is actually doing these tasks. Habitica users, including me, found it hard to exist without the app because the gamified interface pushed our dopamine buttons. For me, it meant more screen time and less productivity.
- Subscription issues. Several users reported that Habitica had charged them for a subscription without their consent. Not to mention that premium features are underwhelming, like buying outfits or some gems, in-app currency.
These are all valid reasons to look for Habitica alternatives, but for me, it was simply not enough. Productivity doesn’t depend on consistency or planning alone. Our health or life events significantly impact mood and energy, and it’s okay because we’re all humans. I would like my productivity to be healthy, and healthy productivity is born from being satisfied with your life.
The last straw for me quitting Habitica was their scandal over how they mistreated their employees and volunteers. I want to support businesses that treat their staff with respect (and not delete the best features within the app).
Top 3 Replacements for Habitica
1. Breeze Wellbeing
If Habitica focuses on what you do, Breeze Wellbeing focuses on why you do it. Breeze doesn’t force you to stay consistent through guilt or overworking yourself. It’s a comprehensive app that boosts productivity by improving your mental well-being.
Breeze also includes a habit builder that lets users create customisable tasks and set reminders/frequency. The features of the Breeze app also include:
- Mood tracker and analytics that show your average mood during a week/month/year and what events triggered what emotions.
- Self-discovery tests include an ADHD evaluation, a charisma level test, a love languages test, and 30 more quizzes.
- Guided journaling to process thoughts and behaviors.
- Community and knowledge base features are available only in the US, UK, and Canada (so far).
- Mindfulness exercises to reduce sensory overload and return to the present moment.
I’ve been using Breeze Wellbeing for two months primarily as a habit and mood tracker. It helped me significantly to finally see myself as a person who’s allowed to have bad days and be sad, not a productivity robot who has to keep up with everything. Habitica, in this case, would just erase my streak, and that’s demotivating.
Another advantage is that Breeze feels less distracting. There’s no game layer pulling attention away. This makes it especially useful for people who feel that gamification works short-term but doesn’t address deeper issues.
Breeze is particularly helpful if your challenges with habits are connected to:
- Burnout or low energy
- Anxiety or overthinking
- Difficulty staying consistent
- Confusion about what you should do
In that sense, it’s not just a productivity tool. It’s a behavioral self-discovery system that helps you build habits in a way that adapts to you.
2. Focus Friend by Hank Green
Hank Green’s “Focus Friend” isn’t a different type of productivity app. The concept is built around a virtual companion, Bean. When you set a timer, you and Bean “work” together. While you focus on your tasks, Bean knits socks and scarves, in-app currency that you can use to decorate Bean’s space.
This isn’t necessarily a gamification of planning but a gamification of a process. Shortly put: a timer on steroids.
Hank Green, as TikTok’s favorite science blogger, explains that his app works due to a straightforward reward system. Our brain loves dopamine, and it doesn’t see the difference between earning real or “fake” in-app money. The release of dopamine when you get something for free then motivates you to initiate and proceed with tasks more easily.
Oh, and have I mentioned that the app is completely free? There are no premium versions. It’s a fully free initiative with limited details that don’t distract users from the app’s initial aim.
However, “Focus Friend” has limitations. Users complain about the app becoming repetitive quite quickly. Once you’ve decorated Bean’s space, the reward system loses its sense. This can reduce long-term engagement.
That said, as a short-term motivation tool, Focus Friend is extremely effective. Plus, it’s actively maintained. Hank Green listens to users and adds new rooms to keep the app relevant.
3. Todoist
Todoist is one of the most well-known productivity tools, and it offers a much more structured alternative to Habitica. Instead of gamification, Todoist focuses on organisation and prioritisation.
Some users call Todoist boring, and it’s valid. But its simplicity makes it highly customisable and accessible. Among the main features of Todoist are:
- Creating tasks
- Setting deadlines
- Organising tasks into projects
- Assigning priorities
- 80+ plugins to personalise your space
- Syncing across devices
- Creating public projects
- Visualisation
However, don’t forget that Todoist isn’t a productivity app. It’s a task manager whose main aim is to focus on what needs to be done. It doesn’t take nuances into consideration: your mental health, motivation, and reward system.
In my case, procrastination was driven by anxiety and overthinking, and lists with perfect structure in Todoist didn’t help me at all. So, this app will work best for people who are motivated but need a clear system to organise and execute tasks efficiently.
Habitica Alternatives in Short Comparison
Don’t have time to analyse which habit tracker is for you? Here’s a quick overview of three main Habitica alternatives:
| Feature | Breeze Wellbeing | Focus Friend | Todoist |
| Free? | Yes, has premium options | Yes | Yes, has premium options |
| Platform | iOS, Android | iOS, Android | iOS, Android, Desktop |
| Key Features | Mood tracking, habit builder, self-discovery tests, journaling, mindfulness, insights | Timer-based | Task creation, setting deadlines, establishing priorities |
| Best For | People who want to improve productivity by improving their mental health | People who need a quick boost of motivation to start the task | People who are motivated, but procrastinate due to a lack of structure |
| Main User Drawback | Some features differ based on region | Becomes repetitive | Can feel too simple or limited |
What to Consider While Choosing a Habit Tracker App
Choosing a habit tracker isn’t about finding the perfect app. It’s about finding the best fit for your needs. Here are some questions I asked myself before sticking to one productivity app:
- What do I need help with?
Are you trying to build discipline, stay organised, or improve your well-being? It’s okay not to know exactly what you need help with. In this case, I’d start with Breeze Wellbeing as a universal, comprehensive option. Depending on what features felt the most helpful, you can go into more niche directions.
Gamification works for some people, but not for everyone. Ask yourself what actually motivates you: rewards, inner feelings of satisfaction, social accountability, etc. For me, the best motivator was crossing off tasks from to-do lists and getting recognised for that.
- What can I do so that the app sticks?
It’s a frequent experience that users start using productivity apps with the mindset “I’m starting a new life.” But it’s actually a toxic approach because it’s impossible to cram 5 new healthy habits in a day if you previously did nothing (speaking from experience).
Consider whether you can realistically keep using it when motivation drops. For example, determine the bare minimum or take breaks. But what I personally recommend is to treat these apps as supportive tools, not a must-do every day. It takes off some pressure.
Why Habit Trackers Work
One study found that when people simply wrote down what they ate, how many steps they walked, their weight, etc., 85% adhered to healthy habits, compared to 37% among those who didn’t self-monitor.
But why does simply seeing our accomplishments written down make us want to stick to them more? In psychology, this is called positive reinforcement: rewarding desired behavior. The human brain loves dopamine, and it will be motivated to repeat things that produce it. That’s why gamification works.
Another reason why habit trackers work is predictability. Once again, human brains are lazy. When there is a plan vs. unpredictability, they will choose to adhere to a plan. For example, that’s why some people don’t like weekends. They simply don’t know what to do without their work routine.
An important disclaimer: habit trackers don’t build habits on their own. Simply downloading the app doesn’t make a person more or less productive. These apps help to stay consistent and aware, but only when users invest some time and effort in them.
Politics
Mandelson told Starmer to take advice from Tory John Major
New Labour’s enemies on the left have often accused the Blairites of being ‘red Tories’: figures like like Peter Mandelson disputed this accusation, and yet we now know he advised Keir Starmer to take advice from John Major.
Mandelson, w e’ve heard this Tory before
The latest revelation emerged in the new release of messages from Mandelson’s time in government. The reason the government is releasing his correspondence is another email tranche – specifically that which the US released in relation to the dead paedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
As it turned out, Mandelson was bosom buddies with Epstein, and he was secretly talking to him about British state secrets. We say ‘as it turns out’, but we did warn the government Mandelson was friends with Epstein before Starmer made him the ambassador to the US.
The latest release of messages contains the following exchange between Mandelson and Starmer. As you can see, it took place not long after Starmer became PM:
[17/07/2024, 21:41] Peter Mandelson: Keir, hope you are well, you have got off to a flying start. I was at a dinner with John Major this evening and if you don’t know him I think good idea to invite him for a chat. As well as being a very nice person, he is interesting and thoughtful. Just a thought. No need to reply.
[25/07/2024, 13:25] Keir Starmer: Thanks Peter. Its so good to be getting on with the job of governing. A million times better than opposition – you know that! I’ll reach out to John M, he’s a very thoughtful man. See you soon I hope.
Who could have guessed that Starmer was taking his cues from a Tory ex-prime minister?
The wrong track
As you may or may not know, Starmer recently re-nationalised the railways. Major was the one to privatise them, and as Tom Nicholas recently covered, this ended up being a long and winding disaster:
Before you think we’re praising Starmer, there’s something else to point out. Namely, that Starmer performed a typical half measure by failing to renationalise the companies which own the actual trains. As James Wright wrote for the Canary:
the party will not nationalise the rolling stock companies – Eversholt, Porterbrook, and Angel Trains. These companies own the majority of the trains that we rent. That’s despite the company shareholders making over £2bn in the past decade in dividends.
So basically, Conservative prime minister John Major sold off the trains when he privatised the railways in 1993. Now we rent them back at higher costs and still will under Labour’s plans.
So yeah – consider us unsurprised to learn that Mandelson, Starmer, and Major may have been chatting it up behind closed doors.
Featured image via Carl Court (Getty Images) / Dimitrios Kambouris (Getty Images) / Carl Court (Getty Images)
By Willem Moore
Politics
Sam Levinson Praises ‘Game’ Sydney Sweeney Over Euphoria OnlyFans Scenes
Euphoria creator Sam Levinson has said that Sydney Sweeney had a gung-ho approach to her controversial storyline in the show’s most recent season.
Throughout season three, Sam has spoken out in support of Sydney’s performance, after scenes depicting her Euphoria character turning to OnlyFans modelling to help pay for her elaborate wedding raised eyebrows among fans and critics.
Some even went as far as comparing the Emmy-nominated actor’s more graphic scenes to a “humiliation ritual” for the star, as her character took part in increasingly more extreme OnlyFans shoots.
As the discourse has raged on, Sydney has mostly kept schtum, although Sam did have some things to say during an interview on the New York Times’ Popcast podcast.
He recalled: “When I first wrote [Sydney’s season three storyline], I thought, ‘Well, maybe, we shoot all of this, and we don’t have any nudity’.
“I was [telling her], ‘maybe, there’s ways to shoot around certain [things]’ – and she looked at me, and she was like, ‘Are you kidding? I’m playing an OnlyFans model!’.”
Praising Sydney, he added: “I think she’s a totally fearless actor. She’s also just wonderfully professional, and shows up just game every day.
“I adore working with her, because there’s such a flexibility in terms of the performance.”
Sam previously weighed in on Cassie’s OnlyFans storyline before the new season had even begun airing.
“What we wanted to always find is the other layer of absurdity that we’re able to tie into it so that we’re not too inside of her fantasy or illusion,” he insisted, pointing out the use of lighting and the inclusion of Cassie’s housekeeper as a makeshift photographer was intended to provide a “gnarly and jarring” contrast between the character’s more supposedly glamorous moments.
He added: “We wanted to capture what she’s trying to show the audience and be inside of it, but then also pull back wider and see how depressing it is.”
Euphoria is now streaming on Now and Sky.
Politics
Euphoria Star Toby Wallace Addresses Divided Reaction To Season 3
Euphoria actor Toby Wallace has had his say on the mixed response the most recent run of episodes has received.
He recalled: “I remember walking on to their season going like ‘okay this is definitely a little bit of a different show, like it feels different’.”
“I don’t think you can really treat it as exactly the same vibe as the last two seasons, because it’s not in a lot of ways. [Sam Levinson, Euphoria’s creator] always wants to recreate and build something original,” Toby continued, noting that the showrunner didn’t want “to replicate or do something that’s already been done”.
Toby added that, while Euphoria’s third outing has received plenty of criticism, there’ve been some “really good” responses from fans and critics, too.
“In terms of the story that we set out to tell, which is a story about addiction and its consequences, this feels like the end to me,” he claimed.
“I want to finish this as strong as I can,” he noted at the season three premiere back in April.
All three seasons of Euphoria are now streaming on Now and Sky in the UK.
Politics
Starmer bans streamer Hasan Piker ‘at behest of Israel’
Critics of Israel have long faced repression for speaking out in defence of Palestinians. In the latest example of this, the UK has now banned US streamer Hasan Piker from entering the country:
the uk has revoked my visa as well. all at the behest of israel. the west is betraying "liberal values" for a genocidal fascist foreign government. soon we will all become israel. https://t.co/UqQG1dogOI
— hasanabi (@hasanthehun) May 31, 2026
Israel influence
Hasan Piker is a streamer on Twitch. He also uploads videos to YouTube, and is famous for content like the following:
As Piker notes in the following video, he was set to interview Jeremy Corbyn, Zack Polanski, and Yanis Varoufakis before speaking at the Oxford Student Union:
Piker has spoken at the Oxford Student Union before, where he said the following:
ironic because a year ago, i delivered a speech at oxford union about the dangers of conflating judaism and zionism & how this foments antisemitism. since then the government has arrested pensioners for protesting against israel and let iof war criminals roam free! https://t.co/C6f9poXFR3
— hasanabi (@hasanthehun) June 1, 2026
Here’s one of the pensioners in question:
British police arrest a blind man with a walking cane in Trafalgar Square, London, under the Terrorism Act, for holding a sign reading: ‘I oppose genocide – I support Palestine Action,’ as part of a wave of arrests targeting hundreds of protesters. pic.twitter.com/CgcBKLXNRB
— Eye on Palestine (@EyeonPalestine) October 4, 2025
In a video he posted after having his visa revoked, Piker said:
Listen, I’m going to say something. This is a warning. I hope you guys understand the Western world and liberal democracy is a sham. And all of the supposed things that they claim to care about, they do not actually care about.
We are moving into a very different timeline. This is why I constantly reiterate that fascism is here, right? Like the administration trying to deploy subpoenas against political dissident in the United States of America or the UK, that’s like completely captive to the interests of of pro-Israel advocacy organizations. …
The Labor government is supposed to be the liberal government… and the American government is the right-wing government… We are we are in the 1930s era ,where I think that the administrations in both the UK and the United States of America – regardless of their supposed ideological differences – are absolutely moving as a uni party.
And things are going to get even worse from here on out.
Genocide-denying stooge VS Hasan Piker
One of the most prominent voices calling for Hasan’s ban was Labour MP David Taylor. We’ve reported on Taylor before, noting that he seemingly denied Israel’s genocide in Palestine as a vector to attack the Green Party:
Do you remember when the Green Party used to profess to care about environmental issues, rather than spout baseless antisemitic conspiracy theories? https://t.co/nGv0zFdB8k
— David Taylor MP (@DavidTaylor85) February 24, 2026
Taylor wouldn’t be the first to describe the genocide as an ‘antisemitic conspiracy theory’, and no doubt he won’t be the last.
Israel’s defenders have repeatedly insisted that you can’t call out the state’s crimes if they resemble historic antisemitic conspiracies. It’s a ‘get-out-of-jail’ free card, and we’ve seen it deployed in the most heinous ways imaginable since the genocide began:
BREAKING: Israel dismisses IDF top lawyer Yifat Tomer-Yerushalmi for leaking video of Israeli soldiers raping Palestinian.
Minister of Defense of Israel Israel Katz threatens her with 'imprisonment for many years" & calls her actions "a grave blood libel against heroic IDF… pic.twitter.com/YpPpdlYSs7
— Double Down News (@DoubleDownNews) May 26, 2026
Before Piker’s ban, Taylor said:
It’s shocking that SXSW would invite someone who has openly supported a proscribed terrorist organisation and spouted these kinds of vile antisemitic rants to speak at their festival.
With the unacceptable rise in antisemitism on our streets leaving British Jews in a constant state of anxiety, Hasan Piker is clearly not conducive to the public good.
The “vile antisemitic rants” are criticisms of Israel. While we’re told its antisemitic to blame all Jews for the actions of Israel, the state’s defenders are happy to label all criticism of Israel ‘antisemitism’.
On ‘support for a proscribed terrorist organisation’, Taylor is referencing comments like the following (as reported by the Independent):
Last month, Mr Piker publicly stood by remarks made during an episode of Pod Save America, where he asserted that Hamas was “1,000 times better” than Israel and that he “would vote for Hamas over Israel every single time.”
Given that Gaza is in rubble and Israel is not, it’s hard to disagree with the maths here.
Also, do you know who supported Hamas in a more material fashion than Piker? That’s right – Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu – who notoriously said the following:
Anyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas … This is part of our strategy – to isolate the Palestinians in Gaza from the Palestinians in the West Bank.”
Israeli politicians made it impossible for the Palestinians to peacefully pursue liberation; the inevitable result of this was Hamas.
Establishment protection
There are obvious reasons why the British establishment has sought to defend Israel at the expense of its own citizens:
- The UK profits from Israel’s actions through arms deals and partnerships.
- Israel is a key ally of America, and the UK is America’s foremost lapdog.
- The Israel lobby has proven to be very effective at influencing British politicians – particularly through the ‘Labour Friends of Israel‘ and ‘Conservative Friends of Israel‘ groups.
- Once enough people within the establishment hold an opinion, mirroring that opinion becomes the price of entry.
Here’s what scumbag MP David Taylor said when it was pointed out how weird it is for senior British politicians take hundreds of thousands of pounds from donors whose primary interest is the betterment of a genocidal foreign power:
Absolutely vile. This person shouldn't be a member of any political party, yet alone it's deputy leader. https://t.co/TQ11164qLC
— David Taylor MP (@DavidTaylor85) February 23, 2026
Is there any way Israel can interfere in our politics that wouldn’t be considered antisemitism?
Oh, and to give a further idea of how preposterous this all is, look at how Fox News covered the Piker ban:
Fox News says Hasan Piker used a antisemitic trope by saying Israel advocacy groups pushed for his ban. And then in the following sentence details how said groups pushed for his ban. pic.twitter.com/skJb1os8pz
— Noot Noot
(@PunishedPingu) June 1, 2026
Zionist advocacy groups
Zionism is the ideology of Israel existing as an expansionist colonial state that serves as America’s foothold in the Middle East. While many advocacy groups in the UK and the US pose as being against ‘antisemitism’, the reality is they spend more time defending the rights of Zionists.
One of the Zionist advocacy groups calling out Hasan was Community Security Trust (CST). The group said:
Hasan Piker has a record of promoting rhetoric that includes antisemitic themes, denial of well documented atrocities and apparent support for extremist groups.
Once again, they’re talking about criticism of Israel. And CST has form on this, as Fréa Lockley reported for the Canary in 2019 after Labour revoked the press pass of journalist Asa Winstanley:
The Community Security Trust (CST) is a charity, initially set up to protect “British Jews from antisemitism and related threats”. On 4 August, it published a report called Engine of Hate: the online networks behind the Labour Party’s antisemitism crisis. This report stated:
the single most popular website for article shares about the subject of antisemitism, the Labour Party and Israel/Palestine was Electronic Intifada, a radical anti-Zionist website which has consistently promoted the idea that allegations of antisemitism in the Labour Party are false, and are part of a smear campaign against Jeremy Corbyn that is orchestrated by the Israeli government.
The campaign against the Canary
Here at the Canary, we’ve also faced attacks from pro-Zionist advocacy groups. As Paul Holden noted in his book The Fraud:
In 2021, Impress launched an investigation into the Canary alongside Skwawkbox, another independent, pro-Corbyn political website. Impress acted pursuant to a report published by Lord Mann, a vehement Corbyn critic and former Labour MP who was promoted to the House of Lords by the Tories. Mann’s report had accused both online publications of antisemitism.
The accusation was based, in part, on the research of Daniel Allington, an academic based at King’s College London. Allington was also ‘Head of Online Monitoring’ for the Campaign Against Antisemitism (CAA) between June 2016 and September 2018.
As Holden also reported, IMPRESS cleared us, and:
It felt moved to add that those who:
disagree with the Publisher’s views on subjects such as Zionism may find these views offensive, adversarial or provocative but this in itself does not rise to the level of threat to, or targeting of, persons or groups on the basis of their protected characteristics.
Over in the US, Piker has faced a campaign which is nearly identical to what we’ve endured here in the UK.
The campaign against Hasan Piker
Piker has faced numerous attacks from the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). As people have noted, the ADL seems to be much more concerned about anti-Zionism than antisemitism:
The ADL, which defended Elon Musk’s salute, and has never made videos like this about rightwing actual antisemites, is obsessed with Hasan Piker. https://t.co/IjQCxw9sCT
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) April 17, 2026
Piker himself has also observed this discrepancy:
asmongold is the largest right wing political content creator in the us. his view counts eclipse the daily wire. here he is, openly admitting that he’s a funnel for nick fuentes & his repulsive neonazi worldview & strangely enough the adl never tries to deplatform him. perhaps… pic.twitter.com/zxQ7vCrpTF
— hasanabi (@hasanthehun) May 29, 2026
Explaining itself, the ADL said the following:
ADL has seen firsthand how extreme and demonizing rhetoric and ugly expressions of anti-Zionism can be the driving force behind antisemitic discrimination against Jews
Even if the above is true, maybe the solution isn’t to police anti-Zionism; maybe it’s to stop supporting a political project which necessitates the ethnic cleansing and murder of Israel’s neighbours in the Middle East?
White supremacy certainly gives white people a bad reputation, but the correct response isn’t to suggest anti-Nazis are the real problem.
In the past, the ADL has nominated Hasan for the position of ‘Antisemite of the Year’ alongside Greta Thunberg (!):
The ADL and donor group AIPAC have also worked with US politicians to try to deplatform Piker:
i mean they did this by way of adl and ritchie torres for like 2 years, now they got higher profile dems and republicans to lean into it because theyre desperate
— hasanabi (@hasanthehun) May 4, 2026
After reading out a headline titled “Jewish groups call on UK to bar dangerous Hasan amid antisemitic attacks”, Piker said the following in his latest video:
[the UK government] did because Israel advocacy organizations have unbelievable amounts of power over what even the United Kingdom has to say and do. Yeah. If you’re an avowed anti-Zionist, your travel will be restricted. It’s totally ridiculous, dude.
Connections
Canary reporter Ranjan Balakumaran noted this is all happening on the same day that more Peter Mandelson files come out:
View this post on Instagram
Another way of looking at this is that these are not separate stories.
Peter Mandelson is the godfather of Labour Together – the group which maneuvered Keir Starmer into power. As we, Paul Holden, and others reported, this included fabricating smears of antisemitism (including against the Canary specifically). Now, the government which Mandelson helped create isn’t just smearing its opponents with bogus antisemitism accusations; it’s barring them from the country.
Point any of this out, however, and figures like David Taylor MP will accuse you of being an antisemite. And in future, you may face consequences far graver than reputational damage.
Featured image via Amy Sussman (Getty Images) / WPA Pool (Getty Images) / Joe Raedle (Getty Images)
By Willem Moore
Politics
The House | “A case study in what the stage does best”: Baroness Chakrabarti reviews ‘Inter Alia’

Cormac McAlinden as Harry and Rosamund Pike as Jessica | Photo (c): Manuel Harlan
3 min read
With its commanding lead performance by Rosamund Pike, I challenge you not to be enthralled and provoked by this urgent legal drama
Light and humorous moments aside, Australian lawyer-turned-writer Suzie Miller’s Inter Alia (“among other things”) is a very serious play. As with Miller’s 2019 stage work Prima Facie, a legal professional woman protagonist becomes the device for exploring wider, urgent societal issues. In the earlier work, it was a criminal defence barrister whose worldview is rocked by her own rape. That piece garnered international plaudits for both Miller and the phenomenon that is Jodie Comer in the starring role in the UK.
This time, the equally glittering and formidable Rosamund Pike plays Jessica Parks, a Crown Court judge and unabashed feminist who has sent many a sex offender to the slammer. Her work-life balance is non-existent, or at least impossibly demanding, thanks to the oblivious entitlement or passive-aggressive resentment of her hapless, less obviously successful criminal silk husband Michael. He is portrayed with understated aplomb by Jamie Glover. Jess’ life of juggling plates, cases, family duties and domestic dinner parties is sent into shock after an incident involving her only child, 18-year-old Harry. In this West End Wyndham’s Theatre transfer from the National Theatre, the darling boy is played with sensitivity and flair by Cormac McAlinden.
Pike delivers what we expect of a cinema star returning to the stage after many years. She commands the space, audience and material in a performance which combines physical energy and dexterity with charisma, empathy and warmth. Would any politicians reading this please take note? Pike’s own discipline and stamina in essentially carrying the one hour and 45 minutes, without interval and at a rate of knots, is well worthy of her character. Crucially, she is completely believable as an obviously class-privileged senior woman who has given her life to public service, towards the less glamorous end of our very precious and much-maligned UK judiciary. I have met and admired a great many Jesses over the years. Some are lawyers and judges, but others are senior doctors, journalists and, dare I say it, even parliamentarians.
Rosamond Pike delivers what we expect of a cinema star returning to the stage after many years
While the energy and pace are impressive, and at times almost mesmerising, there were moments when I did not need quite so much rock guitar and well-choreographed but dizzying actor-driven prop movement, as clothes and dishes are disposed into the well-placed magic doors and cupboards, worthy of legendary National set-design.
Ultimately, however, while the screen is – for me at least – unrivalled as the medium for transcending worlds and developing three-dimensional characters, this production is a case study in what the stage does better or even best. That is providing challenge. While many of us applauded Adolescence, and welcomed all its well-deserved accolades, the parents in the last episode of that Netflix drama let themselves too very easily off the hook. This piece does the opposite.
Photo (c): Manuel Harlan
I loved it, of course, for humanising lawyers and judges, who are fast becoming a demonised minority, but mostly for doing so with critical honesty, integrity and intelligence. Readers might expect this review of me, but I challenge anyone not to be enthralled and provoked.
Baroness Chakrabarti is a Labour peer
Inter Alia
Written by: Suzie Miller
Directed by: Justin Martin
Venue: Wyndham’s Theatre, WC2 – until 20 June
Politics
How UK Government Is Attempting To Address Cost Of Living Crisis
Labour has announced a raft of measures to help alleviate the soaring cost of living for Brits this week.
It comes as Donald Trump’s war against Iran, and the subsequent blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, continues to impact the global economy.
The waterway usually transports around 20% of the world’s oil and 25% of its liquefied national gas supplies, meaning its effective closure has hit energy-dependent countries everywhere.
A food security crisis is looming as a result, and the UK’s household energy price cap is expected to rise by £209 a year from July.
Here’s a look at the measures chancellor Rachel Reeves unveiled this week as part of her £300 million “Great British Summer Savings” scheme.
5p Cut On Fuel Duty
The government announced on Wednesday that it will keep the current 5p cut on fuel duty until the end of the year.
The reduced tax rate for petrol and diesel was meant to be phased out in September.
The policy was announced by the previous Conservative government to help ease the impact of the Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Now, with a fresh energy crisis emerging from the Middle East conflict, the government has decided to extend the scheme.
Red diesel duty will also be cut by one-third and road hauliers will receive a year’s grace on road tax to help the farming community.
A 12-month road tax holiday for HGVs and a 10p per mile in tax-free mileage rates, backdated to April 2026, is also set to be rolled out.
Free August Travel For 5-15 Year-Olds
Children will travel for free on participating local buses in England for one month over the summer, Reeves announced on Wednesday.
The £100 million fare-free scheme will save a family with two children who make a weekly return trip at £1.50 per fare approximately £27, according to the government.
Those eligible can take an unlimited number of trips and do not need to register to enjoy the perk.
Similar schemes were successfully trialled in the West of England throughout the summer, Easter and Christmas holidays.
VAT On Ticket Prices Cut
The chancellor announced a temporary cut to VAT on some attractions from 20% to 5% over the summer holidays.
“This will apply to ticket prices for both adults and children, covering attractions such as fairs, theme parks, zoos and museums,” Reeves told the Commons on Thursday.
“It will include children’s tickets for cinemas, concerts, soft play and the theatre, and it will cut the cost of children’s meals in restaurants and cafes from 20% VAT to 5% as well.
“These changes will apply across the UK from the start of the Scottish school holidays on 25th June, and run until the end of school holidays in England, Wales and Northern Ireland on the 1st of September.”
Tariff Suspension On Supermarket Goods
The chancellor announced plans to suspend tariffs on certain supermarket goods on Thursday.
Tariffs – import taxes on goods paid by companies in the supply chain – will be lifted on more than 100 types of products, including biscuits, chocolate, dried fruit and nuts.
Supermarkets will then have to pass that saving onto product prices so shoppers can enjoy a price cut.
The full list of products will be published next week but the scheme is expected to save consumers more than £150 million a year.
What About Supermarket Price Caps?
There were reports the government was going to force price caps to supermarkets to try to keep the price of essential products – like eggs, bread and milk – down.
However, even the idea of a voluntary scheme was dismissed by the supermarket sector.
Marks & Spencer’s chief executive, Stuart Machin, said the idea was “completely preposterous”.
There were fears that could lead to shortages on shelves and trigger pressure throughout the supply chain.
Is This Enough?
These measures might improve summer, but there is more pain around the corner.
While inflation did fall this week, it is expected to rise as the conflict in the Middle East triggered sky-high fuel prices.
The Office for National Statistics announced that Consumer Prices Index inflation fell to 2.8% in April, down from 3.3% in March, which is the lowest rate since March 2025.
However, that was driven by regulator Ofgem reducing the energy price cap from the start of April by £10 a month.
The energy price cap is expected to increase significantly from July, too, from the current rate of £1,641 per year to £1,850 for a typical dual fuel household, according to predictions.
But the chancellor will wait until September before finalising any package of targeted support for households in winter when energy use increases.
Ministers are also trying to avoid offering a universal bailout for all households so as not to drive up an increase in government borrowing costs and inflation, leading to the kind of economic disaster seen under Liz Truss.
The government insists it is offering “practical steps that help right now”.
Prime minister Keir Starmer said: “We know many hard‑working families are still feeling the squeeze and too often think they have to hold back.
“By giving every child free bus travel throughout August and cutting tariffs on everyday food items, we’re putting money back into people’s pockets and making life that bit easier.
“This government is focused on practical steps that help right now — easing pressure on household budgets, supporting parents during the school holidays, and backing British businesses.”
Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.
Politics
Russell T Davies Slams Gwyneth Paltrow For Intimacy Coordinator Comment
Tip Toe creator Russell T Davies singled out Gwyneth Paltrow while lambasting Hollywood A-listers who have spoken unfavourably about working with intimacy coordinators on the sets of their films and TV shows.
During a recent interview with The Mirror, the creator of hit shows like Queer As Folk and It’s A Sin sang the praises of intimacy coordinators, but lamented that there’s been a “rash recently of very famous actors saying” that their work isn’t “needed”.
“They have so much power and so much privilege and they have no idea what it is like to be a jobbing actor with no power on a set. Shame on them.”
Recalling one incident, when the film’s intimacy coordinator asked if she was happy with a particular move, she told Vanity Fair that she’d responded: “Girl, I’m from the era where you get naked, you get in bed, the camera’s on.”
“We said, ‘I think we’re good. You can step a little bit back’, ” she later admitted. “I don’t know how it is for kids who are starting out, but… if someone is like, ’OK, and then he’s going to put his hand here’… I would feel, as an artist, very stifled by that.”
Politics
Reform councillor accused of stealing a constituent’s video
Since Reform UK did well in the 2025 local elections, there’s been a steady stream of stories about how weird their new councillors are. Because Reform won even more seats in the 2026 locals, that stream is fast becoming a river, with stories like this regularly bubbling to the surface:
Reform: you wouldn’t steal a car
If your councillor posts a video of them walking around the local area, you’d no doubt assume it’s their own. The fact that this may not be could say worrying things about this man’s integrity.
Of course, Lambert isn’t the only Reform politician who’s failing to perform their job as you’d expect:
Nigel Farage hasn't voted in Parliament for the last 11 weeks and has now missed 77 votes in a row, according to official records. The last time he turned up was to vote against adraft regulations for the Employment Rights Act, and that says it all.
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) May 31, 2026
A fish rots from the head, as they say.
Ironically, Lambert has previously posted AI slop in which he promised to represent Christian values:
Matthew Lambert is Reform UK’s candidate in Douglas, Wigan.
He’s been creating AI slop that he claims represents the Christian Fellowship for Reform with himself a preacher / politician.
Must be a very close family judging from the people standing looking at him in awe. — Reform Party UK Exposed
pic.twitter.com/RorbaKlzRN
(@reformexposed) May 7, 2026
We say ‘ironic’, because surely “thou shall not steal”, right? And yet now he stands accused of stealing some random constituent’s walking video.
Lambert is a councillor in Wigan, which is the same area as the ongoing Makerfield by-election. Another candidate, Rob Kenyon, also has a pretty dubious record when it comes to understanding the Christian faith:
Three problems, Rob: it's not a mosque (it's a food bank with a small prayer room), it wasn't a consecrated church (it was an old school building), and it doesn't serve any faith exclusively. The one thing genuinely destroyed at the site was a digger torched by arsonists who'd… https://t.co/g59aDB4EnE
— Waqas
(@m0w4q45) May 28, 2026
As YouTuber Jimmy the Giant commented:
They’ll do anything to restore our christian heritage but go to church
Tip of the iceberg
When it comes to Farage’s awful councillors though, there’s far worse to point at than what Lambert has done, as we’ve reported:
- Reform councillor reposts that Labour MP ‘should be shot’.
- Reform councillor dramatically quits over council tax betrayal.
- What a surprise – Reform councillor attends just one meeting and sends two emails in six months.
- Reform councillor fined £40,000 for hiring ‘illegal’ workers.
- Reform councillor would like to see wage cuts to fund his pay rise.
There’s also the endless racism, as we reported in the runup to the recent locals:
- Reform activist worries growth of Jewish population could ruin UK culture.
- Reform candidate suggests ‘melting Nigerians’ to fill potholes.
- Calls for Reform candidate who praised rape of Sikh women to face suspension.
- Reform activist said ‘Hitler was right’.
- Video emerges of Reform’s ‘Nazi salute’ candidate drink driving.
This Lambert story does show something, however, and it’s that these far-right politicians are constantly attracting the wrong sort of attention – whether it’s allegedly stealing some random video or failing to declare a £5m ‘gift’:
The optics say it all: Farage, a public school boy in cords and tweed, fresh from receiving £5m from another public school boy, nodding along as Kenyon argues that Britain’s real problem is teenagers who cannot be hired on the minimum wage. https://t.co/gA42bUhOKE
— Dr Iain Overton (@iainoverton) May 23, 2026
Featured image via Facebook
By Willem Moore
Politics
Farage spits his dummy out over Desert Island Discs snub
Between 2016-2020, right-wingers like Nigel Farage were fond of accusing the left of being ‘easily offended’. At some point, however, these same people realised that being offended was great for driving attention and they dove in both feet first.
Abolish the BBC licence fee. pic.twitter.com/y6pWf4VR5C
— Nigel Farage MP (@Nigel_Farage) May 31, 2026
The first thing we should note is that the Canary has a long, long history of criticising the BBC. This year alone, we’ve published the following:
- Former BBC Middle East correspondent: broadcaster was central to ‘Labour antisemitism’ scam
- BBC shamefully plays politics with vile racism in the NHS
- Lebanon war correspondent accuses BBC of complicity in ethnic cleansing
- BBC publishes misinformation about small boat crossings
- BBC ran quote from Iranian claiming to be ‘fine’ with nuclear destruction of Iran
The difference between us and Farage is our criticism doesn’t boil down to ‘the BBC dislikes me personally 

‘.
Now, on to the Desert Island Discs dilemma.
A Reform spokesperson told the Times:
We approached the BBC as we thought it would be a no-brainer with Keir and Kemi going on, but it would appear they have a ban on Reform — the party has led in the opinion polls for well over a year. This is the typical BBC bias we have come to expect.
The BBC responded:
We do not ban any individuals from appearing on Desert Island Discs and that includes Mr Farage.
Perpetual victim. https://t.co/A1VO9VNVoF
— Don McGowan (@donmcgowan) May 31, 2026
Rupert Lowe of Restore Britain is also making similar threats, by the way.
The BBC have run a sneering attack piece insulting both myself and Elon Musk…
A Restore Britain Government will defund the BBC, day one.
Let's see who's laughing then.
— Rupert Lowe MP (@RupertLowe10) May 31, 2026
Lowe spends all day writing long screeds about how much he hates his political enemies. What is it they say about not giving it if you can’t take it?
Farage snubbed
If BBC Radio 4 did snub Farage, it probably wasn’t over immigration, because he, Starmer, and Badenoch have had nearly identical policy platforms at times.
When it comes to Farage, though, there are definitely things which make him more poisonous to a general audience than Badenoch or Starmer. Specifically, we’re talking about Farage’s history of the most extreme racism, as his Jewish ex-classmate, Peter Ettedgui, reported:
I’d never experienced antisemitism growing up, so the first time that this vicious verbal abuse came out of Farage’s mouth was deeply shocking. But I wasn’t his only target. I’d hear him calling other students ‘Paki’ or ‘Wog’, and urging them to ‘go home’.
Farage is also more closely linked to Donald Trump than any other UK politician — a man the UK public has no time for.
Forgot about this. After Bannon was corralling Farage and Johnson to topple Theresa May, his former boss Trump chips in to get Farage to do a deal with Johnson in the 2019 election.
A stitch up. https://t.co/ZhXPvcnhkE
— Peter Jukes (@peterjukes) May 31, 2026
The accusations of foreign interference don’t end there, as Skwawkbox reported for the Canary:
Former Reform UK in Wales leader Nathan Gill has today been sentenced to ten and a half years in prison after admitting taking bribes to make positive statements about Russia.
Farage is also facing a great deal of scrutiny for the £5 million gift he accepted from a foreign-based crypto billionaire.
Here are the facts as laid down by Derbyshire: Same old same old https://t.co/ViEIFZkf3A
— Alonso Gurmendi (@Alonso_GD) May 6, 2026
1) Farage says he won’t run
2) crypto billionaire pays him £5mill
3) Farage U-turns and runs
4) Farage hides the donation
5) Farage announces if he wins the election he will slash capital gains tax for crypto firms
If we ran Desert Island Discs, we wouldn’t have any of these politicians on. At the same time, we can see why BBC Radio 4 and its audience might consider Farage to be an entirely different beast to Badenoch or Starmer.
Free press
There’s a real irony in that the BBC clearly doesn’t hate Farage or Reform. If anything, they’ve given him and his party far more attention than they deserve.
Nigel Farage has appeared on BBC's Question Time at least 38 times. His supporters are complaining that he hasn't been invited on Desert Island Discs… (image: @newsthump) https://t.co/fqthrcfQ9u pic.twitter.com/KUrEEMMKk7
— Nick : Data + Independent Politics (@nick_pope) June 1, 2026
And while Farage is all over the media, he’s largely absent from the job he was elected to perform.
Nigel Farage hasn't voted in Parliament for the last 11 weeks and has now missed 77 votes in a row, according to official records. The last time he turned up was to vote against adraft regulations for the Employment Rights Act, and that says it all.
— Mukhtar (@I_amMukhtar) May 31, 2026
Moan alone
Farage has sold himself as an antidote to the British establishment. That’s fine, but the price you pay is you don’t get to sip iced tea and discuss Duran Duran with Lauren Laverne.
In other words, Nigel, pick a lane, and stop moaning.
Featured image via Ian Forsyth/ Getty Images
By Willem Moore
Politics
All to London for the International Anti-War conference
We’re hurtling towards more wars and greater global instability, with the governments of Europe responding with massive rearmament programmes and increasing moves towards conscription. So we urgently need a mass movement for peace to break with the worldview of the likes of Donald Trump and Tony Blair.
The International Conference Against War on 20 June in central London will be a unique and historic step to building it.
Over 1,700 people from the UK and across Europe have bought tickets so far and, with international speakers, this will be a truly world-wide solidarity conference. Speakers are coming from France, Palestine, Belgium, the UK, the US, Ukraine, Germany, Italy, Russia, Spain and Sweden.
They include (all in person):
- Mustafa Barghouti, General Secretary of the Palestinian National Initiative.
- Medea Benjamin, American political activist Code Pink.
- Mothin Ali, Green Party deputy leader.
- Lorena Delgado Varas, Swedish MP.
- UK MPs Richard Burgon, Jeremy Corbyn, Zarah Sultana, Jon Trickett.
- Jérôme Lagavre, French Assembly member.
- Fran Heathcote, PCS general secretary.
- José Nivoi, Genoa docker.
- Tariq Ali, author and activist.
- Felix Kreklow Rojas, German anti-conscription student campaigner.
- Andrew Feinstein, former ANC MP.
- And many more.
John Rees, Stop the War national officer and one of the organisers of the conference, said:
The wolf is at the door. Donald Trump is setting fires he has no intention and no capacity to extinguish.
European political leaders have begun a continent-wide rearmament programme on a scale not seen since World War Two. They’re making arms companies rich and the rest of us poor.
Every day another politician or army chief tells us we have to accept austerity and prepare for war. Conscription has returned in Germany, France, Belgium and the Netherlands. Keir Starmer is threatening the same here.
The International Anti-War conference in London on 20 June is the response from trade unionists and anti-war activists. It could not come at a more vital time. Together we will demand welfare, not warfare, wages not weapons.
Featured image via Getty Images
By The Canary
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