Michael Mosley remembered by Dr Phil Hammond
22 March 1957 – 5 June 2024 His former TV colleague recalls an exhilarating advocate for self-help with a zeal for exposing health scandalsI met Michael Mosley in 1995, when he asked me to audition to present a TV series he was creating called Trust Me, I’m a Doctor. He wanted someone who wasn’t afraid to take down their own profession and I seemed to fit the bill. I liked him immediately, and we discovered we had a lot in common: raised abroad, the privilege of private school and Oxbridge and driven by escaping the fate of our fathers (mine died at 38 by suicide, Mike’s in his early 70s from the complications of diabetes). And we’d both married wonderful GPs to keep us on track.Michael had stopped being a doctor and he needed someone who still was to take the flak
Nonfiction to look out for in 2025
From a river voyage with Robert Macfarlane to Helen Garner’s candid tale of a broken marriage, via Ian Leslie’s analysis of Lennon and McCartney’s complicated kinship, here are the titles you can’t afford to missNonfiction is a strange, alchemical business. In the knowledge that a good writer can make any subject sing, one of the books I’m looking forward to most in 2025 is The Season: A Fan’s Story (W&N, November), in which Helen Garner watches her grandson, Amby, play Aussie rules football during one Melbourne winter. Such territory sounds, I know, slight and even parochial; on paper, I have less than zero interest in footy down under. But this is Garner we’re talking about: Australia’s greatest writer of nonfiction. It’s certain to be epic
A laugh a day to keep the winter blues away: the 31-day comedy diet for January
From the Two Ronnies to TikTok via near-forgotten TV classics, here’s our dose of daily fun to ring the new year in with cheerAmid the cascade of solemn, grimly sensible resolutions we inevitably set ourselves at this time of year, there is a task of universal importance that all too often slips through the net: laugh more. It’s something that more or less all of us agree is a good idea – few people would confidently say “no thanks, I laugh too much actually, and if anything I need to cut down” (perhaps a particularly giggly funeral director). But how does one achieve such an aim? When the cost of living continues to squeeze us into oblivion? When we live in the age of enshittification? And, above all else, in grim, desolate January?Enter the Cultural Diet, the annual Observer feature that offers up 31 pieces of work, one for each day of the month, to help enrich and uplift the start of your year. This year, the theme is comedy – there can surely be no better inoculation against the unspecified horrors of a new year – and the weighty task of issuing the recommendations has fallen to me.As well as a writer, I happen to be a professional comedian – among other things, part of globetrotting comedy double act Max & Ivan, the recipient of an Edinburgh comedy award, and a member of the vast writing team of the Bafta-garlanded Horrible Histories (would the show have been so successful without my homeopathic contributions? Who knows! But also: yes)
On my radar: Jasleen Kaur’s cultural highlights
The Turner prize-winner on the art of the Gaza Biennale, the joys of a queer community choir, and a poet who speaks to today’s injusticesThe artist Jasleen Kaur was born in Glasgow in 1986. She studied at Glasgow School of Art and later at the Royal College, and had her first solo show, Be Like Teflon, in London in 2021. She works mainly with installations, using everyday objects to explore identity, cultural memory and political belonging. Earlier this month, Kaur won the Turner prize for her 2023 exhibition Alter Altar at the Tramway in Glasgow, which memorably featured a replica of her dad’s red Ford Escort covered in an outsized doily. A group show of this year’s shortlisted artists’ work is at Tate Britain until 16 February
‘If we don’t look after this treasure, we’re going to lose it’: the fight to restore one of the UK’s most historic streets
Home to choir singers for 650 years, Grade-1 listed Vicars’ Close by Wells Cathedral is in need of funding to keep its medieval houses liveable – and its unique history aliveChoir singers have lived in two handsome terraces of silvery-pink-stoned medieval houses beside Wells Cathedral for more than 650 years. But the gated close – which is thought to be the most complete and continuously occupied medieval street in Europe – is now in desperate need of restoration.“It’s a privilege to live here – it’s a unique place,” says Matthew Minter, 52, who has lived in the close for almost seven years and sings in the cathedral. “But [the house] is cold. The windows leak £10 notes every time you put the heating on… and the roof leaks actual water
Alexei Navalny remembered by Yevgenia Albats
4 June 1976 – 16 February 2024The investigative journalist recalls her friend, the fearless Russian activist and opposition leader who laughed in the face of a murderous regimeAlexei Navalny had everything that Putin didn’t have. Navalny was tall, Putin short; Navalny handsome, Putin not so much. Navalny had a fabulous wife; Putin was unsuccessful with his personal life. Navalny could talk to people from all walks of life and inspire them; Putin had to force or pay them to attend his rallies. Navalny was loved by everyone, particularly young Russians; Putin’s chief constituency was women, 64-plus, in small towns and villages
Reform woos voters before potential byelection test in Labour stronghold
Blair proposed SDLP Irish nationalists support England at World Cup, papers show
Farage threatens action over Badenoch ‘fake’ Reform membership data claim
Keir Starmer pays tribute to brother who died on Boxing Day
‘It was a shock’: Emily Thornberry on her demotion from Starmer’s Labour frontbench
Nigel Farage working as paid brand ambassador for gold bullion firm
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