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From cynic to softie: How I aged into the bad Christmas movie
New York Times: When you're begrudgingly charmed by Netflix holiday films.
New York Times: When you're begrudgingly charmed by Netflix holiday films.
New York Times: Inside Angelina Jolie's transformation to play opera legend Maria Callas.
These are the television shows you need to be watching next year.
Discover family-friendly games under 30 minutes, perfect for avoiding Monopoly disputes.
'Within myself, I still completely feel me.'
Rob Fyfe is a man who knows what he wants.
OPINION: Are your kids swearing too much? Or just the right amount?
New York Times: His new role may surprise fans of the former Bond star.
A world-first study using imaging technology may explain the gender gap in mental health.
Times: Why Cora Corré is quitting her grandmother's label and denouncing the culture.
Times: The actress thought her politics would never harm her career.
NYT: Director on rejected sequel ideas and working with a “fractious” Denzel Washington.
New York Times: Our are devices distancing us from real connections?
OPINION: In the office kitchen wars, nothing is off the table.
Two decades on, the surviving members of McKenzie Watch gather for their annual reunion.
NYT: Soft-spoken actress is winning raves for her turn as a feisty sex worker in Anora.
OPINION: Tiger, lighthouse, helicopter... a subjective power ranking of parenting styles.
NYT: How Jilly Cooper tweaked some details to adapt her 1988 book for the streaming age.
Times: Bestselling author’s gutsy female pathologist is finally arriving on screen.
OPINION: After a lifetime of iPhone use, switching to a Samsung changed Greg Bruce's life.
New York Times: Post-divorce, French Gates could do whatever she chose with her money.
NYT: Author packs love, laughter and a harrowing real-life health ordeal into new book.
Dr Iona Weir talks about putting her own product to the test.
The TV and radio star's raw and revealing new book tells a story of terror and suffering.
A new book looks at the dollar value placed on human life - and who gets to decide.
NYT: He's been playing the snobby psychiatrist since 1984 - and has no plans to stop.
OPINION: When will I be happy? That's a trick question.
Her compelling new memoir on surviving life, love and unbearable loss.
'I might get weepy from time to time, darling. Forgive me.'
Since 2021, he's been through almost unbearable suffering. Now, he's telling the story.