cultureCultureSmart TV companies are making the BBC pay for prominenceBy Gian M. VolpicelliCultureI binged AppleTV+ and can confirm it’s odd, angsty and horny as hellBy Sophie ChararaCultureReddit's r/LegalAdviceUK has become a rental crisis warzoneBy Jack NeedhamCultureHow the BBC brought the daemons in His Dark Materials to lifeBy Stephen KellyCultureWhy Joker masks are the perfect political protest symbolBy Laurie ClarkeCultureThe Game of Thrones showrunners leaving Star Wars is a smart moveBy Angela WatercutterCultureTikTok has broken rap musicBy Emma MaddenCultureHBO's 'Watchmen' totally misses the point of WatchmenBy Matt KamenCultureCall of Duty wants to make you feel bad for killing people. It doesn'tBy Will BedingfieldCultureInstagrammers are trying to get high by taking icy showersBy Sabrina WeissCultureHow BoJack Horseman broke animation's tedious bro cultureBy Laurie ClarkeIdeasRuPaul's Drag Race UK shows why young people don't watch the BBCBy James TempertonCultureMartin Scorsese thinks Marvel movies are garbage. Is he right?By Amit Katwala and Will BedingfieldBusinessCrack addicts are turning YouTube chiropractors into huge viral starsBy James NolanCultureEl Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie removes any doubt about what became of Walter WhiteBy Amit KatwalaCultureThis AR designer turns Instagram and Snapchat filters into fine artBy Anna BehrmannCultureBlizzard and esports can't win the battle against Chinese censorsBy Lu-Hai LiangCultureMore radio, more live: where Apple Music's headed in 2020By Sophie ChararaCultureWhy we’re destined to sympathise with anti-heroes like the JokerBy Will BedingfieldCultureWIRED Book Club: We're reading Super Pumped, by Mike IsaacBy Victoria TurkCultureWhy sport is the next frontier for TwitchBy Victoria TurkCultureThe best (exclusive) Xbox One gamesBy WIRED InsiderScienceForget sex robots. You'll be intimate with AI sexbots insteadBy Emma Grey EllisCultureAre ultra-short episodes the future of streaming? Hollywood thinks soBy Alex Lee, WIRED UK More Stories