Anyone seen Uncle Shortbread?
The London comedy troupe turning the mundane into nightmarish cinema, one laser-firing, dog-incinerating pope at a time.
The London comedy troupe turning the mundane into nightmarish cinema, one laser-firing, dog-incinerating pope at a time.
Whether through Stüssy prints or opera coats, Ghanaian art collabs or Air Jordan drops, Kim Jones is pushing the envelope pour homme right now. Tremaine Emory chats with the James Joyce-Judy Blame-Larry Levan-loving artistic director of Dior Men.
Student halls across the UK are being put into lockdown, leaving thousands of freshers cooped up in box rooms, isolated from family, and watching sub-par online lectures. We go inside Manchester Metropolitan, one of the universities worst affected by the crisis, in search of signs of life – and of protest.
Featuring M.I.A.’s show-stealing verse on Franchise, a cheeky bassline banger from Bad Boy Chiller Crew, plus object blue and TSV1’s hard-hitting body music.
The Saint Maud actress is about to hit the big time in a billion-dollar TV reboot of Lord of the Rings.
The K-pop group deliver relentless fireworks moments. But due to their highly polished brand, their first studio album often feels impersonal.
The New Delhi-born photographer has documented LGBTQ+ life for over 50 years in India, the US and here in the UK. Now, The Photographer’s Gallery is commemorating his body of work with a retrospective, from the streets of New York to various parks in Delhi.
The NYC-based producer specialises in hypnotic dembow rhythms.
DJ and journalist Ash Lauryn speaks to Waajeed about Detroit’s new music school, which is inspired by the radical techno collective, Underground Resistance.
Carpets that look like bacon and sofas that look like loaves of bread. Plus plenty of things that don't resemble food and will make your home look heavenly.
If you’ve ever studied abroad or simply wanted to, Sex and the City creator Darren Star’s new series Emily in Paris is required viewing.
Syd Minsky-Sargeant is on a teenage mission from Todmorden: to make hometown music that reaches up and out of the Calder Valley – and it’s electrifying the UK indie scene.
If ever there’s a time to call up Chuck D, it’s in this burning trash can of a moment. The leader of legendary rap group Public Enemy is as politically and socially conscious as ever on the eve of their 15th studio album, What You Gonna Do When the Grid Goes Down?.
Tems has already conquered the global charts with Wizkid and Drake, found fans in the highest possible places (hello, President Obama) and carved out a new space in Afrobeats. Next up: a debut album that will see Nigerian music’s biggest new star go supermassive.
In Episode One of Face-to-Face, the duo discuss mental health, social media, the toxic side of the music industry.