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articles,lang
"Image copyright PA/EPA Image caption Oligarch Roman Abramovich (l) and PM Dmitry Medvedev are on the list
Russian President Vladimir Putin says a list of officials and businessmen close to the Kremlin published by the US has in effect targeted all Russian people.
The list names 210 top Russians as part of a sanctions law aimed at punishing Moscow for meddling in the US election.
However, the US stressed those named were not subject to new sanctions.
Mr Putin said the list was an unfriendly act that complicated US-Russia ties but he said he did not want to escalate the situation.
Mr Putin said Russia should instead be thinking about ""ourselves and the economy"".
The list was also derided by a number of senior Russian officials who said it bore a strong resemblance to the Forbes magazine ranking of Russian billionaires. A US Treasury Department later told Buzzfeed that an unclassified annex of the report had been derived from the magazine.
Why did the US publish the list?
The government was required to draw up the list after Congress passed the Countering America's Adversaries Through Sanctions Act (Caatsa) in August.
The law aimed to punish Russia for its alleged meddling in the 2016 US presidential election and its actions in Ukraine.
Congress wanted the list to name and shame those who had benefited from close association with President Putin and put them on notice that they could be targeted for sanctions, or more sanctions, in the future.
President Donald Trump did not support Caatsa, even though he signed it into law, saying it was ""unconstitutional"".
Under the law, the list had to be delivered by Monday. The fact it was released about 10 minutes before midnight may reflect Mr Trump's coolness towards it, and his opposition to punishing more Russians with sanctions.
The top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, Eliot Engel, accused the Trump administration of letting ""Russia off the hook again"" by not taking substantial action.
Who has been named?
Informally known as the ""Putin list"", the unclassified section has 210 names, 114 of them in the government or linked to it, or key businessmen. The other 96 are oligarchs apparently determined more by the fact they are worth more than $1bn (£710m) than their close ties to the Kremlin.
Image copyright Reuters Image caption Congress passed the law in August, although President Donald Trump had opposed it
Most of Mr Putin's longstanding allies are named, many of them siloviki (security guys). They include the spy chiefs Alexander Bortnikov of the Federal Security Service (FSB) - which Mr Putin used to run - and Sergei Naryshkin of the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR).
The men who control Russia's energy resources are listed: Gazprom chief Alexei Miller, Rosneft chief Igor Sechin and other oil and gas executives, along with top bankers like Bank Rossiya manager Yuri Kovalchuk.
The oligarchs include Kirill Shamalov, who is reported to be Mr Putin's son-in-law, although the Kremlin has never confirmed his marriage to Katerina Tikhonova, nor even that she is the president's daughter.
Internationally known oligarchs are there too, such as those with stakes in top English football clubs: Alisher Usmanov (Arsenal) and Roman Abramovich (Chelsea).
Will they face new sanctions?
Not at the moment. The US Treasury document itself stresses: ""It is not a sanctions list, and the inclusion of individuals or entities... does not and in no way should be interpreted to impose sanctions on those individuals or entities.""
It adds: ""Neither does inclusion on the unclassified list indicate that the US government has information about the individual's involvement in malign activities.""
However, there is a classified version said to include information detailing allegations of involvement in corrupt activities.
What does it mean for Russia's elite?
Analysis: Steve Rosenberg, BBC Moscow correspondent
The good news for the Kremlin: this isn't a sanctions list. But the good news ends there.
Those Russian officials and oligarchs named by the US Treasury will worry that their inclusion could signal sanctions in the future.
Even before the list was made public, the Kremlin had claimed the US Treasury report was an attempt to meddle in Russia's presidential election.
The list reads like a Who's Who of the Russian political elite and business world.
Moscow won't want that to become a Who's Sanctioned.
What is the Caatsa act and did the president want it?
The law limited the amount of money Americans could invest in Russian energy projects and made it more difficult for US companies to do business with Russia.
It also imposed sanctions on Iran and North Korea.
Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption All you need to know about the Trump-Russia investigation
In signing the act, Mr Trump attached a statement calling the measure ""deeply flawed"" and said he could make ""far better deals with foreign countries than Congress"".
Earlier on Monday, the US government argued the Caatsa law had already pushed governments around the world to cancel deals with Russia worth billions, suggesting that more sanctions were not required.
How have the Russians reacted?
Perhaps referring to the fact that all of their political representatives had been named, Mr Putin said that, in effect, ""all 146 million Russians have been put on the list"".
He joked he was offended not to be named himself.
Earlier, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who is himself on the list, accepted that it was not one of sanctions but said it could potentially damage ""the image and reputation"" of figures listed and their associated companies.
He added: ""It's not the first day that we live with quite aggressive comments made towards us, so we should not give in to emotions.""
When Caatsa was passed, PM Dmitry Medvedev said it meant the US had declared a ""full-scale trade war"" on Russia.
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny praised the publication of the names as ""a good list"".",en
"Husband admits killing French jogger
Three months after Alexia Daval's body was found, her husband tells police he killed her by mistake.",en
"Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Chris Parker was interviewed by reporters in the aftermath of the attack
A homeless man who stole from victims of the Manchester Arena bomb attack has been jailed.
Chris Parker was hailed a hero after saying he helped, but CCTV showed him stealing from two victims and taking photos of others as they lay dying.
The 33-year-old had previously admitted stealing a purse and a mobile phone.
Jailing him for four years and three months at Manchester Crown Court, Judge David Hernandez told Parker: ""You were not the hero you pretended to be.""
The judge added: ""You were just a common thief.""
Parker pleaded guilty to two counts of theft and one of fraud after admitting using a debit card from the stolen purse.
Judge Hernandez said: ""You stole from people who were seriously injured at a time when others were either dead or dying.
""It is hard to contemplate a more reprehensible set of circumstances.""
Image copyright Greater Manchester Police Image caption The judge told Chris Parker it was ""hard to contemplate a more reprehensible set of circumstances""
Salman Abedi detonated a homemade bomb at an Ariana Grande concert at Manchester Arena on 22 May, killing 22 people and injuring many more.
CCTV footage played in court showed Parker leaning over injured survivor Pauline Healey and taking her handbag to steal her purse, as her teenage granddaughter lay dying nearby.
Hours later, Parker was using Mrs Healey's bank card at a local McDonald's restaurant.
The court heard the footage also captured him taking photographs of the victims, including one of Mrs Healey.
Prosecutor Louise Brandon showed the judge four pictures Parker took in the foyer which, she said, he later sold for £100.
She said the CCTV footage shows Parker ""taking the opportunities that presented themselves to him to take photographs and to look for and, where possible, take valuable items, such as purses and mobile telephones from the bags of the victims"".
""As the tragedy unfolded around him, when the vast majority of those who were in the arena with him were trying to save lives and care for the injured and lost, the defendant was focused on seeking to take advantage of the situation,"" she added.
Image copyright PA Image caption Salman Abedi detonated a home-made bomb in the foyer of the arena on 22 May last year
Parker also stole a mobile phone from a 14-year-old girl who was seriously hurt in the blast.
Miss Brandon said the teenager had been holding it at the time of the explosion.
Parker then picked it up, the court heard.
The prosecutor said the girl's phone rang a number of times as people tried to contact her, but Parker terminated one call with an automatic return text message which read: ""Sorry I can't talk right now.""
In a victim personal statement, the girl's mother said the theft was ""yet another blow as to how despicable people could be"".
Supt Chris Hill, from Greater Manchester Police, said: ""No matter what personal circumstances you might find yourself in, to steal from injured and terrified innocent people is deplorable.
""Parker exploited these people when they were at their most vulnerable and needed the help of those around them.""
The judge told Parker he will serve half his sentence in custody before being released on licence.
He also banned him from Manchester city centre for 10 years.
When the story of Parker's ""heroism"" was originally reported, an appeal on the crowdfunding website GoFundMe raised £52,000.
A spokesman for GoFundMe said Parker did not receive the money and it has been returned to the donors.",en
"Manchester City's Leroy Sane is ruled out for ""six or seven weeks"" with ankle ligament damage suffered in his side's FA Cup win at Cardiff.",en
"Image copyright AFP Image caption Sebastien Bras (l) took over his famed restaurant from his father Michel Bras (r) a decade ago
A prestigious food guide has allowed a top French restaurant to publicly withdraw from its listings.
Sebastien Bras's Le Suquet restaurant in southern France held Michelin's three-star rating for 18 years.
He shocked the food world in September when he decided to give up his top rating, saying he no longer wanted to cook under the ""huge pressure"" of being judged by its inspectors.
It is the first time Michelin has ever allowed a restaurant to bow out.
""It is difficult for us to have a restaurant in the guide which does not wish to be in it,"" Michelin spokesperson Claire Dorland Clauzel told AFP news agency. She said other restaurants had dropped out when chefs retired or the concept had changed.
What did Mr Bras say exactly?
The gastronomic bible's decision comes after Mr Bras, 46, spoke out about no longer being able to deal with knowing that just one below-par dish could jeopardise his reputation.
""You're inspected two or three times a year, you never know when,"" he told AFP.
""Every meal that goes out could be inspected. That means that every day one of the 500 meals that leaves the kitchen could be judged.""
Mr Bras's famed restaurant in Laguiole will not be featured in the 2018 edition of the Michelin guide to be published next Monday.
Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Million dollar idea: The Michelin Guide
What does it take to reach star quality?
Originally published in 1900 to guide French motorists to find food and lodging on the road, the Michelin guide is now exclusively dedicated to fine dining.
To be in for a chance of one of the coveted stars, restaurants first have to be in a region Michelin covers. In 2016, it made history by releasing its first-ever Singapore edition, in which it awarded stars to street stalls for the first time.
Researchers for the secretive organisation whittle down the best-reviewed restaurants by food bloggers and critics, and only after scouts draft a shortlist, do inspectors make anonymous visits to evaluate the food.
One Michelin star represents a ""very good restaurant in its category"", while two stars denotes a restaurant boasting ""excellent cooking"" that is ""worth a detour"". Three stars, however, is the ultimate honour, afforded only to those restaurants that offer ""exceptional cuisine"" that is ""worth a special journey"".
How great is the pressure on top chefs?
It is not clear what the exact recipe is to receive a recommendation or star - but chefs have been chasing these accolades for decades.
Currently, 27 French restaurants are in the elite club of holding Michelin's maximum three-star rating.
Mr Bras, who took over his three-star restaurant from his father Michel Bras almost a decade ago, accepts that by relinquishing his stars, ""maybe I will be less famous"".
Le Suquet was dubbed ""spellbinding"" by Michelin's guide and currently commands a price of up to €230 (£202; $285) for its fixed menus. Its chef says he is keen to ""start a new chapter"" in his restaurant's history, away from the ultra-competitive world of Michelin-star cooking.
He hopes he will soon be able to present tantalising dishes ""without wondering whether my creations will appeal to [the] inspectors"".
He confessed that, like ""all chefs"", he sometimes thought of fellow Frenchman Bernard Loiseau, who took his own life in 2003. Mr Loiseau took 10 years to achieve three stars and his death was widely linked to rumours that he would lose his third Michelin star.
You might also like:
While Mr Bras's restaurant is the first to be removed voluntarily from the Michelin guide, it is not the first luxury eatery to shed its stars:
In 2005, the late Alain Senderens said he'd had enough of the agony of perfection and closed his three-star Art Nouveau Paris restaurant. He is quoted as saying he wanted to do ""beautiful cuisine without all the tra-la-la and chichi""
Olivier Roellinger closed his lavish Breton restaurant three years later, saying he wanted a quieter life",en
"The middle of nowhere
Five miles from the South Dakota border in the remote northern reaches of the US state of Nebraska, a long dirt road cuts through rolling prairie grasslands and golden wheat fields towards downtown Monowi, a place you can see in its entirety by climbing any of its hay bales.
An abandoned church, whose empty pews are now filled with tractor tyres, stands opposite the decaying skeleton of a grain elevator. Weeds and brome grass twist around the rotting remnants of homes that are collapsing in on themselves. And inside a white, squat building with paint peeling off its frame, 84-year-old Elsie Eiler is flipping pork fritters and cracking open beer bottles for a pair of regulars under a sign that reads: “Welcome To The World Famous Monowi Tavern. Coldest Beer In Town!”
When Eiler’s husband, Rudy, passed away in 2004, he didn’t just leave her to run the tavern, but the whole town. Today, according to the US Census, Monowi is the only incorporated place in the US with just one resident, and Eiler is the mayor, clerk, treasurer, librarian, bartender and only person left in the US’ tiniest town.",en
"Image copyright Reuters Image caption Mr Trump was not involved in the misspelling
Tickets for US President Donald Trump's first State of the Union address later on Tuesday have had to be urgently reprinted because of a glaring typo which lawmakers mocked.
The offending tickets invited people to attend Mr Trump's ""State of the Uniom"".
""Looking forward to... State of the Uniom,"" Sen Marco Rubio tweeted, while one social media user asked: ""Will they be serving covfefe...?""
This was a reference to a tweet by Mr Trump in May, which left many puzzled.
It was an apparent typo, although the president has never publicly commented on the issue.
But this time US officials were quick to point out that the ""Uniom"" typo had nothing to do with Mr Trump.
In fact, the error was made by the Sergeant at Arms of the US House of Representatives, whose office oversaw the printing of the tickets.
""There was a misprint on the ticket,"" a spokesman for the office told the AFP news agency.
""It was corrected immediately, and our office is redistributing the tickets.""
It was not immediately clear how many tickets were affected.
Anyone looking at the flawed tickets and wondering whether the word ""visitor"" in ""Visitor's Gallery"" should not be plural instead may be relieved to know it is not a typo - that's just what they call it.",en
"Putin says US list targets all Russians
Russia's leader says the new sanctions-based list is ""unfriendly"" but he does not want to retaliate.",en
"Image copyright Getty Images
It is the blockbuster US news event of the week, with an estimated 40 million people preparing to tune in to watch President Donald Trump deliver his first State of the Union address.
The keynote speech will be an opportunity for the president to outline his agenda for the next 12 months, shape political policy and highlight past accomplishments.
""It's a big speech, an important speech,"" Mr Trump said on Monday. But what can we expect?
1. Taking credit
""The economy will be front and centre,"" White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders told reporters on Monday.
After a turbulent first year in office, President Trump is very likely to start with the positives - his tax reforms that were passed through the Senate at the end of last year. They are the most significant overhaul of the US tax code in a generation, slashing corporate and individual tax rates.
Many expect him to link these reforms with America's improving economy, roaring stock markets and lowering unemployment rates.
Plans to rebuild some of America's aging roads and other infrastructure may also get a mention, as well as demands for reciprocal trade with China.
2. Dreamers debate
Deep divisions remain between Democrats and Republicans over immigration reform, and the president is expected to push for a bipartisan solution.
At the heart of his proposal are the 700,000 young people who entered the US illegally and without documents as children, so-called Dreamers. His decision to overturn a scheme - Daca - that shields these people from deportation outraged Democrats.
The president may touch on the subject as he is hoping to draw Democrats in with a deal to overturn these plans, in return for securing billions for a proposed border wall with Mexico, and cuts to legal immigration levels.
All eyes and cameras will be trained on at least 24 Democratic lawmakers who are bringing Dreamers as their guests to watch the show, according to ABC News.
3. Presidential or Twitter Trump?
It won't be his first speech in Congress as Donald Trump addressed both houses last February, when he stated the US was witnessing a ""renewal of the American spirit"". In fact, he surprised many by adopting a more presidential and measured tone than expected.
However, just days after this speech, he returned with a claim on Twitter that his predecessor, Barack Obama, had hacked his phones during the presidential campaign.
The tone of his maiden State of the Union address remains to be seen, but many will be wondering whether he will stick to the script - or the teleprompter - like he did last time.
4. Kennedy clansman gets first response
Joseph Kennedy III, a rising star who is also part of the Kennedy political dynasty, faces the daunting task of delivering the Democrats' response to President Trump's address.
The 37-year-old Massachusetts representative rose to the spotlight after his criticism of Republican attempts to end Obamacare.
Image copyright Getty Images
His nomination as rebutter-in-chief suggests the Democrats are willing to have a younger generation represent the party. Some observers believe he will appeal to working- and middle-class voters who his party argues have been neglected by Trump.
2016 hopeful Bernie Sanders will also offer his own take on the union address on his various social media platforms.
5. The guests - and the designated survivor
As is customary, the president brings along a group of guests, sometimes called ""Skutniks"". The name comes from a man, Lenny Skutnik, who was honoured by President Ronald Reagan in his 1982 address after jumping into the icy Potomac river in Maryland to rescue survivors of a plane crash.
President Trump's guests include first responders, military veterans, a welder from Ohio who says he is benefiting from recent tax cuts and the parents of children killed by an El Salvadorean street gang, MS-13, which the president has vowed to wipe out.
Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Nisa Mickens, 15, was killed by an MS-13 gang including undocumented immigrants
Lawmakers are also allowed to bring their own guests. Dreamers, sexual assault victims and victims of gun violence are all said to be on the list of attendees.
Some prominent Democratic legislators won't be showing up at all - including John Lewis, Maxine Waters and Jan Schakowsky - in protest against the president, who has caused outrage in recent weeks over his crude remarks about African countries, leading to accusations of racism.
And at least one member of Trump's cabinet will miss the proceedings - the designated survivor, who remains in a secure location to ensure continuity of government should a catastrophic event occur.",en
"Image copyright Reuters Image caption The high-profile figures were detained at Riyadh's Ritz-Carlton Hotel
A sweeping anti-corruption drive in Saudi Arabia has generated an estimated $106.7bn (£75.6bn) in settlements, the kingdom's attorney general has said.
Sheikh Saud al-Mojeb said 56 of the 381 people called in for questioning since 4 November remained in custody.
The others had been cleared or admitted guilt and handed over properties, cash, securities and other assets, he added.
Sheikh Mojeb did not name any of those involved, but they reportedly include princes, ministers and businessmen.
In recent days, the billionaire investor Prince Alwaleed bin Talal and Alwalid al-Ibrahim, owner of the Arab satellite television network MBC, were released from detention at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Riyadh's diplomatic quarter.
Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal gives tour of luxury 'jail'
Both men insisted they were innocent, but Saudi official sources said they had agreed to financial settlements after admitting unspecified ""violations"".
Others known to have been freed include Prince Miteb bin Abdullah, a son of the late King Abdullah who sources said had handed over more than $1bn in assets; and state minister Ibrahim al-Assaf, who was reportedly cleared of any wrongdoing.
Sheikh Mojeb said he had ""refused to settle"" with the 56 individuals still being detained ""due to other pending criminal cases, or in order to continue the investigation process"".
They are believed to have been transferred to prison from the Ritz-Carlton, which will reopen to the public next month.
Last week, Finance Minister Mohammed al-Jadaan said the money recovered through the settlements would be used to fund a $13.3bn programme to help Saudi citizens cope with the rising cost of living.
The anti-corruption drive is being spearheaded by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the 32-year-old son of King Salman, who has rejected as ""ludicrous"" analysts' suggestions that it is a power grab. He said many of those detained had pledged allegiance to him since he became heir apparent in June.",en
"Poland president to review Holocaust bill
It comes after Israel condemned the plan to make it illegal to accuse Poles of a role in the Holocaust.",en
"Image copyright Getty Images Image caption There is growing anger in India against rape and sexual violence
An eight-month-old baby girl has been raped, allegedly by her cousin, in the Indian capital Delhi.
Police say she is in a critical condition after being admitted to hospital on Sunday. They have arrested the 28-year-old cousin.
Delhi Commission for Women chief Swati Maliwal, who visited the girl, described her injuries as ""horrific"".
The debate over sexual violence in India has grown after the fatal gang rape of a female student in 2012.
The rape of the baby girl happened on Sunday but came to light on Monday after local media reported it.
Ms Maliwal tweeted that the baby had undergone a three-hour operation and that her cries could be heard in the hospital.
Is this a new low for India?
Geeta Pandey, BBC News, Delhi
This distressing case of assault on an infant has shocked India and made national headlines. The extent of her injuries has horrified many and prompted them to wonder whether we have reached a new low.
But a look at the statistics, compiled by the government, shows that such crimes are not uncommon.
And worryingly, their numbers are rising rapidly.
According to the latest National Crime Records Bureau data, 2016 saw 19,765 cases of child rape being registered in India - a rise of 82% from 2015 when 10,854 cases were recorded.
A couple of years ago, an 11-month-old was kidnapped by a neighbour while she slept next to her mother and brutally raped for two hours.
And in November 2015, a three-month-old was kidnapped and assaulted in the southern city of Hyderabad.
How are people reacting to the news?
Ms Maliwal described what she heard when she visited the hospital where the baby was being treated.
""Her heart-rending cries could be heard in the intensive-care unit of the hospital. She has horrific injuries in her internal organs,"" she tweeted after visiting the hospital on Monday night.
She posted another tweet expressing her anguish.
""What to do? How can Delhi sleep today when 8 month baby has been brutally raped in capital? Have we become so insensitive or we have simply accepted this as our fate?""
She also tweeted a direct appeal to Prime Minister Narendra Modi that ""stricter laws and more police resources"" were needed to protect girls in the country.
Others joined her, expressing shame and anger over the horrific crime.
Skip Twitter post by @ashsakhuja 8 month old baby girl sexually assaulted in New Delhi this has left the country transfixed. A monstrous act needs the most exemplary punishment. When will this rape culture end? These kind of incidents severely puts a dent in my heart!! #Shame #Disgraceful — Aishwarya sakhuja (@ashsakhuja) January 30, 2018 Report
Has the situation for women improved in recent years?
The 2012 gang rape and murder of the 23-year-old student on a bus in Delhi sparked days of protests and forced the government to introduce tougher anti-rape laws, including the death penalty.
There has also been a change in attitudes - sexual attacks and rapes have become topics of living room conversations, and not something to be brushed under the carpet, our correspondent says.
However, brutal sexual attacks against women and children continue to be reported across the country.
Recently released National Crime Records Bureau statistics for the year 2016 show crimes against women continue to rise.
But what is heartening is the refusal of women to give up their fight, our correspondent adds.
Image copyright AFP
What is the scale of child rape in India?
Police recorded 19,765 cases of child rape in 2016
240 million women living in India were married before they turned 18
53.22% of children who participated in a government study reported some form of sexual abuse
50% of abusers are known to the child or are ""persons in trust and care-givers""
Sources: Indian government, Unicef",en
"The girl is in a critical condition at a hospital where she was brought in with ""horrific injuries"".
From the section India",en
"Behind the Iron Curtain, artists created strikingly trippy ads for the saga, writes Christian Blauvelt.",en
"Clarification:
- Spinach appears twice in the list (45 and 24) because the way it is prepared affects its nutritional value. Raw spinach can lose some nutritional value if stored at room temperature, and ranks lower than eating spinach that has been frozen, for instance.
Correction:
- Pollock (listed at 17) is the specific species Alaska Pollock (also called walleye pollock), which is caught in the Bering Sea and Gulf of Alaska. Atlantic pollock, by contrast, ranks lower.",en
"This video is from BBC Ideas, short films for curious minds.
We hear a lot about going ‘off the grid’ to strike that elusive work-life balance. But what if we can’t afford to jet off to a remote island for a digital detox, or to lock our smartphones in a safe for a week?
BBC Ideas spoke with Bruce Daisley, Twitter’s VP of Europe, who offers six tips to unplug just enough – so that a mini-sabbatical or an email sojourn won’t make you look like a slacker, or make you feel that you’re out of the office loop.
One strategy is even called ‘monk mode’. A morning ritual not quite as ascetic as it sounds, it involves holing up at home for 90 minutes a day before coming into the office. That way, you’re not as chained to your desk as you’d normally be, but are still putting in that needed face time.
Have a look at the video for more tactics.
Want more tips for tackling the challenges of modern living? Check out the full playlist here.
To comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Capital, please head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter.",en
"Giannis Bellonias was standing on the edge of a craggy cliffside in Imerovigli, a village built on the apex of Santorini’s vertigo-inducing caldera, waiting for sunset from the infamous lookout known as the ‘balcony to the Aegean’.
“There, right there! Look at the volcano,” the Santorini local said to me, pointing to what are in fact two small, black lava islands created by volcanic activity (and are the most recently formed pieces of land in the Eastern Mediterranean basin), called Palea Kameni (Old Burnt) and Nea Kameni (Young Burnt).
With sun-bleached, blue-shuttered houses dotted among rocks, and alabaster paved paths meandering between them, Santorini is the archetypal Greek island fantasy, an envy-inducing sight on travel brochures and Instagram posts. But beneath the glittering facade, there is a dark secret to its seductive prowess.
You may also be interested in:
• Europe’s most endangered language?
• The Greek word that can’t be translated
• The mystery behind Greece’s temples
Situated in the southern Aegean Sea, Santorini is a small, circular group of five Cycladic islands, made up of main island Thera; Therasia and Aspronisi at the periphery; and the two lava islands. All five surround a colossal, mostly drowned caldera, a bowl-shaped crater that forms when the mouth of a volcano collapses. But during the Bronze Age, approximately 5,000 years ago, Santorini was a single volcanic landmass called Stronghyle (which means ‘round’ in Greek), and one that played a crucial role in shaping history.
Around that time, a civilisation started developing on the nearby island of Crete. The inhabitants were the Minoans, named for mythical King Minos, an enigmatic and educated people, who were warriors but also merchants, artists and seafarers. The Minoans’ ancestry has been the subject of hot dispute: some believe they were refugees from Egypt's Nile Delta, while others say they hailed from ancient Palestine, Syria or North Mesopotamia. The most recent research says the Minoan civilisation was a local development, originated by early farmers who lived in Greece and south-western Anatolia. Whatever the case, there is little doubt that between 2600 and 1100BC a sublimely sophisticated and advanced civilisation thrived here. Excavations in Crete, especially in Knossos (the capital of Minoan Crete), have unearthed the remains of a spectacular palace, golden jewellery and elegant frescoes.
Over the centuries, the Minoan empire extended over the island of Rhodes (309km east of Stronghyle) as well as parts of the Turkish coast and perhaps as far as Egypt and Syria. Stronghyle (now Santorini) was an especially important outpost for the Minoans due to its privileged position on the copper trade route between Cyprus and Minoan Crete.
“The excavations in Akrotiri [a village in Santorini’s south-west] have found three-storey houses, vast and elaborate palaces, Europe's first paved roads, running water and a spectacular sewage system,” said Paraskevi Nomikou, assistant professor in geological oceanography and natural geography at the University of Athens.
Most fascinating of all, Europe’s first writing systems were found in buildings in Akrotiri and on the faces of Bronze Age rocks in the Cretan palaces of Knossos and Malia: it was here that the Minoans inscribed the first of their written words, initially in the form of Cretan Hieroglyphics and later in Linear A.
Cretan Hieroglyphs is an ancient script of around 137 pictorials that look like plants, animals, body parts, weapons, ships and other objects, and is believed to have been in use until 1700BC. Gradually, the Minoans refined Cretan Hieroglyphs down to the much more stylised Linear A, which took the linguistic helm until about 1450BC. Linear A had various numbers, 200 signs and also more than 70 syllable signs, making it more like language as we know it today (though both scripts remain undeciphered).
Rightfully, the creators of Europe’s earliest written script have been hailed as the continent’s first literate and advanced civilisation. And their intellectual achievements were only surpassed by their uninhibited way of living, celebrating the joy of life even at funerals, playing with bulls instead of killing them and living in blissful harmony with nature.
And it was nature that finally decided to kill them.
Between 1627 and 1600 BCE, the Late Bronze Eruption (commonly called the Minoan or Santorini Eruption), perhaps the greatest eruption in 10,000 years, took place on Stronghyle.
It was nature that finally decided to kill them
“Prior to the eruption, the modern caldera did not exist. Instead a smaller caldera, from a much older eruption, formed a lagoon at the north of the island,” Nomikou said. “During the eruption, titanic flows of 60m-thick landslides of volcanic material fell onto the sea, triggering 9m-high tsunami waves that smashed onto the shores of Crete.”
The waves may have reached western Turkey and even Israel.
Once the cataclysm ended, the modern caldera began to form (though conjuring into existence the modern Santorini would take several thousand years).
For the Minoans it was the beginning of the end. “The volcanic destruction decimated their commercial boats, and the huge amount of carbon dioxide that was released in the atmosphere disturbed the climate balance, destroying Minoan agriculture. All this gradually enabled the Mycenaeans [a Bronze Age civilisation that inhabited mainland Greece between 1600 and 1100 BCE] to seize their chance to put an end to Minoan independence.”
But what startles Nomikou is that, unlike the ancient Roman town-city of Pompeii, which got buried in more than 6m of volcanic ash and pumice in the wake of Vesuvius in 79AD, no bodies have ever been found on Santorini.
“By all appearances, the people of Santorini were warned in advance and escaped,” she said. To this day, no-one knows where they went.
But if Santorini destroyed Europe’s first great civilisation, it did not destroy language. Once the more-belligerent Mycenaeans ruled over the previous Minoan empire, they replaced Linear A with their own evolved version, Linear B, the first attested writing system of the Greeks, which eventually led to the Ancient Greek language that spread democracy, scientific reasoning, theatre and philosophy around the world.
More than 3,500 years after the mayhem, Bellonias is a proud owner of one of Santorini’s traditional hillside cave settlements, carved straight into the volcanic caldera.
“They are the perfect air-conditioned houses. In the winter, the volcano sends heat your way and in the summer it chills you,” he said with a grin.
Bellonias, an art collector who owns a cultural foundation with a library housing 35,000 books (including hundreds dedicated to Santorini), has been living on and off the island for almost 60 years now, having spent his childhood and formative years in Athens.
Santorini is not for the faint of heart
“It may surprise you, but what dwells in my mind is that smell,” he told me. “Every time we came to the island from Athens when I was a child – we arrived at dawn from Piraeus; the voyage was a hard labour back then – I was hit by the smell of cavallines,the excrement of the horses that hauled locals and tourists up to Imerovigli, before Santorini, well, caught on.”
“You can still smell cavallines if you sacrifice the convenience of your car,” he added, looking straight ahead at the volcanic islands, behind which fiery colours stretching from deep red to ultra-violet were brewing as the sun prepared to set.
“I have never been able to put these colours in words. I don’t think anyone who has ever lived on this island has. They might be crimson, pink, orange, red, violet... I just can’t put the sunset in words. For me it’s a visceral feeling. Santorini is not for the faint of heart.”
And he’s probably right; it did destroy Europe’s first civilisation, after all.
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"It’s no surprise that Instagram, of all social media platforms, fuels the imagination of design aficionados around the world – be they designers, writers, photographers or simply design buffs.
Its format is chiefly visual and it lends itself to highly studied compositions as well as off-the-cuff snapshots. Its rectilinear format, albeit one that can be carved into split-screens or grids, is simple, eye-catching and clean-lined.
Instagram is used by design lovers as a form of self-expression, to communicate their sensibility and inspirations to others in a highly curated way that represents their personality and taste, along, potentially, with captions relaying personal insights.
In the form of still images or videos, Instagram can showcase a designer’s work and publicise their business, and as such is a useful – and free - commercial tool. It’s also a versatile visual medium: it allows photos and videos to be presented using the Stories feature or as carousels (various images attached to one post that are revealed by swiping the first picture).
Design-led Instagram handles are used by private individuals, small businesses, magazines such as Dezeen (see @dezeen) and It’s Nice That (@itnsicethat), museums including Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York (@cooperhewitt) and London’s Design Museum (@designmuseum) as well as larger companies such as design consultancy Pentagram (@pentagram) and furniture manufacturer Herman Miller (@hermanmiller).
Via hashtags, Instagram connects peoples with a shared, very specific visual sensibility, yet in a way that is relatively organic and unpredictable. When someone responds favourably to another account’s images, they could be anywhere in the world.
“The Instagram design community is incredibly diverse, sharing everything from traditional design practices to niche art forms,” says a spokesperson for the company.
And while Twitter is seen as combative, Instagram is a safer, less judgmental space for exchanging images and thoughts in a direct, digestible way.
An image can be beautiful, relatable, funny, colourful, thought-provoking or moving – Justina Blakeney
This community has grown rapidly since Instagram was launched in 2010. By September 2017, it had 800 million users. One early adopter was Los Angeles-based designer and artist Justina Blakeney. She has a blog and online design shop called Jungalow and is author of The New Bohemians Handbook: Come Home to Good Vibes (Abrams, £19.99). Her handle, @thejungalow, now has more than 880,000 followers, and the platform is perhaps the perfect showcase for her love of juicy colour and luxuriant botanical motifs.
“I’ve been on Instagram since early 2011,” she says. “A friend touted it to me as the new Twitter for visual people. It’s my favourite social media platform because it’s visual and simple. For me, many things make an image compelling – it can be beautiful, relatable, funny, colourful, thought-provoking or moving.”
UK-based Kate Watson-Smyth has a similarly multi-faceted business operating under the umbrella name Mad About the House. A design journalist, she has a blog and her Instagram handle @mad_about_the_house (with nearly 80,000 followers) is a visual diary, mainly showing images of her home accompanied by chatty captions. The moody, forest-green walls of her home are a unifying element in her feed, which British Vogue named one of Instagram’s top 10 interiors accounts.
I can spend an hour moving things left or right by an inch or two – Kate Watson-Smyth
“I post a new picture about 7am, Monday to Friday. I use it as a micro-blogging site, sometimes giving tips on interior design,” says Watson-Smyth, also author of new book Mad About the House: How to Decorate Your Home with Style (Pavilion Books, £20), to be published in March. Her images are painstakingly composed: “I spend far too much time in pursuit of the perfect image and can spend an hour moving things left or right by an inch or two. I bought myself a very good camera last year and it has a grid on it to make sure I get my verticals vertical and horizontals horizontal.”
Interior life
Meanwhile, French interior designer Pierre Yovanovitch, who joined Instagram in 2015 and has almost 80,000 followers (on @pierre.yovanovitch), says “I immediately liked it. I was keen to get acquainted with a platform that is second nature to millennials as they are tomorrow’s influencers. I like the interactivity of the images, too – you can zoom in on them, send them to another Instagram user...”
For furniture designer and blogger Paddy Pike – who uses a Leica TL2 camera to post images of interiors and furniture he admires on his account @paddy.designs – the platform is a vital tool: “It’s infinitely more cost-effective than most advertising as it’s free. It’s only a matter of time before designers put a large portion of their advertising budget into social media.”
According to Miguel Flores-Vianna, a freelance interiors photographer, writer and author of Haute Bohemians (Vendome Press, £45), whose Instagram handle @miguelfloresvianna has 64,000 followers, “my main motivation is to share what I experience. I travel a lot, see great things. I hope my images help my followers to learn about these places too. Instagram can be a generous tool and I admire those who use it this way.”
The vividly colourful Instagram page of London-based designer Camille Walala is a reflection of her eye-poppingly vibrant work, which takes the form of huge murals and boldly patterned homeware, and is influenced by 1960s Op Art and 1980s design collective Memphis. But there’s more to it than that – it provides an insight into what makes her tick as a designer, since it includes myriad images of what influences her. “Anything I see that inspires me I'll take a photo of. I’ll upload it to Instagram and use it as part of my research,” she says.
As Instagram’s spokesperson points out: “in addition to highlighting exceptional design, successful accounts engage with and nurture their communities by sharing behind-the-scenes, personal content you wouldn’t see elsewhere.” Indeed, seen collectively, an Instagram feed can look like a designer’s private mood board – and one that can be added to ad infinitum.
To comment on and see more stories from BBC Designed, you can follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. You can also see more stories from BBC Culture on Facebook and Twitter.
If you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter called ""If You Only Read 6 Things This Week"". A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Capital and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.",en
"Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Maye Musk walks the runway at Concept Korea during New York Fashion Week
Youth is not everything - at least not 69-year-old model Maye Musk. But, as Alina Isachenka reports, is her success more than just a trend?
The recent ""Spring 2018"" shows in New York, Paris, Milan and London saw a record number of models in their 50s and 60s on the catwalk - 27, according to the industry's forum, Fashion Spot.
Does this mean that the fashion industry is finally breaking with beauty stereotypes and becoming more age-diverse?
""I've never worked as much over the past 50 years as I did in 2017,"" says 69-year-old model Maye Musk, mother of billionaire entrepreneur and Tesla founder Elon Musk.
Canadian-born Musk started modelling in South Africa at the age of 15, but it's only in recent years that her career has picked up.
Musk signed a contract with IMG Models, who also represent supermodels including Gisele Bündchen and Gigi Hadid.
She also appeared on the covers of New York Magazine, Elle Canada and VOGUE Korea. And she starred as the oldest brand ambassador for American cosmetic company CoverGirl.
A fashionable grandmother of 10, Musk believes that allowing her hair to naturally whiten has helped her career. But being a successful model comes with certain challenges.
""I have to plan all my meals and snacks every day, or the wheels come off and I gain weight,"" says Musk, a nutritionist with two masters degrees.
""It then takes two weeks of being really strict to lose it. I'm a UK size 8, so not skinny.""
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Maye Musk with her son, billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk at the 2017 Vanity Fair Oscar Party
Debra Bourne, a director of All Walks Beyond the Catwalk - an initiative that aims to promote racial, age, size and body diversity in fashion - attributes much of the success of older women in modelling to social media.
""With the growth of social media through platforms like Instagram we have seen very successful examples of where elder models have created huge audiences themselves,"" says Bourne, a psychotherapist and a former fashion editor.
This is certainly the case for Musk, who frequently posts photographs on Instagram where she has almost 90,000 followers.
""There is less competition when you're older, but also less jobs,"" says Musk. ""If you keep on working and posting your work, you can build up a following.
""Also, you can be booked directly from your photos and don't have to go to castings.""
With sweat and tears
""I think many designers believe the current focus on silver-haired models is merely a trend that will be over next year so they can return to tall, thin, young colts,"" says Rebecca Valentine, founder of Grey Model Agency, which focuses on models aged 35+.
Launched in 2015 to 'represent the new diverse older population', London-based Grey Models works with clients such as London Fashion Week and Hunger fashion magazine, and represents models including Vivienne Westwood's former muse Sara Stockbridge and 82-year-old Frances Dunscombe - one of the oldest models at the agency.
To Valentine, who is also an experienced photography agent, the emphasis on older models ""is a response to market pressure where, for the first time, this ageing group are refusing to sit down and shut up.""
""They are the generation of rebels, punks, rockers, rappers, gay-coming-outers after all, they are used to being listened to and when they are not they shout louder and demand more,"" she explains.
Image copyright Trisha Ward Image caption An older model is seen wearing Prada for Hunger Magazine
She believes the industry is catching up with the trend, but admits the process remains challenging.
""They [older models] can see that this is a tough mountain to climb with much adversity, prejudice and tradition to fight.
""It is wonderful to be surrounded by such strength and positivity at work,"" she adds.
Beauty = youth?
But not all industry experts agree on the rise of older women in fashion.
Vincent Peter, co-founder of SILENT modelling agency in Paris, says: ""You can see older women on an anti-ageing cream advertisement, but they are unlikely to be booked for high-fashion jobs.
""Occasionally they are on a catwalk but rather as an exception. I don't see any trend here.""
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Maye Musk became the oldest model to be the face of CoverGirl last September
While the fashion industry may hold on to its rigorous age frames, Musk continues to secure jobs worldwide and hopes to work well into her 70s and beyond.
""It's been amazing to see how brands, magazines and designers are focusing on real stories from older women.
""Young models love to see me on a modelling job as it gives them hope for the future. My hashtag is #justgettingstarted.""",en
"Image copyright Getty Images Image caption The three biggest private employers in the US are teaming up to offer their employees subsidised healthcare
Amazon, JP Morgan and Berkshire Hathaway are joining forces to create a healthcare firm aimed at cutting costs for their US employees.
The independent firm would be ""free from profit-making incentives and constraints"", the firms said.
They said their aim was to provide care to staff at a ""reasonable cost"".
Nonetheless, the announcement sparked fears that tech giant Amazon could disrupt the healthcare sector in the same way that it has the retail sector.
The firms are the three largest private employers in the US, collectively employing over 500,000 staff.
The three companies said they would focus on technology to provide ""simplified, high-quality and transparent healthcare"".
""Our people want transparency, knowledge and control when it comes to managing their healthcare,"" said Jamie Dimon, chairman and chief executive of JPMorgan Chase.
""The three of our companies have extraordinary resources, and our goal is to create solutions that benefit our US employees, their families and, potentially, all Americans.""
Shares in US health insurers UnitedHealth, Anthem and Cigna Corp all fell over 5% in early trading following the announcement.
Image copyright Getty Images
Analysis by BBC technology correspondent Rory Cellan-Jones:
He's the man who started with what was effectively a mail order bookshop with an email address and ended up building a vast machine that has transformed the world's retail industry.
Along the way he has sparked a revolution in enterprise computing, putting thousands of organisations into the cloud, bought the Washington Post, and is trying to rival Elon Musk as a space entrepreneur.
No wonder Jeff Bezos thinks he can do anything, including the fearsome task of finding a middle way for American healthcare, which even Donald Trump has described as ""so complicated"".
Just as with Mr Trump, many analysts have predicted over the years that Jeff Bezos and his various ventures are heading for failure or bankruptcy. B
ut the world's richest man - well this month at least - has stuck by his own vision and charged ahead. Don't expect him to give up on his audacious health plan in a hurry.
Unexpected development
""Investors have continually asked what unexpected development might spoil the strong investor sentiment towards managed care.
""Unfortunately, this seems tailor-made to fit the bill,"" BMO Capital Markets analyst Matt Borsch said.
Initially, the company's formation will be headed by Todd Combs, an investment officer of Berkshire Hathaway; Marvelle Sullivan Berchtold, a managing director of JPMorgan Chase; and Beth Galetti, a senior vice president at Amazon.
Plans for a longer-term management team and how the company will operate have yet to be decided.
""The healthcare system is complex, and we enter into this challenge open-eyed about the degree of difficulty,"" said Amazon founder and chief executive Jeff Bezos.
""Hard as it might be, reducing healthcare's burden on the economy while improving outcomes for employees and their families would be worth the effort.
""Success is going to require talented experts, a beginner's mind, and a long-term orientation.""
The US Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has forecast that the cost of a medical insurance policy would increase by 25% in 2018 and double by 2026.",en
"Image copyright PeopleImages
Workers should be given places to rest at work to help boost productivity, according to new official guidance.
Downtime at work can help employees switch off and get better quality sleep at night, Public Health England says.
Better sleep maintains cognitive function in employees, as well as cutting health risks, a blog post from the health body says.
Companies should encourage better ""sleep hygiene"", it adds.
""Sleep is not just critical to recovery, it essential for maintaining cognitive skills such as communicating well, remembering key information and being creative and flexible in thought,"" says Justin Varney, national lead for adult health and wellbeing at Public Health England, in the blog post.
GDP hit
Sleep loss costs the UK economy billions of pounds per year, according to research by Rand Corporation.
Lower productivity comes through ""absenteeism, when people don't show up to work; and presenteeism, when people show up but are working at suboptimal levels"", according to Rand researcher Marco Hafner.
People who fail to sleep between seven and nine hours a day find their performance at work deteriorates, are easily distracted, have a less effective memory and are more likely to be in a bad mood, Mr Varney writes.
There are also links between lack of proper sleep and high blood pressure, heart disease and diabetes, he adds.
The guidance, which was developed with corporate responsibility organisation Business in the Community, recommends that employers help their employees be open about any sleep-related issues they have.
Among steps employers can take is devising shift patterns that give workers time to recover between shifts, and letting workers ""unplug"" by reducing or stopping out-of-work emails.
People can also take their own steps to improve sleep, including:
Fixed bedtimes
Regular exercise
Avoiding caffeine, nicotine and alcohol late at night
Not watching TV in bed
Avoiding blue light from screens before and during sleep
Some firms already encourage employees to have downtime at work. London-based money transfer service firm TransferWise has a hammock and sauna on its premises, for example.
And accountancy company PwC, as part of a training programme on resilience, tries to help its staff improve the quality of their sleep.",en
"EPA
President Vladimir Putin has laughed off a US list of Russians named for possible sanctions, joking that he was offended his name was not on it. Even so, he branded it an ""unfriendly act"".
""I am offended, you know,"" Putin told his supporters with a smile, citing a famous line from a popular Soviet-era movie.
According to Reuters, the president said he had not seen the list so far and quoted the old Oriental proverb ""the dogs bark but the caravan goes on"" in an effort to play down the significance of Washington's report.
The US Treasury on Monday released the long-awaited list of Russian officials - led by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev - and business people singled out for sanctions under a law designed to punish Moscow for its alleged meddling in the election that brought Donald Trump to power.
The report, which features 96 people considered ""oligarchs"" close to Putin and worth at least $1bn each, does not trigger sanctions right away but may cut businesses off from world finance.",en
"Image copyright Getty Images
Volkswagen has taken responsibility for diesel emissions tests on humans and monkeys amid mounting fury.
VW chief executive Matthias Mueller said the German car maker had ""taken first consequences"" for the tests.
He said the animal testing was ""wrong ... unethical and repulsive"", Spiegel Online reported.
VW has suspended its chief lobbyist Thomas Steg, who admitted to knowing in advance about the monkey experiment, which took place in New Mexico in 2014.
He said ""what happened should never have happened, I regret it very much"" and took ""full responsibility"".
The exhaust fume tests were carried out by EUGT, a now disbanded body that had been funded by VW as well as rivals Daimler, which owns Mercedes Benz, and BMW.
Last week the New York Times reported that EUGT had exposed 10 monkeys to fumes - in an air-tight chamber - from several cars, including a diesel VW Beetle, at a lab in Albuquerque.
Image copyright Getty Images
In his first public comments on the test, Mr Mueller said: ""The methods used by EUGT in the United States were wrong, they were unethical and repulsive. I am sorry that Volkswagen was involved in the matter as one of the sponsors of EUGT.""
Germany's Stuttgarter Zeitung and SWR radio reported that 19 men and six women had inhaled diesel fumes in another EUGT experiment.
The German government has called a meeting with the car makers to seek an explanation for the experiments, which have been condemned by politicians and animal rights activists.
The controversy follows a scandal over software that falsified diesel exhaust data for Volkswagen cars.
In 2015 VW admitted having fitted ""cheat"" devices in the US that made its engines appear less polluting than they actually were.
The scandal has cost Volkswagen almost $30bn.
Last month former VW executive Oliver Schmidt was sentenced to seven years in prison in the US and a $400,000 (£293,000) fine after admitting he helped the firm evade clean-air laws.",en
"Image copyright Reuters
Two Chinese airlines have scrapped flights between China and Taiwan, amid a row between Beijing and Taipei over access to air routes.
China Eastern and Xiamen Airlines had planned an extra 176 round trips over the Lunar New Year holiday.
But Taipei has refused to authorise the flights, for which tens of thousands of people have bought tickets.
The stand-off will potentially leave passengers stranded as they try to get home for the year's biggest holiday.
In statements, both airlines said they had no choice but to abandon the flight plans.
Safety risk?
The refusal to agree to the extra flights is being seen as retaliation from Taipei, after China opened up several new air routes - which both China Eastern and Xiamen Airlines have been using.
Taiwan said China's actions risked flight safety, and went against a 2015 deal to discuss such flight paths before they came into operation.
They included a northbound route known as M503, which travels up the Taiwan Strait that divides China from the self-ruling island.
But Beijing insisted it had the right to launch the routes, including M503, which it said was ""designed by China in cooperation with the United States and other countries"" in 2007.
It said there was no danger to safety, and that the routes, which were aimed at easing congestion, would only be used for civil aviation.
Beijing added it had advised Taipei of its plans to use the route, but that it did not require consent.
The incident is the latest spat between the two.
China sees Taiwan as a breakaway province that will eventually be part of the country again, but many Taiwanese want a separate nation.
Ticket struggle
Reports suggest about 50,000 passengers will be affected by the flight cancellations.
The Taiwanese government has raised the possibility of using military planes to bring back people wanting to go home.
The BBC's Cindy Sui in Taipei says that would-be passengers wanting to travel between the mainland and the island were likely to fly via Hong Kong or Macau.
Alternatively they could choose a Chinese airline or Taiwanese airline that had not been using the new routes, though tickets would be hard to come by, our correspondent added.",en
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"Image copyright Getty Images
Would you care if a story you read in a newspaper or online was ""written"" by a machine rather than a stressed-out hack? Would you even be able to tell the difference? Welcome to the world of ""robo journalism"" - and it's coming faster than you think.
Squirrelled away at the Press Association's (PA) headquarters in London is a small team of journalists and software engineers.
They're working on a computer system that can do the work of multiple human beings, picking out interesting local data trends - everything from crime statistics to how many babies are being born out of wedlock.
As part of a trial, the PA has begun emailing selected machine-generated stories, no more than several paragraphs or so in length, to local newspapers that might want to use such material.
""We've just been emailing them samples of stories we've produced and they've been using a reasonable number of them,"" says Peter Clifton, editor-in-chief.
Sometimes human journalists will rewrite or add to the algorithms' copy, but quite often, he says, it is published verbatim. Automated stories about smoking during pregnancy, recycling rates, or cancelled operations have all found their way online and in print.
Image copyright PA Image caption The Press Association's Peter Clifton says automation could help, not harm, journalists
This ""robo-journalism"" is becoming increasingly popular throughout the world's newsrooms, as publishers struggle to cope with dwindling newspaper circulations and the switch to online advertising.
Mr Clifton hopes to be distributing 30,000 of these stories every month by the end of April. The project, called Radar - is a partnership with Urbs Media and is funded by a €706,000 (£620,000) grant from Google.
But how much of a journalist's workload can really be automated? And are jobs ultimately at risk?
Mr Clifton points out that, at this stage, the system simply amplifies the work human journalists do, some of whom are involved in developing the system's output. The automated part is currently limited to trawling through the data, something that would take humans far longer to do.
Image copyright Shutterstock Image caption Automated stories are becoming more prevalent, but at what cost?
Nevertheless, stories churned out by machines are becoming more and more common, particularly in the US.
The LA Times' earthquake alerts, based on data from the US Geological Survey (USGS), have been automated since 2014.
But the risks of such systems became clear last June when the newspaper published a report about a 6.8 magnitude quake off the coast of California - it was actually a record of a 1925 earthquake that had been published by the USGS in error.
The LA Times' automated story had appeared just a minute after the USGS published its outdated report. In this case, being first to the news was definitely a disadvantage.
The odd hiccup has failed to deter publishers, however.
The Washington Post announced last year that it would begin publishing automated stories about high school American football matches.
Image copyright Getty Images Image caption Tools of a bygone era?
""The stories will be automatically updated each week using box-score data submitted by high school football coaches,"" an article on the scheme explained.
In 2017, research revealed that thousands of stories a month are now being produced in European newsrooms with the help of algorithms.
The survey, from Oxford University's Reuters Institute of Journalism, found that many publishers are using automation to release interesting data quickly - from election results to official figures on social issues.
There are other uses, though. One agency in The Netherlands uses an algorithm to rewrite stories with simpler language, for a news wire aimed at children.
While productive, most of these systems aren't overly sophisticated, concluded author of the report Alexander Fanta, then at the Austrian Press Agency.
Image copyright PA Image caption Rupert Murdoch's News International clashed with UK print unions in 1986 over new technology
But more advanced tools are in the works.
Tencent, the Chinese tech giant behind the WeChat messaging app, recently showed off a system that could write a report about a speech automatically. Executive editor of news site Quartz, Zach Seward, had one of his own speeches at a conference written up this way - and he was impressed.
Skip Twitter post by @zseward I gave a speech in Shanghai on Thursday, and before I got off stage, Tencent had posted a not-half-bad article about it written by an AI named Dreamwriter. https://t.co/iacOFG04RT — Zach Seward (@zseward) November 19, 2017 Report
China's state news agency, Xinhua, is now reorganising itself to increase the use of AI.
But could AI really take over more tasks traditionally done by human journalists, such as phone interviews with subjects?
""There could be such a thing as a robot reporter calling up the loved ones of a deceased person and asking them how they feel,"" says Mr Fanta, referring to ""death knock"" calls - a sometimes controversial, but often important task for journalists.
Image copyright Panu Karhunen Image caption Alexander Fanta thinks machines will be an extra ""prosthetic arm"" to help journalists
""You could script that - but I guess the question is, do you really want to?""
Instead, he sees automation increasingly becoming just another tool in the journalist's toolbox - a potential ""prosthetic arm"" for reporters who, in future, might routinely script algorithms to help source stories or produce content.
But isn't there a danger that such automated news generation tools could also be used by propagandists wanted to spread false news for their own political or national objectives? There is already evidence that automation has been used for such purposes on social media sites.
""There's a genuine concern that automation facilitates these kind of attacks on free speech,"" says Mr Fanta.
The BBC does not currently publish stories that have been generated by algorithms, says Robert McKenzie, editor of the corporation's News Labs research team.
But News Labs has worked on tools to automate other parts of journalists' jobs, he says, including ""the transcription of interviews and identification of unusual trends in public data"".
More Technology of Business
Image copyright Getty Images
While AI is undoubtedly going to become more present in newsrooms, Joshua Benton at Harvard University's Nieman Journalism Lab doesn't think it yet poses a serious threats to jobs. There are far greater pressures, such as falling advertising revenues, he believes.
And he also says the really difficult and most highly scrutinised part of what professional journalists do - carefully weighing information and presenting balanced, contextualised stories - will be very hard for machines to master.
""Good journalism is not just a matter of inputs and outputs, there is a craft that, however imperfect, has evolved over decades,"" he explains.
""I'm not saying that machines will never get there, but I think they're still a pretty long way away.""",en
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"Image copyright Hush Image caption The couple first met while Mr Youngman was on holiday in Hong Kong
It was a chance encounter that set Mandy Watkins and Rupert Youngman on the path to love, marriage and ultimately setting up popular womenswear brand Hush.
It was 18 years ago when the then complete strangers met in Hong Kong. Australian Ms Watkins lived and worked in the city, while Briton Mr Youngman was there on holiday.
""I was visiting a mutual friend and was just supposed to be staying there a week,"" says Mr Youngman. ""But I met Mandy and I ended up postponing the flight back.""
The couple carried out a long-distance romance for 18 months before Ms Watkins quit her job and moved to London to be with her boyfriend.
""Somebody was going to have to move, and that somebody was going to be me,"" says the talkative 49-year-old in her strong Australian accent.
""I have an English grandmother, I'd already moved away, and it was easier this way - if he had moved to me and I decided I didn't fancy him, I'd had found that rubbish [to deal with],"" she laughs.
Thankfully it did work out for the couple, who have now been married for 12 years, and have two children.
And their online fashion brand Hush, which they set up from their London home in 2003, now enjoys annual sales of £17m.
Image copyright Hush Image caption Hush started out selling pyjamas and cardigans
Creating her own fashion brand was always the plan for Ms Watkins, who grew up in Melbourne inspired by her small business-owning mother and father.
""My parents worked for themselves running a couple of off-licences, and all their friends ran their own business,"" she says.
Upon moving to the UK Ms Watkins started concocting her business plan for Hush, but without the money to launch a start-up, she initially had to continue her career in marketing.
It wasn't until two years later when she lost her job with a UK mobile phone company that she was able to launch Hush from her kitchen table. Initially funded by her £40,000 redundancy cheque, Hush started out selling women's pyjamas and cardigans.
""The whole idea was built around feeling cosy,"" says Ms Watkins. ""I'd moved to the northern hemisphere, and I had a big three-hour round commute.
""I'd come home [at the end of the day] and it would be dark and wet, and Roo [Rupert's nickname] would say 'fancy going out?'.
""I'd be like 'are you kidding me... no thank you. All I want to do is sit in my PJs with a good book'.""
Image copyright Hush Image caption The company's website and catalogues contain lifestyle magazine style articles and reviews
Hush soon gained momentum with fashion editors who started to mention the brand, and Mr Youngman joined the firm in 2005, giving up his previous job in publishing.
The company has since expanded to sell a wide range of casual and comfortable womenswear, including knitwear, dresses, leggings and coats. Plus shoes, bags, sunglasses and other accessories.
On a day-to-day basis Ms Watkins leads the design work at Hush, while Mr Youngman, 50, is in charge of marketing, finance and IT.
To engage as much as possible with its customers, the company's website and catalogues have lots of lifestyle magazine content, such as recipes, film reviews, travel articles and celebrity interviews.
Image copyright Hush Image caption The summerwear range was slower to grow in popularity than Hush's winter clothing
This was the idea of Mr Youngman, who prior to owning his own publishing firm worked as a journalist.
""I was thinking, 'how can I make myself useful?"" he says. ""Hush is very editorial. It's fair to say we were at the forefront of that; not because I'm a genius but because that's what my background was and I enjoyed it.
""Mandy was keen for it not just to be about product, it's about the lifestyle that goes with it.""
While Hush continues to grow strongly - its annual revenues rose by 60% last year, and profits tripled - Ms Watkins and Mr Youngman admit some wrong turns and challenges along the way.
Image copyright Hush Image caption The company is based in south London
An attempt to launch a menswear range in 2009 was unsuccessful, being discontinued three years later.
""I love what I do, but designing PJs for Roo [and men] rather than for me [and women] I'm not as interested in, says Ms Watkins. ""Therein lay the problem.""
Another problem London-based Hush faced was that its lighter summer range took five years to make a profit, as customers instead preferred its snug and warm winter clothing.
While sales come mostly via its website, Hush made its first move into High Street retail last year when it launched concessions in UK department store John Lewis.
Now in 16 John Lewis stores, the plan is to roll out further concessions next year. There are, however, no plans to open standalone Hush stores.
Image copyright Hush Image caption Hush has no plans to open its own stores
""Sometimes I get really excited about the idea of a store and the idea of creating a concept,"" says Ms Watkins. ""But not that excited about when five years later it starts to look old - or the girl on a Sunday not turning up, and then having to go in myself.""
Despite competing against more well-established brands such as Jigsaw and Whistles, Hush has managed to target a niche in the increasingly competitive UK fashion market, says Global Retail Data lead retail analyst Honor Strachan.
""It has built a loyal following of 25 to 45-year-olds, while some of its more classic, yet still contemporary pieces, extend its reach to an older demographic,"" she says.
However, Ms Strachan adds that Hush faces the challenge of an increasing level of competition.
""The likes of Mint Velvet, Finery and Modern Rarity are all targeting a similar customer,"" she says. ""So Hush must continue to evolve the brand, while also raising brand awareness to become a top of mind destination among the aspirational, stylish 30-plus market.""
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Despite takeover offers, Hush remains 100% owned by Ms Watkins and Mr Youngman, and employs 71 members of staff. While the majority of the firm's online sales currently come from within the UK, the company does sell direct to customers around the world.
Ms Watkins and Mr Youngman say that 15 years after Hush was launched, and 13 years since he joined, they still enjoy working together.
""I wouldn't want to do it with anyone else,"" says Ms Watkins. ""But it does make you think what we used to talk about before Hush and the kids. Sometimes the kids say, 'oh no, not Hush again'.""",en
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