Netflix's new drama following a comedian relentlessly pursued by a fan - and is based on a true story
Here's everything you need to know about the stars of season 2 of 'The Good Doctor'.
From subatomic to cosmic, the pick of the pioneers
Where the hard edge of physics meets the vulnerable metaphysics of the human heart.
The dark comedy is inspired by Richard's real stalking ordeal
The Official Unofficial Richard Ayoade Fansite
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New film The Lost King tells the story of the unearthing of English King Richard III's remains from beneath a car park. But not everyone is happy about it, writes Neil Armstrong.
At one point in his life, Richard Tennant Cooper had dreams of some day being recognised as one of the best artists in the world. Let’s be fair, why not the best artist in the world? We all have dreams – but somehow life intervenes. Tennant Cooper had talent, good talent, maybe great talent, maybe … Continue reading "The Horror, The Horror! Dark and Disturbing Paintings of Death and Disease"
Here are the best memes for anyone obsessed with murder crime TV shows. - Page 2 of 3
Where the hard edge of physics meets the vulnerable metaphysics of the human heart.
Richard III was descended from Edmund of Langley, in name only...
The BBC's lavish adaptation of 'Wolf Hall' will showcase the best UK drama talent. And some of the finest clobber since the court of Henry VIII himself. In the latest of our series on behind-the-scenes heroes, we meet the costume designers on TV's biggest hits
Arthur Hughes has become the first disabled actor to play Richard III at the Royal Shakespeare Company. Look back at other incarnations of Shakespeare’s villain
Where the hard edge of physics meets the vulnerable metaphysics of the human heart.
Fudge. Me.
In Watermelon Sugar by Richard Brautigan. If you've read, as I have, the novel for which Richard Brautigan is most famous, Trout Fishing In America, then you'll have some idea of what to expect here: a sort of wide-eyed hippy innocence, short and enigmatically named chapters, constant repetition of the novel's title at various points throughout the text, and a picture on the cover of Brautigan and some doe-eyed "special lady" in a suggestively charged pose. In Watermelon Sugar was Brautigan's third novel, published in 1968. It's got the same slightly hello clouds, hello sky hippy-dippy innocence as Trout Fishing In America, but in the service of a slightly more coherent story. Which seems to be a post-apocalyptic idyll whereby the trappings of an older and more technologically advanced civilisation (including, slightly bizarrely, a race of talking tigers) are shut away in a place called The Forgotten Works while the survivors live a pastoral existence in their woodland shacks, gathering periodically in the central commune (called, for reasons that are never adequately explained, iDEATH) for food and assorted pleasantries and building their shacks, bridges, etc. out of planks made from the aforementioned watermelon sugar. The nameless narrator is conducting a relationship with a young woman from iDEATH called Pauline while attempting to avoid the obsessive attentions of his ex-partner Margaret. Some members of the commune hang out at the Forgotten Works and scavenge some of the mysterious artefacts to be found there, and needless to say No Good Comes Of It. If one were inclined to, one could find all of this a bit irritating, but I think if you take it as a product of its time it's quite charming in a light and child-like sort of way. None of which will be of much comfort to Brautigan, as he shot himself at the age of 49 in 1984.
Discover the top 20 memorable quotes from Richard Fish, a beloved character from the TV show "Ally McBeal."
The long read: We published 144 pieces in the long read this year – somewhere in the neighbourhood of 800,000 words, if you’re counting. These were our favourites ...
In Caspar David Friedrich’s most famous painting, Wanderer above the Sea of Fog (1818), the German Romantic artist depicts a young, aristocratic-looking man in a green overcoat as he stands atop a jagged rock, taking in a misty, high-altitude scene of mountains and cliffs. The image shows a moment of ultimate self-reflection in the vein […]
A new exhibition collects together work made by inmates of mental hospitals – which is often startlingly detailed and fiercely lucid
SPECIAL zu Richard David Precht »Wer bin ich - und wenn ja wie viele« und Liebe - Goldmann / Random House Audio
The Persuasion star confirmed the news on Instagram
Why Richard III remains such a fascinating figure
Ooohhhh, just the mere mention of Richard Scarry sends me into a calm reverie! His pictures are spellbinding and could mesmerize a child into silence. I encourage young mothers to pick up a copy of Cars and Trucks and Things That Go. Trust me, you'll thank me whenever you're in the doctor's office, the DMV, the pharmacy line, etc. Seriously, it's about the only thing left that can actually compete with Angry Birds! So put it to the test, check it out at your local bookseller, and drop back by to let us know just how much it's saved your peace-of-mind. And while you're at it, take a look at Richard Scarry's The Best Mother Goose Ever. It remains our kids' favorite nursery rhyme collection (and believe me, they've seen them all! this is the one they keep coming back to again and again).
Quipping right 'til the final adverts.
We asked BuzzFeed readers for the science books that changed their lives. This is what they told us.
Britische Geschichte und Erlebnisse