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Determine fruit maturity using leaf scans instead of fruit samples

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It’s ironic … in order for farmers to know if their fruit is ripe, they regularly have to pick and analyze pieces of that fruit, reducing their yields. Utilizing a new technique, however, they could soon leave all the fruit intact, analyzing the leaves beside it instead.

The process is currently being developed by scientists at Spain’s Universitat Rovira i Virgili, and was tested over the course of 11 weeks on 12 nectarine trees in a commercial orchard.

In its present form, the technology utilizes two spectrometers to perform near-infrared and mid-infrared scans of the top surfaces and undersides of leaves immediately adjacent to the fruits. The manner in which the leaves absorb or reflect light emitted by each spectrometer reliably indicates the current ripeness of the fruit.

“The leaves undergo physiological and biochemical changes as the fruit ripens, due to the direct connection between the metabolism of the leaves and that of the fruit,” says team member Dr. Daniel Schorn. “These changes are reflected in their spectral fingerprint.”

The technique has so far proven to be a particularly accurate indicator of fruit weight and firmness. Other ripeness-related fruit properties – such as sugar content, pH, and acidity – aren’t as precisely indicated, although that could change as the system is developed further.

A nectarine leaf gets scanned as part of the study

Universitat Rovira i Virgili

It should be noted that ripeness can also be assessed by directly scanning a piece of fruit with a spectrometer, although doing so often leaves a mark on the skin, lowering the fruit’s market value.

The researchers hope that the technique will ultimately be carried out in the field using portable scanners. Not only could it indicate the ripeness of entire crops via representative pieces of fruit, it could even allow farmers to selectively pick only the ripe fruits from individual trees, leaving the rest to ripen over time.

The study is described in a paper that was recently published in the journal ACS Agricultural Science & Technology.

Source: Universitat Rovira i Virgili

Uncovering the Uniqueness of TikTok’s Algorithm

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Explainer-What is so special about TikTok’s algorithm?

Australian state to ban incendiary chants following Bondi shooting

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EPA Close-up of Chris Minns wearing a blue shirt and tie at a press conference EPA

Chris Minns, Premier of New South Wales, has pushed for tougher hate speech laws following the Bondi attacks

The Australian state where the Bondi shooting occurred plans to ban the phrase “globalise the intifada” as part of a crackdown on “hateful” slogans.

New South Wales (NSW) premier Chris Minns has also called for a Royal Commission into the Bondi attack, marking the deadliest shooting in Australia in nearly 30 years.

Fifteen people were killed and dozens injured last Sunday when two gunmen, believed to have been motivated by “Islamic State ideology”, opened fire on a Jewish festival at the country’s most iconic beach.

Australia’s state and federal governments have announced a raft of measures to counter extremism since the attack.

Minns plans to recall the state parliament next week to pass through stricter hate speech and gun restrictions. Earlier this week, he also suggested he would tighten protest laws to scale back mass demonstrations to encourage “a summer of calm”.

The premier confirmed he would seek to classify the chant “globalise the intifada” as hate speech.

Two pro-Palestinian protesters were arrested on Wednesday for allegedly shouting slogans involving intifada at a demonstration in central London.

The term intifada came into popular use during the Palestinian uprising against Israeli occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip in 1987.

Some have described the term as a call for violence against Jewish people. Others have said it is a call for peaceful resistance to Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and actions in Gaza.

Earlier this week, Minns, along with the NSW Opposition Leader Kellie Sloane, attended the funeral Matilda, 10, who was the youngest victim of the Bondi shooting. He read out a poem dedicated to the young girl at the event.

Prime minister Anthony Albanese has announced a new gun buyback scheme to purchase surplus, newly banned and illegal firearms. Hundreds of thousands of guns will be collected and destroyed, the government predicts.

Around 1,000 lifeguards staged a tribute on Saturday, lining up arm-to-arm facing the ocean, on the shorelines of Bondi beach. Surf lifesaving teams at other beaches around Australia were photographed performing a similar memorial.

Through the week, Bondi’s surf volunteers have been commemorated as some of the heroes of the shooting. Lifeguard Jackson Doolan was photographed sprinting over from a neighbouring beach during the attack carrying a red medical supply bag.

Hundreds of swimmers and surfers paddled out at Bondi beach yesterday to create a giant circle to pay tribute to the victims of the attack.

On Sunday, Australia will hold a national day of reflection with the theme “light over darkness” marking precisely one week after the attack started with a minute’s silence at 6:47 pm (0747 GMT).

Flags will fly at half-mast and Australians are being asked to light a candle in their windows to honour the victims.

“Sixty seconds carved out from the noise of daily life, dedicated to 15 Australians who should be with us today,” prime minister Albanese told reporters Saturday.

“It will be a moment of pause to reflect and affirm that hatred and violence will never define us as Australians.”

Bondi’s attack was Australia’s worst mass shooting since Port Arthur in 1996, where 35 people were killed and prompted then-prime minister John Howard to introduce strict gun control measures.

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The Justice Department released thousands of files Friday about convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, but the incomplete document dump did not break significant ground about the long-running criminal investigations of the financier or his ties to wealthy and powerful individuals.

The files included photographs of famous people who spent time with Epstein in the years before he came under suspicion, including some candid snapshots of Bill Clinton, who flew on Epstein’s jet and invited him to the White House in the years before the financier was accused of wrongdoing. But there was almost no material related to another old Epstein friend, President Donald Trump, aside from a few well-known images, sparing the White House from having to confront fresh questions about a relationship the administration has tried in vain to minimize.

The records, consisting largely of pictures but also including call logs, grand jury testimony, interview transcripts and other documents, arrived amid extraordinary anticipation that they might offer the most detailed look yet at nearly two decades worth of government scrutiny of Epstein’s sexual abuse of young women and underage girls. Yet the release, replete with redactions, seemed unlikely to satisfy the clamor for information given how many records had yet to be released and because some of the materials had already been made public.

Democrats and some Republicans seized on the limited release to accuse the Justice Department of failing to meet a congressionally set deadline to produce the files, while White House officials on social media gleefully promoted a photo of Clinton in a hot tub with a woman with a blacked-out face. The Trump administration touted the release as proof of its commitment to transparency, ignoring that the Justice Department just months ago said no more files would be released. Congress then passed a law mandating it.

In a letter to Congress, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche wrote that the Justice Department was continuing to review files in its possession, was withholding some documents under exemptions meant to protect victims and expected additional disclosures by the end of the year.

Trump, who was friends with Epstein for years before the two had a falling-out, tried for months to keep the records sealed.

But bowing to political pressure from fellow Republicans, Trump last month signed a bill giving the Justice Department 30 days to release most of its files and communications related to Epstein, including information about the investigation into his death in a federal jail. The law set a deadline for Friday.

Limited details about Trump

Trump is hardly glimpsed in the files, with the small number of photos of him appearing to have been in the public domain for decades. Those include two in which Trump and Epstein are posing with now-first lady Melania Trump in February 2000 at an event at his Mar-a-Lago resort.

Trump’s connection to Epstein is well-documented, but he has sought to distance himself from his former friend. He has said he cut off ties with Epstein after the financier hired young female employees from Mar-a-Lago and has repeatedly denied knowledge of his crimes.

The FBI and Justice Department abruptly announced in July that they would not be releasing any additional records, a decision that was supported by Trump. But the president reversed course once it became clear that congressional action was inevitable. He insisted the Epstein matter had become a distraction to the Republican agenda and releasing the records was the best way to move on.

The White House, meanwhile, has moved to shift focus away from Trump’s ties to Epstein, with Attorney General Pam Bondi last month saying that she had ordered a federal prosecutor to investigate Epstein’s connections to Trump’s political foes, including Clinton.

Neither Trump nor Clinton has ever been accused of wrongdoing in connection with Epstein, and the mere inclusion of someone’s name in the files from the investigation does not imply otherwise.

Among other prominent Epstein contacts is the former Prince Andrew, who appears in a photograph released Friday wearing a tuxedo and lying on the laps of what appear to be several women who are seated, dressed in formalwear. Pop star Michael Jackson also appears in multiple photos, including one showing him standing next to a smiling Epstein.

New photos of Clinton

Unlike Trump, Clinton is featured prominently in the files, though the records included no explanation of how the photographs of the former president related to any investigation or the context surrounding them.

Some photos showed him on a private plane, including one with a woman, whose face is redacted, seated alongside him with her arm around him. Another shows him in a pool with Epstein’s longtime confidant, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell, and a person whose face was also redacted. He is also seen in a hot tub with a woman whose face was redacted.

This undated, redacted photo released by the U.S. Department of Justice shows Ghislaine Maxwell and former President Bill Clinton swimming with an unknown person.

U.S. Department of Justice via AP

Senior Trump White House aides took to X to promote the Clinton photos.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt wrote “Oh my!” and added a shocked face emoji in response to a photo of Clinton in the hot tub.

“They can release as many grainy 20-plus-year-old photos as they want, but this isn’t about Bill Clinton,” Clinton spokesman Angel Ureña said in a statement.

“There are two types of people here,” he said. “The first group knew nothing and cut Epstein off before his crimes came to light. The second group continued relationships after that. We’re in the first. No amount of stalling by people in the second group will change that.”

The Epstein investigations

After nearly two decades of court action, a voluminous number of Epstein records had already been public before Friday, including flight logs, address books, email correspondence, police reports, grand jury records, courtroom testimony and deposition transcripts.

Besides public curiosity about whether any of Epstein’s associates knew about or participated in the abuse, Epstein’s accusers have also sought answers about why federal authorities shut down their initial investigation into the allegations in 2008.

“Just put out the files,” said Marina Lacerda, who says she survived sexual assault by Epstein. “And stop redacting names that don’t need to be redacted.”

One of the few revelations in the documents was a copy of the earliest known concern about Epstein’s behavior — a report taken by the FBI of a woman in 1996 who believed photos and negatives she had taken of her 12-year-old and 16-year-old sisters for a personal art project had been stolen by Epstein. The documents don’t show what, if anything, the agency did with that complaint.

Police in Palm Beach, Florida, began investigating Epstein in 2005 after the family of a 14-year-old girl reported being molested at his mansion. The FBI joined the investigation. Authorities gathered testimony from multiple underage girls who said they’d been hired to give Epstein sexual massages.

Ultimately, prosecutors gave Epstein a deal that allowed him to avoid federal prosecution. He pleaded guilty to state prostitution charges involving someone under age 18 and was sentenced to 18 months in jail.

Epstein’s accusers spent years in civil litigation trying to get that plea deal set aside. One of those women, Virginia Giuffre, accused Epstein of arranging for her to have sexual encounters, starting at age 17, with other men, including billionaires, famous academics, politicians and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, then known as Britain’s Prince Andrew.

Mountbatten-Windsor denied ever having sex with Giuffre, but King Charles III stripped him of his royal titles this year.

Prosecutors never brought charges in connection with Giuffre’s claims, but her account fueled conspiracy theories about supposed government plots to protect the powerful. Giuffre died by suicide in April.

Federal prosecutors in New York brought new sex trafficking charges against Epstein in 2019, but he killed himself in jail after his arrest. Prosecutors then charged Maxwell, his longtime confidant, with recruiting underage girls for Epstein to abuse. She was convicted in 2021 and is serving a 20-year prison sentence.

Three or More Fatally Wounded in Taipei Stabbing Incident

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new video loaded: At Least Three Killed in Taipei Stabbing Attack

At least three people were killed and at least six others were injured after an assailant with a knife attacked people in a train station and a busy retail area. The police said the attacker died after fleeing and then falling or jumping from a building.

By McKinnon de Kuyper

December 19, 2025

Legendary composer A.R. Rahman discusses Hollywood, Bollywood and beyond

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MBW’s World’s Greatest Songwriters series celebrates the composers behind the globe’s biggest hits. Here we talk to A.R. Rahman, a giant in the world of film soundtracks, with a hefty collection of Grammys, Oscars, Golden Globes, and Indian National Film Awards on his shelves. World’s Greatest Songwriters is supported by AMRA – the global digital music collection society, which strives to maximize value for songwriters and publishers in the digital age.


Some Oscar winners cry. Some holler deliriously about how their countrymen are coming to take over Hollywood. Some even slap the host.

But in 2009, when A.R. Rahman picked up his Academy Award for Original Score for Slumdog Millionaire, he was coolness and calmness personified.

“There’s a dialog from a Hindi film, ‘Mere paas ma hai,‘” he said, dressed all in black. “Which means, ‘I have nothing but I have a mother’.”

Sixteen years later, Rahman has garnered many more accolades and achievements (including two Grammys, a BAFTA and a Golden Globe) but, as he talks to MBW during a break from the immersive spectacle that is his The Wonderment world tour – which has been packing them in from Abu Dhabi to Los Angeles – it’s clear he still retains that sense of perspective.

“I was in a very Zen mood,” he laughs, of that Oscars speech. “Three months before, I had a very important spiritual experience, which was overwhelming for me, and I was not able to come out of it. So, everything seemed to be smaller than what I had experienced…”

That mindset helped him cope with the massive interest, both at home in India and abroad, that followed his global breakthrough. For many, a double Oscar win (he also picked up Best Original Song for Slumdog’s Jai Ho at the 2009 ceremony) might have been the pinnacle, but Rahman was just getting started.

Already an established name in Indian cinema and classical music, he has since become one of western cinema’s favorite composers, working on the likes of Couples Retreat, 127 Hours, The Hundred-Foot Journey, Million Dollar Arm, Pelé: Birth Of A Legend and Inside Man, alongside countless projects in Indian cinema and elsewhere.

He played for President Barack Obama at a White House state dinner, worked on the 2012 Olympics opening ceremony and has moved into the worlds of musical theater and pop, planning his own musical and collaborating with everyone from Mick Jagger to U2 and Diane Warren to Pharrell.

Hollywood is a long way from Rahman’s roots in Madras, India. Rahman’s father introduced him to the world of music – as a child, A.R. would deliver his father’s lunch and watch him conduct the orchestra at theater showings – and A.R. was playing piano from the age of four. His father passed away when AR was nine, and the young prodigy left school soon after to help support his family.

After working as a session musician and some early experiments with rock music, he started making jingles for adverts, only moving on when he realized his work featured on every single advert in a show he was watching.

He shifted into film music, making his debut with Tamil movie Roja and winning a National Film Award for Best Music Director. He became the go-to composer for Indian cinema and set up his own studio and label before heading for Hollywood.

Now, he shuttles between Mumbai and LA and now, having transcended classical music, can seemingly turn his hand to almost anything, fizzing with enthusiasm over future projects such as his avatar band Secret Mountain; his mentorship of classical music/dance ensemble Jhalaa; his work with Zimmer on the forthcoming epic Ramayana movie score; his numerous music education projects; and his April date at London’s Royal Albert Hall with classical composer Rushil Ranjan.

Rahman, however, remains supremely grounded – sharing many of his fellow musicians’ concerns over streaming and the studios’ approach to film music. Much of his catalog was recorded as a work-for-hire, a practise particularly common in Indian cinema, meaning he does not participate fully in its streaming success, despite having over 40 million monthly listeners on Spotify (“And we get peanuts from that!”).

That partly explains his recent enthusiasm for playing live, with his The Wonderment tour taking music from all stages of his career to a huge, mainstream audience; a bit like his own version of Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour – although he professes to know little about that particular cultural juggernaut. He is similarly bemused/amused to learn that Jai Ho has become the soundtrack to a popular college sports team drinking game, where people have to chug their beer between utterances of the song title.

But, before he heads for the stage, it’s time for the legendary composer to sit down with MBW and talk Hollywood, Bollywood and how he got involved with the Pussycat Dolls…


ARE YOU FINDING THERE IS MORE INTEREST IN INDIAN MUSIC FROM INTERNATIONAL AUDIENCES THESE DAYS?

There is, but not as much as K-pop I believe! [Laughs]

I’ve told this to my team, after Jai Ho – which became a whole world rage – I should have been a little more aggressive and done more concerts, more entrepreneurial stuff in other countries, but I just chilled out. I was like, ‘Ah, I’ve arrived, let me chill out for five or six years’ – but it’s never too late!



DO YOU FEEL THAT WAS A MISSED OPPORTUNITY?

Not missed. I could have done more, but then all my life I’d been slogging away from the age of 12 so I bought a house in LA, I chilled out and did stuff I never did before – like going to parties, meeting Spielberg, John Williams, JJ Abrams. I was flexing my power I guess!

I never thought I’d be crossing the border and people would be recognizing me on that side of the world. And people who I used to adore, like John Williams, Dave Grusin, Quincy Jones – I met all of them.


HAD YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO WORK IN HOLLYWOOD?

It was a dream. I always felt my music shouldn’t just be limited to Indian movies. In fact, from the start my interviews were like, ‘I want my songs to travel beyond India’, so I worked towards the production and sound recording having a vibe that everyone can listen to.


YOU’VE DONE AN AMAZING RANGE OF COLLABORATIONS. WHAT’S THE KEY TO A GOOD ONE?

A good collaboration is not just a box tick, but it’s something where we jam, we talk about life, we talk about what we like and musical tastes. And then, when something comes out, it’s really genuine. That rarely comes.

Through that, we learn from each other and we also exchange audiences a little bit, we introduce each other to our audiences.


YOU’VE WORKED WITH DIANE WARREN [Pictured], WHO LIKES TO WRITE A SONG EVERY DAY. WHAT’S YOUR APPROACH?

I don’t write a song every day, but sometimes I sit and write five songs. It depends on the mood.

Sometimes I feel like only empty bullets are coming out, and sometimes I sit there and feel the energy, then it just flows. And then almost 80% are worthwhile songs.

I’m also very self-critical. When you go forward three decades, you need to leave many things which are your safeguards and walk into the fire.


HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE TREND FOR MULTIPLE CO-WRITERS ON SONGS?

Even when I listen to some of the K-pop stuff, I feel like for eight bars, you know which composer [was writing it] and then another eight bars feel like another composer, the hook seems to be [another] composer.

The average listener may not feel it but, because I’ve been writing songs for the past 35 years now, I can see how it’s been chopped together.

I am a little old school that way, but I love lyric writers. Now we have AI assistance with lyrics – like, what is the rhyme? It’s fun, it’s like an enhanced Google rhyme generator, so we use it like that.

Although, when it generates, after three times it hits the ceiling and starts repeating itself – and it also spits out what has been there, not a whole new perspective for life. Then you understand, that’s how much they’ve stolen, they will steal more to get even better.


SO YOU ACTUALLY USE AI?

Just as a reference point sometimes. It’s a good tool when it’s used right, it speeds up work, it opens up the imagination, especially in art.

I love stuff like that, when people are empowered, even though they don’t have the talent to be an artist, they have the vision to prompt and get something.

But it needs to be controlled so that it doesn’t fall into the wrong hands, where people lose their jobs and nasty things happen to humanity!


SO YOU’RE NOT WORRIED ABOUT BEING REPLACED?

[Laughs] I’m not worried. Worrying is a bad thing. We always find ways to survive.

There’s always something this shit can’t do. The clichés will be there, and people will have to find new ways to express more human experience.

Like the whole live industry surge for the past two or three years has been amazing – there are great examples of what people want to come and watch; the artists whom they love, the songs which they love – they want to see flesh and blood, which is a good thing.


DID YOU EVER THINK SLUMDOG MILLIONAIRE WOULD BE AS BIG AS IT BECAME?

No. It was very underwhelming for me, because usually when I score a movie, I score around 120, 130 cues and for Slumdog, I probably worked for two weeks and had 18 tracks, that was it.



But with Danny [Boyle], every score was pushed up, he would crank it up in such a way that the whole world noticed it. I give it to him, his style of film-making and post-production definitely lifted the whole score and portrayed me to the whole world.


DID THE OSCAR WINS CHANGE YOUR LIFE?

I wanted to get the award and move on with my life, but I couldn’t. For the next three years it was ‘Oscar, Oscar, Oscar – we want to celebrate you and felicitate you’.

I had to get away. We had bought a house in a village near Rajasthan. I told my Mum who was there at the time, ‘I want to get away from all that stuff’. I secretly went off until somebody spotted me.

We didn’t have screens in the bathroom because it was a new house, and there were 300 people standing on every damn house with cameras! I didn’t come out for two days, I was like, ‘Just feed me, I’ll just sleep’ – and they were standing there for nine, 10 days waiting for me to come out. That seems like another life now.


HOW DID JAI HO BECOME A GLOBAL HIT?

Jimmy Iovine liked the song a lot, so he said something which my agent hated: ‘How about AR and the Pussycat Dolls?’

My agent went, ‘No way is AR going to do that!’ But they called me and I said, ‘Why not? Think about the reach if I do it in English’.

“The only thing I’m remorseful about it is, I could have kept the momentum and expanded much more, done more things.”

So that really worked. In that movie, whatever decision I took was great for me! There were people insisting I should not do the movie, but I said, ‘No, I’m going to do this’.

I wanted to pat myself [on the back] like Snoop Dogg says, for doing all the courageous things. The only thing I’m remorseful about it is, I could have kept the momentum and expanded much more, done more things.


DO YOU USUALLY KNOW WHEN YOU’VE WRITTEN AN EXCEPTIONAL PIECE OF MUSIC?

It could go either way. Sometimes you think it’s great and people don’t like it, sometimes you think it’s OK and then people are like, ‘Oh my God, what have you done?’ It’s hard to predict.

But they know that I want every song of mine to become a hit, rather than, ‘Oh, I’ll just write one OK song today’ – I won’t do that. I want to find something that is interesting.


ARE YOU REALLY DRIVEN BY HITS?

Well, not a ‘hit’ hit. But something unique, something which gives a new perspective or a new vibe.

No artist wants to repeat themselves like, ‘Let me do a song like whatever I did three decades back or two decades back’, you only want to find what’s new.

You can see the enthusiasm in the team, the engineer or the musicians, and that’s really cool when they say, ‘I love this’. Mostly, you just want to write something that people will remember forever. The thought is, something that everybody can embrace in every situation. Like Lean On Me or I’m A Believer. All that stuff is very enticing; we’re all hard-wired to search for ourselves.


HOW TOUGH WAS IT HAVING TO LEAVE SCHOOL SO EARLY AND WORK?

It was the mental torture, thinking, ‘No one’s going to respect me, because I left school’. That was the mentality I had, that the person who didn’t graduate was not respected in that society – I hope no one cares anymore! Now it’s like, ‘How much money does he have?’ [Laughs]


YOU MUST HAVE BEEN VERY DRIVEN TO SUCCEED…

Well, I fail, but secretly! Unlike before, we don’t have to display our work in front of 70 people with an orchestra.

So, when I do tunes, probably around 50% get rejected by the director, but nobody knows about it.


SURELY YOU DON’T GET REJECTED MUCH THESE DAYS?

I’m not a person who’s like, ‘This is it, take it or leave it’. I want them to be happy, to invest in it and come back again and say, ‘I love this, people love it, let’s work together again’ – and mostly that’s the case. I’m a people pleaser!

Remember, if I want to do my own thing, I have my platforms, I can put anything out, so that’s how I convince myself. Like, you can afford to do it yourself and commission yourself, why fight with people? Without compromising what I want to do of course…


IS FILM MUSIC TAKEN AS SERIOUSLY AS IT SHOULD BE?

Good directors come with vision and [when they] partner with good composers, great things can happen. But with the studios, I give up.

With all respect, studios want to rehash what is already there. In my experience, they put on temp music and ask the composers to copy it.

That’s the end of creativity – that’s why I lost the zest for scoring in Hollywood. I’d rather score some beautiful indie movies where people let me loose.

I have had great experiences, but with the big studios there’s so much bulldozing. And this scapegoat they use – ‘We screened it in five different places and they said how great the music was’ – it’s already chewed and spat, why do you want to pick that up? Why can’t you do something new – unless you do new, how will you know?

People still remember La La Land and Black Panther for the score, so the music makes the movies more memorable. We still remember Cinema Paradiso because of the theme, we still remember Schindler’s List. Imagine they had to put something derivative [on that], it would never have stood the rest of time. We still remember the first Gladiator for its music, even if you don’t remember anything else. There’s nothing like a tune. You remember Titanic for that tune, not for the temp music.


IF YOU COULD CHANGE ONE THING ABOUT THE MUSIC BUSINESS, RIGHT HERE AND NOW, WHAT WOULD IT BE?

Musicians and writers should get paid fairly.

The credibility of the professional should go up. I made a movie called 99 Songs which addresses this whole thing – nobody takes a musician seriously. Like, if somebody says, ‘What does your son do?’ ‘He’s a musician’. ‘No, what does he do?’ That second question always comes. ‘He plays the cello’ – ‘Yes, the cello’s fine, but what does he really do?’

And that’s because the fairness is not there, there’s no credible structure for finance and pension, all that stuff. Music education should start from the lower grades [in school]. People can listen to a piece of music and be transported, but all that stuff only comes when you learn music and you understand it.

They should be educated from the ground up, so they become better humans and have more empathy.


AMRA is the first of its kind — a global digital music collection society, built on technology and trust. AMRA is designed to maximize value for songwriters and publishers in today’s digital age, while providing the highest level of transparency and efficiency.Music Business Worldwide

Barcelona to face Villareal in La Liga showdown: Teams, start time, lineups, kickoff | Football News

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Who: Villareal vs Barcelona
What: Spain’s La Liga
Where: Estadio de la Ceramica in Villareal, Spain
When: Sunday, December 21, at 4:15pm (15:15 GMT)
How to follow: We’ll have all the build-up on Al Jazeera Sport from 1215 GMT in advance of our text commentary stream. Click here to follow our live coverage.

Villarreal has quietly mounted a potential dark horse title campaign through most of the first half of La Liga.

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Now it has a chance to make it official when the “Yellow Submarine” host Barcelona on Sunday.

Al Jazeera Sport takes a look at a game that could blow the Spanish top flight wide open.

How have Villareal fared in La Liga this season?

The team coached by Marcelino Garcia Toral is in third place, eight points behind leader Barcelona and four behind second-placed Real Madrid. But it has played two fewer games than the powerhouses, so it could easily be in an even stronger position.

Villarreal has disappointed in the Champions League and was eliminated from the Copa del Rey by a lower-division side this week. But La Liga is a different story. Villarreal is on a six-game winning run, and its only two losses have come at Madrid and Atletico Madrid.

Marcelino’s men have also turned their La Ceramica stadium into a fortress, conceding a miserly four goals in eight home matches while remaining unbeaten and winning all but one of those league encounters.

How have Barcelona fared in La Liga this season?

The game will pit the league’s top defence in Villarreal, with 13 goals allowed in 17 games, against the league’s top attack. Barcelona has poured in 49 goals in that time – 15 more than closest challengers Real – and more than made up for a sometimes shaky defence by outscoring its opponents.

Barcelona will look to both quash thoughts of a challenge by Villarreal and close 2025 on a high note this weekend.

An eighth consecutive league victory for Lamine Yamal and company would also keep the pressure on a Madrid side which is struggling.

Madrid hosts Sevilla on Saturday, with coach Xabi Alonso in need of a convincing victory before they have the two-week winter break to ponder the team’s future.

What happened in Villareal’s last match?

Adding insult to the injury of Villareal’s difficulties outside of La Liga this season, they suffered a shock 2-1 Copa del Rey defeat to second-tier Racing de Santander on Wednesday.

Their last La Liga match was on December 6, and was a 2-0 home win against Girona. In between those two matches, Villareal also suffered a 3-2 home defeat at the hands of Copenhagen in the Champions League.

What happened in Barcelona’s last match?

Andreas Christensen and Marcus Rashford struck late in the game to hand Barcelona a hard-fought 2-0 victory against third-tier side Guadalajara in the Copa del Rey on Tuesday.

Their last La Liga match also saw the Catalans pushed to the limit by Osasuna with Raphinha netting twice late in the game to secure a 2-0 win.

What is the secret of Villareal’s La Liga form?

Villarreal has based its success on a team effort with several goal-scorers and playmakers. But left winger Alberto Moleiro stands out. He is having a breakout first season with the team and leads Villarreal with six league goals. Tajon Buchanan has added five goals, and midfielder Santi Comesana helps a solid midfield.

What are Barcelona’s challenges in their La Liga defence?

Barcelona coach Hansi Flick has so far succeeded in making a left-side centre-back of Gerard Martin, who struggled to fill in at left back when Alejandro Balde was injured late last season.

Martin has five consecutive starts in the centre of the defensive line as Flick tries to find a replacement for Inigo Martínez, who left earlier in the year for Saudi Arabia. Martin may be tested by Villarreal’s attack.

What happened to La Liga’s plan to play Villareal-Barcelona in Miami?

The Sunday showdown was originally earmarked for Miami until La Liga’s international expansion plans collapsed under heavy criticism, forcing the cancellation of what would have been the first European league match played abroad.

What happened the last time Villareal played Barcelona?

Villareal were 3-2 winners in the La Liga clash in May at Barcelona in the side’s last encounter, although the home side had already secured the league title five days previous to the match.

The away side took the lead through Ayoze Perez after only four minutes, but Yamal and Fermin Lopez turned the game in Barca’s favour before the break. Villareal were not done, however, with Santi Comesana levelling in the 50th minute before Tajon Buchanan scored the winner 10 minutes from time.

What happened in the corresponding fixture between Villareal and Barcelona last season?

The first meeting between the sides last season resulted in a 5-1 drubbing as Barcelona ran amok at in Villareal.

Robert Lewandowski and Raphinha both netted braces either side of Pedro Torre’s strike. Perez was also on the scoresheet in this match for the home side, but it proved only to be a consolation.

Head-to-head

This is the 55th meeting between the sides, with Barcelona winning 33 of the matches and Villarreal emerging victorious on 11 occasions.

Villareal have won their last two trips to Barcelona, but the Catalan club have the same record from their last two games at La Ceramica.

Villareal team news

Villarreal received a timely boost as veterans Gerard Moreno and Dani Parejo returned to training on Tuesday and should be available to face Barcelona.

Pape Gueye and Ilias Akhomach, however, are away with Senegal at the Africa Cup of Nations.

Pau Cabanes is a definite injury absentee, while Thomas Partey, Gerard Moreno, Willy Kambwala and Santiago Mourino must prove their fitness before the match.

Barcelona team news

Dani Olmo and Gavi are both absent due to injuries, while Ronald Araujo is set to miss the game due to personal reasons.

Pedri missed training on Friday due to a calf strain, making him a major doubt for the match.

Predicted Villareal lineup

Luiz Junior; Navarro, Foyth, Veiga, Cardona; Buchanan, Comesana, Parejo, Moleiro; Perez, Mikautadze

Predicted Barcelona lineup

Joan Garcia; Kounde, Cubarsi, Eric Garcia, Balde; De Jong, Pedri; Yamal, Raphinha, Rashford; Torres

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US launches a significant attack on IS in Syria

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The US says its military has carried out a “massive strike” against the Islamic State group (IS) in Syria, in response to a deadly attack on American forces in the country.

The US Central Command (Centcom) said fighter jets, attack helicopters and artillery “struck more than 70 targets at multiple locations across central Syria”. Aircraft from Jordan were also involved.

It said the operation “employed more than 100 precision munitions” targeting known IS infrastructure and weapons sites.

President Donald Trump said “we are striking very strongly” against IS strongholds, following the 13 December IS ambush in the city of Palmyra in which two US soldiers and a US civilian interpreter were killed.

In a statement on X, Centcom, which directs American military operations in Europe, Africa and the Indo-Pacific, said Operation Hawkeye Strike was launched at 16:00 Eastern Time (21:00 GMT) on Friday.

Centcom commander Admiral Brad Cooper said that the US “will continue to relentlessly pursue terrorists who seek to harm Americans and our partners across the region”.

US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth said the operation “is not the beginning of a war – it is a declaration of vengeance.

“If you target Americans – anywhere in the world – you will spend the rest of your brief, anxious life knowing the United States will hunt you, find you, and ruthlessly kill you.

“Today, we hunted and we killed our enemies. Lots of them. And we will continue,” the US defence secretary added.

Posting on Truth Social, President Trump said the US “is inflicting very serious retaliation, just as I promised, on the murderous terrorists responsible”.

He said the Syrian government was “fully in support”.

Meanwhile, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (OBHR) said IS positions near the cities of Raqqa and Deir ez Zor were targeted.

It said that a prominent IS leader and a number of fighters were killed.

IS has not publicly commented. The BBC was unable to verify the targets immediately.

Centcom earlier said that the deadly attack in Palmyra was carried out by an IS gunman, who was “engaged and killed”.

Another three US soldiers were injured in the ambush, with a Pentagon official saying that it happened “in an area where the Syrian president does not have control.”

At the same time, the SOHR said the attacker was a member of the Syrian security forces.

No group has claimed responsibility for the attack, and the identity of the gunman has not been released.

In 2019, a US-backed alliance of Syrian fighters announced IS had lost the last pocket of territory in Syria it controlled, but since then the jihadist group has carried out some attacks.

The United Nations says the group still has between 5,000 and 7,000 fighters in Syria and Iraq.

US troops have maintained a presence in Syria since 2015 to help train other forces as part of a campaign against IS.

Syria has recently joined an international coalition to combat IS and has pledged to co-operate with the US.

In November, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa – a former jihadist leader whose coalition forces toppled Bashar al-Assad’s regime in 2024 – met Trump at the White House, describing his visit as part of a “new era” for the two countries.

Elise Stefanik, staunch Trump ally, withdraws from New York governor race and announces retirement from politics

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Elise Stefanik, loyal Trump ally, ends New York  governor bid and will leave politics