This taught Wolfe about the sacred responsibility of home teaching assignments — now ministering assignments — in The Church ...
Hundreds of AI-generated Chinese-language YouTube videos have been targeting Singapore and Prime Minister Lawrence Wong as part of an ongoing disinformation campaign. Seven in 10 videos attack Wong ...
A social media account which posted "deeply inappropriate deepfake content" which "targeted school staff" is being investigated by police. A TikTok account which used Grainville School's badge and ...
Is it a good idea to revive Yes Prime Minister, the defining political sitcom of the Thatcher era, for one final chapter? Well, as the obfuscating civil servant Sir Humphrey Appleby might say: ’As far ...
Clive Francis as Sir Humphrey Appleby and Griff Rhys Jones as Jim Hacker in ‘I’m Sorry Prime Minister’ (Johan Persson) “I’m not bothered about being cancelled,” says Lynn, when I meet him in his hotel ...
On his sofa in the first scene is a young black woman with a neatly braided hairstyle and smart-casual clothes. Sophie (Stephanie Levi-John, pictured right) has applied to be Hacker’s care-worker – a ...
AS a huge fan of the original series Yes, Minister and Yes, Prime Minister, I wasn’t going to pass up the chance to catch up with duelling politicos Jim Hacker and ...
“We’re in the dustbin of history,” says retired civil servant Sir Humphrey (Clive Francis), bitterly mourning the loss of his hundreds of minions and innumerable paths of political influence. Former ...
Griff Rhys Jones and Clive Francis revive Hacker and Sir Humphrey in a topical farewell that probes a changing Britain Dominic Cavendish has been writing about theatre and comedy since the mid-1990s ...
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. British politics is so absurd that sometimes only TV satire seems to capture it. Yes Minister, which originally ...
Clive Francis (as Sir Humphrey Appleby) and Griff Rhys Jones (as Jim Hacker) in I’m Sorry, Prime Minister, © Johan Persson There are some interesting themes ...
Stripped of the Westminster scaffolding, this Yes, Minister sequel unspools into endless trading of retorts and ripostes, going nowhere By Rachel Cunliffe What would Jim Hacker and Sir Humphrey ...
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