Cànanan Màthaireil: Scottish Gaelic is making a comeback
Forget road signs. Thanks to AI researchers and social media influencers, the Celtic language is being dragged kicking and screaming into the 21st century.
Forget road signs. Thanks to AI researchers and social media influencers, the Celtic language is being dragged kicking and screaming into the 21st century.
A recent YouGov poll revealed that 71 per cent of women had been sexually harassed in a public space. Now, post-freedom day, organisations such as Don’t Be A Creep and Change The Lineup want to prevent it from happening.
Ten years ago, Mark Duggan was killed by the Metropolitan Police, triggering an eruption of riots across the country. Artist Baff Akoto delves into the dawn of digital activism in Britain, reflecting on how it shaped movements like Black Lives Matter.
Following two tragic drug deaths, THE FACE talks to ravers and campaigners who want a radical change in policy across UK nightlife.
For years, the English teacher has been a teen saviour for in-the-closet queers. Here’s why.
The pingdemic ushered in a wave of milk ’n’ crisps ’n’ booze couriers to make our lives even more frictionless. But of the five leading start-ups, which one rules? THE FACE finds out.
We speak to a psychosexual therapist and individuals whose sexual appetites have shrunk during the pandemic.
As bars, pubs and nightclubs welcome us all back, two spiking victims want us to proceed with caution.
Former Amazon employee Christian Smalls is campaigning to unionise the Staten Island warehouse where he used to work. THE FACE joined him last month to found out exactly how he’s planning to beat Bezos.
In an attempt to stop widespread scamming and defrauding, the social media platform has cracked down on the likes of Tana Mongeau and the D’Amelio sisters flogging ill-informed money-making schemes.
This term has caused a heated debate: those for the NHS Test and Trace app and those fiercely against it. Whatever the verdict, just self-isolate.
Uprising, the director’s new BBC documentary, explores the events surrounding the deaths, 40 years ago, of 14 young Black people after a South London house party.
As CoppaFeel! and LGBTQ+ cancer charity Live Through This work to make breast cancer awareness resources more trans and non-binary-friendly, THE FACE meets a trans survivor to hear why their work is so vital.
Collaborative project @now_you_see_me_moria documents the lives of refugees living inside the Moria refugee camp on the Greek island of Lesbos.
In The Way We Survive: Notes on Rape Culture, writer and podcaster Catriona Morton investigates what it means to be a survivor of rape in the UK.
At 23-years-old, he’s set to represent Team GB at Paris 2024 in a brand-spanking-new category: competitive breakdancing.
In just two months, Watson D. Hirschfield has amassed over half-a-million followers on the platform. His winning formula? Amping up the ridiculousness of our fave retro bangers.
In spring 2002, THE FACE interviewed the biggest pop star in the world. As the #FreeBritney movement gets louder, the writer reflects on her encounter with a young woman already hurting more than we knew.
The insidious gaming software has used the promise of free games like Grand Theft Auto V to trick gamers into downloading a secret Monero mining programme.
Five patriotic(ish) bangers that have lyrics better than “Strong Britain, great na-a-tion”.
With some workers logging 100 hours’ overtime in a month, and “karoshi" – death by overworking – a common trope, Japan hopes to change the narrative and fight back for workplace freedom. We say yes.
With the delayed Tokyo 2020 Olympics approaching, former sprinter and five-time British athletics champion Jeanette Kwakye highlights six female athletes using their platforms for good. What do they want, a medal? Well, yes, as a matter of fact, they do…
In November 2020, the government approved £1.7bn plans to build a dual carriageway on the grounds of Stonehenge – a site as old as Egypt's pyramids. Now a mix of residents, archaeologists and Druids have come to together to fight for its protection.
Photographer Karis Beaumont's Bumpkin Files wants to dispel myths that Black people living outside of London are not “in touch with their Blackness”.