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"I forgot who I was" Lewis Hamilton admits during his first year at Ferrari but vows a comeback as pre‑season testing shows promising speed.
Facing financial pressure, Aston Martin sells naming rights of its F1 team for £50 million, providing a lifeline to weather economic headwinds.
Alpine unveils its 2026 Formula 1 car on a cruise ship, boasting a new Mercedes power unit and promising a resurgence after a tough season.
Bath & Body Works opens its own Amazon storefront, making its famed candles and lotions available for Prime delivery and signalling a shift toward e‑commerce.
Ferrari’s unveiling of a rotating rear wing during testing sparks intrigue and questions about legality ahead of the F1 season.
McLaren team principal Andrea Stella hails Ferrari and Mercedes as the favourites for the new F1 season, engaging in pre‑race mind games.
Kenyan skier Sabrina Simader, sidelined from the Winter Olympics due to funding issues, turns adversity into mentorship and brand ambassadorship.
Snoop Dogg brings star power to Swansea City, attending his first match as co‑owner and energising players and fans alike.
Norwegian club Bodø/Glimt stuns Inter Milan in the Champions League, advancing 5–2 on aggregate and making Scandinavian football history.
Iconic makeup brand M.A.C. expands to Sephora and Kohl’s, signalling a strategy shift towards mass distribution and Gen Z reach.
Clarins unveils an AI‑powered device that promises a 96% accurate foundation match, blending science with beauty to revolutionise shopping.
It seems Peter Parker might be trading his suit again. Sony hints at a Spider‑Man reboot.
A live BAFTA broadcast turned chaotic when the BBC aired a racial slur, triggering apologies, celebrity condemnation and calls for stricter editorial checks.
Kenyan actor Lenana Kariba steals hearts in the new Bridgerton episodes, bringing a local twist to the Regency hit and delighting East African fans.
Vertical integration in the pharma sector is creating monopolies that control pricing and access, threatening the availability of affordable medicines in developing markets.
Rockefeller Institute identifies affordability as the top 2026 challenge, warning that rising costs and labor shortages could lead to 22.6 million preventable deaths by 2030.
The expiration of US health tax credits triggers domestic cost spikes, signaling likely cuts to foreign aid and serving as a warning for Kenya’s own insurance sustainability.
Facing a 70% drop in external aid, Africa CDC advocates for "solidarity levies" and local manufacturing to secure the continent’s health future and end donor dependency.
Donor pressure mounts for a merger between the Global Fund and Gavi to cut costs and streamline aid, sparking fears of mission drift and bureaucratic bloat.
Kenya signs a historic $2.5bn deal with the U.S., securing health funding in exchange for pathogen access, marking the dawn of transactional "America First" health diplomacy.