When an experienced American business journalist asked Vladimir Putin a question on a panel about energy issues, he decided to patronise her in response.
A YouTuber spotted an “Intern” with a Ferrari 488 Spider worth R4,5 million, who it turns out is the cousin of Syrian President Bashar Assad and son of Syria’s richest man Rami Makhlouf.
On Monday at the Defense Development Exhibition, North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un gave a speech and showed off some serious lethal weaponry.
The official account for the Russian government wished President Putin for his 69th Birthday with an outlandish photoshopped image and an embarrassing hashtag.
Current Bonteheuwel ward councillor Angus McKenzie’s campaign ad involves ‘Ghostbusters’, questionable toilet hygiene, and violence.
Spare a thought for the city that is about to take the record from Buenos Aires as the city that has spent the most cumulative days under stay-at-home orders.
With the Digital Vibes scandal hanging over the ANC ahead of the elections on November 1, President Ramaphosa has taken an interesting approach to dealing with those responsible.
A new bill is being introduced that will force companies to be more transparent about the difference between the lowest- and highest-paid employees.
At Monday’s trade fair promoting French gastronomy near Lyon, the French president was pelted with an egg that bounced off his head.
Last week, the UK announced that South Africa would remain on its travel ‘red list’. The reasoning doesn’t hold up under basic scrutiny.
Newsmax host Grant Stinchfield didn’t take kindly to Iraq War veteran Joe Saboe pointing out some inconvenient truths.
Yesterday, the US president announced a trilateral security partnership with Britain and Australia, called Aukus. It did get a little awkward with Scott Morrison.
DA MP Mat Cuthbert claimed the robbery was similar “to a James Bond movie scene” and believed that sensitive information had been stolen.
Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko is notoriously bad at accepting criticism, and don’t you dare make fun of his hair (or lack thereof).
Giuliani’s speech at a 9/11 commemoration dinner on Saturday was a total trainwreck, and included impersonations of the Queen and a strange Prince Andrew segment.
People in Istanbul are now finding out that suspended ANC secretary-general Ace Magashule is not to be trusted.
On November 1, South Africans take to the polls for our local government elections.
JP Smith, the City of Cape Town’s mayoral committee member for safety and security, is being widely criticised for comments he made yesterday.
Has there ever been a more obvious ending to a saga than the announcement that Jacob Zuma has been granted medical parole?
Boris Vishnevsky, a well-known opposition politician, is the latest target of political cosplay that aims to derail the vote in an upcoming municipal election.
One of New Zealand’s ministers learned the hard way that odd-shaped veggies and children can be a dangerous mix.
One can always rely on the ANC to soil its own bed, and that’s very much the case with the local government elections just around the corner.
Google around, and you’ll find the average knee guard goes for somewhere between R100 and R300. Not if you’re buying on behalf of Eskom, though.
For a limited time, to help arm citizens with the information they need to better understand how this industry operates, ‘Influence’ is free to watch.
Yesterday, dishonourable members of Armenia’s parliament traded punches, threw objects at one another, and generally behaved in a manner that wouldn’t have looked out of place at one of our State of the Nation addresses.
As Jacob Zuma’s legal fees continue to mount, the former president’s foundation has sent out a “humble request” for donations.
While addressing the country on Sunday regarding a new outbreak, New Zealand’s COVID-19 response minister put his foot in it.
The US exits Afghanistan after 20 years of war, with little to no success to show for it. John Oliver took an excellent look at how things reached this point during Sunday’s show.
The scenes that played out earlier this week at Kabul’s airport will live in infamy.
A South African contractor staying in a camp at Kabul’s airport has described the “apocalyptic scenes” he witnessed.