Podcast: Is there anything good about The Idol?
This week, we discuss the backlash – as well as the merits – to Sam Levinson’s sleazy TV show.
This week, we discuss the backlash – as well as the merits – to Sam Levinson’s sleazy TV show.
Amber Park spills the tea on her old imaginary friends ahead of the new PLAY! POP! GO! capsule collection drop.
In 2020, Paul McCartney discovered nearly 1000 photographs he’d taken at the height of Beatlemania. Here, he walks us through the collection – and describes what it was like to be inside the “eyes of the storm”.
We meet the 23-year-old North Londoner, at a Celine dinner hosted by Hedi Slimane, to talk Bill Ryder Jones, Selling Sunset, and battling her own clumsiness.
As Mindy Kaling’s Netflix series comes to a close, we turn the tables and challenge the actor to a round of the show’s titular drinking game (sans booze, sadly).
In his new book We All Go Into the Dark, the writer unpicks the sensationalised serial killer story that gripped Scotland.
Forget 4th century monks: we ask the writer and “deep state internet princess” to imagine a fresh set of cultural crimes.
TikTok puritanism be damned – we can't wait for Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell's saucy rom-com to come out. We've rounded up our favourite steamy romantic comedies, from Spike Lee classics to unexpectedly hot cult flicks.
Theatre’s under the spotlight. Punters are in tiers. Recent months have seen an increase in audiences disrupting performances across the UK. Is it a moral panic... or just a stage we’re going through?
We've hand-picked some of the hottest names in music, writing, fashion and film, fresh from our brand new print issue.
It’s the play that’s gone right: a theatrical phenomenon pulling in young audiences via a chilling story and clever actor choices like Cheryl and Lily Allen. As a UK tour looms, its creator and latest cast explain why audience participation – screams, wine spills, all of it – are welcome.
The Succession “winner” tells us all about Leeds United, red carpet drag and Lukas Matsson's fashion choices.
Shane Meadows' new TV show tells the story of the one of the largest frauds in English history. He's used his tried-and-tested technique of casting locals to create something truly unique: a period drama that's naturalistic, rowdy and, well, normal.
The latest exhibition from Sadie Coles HQ calls on some of the most subversive visual artists to explore the darker sides of sex and power.
Lourdes “Lola” Leon is the queen of New York’s red-hot underground. She’s a dancer, model and musician with a sexy, alluring sonic universe. She takes no bullshit from boys and, alongside her bestie, co-producer and FACE interviewer Eartheater, is ready to take on the world. What you gonna do about it?
Jess Alexander plays the human form of Melissa McCarthy’s temptress Ursula in Disney’s live-action version of The Little Mermaid. The South West Londoner does her own stunts, goes claw-to-claw with Halle Bailey’s Ariel, and is the “definition of a sexy female villain”.
As the groundbreaking drama anoints its ultimate successor, we quiz Lupe on spin-offs, Succession sleepovers and closing the door on the role of a lifetime. “It’s like getting over a big heartbreak.”
For the first time, the master transgressor is releasing behind-the-scenes shots from some of his most famous shoots, for his most recent book. Expect the most explicit...
First up: a Blur cover story from May 1994, in honour of the legendary band announcing their first album in eight years, The Ballad of Darren. You don't wanna miss this...
Giovanni Benvenuto spent early mornings at sea with the locals, capturing the sun-soaked beauty of an age-old tradition.
SOLAIRE CULTURE, the brand’s immersive exhibition, has finally landed in London, weaving together the work of forward-thinking artists and Veuve’s rich history.
The legendary New York photographer’s latest book Zines is a cinematic snapshot of the city from 2015 to 2019, told through his raw, unfiltered style.
The Irish photographer is being celebrated in his first UK retrospective at the Walker Art Gallery in Liverpool, shining light on his knack for capturing people at their best.
Call Sheet: The 16-year-old gives us the lowdown on dodgy auditions, hilarious onset moments and landing the biggest role of his career in the year’s weirdest film.