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Emma Raducanu slams Wimbledon for electronic line calling

It’s clear that Emma Raducanu was not happy about Wimbledon’s electronic line calling on Friday.
During her tightly contested defeat to top seed Aryna Sabalenka in the third round, the 22-year-old called out to the chair umpire over a line call, asking, “You saw it out as well, right?”
The controversial call, which Raducanu questioned, was a first serve by Sabalenka at 2-4, 15-0, which did appear to miss the line upon replay.
The serve ultimately led to Sabalenka going up 30-0 in a pivotal set during the match, helping her stage a comeback after going down early.
“That call was, like, for sure out,” Raducanu said in her press conference after the match. “It’s kind of disappointing, the tournament here, that the calls can be so wrong, but for the most part, they’ve been OK.
“It’s just, like, I’ve had a few in my other matches, too, that have been very wrong. So yeah, I don’t know. Hopefully, they can fix that.”
Raducanu ultimately lost to Sabalenka 7-6, 6-4, and showed her frustration after the match.
“I don’t think I’ve really had a loss like this in a long time, where I feel like I maybe had chances and didn’t take them,” said Raducanu. “I think usually I’m pretty good at converting.”
“I’ll probably find it tough to sleep tonight,” she added. “It’s going to take me a few days to process. But at the same time, it really motivates me.
“It could be a good thing that I’m like, ‘OK, I want to get straight back to work.’ I want to solidify my game so that in the big moments I can back myself a little bit more.”
As for Sabalenka, she’ll face off against Elise Mertens on Sunday in the round of 16.
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Twenty One Pilots: Breach Album Review

This is Twenty One Pilots in its purest form. Opener “City Walls” is a five-minute litmus test, with gigantic “oh-woah” hooks, soaring choruses, fuzzy bass tones, overdriven drums, and yes, rapping. It’s also pure fan service; the deeply ludicrous $1 million music video frequently calls back to past work and the song itself interpolates their single “Holding on to You.” It’s fascinating to hear a Christian-adjacent band reprise the words “entertain my faith” as the video depicts Clancy’s submission to a religious cult, but this isn’t the band to handle those implications.
Having once contributed to the Suicide Squad soundtrack, Pilots now convey the bubbly energy of James Gunn’s Superman reboot. You don’t need to know about the Bishops’ necromancing powers to enjoy the frenetic snowboarding-game breakbeat and maniacal vocal processing of “The Contract.” There are dumb-clever antics throughout: “Garbage” teases an uplifting “Something Just Like This” piano part before Joseph blurts out “I feel like garbage!” The song “Rawfear” speeds up on the line “never slowing down,” then abruptly returns to the original tempo—because he can’t escape the cycle. There’s hardly a breather until “Cottonwood,” a loving tribute to Joseph’s grandfather, and the meditative closer, “Intentions.” There’s also “Downstairs,” a dolled-up demo from their pre-major label days, but the vestigial self-seriousness feels out of place on an album like this.
The most engaging motif in the Pilots catalog remains Joseph’s complex relationship with his fans. On Vessel standout (give or take a reggae break) “Guns for Hands,” he felt responsible for their mental health as his own deteriorated. On Trench ballad “Neon Gravestones,” he cautioned them not to glorify his death should he one day lose his battle with depression. The tension comes to a head on Breach. Earlier this year, somebody briefly stole a kick drum from Dun’s kit at a concert, and throughout “Center Mass,” the band samples another fan’s cautionary “I really don’t think you should take that!” On “Drum Show,” seemingly in response to this fiasco, Joseph pays tribute to his burnt-out bandmate, who’s “stuck between a rock and a home, two places he does not wanna go.” When Joseph says, “This has not been interesting in a while” on “One Way,” a fundamentally earnest band fully admits to disillusionment.
Twenty One Pilots’ pure pop songs—like Scaled and Icy’s “Shy Away”—are often their best, which makes their ongoing attempts at hip-hop all the more frustrating. Joseph once gave Zane Lowe a playlist of his greatest influences, and not only was Ben Gibbard on it twice, the only rapper was Matisyahu. On Breach, they sound like they maybe gave GNX a passing listen (the call-and-response on “Center Mass” is very “Reincarnated”), but their engagement with the genre remains shallow. No one has ever sounded less convincing than Tyler “gangstas don’t cry, therefore I’m Mr. Misty Eyed” Joseph singing about “empty Uzis” on “Rawfear.” But when they get the balance right, they wind up with some of their best material to date: “Mass” starts with a suitably moody verse over a two-chord vamp and ends with a genuinely exciting double-time outro.
Right now it’s hard to imagine a cultural re-evaluation for Twenty One Pilots, the way people who grew up in the ’00s eventually gave My Chemical Romance and Linkin Park (both obvious influences) their flowers. But seeing the likes of MGK attempt a similar style without the same ambition puts the duo’s merit into perspective, and at least Pilots are thoroughly committed to their uncool niche. They’d be more respected if they did away with the rapping entirely, but that would fundamentally change what this band is and why it got this far. As for poor Clancy, he fails to break the cycle and, in a Matrix Reloaded-esque twist, the rebels must find another “Clancy” to continue the fight. It’s a surprisingly sobering ending: No one here truly transcends their limitations, but it’s only a matter of time before they try again.
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Jeff Hiller Win & ‘White Lotus’ Shut Out

Many of the 2025 Emmy Awards categories went to the projected frontrunners, like The Studio and Adolescence dominating most comedy and limited series races including Outstanding Comedy Series and Limited Series, respectively. Still, there were several upsets and surprises, including the nail-biting Outstanding Drama Series victory for HBO Max’s The Pitt in the final minutes of Sunday’s telecast.
Apple TV+’s Severance was the most nominated program this year with 27 noms versus 13 for The Pitt, giving it the edge in the top drama race. But the medical drama, done on a modest budget — fraction of the cost of the high-concept Severance — had momentum, and last weekend landed the Casting for a Drama Series Emmy alongside The Studio and Adolescence in the comedy and limited series fields. The casting Emmys are considered a relatively reliable predictor of the top series winners.
The Pitt‘s Katherine LaNasa brought another surprise win tonight for Supporting Actress In a Drama Series. She took the Emmy for playing Charge Nurse Dana Evans on the medical drama in her first nomination, beating out four The White Lotus performers, led by Carrie Coon, who had been projected by many pundits to win. (In another surprise, White Lotus was shut out completely tonight.)
Similarly, Severance‘s Britt Lower won for Lead Actress In a Drama Series. She won over Oscar winner Kathy Bates, a 14-time nominee and two-time Emmy winner who had been tipped to triumph for her title role on the CBS drama Matlock.
Adolescence‘s Stephen Graham, a three-time Emmy winner tonight, delivered a mild surprise in the Lead Actor in a Limited Series category. The Penguin’s Colin Farrell had been tipped as a possible winner, but the category had largely been considered a toss-up between the two.
While LaNasa, Lower and Graham still factored into a number of predictions as possible winners, Jeff Hiller of HBO’s Somebody Somewhere did not.
In one of the night’s biggest shockers, Hiller prevailed over the likes of The Studio‘s Ike Barinholtz, Shrinking‘s Harrison Ford and The Bear‘s previous Emmy winner Ebon Moss-Bachrach.
“I feel like I’m going to cry,” a speechless Hiller said onstage.
The drama writing and directing categories also delivered surprises, with neither going to the two series leading the drama series Emmy race this year, Severance and The Pitt.
While Dan Gilroy‘s writing win for Disney+’s Andor over said dramas was considered a surprise, Adam Randall‘s directing victory for Slow Horses was a real shocker.
“I think a lot of people were surprised, it was unexpected,” Gilroy said on stage while accepting his award.
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Emmys 2025 Winners: ‘The Studio’ Dominates With 13 Wins, ‘Adolescence’ and ‘The Pitt’ Win Top Honors – Variety

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