Friday, November 14, 2025

Creating liberating content

Our dogs’ diversity can...

Victoria GillScience correspondent, BBC NewsVictoria Gill/BBC NewsDomestication: An ancient mysteryDogs were the first...

U.S. Government Shutdown Ends...

Congress on Wednesday ended the longest government shutdown in US history --...
HomeEntertainment & CultureHow Prince William...

How Prince William stands ‘shoulder to shoulder’ with Donald Trump

Prince William has successfully cultivated Do and Trump with his charm, says an expert.

The Prince of Wales, who met Trump last week on the re-opening of Notre Dame, exuded sheer confidence that mesmerised the new head of America.

Speaking about William’s charm, Dr Tessa Dunlop told the Mirror : “All hail the Prince Williamof Wales, the only man really standing shoulder to shoulder with America’s bolshie new president-elect, Donald Trump, in a wet Paris this weekend. Royal commentators gushed over the dawn of a new special relationship, with the future King sealing the deal perched opposite Trump on the British ambassadors’ golden upholstery.

She added: “Height wasn’t the only in-built advantage that William enjoyed; he exuded the untouchable confidence that comes with future kingship. Unlike Macron and Zelensky, who were subjected to Trump’s ostentatious grandstanding and power pummels, William received a shoulder pat and a paternal compliment – ‘good man, this one’. The American’s casual platitude a tacit acknowledgment that William has something even Trump can’t match – the magic of royalty.”

“Observers have commented on the unlikely bromance between a prince who helped decorate a ‘kindness tree’ outside Westminster Abbey on Friday evening and an unrepentant president who wants to drill his way to making America Great Again,” she noted.

Continue reading

Sarah Ferguson is moving countries after Royal insult

Sarah Ferguson is ready to move forward with her life, says an insider. The former wife...

Our dogs’ diversity can be traced back to the Stone Age

Victoria GillScience correspondent, BBC NewsVictoria Gill/BBC NewsDomestication: An ancient mysteryDogs were the first animals to be domesticated. There is evidence that humans have been living closely with canines for at least 30,000 years. Where and why that close association...