✨ Check out this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Punk,Pop and rock,Music,Culture ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: 'T“There's no one songwriter, so the flavor of the band is always going to change,” says Dave Vanian, reflecting on 50 years of the group of which he was the only permanent member, The Damned. “Captain Sensible is a big fan of edgy pop, prog rock and glam. So his writing is very poppy and melodic and very groovy. My writing is more melodramatic and more theatrical. And Rat Scabies was a model that really liked bands like The…
✨ Read this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: South Korea,BTS,K-pop,Pop and rock,Music,North Korea 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: What is Arirang?“Arirang” is the title of the most popular folk song on the Korean peninsula, an unofficial and emotional national anthem that has resonated across generations. Its origins are believed to extend back centuries.There is no single agreed upon definition of what Arirang specifically means. Some scholars suggest that the word "ari" is derived from an ancient Korean word meaning "beautiful" or "painful", combined with the word "rang" meaning "beloved", although this remains a disputed folk etymology.…
💥 Check out this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Adelaide festival,Culture,Antisemitism,Israel-Gaza war,Islamophobia,Australian books,Books,South Australia,South Australian politics,Peter Malinauskas,Defamation law (Australia),Australia news,Freedom of speech 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: It started as a quiet programming dispute in the elegant city of churches.But by Wednesday morning, a frenzied six-day war of words had culminated in the end of the 2026 Adelaide Book Week and total institutional collapse.What started with the secret exit of the business tycoon and veteran arts council member turned into boardroom carnage last weekend, with mass resignations, letters of demands from lawyers, and allegations of racism…
🔥 Explore this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Fiction,Books,Culture ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: AAustralian author Madeleine Gray's award-winning novel Green Dot was a smart and funny tale of a doomed office relationship. Her new novel, The Chosen Family, is a smart and funny story about a complex, life-changing relationship between two women.Neil and Eve meet when they are 12 years old at a girls' school in Sydney. Gray's narrative moves seamlessly back and forth from the 2000s to the present day; As in David Nichols's novel One Day, we get to know our heroes by…
🔥 Check out this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Anne Tyler,Edmund White,Rutger Bregman 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Memoir A Jamaican childhood The Possibility of Tenderness Jason Allen-Paisant The Possibility of Tenderness Jason Allen-Paisant A Jamaican childhood Go these days to any independent bookshop or art gallery or zine fair, and you may find yourself asking: where are the humans? Title after title is devoted to clay and stone, trees and flowers, the riverine and the botanical, gardens and allotments. They share a vocabulary: care, tending, grounding, rootedness, nourishment, regeneration. Nature, however battered, is held up…
💥 Check out this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Ant and Dec,Podcasts,Digital media,Television & radio,Media,Culture,UK news 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Ant and Dec have announced they will be presenting their first podcast series together from next week.The series, titled Hanging Out With Ant and Dec, will feature the old friends as they reconnect and reminisce, and listeners will get the chance to ask the pair for advice, relive TV moments and share anecdotes.Episodes will be released every two weeks starting January 22, with an additional episode every Monday.The hosts of I'm a Celebrity... Get Me…
🚀 Read this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Documentary films,Second world war,Holocaust,Film,Culture,Nazism 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: WWhen journalist Marissa Fox was a young girl, her mother regaled her with stories of her youth, all of which were full of drama and consequences. When she was a 13-year-old girl living in Poland in the late 1930s, on the brink of Nazi occupation, her mother told her that she had been pulled away from her mother and put on a boat to Palestine where she spent the rest of World War II. As a teenager in that…
💥 Explore this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Hamnet,Film,Culture,Golden Globes,Awards and prizes,Oscars ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: If you were to compile a list of the most powerful people in the film industry, you might start with the writers, superstar actors, or executives who finance Oscar-winning projects.But among these most famous brokers is another vital cog in the Hollywood machine: people with the ability to create and nurture stars.This year, for the first time, the Academy will honor casting directors, and among the front-runners is Nina Gould — the woman who brought Jesse Buckley and Paul…
💥 Discover this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Culture,Music,Stage,Dance,Theatre,Film,Television,Television & radio,Art,Art and design,Games 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: Checkout: cinema28 years later: Temple of BonesOut nowIt was hard to imagine in 2002 that 28 Days Later would produce something so different (and maybe that's a good thing; who wants an identical sequel?). A post-apocalyptic United Kingdom is now almost unrecognizable in this film directed by Nia DaCosta and written by Alex Garland, where violent tribes compete for meager resources.Rent familyOut nowIn this Japan-set drama from director Hikari, Brendan Fraser plays an actor hoping to land a…
🚀 Read this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Television & radio,Culture,George RR Martin,Game of Thrones 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: TGame of Thrones has borne fruit once again, like a bountiful oak tree. Where is there left to go? The stunning opening, in which a lumbering bird takes a dump behind a tree, gives us an idea. Chronologically, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms (Monday 19 January, 9pm, Sky Atlantic) falls between the original juggernaut and its courtly prequel, House of the Dragon. Tonally, it's in a world of its own.This idiot eventually gets a name:…
