Now You See Me 3: A magical return

More than a decade after the Four Horsemen first dazzled audiences with their blend of illusion and high‑stakes heists, the Now trilogy has finally reached its third act. Now You See Me: Now You Don’t arrives as both a continuation and a celebration of what made the franchise iconic.

RAYE performs a standout set at the O2 Arena

I’ve been a RAYE fan for more than ten years, back when she was the name tucked inside songwriting credits, the type of artist you’d play for friends with a quiet insistence that she was going to be huge one day. When she stepped on the stage at the O2 arena this year, not as a support act, not as an unknown backing vocal, but instead as the headlining show for her own tour, I realised that she wasn’t my little secret anymore, and I couldn’t think of anyone else more deserving of her success. The atmosphere before she came on wasn’t the usual pre‑show buzz; it felt more like a collective breath being held.

Coraline: Why this creepy classic still has us button-eyed

Over fifteen years ago, a little blue-haired girl crawled through a secret door and Henry Selik took the story and turned it into one of the best pieces of cinema. Released in 2009, Coraline was marketed as a children’s film, but let’s be real, it’s the type of stuff from some twisted adult therapy session. With its incredible stop-motion animation, button-eyed doppelgängers, and a villain who’s basically a spider-mum from hell, this film has aged into a cult classic. As its sweet sixteen approaches, fans are still dissecting every frame (me being one of them). So let’s dive into the theories and why Coraline feels weirdly relevant in 2025.