UK car production falls to lowest level since 1954
Evil toilets, terror food and billionaire Squishmallows: my eye-popping day at the UK’s giant toy fair
With the UK toy market now worth £3.4bn, we storm the high-security world of fun – and find possessed loos, creepy-crawlies in sushi rolls and more plastic than a petrochemical conventionThe Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.A chubby baby dinosaur waddles down a pink carpeted aisle, narrowly avoiding an army of Care Bears tramping in the other direction
David Sedaris: ‘I’m shocked by people who take selfies in public. I’d sooner masturbate in public’
You just got back from Egypt. What was that like?There are 6 million cats in Egypt that are kept as pets, and there are 100 million that live on the streets. And they’re all missing an eye, or a part of a paw, or they’re filthy. So I didn’t go to the pyramids – instead, I bought cans of tuna, because you wouldn’t believe how cheap it is there to feed cats.When you get to a hotel, what is the first thing that you do?Flush the toilet to make sure that it works
‘He was unforgettable’: the mesmerising star of cult documentary Andy the Furniture Maker
He used to fish for oysters but he fled to the hedonism of London, where he was taken under the wing of Derek Jarman. But Andy Marshall was also a creator of dazzling furniture – and the star of a pioneering film about gay lifeIt was 1982 and young film-maker Paul Oremland was in an east London leather and denim pub, about to meet a character who would change his life. “Andy was pretty unforgettable,” recalls Oremland. “Full of amazing tales, and with a wealth of knowledge about people, places and quirky London life.”Oremland had been talking to the fledgling Channel 4 about making a series of documentary films about gay life
Ouija boards, feathered dinosaurs and stuffed-crust pizza: the best podcasts to send you down a rabbit hole
The much-missed Reply All delved into internet culture with wit, smarts and a lightness of touch that has been sorely missed since its conclusion in 2022. Now, former host Alex Goldman is hoping to ape its success with Hyperfixed, a wholesome podcast about listeners’ varied life dilemmas: from the origins of a mysterious badge to whether or not to have kids. Elsewhere, his erstwhile co-host PJ Vogt’s series Search Engine considers questions you didn’t know you needed the answer to, such as: “Who buys luggage at the airport luggage store?”Named after designer Bruce Mau’s observation that 99% of all design goes unnoticed until it fails (itself adapted from a Buckminster Fuller quote), this longrunning podcast hosted by Roman Mars explores the hidden architecture and design that shapes our world. That means delving into the mechanics of everything from global supply chains and Soviet housing to canned laughter and Ouija boards. With 600 episodes and counting, you can expect deep dives on pretty much everything, however niche
‘We won’t come again’: dazed visitors fed up with overcrowded Louvre
As the crowds poured out of the Louvre, the look of dazed exhaustion on many faces confirmed what the museum’s director had warned last week: a trip to Paris’s biggest cultural attraction has become a “physical ordeal”.Myriam, 65, a former secondary school science teacher had driven from Belgium with her husband to show their 12-year-old granddaughter the Mona Lisa. They left disappointed. “I think the Louvre is a victim of its own success,” she said. “We won’t come again
What is gleeking and why is the saliva-ejecting craze blowing up on TikTok?
Caitlin, I’m here to ask you about gleeking. I’ve never heard of it. Can you explain it to me?Consider yourself blessed. I’m sorry to say gleeking has nothing to do with the hit early 2000s musical comedy TV series Glee. It’s much more disgusting
NHS England chief under fire again as MPs ‘exasperated’ by responses
Ex-supreme court judge says high court signoff for assisted death unnecessary
Members of London’s Savile Club vote against letting women join
Jean Willson obituary
Child poverty predicted to rise in most of UK except Scotland
‘Complacent’ health chiefs in England lack drive to transform NHS, say MPs