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Djokovic fights through tough Roland Garros opener, Zverev strolls
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Clark fires sizzling 60 to win PGA CJ Cup Byron Nelson title
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Como, Roma reach Champions League, Milan and Juve left in limbo
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Antonelli wins Canadian Grand Prix to extend championship lead
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Mandalorian and Grogu blast to first place in weekend box office
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Second division Torreense stun giants Sporting in Portuguese cup final
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Como, Roma reach Champions League, Milan and Juve miss out
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Djokovic comes from behind to keep Roland Garros bid alive
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Sweden's Rosenqvist wins closest-ever Indy 500
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Villarreal crush Atletico to claim third in La Liga
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Como, Roma reach Champions League, Milan, Juve miss out
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Ready, set, dope: Enhanced Games to begin in Las Vegas
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Senegal parliament speaker steps down in political crisis
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'Be yourself' Guardiola tells Man City successor
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Rubio accuses Hezbollah of trying to 'drag Lebanon back into chaos'
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China launches crewed space flight as part of Moon ambitions
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'Sad' Nuno apologises to fans after West Ham relegation
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Juve's derby with Torino delayed after trouble leaves fan in hospital
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Arteta savours Arsenal's 'beautiful' trophy celebration
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Emotional Salah proud to put Liverpool 'back where it belongs'
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Arsenal lift Premier League trophy after beating Palace
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Spurs must invest to build 'top team': De Zerbi
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Spurs win to relegate West Ham as Guardiola, Salah say Premier League farewells
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Carrick says Man Utd's third-place finish 'something to build on'
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Ngidi leads Delhi to consolation IPL win over Kolkata
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Spurs 'showed up' to survive in Premier League: Palhinha
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St. Gallen win Swiss Cup
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Spurs survive as Guardiola, Salah say Premier League farewells
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Haaland crowned Premier League's top scorer
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Guardiola goodbye spoiled by Man City loss to Aston Villa
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Wolff plays down Mercedes rivalry as 'good learning'
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Man Utd's Fernandes sets new outright Premier League assist record
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Trump tempers expectations of a Middle East deal with Iran
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Trump says US will not 'rush into a deal' with Iran, as criticism mounts
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Zverev strolls to opening Roland Garros win, Djokovic waits in wings
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Salah starts in final Liverpool game
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Norway's Dversnes takes surprise win in Giro 15th stage
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All-round Archer powers Rajasthan into IPL play-offs
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Iran and US closing in on deal to end war
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Kostyuk dedicates opening Roland Garros win to Ukraine
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Turkey riot police use tear gas to take opposition party HQ
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China to launch three-crew space flight as part of Moon ambitions
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Rescuers search for 20 missing after Philippine building collapse
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Yemen family deprived of aid reduced to eating tree leaves
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Possible Iran-US deal: What we know
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Will Barcelona's latest Champions League triumph mark the end of an era?
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Dread and denial at heart of deadly DR Congo Ebola outbreak
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India voices concern on US visas but sees alignment with Rubio
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China's Li Shifeng defends Malaysia Masters title
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Pakistan train blast kills at least 24 in Balochistan
Adam Driver shuts down question about clashes with Lena Dunham
American actor Adam Driver batted away accusations about aggressive behaviour on the set of the television series "Girls" Sunday, saying "I have no comment on any of that. I'm saving it all for my book."
Lena Dunham, who wrote, directed and acted in the series, accused the "Star Wars" and "Marriage Story" actor of being rough with her during their first sex scene. He "hurled me this way and that", she wrote in her new memoir "Famesick".
"It wasn't that I felt violated," Dunham wrote, but that she felt she had "lost directorial authority".
Another time, she alleged, Driver "hurled a chair at the wall next to me" when he grew angry at her for forgetting her lines during a rehearsal, and swore repeatedly at her.
The hit show "Girls", which ran for six seasons until 2017, was about a self-obsessed writer and her boyfriend named Adam, played by Driver, and their on-off toxic relationship.
It often seemed to mirror Dunham's own life.
Driver, who is married to actress Joanne Tucker, shut down the issue when he was questioned about it at the Cannes Film Festival, where he is starring in James Gray's new crime thriller "Paper Tiger".
The gripping drama about an ordinary family that falls in thrall to the Russian mafia in New York is in the running for the Palme d'Or, the festival's top prize.
Gray, the US director of "The Yards" and "Little Odessa", said the "crisis of masculinity" -- a recurring theme at the festival -- was nothing new. "Sophocles was talking about 2,500 years ago."
"What is recent is (the idea of) the strong man without flaws. That's the last 100 years. That's the thing we have to get away from and bring back the complexity of what it means to be a human being. That's what I've tried to do," he told reporters.
Gray also said his film was an indictment of the often "transactional" nature of the United States. "Like the current American president, who is a symptom of what I'm talking about. Totally transactional. You know, how can I make the most money?
"This ethos becomes everything, and what does that do to our souls? If you tell young people it doesn't matter whether you're a good person or not... it leaves them adrift," he said.
Which is why, Gray said, he set the movie in the mid-1980s. "It was the beginning of the moment in which the market became God."
R.Veloso--PC