Football / Marc Guehi has exposed the flaw in the Rainbow Laces campaign
Trouble in Tbilisi / A true popular uprising is taking place in Georgia
TV / I’m A Celebrity has been enjoyably dull
Kemi v Keir / PMQs has become painfully predictable
Books / The subversive message of Paradise Lost
From the magazineBooks / Who’s still flying the flag for Britpop?
From the magazineMoronic Inferno / Who cares about Gregg Wallace?
From Spectator LifeTravel / 48 hours in Dublin
From Spectator LifeCut above / Is London the most stylish city on earth?
From Spectator LifeKemi v Keir / PMQs has become painfully predictable
Books / The subversive message of Paradise Lost
From the magazineBooks / Who’s still flying the flag for Britpop?
From the magazineMoronic Inferno / Who cares about Gregg Wallace?
From Spectator LifeTravel / 48 hours in Dublin
From Spectator LifeCut above / Is London the most stylish city on earth?
From Spectator LifeLatest from Coffee House
All the latest analysis of the day's news
BBC presenter under fire over failure to declare extra work
Masterchef gives me the creeps
Will Sue Gray get a peerage?
A failing steel company is the last thing the state should buy
South Korea’s President Yoon will be lucky to escape jail
Blame the EU for what’s happening to France
South Korea has a long history of martial law
The right reason to give back the Elgin marbles
Can Starmer help get children ‘school ready’?
Spectator TV Presents
Boris Johnson on Covid failures, the Nanny State, and his advice for ‘Snoozefest’ Starmer
Spectator Life
An intelligent mix of culture, food, style and property, plus where to go and what to see.
48 hours in Dublin
From Spectator LifeGregg Wallace was no national treasure
From Spectator LifeAre you brave enough for night shopping?
From Spectator LifeThe horror of a Christmas jumper
From Spectator LifeWho cares about Gregg Wallace?
From Spectator LifeIn 1986 the late Martin Amis published a book of essays called The Moronic Inferno – a title he had borrowed from the writers Saul Bellow and Wyndham Lewis. The essays focused on Amis’s dim view of culture in the USA. These aspects of American life have long since crossed the pond, and we are
Is London the most stylish city on earth?
From Spectator LifeMagazine
This week's magazine
Who dares sins
The great betrayal of the SAS
The SAS have been betrayed in the name of human rights
The SAS are worried. Britain’s most elite military unit have come face to face with the IRA, the Taliban and Isis. But the enemy that really concerns them doesn’t carry a gun or wear a suicide belt. It’s the phalanx of lawyers they think are coming for them, armed with a deadly weapon: the European
The SAS have been betrayed in the name of human rights
The SAS are worried. Britain’s most elite military unit have come face to face with the IRA, the Taliban and Isis. But the enemy that really concerns them doesn’t carry a gun or wear a suicide belt. It’s the phalanx of lawyers they think are coming for them, armed with a deadly weapon: the European
Culture
The good, the bad and the ugly in books, exhibitions, cinema, TV, dance, music, podcasts and theatre.
Lovingly designed, touching and immersive: Neva reviewed
From the magazineGrade: A- There’s a very faint echo of Jeff VanderMeer’s unheimlich Southern Reach Series in the new indie side-scroller Neva. You’re plonked at the start of the game into a pleasant dreamlike landscape of pastel foliage, benign fauna and the gentle twitter of birds. But as you progress you start to encounter something darker –
Tate’s finances are on the skids and I think I know why
From the magazineSmart, taut and stunning: Conclave reviewed
From the magazineWonderful comedy of manners: Kiln Theatre’s The Purists reviewed
From the magazineKneecap are basic but thrilling
From the magazineDeeply impressive and beautiful: Akram Khan’s Gigenis reviewed
From the magazineWe’re wrong to mock Do They Know It’s Christmas?
From the magazineCartoons
Cartoon
‘‘I’ve got a certificate that says I’m a sheep.’’
Cartoon
‘‘There will be some pain and some growth.’’
Cartoon