Guardian’s worldview promotes the crucial establishment myths of benign British and American power
It rarely seeks to investigate or expose UK foreign policies and routinely ignores key aspects of the UK’s role in the world
The paper covers some issues relatively well, but also regularly acts as a platform for the British security state
New study covers two years of reporting by
The Guardian and
A leading
Guardian columnist wrote an article in February listing the world’s “bad guys”. “Across the world”, he asserted, “the bad guys are winning”. His list included Burma, China, Russia, North Korea, Syria and Ethiopia – but he didn’t mention the UK or US.
Que la modernidad no nos estropee una buena comedia romántica o qué ha pasado con el género últimamente
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Linha do tempo do documentário Allen contra Farrow
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“In cooking, as in writing, you must please yourself to please others,” Nigella Lawson wrote, in her first book, “How to Eat,” from 1998. In the course of eleven subsequent books (and more or less the same number of television series), she has rarely strayed from this gastronomic axiom. To please oneself requires confidence, which in turn requires knowledge emotional, intellectual, sensual. Lawson’s most recent book, “Cook, Eat, Repeat,” was written almost entirely during London’s coronavirus lockdown, during a four-month period that she spent in near-total solitude. Its essays and recipes take a more intimate and, consequently, more expansive approach to the nature of pleasure. Lawson devotes one chapter to the unglamorous anchovy. Another is titled “A Loving Defense of Brown Food.”