-
Nov 22, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | India McTaggart |Georgina Wray |Josh Bourne
The Duke of Sussex has been videoed being given a fake tattoo by a US country artist in a new skit to promote the Invictus Games. Captured in the East Side Ink studio in New York, the Duke is seen shouting as he appears to be given a neck tattoo by Jelly Roll, a rapper and singer, in exchange for a performance at the closing ceremony of the games.
-
Nov 14, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | James Badcock |Gemma Brown |Josh Bourne
After the flooding came fury. Many Valencians are angry at the handling of the disaster and the subsequent recovery operation – 130,000 protested in the streets on Saturday, demanding that Carlos Mazón, the regional leader, should resign and could even be sent to prison for his role in the tragedy. The death count from the devastating flash flooding in the region has risen to more than 200. But who, apart from extreme weather, is to blame?
-
Sep 20, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | Josh Bourne |India McTaggart
There’s absolutely no question that the touching family video that was released to the world on Sept 9 to announce the end of Princess of Wales’s cancer treatment has shifted the axis. Not only did it mark a shift in how the Waleses communicate directly to the public, and how much of their lives they are willing to share with us, but it also marked a more profound shift.
-
Sep 8, 2024 |
stuff.co.nz | India McTaggart |Georgina Wray |Josh Bourne
-
Sep 6, 2024 |
smh.com.au | India McTaggart |Georgina Wray |Josh Bourne
By India McTaggart, Georgina Wray and Josh BourneUpdated September 7, 2024 — 1.57pmfirst published at 1.54pm, register or subscribe to save articles for later. Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. London: On September 15, the Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, turns 40. His future looks very different from how we might have expected at his last milestone birthday, 10 years ago.
-
Sep 6, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | Georgina Wray |Josh Bourne |India McTaggart
On Sept 15, the Duke of Sussex turns 40. His future looks very different from how we might have expected at his last milestone birthday, ten years ago. Then, the popular 30-year-old Duke was fourth in line to the throne and looked set for a life of royal duty. But sources close to the Duke told The Telegraph he now has no interest in returning to those duties and is focused solely on his future in the US, four years after cutting loose from the British monarchy.
-
Aug 30, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | Dominic Nicholls |Josh Bourne |Elliott Daly
Many Western allies are so fearful of how Russia could respond to an escalation with Ukraine that they won’t allow certain donated weapon systems to be used further inside Russia. Faced with the unending prospect of having to fight this war in a pair of golden handcuffs, Kyiv has decided to test Moscow’s limits by doing two things: invading Russia and developing its own fleet of ballistic missiles.
-
Aug 16, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | Dominic Nicholls |Josh Bourne
If there was a prize for bravest Russian of the week, surely Alexei Smirnov, the acting governor of Kursk Oblast, would be in the running. In a very tense National Security Council meeting a few days ago, Mr Smirnov did what very few others have ever done: tell Vladimir Putin the truth. This didn’t go down well. Mr Smirnov wasn’t expected to actually say how much land Ukraine had gained in its cross-border incursion, so when he did, Putin, who really doesn’t like surprises, abruptly cut him off.
-
Aug 9, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | Hannah Furness |Georgina Wray |Josh Bourne
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are off to Colombia. The couple’s office has announced they are making a short tour to enjoy the South American nation’s culture and music, and to meet young people and women for what it calls “meaningful interactions”. We’ve got into the habit of calling these trips “quasi-royal tours”, because previous visits to Nigeria and New York replicated the sort of trips the couple might have made if they were still engaged in royal duties.
-
Aug 2, 2024 |
telegraph.co.uk | Francis Dearnley |Josh Bourne |Elliott Daly |Rachel Slater
Despite more than two years of war – and hundreds of thousands of casualties – Western leaders remain divided on what they want Kyiv to achieve. Many seek Ukraine’s survival in some form as a sovereign nation; others argue anything less than Russia’s defeat, evicted from Ukraine entirely would be appeasement, and far more dangerous. This absence of a clear objective has led to a muddled policy of arming Ukraine with enough to survive, but not enough to win.