Politics
22 Best Places To Watch The London Marathon 2026
On Sunday, 26 April, the 2026 London Marathon is set to take place.
Over 59,000 runners are expected to take part in the race, which is set to run from Greenwich to the Mall.
Here’s when and where to catch the best views of the event, as well as the least busy points to access it.
When does the London Marathon 2026 start?
The marathon kicks off in waves. For non-elite runners, these run from 9:30 am to 11:30 am.
For elite participants, the times start:
- Elite wheelchair races, men’s and women’s: 9:50 am
- Elite women’s: 9:05 am
- Elite men’s: 9:35 am.
Fun fact: last year, runner Tigst Assefa ran a record-breaking 2:15:50 marathon at the London Marathon. She’s running again and is hoping to beat her record; even if she gets the same time or slightly more, she’ll still have completed an entire marathon before the last wave of non-elite runners even starts.
Which will be the busiest Tube stations during the London Marathon 2026?
Because the course runs from Greenwich up through to the Isle of Dogs and on to The Mall, there will be opportunities to cheer the runners on from both sides of the river.
But with tens of thousands of runners, supporters are expected to be plentiful. The race organisers themselves say that:
- Cutty Sark,
- Bermondsey,
- Canary Wharf,
- Limehouse,
- Tower Hill,
- Westminster, and
- St James’ Park Tube stations will be “extremely busy”.
Westminster station will be exit-only from 7am to 7pm.
Which are the least busy stations to get to the London Marathon 2026?
London Marathon says that if you’re going to popular spots on the route, they expect it’s best to walk from:
- Deptford,
- Greenwich,
- Island Gardens,
- Maze Hill,
- London Overground Rotherhithe,
- London Rotherhide Surrey Quays,
- London Bridge station,
- The Canary Wharf DLR,
- Crossharbour,
- South Quay,
- Shadwell station via Cable Street,
- Westferry station,
- Poplar station,
- Bank,
- St Paul’s,
- Southwark,
- Cannon Street,
- Mansion House,
- Charing Cross,
- Piccadilly Circus,
- Victoria,
- and Waterloo.
Where are the best places to see the London Marathon 2026?
Most accessible London Marathon 2026 viewing spots
There are five accessible viewing points planned for the London Marathon. These are located at:
- Cutty Sark,
- Canary Wharf,
- Rainbow Row,
- Tower Hill,
- Victoria Embankment.
Head to the London Marathon’s site for more details.
Quietest London Marathon 2026 viewing spots
These are expected to include:
- Rotherhide Peninsula,
- The Highway,
- Isle of Dogs,
- Westferry,
- Poplar.
Most popular 2026 London Marathon viewing spots
These are expected to include:
- Cutty Sark,
- Greenwich,
- Canada Water,
- Bermondsey,
- Rotherhide,
- Tower Bridge,
- Tower Hill,
- Canary Wharf,
- Limehouse,
- Westminster,
- Rainbow Row, and
- Victoria Embankment.
“These routes will be clearly signposted and diversions will be in place to assist with crowd flow so please listen to marshals’ instructions,” said the London Marathon’s site.
Politics
Marine biologist shares why she returned a restaurant crustacean to the sea
Marine biologist Emma Smart was sentenced for criminal damage last week, after releasing a lobster from a seafood restaurant back in April 2025. Amidst accusations that the environmental activist harmed animals displayed for public education, Smart shares what motivated her to intervene and questions whether the response of the police, courts and media were proportionate.
‘Animal rights activist killed my crayfish‘. ‘Activist threw restaurant’s educational lobster into the sea‘. ‘Woman storms posh restaurant to steal lobster‘. These were amongst the bizarre headlines I read this weekend. Unmistakable in the grainy CCTV images within each article was the rainbow jumper-wearing perpetrator of this unusual, alleged crime. She was a climate activist who I know cares deeply for people and animals alike. So I wanted to find out what happened, why she did it, and whether those headlines are a load of codswallop.
‘Why I liberated the lobster’
Emma Smart knows a lot about aquatic animals — she even has a species of fish named after her. At the centre of this story is the spiny lobster (Palinurus elephas), a largely nocturnal, often solitary sea creature classified as vulnerable to extinction. In the wild, they’d spend almost all of their time in total darkness, preferring to hide under boulders or in cracks in the rock.
Sharing something of her own distress seeing the crustaceans on display — apparently to educate children — at the harbourside restaurant, Smart describes the lobster’s artificial habitat:
A bare, shallow tank under the bright fluorescent lights of a fishmongers hall amidst the constant clatter of a restaurant is undoubtedly an incredibly distressing environment for spiny lobsters. There was no cave or refuge for them, which is a fundamental necessity for this species to have.
She acknowledges that her decision to take a lobster from the tank was impulsive, but stresses that it was motivated by deep concern for the animals’ welfare. She emphasised how carefully she placed the animal in the harbour, and that the judge in court recognised this. This jars with widely publicised but unsubstantiated claims from the restaurant’s owner: Smart “threw” the lobster “like a cricket ball”, and it would have likely died of shock upon entering the sea.
Smart refutes this, saying that she has no reason to believe that it couldn’t be “living its best natural lobster life” back where it was caught roughly 10 miles down the coast.
A house raid, arrest and year of criminal prosecution
Having walked away from the scene of the lobster release, Smart describes how, six weeks later:
Three police vehicles arrived at my home. Four officers raided the house, searching for ‘critical evidence’ – the rainbow jumper.
The restaurant owner shared publicly that he told the police and prosecution service that he wanted the “book thrown” at Smart, and it seems it was. She continues:
I was arrested, strip-searched, held in custody and charged with 5 serious offences, including an assault charge so absurd to the custody sergeant he admitted it had ‘come from above’.
One year later, she pled guilty to the less serious charge of criminal damage to the restaurant owner’s lobster, worth £25-50 by his estimation. Hearing her reasons for deciding, reluctantly, to do this, I’m left asking myself where the greatest damage, criminal or otherwise, has been caused here.
When UK court backlogs are worse than ever, is it responsible or proportionate to drag nonviolent activists through long, stressful, costly crown court trials? Smart puts it more bluntly:
While victims of actual violence face record waiting times for their day in court, the state somehow found the capacity to treat a wealthy man’s display piece as a matter of national importance.
Are we the lobsters, boiling alive?
Throughout the telling of the ‘educational lobster’ tale in court and in public, a restaurant that turns crustaceans into croquettes is suggested to be a better advocate for marine life than the biologist who felt compelled to transport an animal from a small, exposed tank back into the sea.
To me, this feels slightly absurd, but there is a bigger, more dangerous absurdity here too. When we debate whether liberating lobsters is misguided or heroic, or how robustly it should be punished, we can lose sight of the biggest threats to crustaceans, to restaurants and to every one of us.
As our polluted planet heats and as wild animal populations plummet, our food supplies, livelihoods and safety hang in the balance. From Smart’s perspective:
The restaurant in this case sits on Weymouth harbour, a location at (current) sea level. It is increasingly vulnerable to the tidal surges of climate breakdown. There is a profound irony in an influential businessman spending a year of his time and energy persecuting a climate activist while the sea itself prepares to reclaim his fancy dining room.
As our polluted planet heats and as wild animal populations plummet, our food supplies, livelihoods and safety hang in the balance. So when we debate whether liberating lobsters is misguided or heroic, or how robustly it should be punished, we can lose sight of the biggest threats to crustaceans, to restaurants and to every one of us.
Featured image provided via author
By Abi Perrin
Politics
Leonardo DiCaprio Had Saucy Response To Nikki Glaser’s Golden Globes Jokes
Appearing on Jimmy Fallon’s talk show on Wednesday night, the stand-up explained: “After I [host an awards show], I always send flowers to everyone that I made fun of that was a good sport about it, which was everyone.”
She then revealed that Leo is “the only person who sent something back to me”.
“Is your favorite food still ‘Pasta, pasta and more pasta?’” she quipped from the stage, to which Leonardo responded by giving an amused thumbs-up.
So, guess what his gift to Nikki was?
“He sent me three baskets of pasta as a ‘thank you,’” she revealed. “So funny. So good. And part of me was like, ‘Does Leo want to smash?’”
You can watch Nikki Glaser’s complete interview with Jimmy Fallon below:
During her opening monologue at the Golden Globes in January, Nikki said: “What a career [Leonardo DiCaprio has] had. Countless iconic performances, you’ve worked with every great director, you’ve won three Golden Globes and an Oscar.
“The most impressive thing is you were able to accomplish all that before your girlfriend turned 30… I’m sorry I made that joke, it’s cheap, I tried not to, but we don’t know anything else about you, man. There’s, like, nothing else.”
Politics
The fastest red card in World Cup history
The introduction of the card system (yellow and red) marked a turning point in the history of the World Cup, as sendings-off had previously been communicated verbally without any clear visual indication.
This change, which officially began at the 1970 tournament, reshaped the relationship between the referee and the players, and made discipline clearer to the fans.
The first sending-off under the old system and the contemporary one
In the early editions of the tournament, specifically the 1930 World Cup, the card system did not yet exist, and sendings-off were recorded through direct decisions by the referee to send the player off the pitch without any visual signal.
Some historical sources, including encyclopaedic records such as Wikipedia, indicate that the Peruvian Plathido Galindo was the first player to be sent off in the history of the 1930 World Cup, during Peru’s match against Romania, which was refereed by Alberto Warnek.
As the game evolved, the biggest change came at the 1970 World Cup in Mexico, when the system of yellow and red cards was officially adopted by FIFA, in a move aimed at standardising refereeing decisions and making them clearer to both players and fans.
The first red card in the history of the modern system was issued during that tournament, shown to Chile’s Carlos Caselli in a match against West Germany, making him the first player to be officially sent off with a red card in World Cup history, in a moment that marked the beginning of a new era in match management.
The fastest red card in World Cup history
As for records, Uruguayan José Batista remains the holder of the fastest sending-off in the tournament’s history, having received a red card after just 56 seconds against Scotland in the 1986 World Cup, and this record still stands today in FIFA’s records as the fastest sending-off in World Cup history.
Featured image via Statathlon
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
BBC Expert Warns Against Trumps Iran War Claims
A BBC expert has demolished Donald Trump’s claim that the Iranian leadership is in crisis and desperate for a deal to end the war.
The US president said on Thursday that the regime in Tehran “is in turmoil”.
Speaking in the Oval Office he said: “I want to make the best deal. I could make a deal right now.”
But Lyse Doucet, the BBC’s corporation’s chief international correspondent, insisted Trump was wrong.
She told Radio 4′s Today programme: “The general assessment is very much not the one that President Trump is presenting, saying that the leadership is in turmoil [and] he’s waiting for them to have a unified position.
“I think the most experienced Iran watchers would say that there’s always been fierce debate within the Iranian system between those who are regarded as pragmatists and those who are regarded as the hardliners.
“But at the very top, on the issues which matter, and that includes the nuclear programme, the fate of the Strait of Hormuz, there is consensus on how they want to deal with the United States, what are their red lines.”
Doucet insisted that the current ceasefire in the war – which Trump extended earlier this week – does not indicate that a deal is close.
She said: “Both sides are indicating that they are not in a rush to make a deal, both sides are saying that they are not going to back down.
“That is bad news for those that want a deal, and certainly bad news for everyone everywhere who are affected by this standoff.”
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
Slovenia To Broadcast Palestinian Filmmakers’ Work On Eurovision Night
Slovenia’s national broadcaster has announced plans to honour Palestinian artists rather than airing this year’s Eurovision Song Contest.
Last year, Slovenia was one of five countries to announce it was withdrawing from Eurovision due to the decision to invite Israel back to the competition, despite the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.
“As a public service broadcaster, RTV Slovenia is committed to upholding ethical principles and expects that equal rules and standards apply to all EBU members and all participating countries,” the Slovenian broadcaster said at the time.
On Thursday, RTVSLO’s director told AP: “We will not be broadcasting the Eurovision Song Contest. We will be airing the film series Voices of Palestine, featuring Palestinian documentaries and feature films.”
After the news that Israel would be competing at Eurovision 2026 – amid widespread calls for them to be banned, similar to how Russia was expelled from the contest in 2022 after the invasion of Ukraine – The Netherlands became the first country to withdraw in solidarity with Palestine, followed by Spain, Ireland and Slovenia. Iceland then did the same a week later.

Matteo Placucci/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
While Ireland and Spain have already indicated that they will not be airing Eurovision 2026 on their respective national broadcasters, The Netherlands and Iceland will still show it, despite not taking part.
Eurovision’s reigning champion JJ said shortly after his victory for Austria in May 2025 that he supports calls for Israel to be banned from competing, echoing comments made weeks earlier by his predecessor, Switzerland’s Nemo, during an interview with HuffPost UK.
In the run-up to last year’s live final, a host of musicians and performers associated with Eurovision – including multiple former winners – shared an open letter calling for Israel to be removed from the contest.
An additional open letter was shared by the campaign group No Music For Genocide earlier this week, co-signed by numerous prolific musicians who are calling for a boycott of the 2026 Eurovision Song Contest.
Politics
Leaving Neverland Director Slams New Michael Jackson Biopic
The director of the Michael Jackson documentary Leaving Neverland has opened up about the new biopic about the singer.
Filmmaker Dan Reed got the whole world talking in 2019 with his two-part doc, which explored the multiple allegations of child sexual abuse made against the Thriller musician in his lifetime.
During a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Reed was asked about the new movie Michael, which has already been panned by critics, not least because it ends in the late 1980s, meaning the accusations levelled at Jackson are never addressed in the movie.
The Emmy winner also spoke about Michael director Antoine Fuqua’s assertion to the New Yorker that “sometimes people do some nasty things for some money” when asked for his own take on the allegations.
“For Antoine Fuqua to accuse people of gold digging is kind of ironic,” Reed responded. “It seems to me all the people involved in this movie are just making bank.”

He continued: “How can you tell an authentic story about Michael Jackson without ever mentioning the fact that he was seriously accused of being a child molester? I just don’t really see it.
“If anyone’s making money, it’s Michael Jackson’s estate and the people who worked on this biographical picture. Wade [Robson] and James [Safechuck], the protagonists of Leaving Neverland, have never made a cent from their accusations. People don’t seem to understand: If you bring a lawsuit, you don’t get any money until you win in court. And when you win in court, that means you’ve proved your case, right?”
Leaving Neverland premiered on the US broadcaster HBO, before a shortened version aired on Channel 4 on this side of the Atlantic.
Years after Leaving Neverland’s debut, the Jackson estate raised a legal complaint with HBO over a previous contract agreement relating to a Michael Jackson concert broadcast from the early 1990s, which included a “non-disparagement clause”.
As a result, the film was removed from HBO’s catalogue, and is currently not available to watch anywhere, with Reed noting that they still hold the licence for his project until 2029.
Reed later worked on a follow-up, Leaving Neverland II, which was made without HBO’s involvement, also released to Channel 4 in the UK, while overseas, it premiered on YouTube.
Politics
Why Trad Men Are Obsessed With ‘Pilates Girls’
Bad news for anyone who loves Pilates: Trad men have discovered the exercise and taken a liking to the “Pilates girl”.
Pilates – a low-impact, full-body movement method focused on core strength, control, alignment and breath – has surged in popularity in the past few years, especially among women.
The celebrity-favourite workout can be done on a mat at home or with a specialised machine that uses springs and pulleys for resistance. Those who practice it swear by its ability to tone the body and reduce stress.
But Pilates also has a certain reputation it can’t seem to shake: People think it’s for rich white women. Like yoga before it – the last “It” girl exercise of this scale – the practice isn’t inherently exclusionary, but the way it’s marketed tends to centre around a narrow body ideal and women of a certain tax bracket. An average 60-minute group class typically costs $30 to $65.
Then there’s the “look” it gives you. Instead of focusing on bulk, regularly practicing Pilates achieves a toned, lean and elongated body. You build strength, not muscle mass.
All of this has made it appealing to a certain type of man, who, as The 19th recently reported, expects their partners to devote hours to the workout.
“If your girl goes to Pilates, wife her up immediately,” online business entrepreneur Christian Bonnier said in a recent viral Instagram Reel, deeming the exercise “wholesome” and “the biggest green flag ever for a girl”.

“If your girl goes to Pilates, she’s probably staying in on the weekends so she can get up early and go to a Solidcore or BodyRok class,” he says in the clip. “And she’s going to come back from the Pilates class in a great mood because she went with her friends and didn’t get hit on by any creepy guys and got a great workout in.”
In another video, which racked up 564,000 views, Bonnier declares, “Bring back stay-at-home Pilates wives.” He’s not buying that women find greater fulfilment in a 9-to-5 job rather than staying home with their kids – but if they are working, it should be a job that leaves ample time to “tan by the pool, go to Pilates, go to farmers markets in a sundress and raise a family”.
Then there’s the Pilates-girl-loving bros of reality television. During the most recent season of Netflix’s popular dating show Love is Blind, contestant Chris Fusco faced backlash online for breaking up with fiancée Jessica Barrett in part because she wasn’t the type to do Pilates every day.
“Love Is Blind, as Long as Love Does Pilates,” the Atlantic joked in an article about the debacle between Barrett, an infectious disease doctor, and Fusco, an account executive and Army National Guard member.
Then last month, The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Jessi Draper alleged that her estranged husband, Jordan Ngatikaura, told her he wanted her to do Pilates “every single day” – a request she said he tied to his want for a more traditional marriage. “He said, ‘I think I believe in traditional gender roles and I want to be more in my masculine and I want you to be more in your feminine,’” Draper said on the Call Her Daddy podcast.

How did Pilates – an exercise that has been around since the 1920s – get co-opted by gym bros with a trad wife complex? Pilates instructors have some theories.
“Pilates has a certain visual language such as long lines, control and softness that some men interpret as ‘feminine,’ ‘disciplined’ or ‘low-risk.’ That’s where the ‘green flag’ talk is coming from. But that’s projection, not reality,” said Sabrina Seymore, the owner and lead Instructor at Prevailing Pilates, the first Black-owned Pilates studio in North Carolina.
What’s happening now “feels like a mix of aesthetic culture, social media and old-school gender expectations,” Seymore told HuffPost.
It’s a strange appropriation, though, she said, because Pilates was never designed to signal anything about a woman’s desirability or “values.”
“It’s a system for strength, control, rehabilitation and full-body awareness for everyone,” she said.
Joseph Pilates, a German gymnast and physical trainer, developed the system, originally called Contrology, while interned in British camps during World War I. Lacking proper equipment, Pilates improvised by attaching bedsprings to hospital bed frames. These makeshift devices allowed bedridden patients to perform resistance exercises, forming the blueprint for modern Pilates machines like the trapeze table and reformer.
Years later in the U.S., Kathleen Stanford Grant, a Black classical ballet dancer, played a pivotal role in establishing the foundation of the workout here.
For Seymore, it’s off-putting to see the restorative exercise she loves so much turned into a personality trait or a dating filter for “trad” men. It flattens women who practice Pilates into a lifestyle aesthetic, she said, and co-opts wellness into a language of control in a subtle, insidious way.
“Personally, I don’t feel offended so much as protective of the practice,” she said. “Because Pilates, at its best, is about helping people feel strong, capable and at home in their bodies, not performing a specific kind of femininity for approval.”
Zhane Dadson, a Pilates instructor in Philadelphia who goes by Coach Zha online, feels similarly.
“The women I see in Pilates are rebuilding themselves,” she told HuffPost. “It’s not about fitting into someone else’s idea of desirable. Pilates has always been about choosing yourself. Not being chosen.”

FG Trade via Getty Images
The Deeper Reason Trad Men Are Into Pilates Girls Who Want The ‘Soft Life’
Mariel Barnes is an assistant professor of public affairs at the University of Wisconsin whose research examines the manosphere and its influence on U.S. politics. She isn’t surprised that this type of man gravitates toward women who do Pilates (or at least their weirdly retrograde image of women who do Pilates).
“Manosphere types generally want someone who’s fit, slim, generally white and also generally young. It’s why they talk about women hitting ‘the wall,’” Barnes told HuffPost. (“The wall” is a Red Pill talking point for the age – usually put at around 30 – when they believe women lose their beauty, sexual appeal and high dating value.)
The manosphere likes to argue that feminism has ruined Western women, making them too demanding, pushy and assertive. It’s the reason they prefer Eastern European and Southeast Asian women; they consider such women more compliant and less influenced by feminism.
“Similarly, I think there’s this idea that women who do Pilates are perhaps a little bit softer or are into what young people are now calling the ‘soft life,’” Barnes said.
“Soft life” is just the latest right-wing pipeline for Gen Z women. On TikTok, creators promote rejecting hustle culture – and oftentimes work altogether – while encouraging women to pursue a life of ease and husband-provided luxury.
One video from such a creator shows the woman grocery shopping, with the caption, “You woke up one day and realised you’re the Whole Foods-shopping, vacationing in Europe, Pilates-going wife.”
This genre of influencers is the perfect companion to the trad husbands of the manosphere, because the women are willing to let men be in charge while they run the household. Pilates and other “soft life” trappings are the latest window dressing for drawing women into the trad wife lifestyle.
‘Pilates girl’ is almost a dog whistle now. Because if the manosphere were to say what they really wanted in a woman, it would come across very badly.
– Mariel Barnes
“‘Pilates girl’ is almost a dog whistle now,” Barnes said. “Because if the manosphere were to say what they really wanted in a woman, it would come across very badly.”
Saying you want a “Pilates girl” who values her health and staying fit sounds much better than saying, I need full control in the relationship and I’m superficial and looks are the be-all, end-all for me, Barnes said.
Pilates Instructors Fight Back
The women of colour Pilates instructors we talked to aren’t going to give their beloved exercise over to manosphere-adjacent types so easily, though.
“The Pilates I know is adaptive, intuitive and rooted in making things work with what you have,” said Tay Milburn, the owner and lead instructor at Fringe Pilates in Brooklyn, New York.
When Milburn sees Pilates reduced to whether it makes someone look “lean” or fit a certain aesthetic, it tells her that those people don’t actually understand the method.
“They’re engaging with it as an outcome for the male gaze, not as a wellness practice,” she said. “I think the current conversation is less about what Pilates actually is and more about how it’s been marketed. At its core, Pilates is a tool for connection, healing and strength.”
They’re intent on making the exercise more welcoming, too.
“It’s true that it has had a reputation as being for white women,” said Sonja R. Price Herbert, a Pilates instructor and founder of Black Girl Pilates, a space where Black female instructors can network.
“When I started Black Girl Pilates in 2017, there was more intimidation felt due to the lack of Black instructors,” she told HuffPost. “Because of our advocacy and because of Black instructors, there are more safe spaces for all of us.”
Politics
A list of the 13 fastest goals in World Cup history
In the history of the World Cup, not all moments are measured by their length, but sometimes by their sheer brevity. Since the very first iteration of the tournament, early goals have served as a surprise factor capable of turning the tide of matches before the crowds have even caught their breath, turning the opening seconds into a stage for swift decisions.
According to a specialist report on the FIFA website, the goal scored by Turkey’s Hakan Şükür in the 2002 tournament stands out as the most notable example in this context, having found the net after just 11 seconds against South Korea — the fastest goal in the tournament’s history. This record has stood for more than two decades, despite significant developments in playing styles and tactical discipline.
However, the phenomenon is not a recent one, as its roots go back to the early editions of the tournament, where Germany’s Ernst Lener scored a goal after 25 seconds in the 1934 World Cup, before the feat was repeated in subsequent decades by players such as Czechoslovakia’s Václav Mašek (15 seconds — 1962) and England’s Bryan Robson (28 seconds — 1982).
As football entered the modern era, these goals did not disappear; rather, they continued at the same pace, as demonstrated by the American Clint Dempsey at the 2014 World Cup, when he scored after just 30 seconds, confirming that the element of surprise remains present despite digital analysis and tactical precision.
These goals reveal a common thread: early pressure, capitalising on defensive errors, and mental readiness from the very first moment. In World Cup matches, a single touch can be enough to completely rewrite the script, which is why the ‘start’ is sometimes more important than everything that follows.
The 13 fastest goals in World Cup history
- Hakan Şükür – 11 seconds (Turkey v South Korea) 2002
- Václav Mašek – 15 seconds (Czechoslovakia v Mexico) 1962
- Ernst Lener – 25 seconds (Germany v Austria) 1934
- Bryan Robson – 28 seconds (England v France) 1982
- Clint Dempsey – 30 seconds (USA v Ghana) 2014
- Bernard Lacombe – 31 seconds (France v Italy) 1978
- Arne Nyborg – 35 seconds (Sweden v Hungary) 1938
- Émile Finant – 35 seconds (France v Belgium) 1938
- Florian Albert (Hungary) – 50 seconds (Hungary v Bulgaria) 1962
- Tied. Adalbert Dezso (Romania) – 50 seconds (Romania v Peru) 1930
- Pak Song-jin – 50 seconds (North Korea v Portugal) 1966
- Celso Ayala – 52 seconds (Paraguay v Nigeria) 1998
- Mathias Jørgensen – 55 seconds (Denmark v Croatia) 2018
Featured image via Olympics
By Alaa Shamali
Politics
Star Wars: The Acolyte Is Having A Resurgence Two Years After Being Cancelled
The Star Wars series The Acolyte is enjoying an unexpected resurgence, almost two years after Disney made the decision not to renew the show.
In 2024, The Acolyte premiered on the streaming platform Disney+, starring Amandla Stenberg as twin sisters Osha and Mae, leading a cast that also included the likes of Manny Jacincto, Jodie Turner-Smith and Squid Game’s Lee Jung-jae.
Regrettably, the show’s diverse casting was met with a backlash from more narrow-minded, far-right members of the Star Wars fandom, resulting in it being “review bombed”.
Eventually, it was cancelled by Disney after one season.
However, fans have spotted in recent days that it has been enjoying an impromptu renaissance in recent history, to the point it’s made its way into Disney+’s list of most-watched shows right now.
In the summer of 2024, Amandla had some thoughts to get off their chest about the show’s cancellation, lamenting the “rampage of vitriol”, “hyper-conservative bigotry” and “prejudiced hatred and hateful language” levelled against them and their co-stars.
While Amandla said they feel “very sad about the show being cancelled”, they also insisted it had been “an honour” to be part of the Star Wars universe, particularly as a long-time sci-fi fan, and praised fans of The Acolyte who did their best to support for the show.

Months later, Amandla’s co-star Jodie Turner-Smith admitted she was not impressed with the way Disney handled the conservative backlash against The Acolyte.
“They’ve got to stop doing this thing where they don’t say anything when people are getting fucking dog-piled on the internet with racism and bullshit,” Jodie said. “It’s just not fair to not say anything. It’s really unfair.”
Her comments were similar to quotes from Star Wars actor John Boyega, who has also been critical of Disney since his time playing Finn in the reboot trilogy came to an end.
The Acolyte is available to stream on Disney+ now.
Politics
There in black and white: The US admits it is bombing Iran at Israel’s request
The US government has just admitted it is bombing Iran at the request of Israel. The Trump administration previously strenuously denied it had been dragged into this defeat by its genocidal Middle East ally.
The statement appeared on the State Department website on 21 April 2026. We’re sorry we didn’t get to it earlier… but we weren’t exactly looking for an admission on that scale.
An equally surprised US-based ex-military commentator and Iran War critic named Jack Murphy posted the quote on X:
I had to check to make sure this was legit, it is. America is being governed by a small foreign country far abroad, while we stagger around in a zombie like state, dabbling in an economy held together by Netflix subscriptions and gamified internet gamblinghttps://t.co/gsaZwWTiVS pic.twitter.com/p3H5Wr0Cch
— Jack Murphy (@JackMurphyRGR) April 24, 2026
The full statement can be accessed here. The relevant passage reads:
the United States is engaged in this conflict at the request of and in the collective self-defense of its Israeli ally.
as well as in the exercise of the United States’ own inherent right of self-defense.
The full statement is a lengthy, Trump-style screed. It’s just the foremost military power on earth trying to justify the war — which it started — as some sort of act of existential self-preservation.
Just to reiterate…
US-Israel attacked Iran first on 28 February without provocation. Iran was offering unprecedented concessions in negotiations at the time. The Pentagon has since stated there was no imminent threat from Iran. And the UN’s atomic watchdog, the IAEA, has said there is no evidence Iran was developing a nuclear weapon.
The US has achieved none of its original war aims. Iran predictably closed the Straits of Hormuz, a vital oil channel, once attacked — creating a global energy crisis. Far from being defeated, Iran has said the war will continue until “the enemy’s inevitable and permanent humiliation, disgrace, regret, and surrender”. Trump came to power on an anti-war ‘America First’ ticket. He now faces worldwide humiliation.
A temporary ceasefire is currently in place amid attempts by Pakistan to broker a deal.
Trump — strenuous denials
Donald Trump has repeatedly denied Israel dragged the US into the war since the bombing began. He did so again on 20 April:
Israel never talked me into the war with Iran, the results of Oct. 7th, added to my lifelong opinion that IRAN CAN NEVER HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON, did.
And here he is quoted by the Guardian on 4 March, just days after the attack began. He has been asked if Israel forced the US hand:
No. I might have forced their hand.
Trump continued:
We were having negotiations with these lunatics, and it was my opinion that they were going to attack first. They were going to attack. If we didn’t do it, they were going to attack first. I felt strongly about that.
If you are struggling with the logic of the US president’s line of argument there… welcome to the club.
Nevertheless, the US State Department website now says the US is fighting Iran:
- at the request of Israel
- as a matter of national defence
In that order.
As ever, it is hard to know what an American leadership clique — as erratic as this one — is thinking. But that particular point is there in black and white.
Featured image via the Canary
By Joe Glenton
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