Plus: Ghibli, millennials, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Minecraft and pickles
Saved For Later | The Guardian

Support the Guardian

Power independent journalism into 2025

Saved For Later
 

Dear reader, you can now get breaking news alerts sent directly to your inbox. Sign up here.


Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties.

 
Penguin tariffs
Congrats to every white boy of the month

 Alyx Gorman and Michael Sun
We can't stop talking about...
‘Coke and beer – in one glass, please’
Bad combinatons  
‘Coke and beer – in one glass, please’
Could Elle Hunt discover a signature drink order that would mark her out as intriguing, charming and strangely sophisticated? She spends a gut-churning week finding out.
Patents and prose  
How an author's attempt to use a line from Jilly Cooper's bonkbuster Riders ended in a spiral of licensing despair.
Handbags of joe  
Balenciaga coffee cup bag shows memecore luxury is beginning to grind.
Work and egos  
Could the language in job ads be the reason why so many narcissists are lured into management?
Cook this
Quick pickles
Quick pickles
Cornersmith’s Alex Elliott-Howery shares three easy, flavourful ferments.
Extremely online
Extremely online
What was millennial culture? What was nu metal? What was conspiracy cinema? Who was the female edgelord? So many relics, lost like tears in rain. RIP to Studio Ghibli, girlhood, and Katy Perry. People are literally getting addicted to ChatGPT. It’s time to see a therapist, AKA Joan Didion.

Good reads: on books; on beauty; on bad governance. The Beatles made everyone mad and Phoebe Waller-Bridge was an inspiration to layabouts everywhere. This is the most normal TV show and the only normal DJ.
The funniest things on the internet
Pierre Novellie's tour of his tabs
Pierre Novellie's tour of his tabs
If we had a dollar for every time one of these lists featured Kim Cattrall scatting we'd have ... probably around $5?
Top of the list
An album – tunes affected  
Black Country, New Road have long been the UK's artiest young band. But after their lead singer quit, they've gone even weirder, with streaks of fantasy – and lots of recorders.
Black Country, New Road have long been the UK's artiest young band. But after their lead singer quit, they've gone even weirder, with streaks of fantasy – and lots of recorders.
A film – wounds infected  
Jack Quaid is the man who feels no pain – though the audience certainly does in this heist thriller that's a 'blitzkrieg of ultraviolence'. Novocaine is in cinemas now.
Jack Quaid is the man who feels no pain – though the audience certainly does in this heist thriller that's a 'blitzkrieg of ultraviolence'. Novocaine is in cinemas now.
Another film – blocks connected  
Surely no-one expected the Minecraft movie to be good – but this adaptation of the bestselling game of all time is fun. Kind of. In cinemas.
Surely no-one expected the Minecraft movie to be good – but this adaptation of the bestselling game of all time is fun. Kind of. In cinemas.
A console – Switch dissected  
Also in games: this writer got to try the Nintendo Switch 2, out in June. It's not all that different from the original Switch – but will customers buy in anyway?
Also in games: this writer got to try the Nintendo Switch 2, out in June. It's not all that different from the original Switch – but will customers buy in anyway?
This week's weirdest story
Penguins hit with Trump tariffs
Penguins hit with Trump tariffs
A tiny uninhabited island near Antarctica comes afoul in US trade war.
Enjoying this newsletter?
Have a friend who might? Forward this to them, or tell them how to get it.
Get in touch
If you have any questions or comments about any of our newsletters please email newsletters@theguardian.com

A message from Lenore Taylor editor of Guardian Australia

I hope you appreciated this newsletter. Before you move on, I wonder if you would consider supporting our work as we prepare for a pivotal, uncertain year ahead.

The course of world history has taken a sharp and disturbing turn in 2024. Liberalism is under threat from populist authoritarianism. Americans have voted to install a president with no respect for democratic norms, nor the facts that once formed the guardrails of public debate.

That decision means an alliance critical to Australia’s national and economic security is now a series of unpredictable transactions, with a partner no longer committed to multilateralism, nor efforts to curb global heating, the greatest threat we face. We just don’t know where this will lead.

In this uncertain time, fair, fact-based journalism is more important than ever – to record and understand events, to scrutinise the powerful, to give context, and to counter rampant misinformation and falsehoods.

As we enter an Australian election year, we are deeply conscious of the responsibility to accurately and impartially report on what is really at stake.

The Guardian is in a unique position to do this. We are not subject to the influence of a billionaire owner, nor do we exist to enrich shareholders. We are here to serve and listen to you, our readers, and we rely on your support to power our work.

Your support keeps us independent, beholden to no outside influence and accessible to everyone – whether they can afford to pay for news, or not.

If you can, please consider supporting us with just $1, or better yet, support us every month with a little more. Thank you.

Lenore Taylor
Editor, Guardian Australia

You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to Saved For Later. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396