Nick Nurse on Malachi Flynn's breakout game
Toronto Raptors coach Nick Nurse has been waiting for rookie Malachi Flynn to show his offensive prowess and he got an abundance of it against the Wizards.
At this point, you probably know very well what a can of Coke looks like—it's in every supermarket, every pharmacy, and every convenience store you go to, and it hasn't changed in years. So you might be in for a surprise later this year when you pass the soda fridge at your local corner store and notice that something doesn't look quite right. Coca-Cola has revealed new can designs for three of its most popular beverages, and the minimalistic new look is the company's first visual update to those products since 2016.According Design Week, Coca-Cola, Diet Coke, and Coca-Cola Zero Sugar will now feature a pared-back look that goes back to basics and focuses on the brand's most recognizable features—its classic logo and the signature red color. One of the biggest changes you'll notice is that the logo has been moved from the center of the cans to the top, symbolizing how "uplifting" these beverages can be.RELATED: This Is the Biggest Mistake Coca-Cola Has Ever Made, Say ExpertsThe company first announced the Coca-Cola Zero Sugar redesign, which replaced the current design with multiple colors of text and a two-tone background with black text and a simple red background. Diet Coke, meanwhile, is cutting out the red stripe and the vertical white type in favor of red print against a solid silver background. The rollout of these new cans will be complete by 2022.While the cans are getting a visual redesign, Coca-Cola's bottles may be getting an eco-friendly upgrade. In October, we got a peek at the company's prototype of a paper bottle, which would be a more sustainable alternative to the current all-plastic design. The company has been testing out the design in an online grocery store in Hungary while at the same time introducing more recyclable plastic into its bottles in the United States.For more about the iconic soda brand's bottles, its cans, and its history, check out these 30 Coca-Cola Facts You Never Knew, and don't forget to sign up for our newsletter to get the latest restaurant news delivered straight to your inbox.
‘Unorthodox and magical’: how tree stumps can transform your garden. The Stumpery at Arundel Castle is a sculptural paradise – and the idea works in a small plot, too
A beginner’s guide to growing show-stopping cucumbers. Our gardening expert on the delicious homegrown alternative to supermarket offerings
I’ve lost my conversational mojo – can I relearn the art of small talk?Been up to much lately? After a year of isolation, I’ve forgotten how to talk to people – but help is at hand Rhik Samadder: ‘What is small talk again?’ Composite: Nick Dawe/The Guardian
Wilhelm Reich: the strange, prescient sexologist who sought to set us freeHe believed orgasms could be a healing force and coined the term ‘sexual revolution’. Reich’s understanding of the body is vital in our age of protests and patriarchy, writes Olivia Laing Wilhelm Reich in the mid 1950s. Photograph: AP
White City by Kevin Power review – in the steps of Martin AmisThe story of a disgraced banker’s son, Power’s second novel is part rogue’s confession and part post-Celtic Tiger satire ‘Comic timing and pithy aperçus’: Kevin Power. Photograph: PR
The best UV protection on the high street. Here comes the sun – and with it, dream sunscreens, old and new, for all skin types
Art, gigs, theatre: 100 must-see events to book as Britain reopens. From David Hockney to Die Walküre, Sindhu Vee to The Suicide Squad – here’s what to catch as culture returns
Drive-in cinemas and Covid-compliant hedonism: welcome to 2021’s summer of arts. As rules begin to relax and venues start to open, the culture industry is preparing for a season like no other
Monica Jones, Philip Larkin and Me by John Sutherland review – a poisonous love In thrall to Larkin’s genius: racism, drink and despair in a generous account of a tortured relationship over four decades ‘A victim of misogyny, she was a bit of a misogynist herself’ … Monica Jones with Philip Larkin. Photograph: Rex Features
What links Diana Ross, Audra McDonald and Andra Day? The Weekend quizFrom Koch to Kronk to Kings Oak, test your knowledge with the Weekend quiz Supreme performer: Diana Ross. Photograph: ShowBizIreland/Getty Images
15 UK market towns you’ll want to discoverThese lovely and lively towns – for a day trip or spring getaway – also make great bases for exploring the nearby countryside Lovely Ludlow … the parish church of St Laurence amid the town. Photograph: Danny Thomas/Getty Images
‘Her eyes stay shut. She doesn’t respond. But nothing feels real until I tell her’: visiting my mother’s care home after a year For the past year, the pandemic stopped novelist Katherine Heiny from seeing her mother. Now that she can, where will she start? ‘I have a year’s worth of things to tell her.’ Illustration: Giulia Neri/The Guardian
Blind date: ‘How did the call end? I needed to feed the cats’Claire, 33, global regulatory affairs, meets Chris, 33, senior statistician Claire and Chris: ‘It was nice that he was wearing a shirt.’ Photographs: Alicia Canter/The Guardian Photograph: Alicia Canter/The Guardian
Tim Dowling: is the monster in the mirror how people see me?‘Why are you looking in that mirror?’ my wife says. ‘Never look in that mirror’ ‘It is, by some margin, the most unflattering mirror.’ Photograph: Irantzu Arbaizagoitia Photography/Getty Images
Check back every day to shop a new Mother's Day deal from Best Buy Canada.
It helps hair that’s a “hot bed of tattered ends and edges” grow healthy.
Reviewers swear by Baebody eye gel for targeting dark under-eye circles, puffiness and wrinkles.
Matcha lattes are all the hype right now, and they are extremely easy to make at home.
Poet laureate Simon Armitage publishes elegy for Prince Philip. The Patriarchs – An Elegy deliberately avoids the sycophancy Philip hated, the poet says, and is instead ‘in service of all people like him’