Month: October 2022

Following the announcement of huge cuts to the BBC World Service, with many staff being asked to relocate overseas, journalists have said plans to move the Vietnamese service to Thailand will pose dangers to press freedom.  The Guardian reports several reporters raising concerns that there is history of the Vietnamese state abducting journalists from Thailand
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Likewise, Ned Fulmer—an original member of YouTube sensations The Try Guys—issued a statement taking accountability after claims that he had cheated on his wife, interior designer Ariel Fulmer, with someone from his work surfaced on social media. After parting ways with his comedy group, the content creator confessed that he “lost focus and had a consensual workplace relationship,” adding,
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News California’s Rap Lyrics Bill Becomes State Law Governor Gavin Newsom signed the Decriminalizing Artistic Expression Act in a virtual ceremony with Killer Mike, Meek Mill, E-40, and more By Allison Hussey September 30, 2022 Facebook Twitter California State Capitol Building, July 2021 (Photo by David Paul Morris/Bloomberg) Facebook Twitter California governor Gavin Newsom signed
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Five Moves of Doom is the kind of novel we like to point to when we talk about independent publishing and how it feeds vibrant new material into the crime fiction scene. I’m not sure any mainstream publishers would dare touch a book where the main character is ‘Hammerhead’ Jed Ounstead, a private investigator who
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Breaking Glass Pictures is proud to announce the release of the Italian ghost story DEAD BRIDE from writer/director Francesco Picone (“Anger of the Dead”). The film follows Alyson and her family as they return to her childhood home and battle against a malevolent spirit hellbent on growing her own family. Dead Bride will arrive on VOD, digital on October
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Nothing has illustrated the current turmoil in British politics quite as starkly as the recent tanking of the pound against the dollar, a puzzle even to the ruling party whose prime minister and chancellor caused it. Richard Eyre’s fitfully funny Allelujah reflects this schism in more ways than one, balancing broad grey-pound comedy and seriously
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