Coca-Cola This article is more than 14 years oldCoca-Cola trials sweet, fizzy, milky 'vibrancy' drink in three US citiesThis article is more than 14 years oldSoft drinks giant launches new Vio drink in New York but no word yet on whether it will reach the UKIt may not quite sound the real thing but consumers are being asked to decide whether milk goes better with sparkling water, cane sugar and fruit flavouring.
Where other midlife male standups splash in the shallows of domesticity, dinner parties and feeling tired, Birbiglia dives right into family, death and the meaning of life Published: 17 Sep 2023 ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7tbTEoKyaqpSerq96wqikaKuklrSme8KopJ6cqWDBsLrEaKmerpmaxLQ%3D
Hacking This article is more than 5 years oldHacker sentenced to prison for role in Jennifer Lawrence nude photo theftThis article is more than 5 years oldGeorge Garofano, 26, one of four charged over illegal hacking of American actor and other celebrities A hacker was sentenced to eight months in prison on Wednesday for a scheme that exposed intimate photos of the actor Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities.
George Garofano, 26, was accused of illegally hacking the private Apple iCloud accounts of 240 people, including Hollywood stars as well as average internet users, allowing their nude photos and private information to be spread around the internet.
TV reviewTV comedyReviewThe 30-something creators, Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle, play their 13-year-old selves in a carthartic comedy that has lots of laughs but never mocks
On paper PEN15 has a gimmick, which is that the two 31-year-old writers and creators of the 10-part comedy series – Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle – play their 13-year-old selves trying to navigate middle school, amid a cast of actual teenage actors. So rapidly, however, are they subsumed into their parts that (apart from Konkle being a head taller than everyone else) it becomes unnoticeable.
The ObserverSportThe growing pains of the world's strongest boyMedical experts were appalled. Richard Sandrak, driven on by his parents, looked more like a champion bodybuilder than an eight-year-old child. Seven years on, Andrew Anthony goes in search of the 'mini-Schwarzenegger' and finds a familiar tale from La La LandI am heading north out of Los Angeles on Interstate 5, bound for a meeting with Richard Sandrak. His name sounds like that of a double agent from the Cold War.