Enjoy this week's features and longer reads
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LIFESTYLE & CURRENT AFFAIRS | Leaving home and making your own way was once a given, but those aged between 18 and 29 and still living with their parents is now at its highest ever. Olivia Petter catches up with three women 'priced out of their own lives' to discover how it feels to miss out on the grown-up milestones that other generations took for granted | 'I feel like I don't have a private life because my parents know what I'm doing from when I wake to when I go to sleep,' says Milly, who has been unable to move out of her parent's home due to financial reasons | |
| The state's Republican governor Ron DeSantis has waged war on the rights of minorities, so transgender woman Diana Thomas feared that Florida might prove a hostile holiday destination. But then she arrived in Key West to find the residents and hoteliers had rolled out the red carpet... | Diana Thomas went in search of a destination that would suit a solo traveller | |
| The dawn of streaming turned us into Netflix nation, eyes glued to a dazzling line-up of shows to watch whenever we wanted, writes our chief TV critic Nick Hilton. Now, with scheduled smash hits such as 'The Traitors' and 'Mr Bates vs The Post Office', the watercooler moment is well and truly back. And it's got the big boys of the small screen tuning in to a very real threat from the terrestrial world… | The Traitors and Mr Bates show that appointment TV is back – streamers watch out | |
| Forget the baseless claims of bias made by the hapless culture secretary Lucy Frazer. Keir Starmer must resist the temptation to go for the same approach. It's time to free the BBC, writes Alan Rusbridger | |
| After 13 years of Tory rule, John Major defied the opinion polls to win a shock election victory. Surely Sunak has a chance do a 1992? No, says Andrew Grice, he's hurtling towards 1997... | |
| In the new Oscar-tipped drama, Paul Giamatti plays an off-putting curmudgeon with a bad stench. The success of 'The Holdovers' lies in its cruelty, writes Louis Chilton – there are few films out there this willing to plumb the depths of pity | |
| They reached no view on whether there has been genocide in Gaza – nor did they call for a permanent ceasefire – but they have treated the case with the seriousness it deserves, writes Sir Malcolm Rifkind | | | | Subscribe today to enjoy: | - Advert-free reading across independent.co.uk
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