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  • WeekDay AM: 10 Things you need to know this morning
    UN backs Gaza plan, ticket resale limited, and Islamic State experiments with AI

     
    today’s international story

    UN Security Council backs US Gaza plan

    What happened
    The UN Security Council has approved a US-drafted resolution endorsing Donald Trump’s 20-point plan for Gaza, clearing the way for the creation of an International Stabilisation Force (ISF), with contributions promised by several unnamed nations. Thirteen members supported the proposal, while Russia and China abstained. The blueprint gives the ISF a broad remit: securing the territory, protecting civilians, maintaining humanitarian corridors and working on the “permanent decommissioning of weapons from non-state armed groups” including Hamas. Authorisation for both the ISF and a transitional “Board of Peace”, which Trump would head, runs until the end of 2027.

    Who said what
    Hamas rejected the resolution, arguing that assigning the force responsibilities inside Gaza “strips it of its neutrality and turns it into a party to the conflict in favour of the occupation”. 

    The vote is a “breakthrough that provides a legal UN mandate” for how to “move past the ceasefire and rebuild the war-ravaged Gaza Strip”, said Farnaz Fassihi in The New York Times. But this is a plan “with big ambition and scant detail”, said Tim Lister and Nic Robertson on CNN. “It is – in short – a hornet’s nest. The sequencing will be hard to manage and the ISF will have to carry out the complex task of disarming Hamas.”

    What next? 
    The resolution also envisions border oversight, the establishment of a new Palestinian police force in Gaza and a potential route towards Palestinian statehood. Whether Hamas will engage with the political pathway outlined – especially the requirement to surrender weapons – remains uncertain.

     
     
    today’s music story

    Government to bar the reselling of tickets for profit

    What happened
    The government is preparing to outlaw the resale of event tickets for more than their original purchase price, ending years of frustration for fans and artists over inflated secondary market costs. The move, expected to be announced tomorrow, scraps earlier proposals that would have allowed mark-ups of up to 30%. Resale platforms will still be able to charge service fees, but these will be capped, and sellers will be barred from listing more tickets than they could legitimately obtain. The Competition and Markets Authority will enforce the rules, which will also cover unregulated sales on social media.

    Who said what
    The announcement comes just days after dozens of major artists urged Keir Starmer to honour Labour’s pledge to stop “pernicious” touts. But some industry insiders have warned that the move could “fuel the black market in tickets”, said David Hughes in The Independent. A spokesperson for resale firm StubHub International said: “The government’s intention to implement a price cap on the resale of live event tickets will condemn fans to taking risks to see their favourite live events.”

    What next?
    The fee cap is still being finalised. The measures could be included in next year’s King’s speech.

     
     
    Today’s terrorism story

    Islamic State experiments with AI recruitment

    What happened
    Terrorist group Islamic State has deployed the use of AI to encourage Britons to join the group. As well as creating videos and promotional material, the group has been able to instantly translate propaganda into dozens of other languages. All of this is then posted on Facebook and other social media platforms, quickly reaching large audiences before it can be spotted and removed.

    Who said what
    The move by IS to “attract new followers” with AI has “caused alarm” within UK intelligence agencies, said Robert Mendick and Martin Evans in The Telegraph.

    The group is “both personally encouraging and indirectly inciting would-be attackers in the West”, said Ken McCallum, MI5’s director general. “Al-Qaida and Islamic State are once again becoming more ambitious, taking advantage of instability overseas to gain firmer footholds.”

    Governments must treat IS as a “networked, AI-enabled insurgency” rather than a “territorial actor” if they want to contain the group, said Mohammad Taha Ali on the Middle East Forum.

    What next?
    Last week Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa visited the White House, raising hope that the country’s current government will cooperate with international efforts to fight IS.

     
     

    It’s not all bad

    Tom Cruise has finally received his first Oscar, more than 30 years after his debut nomination. The 63-year-old was honoured with a lifetime achievement gong at the Governors Awards, praised for his dedication to cinema and defence of the theatrical experience. “I will always do everything I can to help this art form,” said Cruise. Director Alejandro González Iñárritu, presenting the award, said: “Tom Cruise doesn’t just make movies, he is movies.” Other honorary recipients included Debbie Allen, Wynn Thomas and Dolly Parton.

     
     
    under the radar

    Has 21st-century culture become too bland?

    Music is blending into an algorithm-generated playlist, cinema is dominated by blockbuster movies from decades-old franchises, and the rest of the cultural scene is as flat and bland as a pancake.

    That’s according to a new book, the “lucid and entertaining – yet despairing” “Blank Space” by W. David Marx. In it he argues that 21st-century culture has become an “enthusiastic embrace of selling out”, said The Minnesota Star Tribune. But has he missed the point?

    “Omnivorism” is “one of the primary culprits” that Marx identifies. When “country, R&B, hip-hop and classic rock become interchangeable bits to sample, rather than distinct musical styles”, then “nothing stands out”. He thinks “the understandable desire to cross musical boundaries in once unthinkable ways has turned into a slurry of stagnation”.

    Yes, it feels like there’s a “confounding glut of art”, said The Economist. But Marx’s “sweeping book oversimplifies a dizzyingly messy picture” because some of his criticisms “could have been made in the past, and were”. So even if today’s “means of self-publicity are new”, the “attention-seeking grifters are not” and “there has always been more dross than gold”.

    Marx’s argument is a “dated, misguided understanding of how history works”, said Art in America. It is “rooted in a 19th-century fallacy called positivism: the belief that history moves in a clean, linear progression of successive innovations”.

    But “if history is any indicator”, those “still insisting that culture is dead” will “go down” as “conservative curmudgeons very much on the wrong side of history”, added the magazine. You might “think writers so obsessed with the past would have learned as much”.

     
     
    on this day

    18 November 1626

    St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican City was consecrated by Pope Urban VIII, 120 years after construction began to replace an existing 4th century church on the site. About 12 million people visit the basilica every year, with even more expected to pass through it during the current jubilee year.

     
     
    Today’s newspapers

    ‘Labour revolt’

    Around 20 Labour politicians have publicly “expressed concern” about Shabana Mahmood’s changes to asylum laws, says The Guardian. “Mahmood turns air blue in blast at liberals”, says The Telegraph, after the home secretary was accused of “stoking division” in the Commons. She pointed to the racial abuse that is “regularly” levelled at her, says the broadsheet. There is a “crackdown on industrial-scale touts”, says the FT, reporting that scalping costs concertgoers £145m a year in elevated prices.

    See the newspaper front pages

     
     
    tall tale

    Wheelie impressive

    A French university student has broken the world record for the longest ever wheelie, balancing on the back wheel of his bike for 93 miles straight. Oscar Delaite, 19, spent six and a half hours cycling 752 laps of an indoor track in the town of Vittel in order to set the record. The engineering student had clinched the title of longest one-handed wheelie last year. Asked why he was so devoted to one-wheel cycling, Delaite said: “Because it’s fun.”

     
     

    Morning Report was written and edited by Arion McNicoll, Rebecca Messina, Will Barker, Ross Couzens and Chas Newkey-Burden, with illustrations by Julia Wytrazek.

    Image credits, from top: Angela Weiss / AFP / Getty Images; Samir Hussein / WireImage / Getty Images; Pictures from History / Universal Images Group / Getty Images; Illustration by Julia Wytrazek / Getty Images.

    Morning Report and Evening Review were named Newsletter of the Year at the Publisher Newsletter Awards 2025
     

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