
-
Malaria deaths soar in shadow of Ethiopia conflict
-
Plan B: Climate change forces Pakistan beekeepers to widen pursuit of flowers
-
Trade wars intensify as US tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China take force
-
TSMC announces $100 billion investment in new US chip plants
-
7-Eleven says Couche-Tard takeover still under consideration
-
Trump to pledge new 'American dream' in Congress speech
-
Plan B: Pakistan beekeepers widen pursuit of flowers
-
Asian stocks tumble after Trump tariffs
-
US tariffs on Canada, Mexico imports come into effect
-
Gilgeous-Alexander stars again for rumbling Thunder
-
Japan's worst wildfire in half a century spreads
-
Work, housing, marriage: issues at China's annual political meetings
-
Asia stocks tumble after Trump tariffs
-
Starmer puts UK back on world stage as 'bridge' over Ukraine
-
'Absolute underdogs': Bayern irked by outsiders tag against Leverkusen
-
Prolific PSG appear a formidable prospect ahead of Liverpool showdown
-
Trade war casts pall as China's leaders meet
-
Adrien Brody breaks longest Oscars speech record as ratings dip
-
7-Eleven shares plunge on reported plan to reject takeover
-
Walkouts on global disarmament treaties
-
Trump's China tariffs eclipse first term, more hikes likely: analysts
-
Arab leaders gather to hash out alternative to Trump's Gaza plan
-
Marking Ramadan at Canada's 'Little Mosque on the Tundra'
-
Tunisia opposition figures go on trial on state security charges
-
US Supreme Court to hear Mexico's suit against US gunmakers
-
'A slap': US Ukrainians stunned by Trump-Zelensky showdown
-
Fact-check: Trump's claims about Canada
-
'Terrifying': Canadian auto workers dismayed at looming US tariffs
-
Trump says Canada and Mexico cannot avert tariffs, hikes China levy
-
Trump pauses aid to Ukraine after Zelensky clash
-
60% of adults will be overweight or obese by 2050: study
-
Paris return 'too soon' for Liverpool fans traumatised by 2022 Champions League final
-
Bitcoin value dives as uncertainty grips market
-
Adrien Brody breaks longest Oscars speech record
-
SpaceX calls off Starship test flight at last minute
-
Historic Global Anti-Scam Summit Convenes in London to Combat Escalating Online Fraud
-
MLS's San Diego vow to tackle homophobic chanting
-
Trump puts US allies on notice - power comes first
-
Ionescu invests in NWSL's Bay FC
-
Nottingham Forest beat Ipswich on penalties to reach FA Cup quarters
-
Daughters scale Argentine peak, retrieve dead mountaineer dad's photos
-
US stocks fall on Trump tariff concerns, European defense firms soar
-
Juventus see off Verona to stay in Serie A top four
-
Trump warns will not 'put up with' Zelensky
-
LA Times adds AI-generated counterpoints to opinion pieces
-
Trump says no room for Canada and Mexico to avert tariffs, hikes China levy
-
What are China's annual 'Two Sessions' meetings?
-
Trade and growth on agenda for key China meeting
-
AI firm Anthropic valued at $61.5 bn in funding round
-
Trump suggests Zelensky 'won't be around very long' without deal

Adrien Brody breaks longest Oscars speech record as ratings dip
Best actor winner Adrien Brody broke the record for the longest-ever Oscar acceptance speech Sunday, as a lengthy gala suffered a small ratings dip, reaching some 18 million people on US network ABC and streamer Hulu.
Despite promising to be "brief" on multiple occasions during his marathon monologue, "The Brutalist" star Brody clocked a whopping five minutes and 40 seconds on stage, surpassing an eight-decade-old record.
The ceremony itself, in which low-budget indie "Anora" took five Oscars including best picture, overran to nearly four hours.
British star Greer Garson, who won best actress for "Mrs Miniver" in 1943, had held the record with a five-minutes-and-30-seconds speech, according to the Guinness World Records website.
The Academy introduced time limits and the practice of "playing off" winners with music following Garson's speech. But Brody on Sunday ordered the orchestra to stop.
"Please, turn the music off. I've done this before," said Brody, who won best actor in 2003 for "The Pianist."
"It's not my first rodeo, but I will be brief. I will not be egregious, I promise," said Brody, before continuing for another 90 seconds.
The preliminary 18.1 million US audience figure, shared by ABC on Monday, includes Hulu. The Oscars went live on streaming for the first time, with technical glitches meaning some online viewers missed the final prizes.
It means a recent three-year streak of improved Oscars ratings has ended.
Last year's comparable early ratings figure was 19.5 million, for a gala that saw Christopher Nolan's blockbuster "Oppenheimer" dominate prizes, and featured live musical performances from smash hit "Barbie."
During the Covid-19 pandemic, Oscars ratings sank as low as 10.4 million.
The Academy Awards telecast regularly topped 40 million just a decade ago.
- 'Acid and affection' -
Sunday night's show received generally positive reviews.
Variety called the 97th Academy Awards "successful in more ways than not," and said Conan O'Brien "absolutely rocked his debut at host, walking the perfect line between acid and affection."
The Los Angeles Times declared the show "generally navigable in spite of a pointless excursion into a dancing-singing salute to James Bond films."
Indiewire called it "one of the best Oscars telecasts in years," but The Hollywood Reporter found the evening "unstable" and "uneven."
Brody's extended speech was perhaps appropriate for "The Brutalist," a three-and-a-half hour drama that features an intermission.
Brody plays a brilliant architect, haunted by the Holocaust, who moves to the post-World War II United States to begin a new life.
The actor used his speech to thank more than a dozen people by name, including his mother and father, "Brutalist" director Brady Corbet, co-stars Guy Pearce and Felicity Jones and his girlfriend Georgina Chapman.
In a bizarre moment on his way to the stage, Brody paused and removed chewing gum from his mouth, tossing it to Chapman, who caught it.
"I forgot I was chewing gum... 'I've got to get rid of this somehow!'" Brody later explained, in a post-victory interview Monday on "Live with Kelly and Mark."
Brody concluded his speech with a more serious note.
"If the past can teach us anything, it's a reminder to not let hate go unchecked," he said.
O.Krause--BTB