🔥 Explore this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Music,Culture,Pop and rock 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: from LondonRecommend if you like Rochelle Jordan, Rags Original, Sailorthe next New music is scheduled to be released later this yearNatanya tears down literary genres and reconstructs them in her own image. Its drums swing loosely and energetically over heavy 80s music. The synths drift in dreamily before gravitating into bold guitar riffs. Writing, producing and arranging all of her own work, she weaves together the silkiness of neo-soul, R&B groove, indie edge, and flashes of grunge, all carried by…
💥 Check out this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Books,Culture,Fantasy books,Horror books,Science fiction books 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: Nowhere to Burn by Catriona Ward (Viper, £16.99)The talented horror/crime thriller combines supernatural, psychological and very human horror in a story that draws on elements ranging from Peter Pan to historical serial abusers. It wasn't anywhere located in a remote American mountain valley. When it burned, the horrific crimes committed by Hollywood star Liv Wenham against young people were revealed. Later, runaway children turned the valley into a fortress, living on food they could catch or grow,…
🚀 Check out this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Television & radio,Culture ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: The Masked Singer7pm on ITV1Moth, Toastie, and Conkers are the three great finalists! Harry Hill, Kate Nash and John Lydon have all been unmasked and booted from the competition so far - but who are the celebrities behind the latest masks? Who will be crowned the winner? Samantha Barks is the guest judge, and former faces Lionfish, Pufferfish and Snail return in three unique duets. Holly RichardsonNavigating the Shipping Forecast with Pastor Richard Coles7pm on Channel 4It's a nice…
💥 Discover this trending post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Flying Lotus,Music,Electronic music,Culture 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: Steven Ellison, aka Flying Lotus, has been releasing albums of electronic funk music for 20 years, along with a filmmaking career that has grown beyond just an amateur side project. As he gears up to release his new EP, Big Mama, on March 6, he'll be answering your questions.Born into a musical family that included Alice Coltrane as his great-aunt, Ellison released his debut album 1983 in 2006 but established his reputation with 2008's Los Angeles: a lumpy, mesmerizing mass…
✨ Discover this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Romance films,Film,Culture,Life and style 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: As groups of women reserve rows of seats with friends to watch Wuthering Heights, likely to help push Emerald Fennell's film to the top of the weekend box office, a new study suggests that men are willing to watch romantic films at home - although their motivations for doing so are mixed.A poll of 2,000 film fans on behalf of Freeview romantic film channel Great Romance found that the top three reasons men gave for watching a romantic film…
✨ Explore this must-read post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Wuthering Heights,Martin Clunes,Film,Television,Emerald Fennell,Emily Brontë,Television & radio,Margot Robbie,Jacob Elordi,Culture,UK news 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: IIt has been described as the sexiest adaptation of Wuthering Heights, with bodies being ripped to shreds and BDSM flirting. However, the breakout star of Emerald Fennell's new film is not one of the film's flaming young lovers, played by Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi, but rather the most affable person on British television - Martin Clunes.Clunes plays Mr. Earnshaw, the head of the Earnshaw family whose decision to bring the destitute young…
🔥 Discover this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Books,Culture,Netherlands,History books,Fiction,Travel writing 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: IIn the opening of his famous book Roads to Santiago, Dutch author Cees Nooteboom wrote that “there are some places in the world where one's arrival or departure is mysteriously magnified by the feelings of all those who have arrived and departed before.” “Travellers have existed in all ages,” Nottebohm continues, “but only for some is there a special sadness: the sadness of one who leaves with no hope of returning.” For them, the trip abroad becomes life.Noteboom, who was…
💥 Check out this awesome post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Fred Again,Dance music,Electronic music,Music,Culture ✅ **What You’ll Learn**: Fred Again, also known as Fred Gibson, has had impressive success in recent months: a tour from Madrid to Mexico City, a six-night residency in New York, and the debut of dozens of songs that make up his new album USB002. He is now back home in the United Kingdom; Literally through his four-show residency at London's Alexandra Palace, but also through his opening night musical tribute.Respectively, Gibson plays Arctic Monkeys' "When the Sun Goes Down," a techno…
✨ Explore this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Film,AI (artificial intelligence),Film industry,Business,Computing,Culture,Technology 💡 **What You’ll Learn**: “It's probably over for us,” a senior Hollywood figure has warned, after watching a widely shared AI-generated clip showing Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt fighting.Rhett Reese, co-creator of Deadpool & Wolverine, Zombieland and Now You See Me: Now You Don't, was reacting to a 15-second video showing Cruise and Pitt being punched on a bridge filled with rubble, posted by Irish director Ruairi Robinson, the director of the 2013 sci-fi horror film The Last Days on Mars. Reposting the…
✨ Explore this insightful post from Culture | The Guardian 📖 📂 **Category**: Stage,Theatre,Culture,Hugh Bonneville,CS Lewis 📌 **What You’ll Learn**: TThe drama of love and loss in Shadowlands has played an influential role in film and television. William Nicholson's view of C.S. Lewis's marriage to an American divorcee is one of the famous writer's belated passion, terminal illness, and crisis of Christian faith. In all its iterations, it's good old-fashioned crying. In this production, originally staged at the Chichester Festival Theatre, it feels very old-fashioned.It has charm and pulls you into its melancholy but it looks as creaky as the…
