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Marquez sweeps to victory in Hungary to bolster title lead
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Australia start Women's Rugby World Cup with record 73-0 rout of Samoa
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Man City's old problems rear their head as Tottenham ease to victory
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Revenge off the menu for Ginting at badminton world championships in Paris
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Guinea's junta suspends three main political parties
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Bosnia's Serb statelet calls referendum on verdict against leader
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'Uncle Marc' Guehi credits family and Swansea for Palace starring role
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Berlin's 'Moors' Street' renamed after years of controversy
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Practice makes perfect, says 'disciplined' Jefferson-Wooden
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Bolsonaro defense says Brazil police aim to 'discredit' him
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Summer brings overtourism fears for 'Bavarian Caribbean'
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Rebrand of US culture 'fixture' Cracker Barrel sparks backlash
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Lyle Menendez denied parole decades after murder of parents
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US halts work on huge, nearly complete offshore wind farm
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Van de Zandschulp to face Fucsovics in ATP Winston-Salem final
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Firefighting games spark at Gamescom 2025
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'KPop Demon Hunters' craze hits theaters after topping Netflix, music charts
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Zverev 'on right path' after mental health reset
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Colombia vows to neutralize guerrilla threat as twin attacks kill 19
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Akie Iwai stretches lead to three strokes at Canadian Women's Open
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Five killed in New York state tourist bus crash
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Secretariat's Triple Crown jockey Ron Turcotte dies at 84
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Trump, Intel announce deal giving US a 10% stake in chipmaker
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Djokovic narrows focus in pursuit of 25th Grand Slam
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England 'just getting started' after Women's Rugby World Cup rout of USA warns Mitchell
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Trump names close political aide as ambassador to India
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Kane hits hat trick as Bayern make 'statement' in Bundesliga opener
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Fraser-Pryce aiming to end career in 'magnificent way' at Tokyo worlds
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Multiple tourists killed in New York state bus crash
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Gauff looks to future with bold coaching change before US Open
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Salvadoran man at center of Trump deportations row freed
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Dutch foreign minister resigns over Israel sanctions showdown
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Top-ranked Sabalenka seeks rare US Open repeat
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Chelsea thrash West Ham to pile pressure on former boss Potter
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Kane toasts 'instant connection' with Diaz after Bayern romp
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Ruiz goal gives rusty PSG narrow win over Angers in Ligue 1
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Salvador man at center of Trump deportations row freed
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Kane hits hat trick as Bayern thump Leipzig in Bundesliga opener
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England begin bid for Women's Rugby World Cup by thrashing United States
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Hopes dim for Putin-Zelensky peace summit
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Sinner in race for fitness with US Open title defense looms
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Jefferson-Wooden cements Tokyo sprint favourite status with Brussels win
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Dutch foreign minister resigns over Israel sanctions
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Colombia reels after twin guerrilla attacks kill 19
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'Zero doubts' as Jefferson-Wooden scorches to Brussels 100m win
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Fleetwood ties Henley for PGA Tour Championship lead
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Detained Chileans freed two days after football brawl in Argentina
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Jefferson-Wooden scorches to Brussels Diamond League 100m win
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Trump says 2026 World Cup draw set for December in Washington
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Canada removing tariffs on US goods compliant with free trade deal

Michael Parkinson: Britain's chatshow king
Michael Parkinson was a regular first port of call for reporters looking for a tribute on the passing of the rich and famous, so much so that he often picked up the phone and asked: "Who's died now?"
But it was a reflection of how many stars -- from Hollywood A-listers to sporting and actual royalty -- had appeared on his eponymous Saturday night chatshow, which first ran from 1971 to 1982.
When he finally bowed out in December 2007 after his show was revived for a second stint, "Parky", as he was often called, reckoned he had interviewed some 2,000 celebrities.
"Sinatra was the one that got away," he recalled. The great Australian cricketer Don Bradman was another.
"Otherwise, I've met everyone I have ever wanted to meet," he added.
Parkinson, whose death aged 88 was announced Thursday, won fans for his laid-back interviewing style that encouraged guests to talk, in stark contrast to some modern chatshow hosts who are often billed as the main attraction.
But it was also the calibre of people he attracted, in an age when big-name celebrities were rarely seen on prime-time television.
His assessment of his abilities was typically modest.
"I'm not bad at what I do," he told The Guardian in 2000, adding that he knew his limitations and the trick was getting the chemistry right between guests.
- Ali and Billy -
Parkinson, the son of a miner, was the quintessential plain-speaking, flat-vowelled, cricket-loving Yorkshireman.
He once opened the batting for his local club side Barnsley with the future Test umpire Dickie Bird, and tried out for Yorkshire with Geoff Boycott, later an England opener and commentator.
From school he became a newspaper journalist, moving into television in the 1960s after stints on the Manchester Guardian and Daily Express.
Highlights on his chatshow included Marlon Brando, David Niven, Richard Burton, and Orson Welles, Alec Guinness, Fred Astaire and even Princess Anne.
He also appeared on the cover of Paul McCartney and Wing's 1973 album "Band on the Run".
But he will be best remembered for his encounters with the heavyweight boxer Muhammad Ali, whom he called "the most remarkable human being I ever encountered".
"I interviewed him four times and lost on points on just about every occasion," he told the Daily Telegraph in 2016.
Parkinson once recalled that only two guests could add millions to the viewing figures -- Ali and the Scottish comedian Billy Connolly, whose early career he championed.
He sometimes secured scoops, such as in March 2006 when prime minister Tony Blair told him that he believed he would be judged by God for the divisive Iraq War.
There were lows, too, notably with the actress Helen Mirren in 1975, whom he introduced as the "sex queen" of the Royal Shakespeare Company and pursued a prurient line of questioning.
Mirren dismissed him later as a "sexist old fart" but Parkinson was largely unrepentant, assessing it was "over the top" and "of its time" yet still "good television".
- Big band and sport -
After TV, Parkinson moved to radio, briefly presenting the BBC's "Desert Island Discs", on which celebrities and others reminisce about their lives before being cast away to an imaginary desert island.
The widow of the man he replaced, however, decided he was "a rough country boy with a terrible accent", he said, and he left.
Other stints followed ranging from sport to music, particularly jazz and big band.
He also kept up his sports writing, and was president of the Sports Journalists Association.
Parkinson, who married his wife Mary in 1959 after meeting her on the top deck of a bus, earned a knighthood in 2008, becoming "Sir Michael" for his services to broadcasting.
But he admitted he was a print journalist at heart.
"I've never had that fear about what would happen if TV didn't come calling," he told The Guardian in 2000.
"That's terribly important. If they said tomorrow 'we never want to see your face on television again', it wouldn't matter a damn.
"I could still make a living and I'd probably write a book about how crazy they all were on TV, all my secrets."
A.AlHaj--SF-PST