News

Making his first public appearance since the Glastonbury performance, Vylan, whose real name is Pascal Robinson-Foster, ...
The controversial crew played it relatively safe while supporting fellow Irishmen Fontaines DC in London over the weekend, ...
Melbourne's night of terror left a synagogue in flames and diners in shock, as anti-Semitic violence erupted with chilling ...
The BBC is set to publish a review into the controversial Gaza: How To Survive A Warzone which was aired in February and was ...
The culture secretary says she is "exasperated" over the length of time a BBC review into the documentary has taken.
Rioters in Melbourne set fire to a synagogue and ransacked an Israeli restaurant while shouting “death to the IDF” as the ...
Talk-show host and pop music icon Kelly Clarkson has delayed the start of her Las Vegas residency this weekend due to vocal ...
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy has said she asked the BBC why nobody has been fired for airing a Gaza documentary which ...
Chanting “Death to the IDF” is not edgy or brave. It’s despicable. If Britain cannot say that clearly and without a proviso, then it has lost its moral compass.
For a distinctly unremarkable man Keir Starmer has had quite a remarkable week. First, he managed to pull off that never-seen-before trick of achieving a humiliating victory in Parliament on Tuesday.
The BBC instructed a number of its senior staff to “step back” from their duties on music and live events, following the broadcast of Bob Vylan's “Death to the IDF” chant in Glastonbury, the BBC ...