5d ago14.10 ESTThat’s it for the moment, with full AFCon roundup to follow later.
5d ago13.59 ESTFull-time: Senegal 3-1 CameroonSenegal close it out on the attack. They dominated the game but had it not been for Nkoudou’s miss it would have been 2-2. Senegal go through after Sadio Mane seized on that miss and made it six points so far for the holders. Cameroon have much to do when they play The Gambia on Tuesday.
Internet wormholeMobile gamesIn his quest to discover why these ads are everywhere, Alex McKinnon ended up downloading too many of them – and investing too much
In a glamorous penthouse apartment, rain drumming against the floor-length windows, a chiselled man wearing nothing but a bath towel slowly undresses a beautiful young woman – only to stop when he notices a distinctive red mark on her chest. She has a birthmark – just like the baby he abandoned one rainy night many years ago.
eBayFTX fortune cookies and Theranos gift cards offer souvenirs from recent business disasters
You’ve just been laid off from your job at a once mighty startup that was going to change the world. The New York Times has exposed your CEO’s fraudulent business model. Investors have freaked. The stock market is hemorrhaging. Your office keycard doesn’t work. What you do next is very important: go raid the merch closet.
By now, we’ve all seen enough rise-and-fall documentaries to know how this sort of thing plays out.
Irreverent and fun: Bong Bong Restaurant, Cambridge Heath, London. Photograph: Karen Robinson/The GuardianIrreverent and fun: Bong Bong Restaurant, Cambridge Heath, London. Photograph: Karen Robinson/The GuardianGrace Dent on restaurantsFoodReviewA slightly chaotic but warm-hearted Filipino street-food joint that doesn’t play by the rules When BBQ Dreamz scooped £350,000 on BBC Two’s My Million Pound Menu last year, the cash came with the advice that their street food stall’s name suggested nothing of its Filipino flavours and that a name upgrade was sorely needed.
Self and wellbeingLife and styleGlennon Doyle’s memoir inspired Adele – but do we all need to be ‘untamed’?The marriage wasn’t unbearable, but it didn’t feel right any more. The lightbulb moment came when she realised she needed to think about what she truly wanted, rather than about what society had trained her to think she wanted. Also, she became aware that remaining in an unhappy marriage meant she wasn’t being the parent she wanted to be: following her heart would cause heartbreak to her family now, but it had a noble purpose.
Bolivia holidaysAfter landing at El Alto, canny travellers don’t go straight to La Paz but soak up the exuberant architecture, culture and women’s projects of Bolivia’s second city
Most travellers never give El Alto a second thought. Bolivia’s second city, home to the highest international airport in South America (and fifth-highest in the world) at 4,061 metres, it is a place visitors fly into before being whisked to La Paz, the de facto capital, 15km away and 421 metres lower.
The ObserverWorld newsMurderer appears in a different courtItalian newspapers printed photographs last week of a strikingly attractive, dark-haired woman playing volleyball in bright sunshine and cheering on team-mates. She is Erika de Nardo, 22, convicted in 2001 with her boyfriend, Omar Favaro, of the murder of her mother and her 12-year-old brother.
De Nardo and her boyfriend have never explained the killings but some believe that she, at least, was mentally ill - and many people have expressed surprise that she was out on day release after only five years in jail.
US television This article is more than 7 years oldPortlandia takes on men's rights movement with new music videoThis article is more than 7 years old‘What about men?’ ask Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein repeatedly in a preview for the long-running IFC show’s upcoming season
Portlandia’s Fred Armisen and Carrie Brownstein have taken it upon themselves to lend a voice to the men’s rights movement in a self-deprecating music video to herald the upcoming season of the popular IFC comedy series.
The ObserverDanceFrom TV’s ‘Strictly’ to films about Nureyev and Acosta, the art form once dismissed as elitist is everywhere. One dance critic explains why…
It feels like the future,” says the BBC’s director of arts Jonty Claypole. “In tackling some of the inequalities that still exist around the arts, you can do far worse than look at the way dance is merging traditional notions of high art and popular art, and attracting mixed, diverse, multi-generational audiences.
Top 10 city guidesMumbai holidays10 of the best books set in MumbaiMumbai's extraordinary colour, energy and humanity are captured in some of the most celebrated writing of the past three decades. Malcolm Burgess, publisher of the City-Pick series, selects his favourite stories and essays set in the city As featured in the Mumbai city guide
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