

The plotting of “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story” is its own big joke, a fever dream by a self-deprecating entertainer looking into a funhouse mirror. Co-written by director Eric Appel and “Weird Al” Yankovic, “Weird” distills what has kept Yankovic a subversive force on the Billboard charts since the 1980s to create one of the funniest movies of the year. "If they do then they have got enough for two powerful armoured brigades and we will see where they intend to use them and when.However serious you take that exclamation, it comes from a perfect centerpiece scene for “Weird: The Al Yankovic Story,” a pop music phantasmagoria that’s equally egoless and entertaining. "We know they have the equipment but have they organised themselves so as to use them properly in this combined way - tanks, armoured vehicles, artillery, air defence, intelligence," he added. When it comes to weapons, he said the Ukrainians, according to NATO, had about 98% of the equipment that allies were due to supply.Ĭlarke noted that Ukrainian troops had 230 new main battle tanks and around 1,550 armoured fighting vehicles. "They are digging tremendous defences in the southern area, from Zaporizhzhia towards Crimea."

"They've stopped pushing so hard in the north, and in the south and southwest they look as though they might be preparing to pull back a little bit, Clarke said. Speaking to Sky News, Clarke said both sides were waiting for a new offensive, with Russia building its defences and pulling back. Russia has "stopped pushing on so many areas" as it prepares for its new offensive, security and defence analyst Michael Clarke has said. "We love each other madly, that's a fact." That's why over the year Philip has been with us, we've been adapting "As far as having him in our family, it's always a tricky situation when you foster a child no matter where he is from. "We talked to Philip and my heart fluttered, and I realised that he was my child.

"He was in a group we evacuated from Mariupol after the hostilities ceased.

She went on to say the "so-called deportation of children" was "an evacuation from shelling".Īsked about the the teenage boy from Mariupol who she is now fostering, she added: "When it comes to Philip, my heart called me to him. Now, in an interview with Vice News, Lvova-Belova has said she is a "mother" and not a war criminal. In March, she also told the Russian leader she was able to "adopt" a 15-year-old boy from Mariupol, the southeastern Ukrainian city that was destroyed and occupied by Russian forces. Maria Lvova-Belova, who was appointed by Vladimir Putin as his children's rights commissioner in October 2021, has claimed to be the "saviour" of Ukrainian children caught up in Russia's so-called "special military operation". A Russian commissioner who is being sought for war crimes for deporting children has said she is "not ashamed of anything" she has done.
