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  • 'Our rejection of displacement is also firm and unwavering' says Jordanian foreign minister

    1:48

    Palestinians and Jordanians reject Donald Trump's call to displace Palestinians in Gaza – video

  • The US president says he wants residents to move to neighbouring countries and that he has resumed shipments of 2,000lb bombs to Israel

    1:28

    Trump suggests Palestinians leave Gaza and ‘we clean out that whole thing' – audio

  • Tesla and SpaceX boss makes supportive speech at a campaign event for the far-right Alternative für Deutschland party in eastern Germany

    1:53

    Germany too focused on past guilt, Elon Musk tells AfD event – video

  • The World Health Organization says 80% of Gaza's healthcare system has been destroyed

    1:42

    Drone footage shows scale of damage caused by Israeli army to four hospitals in Gaza – video

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Sport

  • The Italian skier Miro Tabanelli and the Japanese snowboarder Hiroto Ogiwara landed the world's first 2340 trick in their respective categories on Buttermilk mountain at Aspen, Colorado's X Games

    1:31

    'I'm nauseous': Skier and snowboarder pull off 2340 trick for the first time – video

  • Madison Keys tells reporters that 'lots of therapy' helped her find the self-belief to secure her Australian Open title

    1:21

    Madison Keys says 'lots of therapy' helped her win Australian Open – video

  • Novak Djokovic of Serbia retired during his Australian Open semi-final against Alexander Zverev after suffering an injury

    1:18

    'I tried': Novak Djokovic after retiring against Zverev at Australian Open – video

  • Commenting after his final answer at his post-match news conference, US tennis star Ben Shelton said he was 'shocked' with 'how players have been treated'

    1:24

    Ben Shelton takes swipe at ‘disrespectful’ interviewers at Australian Open – video

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Documentaries

Watch our series of in-depth films exploring in rich detail the stories behind the headlines
  • Out of 6,700 languages spoken worldwide, 40% are in danger of extinction. We join Marvin's unique Haíłzaqv community in British Columbia over two years, as they race against time to save their critically endangered language and culture for future generations.

    23:54

    Racing to keep our language alive: H̓ágṃ́ṇtxv Qṇtxv Tx̌ (We’re all we got)

  • Fell running is a demanding endurance sport and Joss Naylor ran with all his heart.  Fuelled by apple cake and Guinness, the English sheep farmer broke multiple long-distance running records. He died this year at the age of 88. His indomitable spirit and unwavering resilience live on in his inspiring athletic legacy

    16:14

    King of the Fells: Joss Naylor, the shepherd with an unbeatable running record

  • A group of young adults born during or just after the 1994 genocide against Rwanda's Tutsi people gather to find the courage to break a powerful taboo. Rwanda is one of the few nations in the world providing specialist counselling for children conceived through rape, who number 10,000 across the country. Here, course leader Emilienne, a mother, therapist and genocide survivor, helps the group to imagine a future free from family secrets and societal stigma. In a circle of supportive peers, they tell their individual stories and face their struggles together, in the hope their participation will advocate for others facing similar trauma

    20:30

    The Things We Don't Say: children of the Rwandan genocide

  • Fertility tourism is booming for single Chinese women with hopes of future motherhood. China's birthrate is at a record low, yet unmarried women are not legally allowed to freeze their eggs there. We meet Lei and Abu, as they travel to the US for the procedure, battling self-doubt and scepticism along the way. What does this mean for womanhood and parenting in modern China?

    24:14

    Frozen in Time: the motherhood dilemma for single women in China

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  • Majdi Fathi is a freelance photojournalist living and working from al-Aqsa hospital, the only functioning facility in central Gaza. He documented his past year living and reporting from the war, travelling all around the Gaza Strip, and also looking after his young family

    8:49

    My life behind the lens
    One year reporting from the war in Gaza

  • Milford Towers is a social housing estate in Lewisham, south London, slated for demolition and described by its residents as 'hell'. The residents accuse the council of ignoring them and deliberately running it into the ground. There are frequent leaks, mould infestations, fires, stabbings and violence – and perpetually broken lifts.

    7:33

    The London ‘hell’ estate fighting back: murders, fires and broken lifts

  • Samah Khalid Naji is 18, and along with six other members of her family, is living in the bombed-out remains of their house in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza. It was destroyed in October by an Israeli missile strike. The Guardian spent two days with Samah and her family in December to see the remains of their house and how they are surviving the war. She told the film-maker Majdi Fathi about why they decided this was the safest place for them to be

    6:35

    Why I stay: Living inside the ruins of my Gaza home – video

  • Kuo Chiu, known as KC to his friends, teaches urban design at Tunghai University in Taiwan. He’s also one of many of the country's citizens who practises rifle skills in his spare time, in case of a Chinese invasion.  The Guardian's video team spent time with KC to see how he is preparing.

    7:56

    The Taiwanese civilians training for a Chinese invasion – video

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  • American research group Ocearch has more than 15 years’ experience in catching, tagging and tracking great white sharks all over the world, contributing to filling the many gaps in knowledge about the ocean predator. Ocearch came to Europe for the first time in the summer, hoping to study the elusive Mediterranean great white

    12:39

    The hunt for Europe's great white shark

  • After 30 years of relentless growth and capitalism, a new trend has emerged in China. The search for a simpler, calmer life is leading some Chinese people to seek a life abroad. The trend is so popular that it’s gained its own internet buzzword: the 'run philosophy'.

    9:25

    The 'new China' in Thailand: ‘if you want hope, you have to leave’ – video

  • The Guardian’s Bethan McKernan and Ayman Abu Ramouz meet people celebrating their hard-won freedom, but also those grappling with a traumatic past

    10:16

    Inside Syria’s ‘horror city': Sednaya and a country reborn – video

  • Tech entrepreneur Justin Harrison is on a mission to fundamentally change how we experience loss, using artificial intelligence to recreate the essence of dead loved ones from their digital footprint. His company, You, Only Virtual is part of a growing worldwide 'grief tech' industry harnessing AI to attempt to replace what has naturally departed. The Guardian visited him and one of his clients to attempt to understand his aims, how realistic they may become as the technology develops – and what it says about humanity if we are to be so easily replicated digitally

    12:38

    Back from the dead: could AI end grief? – video

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Explainers

  • Guardian Australia's Jonathan Barrett breaks down the major fights currently embroiling Coles and Woolworths

    2:42

    Coles and Woolworths are fighting claims of fake discounts and a lack of competition - video

  • The Sunshine state is heading to the polls on 26 October. Queensland correspondent Ben Smee sets out how things are looking in the lead-up

    5:16

    Queensland's state election is coming up. Here's five things you need to know – video

  • Without a national measurement for poverty or disadvantage, how does a country measure whether things are getting better — or worse?

    2:26

    What does it mean to be poor? The Australian government isn't sure – video

  • Chris Stokel-Walker, a technology journalist, explains the implications of Durov's arrest for the tech sector

    4:04

    Who is the Russian billionaire founder of Telegram? – video explainer

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  • Why are your favourite products getting smaller but costing the same? From toilet paper rolls to snacks, shrinkflation is the sneaky tactic is affecting many things we buy.

    5:56

    How we're getting ripped off by hidden inflation – video

  • Pharmaceutical corporations claim high prices are the cost of innovation, but the reality is far more complicated – and troubling

    How big pharma keeps affordable drugs out of reach – video

  • Neelam Tailor traces the surprising journey of ultra-processed foods from their origins in industrial waste to today's complex ingredient lists and the regulatory loopholes that paved the way

    6:52

    How we created ultra-processed food from industrial waste – video

  • Mark Townsend looks at how countries have moved away from the EU's founding commitment to human rights

    How Europe closed its borders and betrayed its values – video

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  • On a non-stop road and rail trip, John Harris and John Domokos go from Rishi Sunak's well to-do seat in Yorkshire via County Durham and Lanarkshire to arrive amidst the new-town community spirit of Milton Keynes on election day. Everywhere people are holding places together: will a victorious Labour party soak up those vibes?

    18:49

    So what does the future look like now? | Anywhere but Westminster - video

  • In the third episode of a new series of Anywhere but Westminster, John Harris and John Domokos travel around the West Midlands, and find a fascinating political mixture: hesitant Labour voters, a new crop of independents focused on Palestine and local cuts  – and, amid deep social problems, lots of people who think the election hardly matters. Here, it seems, is the reality that all those opinion polls get nowhere near

    16:24

    Here's what you find under Labour's 'landslide': doubters, abstainers and independents - video

  • In the latest episode of Anywhere but Westminster, John Harris and John Domokos go to Woking, Guildford and Aldershot. Most of England's south-east used to be loyally Conservative - now, however, people in the "blue wall" are struggling, cuts are biting, and Toryism today is leaving younger voters behind.

    15:51

    Why are the Tories collapsing? These true-blue towns know the answers - video

  • In the first video of a new series of Anywhere but Westminster, John Harris and John Domokos revisit Stoke-on-Trent, the once-loyal Labour city that went totally Tory in 2019. Has 'levelling up' money made up for swingeing local cuts? Will Labour win again? And what do people working hard to turn the place around think  about the future? 

    15:30

    This Labour city backed Brexit and went Tory: what did it get in return? - video

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  • The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale and Oldham who wanted to highlight the realities for women in the asylum system across Greater Manchester. Supported by the Elephants Trail, the group met women stuck in the asylum backlog, women traumatised by detention and women struggling to find housing. They were all volunteering in their communities, while reckoning with a hostile climate towards refugees and asylum seekers. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain

    11:58

    Our lives in the UK asylum system: 'the power of fear' – video

  • The Guardian has been working with a group of community reporters in Rochdale in greater Manchester, who turned the lens on a benefits system that they have seen unfairly penalising vulnerable people in their town. The group of reporters from the Elephants Trail met friends, family and others in the community trying to navigate the system, and consider how they can use those stories to advocate for change across the country. This film is part of a collaborative video series called Made in Britain.

    13:37

    Britain's broken welfare system is leaving our community on the brink – video

  • The Guardian was working with a community reporting team called the Elephant’s Trail in Rochdale on a series about their town when a byelection was called.  The contest quickly plunged into chaos after the Labour party and the Green party withdrew support for their candidates and the canvassing was dominated by smaller parties. But how did this affect the voters? The team hit the streets and found evidence of apathy, concerns about homelessness and a desire for politicians who are committed to changing their community for the better 

    4:09

    A view from Rochdale: ‘Democracy has gone out of the window’ – video

  • Homegrown was a grass roots community group that stood in the middle of a new housing development in rapidly gentrifying Tottenham in north London. The group was led by Rose and Emma whose message to the young people they helped was to be their best, and never give up. So when they were told they had to leave, there was only one thing to do: occupy.

    21:41

    Occupy Tottenham: a community defends its home - video

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