Emine Saner
Emine Saner is a feature writer for the Guardian
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Marina Hyde with her take on Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson’s surreal US presidential bid; Emine Saner meets the sociopath who learned to behave – and found happiness; why Gen Z has fallen in love with Sex and the City; and do our political opponents really hate us?Podcast
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How did a small, relatively poor country become an educational powerhouse? Creativity, autonomy and a deep embrace of the digital age
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In 1974, a group of families sought like-minded people to live together. Today, Old Hall in Suffolk is still home to some of its original members – including those who have returned with their own children
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His album and single are at No1 in the UK, he plays to enormous crowds who sing along to every word, and he was up for a Grammy this year. So why is he still afraid of failure?
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In new panel show Out of Order, three of the UK’s best female comedians are defying bigotry – with big-hearted, chaotic comedy. She and her team captains, Katherine Ryan and Judi Love talk about friendship, filth and twerking
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Research has found that couples who argue (and get over it) are more likely to stay together than those who avoid conflict. But how can you argue safely?
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Inside the Taylor Swift deepfake scandal: ‘It’s men telling a powerful woman to get back in her box’
AI-generated porn, fuelled by misogyny, is flooding the internet, with Taylor Swift the latest high-profile casualty. Victims say social media platforms are failing to take it down – will they now start taking it seriously? -
Long live the Tory Fringe! John Crace reviews last week’s conservative ‘comedy hour’; Johannes Radebe on how he fought the bullies - and became a Strictly superstar; and Zoe Williams reveals how to spot a liar in ten easy stepsPodcast
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Her role in David Nicholls’s One Day looks set to make her a megastar – even though she almost refused to audition. Ambika Mod talks romance, racism and making her 13-year-old self’s dream come true
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When he began performing, as a boy in South Africa, he was told he would never win. But Radebe overcame homophobia and homelessness to become a beloved dance pioneer
If you live to 100, you might as well be happy: what poverty, jail and war have taught author Rhee Kun Hoo